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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1955)
2-(Scc, 1)-Capital Journal, Memorial for Dams Given OK Wilh only Rep. Maurine Neu bernor, Portland Democrat, dis senting, the House State and Federal Affairs Committee Fri day recommended passage of a memorial asking the govern ment to initiate Green Peter and Cougar dams in the Willamette Basin. Public and private power advo cates clashed for the second time this week In the hour-long com mittee hearing. Debate centered on the partner ship provision of the memorial, which was strongly resisted by labor and Grange representatives State Grange Master i-.imcr Mc dure said his organization agrees with the major provisions of the memorial, but disagrees on the proposed method of selling power from the dams. Asked if the Grange would with draw its opposition if it meant gaining a year's slart on the proj ects, McClure said the time ques tion was not an issue. Senator Brown Made Committee Head Senale President Elmo Smith announced Friday appointment of Sen. Gene Brown of Grants Pass as chairman of the legisla live counsel committee, to serve during the next biennium. Senator Brown was recently reappointed to the committee for another term as were Sens. Stew art Hardie, Condon; Donald Hus band, Eugene and Carl Francis, Davton. Five members of the House make up the balance of the com mittee which has become a vital legislative activity in giving uni formity to bill drafting and or derly preparation ot legislation YESTERDAY'S CLOSE N. Y. STOCK QUOTATIONS (By The A.socUtH PrfMl Admiral Corporation Allied Chemical Allis Chalmers Aluminum Co. America American Airlines American Motors American Tel & Tel. American Tobacco Anaconda Copper Atchison Railroad Bethlehem Steel Boeing Airplane Co. Borg Warner Burroughs Adding Macll. California Packing Canadian Pacific Caterpillar Tractor Celanese Corporation Chrysler Corporation Cities Service , . Consolidated Edison . Crown Zellerbach Curliss Wright , Douglas Aircraft riu Pont do Nomouri Easlmnn Kodak Emerson Radio General Electric General Foods General Motors Georgia Pac Plywood Goodyear Tire Homeslnko Mining Co. International Harvester International Paper Johns Manvillc Kaiser Aluminum Kennccotl Copper l.ihby, McNeill ; Lockheed Aircraft I t.nwc's Incorporated Montgomery Ward ' New York Central Northern Pacific Pacific American Fish Pacific Gas k Klectric Penney M.C.l Co. Pennsylvania R. It. Pepsi Cola Co. Philco Radio Radio Corporation Unyonicr Incoip. Republic Steel Revnolils Metals (tichlield nil. Saf'Hvnv Stores Inc. Scott Paper Co. Sears llecUick & Co. Srteo'iy-Yecuuni oil Southern Pacific Standard Oil Calif. Standard Oil N J. SttHcbakor Packard Swift & Co. Transamcricn Corp. Twntieth Century Fox. I'nion Oil Company I'ninn Pacific I'nilcd Airlines I'nited Aircraft 1'nited Corporation fined Slate Plvwnod fnilcd States Steel Warner Pictures Western fnien Tel Westinchouse Air Drake V'eslinhouse Klectric Woolworlh Company 28 A n 12 87 "a 21 Vi 12 Vt 175 67 " 4H ii 124 107 H . 75 -I. 37 " 24 H 35 '4 29 "i 84 24 K r.8 119 47 4t fifl M 17 i 134 44 1511 t 70 44 1.1 48 75 '4 97 "i 28 H 108 45 v, 37 83 '4 88 H CO 102 15 53 '4 19 ' 81 34 H r.7 '. 11 45 M iir, 23 18 'i 38 V 39 M 1 711 ' 111 1.8 1 48 r.a n 71; h r.t 'i r.:t 7(1 loll 13 47 . 39 '4 I 30 I 54 I 141 3 li 7!l i CS '.I 38 i 71 1!1 i OPKN 6:30 AM Color Cinemascope "Seven Brides fer Seven Brothers" JANE POWELL 'The Sea Around Us' MPlrllMmiMMMni Through Thcie Portals Pass The Molt Wonderful People In The World OUR CUSTOMERS! For Orders T. G. Ph. 27ft Salrm, Orfr., FH, Jan. 21, 1955 jLocal Koragropnsi Cars Damaged Considerable damage was done to cars driven bv Delene Pauley. 1392 Park avenue, and William White Da- vies, 782 Sunset drive, Thursday evening, city police reported. The accident occurred about 8 p.m. at the intersection of Belmont and Summer. Witnesses said the Pauley car was being driven without lights and was struck when it pulled onto Summer street in front of the Davis car, investigating officers said. lino Kalil Pnlcnnpd A Chihua hua terrier belonging to Mr. an'1 1 involved deliberate intent to de Mrs. Edwin D. Lawrence 1362 jrauj tne government. Franklin street, was poisoner. Hallinan, independent Progres Wednesday night, they reported, i sive Par, candj(jate (or president When they noticed the dog wiin 19S2i paid , $50.000 fine afte ill they took it to a veterinarian, ..rvuw wno saio tne ucam uii.v.. i r-anscd hv