" ' 1 ' ' 1 1 1 ' -''' ii- r iiir" ii ,' ' ,,..,;; , , , . Vol. 81, No. 1 Salem. Oregon Saturday Mqrninc, March 28, 1931 Section 3 BEAUTIFUL SALEM REWARDS VISION OF 1851 -i i All II I f r t 'i ,i- f , uVQ AH U '--.i I:! 'f ! K . . - I I -- I ; mi. v'1 ! . - - I i ?t - t N -i- - ' I i f ... rt 1 ' -'..' I i ... I - tVir- i f V - ..-y .'v i ' ; , I A ": f .- J '3 : r . V . ' 1,;. ... v- ; -s . i, .. . . - '' 1 . . ., - y. ; . " ' '7 ,'.y w y'r - ' ' " "- " r' 7 yy ' ,,"' - (4---L,"t'-" 'V"" yi ' ' iff " : V( - ' " tl Yf' -"y- r'j.-tr I fi..mJfuaiC.U-y-:' A . it- '-1-... T iT (T III . ' t!;HUfJIfc feirrLiJL --1 r KEW STATE OTFICE- EtTTLDTSfO AT TTPPER LEFT; STT . PRFME COURT BUILDING AT RIGHT. BOTH "ARE JCST EAST OF THE CAPITOT, BUILDISO AND ARE BETWEEN STATE ASV COURT STREETS. THE HAJTOATt- AT THE - SALEM- AIRPORT1 SHOWN AT LOWER LEIT. IN THE CENTER-18 THE WAITE MEMORIAL FOUNTAIN IN WlLI.SON PARK. TO THE RIGHT IS PARRISH" JUNIOR -HICH -SCHOOL. Iff THE CENTER IS AW AIRPLANE VIEW OF SALEM A3 IT NOW APPEARS. FLANKED BY A VIEW OP THE CAPITOL AND AN INTERIOR VIEW Ol THE EL8INORE THEATRE. i THE STATESMAN LOOKS BACKWARDAND THEN INTO THE FUTURE! WHAT will the next 80 years bring? Above all else they will bring change, transition, development. The cumbersome, te dious, in some ways ludicrou progress we have chronicled in the past, will be described again. We chuckle now at the Tiger fire crew of the decades gone; 80 years from now our laborious cars of today, our golf clubs, short skirts and Rotarians will seem" so odd, so remote so time-tarnished. ' ' 1 ; But the 80 years of Oregon history The Statesman has chron icled,' leaves no question that the equal distance ahead compared with that we have traveled, will see more rapid progress, far great er population, the continued diversity of occupation with manufac ture slowly, surely augmenting agriculture. Evenly more : trenchant is the call of the west of 1931 than the west of 1851 ; then there were the long plains to traverse, hard rivers to cross, the; Indians to replace, and rude pioneering to be done. Today a greater population still seeks the west a west of continued opportunity. Here the allure of youth is yet present. Here nature has been most generous. Farther on into the sun is the Orient," potential commercial neighbor for coming generations. The Statesman at 80 is an old man, seeing visions of what f our score years has brought to pass.-The; Statesman at 80 is a young man, dreaming dreams 'of greater realizations in the f pur score years which shall make the next span. Aged, but youthful, this realized anomaly of perpetual youth from venerable age, makes possible better service for1 this newspaper in its tomorrows.' -