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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1926)
THUHSRAYIOBNINO, AUGUST: 5 W&m SIXTH CONSECUTIVE YEAR THE DAILY STATESMAN dedicates two or more oases each Week in the interests of one of the fiftv-two to a hundred basic industries of the - - W I . - i I oalem district. Letters and articles from people with vision are solicited. This is your page. Help make Salem grow. . , . . '.I v BiLEM : "DISTRICT INDISTFSIB .. i - ... , ' MTiniHl.. MM I. Illllll II HI I I II IIIIIM 111 IHM IIIIIIM -III' I I'm Tt IW1 f" It TTT TWTII " ' - 5 - : l "1 ' : . : i : ' ' I I I V S it IV h 1 HER PRODUCTS SEIST TO ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD AOVEHTISE SALEM - The Value and Variety of Her Manufactured and, Prepared Products Are Constantly on the Increase and Bound to Grow Greater Every Year Salem Has Many Ben- ems rrom Being ine biaie uapitai, but More Because of Her Diversity of Crops and the Making Up of the Raw Products From the Land Here A long, long time ago, Salem was called a "slow town," be cause her people depended largely upon the business that came from the Tact -that this city was the state capital in common with a few other "slow towns" that were capitals of states t But that ancient history. Ka lem still has the slate capital, and this is of over increasing import ance. Witn the 'tremendous growth of the fcuyfiiess of. the state. But Salem Is. now principally a manu facturing and marketing and ship ping and. banking city, preparing and handling and. forwarding the fast growing volume of raw ma terials produced on the land with in her trading district. Rome years ago a writer on this point said: , ,, "For more than half a century Salem hadn't much to boast about save Its climate and its wide streets and its state capital. The climate was good enough for those who lived here that was before the days of general touring, and the climate brought in no money. The wide streets saved a few am bling nags from collision and gave the down-towners . a little longer to walk to and from their meals. The real big asset was the state capital, with it3 Jobs. Its society. Its easily-gotten payroll. Even if public wages were not very high, they were just as low in trade and industry; and the state wage, be ing as certain as the proverbial death' or taxes,, made a coraforta .ble Ipcal: asset.- Salem, was rea wonaWy content, with what the state pdured into the local coffers. Great Change Came , "The climate ' and the wide streets, and the state payroll all remain i but other sources have been found for revenue that put all the old time resources into the limbo of the inconsequential so far as figures go. Salem has be come an industrial city, a manu facturing city with actually scores of establishments that ship their ' roods all over the nation, or all j over the world, and make the old- timej-s who remember Salem only as a school and a political and a social town wonder if they haven't changed the name." A Long List Since the above was written, the same thing has been going on steadily; the same expansion or Salem as an industrial city. Our prunes have gone out under brands that have advertised Sa lem far and wide, and so have all of our other fruits. The Spaulditg lumber company is manufacturing many cars of lumber for export, everv week fhls ia in addition to the lumber sold for local use. The annual shipments would make up a train many miles long. The Spaulding lumber Isn't trademarked. eTery board: but the shingles and some of the other products are so mark ed in the package, and the cars bear the company name and the nalne of Salem. The value of the Spaulding products, and Its annual payroll. Is so much better than the old time single output of politi cians and state house wages, that nibody need to talk about "the good old days" in Salem before there was smokl and ashes and a factory atmosphere! The old days were "the bunk" from the stand point of a city for people to livft, iu- even though there were noliti- names millions and millions of cans and ca.ses and ia-kages an nually. (Our canners alone use 'away above 20.000,000 cans an nually. One of our eighj canner ies has this season put up over 240.000 cans of fruit in a single day.) The Thomas Kay Woolen mills does a business amounting to sev eral hundred thousand dollars a year. The name "Oregon Wool ens." is the staple all over the I'nited States; especially in all the sections where hard wear and warmth ana requisites. While the Kay woolens