eat ne something - irnntamlng warlann, a rat poison. .Mrs. Lawrence said. Car Hits Train A car driven by Glen Larkins, 1759 Park ave nue, suitcrea consiueninie i'V"' - ! end ?"aKe.fVL, I. TJh at 12th and Ferry streets, city police said. Larkin told officers he did not sec the slow-moving engine in time to stop. No one was reported injured. Arrested for Seattle Calvin f.avcrne Mct.'ourry, 295 North 24th street, was charged Inday with abandonment and non-sup port of his wife and two minor children in a King County, Wash., fncitive warrant. Arraignment on the warrant was continued to Tuesday in District court here and hail set at $3,000. He was ar rested Thursday hv a Marion county deputy sheriff. Seminar Bring Students A legislative seminar on Feb ruary 3 and 4 will bring two out standing students from every col lege in the state to Salem, accom panied by one professor from everv campus. The seminar is sponsored by the Oregon Citizen ship Clearing House 01 Willam ette University. The purpose of the seminar, according to A. Freeman Holmer, to encourage outstanding col lege students to recognize the political obligations that will be theirs following graduation and prepare them to take their ful responsibility. a - The seminar will introduce them to the role of politic "partv." the functions of legisla tive committees, the duties 01 pre-, siding officers, the activities of the Ways and Means committee and press coverage of the egis- talure. A luncheon Friday at 12.30 p.m. at the Sonator Hotel will be focussed on the problems of press coverage with Tom Lawson Mc- Call, radio commentator, the speaker. Wendt Asks Court io Grant Another Trial Corl Wendt, unsuccessful plain (iff in a $13,056 d .image suit, made a motion in Marion County Circuit Court Thursday for a new trial. Wendt alleges that the court er red January 6 in not dismissing the jury after it had deliberated eight hours, lie also charges the jury received additional informa tion, over the protest of the plain tiff, after it had retired to con sider the case. At the time, the jury ruled in favor of the defendants, Glenn O. and Kthel A. Burriuht. after de liberating nearly nine hours. Wendt claims he tripped on a curb in front of the defendants' j store at m houlh rhurch street and broke his ankle on March 7, l!tr4. lie alleged the HurriglUs were negligent m that the curb was so fonstnicted that it stuck up above the sidewalk level, Landscape Architects Meeting Here Saturday The Oregon Society of Land scape Architects will have its iiu-i-nui; .-..uuiu.iv aner - i noon in the Mate llinlm.iy build- , me. : Arthur r.in-iui in roi nand. nrriHi'nt nf th twimi' will -.11 Ihc niPPtini- fur ! hn'cmi... business sps."uk .,trest tioscmn sinn at 4 o'clock. The iiroup wilh hour at Chuck s Steak House whrre I. ryiiearandTw "New Kxlm Rhododendrons" and colored slides will he shown of the plant introductions. 7:i ' Arrangements for the meeting ;8 .are beins made hv Mark II. As - 14 I trup, landscape architect with the 51 , Slate Highway Department. Arrangements f( Milk Producers Meet at Fairview FAIItVIFW More than 100 patrons attended (.'operative viiiK' I roducers nieelini: held1 i nui-Mi.iv evening view school hou-e of the Mi-Minnville Cooperative Creamery was master of ccre- mnnk-v Frank Finniciim of Grand Is. and. presidenl of the McMinn ville Cooperative Creamery, re ports the milk situation now is ery satisfactory. J73fi?T sah snap Hfllf1fin FflfAC Disbarment SAN FRANCISCO I Disbar ment proceedings against attorney Vincent llallinan must await his release from the federal peniten tiary at McNeil Island where he is serving an 18-month term for income tax evasion. This was the opinion of the State Supreme Court Thursday in a let ter to the board of governors of the state bar. The court said llalli nan must be given a full hearing to determine whether his offense , ; , , ..ni,rv his prison term last J eoruary. Water Resource To Be Discussed Water resource legislation which will face the Oregon legis lature will be discussed at the Monday noon luncheon of the Salem Chamber of Commerce by Lyle F. Watts who for the last two years has been chairman of the governor's committee on water resources. The speaker is the retired U.S. chief forester and is a former member of the Oregon State Board of Forestry. Based on the report of the com mittee he headed, two major bills dealing, with water resources are now before the legislature. One of these bills would set up a statewide Water Resources