Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, September 07, 1953, Page 2, Image 2

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THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Bakm. Orefoa
Monday, September 7, 1953
In The Valley
Edited a; MIKE FOKBES
St. Paul Schools Prepare
To Open Classes Sept. 14
St Paul All three of the St.
Paul schools will open the 1953
84 school year Monday, Sept.
14.
The St. Paul Cnion High
School will itart at 8:45 a. m.,
the (ami at in previous years
and all students are urged to be
present at that time lor regis
tration. The ieculty will have
just one change from last year,
that being a home economics
teacher to replace Mrs. Sue
Glatt
Mrs. Jennie June Msgnuson
of Woodburn, a graduate of
Oregon State College, will
Woodburn
Woodburn Mr. and Mrs.
' Julius Peet of Salem have
. purchased the Poorman resi
dence at 199 Settlemier Ave
in Woodburn and moved into
- their new home last week. Mr.
Peet is employed at the Mac
Laren School for Boys.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Ahre and
children have left for Idaho
wher. they ' will . spend a
week's vacation visiting;
friends.
Guests at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Jsmes Lamb during
the past week were Mr. and
Mrs. Harold McKellip of Fort
Lauderdale, Florida.
- Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Peyton
have returned from a vacation
trip of almost 1900 miles in
' their car. They first visited
Detroit Dam and then went on
to Burns where they were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. D.
Woolley, formerly of Wood
burn. Other places visited
were Oywee Dam, Couer
d'Alene, Idaho, Spokane,
Grand Coulee Dam, Umatilla
Dam, the dam near The Dal'
les and Celillo Falls. They
were absent a week.
Recent guests of Dr. and
Mrs. T. K. Sanderson were her
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. W. T. Peters of Port
land. Peters recently returned
from an extensive trip through
Canada, along with about 6S
members , of the Columbia
Aviation country club of
which he Is a member. Also a
guest was Miss Bonnte Way of
Portland, granddaughter - of
the Sandersons.
Guests at the A. P. Zuber
home recently were Mr. and
" Mrs. John Welres of Alpha,
Minn. Mrs. Welres and Mrs.
Zuber, who are double cou
sins, had not seen each other
for over 30 years. The Welres
had been visiting their son,
stationed at Fort Lewis, Wash.
Other visitors in the Zuber
home were Mr. and Mrs. Lor
ren Workman of Tacoma,
Wash.
Charles Sheron, f o r m e r
coach at Woodburn high
school, is attending a special
Insurance course at the home
office of the Acme Casualty
and Surety Co., at Hartford,
Conn.
teach home economics and be
In charge of the library and
girls' physical education.
Mrs. Enid Johnson, who has
been attending summer school
again, will be in charge of the
commercial and mathematics
departments, this being her
sixth year at St Paul U.H.S
Leslie Weatherlll will teach
English and driver education
along with boys physical edu
cation classes, weatherlll is
starting his fourth year at St.
Paul.
Ned Gleason will handle all
the sceince classes. Gleason
is beginning his fourth year at
St. Paul.
H. W. Bowers again will be
principal and will teach the
graphic arts clan and history.
Gleason and Weatherlll also
coach the various sports with
Gleason hsndllng football and
track and Weatherlll coaching
the basketball and baseball
teams. A music teacher has not
been hired as yet
The building custodian will
be Edwin Woodruff who has
mad. number of Improve
ments In the new building and
on the grounds during the past
summer.
The union high school board
of directors installed a new
member at the last regular
meeting . John Kaufmann, who
replaced Joe Pohlschneider at
the last .lection.
Other members of the board
are Chairman, Bob Coleman
Ray Smith. Tom Jette, Pat Mc
Carthy and John Kaufmann. H.
W. Bowers is clerk of the
board.
