PAGE FOUE V The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Wednesday Morning, August 17, 1933 . tmm MM "A'o Faror Sways Vs; No Fear Shall Aw" From First Statesman, March tS. 1181. Charles A.Spracub . Editor and Publisher., THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. " - 1 . Charles A. Sprague, Pres. - - Sheldon T. Sacsett, Seey. Mrmber of Ihm Associated lrra 4 , . . - The AMOctalrd Pi la -.durably ntltl.4 t lh Pf " tw. of .Ur. Ul-p-tcfa- eJUM MUW .iWwlr er.dU.it - IM. paper. - " y ' - i " - - :.- " ' . - ' Crossing Party Lines New dealers in Idaho are complaining that the defeat of Senator James P. Pope was accomplished - by .republican voters tasting their ballots in the democratic pnry. Some of them have been broadTminded enough to admit that uie democrats "dug. their own grave" in this matter,-for that par ty was responsible for Idaho's primary law. , i n - -1 Undethis law, the republican and democratic Jickets are both on the.same ballot, which is handed to all voters in the primary. Then, after entering the voting booth, the voter may decide whether he is going to be a republican or a dem ocrat at this election; but he cannot, as in Washington state, be both. If he marks one V on the democratic aide, he for bidden to make any marks on the republican side. , s Now this may appear radical to Oregon citizens, but upon analysis its principal difference from Oregon s primary law is this : That an Oregon citizen must decide SO days m ad vance of the primary which party .he plans to espouse in other words, before the registration books close. True,; he must swear that he is a bona fide member r the party m which he registers, but that seems only a mild deterrent to -switching." The Idaho method allows a voter to decide on the basis of last minute developments. . v . Ther is one other important difference. In Oregon the registration lists are public records. Presumably they are also in Idaho. But in order to vote democratic in the primary, an Oregon voter must register as a democrat and that fact is permanently on record. Many members of both parties will refuse to "switch" when it means publicly marring their rec ords of party affiliation. There is no such barrier-to scratch ing" the party ticket in the general election, j The new dealers are indignant. The ethics of the repub lican "switch" require separate consideration ; but after all, party government in any state is precisely whatever the pri mary laws of that state make it The Idaho system undeni ably weakens party unity, and if we are convinced that re sponsible government through parties is desirable, the sys tem is weak in that respect. But students of politics who are less concerned about party considerations will find merit in the Idaho system along these lines i: i It was generally believed that Senator Pope would have been nominated if only "legitimate" t democrats whatever the definition had voted in the democratic primary. It was also believed that if Pope had been nominated,! his prestige as compared to the comparative obscurity of the republican nominee, plus the support of traditional democrats and new dealers,' would have elected him. Yet the results of the pri mary showed that there is not a new deal majority in Idaho. Pope received about 39,500 votes, and that apparently repre sents the sum total of new deal sentiment. His victorious op ponent, Congressman D. Worth Clark, polled about 42,500, and the three republican candidates 33,500. So the anti-new deal vote amounted to 76,000--nearly double Pope's total. The result therefore more truly reflects actual sentiment in Idaho than it might have if Idaho had followed Oregon's primary law. But let's not jump at conclusions. The republi cans who helped to nominate Clark, thereby weakened the chances of their own party for success in November, and if Clark is elected, they will have been largely responsible. Clark is an "independent" but still a democrat who will side with the new deal on most measures, except 1 where a vital principle is involved. The republicans who help put him in the senate will not be satisfied but they will have nothing to say about it, and nobody to blame. So this Idaho incident may be set down as an unusual one, reflecting no true picture of the working of party gov ernment. Why was Pope defeated? Because the administra tion at Washington intervened in his behalf. That was the thing that aroused republican