The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 14, 1941, Page 1, Image 1

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TrHw'rri Yomn ;
r
TTeaihor '
" I ' The community eerred b y
i The Oregon SUtesmaa; is
-your community, this paper
v. yonr newspaper. Look to 1
for 7 oar newt It's accu
rate, interesting, on time.
- Occasional showers today
and , pjSTednesday. Snow tar,
mountains. Max. temp. Uon
Ur. 4S. inia. SO. Northwest
wind.! tUia trace. River 1
reet, Goudy. ;
Salem. Orogoa, Tuesday Morning. January .14. 1941
Price) 3cs nwaslanaa 5e
Ho. 150
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TigMeii
Be
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rair
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TTK AO
Gove
ii i ii
Urges
: NjbJNew Taxes'
aye:
A irport
Council Gives
Go-Ahead Sign
For First
Development of $140,000
Project Awaits Only
: Official Okeh
CAA Will Call for Bids
When Agreement Made
for 63 More Acres
An airport development that
open Salem' municipal field
to uae by. commercial transport
plaBea upon completion of an ini
tial $140,000 unit received the
"go ahead" signal at an informal
city council session called by May
or W. W. Chadwick Monday af
ternoon. The civil aeronautics authority,
the council was advised, will call
for bids as soon as the aldermen
five the project their official sanc
tion and agree to buy 63 acres of
additional land. This the 12 mem
bers present and the mayor
pledged themselves to do at next
Monday night's regular meeting.
The first unit of the project,
eventually to comprise at least
four hard-surfaced runways, new
lighting and possibly a radio beam
Station, will consist of a 4000
foot paved runway 150 feet wide,
replacement or extension of the
present field illumination and
marker system. Improving drain
. age and placing interfering tele
phone and power lines under
ground, J. H. Keeffe, CAA air
ways engineer, Portland, and CAA
inspector Morris of Seattle, told
the council.
Alternate Landing Spot
tor Colombia Field
' " Taei:riii-- vrere .toU .Ikal,
after this first new runway la
completed, the field will be suit
able for use by commercial air
lines. The Salem airport ultimate
ly may be utilized as an alternate
landing spot to Portland's new
Columbia field, CAA officials in
dicated when they first called on
the council early In Novefber.
Negotiations for the project
were carried put with CAA offi
cials by the council airport com
mittee consisting of Lloyd T. Rig
don, chairman, George Belt and
Bert T. Ford. The committee ob-
' tained authority more than a
month ago to dicker for the addi
tional land required to permit con
struction of runways of a length
suitable for large planes.
Waikie Obtains
Visa for England
NEW YORK, Jan. l3.-P)-The
New York Herald Tribune said
today Wendell L. Winkle's pass
pert for his trip to England was
delivered yesterday by a state
department representative.
The newspaper said passports
also had been approved by John
Cowles, president of the Minne
apolis Star-Journal; Langdon K.
Thome, a director of the First
National bank of New York, and
. Rassell Davenport, former man-
- aging editor of Fortune raaga-
.siney who will accompany Willkle
abroad.
(In Des Moines. Cowles said he
hoped to accompany the 1940 re
publican presidential : candidate.
If passage by Pan American clip
per could be arranged.)
.Willkle plans to fly to Lisbon
next week In a clipper plane,
en route to Great Britain to sur
rey the war situation first-hand.
Before hla departure, he is ex
pected to go to Washington to
confer with Rep. Joseph W. Mar
tin, Jr., of Massachusetts, nation
al republican chairman.
Portland Truck
Firm Exempted
In "Hours" Law
WASHINGTON. Jan. 13-Pt-The
labor department's wage and
hoar division announced today the
- City Motor Trucking company,
Portland, Ore., tentatively had
been included in the seasonal ex-
emption from hour provisions of
the fair labor standards act pre
Tiously granted the "northern
: Branch of the crushed stone in
dustry. -
? .Unless objection is filed within
XI days the company will be per
mitted to work employes np to
11 hours a day and 66 hours a
- week for 14 weeks without paying
time and one-half for overtime. -
; Traffic Victim ..
