PAGE SIX uNo Favor Sway Us: No Fear Shan AiceT ! From First Statesman. March 2S. 151! CHARLES A. Spbactie '-::" Editor and Publisher THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. ' Charles A. Sprague. Pres. - - - Sheldon F. Sackett, Secy. Member of the Associated Press j Tfcs Associated Press Is .sciusively eoUlled to the use Tor Pu""---Mob cf all oewe dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited la tbie pnpi. Oregon's Grazing Lands IN an address at Corvallis Wednesday night F. R. Carpen ter, administrator of the Taylor grazing aQtj criticised the i Oregon land board for leasing some 300,000 acres of its school lands in eastern Oregon to- former Senator Stanf leld s company at a rental of around 15 mills per acre. Carpenter expressed the fear-that the state was not cooperating with the federal government in its program for conservation in the grazing domain, that erosion would follow witn silting of thp Owvhpfi reservoir. I Investigation reveals the m a . - J in its leases nas insenea provisions wiic icanc mc tootv. to conform to the regulations of the department of the inter ior and to comply with the regulations and apply for the bene fits under the federal agricultural act. Specific protection is provided against over-grazing and running stock at the wrong season of the year. In thi3 regard Mr. Carpenter's criticism seems unfounded. j Another point in the current news is the objection to Stanfield's sub-leasing of part of the area. Some sections, it is said, he will sub-let for 10 cents an acre. This will show , him a big profit on the particular section ; but it must be real ized that there are vast areas of little value, where he can de rive no profit. Whether it is sound policy to allow sub-leasing this paper does not undertake to say ; but in making the lease the board accepted Stanfield's bid because it was the highest, and then allotted to small bidders all the land they asked for, srivincr to Stan field all the remainder. -1 , This grazing land problem is a tough one for the board to handle. The sections are scattered, (nos. 16 and 36 in each township). It is impossible to police them all; and it is not practical to fence them. The state is almost at the mercy of the occupants of the surrounding lands. What is needed is the blocking of these state lands into solid areas. The land board is undertaking such a project now; and the Taylor act is mandatory in that regard. Ma chinery is being set up for the appraisal of the state lands preliminary to making a sale or exchange with the federal government. Cong. Pierce has introduced a bill authorizing the federal government to buy the state school lands in the grazing area so theytmay be administered with the other pub lic lands. Something needs to be done; and something will be done &o the state will derive more from these lands than it has b$en able to in the past.' Oregon wants to cooperate with the federal government in long-time plans for rehabilitation of the range. But there is the problem of the immediate care of the lands. If they are not leased the neighboring stockmen will graze stock on them without making any payment. The Stanf ield lease will bring in some return ; and unless the terms are violated, will be in conformity with the standards being set up by the in terior department. I But the big problem is the blocking of the lands for bet ter use and more economical administration. Oregon hopes Mr. Carpenter will cooperate in solving that problem. - i Stalin Exterminates His Foes A few years ago when Lady Astor was visiting Russia she asked Dictator Stalin, bluntly, when he was going to quit killing people. The dictator somewhat taken aback by the direct inquiry, stammered a reply that the killing would continue "as long as necessary' The necessity appears to re main, because, not only have there been many executions even of the "old bolsheviks," jnen once high in communist councils, but the dictator has boldly declared the purge must continue. He said in a widely published speech i ! "It is quite clear these gentlemen (professional wreckers, diversionists, spies and murderers) should be destroyed, exter minated mercilessly as enemies of the working; class and ene mies of oar country." i