The directors voted to start
construction of a double tennis
court on the northeast corner
of the school property as soon
as possible with hopes that it
would be ready for use yet this
falL
The St. Paul public grade
school has grown in size of ter
ritory this year with consolida
tions of all of the Four Corners
district, and parts of Raybell,
Champoeg, Arbor Grove and
Mahoney districts.' The school
building has undergone re-dec
orating during the past summer
months and plans are under
way to improve the grounds
before the fall rains start. One
new teacher has been added in
the grade school, that being
Mrs. Catts. Mrs. Kaup again
will return to the faculty as
Dayton
Dsyton Mrs. -Gordon Cook
and baby of Wenatchee,
Wash., visited her brother and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Veach recently.
Also recent visitors In the
Veach home were his aunt and
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Berg-
gren of Sheridan and Mr. and
Mrs. Esrl Freshour of Bea
trice. Nebr.
1 Mrs. Charles Jaqulsh and
family of Cottage place,
Wash., visited her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Timm,
last week.
Mrs. Joe Dreher returned
home Saturday, August 25,
from Bozeman, Mont, where
she has been visiting her
daughter and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Buckley, for two
weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. George Olson
have as houseguests ber sis
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rlnke
of Britton, S.D. They plan to
locate in Oregon.
The Christian Woman's Fel
lowship of the Christian
church is sponsoring a
"Luncheon Is Served" pro
gram Saturday, September 19,
at the Dayton grade school
cafeteria, with Ruby Smith
Willis of Portland In charge
.A program for homemakers
has been arranged and many
prizes will be given. Also a
home cooked sale will be held
following the program. A
nursery room witn dsdt sit
ters in charge will be con
venient for those who have
small children.
Mrs. Ralph Timm and Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Grover visited
Theola Grover at the T.B.
Sanitarium In Salem Tburs
dav. Thev found Theola Im
proving and able to be up and
around Dart of tne tune, me-
ola has been confined In Sa
lem for the past year.
Miss Lois Rockhill, daugh
ter of Mrs. Lulu Rockhill, left
August 29 for Wilmore, Ky..
where she plans to stay indef
initely. She will visit her
sister and husband. Rev., and
Mrs. Eugene Lamb, and .will
be employed as a nurse In a
Lexington, Ky., hospital. She
is a graduate nurse and has
been employed in the General
hospital in McMinnvUle.
Miss Jane Mills left Tues
day by ' plane for Lincoln,
Neb., having been called there
by the serious illness of her
father, F. R. Johnston.
Mr. and Mrs. John Ander
son returned Friday from a
two-weeks' vacation at the
Harrison Hot Spring in Can
ada and with her mother, Mr.
and Mrs. H. G. Youngs in
Seattle.
Miss Patricia Huffman re-
Woodburn Boys
Enroll at VU
Monmouth
Woodburn Graduate of
Woodburn high school planning
to enter Willamette university
this fall include L. Duane
Baird, Robert D. Baumann,
Paul E. Edwards, wmard Lb
Thompson and Robert L. With
ers.
During high school Baird
earned three letters in baseball
and two in basketball. Bau
mann, who plans to major in
voice, was vice president of the
senior class, a member of the
Lettermen's club and DeMolay
and president of the Woodburn
high school chorus, towards,
winner of the outstanding band
member award of 1992, was on
the student council and chair
man of the 1953-94 handbook.
He It a member of DeMolay
and Boy Scouts.
Thompson, former vice pres
ident of the studentbody, will
enroll as a pre-medicine stu-
dent. He was a member of the
student council, chorus and De
Molay, annual and paper staffs
and dramatics.
Withers, student body presi
dent for 1953, plans to major
in business administration. He
won letters in '-asketball, base
ball and football at high school
and was a member of the chor
us and DeMolay.
Lebanon Reports
Population Gain
Lebanon Latest estimates
of the Chamber of Commerce
places city population at 8,300.
In 1950 the official census
placed population at 9,800.
Commenting on the growth,
Mel Baker, president of (he
chamber, stated the recent
growth was slower than that
immediately . following the
close of the war, but that it
haa been a more permanent
type of growth.