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. ll-UPf
genry Jans, 77. Gull Lake. Bask.,
wad a, died In a. hospital today
ct . automobile accident injuries
suffered Saturday. He was Port
land's second traffie ; fatality of
the year. : . -
Unit
Blans A
Oregon Editor
Dies Sudd r?
..t...
ft.
LARS E. BLADINE
Publisher Dies
At McMinnville
Heart Attack Fatal to
Prominent Republican
and Former Iowan
McMINNVILLE, Ore., Jan. 1S
(A Lars E. Bladine. 65, publish
er of the McMinnville Telephone
Register and former publisher
of several Iowa newspapers, died
unexpectedly tonight of a heart
attack.
He was a prominent member
of the republican party and served
as collector of internal revenue
for Iowa from 1921 until April,
1932, when he moved to Oregon
and took over the Telephone-Register.
He also was a former president
of the Oregon Newspaper Publish
er' association. , :
native-- fwft,' BteMlne
came to the United States as a
Turn to Page 2, Col. 6)
200 Are Rescued
From Big Liner
Passengers Taken From
Luxury Ship Without
Mishap off Florida
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla..
Jan. 13. JP Coast euardsmen.
working in a moderately high sea
aicKea up by a brisk breeze, re
moved the last of 200 passengers
from the grounded luxury liner
Manhattan tonight and brought
them safely ashore.
The nearest thing to a mishap
ended haODilT when rnnlmn
grabbed a woman who lost her
oaiance wnue being lowered to
a small surf boat and nearly fell
overboard. No one was injured
and there was nothing resembling
hysteria among the passengers.
Plans were made to have the
tug Wlllet, using kedge anchors
to take advantage of swells lift
ing the ship, attempt early to
morrow to pull the Manhattan
free.
The 24,000-ton cruiser ship
went aground last night, nine
miles north of here.
The worst storm of the winter
battered Atlantic shipping today,
leaving two American freighters
In distress and delaying scheduled
arrTal ' nre passenger liners.
While other ships hove to, un
able to make headway until the
storm moved north, the 4896-ton
freighter Coelleda radioed that
(Turn to Page 2, Col. S)
Justice Bean Better
Justice Henry J. Bean was re
ported "stronger" by Deaconess
hospital attendants last night.
The 87-year-old Justice of the Ore
gon supreme court was hospital
ized for treatment of an Intestinal
ailment IS days ago.
Unsalaried Deputy Sheriff
Ep
isdde Ends; Saunders out
By RALPH C. CURTIS
The curious episode of the un
salaried Marion county deputy
sheriff was on Monday a closed
Incident.
H. o. Saunders, recently of
Los Angeles, no longer possessed,
on 'Monday, the authority under
which he had conducted an In
vestigation of pinball activities
and ordered operators to remove
some or all of their machines
fronl., public places.
j No announcement to this . ef
fect was made by Sheriff A. C.
Burk. What the - sheriff did say
was this: . :.'...'--
VI have never said he was ap
pointed, io . I can't t gar ithat .1
have dismissed him.; v
Early In the evening of Decem
ber Z0, . 1940, . sitting in The
Statesman office In the presence
of, two .representatives': of vthis
newspaper. Sheriff Burk. was
asked whether H. 0. Sapnderg
WiUlde Ideas
On President j
Powers Heard
' . ii
Suggestions Considered
by House to Restrict
British Aid Bill
Democratic Leaders Say
They Are not Opposed
to "Time Limit" H
j;
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.-(flV
Amendments to the British aid
bill reflecting, in part at least,
the ideas of Wendell L. Willkle,
were Introduced in the house to
day after administration leaders
had expressed a willingness to ac
cept some restrictions on the pow
ers the measure would give Pres
ident Roosevelt. j
After talking with the defeated
republican presidential nominee
by telephone, representative Simp
son (R of New York) proposed
that the bill's grant of authority
be limited to two years and that
the legislation specifically name
the nations which this country Is
to assist with loans of war equip
ment. Simpson, a new member of the
house but long prominent in na
tional republican affairs, said he
had talked with Willkle before
presenting his proposals, but did
not wish to commit 'the titular
party leader to them. However,
in announcing his general approv
al of the British aid pill yester
day, Willkle asked that a time
limit be included.