Board with broad powers aimed at development of a coordinated water development and conserva tion program in Oregon. The sec ond bill proposes a new compre hensive ground water code which would require that claims be reg istered on wells and other ground water claims. The claims, under such a law, would be subject to state regula tion to avoid waste and polution. The code would be administered by the state engineer who would he required to study available water resources and to see that a stable ground water level was maintained. Site of the Chamber meeting Monday will be at the Marion Hotel. -'Annual Meeting 1 W9 Held by Bank Deposits in the new Commer cial Bank of Salem, which opened lor business January 3, now amount to $413,731 stockholders in ttie company were told at the bank's lirst annual meeting held Thursday night. All of the bank officers were re-elected and two new directors. Jake Well, Hiilsboro, and Ralph jcnines, f orest urove. were nam ed to the board. Re-elected as officers of the uanK were Donald B. Peterson, president: Charles A. Snrnpnp chairman of the board; Tinltham Gilbert, vice-president and Hieh. ard F. Haugc, cashier. In addition to the two newly elected members, the board is made up of R. L. Elfslrom, Gard ner Knapp, Roy Harland, A. L. Reiling, Hiilsboro: Axel Erickson, Portland and Gilbert. Peterson and Sprague. The meeting was held in the Griffin building, temporary quar- uts oi me naiiK. a nuiiding In house the new financial institu tion is now heing built on the northwest corner of Church and Chemeketa streets. Drama Class Plans Two One-Act Plays The South Salem drama class will present two one-act plavs to the public on Fcbruarv 1 and 2 at 7:30 in the school's t.ittle The ater. The director is Miss Marga ret RtiiTnui:hs. The first play is "Pink and Patches" by Margaret Bland. The east includes Taisa Akulaw, Mike Rolnw. I.illip .Mcintosh, and Rose 1 in irv I, nerl 1 "e other play Is "The Wonder Lead," bv lten'lleehl :iml Ken J " ""''mm.ui. imc esi memo Hon IVHut. Richard An Franc I'ek arv Gilbert' mil 1.1 iu rtKUWW r . I reC 'eQ POn L.OITI ITU tree AdoPtS Four Projects ... "', ""'rcalion committee of tin- ,-viieni . nainner ot t ommerce has adopted four projects for im mediate promotional work. Mllieonimittees wi lie formed ii i work with the North Santiam 184 lodge Wednesday night. Fur t handier of Commerce in promo- ther plans were made for the lion of the canyon area: to work 50th anniversary celebration of with other agencies and groups, the Moialla lodge, with the eve tow.ud developing public rose : ning to lie preceded bv a no-host gardens in Hush's Pasture: to dinner in Ihe dining room, study Ihe Three Sisters ltecrci- j William Crouch. l. II. Bobbins lion area problem and to studv and Frank Dieken were named river-ode ivo-lt l...'..l.M,,ni ; .. S;,lMn : I. H. (.lock) llrvdon. is Chair- at the Fair-; man of the newly formed com Neil liuivfirinittee. SPECIAL 63 MEN'S SUITS 100 Werstcds Our Rceuler Lew Prices $45 te $55 HOW OHl PRICE OPI Akk 04 m xsmm M I. lt . Senate Gives Young Member Big Ovation After Senator Lee Ohmart had called the Senate's atten tion to the fact that his col league, Senator Mark Hatfield, had been chosen as Salem's first junior citizen, the senate gave the young educator-legislator a standing ovation Friday morning. Sen. Ohmart told the Senale that the legislative careers of both Hatfield and himself had been parallel and he had won dered which of the two was the junior Senator from Marion County, "This action on the part of the Salem Junior Chamber of Commerce, I believe, settles the question wilh Mark defi nitely the junior Senator," Oh mart said. Sen. Hatfield, visibly moved by the accolade, managed to offer a word of appreciation but he declared "I have cotton in my aiouth. I'm simply over whelmed." Senator Stewart Hardie of Condon told the Senate that Senator Lowell Stcen had been chosen as first citizen of Mil-ton-Freewatcr, and while the eastern Oregon city was not as large as Salem, yet it was a high honor. The Senate gave Steen a rising ovation, also. Hartley Heads Counties Assn. Marion County Judge Rex Hartley was named president of the Association of Oregon Coun ties Friday by the executive com mittee oi the group which met at the courthouse here. Judge Harlley replaces Judge James McBean of Benton County who had been ordered by his physician to give up the presi dency of the state group. The Marion county judge's election was in keeping wilh association