Stalin concluded with pitiless brevity: "This is clear and does not demand further interpretation." Indeed it does not. The dictator of the USSR has served notice to the world and to internal factionists as well, that any who j deviate from complete submission to his will, to his "ideology," will be ruthlessly exterminated, even as were the tsarists, the old no bility, the intelligentsia of the early days of bolshevik rule. The internal traitors to the regime, according to btalin, areNthe Trotskyists. But if there are dissension and treason in such high places then it reveals a singular failure of the government to solidify public support after nearly 20 years of power. Since the charge against the suspects is frequently that of industrial sabotage, it reveals, if true, breakdowns in the industrial organization and administration. And if these charges are not true then Stalin's abuse of power through the legalized assassination of his political opponents ranks -With the worst tyrannies of history. Friends of the soviet ex periment are hard pressed for answers in these days. - License at Age 16 j store for them. The recent legislature has moved the age : requirement on issuance of drivers' licenses from 15 to 16. 'Now -see many jaws drop. These young Skeezixes will have to wait another 12 months before they jean drive le gally. . - - . . . Which reminds us of a few years ago when the legisla ture cut the age down from 16 to 15. News of the change was carefully concealed from one 15-year old we knew; but he would read the papers so one day there was a whoop and the jig was up and when the law went into effect in June he went over to get his driver's license. j There is this softening of the blow for the 15-year olds however. "Learners' permits" will be issued to persons age 15, good for 12 months. That lets the youngster drive provid ed there is an adult in the car, which is still quite a ways from the full freedom that youth now longs for. The reason assigned for making 16 the minimum age is to conform with neighboring states which have that limit; and because statistics show that most drivers in accidents lie within the 15-24 age limits, and it was believed that cutting off one year might reduce the accident total. fj ee mmb Apropos of the proposal of the Colorado legislature to name one of Its surplus mountains (one that AAA has not yet plowed nnder). "Mount Franklin Rooaerelt the Oregon lan offers the opinion. In Tiew of the wiping out of HooTer's name from Boulder dam, that It Is too soon, "much too soon," to be naming a mountain after a man. Bat in Mr. Rooserelt's case, surely the Oreconian doesn't now expect that Mr. RooseTelt will go to the mountain. j ; ' - A young Denrer girl "was lured to BeTerly Hills to become the "Virgin Mary in a "new Bethlehem" by one who claimed to be "as Istant God" and follower of Father Divine, the Harlem negro who poses as God himself. Scratch the surface ef many of these quack prayer-jerkers and you find a lecherous seducer who uses the cloak f religion to beguile his Tictiras. . , - . Judge Wimberly baa tent a first offender on a tour of the state prison In hopes ft wUl shock him so much be will refrain from forg ing any more cheeks The trip may be a lesson; but all too tew of those who get actually seat up for a term learn the lesson and keep ut of jail in the future. Prisons are full of repeaters who simply rant go straight, , I Re present Lire Pitman now proposes to bare the government acquire ownership of the 12 federal reserve banks. Prom the amount t government bonds the federal reserve banks are carrying It almost looks as though the banks would own the whole country pretty soon. mm - - " sussuaea ssubsusbi I . fact that the state land board j .1 . ... W Ak tAMIt east V A 1 O flO Bits for ' Breakfast " By R. J. HENDRICKS Site of lower " j , 4-2-37 Astor fort on the Willamette river now surely known: must be marked: . . . (Continuing from" yesterday: ) The Lueier donation land claim extended away above the east end of the Newberg bridge. Lueier was a good judge of land, and he and his Indian wife were entitled to 640 acres, a mile square, but not necessarily a square mile. That Is, they could take it aa they pleased, with numerous corners