With business and Indus
try becoming stabilized, peo
ple are now looking for a per
manent place to live and work.
Lebanon has certainly been
getting its share of this new
population," he pointed out
Mother Arrested
Along With Her Son
will Mrs. Draper, the princi
pal. Mrs. Draper has stated that, turned last week from Alaska,
the grade school will begin at where she had been employed
8:45 a. m. the ssme as the high by the government as a nurse
EXHIBIT JERSEYS
Grand Inland Frank Finni-
cum and son, Ronald Finnicum,
dairymen of Grand Island dis
trict, have taken some of their
registered Jersey cattle to Sa
lem to the Oregon State Fair
grounds for exhibition during
the annual fair.
iSW GREEN STAMPS
ON ALL PURCHASES
, FREE DELIVERY
OUHUMNOCnOK
14 Caadalarla Blvd.
school on Monday morning. Mr.
Kelso Draper if the building
custodian.
St Paul district No. 49 will
operate three busses this year
having Just purchased a new
86 passenger bus to replace the
oldest one of the vehicles.
Bernard Brentano, board
member, traveled to the factory
and drove the bus to St Paul
last week. One of the busses
will be driven by Kelso Drap
er and another by Mrs. Hildie.
The driver has not been hired
as yet Directors of the St Paul
grade school district No. 49 are
Ann Smith, J. W. Richardson
and Bernard Brentano,
The St. Paul's academy also
will start Sept 14, and Sister
Superior RoseAnn Mary has
asked that all new students as
well as old students to the
Academy register before Mon
day. There will be two new
teachers at the Academy this
year. Sister John Maureen and
Sister Mary Rosellen. Sister
John Maureen will teach the
5th grade and Sister Mary Ros
ellen will be the new music
I teacher.
CHIRRY'S
Plantation Dinners
IVt Ml. S. en 991
CHICKEN - STEAKS - HAM - ETC
COMPLETE DINNER S1.35 ond up
COUNTER - BOOTHS - DINING ROOMS
N. Parking Problem!
Fair Week Honrs: Closed Monday
T a-m. to ! p-m. Bandar. It Neva to 9 p.an.
r China City -i
OPEN LABOR DAY
Open 7 Day Weak
DAILY 4:30 P.M. TO 2 A.M.
SAT. 4:30 P.M. TO 3 A.M.
SUX 2 PM. TO 11 P.M
at Edgecomb, Alaska, in na
tive service since last April.
Mr. and Mrs. James Crane
and daughters visited her sis
ter and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Ed Hunter, at Astoria, Sunday.
The Harry Wilson family
has rented the Dewey Wil
liamson house and moved
Tuesday. ,
Mrs. June Harvey and two
children have moved into the
James Parkey residence. They
are former residents of Leb
anon.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronsld Clare
and family recently spent his
vacation in Idaho visiting rel
atives. They went to Lake
McCall while there.
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Petre of
Myrtle Point spent a week
end here with his sister, Mrs.
Clete Gell. Their two chll
dren have been spending the
summer in the Gell home
The first tall meeting of
Electa Chapter No. 29 will be
on Tuesday, September 8,
with Sheridan and Amity
chapters as guests.
Dinner guests of Mrs. Ve-
dah Wllard and Sylva on
Tuesday were Mrs. Marian
Edwards and children of
Yawlma, Wash.; Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Massy aned chlldrn; Miss
Elsie Herring; Miss Annabelle
Nelson; Mrs. Carolyn Smith.
Honoring Mr. and Mrs. Ce
cil Krauss and daughter and
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Krest and
, daughter of Cambridge, Neb.,
the Dale Massy's entertained
j at dinner Wednesday, with a
few friends in. Mrs. Kraus
will be remembered as Gladys
Herring, niece of Miss Elise
Herring of McMlnnvllle.