British Negotiating
for Sale of Securities
Meanwhile Secretary Morgen-
thau. disclosed that the British,
government. In order to get dol
lars, to finance the war, was ne
gotiating with American invest
ment trusts for he sale of an un
disclosed amount of British in
vestments in the United States, j
While the bill, as Introduced by
administration leaders would per
mit the president to lend or oth
erwise furnish military supplies to
any nation whose defense he con
siders essential to the defense of
the United States, Simpson's
amendment would authorize help
only to England, Ireland and mem
bers of the British commonwelath
of nations. Before assisting any
other nation, he explained, Roose
velt would have to come back to
(Turn to Page 2, Col. 5)
Stone Is Denied
Time Extension
Draft Board at Dallas
Rejects Request of
War Objector
DALLAS, Jan. 13 A request
filed today by Harry William
Stone of Monmouth with the Polk
county selective service draft
board for an extension of time
for the completion of registration
pending the outcome of court
action in the New York courts
concerning the constitutionality
of the law was rejected. Stone
had previously brought suit in the
federal district court at Portland
and upon having his suit thrown
out had been given until January
16 to register.
Accompanying Stone's petition
for an extension was the request
for the type of questionnaire,
available for conscientious objec
tors of the selective service draft.
Several weeks ago when Stone
reported that he would comply
with the law by registering, as a
decision by the federal courts of
Idaho had declared the law con
stitutional, he prefaced his com
pliance by a signed statement In
dicating his position as a con
scientious objector. '
was or was not a deputy sherift
He replied that he was. An
answer to a subsequent . question
brought the statement that Saun
ders was not on the payroll, j i
Convinced that the assignment
of an officer with no -risible
means of support" to the business
of policing a business recognized
as peculiarly susceptible to racket
eering, was contrary . to sound
public poller. The Statesman pub
lished, several news ' stories ahd
editorials concerning the matter
and Sheriff Burk made sereral
statements directly and t Indirect
ly, all ; of : which were i reported.
At no time did - he suggest, until
Monday,, that Saanders, was Dot
a.deputy sheriff. .; j j
; Removal . of Deput Saunders
from all. connection with the sher
iff's -office leaves the way clear
for an orderly policing of pinball
activities If . the sheriff -believes
i .(Turn .to Pag j; CoL I) j I
Nazi Raiders
Stage Fierce
Coast Attack
Thousands of Volunteers
flight Flames; Welsh i
Towns Also Bombed ,
British, Creek s Claim
New Victories .When .
Italians Fold up
(By The Associated Press)
German warplanes dealt ma
jor assault last night and early
today against a southwest. Engr
lish coastal town and casualties
were believed heavy. r
The raiders followed - . their
usual practice of dropping thou
sands of incendiary bombs to
light the way for bombers to un
load heavy explosives. Thousands
of volunteers fought the flames.
Two surface raid shelters were
struck, as were a church and two
hospitals.
Two Welsh towns also were
bombed, and a third was machine
gunned by the Germans.
For the first time since Adolf
Hitler's sky armadas began the
siege of Britain, London military
quarters claimed a "slight edge"
in the aerial conflict which may
spell victory or defeat for a nazl
invasion attempt.
As an example the British
cited four successive daylight
raids into the lair of the Ger
man luftwaffe topped by the
RAF's machine-gunning . attack
yesterday on nasi troops In
trenches along the channel coast.