practice of having the president come from west of the Cascades in alternate years. Purpose of the meeting was to discuss legislation of interest to the stale's counties. Judge F. L. Phipps, executive secretary of the association, ex plained that usual practice was for the executive committee to meet before the legislative ses sion began and later after it was in progress to discuss measures which had been proposed. Today s meeting was taking the place of both meetings, he said, because the earlier session had not been called. Discussion at the meeting this morning centered around a bill which was proposed but not yet introduced which would set up a juvenile department in county government. There was also dis cussion relating to problems of county lairs. . t ; , High School Students Get Brief Vacation Senior high school students in Salem were enjoying their an nual mid-semester holiday today wnue otner lower-grade students were in school as usual. I Salem high schools are on the semester basis and teachers are spending today bringing records up to date and perfecting new class schedules while students take what they feel is a well earned vacation. It'll he back-to-school Monday as usual with a brand new se mester lo wade through. Duncanson Heads Moore Business Forms Thomas S. Duncanson has been elected president of Moore Busi ness Forms, Inc., and of the par ent company, Moore Corporation. Limited, it was announced at the corporation's head office today. W. Norman Mcl.eod. former president, has been elected chair man of the hoard of directors. Moore Business Forms, Inc., pi oneer of tiie business forms indus try, has Pacific Division nlants at i. "J Salem and fcmery-j r . ,n 2 ,ne I, c'"m,m"n n"w "lales 22 plants '.mini coasi 10 coast and through- out Canada. Sales olfices are lo cated in more than 3O0 cities. Moialla IOOF Plans For 50th Anniversary MOLALLA William Averill presided at his first meeting as noM,. ..m.,,1 of Molnllo u-uw v iwiinrn. FMnn Aiitlin rw Wil. Uam t'ronrh woro namnl nn t)w "eats' committee for the next meeting. NOTE! IATUKBAT ma mm (Tl rnt th Traie (.) j jj Blast and Fire Follow Suicide LOS ANGELES m An Insur ance executives estranged wife was burned to death early Friday when her (35.000 home was se verly damaged by an explosion and fire, apparently fed by gasoline which police said was slopped over furniture in nearly every room. Officers found the body of Mrs. Yetta Weisstein, about 60, crjm pled in a half closet. She was alone in the house at the time. Police Capt. M. A. Stephenson said gasoline cans and matches were found by the body. He said the death probably is a suicide. The explosion, felt within a ra- diui of two blocks, blew out the living room window and knocked plaster from the ceilings of several rooms. McCarthy Raps Moss Decision WASHINGTON Hi Sen. Mc Carthy (R-Wis) said Friday the Pentagon has chosen a "rather ridiculous" solution in restoring Mrs. Annie Lee Moss to duty in a different job after she was sus pended twice as a possible security risk. "She is either a good security risk or a bad one." McCarthy told newsmen, and said the Pentagon should have been more definite in its decision. Secretary of Defense Wilson has ordered the 49-year-old Negro wo man placed back on the Army's Davroll in a nonsensitive job "with out access to classified informa tion." The Army said she would be assigned to a job in the office of its chief of unance. Wilson said the record of Mrs. Moss, whose suspension McCarthy had applauded, "does not support a conclusion that she is actually subversive or disloyal to (he United States." Wilson said it did contain "clear indication of cer tain derogatory information occur ring prior to 1946." Hit and Run Driving Reports Reach Police Two hit and run driving re ports were received by state police Friday evening In Marion county. A speeding vehicle hit her parked car about 9:45 p.m. while it was parked in front of her home, Mrs. Bernardina Rocco, Butteville, re ported. Both cars were heavily damaged, police said, but the hit and run car left the scene after the accident. The car ot Ivan Orval Gartner, 5325 South Pacific highway, had to be towed away after a collision with a hit and run car just north of the 12th street junction with the Pacific highway south of town, officers said. Gartner said the other car swerved in front of him and then kept on going after the accident. His two-year-old daughter suf fered a head bump in the crash but it apparently was