are not so brand ed, yard by yard, they are adver tised as "Oregon Woolens." and they bring to the state a prestige not enjoyed by woolens from any other mill seel ion in the world. The Salem Iron Works, founded in Salem about (JO years ago, has grown into a really big enterprise. It markets a large output each year under the label "Salem. Ore gon." This includes drag saws, centrifugal pumps, prune dryer stoves, canning machinery, etc. Th" Producers Canning and Packing association of Salem puts out many thousands of cases of canned goods annually. Both con tainers and individual tans carry the label "Made in Salem," except for a a small percentage that is sold to various contracting distri butors and marketed under their own personal labels. The Gideon Stolz vinegar; works have been shipping train-1 cal Jobs for the lucky partisan, and aa occasional heart-rending turn over that almost broke the whole community's heart. Some Escape : Some years ago a law was passed by the Oregon legislature, co'riteniplating the stamping of every package .of Oregon fruit with the fact that the frnit was grown in Oregon. It looked like an Ideal way to force the name "Oregon" into the eyes and the mouths of the world as the origin al fruit-producing section. But the law was partially nullified by a rider that exempted from this provision all the fruits packed un der the name of a buyer wishing a special pack under hist brand and name. It allows the local canners and packers to put, on the labels of any such concerns, and It is no required to use the name "Oregon" on; their packages. Tader Oregon Labels The'great bulk of all the fruits and yegetables packed here how erer. tos. s1 under, . Oregon loads of vinegar every year; in barrels, in bottles and containers of every marketable size. It is one of the oldest and one of the most progressive factories of the kind and in the six-figure class every year. The growth of the small, factory-prepared household package for food of every kind has grown steadily every year for a number of years past until now the bottled vineear business has reached huge proportions. The Stolz company has the Salem name prominent on all its exports. Buttercup ice cream factory has built up a business that runs Into big money for their frozen dain ties, shipping ice cream, sherbet and Ices all over the central Wil lamette valley, using the Weath erly packages. An immense business Ir. carried on by the Oregon Packing cor poration at the Twelfth street can jiery. This factory in busy times has hundreds of employes with payrolls of glK.unu and more weekly. About the same volume of busi ness is done by the great Hunt Bros. Co. cannery on Front street. This company has a huge factory, and employs several hundred workers during the busy season. It is among the best equipped can neries In the world. A surprisingly thrifty little bus iness is the Oleason Glove works, at 14 55 Oak street, Salem. This unassuming company has succeed ed in building up a really fine ex port trade, and all its wares carry the Oregon and Salem name on the packages. W. W. Rosebraugh puts out a considerable quantity of- foundry stuff bearing the Salem label. His stoves and furnaces are made in wholesale quantities, and sold all along the coast, from Mexico to British Columbia. It would not be boastful, per haps to list The Statesman as one of the real manufacturing indus tries of Salem, that has helped materially In carrying the name of Salem beyond the city limits. The Statesman has an annual pay roll of approximately $150,000; it employs at rush times upwards of 100 people in its various depart ments, and it sends its magazines and Its printed goods all over Ore gon, and the west. There is but oneofher brick and tile factory in Oregon to fair ly rank with the big plant of the Salem Brick & Tile company. Its drain tile, hollow tile for buildings, and brick, both plain and orna mental, give a tremendous ton nage to the railroads and furnish materials for building all over the alley. The factory is old. in lo cation, bat new in personnel and in its np to the minute efficiency. The Oregon Gravel company, at 1400 North Front street. Is put tin out an extensive line of ce ment products brick, drain tile, road culverts and chimney blocks, and various specialties, with a constantly increasing and develop ing line. It furnishes gravel for the roads and for local building purposes; but the manufacturing end promises to far outrun this crude-material service. The Starr Fruit Products com pany