voters to step across party lines and chastise him. 1 ,-, . Government by Decree j -If, as is reported, the experts In the department of agri culture had'tp figure the corn crops several times in order to avoid "a corngrowers election this fall, then j we have prac tically arrived at. government by decree. Thej agricultural act was largely written by Secretary Wallace's assistants. If now his men have to scuttle the plain intent of the act in order to make it fit the political exigencies of the administration, then .congress is even farther reduced into a rubber stamp role. -. The point of the affair is this: there is revolt brewing in the corn belt. Wallace fears if an election were held in Sep-" Umber, which is the time required under the law, the corn growers would reject his control plan. That would be a grievous blow just before the political elections in November when the national administration hopes for victory. Hence political necessities dictate avoidance of the corn election; and the experts in the department of agriculture have had to erase their figures several times in order to do sums which make the. election legally unnecessary. i So this is where the country is iast finding itself : the national administration. President Roosevelt. Secretaries Ickes and Wallace and WPA chief Harry Hopkins, are con vinced of the superior virtue of their own plans. Hence they contrive party purges to stack congress with yes-men j they scheme to pack the courts with judges subservient to their will ; they gather power into executive hands, and Secretary WallarA in the eas of corn control' warns the facts to evade the obligations of his own law. The situation is indeed dan- j gerous. Will popular liberty and constitutional government survive? They are in danger now not from foes of the people J but from friends who by their own excess of zeal are sacrific- ing political methods and principles we have been taught, to regard as sacred to any system of democratic government.' We preserve the forms of a popular legislative body and a re viewing judiciary. In fact we are very near the authoritarian type of government by executive decree. . J : J Prof. David Snedden, former commissioner of education in Massachusetts, kept each of his five children out of school until age 9; they all galloped through the grades and high school and entered Stanford University at age 18. He claims children enter school too early. It is true that older students' assimilate elementary school work muchT more rapidly; in the CCC, it is not uncommon for a young man to master a, rrrnAm in a month and he nrfimotpd to the next grade. But aft-' er all, what are parents going to they don't send them to school? A German poet proposes a campaign to provide food for the Spanish civilians on both sides of the fighting lines. We like to be good neighbors, but if the Spaniards would stop fighting and go to plowing they could feed themselves. Feed ir tl 2 civilians will serve just to continue the carnage. Star vat.:;::! is the final arbiter, of warfare, so why postpone its de cision? . ' ' " ' t ' . ; Forest Grove occupied a new city hall last week erected at a cost of $20,000. , Believe It or not, the building was con structed without federal aid. . Call for Mr. Ripley, a An Omaha boy wen the soap box derby at Akron Sunday. The llz soap box derby, alias be settled until November. The Duke of Windsor is going out of the cattle business. Doubtless he finds the dual income cannot support both a rife and a cattle ranch. gitatemtiau do with their six-year-olds if j . the political campaign, will not! j 1 Bits for Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS More about Captain . 7-17-3 8 Tom McKay, one of our . first permanent settlers;' had a most colorful career: ; '(Concluding- from yesterday:) Her book, Ruth Rover, shows that Dr. and Mrs. Bailey started east together, by water, around Cape Horn, in 1842. Fart way on the first leg of that more than 28,000 mile round . trip. Dr. Bailey stopped, intending to return home, and Mrs. Bailey went on her way alone. ' Later, he changed his mind. and, soon after her arrival at her old home, Saugus,- Mass., near Salem and Lynn, and Boston, he joined her. They returned to Ore gon together, arrlTing in the fall of 1843. , - ' " . . : . , W . The monument,, at Champoeg state park upon ' which are en grayed the names of the men sup posed to hare to ted in the af f lrmatlTe on