if they fan cied like the one on Salem prairie with' 36 corners. The Lueier donation claim land is the same as that of the Kaiser bottom, or South bottom, or Mis sion bottom. It is rich land. . It must hare been deeply under water in the Hoods of 1861-2, and 1S90, and the other high Water years. So was the site of the low er Astor fort. The Astor called the distance 29 miles from their lower and upper forts. Not quite so far now, by paved highway. By the way, mission trail from Campment du Sable to Cheraar way ran by the lower Astor fort. That is, from the sand encamp ment to the place of the willows, where was the Lee mission 10 miles by water below the site of Salem. That Is, from Champoeg state park to some hundreds of paces above the Marion county end of the Wheatland ferry. S Frank E. Osborn has found sev eral relics "of the travel by that trail, including an old fashioned pistol with its wooden handle partly rotted away, etc. From 1834 on, everybody who did not go by boat traveled that trail including Indians and whites, explorers and trappers, and, later, settlers. Capt. Sutter came that way. So did Slacum, and Lieut., afterward Commodore Wilkes. So did Lieut. Peel, son of Sir Robert Peel. Great Britain's great premier, whose visit here was a gate that let out a third war between our country and that of our English cousins; but for whose coming that conflict would surely have eventuated. The sand encampment was the place where bateaus and other heavier boats met land travel go ing Into the heart of the Willam ette valley. It was where the machinery for the mission mills was unloaded to be hauled to Salem's site with wagons; where the Hudson's Bay company erected a warehouse at which to receive and store for shipment by water the grain, of the early settlers. . S So. for a brief time old Cham poeg was the largest town in Ore gon, with a Masonic building, hotels and stage stations, saloons and gambling houses a real pioneer metropolis, with perhaps 200 houses In all and every last one of them washed down the river in the flood of 1861-2. In 1847, Thomas Cox started with his stock of goods in 13 cov ered wagons from Illinois to open a store In Champoeg; but he found business overdone there, and so came to Salem and opened the first store here diagonally across from the present States man building. V In the Issues of March 10-17 and 26-27, 1935, this column had a review of the celebrated books of Franchere, Cox and Ross, mem bers with John Jacob Astor of the Pacific Fur company which In 1811 founded Astoria, Oregon, by erecting their fort and trading post there. Each of the three books told of the operations of the am bitious enterprise, the first com mercial undertaking by Americans or even white men we6t of the Rockies and north of the Spanish (California) line,- excepting by Russians in Alaska. Referring to the year 1812. Franchere had In -his book these paragraphs: . "a "I . . . returned on the 16th of November, to Astoria, where the want of fresh provisions began to be severely felt, so that several of the men were attacked with scurvy. "Messrs. Halsey and Wallace naving been sent on the 2 3d, with 14 men. to establish a trading post, and Mr. McDougal being con fined to his room by sickness, Mr. Clapp and I were left with the entire charge of the post at Astoria." W V Everybody knows that the clerks of the Astoriana. William Wallace and J. C. Halsey, with 14 men, who left Fort Astoria Nov. 23, 1812, as Indicated, came to near the site of what are now the northern suburbs of Salem and erected In the wilderness the first building of white men In present Oregon, or in the Pacific north west, outside the vicinity of Astoria. It was the Astor fort, on laad that is now the Bush farm, on Wallace prairie, named for Wil liam Wallace, one of the clerks. Men called clerks in trapping cus tom were the men fn charge; man agers, responsible for the enter prise Under the direction of the clerks, the 14 men traded, hunted and trapped that winter and, oa the Willamette river, at a point somewhat over a mile west of their fort, they loaded Into boats 17 packs of beaver akins 13C0 of them and 32 bales of dried venison and the precious cargo arrived, at Astoria May 25, 1813; some of the first fruits of the Astoria enterprise to reach that headquarters post, 1 - This afte is well established, and it fs the place of other events, too, that give It high historical values. (Continued tomorrow.) Child Has Fin WEST STATTON. April .1 The sman daughter, Aletha, of Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Stewart, is 111 at her home with intestinal flu. She la reported some better. tThe OREGON STATESMAN. Salem, CM IW, be f li 1 I Wortrf rpm i iil?"