DcUness lint, not "Sold" j- cn. Idea ; Housewives, ' i : Farmer Queried - JContlaned from pic 1) w other ; hud,' many object baeam tke don't want to pay a nickel to park 1 o minutes Rut X believe it Would , solve the parkins prob- - lenvand kelp the city financially. ' Mrs. G. . Thompeow, house wife: "I don't believe I'd cam tor jthent." I mlf kt not always bar a htekl. : Miss Alice Udwood. audent: Th worry that reaalts from, the , necessity tor haste is one of - the most harmful factors la modem lit:-. I'm afraid parkins meters -would Just add one more sack worry,'; " M. - Veraon : Gfbnote, house wife! "I don't think Salem U large enough for parkins meters yet. The shoppiag district is too small, aad 4 for one. would rather walk the few blocks than pat a nickel la a parkins meter. Mrs. . Badeaa, koasewtfe: "There would be more places to park because feWer people would parkin the meter district. I would be In laror of nickel parkins be caus4lt costs more to drive around thre& or four blocka loo kiss for a plSCG tO Stop. .-. ' s'-Mf. Derjl F. Meyers, house wife? I think they are good for a f placl: as large as Portland but . Salem Is rather small for such a thins. " v . ' ' ' " JL F, Holmaa, fanner: "When r 1" first heard parkins meters ' proposed for Salem 1 swore 1 would,, never trade here agsla it . they , - were installed, - 8 luce studylag over- the matter, how everj.l do feel that there would be almost as ' many ' advantages as disadvantages under the meter system.' However, I feel, certain the. downtown area would suf - fr.- ?The- outlying . stores,' sarh as tnw variouar i 'four corner's' stores where groceries, drugs, etc. are procurable will set ajuch, of . the business that Is apw going downtown." if-Yank Mrabetx, berry grower: "l don't see why It should be say, worse In Salem than In Portland. A person who wants to trade here never-sots a place to park In the center of the ousl ass district, he can't : double park; so he has to go trade wher he can park. I tkink rk . lajg. meters would do away with A a klot of that. It seems to t: i . sdrsntage of tha buslnes men a Portland to hare parkins meters Because we can usually nnd a place Ho park there. It certainly good a thins for sbbnjd - be as Salem; Olagh Magee, farmer: "I think their -use will bo a good thins principally because meters work Tery satisfactorily wherever they Lave been tried. Also, , they are correctly checked and ;. pay ex penses. Ton can set a place to park .then; under the present system you can't even get a hair cat' and rback to . the car in tS minutes, . let alone Anything tse,ri-.?.j.:.,-. r - -: - . - " .J Bob Brewer, farmer; "Sure put 'em in if we'll find: a place ta,: park easy. It's so darn hot I'd pay a dollar , to be able to drive in and out without auy trouble. i I Led W. Collar, minister) The way business looks now, I think It would be a fine thine. It would help parking congestion materl- ally, especially for people who are ta: a hurry. I believe. The war It is nowi you drive around the block several times banting, a place to park and then have to park about faur blocks away.-.;-EBoyd A. Filler, shoo salesman: Parking meters? Finest thing in the world. Tea. I Jost got a park- tag ticket. Traveling salesmen I InPoisonCase tin. Lodm EnSsna Held for questioning7 regardjnf tie fatal poisoning of her 000004 I Jtaband. Fred IU chiefs, S4, and lames Eumvan, IV son of her t .ird husband. Is lira. Anna, liwlse EuHlvan, SO. of - l3wau Ipe, Wis. lira, Evan's present j , tausbud Is ill from poison. 1, l?arldiiff Bletero J1 Cup out, indicate, your opinion Wita."an "X and mail to pety Valve Editor, The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Ore." i i Signatures are optional but adciresses are desired to show tpy difference in sentiment letween Salem and out-of-town readers ( ) Yes, I faror Parking I.! tiers for Salem. SE Eighteen-Ounce Baby Conceded Chance to Live V" :tr. v a -v h g . .......t....x. i ... , Above, Mra. Mario klelchlonne Is shown la a Los Angeles hospital shortly after an 18-onace baby daughter. Theresa Phyllis, was bora to her. Kane E. M. Backer la atteadlaK her. Below, the tiav Infant is shown la a respirator. Physicians said she had a good chance to live. Beside her is Robert W. Detra of the fire department rescue sqaao. who come from Portland and oth er places where- they have parking meters say they are well-liked. J. B. Rogers, downtown em ploye: "I'm not against them and I'm not. for them. I say give them a chance. We may find