the proposition up for discussion May 2, 1843, con tains that of Dr. W. J. Bailey. The reader, if new In Oregon, will wonder how he could be- present in two places on that day, the places over 13,000 miles apart, by the common mode of travel - be tween them in the period. The answer is that he was not there, nor was Gustavus Hlnes, who wrote in his' book, "Oregon, that he was on the south bank of the Columbia river at a point near where great Bonneville dam Is now though the monument has Hlnes' name. Nor was Wm. John son, who was at his home on the site' of Portland, though his name is on the monument. . And the names of five to seven men, who were present and voted for the proposition that was up, do not appear on the monument. These are only a few evidences of the bogus character of the "Cham poeg myth." "U (By the. way, a look at the pages of the Hines book describ ing his activities in the period un der discussion makes an urgent call for another Installment of this series, so it will be conclud ed tomorrow, and not today, as announced and arranged for.) J The author of "Ruth Rover, wife of Governor Bailey, the for mer mission teacher, first white woman to settle in lower Marion county lived under primitive con ditions, and made the best of It. "W -W ' It was hard to get paper of any kind, even for her doctor hus band's use in putting up medi cines, or for her letters home. At one time she had neither shoes nor writing paper. She made moc casins serve for shoes. She was delighted to tell her mother in that period, in a letter, that her packages had arrived and they contained shoes and an ample supply of writing paper all the way, 13,000 ocean miles, from Massachusetts.' After enduring many periods of neglect and abuse from her hus band, the lonely woman sought a divorce, and got one; else she died before 1863. How do We know that? Because the will of Dr. Bailey, made Jan. 6, 1863, ev idently in his own hand writing, was properly witnessed by Hugh Cosgrove and Joseph A. Osborne, well known pioneers, and it con tained specific language bequeath ing, after the death of the signer, "all the real, or personal property of whatever- kind or nature to his "beloved wife, Julia Madeline Bailey. In the will nothing was said of any other heirs, so, man ifestly, none existed. S V Dr. Bailey died Feb. 5, 1876, as the probate papers show. He was buried In the Catholic cemetery at St. Paul; the present one. The appraisers of the property listed a house at 3250, a .stable at 325, surgery and furnishings 320, bug gy and harness 375, saddle 7.50 (rather low for a saddle of that date), medicines and sponges 3300, medical and surgical books 75, two safes $40. . The appraiser found 31500 In gold, 3110 in notes, and $350 in book accounts. The whole estate was appraised at ; $3951. The "sod" widow gave him a $480 funeral, and spent $150, for a "mourning outfit. She paid $4 for notice of appointment and 35 for that of final settlement, to The Statesman; Joseph. Thomp son swearing as foreman and J. M. Waters as manager. John M. Waters and his two brothers, W. H. H. and Abner W., then owned and conducted The Statesman. W. H. H. Waters, fa ther of our Geo. E., Frank W. and Wayne H. Waters, was the editor. He was afterward a pioneer ab stract man here. John ' M., who was the manager, later ' was ' one of the owners of the Brownsville, Oregon, woolen mill, and finally went to the state of Washington. Abner W. went from Salem to Idaho. Does any one here remem ber Joseph Thompson, foreman of The Statesman at that time? An Idea of the primitive condi tions under which Mrs. Bailey, cultured college bred lady, lived, in lower Marlon county, is gath ered from what she told of a neighboring, white settler, who boasted that he did no work him self, nor did he intend to do any, so long as he had plenty, of In dian wives to do it. , She evidently gave up all hope, after many - disappointments, of her recreant and dissipated hus band mending his ways and be coming 1 o y a 1 to his marriage vows.. She wrote in ; her :Ruth Rover"book these words:' , "I can think of him only as a grave with a poison dag growing above it and contaminating the air with Its poisonous breath. Another writer of the time re corded the belief, that she had reference in the quoted words to her hopelessly recreant husband, from whom she was seeking dlr Torce . '. . There seems no historic record concerning the after career of the abused wife, or when and where she died. . But this does not de clare the search hopeless. It Is surprising how inch matters torn Chinese Soldier Has Proven Worth Under Fire t.