--!:.1 Mf fir mmf Sl & ' -3k . M On the By DOROTHY The Supreme Court Decisions THE Supreme Court, less than a year ago, declared the New York State minimum wage law for women un constitutional by a five-to-four de cision. Today by a fiveto-four de cision it declar ed the Washing ton mini mum wage law consti tutional. The former decision was hnaaJ nnAII uotet&v Tbope a previous' deci sion in the Adkins case, made in 1923 by a court whose personnel was not identical with the present one. A minority of the court last year believed that the New York statute was distinguishable In ma terial ways from the Adkins case. However, the Court of Appeals in New York Itself had held the New York act to be unconstitutional, so that the Supreme Court was upholding the decision of a state court in regard to a state law. Now, in sitting upon the Wash ington case. It had to consider a law which the Supreme Court of that state had upheld as constitu tional, the state court in Wash lngon having refused to regard the Supreme Court decision In the Adkins case as determinative. There was, therefore, the case of the Supreme Court of a state be ing in conflict with the Supreme Court of the United States, and this was certainly a reason why the Supreme Court should recon sider, especially as Us decision had been almost universally de plored throughout the country on a perfectly non-partlcan . basis, and the decision had caused the suggestion of an amendment tQ be written In the platform of both political parties. In ' no case, therefore, can the changed decisioa of the Supreme Court be regarded as yielding tp partisan political pressure. : . i The most Interesting and en couraging feature of the new de cision is that It gives a fresh in terpretation te the due process clause of the. Fourteenth Amend ment, an Interpretation which may, by inference, be extended te the Firth Amendment, The Fifth Amendment restrain the Federal government from depriving ettl sens of life, liberty or property without due process of law. The Fourteenth Amendment restrains the states in the same way. It has been the contention of liberals a contention which his column be lieves to be sustained by ; many court decisions that the due process clause has . often been used to protect property In a too narrow sense of the term, treat ing property a though Its owner ship and management were com pletely free from any social re sponsibilities. The liberals on the bench have consistently fought for an Interpretation of the idea of due process which takes ac count of the fact that the growth of finance capitalism and of the modern 'corporation creates, a modern kind of property with vastly Increased economic power, and. therefore, with rastly in creased economic power,' and. therefore, with vastly Increased social responsibilities. The ma jority decision today has a few sentences of great value. It says: "The. Constitution does not speak of freedom of contract. It speaks of liberty, and prohib its the deprivation, of liberty' without due process of law.. In prohibiting that deprivation, the Coaatltutfoa doea not rec ognize aa absolute and uncon trollable liberty. . . . The liber ty safeguarded is liberty in a social organization. ... Liberty ' K , Oregon, Friday ManOn, April i Spring Comes to Europe j Record THOMPSON under the Constitution is thns necessarily subject to the re straints of due process and to regulation which Is reasonable. ... Liberty Implies the absence of arbitrary restraint not im munity from reasonable regula tions." e In commenting upon the major ity decision last June this column said: "The majority argument Is dis turbing. It is founded upon free dom of contract and an eight eenth century interpretation of that - phrase. The same argu ment was brought up