has one of its largest plants here, with its cannery output, car rying the name of "Oregon" save the small proportion that Is sold under other contract labels. The Northwest Canning com pany, affiliated with the Phez and Northwest Fruit Products com pany has a wonderful new can nery on South Liberty street. It is the very last word in factory ef ficiency ami equipment. Closely connected, physically and mana gerially, is the Northwest Fruit Products company and its national loganberry juice business. The juice has a national sale. TI. S. Gile and company, and the Willamette Valley Prune as sociation, with headquarters cm South High street, do a business in dried fruits running into the hundreds of thousands of dollars annually. AH their products are "Made in Oregon." and they glad ly tell the world of the fact. They handle prunes and loganberries. The DraEer Fruit company. with three packing plants in Ore gon, is one of the largest of the independent companies in tin stale. Its largest plant and gen eral office is at Salem. It handles dried fruits prunes, logans, cher ries and puis out a very large quantity of these in small, household-sized packages under the Salem-Oregon brand. Perhaps the biggest exporting firm or organization in Salem is the Oregon Pulp & Paper com pany, the hip: paper mill estab lished in Salem seven Tyears ago. It was put into operation a little less than six years ago. on what was then thought lo be an ade quate production wale. However, the demand has been so great that the mill euuinment has been in creased steadily: there has been no moment that more equipment was not being installed to speed up and increase production to meet the demand. It is just now adding buildings and machinery that will double jts output. Its greatest specialty is glassine and fruit wrapping paper, which goes out literally by train loads, espec ially to the California and south western markets; though much stuff is shipped to the Mississippi valley. Its exports run up into the million class. The company sends the name of Salem. Oregon, to many thousands of buyers and users every year.. The superior quality of the Salem product, due to the excejlent materials avail able and to the fact that the mill is the latest and most efficient in the northwest, makes Its adver tising especially effective. lAst Not Complete The alove list is by no means complete. There are a number of other concerns in Salem, send ing their products, some of them, long distances. The state flax plant puts Salem on all its bags of flax seed: on its ground seed sent to the drug trade all over the country, and on its shipments of tow and fiber to the furniture factroies and other fac tories. National Advertising There has been a good deal of national advertising by such Sa lem concerns as the Phez com pany: the King's Food Products company; the Oregon Growers Cooperative Association, under the Mistland and Firland and other brands, of prunes and other fruits atid nuts. All this national ad vertising will no doubt be resumed and continued and increased in the years to come. Its cumula tive value Is worth a great deal, and will not be allowed to be lost. The Salem Chamber of Com merce does a good deal of adver tising with booklets and in vari ous other ways. Our Cherry City Flour mill manufactures and advertises a long list of specialities, includ ing poultry and stock feeds. Our mint growers advertise our superior product of oil of pepper mint, going into wide markets. Our Jersey breeders and other livestock breeders make the name of Salem and of Oregon famous. Our packing house (Valley Packing Co.) Bends the name of its wonderful Cascade brands of meats far and wide. Our onions and onion sets tell Dates of Slogans in (Iti Weekly (With a few possible changes) I og.ui berries, OWoUr I, 9'.5 IVunes, October 8 dairying, October 1.1 Flax, October -'J. Filbert, October 29 Walnuts, Novembjer 5 Strawberries, November 12 .pple, November Hi Jtaspbfi-ries, oventtcr 26 Mint, December tfj Beans, Htc, Dece'nlxr lO lilacklM-rrie s, IeciMnler 17 Cherries, J )e-euibe!r 21 " I'eurs, ! mber :ii (Joosefjerries, January 7, 192ft Corn, January 14! Celery, January 21 .Spinach, Ktc, January 28 Onions, Ktc, February 4 Potatoes, Ktc, February 11 February 1H Poultry and Pet Stock. Feb. 2." City Beautiful, Ktc, March 4 Great 4 ows, March I I Paveif Highways, March 18 Hejwl 1fttiicf, March 2.1 Silos, Ktc, April 1 , leg:umes, April 8 ; Astaragus, Ktc, April 1.1 Grab's, Ktc, April 22 lru;; Garden, April 2t Daily Statesman