we will like them. I wouldn't mind, paying a nickel to be able to park near where 1 want to. You'll recall that most parking changes have met with objection, the people have lPom to them Kay Sharpaack, clerk: I don't think parkins meters would work in Salem. People park for too abort periods here and wouldn't make use of the meters. Salem is deflnttely.too- riall Wsufy . : lonV' Pti&Tj:i& think .Satem is not Quito large enough and this thing would be. just copying Portland. It ; would hurt our business which consists largely of farmers trade. Tanners would be apt to trade la the stores near the city limits, where the business districts are growing Plan to Change Forests Worries l (Continued from page 1)" message which .caused , so much concern follows: ' I have also considered the problem of certain public '"-nda Insofar as they present overlap ping Jurisdiction between th ?e partmeat"ot interior . and .agrf. Insofar f as 9 crops, including tree crops, are Involved, there -Is somethins to be- said tor Aeir retention la the department , of agriculture. Bat where lands are to be kept for the primary, pur pose of recreation and permanent publle use aad conservation they fall more logically into the de partment of the Interior. Uotorist It Indicted : In OSC Student Death "ALBANY. May ll()-Robert R. Odell, St.4 Helens, was Indicted today by the grand Jury for In voluntary manslaughter. He was accused la the deatk of Donald Kuykendall, 1, Portland, an Ore gon State college student, who was killed a week ago ta a col lision .between OdelTa ear and tbat of Robert Bracchl, . with whom Kuykendall was riding. . . . , . - ' . . ( ) NcCiI oppose Vark-: v In Meters for Salem, . . .Address: i 1 r . Mud-Runner Beats Great Joliiistom PIMUCO RACE COURSE, Bal timore, Md.; May U-tVThe mud and a great mud-runner caught up with Johnstown today. W. L. Brann's bay colt, Chal ledon, a mudder from 'way back, came on In the last three-eighths of a mile on a track soaked by day-long rain to win the 49th run ning of the rich Preakness stakes, as William Woodward's top-heavy favorite, the horse that had taken ,tke Kentucky derby by six lengths only, a week ago, ran fifth ta the field at six. ror ;three-4juarters of a mile ta this mile and three-sixteenths sal- lop. It was all Johnstown. The bis aoa of Jamestown, winner of fonr straight previous three-year-old outings by a. total of 25 lengths, loosed uke a jboo-ln. Motorists i Burgunder Admits He Slew Sal ram en (Continued fro mpage 1) attle attorney who came here to meet the suspect, was not notified Immediately that his son had been returned. The youth's mother, Mrs. Ruth Burgunder of Alham bra, Calif., likewise was not in formed. The? eider Bcrgnnders are divorced.-' - Early today, in JQ Paso, Texas, Burgunder was questioned la con nection with the' torture slaying! of Mrs.-Weston O. Frome and her daughter, Nancy, of Berkeley, Calif., on tha west Texas desert near Van Hor, Texas, March SO, It IS. He denied any knowledge of tke crime. - Questioned concerning- a mo tive for the killings, the Repub lic quoted Burgunder as saying: I haven't any guts. "X never had enough guts - to stop gambling, to stop playiaS those damn slot machines, marble boards and poker same machines. They kept me broke. ."I waa reaching the end at Tempo. I had to keep asking my mother for more and more money, and I Just couldn't sponge on her any more. I lost a couple more dollars Friday on marble machines and a poker machine, and I knew ' X had to do something then. Parched Gtizens Use Much Water V 'J , (Continued from page 1 ground supply would not be ex ceeded. One ywellK already drilled as 'a test - hole on the island to Augment the underground In filtration galleries can bo drawn on to the extent of a million gallons a day if necessary, he addedr and development -t a larger well Is now in progress. . Outside ; of Salem the ansea sonally dry weather was re flected by the report of State Engineer Charles E. Stricklla that 4t applications for permits to use water from the state's streams had been filed at ' his office during the week. Eight of the applications were from per sons la. Marion aad Polk coun ties. , Largest amounts of water asked for locally were S.SS sec ond feet from the Willamette river and Horseshoe lake, ap plied for by County Commission er Jim E. 8mith, for irrigation of 42S - acres of land, aad five second feet from laeklamute river, asked for by 'A. F. aad H. P. Xlkins, Monmouth route two,, for Irrigation of .401 