not serious, police said. Portlander Named to Board on Retirement Named to represent the public on the public employes retire ment board is William P. Stalnak er, Portland, who succeeds W. C. Schuppel, Portland, who resign ed. Stalnaker, the treasurer of Standard Insurance Co., was nam ed to the job Thursday by Gov ernor Paul L. Patterson. Also appointed by the governor was W. I. West, Corvallis, to rep resent the Oregon State College School of Forestry on the advis ory committee for the Oregon Forest Products Laboratory. West succeeds Dean Paul M. Dunn who resigned. Say Nationalists Bombed British Ship TOKYO i. - Peiping Radio Sat- unlay quoted the captain of the suken British freighter Edendale os saying Nat: B Nationalist planes swept down to 2rH) feet of his ship in Swatow Ilarhor and "deliberately bombed" it although it earned con spicious British markings. Britain Friday protested the sirking of the 1.717-ton freighter in Wednesday's raid on Swatow. The Nationalist Defense Ministry on Formosa said it was investi gating the sinking. Its officials previously contended that t h e freighter must not have been dis playing British flags. NOW PLAYING mm FRtD CLARK SHEfiEE hOUTH 2ND BIG HIT DANA 1 imnmiA AflUKtHi V DomiKEO HEY KIDS! Vaaerrew 4 I t. K mi You're of Age If Married Judge Says PORTLAND tyfl A city judge said here Thursday that if a per son is old enough to be married he i-- old enough to h ly an alcohol ic drink. Judge John J. Murchison said he believes the Stale Liquor Con trol Commission is wrong in re quiring a person to be 21 before he can buy a drink. Murchison cited state law, say ing that a person is deemed to have reached his or her majority upon being married. All this came up because Mrs. Joyce Whitmore, 18, was accused of buying drinks here and of fal sifying her age in doing so. Murchison found her guilty, but let her go without penalty, saying. "V is a technical violation, but brought on to some extent by the liquor commission's refusing to recognize the law." Soviet Output Quotas Filled MOSCOW vn Pravda announced Friday the Soviet Union fulfilled its 1954 industrial production plan 103 per cent but said that three sections of the Soviet economy failed to meet their quotas. The Communist Party newspap er, devoting much of its issue to a statistical report of the nation's progress last year, listed the three delinquents as: forestry, 93 per cent of quota: fisheries 92 per cent and meat and milk products, 97 per cent. The paper added that a number of individual factories, mines and oil fields failed lo meet their tar gets because they did not work with the "necessary rhythm." Pravda said these branches "produced a major part of their goods at the end of one month and permitted lowering production beginning the next month." "This led to enormous losses in working time and equipment," the paper reported. March of Dimes Events at Woodburn WOODBURN "March of Dimes" events in the Woodburn area during the final week of the 1955 campaign will open with a "dime throw" by the girls PEP club Friday night at the Wood-burn-Canby basketball game at the local high school gymnasium. The Cub Scout Boy Scout "Mile of Dimes" on Front street will be continued Saturday afternoon. The drive was halted last Satur day by rain. The local American Legion auxiliary is holding a food sale Saturday at the Woodburn . food market with all proceeds going to the fund. ! Next week the annual! "Mothers' March on Polio" will j be conducted on Thursday night, Jan. 27, between 7 and 8 o'clock. Friday, January 28, a benefit bas ketball game has been tentative-! ly scheduled and Saturday eve-' ning a benefit dance is planned at the Woodburn armory. The Woodburn junior chamber of commerce is sponsoring the drive in Woodburn with Armand Ball as chairman. Activities for the campaign in other North Marion county areas include a benefit dance at Don ald, Saturday, Jan. 22: the! Mothers' March at Hubbard, Don ald, St. Paul and Gervais, Jan. ! 