Statesman) Sugar Beets, Sorghum, Ftc, May (i, 1926 Water Powers, May IS Irrigation, May 20 Mining, May 27 land, Irrigation, Etc., June 3 Floriculture, June 10 Hop, Cabbage, Ktc, June 17 Whole salitig; and Jobbing June 24 Ciicutiibe rs, Ktc., July 1 lilies, July 8 Goats, July 15 " Schools, Ktc, July 22 Sheep, July 29 National Advertising, August 5 Seeds. Ktc. A u ti list 12 Livestock, August H Grain and Grain Iroluets, Aug ust 26 Manufacturing, September 2 Automotive Industries, Sept. 1) Woodworking, Ktc, Sept. 16 Paper Mills, Sept. 2:1, H26 (Hak copies of the Thurs day edition of The Daily Ore gon Statesman are on hand. They are for sale at 10 cents each, mailed to any address. Current copies f cents.) THIS WEEK'S SLOGAN DID YOU KNOW That the concerns of the Salem dis trict doing national advertising in varied forms are put ting the name of this city and the advantages of this section favorably before millions of people in this coun try, and of all other countries where the printed word is read; that the result of this national advertising is ex tending to wide markets the manufactures of products of our soil, making a growing demand for ail that can be raised in this district, and thus indirectly in many ways Increasing the rising prosperity of both city and country and making for ja (iibralter solidity and stability of bus iness and a sure! increase of population in city and coun try; that national advertising, backed by our quality products, proper distribution methods, and sales energy, is the insurance policy of Salem's future wealth and greatness? than all else, to not 1h able to count upon any price as a certain ty. Where Is (lie Man? Here is a wonderful field for the right man. He should put his life into the enterprise. He should be hacked by a large number of the best growers. There are a number of ways to organize. It might be done by the growers owning the plants, and operating them through a board of directors chosen from among their number, as some of our suc cessful canneries are being oper ated, taking the raw products of their members. Or it might be done in any one of a half dozen other schemes for operating coop eratively. Or it might be done through straight stock selling, with a continual emnhasis nnon selling to growers andiemployees, like the plans of some of the big gest service corporations. The opportunity is here. It is a great prospect. It is capable of great good, to every person with any kind of a stake, if only a job, in this whole section. We have the man; honest, un selfish, with a vision: willing to work hard and long hours, and singularly able . jn organization. We have many such men. Which shall he chosen? Who shall say. "Here am I; choose me?" THE UnW JUICE BUSH mini i-r- -vr nr sum Bin nflllfIT 1 1 1 1 1 I HI IU bt AIIIUIVU UUUUi WILL BE REVIVEO FOR INDUSTRY'S GOOD I It Is Needed as an Additional Outlet to Keep the Industry Growing, and in Case of Heavy Rains in Picking Time, and to Take Up Loose Ends of the Crop at the Last Part of Picking Time Is a Wonderful Product i ADVERTISING IS 10 IS THE LOGilBEW BY FORD TO ORGANIZE THIS GREAT INDUSTRY? ( There Is a Wonderful Field Here for His Work and His Genius, and He Would Be Worth Millions of Dollars a rear 10 me baiem uisinct Aione it is a iasK unai lenging the Efforts of a Big Man And He Is Here Now (The following was written for the annual national advertising Slogan number of The Statesman of a year ago. It is all still true and timely; more nmely. than last year. If you read it last year, it may pay you to reread it this year. You may be the man meant : ) (font iu up. I on p(Tf 0.) The Bake-RIte Bakery. Busj every day supplying best home( with bakery goods of all kinds; baked In a kitchen clean as your own. 345 State St, () Slate surface rooffnr rmlhxi over your old shingles. We bare orer 200 Jobs In Salem. Nelson Broa.. plumbers, sheet metal work, .855 Cbemeketa. - .... () Wanted, a man A man to organize the logan berry industry and put loganberry juice on the map in a big way. Wanted, the Henry Koifd of the lo ganberry industry. He would be worth many millions of dollars a year to the Salem district. The loganberry is the wonder berry. It gives, new ' flavor to tempt the jaded appetite of the world. It gives the tate that lin gers. ! Jt Has Many tses The loganberry has I more uses than any other berry; imore ways of finding a market. Jt is going in cans in larger and larger ann ual packs. In lf)2 1 theuanned lo ganberries packed in the Pacific northwest were larger