against all the protective legislation intro duced fifty years ago in Germany and England, but it has not been heard elsewhere for a generation. No modern interpretation of com petitive economy include the right to pay labor less than must, by the very nature of things, be paid to a machine! For machines must be maintained! Competition starts with rules, one cannot inrow numan bones and blood in to the scales. . . . The decision is disturbing because of possible public reaction . . . The great dan ger exists that a revolt against ine oecision will become a revolt against the Supreme Court, which for 150 years has helped to sta bilise this Republic .... and re publics are not. historically con sidered, stronar fnstit No republic can last without stan- aaras, without some ultimate au thority to which to appeal.' . And it was on the basis of that decision that this column ventur ed a prophesy: "We must lace the reality of a crisis in government. If we do not face it the Supremo Court may be undermined di rectly or, worse, by Indirection. Indirectly for I n a t a n c , its membership may be extended, thereby turning it admittedly into a political body. That the Supreme Court Itself has had . the courage to reverse a previous decisioa oa the basis of further- thought, knowing as It did so that ft would throw itself open to charges of yielding to threat isaheartening thing. There fs nothing new in It, Deci sions hare been reversed before In our history. e The Important thing about the decision on the new Fraxler-Lem-ke Farm Mortgage bill is that It supports a contention which often has been made by friend of the made in this column, that legisla tion more carefully framed with a more respectful eye on the Con stitution could accomplish the de sired ends with no question of constitutionality. In several pieeee ' New Deal legislation challeng ed in the courts the Su pre me .Hax. nDael Prt of the law ?ri wJ?" the WBOle -eH-l-ii u i.be?.w eerta,a ,te Farm l f,m Fr"i--Leke StM'w act w" thrown out by a nine-to-nothing decision - Jm. In reiectln the rst bill the Supreme Court enumerated til? aBmber' d made ft clear Protection of those right. ?utUw lleItion to the J Vom ot "orator! Inm. but that the moratorium n- rff r rottlon for those rights. It was oa the basis of that JhH1.0. PI0" le,1tor. were ble to draft another MIL This decision indicates that the Su preme Court fa conscious that aew conditions require new laws regn isttng economic reUtionshlpa. But the two decisions on the 2, 1937 Radio Programs xonr rxxDAT no s. :30 Klock. 8 Keeping Fit. S:30 News. Varieties. S :S0 Romaaee of Helea Trent, serial. t:3 Onr Gel 8nn4ay, serial.' 10:00 Betty s4 Befc. serial. 10:13 Modern Cinderella. 10:30 Betty Crocker. 10:45 Chnrc hreua. 10:48 Who'i vbe ia aew. 11:00 Bi Sister. 11:45 Mj rt and Marse. IS :00 MaRaiia. Teriea. 11:45 Friday Melody. 1:00 Thru Consoles. - 1:15 Home lastitate. 1:30 Dot ana Few Dasbes. . 1:45 Kewa. 8 :30 News Tferench a 'Woman's Erea. 8:00 Western koaee. 4:00 Newlyweda. 4:lf Variety. 4 :45 Haraoony trie. 5 :00 Broadway varieties. S :4o Topa rerne. 6:00 Hollywood Hotel: "Majrtune." V :0O Momenta You. Sierer Forget. 7:;io Musical Momenta. 8:00 Seattergoed Balnea. -. 8:15 Pretty Kitty Kelly. ; serial. ' 8:30 Kemp area. 9 Drewa, organ. 9:15 Xitbols oreh. 9:30 Shaw orck. 9:45 Legion igkta. 10:45 Pio-Bito eren. 11 AI!en area. 11:30 Lee oreh. 11:45-13 Tacker area. . KGW FRIDAY 620 Xo. 7:00 Morning melodies ET). 7:30 Petite mnaieale tET). 8 U0 Financial. 9:00 News. 9:15 Mary Marlin, aerial. 9:30 How te B Charming. 9:45 Women ia the Headlines. 10:00 Benny Walker's Kitchen. 10:15 Mrs. Wigee of Cabbage Patch. 10:30 John's Other Wife, drama. 10:45 Just Plaia Bill, drama. 11:30 News. 11:45 Hollywood in Person. 1S:00 Pepper Yoang'a Family, drama. 12:15 Ma Perkins, aerial. 12:30 Vic and Bade, comedy. 12:45 O'VeiUa. drama. 1:00 Little eoacert. 1:30 Follow the Moon. 1 :45 Gliding Light, drama. 2:00 Hollywood aewa. 2:05 Church council. 2:15 Cleary and Gilluaft. 2:30 Smilia' Sam. S :00 duration in news. S :15 Macaxine. Taried. : 4 15 Back 8eat Driror. 4:30 Edwin C. Hill, commentator. 4 :45 Caballeros. 5 :15 Meakia'a music. 5:45 Junior sews. 8:00 Dinner concert. 