Forerlosnre Granted
Albany Judge Victor Ol
liver in circuit court here has
handed down a 85,099.76 Judg
ment in favor of the state of
Oregon, through the depart
ment of veterans affairs, and
against George F. and Sarah
H. Hayes and John and Mar
jorle Burt, accompanied by a
foreclosure order on a real
property mortgage securing a
note.
Albany, Ore. W) Louis E
Slogsdill, 23, of Shedd, Jailed
Friday on a charge of assault
ana armed robbery, was Joined
Saturday by his mother.
The mother, Mrs. Lottie
Stogsdlll, 40, was charged with
being an accessory.
In district court for arraign
ment Saturday, they were given
until Wednesday to plead. The
charge against the mother is
that she waited In her son's car
outside a grocery store at Peo-
Monmouth All studenU new
to Central high school wis year
are to register as soon as pos
sible. The school area includes
Monmouth, Independenc. and
surrounding areas. The school
ir. is oDn daily except Sat
urday afternoon, Sundays ana
i .hnr Dav from 8 to 12 noon
and from 1 to 8 p. m. Working
students may register on Wed
nesday 'nd Thursday nights.
Only new students are to reg
ister now. Returning siuoenu
will be notified if there are con
flicts in their class schedules
and they should report at once
to clear their scneauiea. ah w-
H.nt Miterlnc central man
school for the first time must
hsve a physical examination
nH nhviieians in the school
district have been supplied the
forms to be brougni on opening
dsy.
The class of 1943 of tne Mon
mouth high school held a re
..ninn at the Clarence Grund
farm with 11 of the class of 21
attending, with eight husbands
or wives and 11 children also
nresent Clarence Grund, Jr.,
ami the farthest from Blrm
Incham. Ala.: second farthest
was Jane Miller Armstrong and
husband. Rev. Ray Armstrong,
coming from Eureka, Kan. Mat
thew Thompson, principal of
the high school from 1937 to
1043 was present All men of
the class were in tne service in
World War II, and two were in
active duty in the Korean con
flict Mrs. William- Leber, Jr.
(Ruth Groves), South Bend,
Wash., will send to members
absent an account of the gath
ering and activities of the class
members during the past ten
years.
. Hans ' Riepe, a 18-year-old
German exchange student, will
enter Central high school this
fall as a senior. He will live
with Mr. and Mrs. John Mc-
Rae in the Oak Grove district
for a year. His home Is at Eng
er, in the Hereford district in
western Germany. He Is inter
ested in farming and engineer
ing and also sports.
Joan and Wayne Robison of
Terrebonne are visiting their
grandmothers, Mrs. Sylvia Rob
ison. Wayne, age II, if recov
ering from a badly burned left
leg. He was burning out ant
hills the last of June with gaso
line and the can tipped over
and he received the burns
while putting it out Skin was
grafted on his leg and it was
put in a cast on the third de-,
gree burns and after month in I
hospital and convalescent home !
it is healing nicely.
Mrs. James Gentle left by
train Monday to visit relatives
and friends in Wisconsin and
plans to be gone' a month.
Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Hasiler
of Phillipsburg, Kan., are vis
iting their son, C. A. Hauler
and family. The two families
went to Roseburg Thursday to
visit a son and brother, Clifford
Hassler and will go on to San
Luis Obispo, Calif., to visit Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Hassler.
A "Care" food package to be
neighbors Seat
Drive Chairman
Silverton
Sweet Home Mrs.
Rice and Mrs. Phyllis Ogle
were appointed Jubilee mem
bership drive chairmen dur
ing a meeting of the Sweet
home Royal Neighbors.
During the evening Mrs.
Wander Fogerson was initiated
into camp, and birthday anni
versaries of Mrs. Alice MaGee
and Mrs. Thelma Manning
were noted.' Mrs. Marguerite
Fryatt was a prize winner dur
ing the evening.
The next meeting of the
group will be Sept. 15 when
hobo party will be a fea
ture of the evening and those
without proper costume will
be fined.