than either the apple or pear packj and more than blackberries, strn wherries and raspberries combined. There were 36G.073 cases of loganber ries put up in the Pacjiric north west in 1924. and the l!)25 pack will show a very large; gain. In one day, one Salem cannery put up this year 163.000 Cans of lo ganberries. Then the barrel pael of logan berries has been growing fast. Very few loganberries Were dried this year, but all the old stock of past years has been takn eagerly. Some are frozen in cans and sent to the big cities for the pie trade. I'ses of the Juices Hut the big thing f6r general marketing is the juice of th.e lo ganberry, for it has such a large number of uses. The Oregon Ag ricultural college, a few years ago. passed upon a lot of recipes for using loganberry juice.: Tney in clude: j Loganberry sherbets!' tee and ice creams. loganberry milk sherlet. lo ganberry lacto. loganberry punch. loganberry frozen phddine. lo- gannerry mousse. j loganberry jelly, fruit cocktail. Loganberry juice with whloned cream, or marshmalloW sauce; or " ' y ccrems, qr aaaea to icea tea, or to hot tea. Loganberry puddings, many kinds, loganberry taDioca cream. Loganberry mould; snowball pudding. Loganberry pudding sauces and hard sauces. loganberry sundae, loganberry dressing. Loganberry candies of many kinds, and gelatine desserts. Loganlerry highballs, rickeys, juleps, lemonades. Loganberry sponges of all kinds. It is good hot or cold. It has no seasons, no climes. It is uni versal, perennial. And In the Sick Room Especially is loganberry juice great in the sick room. There are a hundred appetizing, colorful ways to serve it. It is good for that tired feeling. It will stay the ravages of old age. In the cakes, icings and frostings, there is nothing to compare with logan berry juice. There is no other plo just as good as" loganberry pie. Jt is bet ter than the nectar of the gods of Olympus. It is a dish to set be fore a king or a commoner. loganberry juice is a hundred things, a thousand things more than a mere drink. It is a color ing, a frosting, an icing, and all the things the dainty housewife or the accomplished chef may want to make of it. Will Hear Advertising The loganberry will bear adver tising; national advertising. So will loganberry juice. The right man to organize the loganberry industry here would make a fraction of a cent a pound pay for his services and for the advertising, and he would from the first year be able to guarantee a reasonable price to the grower tt the berries. He would be able to stabilize the industry. It would be a good deal better for the grower if he were guaran teed a fair price every year than to have a high price one year and a price below the cost of produc tion part of the time and, worse Nash Furniture Cn taVoa tha lead with low prices on chairs, rockers, tables, wood and steel beds, springs, mattresses. Saves you 25. 219 N. Com'l. () Sacks, sacks, sacks! 100 pound sugar sacks for sal at .Capital Bargain House, 225 Center street, tne Bargain Center of Salem. () GOOD I1ESTHT The Practice and Experience of the United States Rubber Company There are far more automobiles than bathtubs in use in the United States. This must mean that since automobiles and auto sup plies are bought by the masses in larger volume than bathtubs it is to the masses that selling effort must be directed. This means, of course, increased advertising. It means also the capitalization of a receptive state of mind. An out standing example of vigorous and successful advertising through an appeal to the psychological atti tude of the public is that of the United States Rubber company which last year recorded sales amounting to the gigantic sum of $206,000,000. The campaign schedule of this company for na tional newspaper advertising alone this year amounted to consider ably more than SI, 000, 000, which, of course, is a little less than 2 per cent of its last year's volume of business. This campaign is more remarkable since it was launched at a time when it seem ed that the British monopoly of crude rubber would make the product still higher. The United States Rubber com- pany. recognizes and declares newspaper advertising as the backbone of its business. There is neither city nor hamlet in the United States which supports a newspaper of any consequence in which this advertising does not appear and If newspaper adver tising is of so great value to this company it is obviously of value to the local dealers in tires in the same communities. Through this newspaper