6:30 U. S. Army band. 7:00 llrst Nigbtcr. dmma. 7 :0 Varsity snow. 8:00 Amos n" Andy, comedy. 8:15 Uncle Eara, comedy. 8:30 Tree Story Court, drama. 9 :00 Carefree carniral. 9:30 Fireside hoar. 10 N'ewa. lO: 15 Southern Harmony Four. 10:30 Hopkins orca. 11 :00 Ambassador orca. 11:30 Trent orch. 'lo 12 Weather. e KKX FRIDAY USt Xa. S:30 Clock (EX). 7:30 Josh Higgins. 7:45 Sows. 8:00 Varieties, 8:05 Vagabonds. 4-aing. 8:15 Robert Uately, amg. 8:30 Vie aad Bade, comedy. 8:45 Ueenet singer. 9:0O Hoaeyboy aad Sassafras. 9:15 llama Institute. 5 :30 ji'atioaal farm aad heme. 10:30 Love aad Letts, aenel. 10:45 Neighbor KoU. aerial. 11:00 Current areola. 11:15 Life ef Chopin. 12:00 Western farm aad hems. 12:45 Market reports. 12:50 Viaiter. 1:05 O. M. riummor. talk. 1:15 Song cycle. 1;30 tftrwgwoed emaemblo. 2:00 Mary Marlin. serial. 2:15 EdeUe flwurtouu 2:45 Old Homestead, drama. 3 :00 Kogea orca. Financial aad grain reports. S :30 News. 4:00 Jim aad Judy. 4:30 Show window. 4:45 Jeon Dickinson, aing. S:O0 Irene Rica, drama. 6:15 Loui. Fori :25 Food and Friends. 5:30 Blue Bkiea. drama. 0:OO Zaroee. eiag. S:15 Cheater Mowon. J:?tL"TC"? News. 8:15 Lum and A oner, comedy. 8:30 Siagta Sam. 8:45 Night Watch maa. drama. 9:00 Chandler orchT :30 Vocal varieties (ET). 9:45 Fights. 10:30 Bilrmoro orch. 11 News. 11:1 Charles Kaayoa. To 12 Weather aad police reports. X0 AO FRIDAY 660 Ja, S :O0 Today's' Prograane. 9:03 The Homewsaaors' Hour. 10)0 Weather Forecast. l?:lf -8eT Hwur for Adalta. v ll.-OQ School of the Air. 12:00 News. " 12:1S Farm Hoar. , 1:1S Variety. 2 :0O Guarding Tear Health. 2 10 Surreyiug Our Hiatorieal Record. 3-00 Artistic Aeeoata "The Begiav two Frazer-Lembe bills show that the court realises that legislation must not take the form ot a cha otic redistribution of privileges. ' CowTricht. 1937. Sew York Tribune. IaC Decker's Eye Is nftilly lnjiired Pai Blsmy Gates Persons Attend - Fred Horner Rites At BliU City . GATES. April 1. J$tT -JlgS" Decker, who works t Ritnera camp,: this week re celred quiU a painful injury to an" eye. caused from . running; sUck in: 1L Many , people . from this - com munity attended the Fred Horner funeral at Mill City Tuesday. Fred Horner fs the oldest brother of Burr Horner of Gates. The Horner family are pioneers of this section and llred on the place which is now- the G. B. Heath home. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Davis and Mrs. Lincoln Heness were called to Mill City Tuesday because of the serious illness of Hubert "Mode" Daris, brother of Ed Daris and Mrs. Heness. He was somewhat improved Wednesday. Senior Play Tonight ' IntenslTe practice on the se nior "high school play 'The Ghost Chasers," has taken op the time rf tha RAnlors most of this week. They will present the play Fri day night at. the nigh scnoot-auditorium. The proceeds to go to the senior class. . Mrs." Roy Taylor entertained the Birthday club at her home on Kings Prairie Saturday af ternoon. Prizes at cards went to Mrs. Blanche Dean, Mrs. A. D. Scott. Mrs. I W. Kelle ana Mrs. Carl Knutson. Farmer at Howell Loses 2 Horses CENTRAL HOWELL. April 1. The loss of two horses In the space of a week has been the, misfortune of C. Schubert. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brand are at home again after spending the winter In California. The condition of H. A. Lichty who was taken ill last week with a serious heart ailment is im proved. Miss Nora Lichty Is at home helping to care for her father and a nurse Is In attend ance. ! A. E. Jans returned home Monday after going to his work at Portland.. He was suffering with a , lame back caused by a slight sprain. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Jans -and Lyle Jr., spent Sunday at the A. E. Jans home. i The. Central Howell ball team has won two practice games with the Hasel Green team. A league game played with the Liberty team resulted in a i victory for the 'visitors. . , J . Ten Years Ago April 2. 