Taking the chairs for the
evening will be Past Oracle
Sadie Kaeding, Vice Oracle
Peggy Wells, Past Oracle Alice
Chance, and Chancellor Ethel
Wills.
Visitors at the meeting in
cluded Mrs. Mabel Miles, of
Salem, an RAN district dep
uty; Mrs. Blanche Gaines,
member of the Salem camp;
and Mrs. Viola Dick, Sweet
Home.
Silverton Mr. and Mrs.
Charlie Borte and children are
spending the week-end in
Washington, attending the old-
Lucllle time harvest festival near Che-
Unionvale
Unionvale Week - end
guests of Mrs. Robert Terry
and son. Emmet Terry of
Unionvale, were Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Terry and son, John,
of Dallas; Mr. and Mrs. Verl
Terry of Portland.
William Hauseman of Port
land was a Sunday dinner
guest.
Mrs. Walter Diebel of Union
vale, ill since July 6 with heart
trouble, la home after a short
series of treatments at the
General hospital McMinviUe.
She is greatly improved and
recovering satisfactorily.,
halls, where an early-day steam
engine and early-day threshing
machine are operating.
' The Maurice Bensons are
having ' double trouble" that
has been serious worry.
Their 6-year-old son. Victor.
is recovering from a bad case
of blood poisoning, due to an
unexplained injury to his foot:
requiring surgery and hospital
ization. A younger sister of
Victor la a patient In a Port
land hospital under treatment
for a burn in the palm of her
hand, resulting in the need of
skin grafting to insure proper
neaung.
The Bensons are residents of
the Silverton Hills.
Fairview
Fairview Mr. onri Mr.
Charles Andrews of Fairview
returned home Thursday after
rarnam, in en., .with, cousins
and friends. Their nnhu
and niece, Mr. and Mrs. Rus
sell Burchett and family, took
them bv car but r.tnrn in
a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Mel
vin ADnleburv and familv f
Salem had charge of the home
during the Andrews absence.
SILENT PICTURE STAB DIES
Hollywood Francis Ford.
71, a star of the old silent Die-
ture era, died Saturday.
der of Alaska and back over
land to Fairbanks, Alaska. His
wife visited in Japan with her
son, Paul, and daughter, Ann.
She made the trip to Japan by
board and returned by plane.
Me .Till S:M
RoryCathonn
Corinna Cahrert
"Powder River"
Cater by Technicolor
, Betty Grable
"Th. Former
Taks a Wife"
Color by Technicolor
ria. 15 miles south nf her.
while he held up the proprietor sent now and textlle Pkage
and made off with $20
Bond of $2,000 was set for
each.
Bus Service for
Victor Point Students
Silverton- Bus service for
the young folk attending Vic
tor Point school will be avail
able for transporting them
from their homes, Monday
morning, Sept. 14, between
7:30 and 8:30 o'clock, and will
return them to their homes
by noon, as only registration
for class work will be done
on that day.
Youngsters are to bring their
birth certificates and to have
had physical examinations.
Serving of hot lunches ard reg
ular class work will begin
Tuesday, Sept. 15, according to
the principal, Mrs. Larry Carpenter.
to be sent later was voted by
the Monmouth Thimble club
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Ivy Hamar. Scrap books for the
Shrine hospital in Portland will
be made at the next meeting to
be held with Mrs. W. J. Stock
holm, Sept. 23.
Matthew Thopmson Is now at
home after a trip as a navigator
with the navy on a routine
weather flight over the north
pole. They went from Point
Barrow, Alaska, north to the
pole and along the north bor-
-i:t!c-
3
Now Shewing Open f M
PICKUP ON SOUTH STBEET
Richard Wldmark, Jean reters
Technicolor Co-Hit
-THE OIHL NEXT BOOR"
Daa Delley, Jane Borer,
Dcnh P--
RMI S-S7M
Fred Astaire
r i r. i
1 IJU tHIBK
1 Color by Technicolor
.