-V , Old type soldier , $.- "1 V : 1 X - - H' , w.,.;x.j,.v;.:.,:y.v,:,,.-.,..,. mill'"1 1 "S"-- " 'r&&&'? ifryM?$- M Modern tgtUng man P . ' c X s C k V. : v ; v ", -V t , ,x ... .-- vi N - One result of the JaDanese invasinn n rjn ! been to develop an efficient and modernized army, something- which China. lacked before' the regime of Chiang Kai-Shek. The Chinese fighting- man of the past was a sort of comic opera person who was as much a bandit as a soldier. Today, how ever, China has an imposing standing army of KSLM WEDNESDAY 1370 Kc. 7:30 News. 7:45 Time O Day. 8:00 Balladeer. i. 8:15 The Ifrtanhatters. 8:30 Hits and Encores. 8:45 News. 9:00 The Pastor'c CalL 9:15 The Friendly Circle. 9:45 The Buckeye Four. 10:00 Women In the News. -10:15 Hawaiian Paradise. 10:30 Morning Magazine. 10:45 Bob Young. ; 11:00 Newt. 11:15 Organallties. 11:30 Harold Stokes Orchestra. 11:45 Bill Lewis and Organ. 12:00 Value Parade. 12:15 News. 12:15 News. 12:30 Hillbilly Serenade. 12:36 Voice of the Farm. 12:50 HUlbiUy Serenade. 1:00 The Third Alarm. 1:1 5 Tommy Tucker's Orch. 1:30 Musical Salute. 1:45 The Johnson Family. 2:00 Varieties. 2:15 Frank Ferneau's Orch. 2:30 Sands of Time. 2:45 Joseph O'Connor. 3:00 Feminine Fancies. 3:30 Vocal Varieties. 4 : 0 0 -M usical Steeplechase. 4:30 Mitchell Ayer's Orchestra 5:00 Bob Crosby's Orchestra. 6:15 Novelty Choir. 5:30 Howie Wing. 5:45 Fulton Lewis, Jr. 6:00 Chtco and His Orchestra. 6:15 Phantom Pilot. 6:30- Sports Bullseyes. 6 : 4 5 Tonight's Headlines. 7:00 Musical Interlude. 7:30 The Lone Ranger. 8:00 News. 8:15 Singing Strings. 8:30 Vocal Varieties. 8:40 Grift Williams Orchestra. 9:00 Newspaper of the Air. . 9:15 Swingtime. . 9:30 Crystal Gardens Orch. 10:00 The, Playboys. 10:15 Frank Brandt's Orch. 10:30 Sterling Young's Orch. .. . KGW WEDNESDAY 620 Kc. 7:15 Trail Blazers. 7:45 News. 8; 00 Vaughn De Leath. 8:30 Time for Thought. 8:45 Dorothy CrandalL 9:00 Ray Towers. up and unwind themselves. : (Concluded (a second time) to morrow.) Barkley Swells 2 i is -6, X-:-- 1 - X. I. " . ., Senator Barkley voting r Senator Alben W. Barkley. shown easting- his 'vote, fa. virtually as l aured of returning to the senate as a result of his victory over Gov. A. B. (Happy) Chandler In the primary, since the Democratic nomi ' nation Is tantamount to election although Barkley must face John P. Haswell, Republican nomlsee, in the election. m P .... ! " I Radio Programs 9:15 Tour Radio Review. 9:30 Words and Music. 1:45 Gallicchio's Orchestra. 2:30 Woman's Magazine. :3:30 News. ' 3:45 Ruth Bryan Owen. 4:30 Jingletown Gazette. 4:45 ArgentlneTrio. , 5:30 RIcardo. 6:00 Kay Kyser's Musical Class. 7:00 Amos 'n Andy. 7 : 3 0 Orchestra. 8:00 Town Hall Big Gam Hunt. ' 8 : 3 0 Orchestra. 10:00 News Flashes. 10:1 5 Gentlemen Preferred. 10:30 Orchestra. 11:30 Armand Girard. KOXX- WEDNESDAY 440 Kc. 6:30 Market Reports. 6:35 KOIN Klock. . 8:00 News. 10:45 This and That 11:15- Syncopation Piece. 11:45 News. 1:00 CastiUians. 1:30 March of Games. 1:45 Exploring Space. - 2:05 Lew White, Organ, 2:15 Doris Rhodes, Songs. 2 : 3 0 Pasadena Talent Hunt. 3:15 Newspaper of the. Air. 4:00 Backgrounding the News, 4:30 Maurice Orchestra. 4:45 Boake Carter. . . 5:00 Meet the Champ. 5:45 Headlines on Parade. 6:00 Rainbow's End. 6:30 Lois Elllman. 8 : 0 0 Gangbusters. 8:30 Leon F. Drews. 8:45 Orchestra. 9:30 Oregon on Parade. 10:00 Five Star Final. 10:15 On the Air. 10:45 Orchestra. - KEX WEDNESDAY 1180 Kc 6:45 Family Altar Hour. 7 : 3 0 Financial Service. 7:4 5 Viennese Ensemble. . 7:58 Market Quotations. 8:30 National Farm and Home. 10:02 Vivian Delia Chiesa. 10:15 Let's Talk It Over. 10:30 News. ; 10:45 Home Institute. 11:45 Spitalny Orch. 12:00 US Dept. Agriculture 12:30 :News. 12:45 Market Reports. 1:15 Silhouettes of the West. 1:30 Financial and Grain. 1 : 4 5 Orchestra. 2:25 News. Victory Total crack troops, trained by German militarists and supplemented' by a Urge force of reserves. There are more than 2,000,000 men in the field and the manner In which they have stubbornly contested the Japanese advance indicates that their baptism of fir is forging them into a powerful fighting . machine. . 2:30 Alma Kltchell. - 2:35 Your Nary. 3:00 Orchestra. 3:15 Tar Heel Tattler. 3:30 Ralph Blaine, Tenor. 3:45 Science on the March. 