1927 I Judge P. H. D'Arcy will make the address at the Chamber of Commerce ''Champoeg Dinner." It Is believed that Leland L. Chapin, Willamette graduate and teacher at Canton Christian col lege. China, has fled with the other refugees to Hong Kong aboard steamer Fatsha. "Seeing Oregon First" will be subject of a" lecture by W. S, Baker, state organizer of Oregon State Audsbon society, at Y. M. 0. A. lobby. Twenty Years Ago April 2, 1917 First Y. M. C. A. Chautauqua health lectures will be given Monday at First Congregational church by J. C. Elliott! Among the Salem women tak ing part in Elks play, "Get Rich Quick Wallingford" are Mrs. A. J. Rahn, Mrs. W. Carlton Smith. Mrs. R. M. Hofer and Miss Vema Cooder. , Germans . hold fifty Americans aa prisoners, seamen were cap tured during operations ot the Raider Moewe. , . w alng of Xedera Patating' Ber nard Hiashaw. associate wrofee . aor of art, general extension di vision. 4:00 We Listen to Music. 4:30 Stories for Boys and Girls. 5:00 Oa the Campuses. 6:00 Cubbiag with the Boy Scouts W. C. WesseU. notional director of Oabatag for the Boy Sewats of America. 8:15 Jfews. ' :30 Farm Hour.- T:40 OSO Varsity Beaate Squad. ' 8:1- The Business Hoar. The Pacific Northwest say industrial economists,, will be the focal point of a new imdmstrud and mgriadtural empire! You. as a citizen, will or will not share Buy ICourself Some Permanent v ': --. Prosperity... FIRST realize your share of the Columbia Empire s present and1 future ptosperity depends oa you! With every lJuahase foe your home you step closer to insuring It! yoursradiant, -Where did it come from? "Whera is itauderthea UNITE. This is the foundation stoat wtlsisErmskdwtt progress. Tats seaek pireecesurss uriuautwOl eJcaltr taela. rsSatui e tt Unite for Prosperity Exposition Queen m T ii ami r r i 1 J , When the Paris exposition opens in May, Mile. Jacqueline Jacow-j lew, atunning Parisian brunet. will reign as queen of the show.; Woman Honored, 87th Anniversary UNION' - HILL, April 1. The 87th birthday anniversary or Mrs. Phoebe Stlnchf ield was cele brated at the home of her grand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Ma gee near Shaw Easter Sunday by a family gathering and din ner. ' ' ' :". Present were the honor guest. Mrs. Phoebe Stinchfleld and the toiiowing relatives; air. ana Mrs. Guy Chapman, St. Helens; Mr. and Mrs. Otis Kizer, Coburg; Mr. L. C. Trask, Lyons; Mr. and Mrs. Verny Scott. Guy and Cliff ord Keith Scott, Sublimity; Miss Alice Chapman and Harvey Har ris. St. Helens; Mr. and Mrs. Charley Carter, Vancouver, Wash.; Mrs. ' Ruby Kizer Clark, and Mrs. Florence Dunbar, Eu gene; Mr. Fred R. Perrin. Salt Lake City. Utah; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Charlton and Mr.. and Mrs Harvey Landis and sons, Salem; Mrs. Millie McConnell, Portland; Miss Margaret Kizer, Coburg; Mrs. Alice Wipper, Turner; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jarvis, Salem; Mrs. Jessie Pendleton, Underwood, Wash.: Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stinch fleld, Miss Elna Stinchfleld. Mrs. Laura Carter. Miss Mary Nelson, Miss Peggy Wright all of May ville; Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Trask. Hillsbofo; Miss Laura McConnell and Mr. and Mrs, Art Rengo, Port land; Mr. and Mrs. David Don and son Dickie. Salem; Bobby Dubar, Eugene; Margaret Kizer, Coburg; and the hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Magee. Harvey Carpenter Is Complimented on 60th Birthday Aiimversarjr DALLAS. April -1.' Mr, and Mrs. Harvey Carpenter were re cent hosts, complimenting Mr. Carpenter on his 60th birthday. The evening; was spent in bridge and "500." High scores were held by Mrs. J. F. Spooner and J. K. Johnson. Mrs. R. R. Van OrsdeJ and Gus Ellie . A buffet supper was served to Mr. and Mrs. -E. V: Dalton, Mr. and Mrs. Spooner. Mr. and Mrs. Ellie. Mr. and Mrs. Orin Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. Van . Orsdel, Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, Dr. and Mrs. H. D. Peterson, and Mrs. Eileen Teet of Fairbault, Minn. Inman Building Group Of Three Cabins For Tourists at Silverton SILVERT0N7 April 1. Work was. begun Wednesday on a new. group of cabins by L. E. Inman oa South Water street. The new group will consist ot three cab ins and a laundry room. Two ot the cabins will face South Water street while the third eabin will face Jersey street.' Hugh Range Is In charge ot the building and It Is expected the. cabins will be ready for oc cupancy, within 60 days. this coming prosperity. kas Wee est rea se tke tais area. 19 7