Greeks Assert Italo
Lines Are Crumbling
In the Balkan war, Greece's
armies plunged ahead from cap
tured Klisura, key mountain
stronghold in central Albania, and
declared that Italian defense lines-
were crumbling before the GreeWjnj bt Oregon and its legislature, as the lst biennial session opened at tbe''cItdl yesterday, f Up
advance on Valona, Italy'a last n-pJfu Rfcrt 8. Fnrrell Jr Portland repnblieaa, aged 4, as Jib. wielded gavel-Jo first time as
major port In southern Albanidgj tlu lower bOutfe. ' Ttaper right. GoveriMw Cnnrie A. Sprngwe reads-his biennial message
A Greek column pushing north
(Turn to Page 2. Col. 1)
Salem Cherrians
Crown New King
Frank Doerfler Succeeds
to Throne at Annual
Banquet Conclave
Frank Doerfler, local landscape
designer, succeeded to the throne
of the Salem Cherrians last night
as the booster organization's
28th King Bing and third King
Frank, . at the annual banquet,
initiation and installation meet
ing at the Marion hotel.
Doerfler succeeded Kenneth
Perry, whose year of rule was
loudly lauded by the "vassals."
Seventeen men braved the Cher
rian initiation "cellar." They were
Carl Collins, Charles Hugglns,
Wallace Doerfler, James Burrell,
Fred Carstensen, Charles Barclay,
Clayborne W. Dyer, Dr. E. V.
Fortmiller, W. C. Bell, Frank Ro
berts, William Martin, Rex Kim
mel, W. J. "Pat" Farrell, Ken
neth Oolliet, Harold Pierce, D.
W. "Tex" Burroughs and G. K.
Mather.
The 1941 council of nobles will
consist of King Bing Doerfler, Sid
ney McNeil, Lord Governor Wood;
Fred D. Thlelsen, chancellor of the
rolls; Chester Zumwalt, keeper of
the orchards; A. C. Burk, king's
Jester; William C. Dyer, Jr., Duke
of Lambert; Orville Lama, Queen
Anne s consort; Mayor W. W.
Chadwick, Archbishop of Rlck
reall; Henry M. Boesch, Marquis
of Maraschino, and Fred S. Fins-
ley, Earl of Idaho.
Late Sports
DENVER. Jan. 13-GTWames
H. Moorehead, 69, former profes
sional baseball player, died here
today. Moorehead played with the
Butte, Mont., Ogden, Utah, and
Boise, Idaho, clubs la the old
Union association and formerly
managed semi-pro teams la Colo
rado. BANT FRANniSCO. Jan.
Out in front most of the wa.
Tommy Martin, IS 6-pound boxer
from London, took a 10-round
main event decision over Pat Val
entino, 178, San Francisco, at Col
iseum bowl tonight. -
TACOMA. JaiC ISHtfVA. one-
man basketball, gang. Center Nor
man Walker, scored 24 points
here tonight to lead College of
Puget Sound to a S 7-4 5 Tietory
over Whitman In the first CPS
defense, of its 194 Northwest
conference title. :v j
CPS led all the way and the
regulars took to the bench for
most of the second half. Walker
scored , 1 of his points in the
first half and played only about
half of the final period.'
CPS led at the -half, z-it:
SPOKANE. JaiCrlJ-aVMonty
Montgomery, business manager of
the Spokane Indiana of the Wes
tern .International baseball league
announced today the acquisition
of ,a - pitcher and "an- lnf ielder. -
" (Tnra-td Pare 2; Col. )
THEY LEAD DELIBERATIONS OF LAWMAKERS
f - ' ' ' s
to the two hoaes. ' llelaw. Senator Deas Walker, Independence, a
tion to the senate presidency by
the post this year in Walker's
Senate and
Posts
M Eie EaE
Paul Hauser9 Column
The state legislature arrived
yesterday in a heavy fog and by
terms of the state constitution Is
entitled to re
main therein for
40 davs.