5 : 00 It May Have Happened. : 5:30 Natural Music Camp. ; 6:30 Minstrel Show, 6:45 Sport Column. 7:00 Sons of the Lone Star. 7:15 Orchestra. 7:30 Chicago Round Table. 8:00 News. 8:15 Orchestra. 8:30 Baseball. 10:30 Orchestra. 11:00 News. , 11:15 Charles Runyan. . - KOACS WEDNESDAY S50 Kc. 8:00 As You Like It. 9:0 0 The Home makers Hour. 9:40 School for Brides. 10:01 Symphonic Hour. 1 1 jOvVTonr-Health. ' -'' 11:15 Music of the Masters. 12:00 News. 12:15 Farm Hour. 12:15 Safety Talk, State Department. 12:3 0 Market, Crop Re ports 1:15 Stories for Boys and Girls 1:45 Monitor View the News. 2:00 Homemakers Half Hoar; 6:30 Farm Hour. 6:45 Market, Crop Re ports. 1--7M5 Everett H. Davlea. 7:454 News, v Rickreall People Visit Palls Gamp Shown How CCC Operates; 7 Guest' of Nesmitli There Sunday RICKREALL Sunday dinner guests of Lynn W. Nesmlth at the CCC camp at Silver Creek falls were his aunt, Mrs. Sarah Burch, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dempsey of Rickreall. Nesmlth is office assistant at this camp. It was of great interest to the visitors to meet the men In charge, who graciously gave their time to explain the work of the camp, to view .the Inside of the buildings,, to note the details of all affairs handled by Mr. Nes mlth at the office, and to be numbered with the guests at an expertly cooked and served chick en dinner. ; Tidiness " and cleanliness of grounds and buildings 1 and sys tematic order of business . are outstanding features.: -. j ' - Silver Creek park where 3000 people had picnicked during the day was visited in the afternoon. Infants Are Born To Three Couples S I L V ERTON Mr. and Mrs. William Francis are announcing the birth of a 7 hi pound son August 13. ; y , Mr. and Mrs. L. Sowa are announi:ng the ' birth of a 7 pound 9 ounce son born August 12, Mr. and Mrs. Don Kuemi are announcing the birth of an eight pound 10 ounce son, born August 1. -: - . ' .. V. - y-J-r ; ' : t All three were born at the SI1- verton hospital. ' New Sons Arrive In two - Families k SCOTTS MILLS- Mr. and Mrs. Errln Pownall arc rejoicing over the arrival of a son born, at the SUverton hospital Thursday. This is their first child. Mrs. Almond Mch was brought home from the Silverton hos pital this week. Mrs. Rich spent two weeks In the hospital fol lowing a n ajor operation. : Mr. and Mrs. Orrille Talker have gone to Kansas, to attend the wedding, of Mrs. Talker's brother. , Sage of Salem Speculates By D. H. - ' ALONG THE TRAIL There is humble plant life along the trail. There Is pridef ul plant life, too, And - upon- them both in the . morning- sun Sparkles the selfsame dew. And one wilts down in the noon day glare, - As' fragile natures- do. And the other bravely rears its - .-head , And somehow carries through. And the one Is you and the other Is I, Or. reverselv. I and you. It matters little what we are. What counts is wnat .we do. More New York An afternoon In the old Colum bia theatre, New York, now giv en over to radio. Dark down in front. A small and attentive au dience : there in the gloom. No dress suits. Costumes rather on the free and easy order, suitable for the heat, which now and again drafts in from the streets. A Philip Morris program in pro cess of rehearsal. Lights and life. Russ Morgan and . his ex cellent band, "Johnny" in - his uniform, so familiar a figure on the billboards and the show win dows, the- cast presenting t h e current dramatization. Jack John stone, who Is a swell guy in the best sense of the term, and Mrs. Nauptman, office manager for BIOW, the - broadcasting com pany, office at No. 9 Rockefeller Plata which try and , find. But one can find it, given time. I did. Rockefeller Center Is an amazing, and bewildering place, tremendous and beautiful. An ordinary guy like me, who has ' devoted much of his life to chasing jack rabbits and not very good plots for not very good fiction, . including some news stories not fiction. In a period of our national growth when the hotels which were of more than three stories were almost as rare as dodo birds, must mind his step ' and revise himself some what if he Is to get much of anywhere at Rockefeller Center, of which the Plaza Is a detail. The number nines 1 1 have known were usually on the second floor and consisted of a single room and a cracked water pitcher. But No. 9 Rockefeller Plaza Is a suite, with rosewood furniture, and there is really no use look ing for It on the