Jean Simmons
"CAGE OF GOLD'
Dennis O'Keefe
1W UDT WANTS MINK"
Trneelor ;
-
John Hodiak
John Derek
"AMIUSH AT a
TOMAHAWK SAT
Police Fines $1819,
Sweef Home Court
Sweet Home Revenues col-lected-
through Municipal
court during the month of
August totaled 81819.50, ac
cording to the monthly report
of Police Chief Roy Clover.
Fines and bail forfeitures
totaled $978.30, while parking
meter collections, motor ve
hicle fees, Jaywalking fines,
dog license fees and the sale
of a car accounted for the remainder.
Eighty-six cases were han.
died by the Sweet Home police
department and 72 compalinta
during tne month were an
swered including' prowlers,
stolen articles and disturbances
of livestock.
M
ST
i 'up
HSESEI!
nun Wednesday
KagaJoT Prices
Pta 16c tar Viewers
GUY IAMS0N RAM LOYEJOT
mb reran nu au ml ibm
ALSO
White Goddess
MM 4-eaie
, GATES OPEN 6:38
SHOWAT7tl9
NOW ENDS TUES.!
' Doris Day and
Gordon MaeRae
In Technicolor
"BY THE UGHT OF
THE SILVERY NOON"
also
Csry Grant
Ginger Rogers
Marilyn Monroe In
"M0KKEY
RIKIKFH"
VVMIIWJ
e8
E
DRIVEJMTHEATR
pmon ma
UIISH CAIDIH, MktNWa f
GATE8 OPEN 8:30
SHOW AT 7:15
NOW ENDS TUES.!
AU Technicolor Show -Alan
Ladd
Arlene Dah!
Richard Conte in
"DESERT LEGION"
RleharcT'widmark
Don Tav lor in
"DESTINATION
f MM" . f
1 1 I
Don't wait
for Pah
n
Sfeciafiilftf CMmm mmi American Ft)
Ortfert r. la. rwewe
LA BOB rABUNd AIIA
3
-jr rctFiKFooo
Chines
fi tnd Americia
COMl TO MT PLACE
Chinese
Tea 6ardcn
aught Dm town
1(114 No. r.i.i
cjCabor eZ)ay
The brawny men who keep th. wheels of
progress QOing in o million plants ond fac
tories or. having THEIR doy todoy. It's La
bor Doy across the nation . . . parades ond
celebrations or. the order v.rywh.r.
Strik. up rh. bond and get In th.r. with
your fellow workers. Don your uniforms,
your bodges or your special insignia to let
on. ond oil know thot you or. a proud
member of your special orgoniiotion. Ameri
ca proudly solutes Lobor Doy, cognizont of
th. foct that this ormy of work.rs, joining
hands with monogement, is a production
teom thot con whip th. world now ... or at
ony tim.!
CAPITAL DRUG STORE
40S Stat. St. Corner .f Liberty
WE GIVE frC GREEN STAMPS
hi ; U I "
Un tkt J?nUtt5t .
ofc flttttt
VnUl4j taltk
DR. SEMLER
Soys: H
. . . DONT PUT OFF THAT VISIT TO
YOUR DENTIST! Regular Examination
and Prompt Attention to your dental
needs or your protection against
decoy and infection that can cause
serious Infedi.n and cetrly Illness.
Visit Yeur Dentist TODAY ... for e
Healthier TOMORROW.
DR. SEMLER GIVES YOU
THE CREDIT YOU NEED
You con stake your own reasonable Credit
Tormi . , . arrange to pay in Small Weekly
or Monmly omounts AFTER your
Work Is completed.
Special Service for
OUT-OF-TOWN PATIENT
Your Dental Work coeipfetod st I st-t
J 1 1 "I t II inn
rr I I Mr o. a.
r
C
STAniCOrClAL
ggatyitlt T T
WW
, JSSJ S. COMMERCIAL.
iZT Coart St.
. . .