acres. Injured at Scene of Gets Baidng No; Serious Forest ; Fire now ..but Outbreak. Feared . . (Continued from past X) . tares' np- near the 100-degree mark today as a climax no -f ft days of drought which left'Ore coa with the most critical forest fire threat la modem history. Strangely- not . a serious fire was burnlngr despite the tact that at Marahftald. jllrertlj on . the coast, humidity fell to. 10 per eent, only three degrees above thai pre raltJns in 1M ;'Wheai the great Ban don nra oeearrad, ,f Normally spring Is drfppW vset In Oregon but ? Portland waw..a sood example of what haa hap pened aince March.. Only . of an inch of rain haa fallen here com pared to normal of S.S 7 Inches. When the thermometer touched II degrees ljere In mid-afternoon It came within three degrees of the; all-time .May high 40, years ago.-:-; : , :! - Coastal temperatares were al most phenomenal. At Marshfield it waa nearly 15 degrees. Ordinar ily, the thermometer keeps within the high eO'a. Astoria, at the Co lumbia rivers mouth, sweltered in 90-degree neat; It ""was SO at Grants Pass. : " Four sood-slsed fires aad.a half dosen smaller biases were being fought. The largest, CO acres, raged over Blue Ridge mountain near Marshfield. while smaller tires burned in the same vicinity and all available men were called out from three CCC camps. All Warrenton CCC enrollees were mustered out to fight anoth er blaze near Vernonia, where a shingle mill and two small houses were destroyed. On Round Top mountain, 23 miles northwest of Forest Grove, 100 enrollees were trying to control flames which burned a million and a halt feet of lose . and flgOO of logging equip ment Several " sman blazes In southern Oregon were controlled. All forest areas reported condi tions "acute and all hands were standing by. Another product of the drought. Mormon crickets, plagued farmers la the rich Plne valley of eastern Oregon, near Baker. While orchard and irrigated crops were not endangered, range lands were sotting so dry that stockmen already were moving Still Bologna .IK---.--' . . IT'S tOLOCNA aad hur tt is a ados task far John & Kankcl (aUTa.) of Ear- rlshwrg. Ee distributed 15 ef hlg iimm aiiia wd net ta Wajhinstsnv JKC i $40fi00 Fire Attracted by a hoary pall of awoke, haadreds of Los Aage " .this spectacular blase and a ies ef resaltins traffic accidents hroasbt tnjary to aeveral per- A taw ahoy aad a ahecC Toy -the flanses, with 1 tlmated at S540.OOO. Three ty fire departments were called at to prevent flamee spreadbag : thixwghowt the entire blocks la fisato. : v;-' - :J gur gunders Ayait Accused Son mo Together again to do what they eaa for their sea. Sir. and Mrs. Robert Burgunder. sr., the divorced pareata of Robert Barsaader, Jr.. ac eased of slaying two aatomobile aalesmea, are ahowa la Phtfeatr, Aris- awaiting: the retara of the youth front, Tennessee, where he was captured several days after the bodies of the aalesmea were foaad ta a desert wash near Phoenix. 'It's a horrible thine, bat we've sot ta face it." . . . cattle and sheep Into mountain forest reserves despite the knowl edge that a sudden storm would kill many young animals. Dry land farmers la . central Oregon aaw crops begin to wilt and there was impending danger of much damage. SEATTLE. May lx.-A)-State Forest Supervisor T S. Goodyear today asked southwestern, Wash ington -civilian conservation corps men to stand by for emergency forest tiro fighting tomorrow, as incendiarism Increased and, fore casts of high temperatures and low humidity presaged a new cri sis la that heavily wooded section. Weather forecasts indicated some slight relief In slightly high er temperatures and local fogs alons the coast, but warned ship pers to guard commodities aguinst maximums of 00 degrees en route to Walla Walla and Yakima, and SS to Spokane. Large Crowd Out For Scout Circus Most every Boy Scout has two pareata and many of them have a few brothers and sisters. There probably were not more than three spectators to each participant at the Cascade Area council's annual circus on Sweetland field Satur day night but since about 800 scouts took part, that would make a crowd of z 400 or so. The program went off with a minimum of delays. Some thrill ing highlights were the "rescue at sea" staged la lifelike fashion by the Sea: Scouts, and the "winning of the west" pageant which gave hundreds of boys opportunity to show their skill In innumerable 1 outdoor arts and crafts. Proceeds of the circus will be devoted to improvement of