coverage both daily and weekly the United .States Rub ber company expects to reach 90,000,000 newspaper readers. In America and out of this advertis ing campaign with its expenditure of between $1,000,000 and $2, 000,000. this company alone ex pects to increase its sales at least fifty millions. In this campaign a comparatively new kind of ad vertising is introduced. In It conventional forms and state ments are discarded and direct ouestions such as any motorist might ask may he answered. These questions may be those which have passed in and out of mind no doubt during the owner ship of a car. They also give def inite information about rubber and tires. Every ad and every part of these ads are definite and of specific interest to auto own ers and prospective owners. In this' as in other campaigns put on by manufacturers on a gi gantic scale all over the country is testimony that advertising is es sential to business and that it pays. It is the. experience also that advertising is equally essen tial and profitable to dealers both large and small everywhere. A sum equal at least to 2 per cent of the annual business spent in newspaper advertising through local as well as national dealers Is pointed out by manufacturing and trade economists as an investment which produces the very best results. Before the World , war, logan berry juice was one; of Oregon's principal nationally i advertised products, and that ! part of tho loganberry industry was built up to a Doint where it was the larg- I est outlet for our growers in dis posing oi nieir crops, ami me mosi promising for a constant increase iu acreage. This was before the canning of loganberries, or the barreling of them, had assumed large propor tions. The principal outlets were then in the drying of them and tha pressing of them for their juice. Hut came the World war, and the great demand for canned fruits of .all kinds; and the prices of loganberries were shot up from j an average of less than 5 cents a I pound, to 10, 12, and even 14 I cents a pound perhaps higher in some cases. The price had been down as low as a cent and a frac tion a pound in some former years, before the juice industry got to going, and tons and tons of berries were left on the vines This happened again after the war, when the canning and barrel ing demands had languished, and the juice industry had been put out of the running, by the high prices. The Loju company and the' Phez company, the principal concerns engaged in the pressing and mar keting of loganberry juice, mere ed. and becapie the Phez company. and did a large volume of national advertising, in the principal mag azines, and in sending samples and in many other ways; with a big selling organization extending to many of the large cities of the country. It was going fine; look ed like a great winner in the na tional advertising field. But came the high berry prices, as stated, and the juice business had been built up on the idea of ber ries at 5 cents a pound, or there abouts. And the business was crippled, and- had to be re-organized, on a modest basis. It Is still being carried on. under the name of the Northwest Fruit Products company, and there is a considera ble demand from old customers, such as hotels, for the ice cream trade and other lines. This trade is being supplied regularly, but there is little chance to extend it without national advertising and an expensive national selling or ganization, which has not been at tempted again. Also, the King's Food Products company carried on a national ad vertising campaign on dehvdratefi loganberries, put up an attractive package, and had a" large trade That was also discontinued. The dehydrated loganberries are now off the map. But they are certain to come back, sooner or later, because they are a won derful product, and that branch of the business is basically economi cally sound. So loganberries, and loganberry juice, are destined to get back on to the nationally advertised pro ducts map, and to stay there. j These Outlets Needed! The loganberry industry is In good shape now. There was a de mand the past season for tho whole crop, from . tjfce fresh fruit shippers, and the barreling trade, and from the canneries the lat ter being the biggest demand.. The price was uniformly 5 cents a pound; remunerative, to growers of large per acre tonnage. And the dried berry demand took up all the slack, even to the tapering off time of the harvest, When the supply was not large enough to justify the canners to make runs on them. But