first or second floor, - because it is 25 stories higher, which. -after all, isn't so high, as things go in New York. Rockefeller Center, was the only thing which got the better of me In New York but not for long, mind you,, old and feeble as Lam. : ., 4.,-- Just by way of doing north Pacific coast folks a favor, I want to introduce them to this Mrs. Hauptman, heretofore men tioned. An interesting forceful person is, ever more worthy of attention than a building or a bridge or any , other - of those things commonly referred to with pride as "sights." Jack' Johnstone of BIOW, Is a great director and Russ Morgan Is a great orchestra leader, but to a newcomer into the circle It seems they would both be working at - a disadvan tage were it not for Mrs. Haupt man. Mrs. ' Hauptman, a young woman from Ohio, is a never falling help in time of confusion. Furthermore, she is a delightful person, .unassuming, always in balance i- The final broadcast of the pro-' Some odd Facts V M II it ' H f Jit jv. " Eiffel tower, cost 1,000,CC0 ' C4 Icebergs, sometimes T?0 U. RS,'than fiction; Is evident when one glances through the almanac or encyclopedia, rlt la estimated that the Wash tngton monument has 23.000 stones In It; icebergs sometimes take ,t2r32. 7Vi i"1 "th towr ra P1 re than 41,000,000. 2W,000 of which was contributed by the French .fpvenunent and the balance collected by admission fees; Brazil furnishes two-thirds of the world's supply of coffee; color blindness ts much mors prevalent among men than women; watermelons have een frown weighing nearly 300 pounds; there is about Art per cent nicotine content in tobacco-' TALMADGB gram In which I was especially Interested was made at , 11:30 p.m.. E.S.T. After that, a rush of autograph hunters and a chorus of good nights and good byes. Among other mementoes of the occasion is the manuscript of the story dramatization sent out that day, on the first page of which is written, "Give my regards to r Oregon. Jack John stone." Again, thank you; Mr; Johnstone. Oregon will, I am sure, be listening for your pro gram. I reckon I hare - passed fully a million boys In the streets dur ing the past ten days, and not an 'hello in them all. It seemed pretty good, back in Salem, to look into faces that I know, boys aud i girls and men and women. A boy that Is too busy to ex change talk with a friend is a disappointment. Thus, for ex ample, I. met a certain boy on Court street Monday. He has, I am Quite sure, a future, this boy. Perhaps he will be an acro bat or perhaps he will become a member of the state legislature and electrjfy his fellow members with his eloquence, .or perhaps but there is no end to the possi bilities. However, I fear he will become something else. I'll tell you why. "Hello," says I to him Monday, "did you see the boat races yesterday?" "No," says he to me, "but I heard 'em." That's" what my uncle Zip said when a man asked him if the cattle was his No," says my uncle, "but I herd 'em." It may be a good sign or a bad one, but it evi dences an entertaining spirit. And what does the age of a joke matter between congenial asso ciates? I learned by chance last week that an efficient stewardess on one of the United Airlines main liners is a daughter of the Lu theran minister at Monitor, over on Battle Creek In Marion coun ty, , Oregon. She told me her name, but in the rush and bustle of disembarking at New York (she chme on duty, I think at Cleveland) permitted It to pass In at one ear and out at the other. However, this to her reverend father his daughter Is a gra cious girl and gives every ap pearance of - being In tip-top health. Ten Years Ago. ' August 17, 1&28 Earl Douglas, physical director and athletic coach at Leslie jun ior - high . school, will return to Salem September 1 after spend ing summer at: University of Ore gon summer school and is now taking a coaching course at Po mona college. Misa Alta Kershner will leave in September for New York to en ter the graduate school of library service at Columbia university. Work will be completed today on the auto mechanic shop at the Sa lem high school. Plans for shop were , drawn by Lyle Bartholo mew, school architect. Charles Adams Visits . RICKREALL- Charles W. Ad ams was home from Yancouver, Wash., barracks Saturday night and Sunday. He haa Joined the artillery and expects to leave some time soon for Fort Stevens. About Universe Washington monument, 23,000 -stones last 2C3 years