27, benefit dances at Brooks and St. Paul January 28. ! E. A. Buchanan of Woodburn is chairman for the drive in the North Marion county area. Bond Issue Sold For Crowfoot School LEBANON The $183,000 bond isstip of Crowfoot school district, No. 89C, has been pur chased by the First National Bank of Portland, announces George Evans, school superinten dent. The income will go into a new , building at Crowfoot and a multi-! purpose room at Waterloo. Pre-, liminary plans for both buildings have been approved, Evans said.. Basis of the bond purchase is1 to provide interest cost of 2.2062 per cent to the district. They will mature in 10 years with the last: five years callable, the superin- tendent stated. NOW PLAYING! itOQERS t OI.OK CO KKAflKK ' I im nil 4 5 fcJ& Hayes Figured In Spy Scandal WASHINGTON Hi The Air Force Friday ordered Col. Pat rick W. Hayes to show cause why he should not be dismissed from the service for associating in Ger many with a woman who has been convicted of spying for Hussia. The announcement was the first public identification of the Air Force officer whose associations had been mentioned in the case. The woman is Miss Irmgard Schmidt, a German national. She was convicted and sentenced to five vears in West Berlin on Nov. 21, after a trial in the high com missioner s court. Haves is now assigned to Air Force headquarters command at Boiling Field. Washington. The Air Force announcement said that an exhaustive investi gation had revealed no evidence that Hayes or any other Air Force person had given any classified lnlormation lo Miss senmiai, eun er intentionally or unintentially. The Air Force said also Hayes returned to the United States sev eral months before the occurance of the events which led to the ar rest of the German woman. The Air Force said that although there was no indication Hayes provided Miss Schmidt with classified in formation, its investigation "did raise questions concerning the of ficers judgment and conduct. MOLALLA FOLK ILL MOLALLA Mrs. Sylvia Lytle who has been ill in bed for the past several weeks is reported to be unimproved tnis week. Ld Hel ser, taken to Silverton hospital early last week after a heart at tack, is reported to be slowly im proving but unable to be up. He may be brought home next week, but will have to remain quietly in bed several more weeks. Fire insurance companies paid 220 million dollars in claims after the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906. oscar harm eksteinji ocorols don't Fj want rMti 4jC 0SCAR HAMMERSTEIN'S -PLIS - ON STACK UN Abe Snpcrstcin "Harlem Globetrotters Varieties of 11)55" WITH EARL (FATHA) HINES His Dccca Recording Orchcstrn CISSIF. I!OSK Tnvn nunc U. ot 111. C'ollcRinte Sonjfstrcss TONY PONCE Sensational" Rasque Opera Star JACQl'ES COHDON Vnicyclist Jugling I'hennm TONY I.AVEl.I.l Yale's Concert Accordionist KING and ZElilTA America's Foremost Mentalists Xorlh Salem Kioh School Auditorium TI kUY .S,,:'l $"" 1111.1,1. O. 0. .) katurrfay night at Hie Hieh S;.mire Uj Salem Junior Lebanon Driver Sent to Jail Again ALBANY Virl Hampton, 29, Lebanon, had no more than com pleted a 40-day Linn county jail sentence Tuesday, when he was returned to serve another 45 day term. Hampton's second sojourn was Imposed on him by Judge Harvey Wight of Lebanon justice court for driving while his operator's license was suspended. Judge Wight also imposed a $100 fine. The first conviction was on a similar charge and a $100 fine was levied at that time also, but Hampton escaped it by means of a pauper's oath. The second charge was pending when the first conviction took palce. Adventist to Hear Speaker Saturday SILVERTON Edwin Hyatt, elder, is announcing that a Sa lem speaker will be present Sat urday at the 11 a.m. worship hour for the Silverton Seventh Day Adventist church at Second and Park streets. Preceding the 9:30 a.m. Sab bath school period will be an 8:30 o'clock teachers' meeting. At 9:15 a.m. there will be singing of hymns. The 9:30 Sabbath school study theme is "Forgive ness Through Faith." The topic for the visiting speaker at the 11 o'clock wor ship hour is a phase of the gen eral theme, "Religious Liberty." Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. there will be Bible study and prayer service. MT. ANGEL CLINIC MT. ANGEL The county health doctor will be at the Well Child clinic to be held here Tuesday. Jan. 25, at 1 p.m. at the Legion Memorial nail. Mrs. K. T. B - senius is in charge of details and appointments. STARTS TODAY! bizxt THE SMASH ' BROADWAY HIT NOW EVEN GREATER ON THE SCREEN! CinemaScopE $ COLOR by DELUXE The Most Entertaining and Exciting Theatrical Attrac tion Ever Presented on Any Staoe! Presents . . . Chinese Balancing Marvels 1 1 ADDA 11UOOKS Sepia Movie and Recording Star MASON' & ANDERSON Now Orleans Dancing Duo COATES & DOI.OHES Top Trampoline Team TIIE ROMANOS nilOS. Comedv Acrobatic Wonders W, JI.V. l" T '"dune Available at Stevens 4 Sons, end School. ' Chamber of Commerce PrtltJ Ro4 f Horrfc Citv