the outlet of the dehydrat ed berry demand , is needed, to keep the industry growing, and the revival of the Juice Industry is especially needed, for the samo purpose, and to take up the slack at the end of harvesting time, In case the dried berry demand Is dull and to take care of the crop in case of heavy rains in picking time, rendering the berries too soft for the use of the canneries. The canning demand has beeny greatly stimulated by the market-' for canned loganberries in Great Britain. That country, both last year and the year before,, took about half the canned loganberry (Continued on pace 9.) XOTICK OF FIXAIi SETTI.FU MKXT: i j Notice Is hereby given that tho undersigned has filed in the Coun ty Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Marion his duly verified final account as adminis trator of the pstatn nf rii.nkcd. Troudt, deceased, and that said court has fixed Saturday, tho 28th day of August. 1926. at the hour of ten o'clock a. m. of said day, as the time, and the county court room In the county court house In Salem, in Marion county, Oregon, as the place for hearing said final iccount and all objections thereto. Dated at Salem, Oregon, this 17th day of July, 1926. WILLIAM TROUDT, Administrator of the Estate of Elizabeth Troudt. n.orf Ronald C. Glover, Attorney for Administrator. Salem, Oregon, jly 22-29; a 5-12-19 Notice of Intention to Improve Fifteenth Street Between Oak street and Mill Street. Garibaldi New $4 0,000 high school will be completed for Sep tember opening. 'n Notice is hereby given that the common Council of th rst Salem, Oregon, deems it necessary uu cipeuieni ana nereby declares us purpose and intention to im prove Fifteenth Street from tho north line of Oak Street to the sourn line or Mill Street, at the exnense of tho ahiit;nn. - cent property, excentine- the etroot - -- n - . w ana auey Intersections, the ex pense of. which will bei assumed by the City of Salem, hv l.rncrin said portion of said street to the established grade, constructing Portland t-ement concrete cur ha and paving said portion of said street with a six inch. Portland cement concrete navement ihirtv leei wiae in accordance with tha plans, specifications and estimates I. I , . "'"ui, which were aaopted by the Common Council. - Jnlv io 1926. now on file in tho nffi i . wB,mwx; w tfte City Recorder and which said plans, specifications and enHm.-jtoo are nereny referred to and made a part of this notice. The r Am mm. Council hereby declares its pur pose and intention to make the above described improvement by nu nirougn ine street Improve ment Department of the City of Salem. Written remonstrances may be wu wun me city Recorder of said City against the above pro- fwwu improvement within ten uays rrom the date of final publi luiiuu nereor. j By order of the Common fconn in mis zin aay of July, 1826. M. I'OULSEN. atv nAMjA. Date of first publication hereof is august 1, 19ZR. Date of final publication hereof wui oe August 13. 1926 u' AI'I'OIXTMKXT Notice is herehv riVOr, .t,i undersigned has been appointed by the County Court of ih of Oregon for ihe. County of Mar ion, as administrator nt ihn utui. of Harry II, "Hill., deceased, and that he has duly qualified as such administrator. All persons having claims against the estate of said decedent are hereby notified to present the same to me, duly veri fied, and With nroner vn.ichon 715, N. Capitol street, Salem, o'ro gon, within six weeks fmm ih date of this notice. Dated at Salem. Oree-on th-icr 29th day of July, 1926. M n. PTT w W"rrT Administrator of the Rntatn ' r.t Harry H. Hill. Deceased. July Z9-A5-12-19-26-S2 XOTICK OF HEARING OF FIXAL ACCOUXT In the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Marion Crmn t v In the Matter of the Estate of Paul oirod, Ueceased: I Notice is hereby riven that tha undersigned, as administratrix cf me estate or Paul Glrod, deceased, has filed her final nermnt n tho County Court for the stnto r rw gon for Marion county. Oregon, and that Monday., the 23rd day of jo, at me nour or i . f o clock In the - forenoon of said v V day and the court room of sald court has been flreH as the time and place for the hear ing of objections thereto and th? settlement thereof, at which ttm. any person interested in nh mu tate may appear, and file objec tions mereto in writing and con test the same. Dated - thla slot . t..i 1926; " 1 , IDA GIROD. Date nf first' mh1tj.ln T..1 22nd. 1926. ' Date Of last nnhltatnn Annef 19, 1926. ' . . s .al to 13 Inc. Jly 22-29; a 6-12-19. j J