Camp Pioneer, center of summer outings lor tno scouts. Roundup Foiinder, J. J. Hanaley Dies PENDLETON, Ore., May lS-OT -One of the founders of the Pen dleton round-up, 80-year-old J. J. Hamley died today. Better known as a saddler, Hamley founded a company li years ago that grew into one of the most widely known businesses of Its kind in tke world, the Ham ley Co. saddlery. Over the years. Hamley had made the presentations of SI sad dles to winners of the round-up events each year. It waa custom ary tor him. too, to buy the first round-up -tickets each year. He had -lived hero since 1005. ropnations Charged Auditor GOLDENDALE. May ' lS-tffV- County Auditor George M. Baker, i. was jailed today in Hen of T,S00 ball on a superior court information charging misappropri ation of I4.402.4S from state land sales, pin ball license and motor vehicle license funds. - Prosecutor Edgar H. Canfleld said the charge followed three days ot a state audit of Baker's accounts. He said the audit would continue. Blaze Interrupts .': ' Fire Danger Talk MEDFORD. Mav ll.-PWWhfi Homer Hixon. Union creek dlstrfei forest ranger was discussing wit Harvey Morga a, sawmill oper ator of tha trail district, new Are rules Friday noon, the roof of the as wmin caught on flra from, a spark from tha Incinerator, a ancKec onsaao summoned ty asts from the mill whlstla ax ttnguished the blase, after which the discussion of fire hazards con tinued. . , : . . jiuV Philippines Resident Is nightoayyUtim EUREKA, Calif, May ltffl -F. E. Greenfield. SO. a nlne- apple planutlon. operator of Ma- xairia, on Negroa Island . In. the PhiliimlBM. AimA mt lit. cnm noapltal , tonight of injnrles re jcefved weB ha, waa - struck a auiomonue on the Redwood fclskway ' near. DyervOla. . . - - Mr. and Mrs. Greenfield were wa their way to Vaacouvr, -J. CX. Marshfield Triplets Take Prize at Fair BAN. FRANCISCO. MayUlrW -The title or most beautiful trip lets in a contest at Golden Gate exposition today went to John, Jean and Jo Ann Bush, three-year-old daushters and aon of Earl M. Busk, Marshfield, Ore. "Bess Yons job Depend on Yonr Teeth?'7 YOU KEEP YOUR CLOTHES PRESSED-yonr shoes shiued your face shaved. WHY ISNT IT MORE IMPORTANT TO TAKE CARE OF YOUR TEETH? YOUR TEETH not only help yon to keep up a good appearance, but also help you keep up your health! Eren the best of jobs is no good at all if yonr health is so poor that yon cannot work at it ! If your teeth are good, keep them that way by eaning on the dentist and hawing' him examine them and aid you in their care! , (Sooplefte Cental Extractions, Fillings, Inlays, Crowms, Plates, Bridgework ' Vkit f Here Tomorrow Without Appointment! OUtr, E5e, l&, Ttmn, BpoUms -: n-lmimTmM Coaa Qtlea -' , Road Oiling May SfcirtfNext Week - Road ofllns may get uader way In Marlon county next week If the dry, hot weather continues, the county , court indicated yesterday. Engineer N. C Hubba and Ralph Girod. olllaa expert, were-ordered to survey the situation-and set a starting date. , In ordinary seasons tno oiling program does not open until July but conditions this month already have been ideal tor this typo of aurfaee construction. .-; Tha court reported yesterdsy it had purchased an asphalt re tort booster to obviate the neces sity of using the old steam boiler formerly used and of heating the road material during tha night. ' The program will be varied this year by addition of the practice of applying a prime coat of oil to some roads, particularly the lesser traveled ones, and lettins It stand for a year or two before the final surf scins task is undertaken. California Sifted For Kidnaping Duo (Continued from page 1) publication, it read: Tse no chances of a bloody killing you want to live. tr - George Palmer Putnam estab lished the Bend, Ore., daily Bulletin and served In Salem as private secretary . to Governor James L. Wlthycombe. der in 101C with the old Oregon' company M. Chickens Caute Wreck, So They're on Table ALBANY, May 1 J - (ff) - Ken neth Ramsey did a natural thing after he lost - control of his car while driving to Portland from Cottage Grove with two chickens, one of which got out of a box. . While trying to get the chicken back in tke box, the car plunged into a ditch and waa- wrecked, Ramsey wasn't hurt but he wrong the chickens respective necks. Say rtu DR. PAINLESS PARKER Dental Plates ; That Fit Yonr Personal Needs!- So Natnral They .Defy Detection! 1 , f - , . ' , ' - . i waero DoiB nave relatives. !vsJsewiatfA"israSci! mill !titfrfr4z