Alter me it
days, by terms M
of said eonstltu-t-i
tion, the pajff
stops and the
leaislature comes
out of the to g
with the clarion
r
cry "Out of t h e
ther
getf d ac-
won-1
mnrk. let's
to work" and
complishes won-
ilri. The accom
plishments of the rni H. emw, jr.
legislature in these frantic periods
amazes most-everybody, including
the public printer who has to set
them down, in good Ink and on
paper of good stock. There is no
objection to this as long as Ore
gon still has trees and Canada
sells us pulpwood.
The nanniflcJent pay of the
legislature is 93 per day or per
diem if yon talk the kind of
Latin legislators know. The
other Latin they will admit to Is
'pro bono pnbllco" and if yov
ask them why they work for S
a day. they; will respond from
the depth of their togas MPro
. Bono Publico and of course I
remember yon.
The legislature was In session
three, hours yesterday . and f 3 for
three hourtr Is a buck an hour,. as
any Certified Public Accountant
nlalnrv see. This but make
some people say, "Well, what are
they 'kicking anoav espeoauy
the good people of Marion coun
ty who said it so vehemently that
the legislators are seriously con
sidering moving .the eapttol back
to Oregon JCity, , - . -
1st fact, some of these days
both bowses might- get so
vsteamedl np with oratory that
they could Hoat it back on the .
lighter-thsn-elr principle. .
The price of eggs In England
has been reduced to 12 cents a
itA.an The hlaeVAnt liaa nnariit.
ly slowed production in the more
modern nennousea.
La Trirlata . GoTeraor,
Spragne read hla message. t
the legisiatnre with one eye n
hie speech and the other Just
idling. He bent the nose piece
. on. v bis ; spectacle , . yesterday
morning .and sent - them . to aa
optician. The optician. In - at
teraptfng to straighten the o-'
' piece, cracked a - lens. Since,
time was a-wastin the broken
lens was patched" tip with m
4 - (Turn. to Page 2r CcL 7 -
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WW
. VM .....
it
Senator Dowgias McKay, Salem,
laror. statesman photos.
House Officers Take
Without formal Contests
Pre-Session Caucuses Iron out Path for
Offices; Dean H. Walker Named Head of
Senate; Farrell, House Speaker
The 41st session of the state legislature followed a
smooth path ironed out for it in pre-session caucuses as it or
ganized yesterday and house and senate elected officers with
out contests.
Dean H. Walker, white-haired Independence hop grower,
was the choice of the 25 republican and five democratic sen
ators for i president of the senate.
Robert S. Farrell. jr., 35-year-
old Portland attorney, was unani
mously elected speaker of the
house after defeating William M.
MeAliatex of Medford 37 to 23 in
a Sunday! night caucus.
State Senator Walter E. Pear
son of Portland, who completed
his term as state treasurer a
week ago, will be chairman of the
Important senate ways and means
committee, President of the Sen
ate Walker announced shortly af
ter his election.
Angus Gibson of Lane county
won the coveted ways and means
chairmanship in the house. Speak
Farrell's committee appointments
revealed. I
The (0 members of the bouse,
24 of whom are "freshmen, and
the seven newcomers and the re
elected members of the senate
were sworn in by Chief Justice
Percy Kelly of the state supreme
conrt, i
Senator W. H. Strayer, senior
member of the .senate, and Rep.
Frank Lonergan served as tem
porary chairman of their respec
tive bodies during organization
proceedings.
- Senator H. C Wheeler of Lane
(Turn to page 3, col. 1)
New Speed Laiv Bill Offered
ojryConside Day
Aside from the bouse bill ap
propriating the legislature's, expenses,-the
only bill introduced
on the first day was a measure to
adopt fixed highway speed limits
of - II miles nn hour in school
sonesv 20 mile- in business dis
trict, 28 miles" In residence dis
tricts, and 45 miles on open highways.-"
f.:. ' -.
v The measure which would re
peal the basic speed law and shift
the burden of p roof from tneof
flcer to the driver, was Introduced
br Senators Lee of : Multnomah,
McKay of Marion . and - Clark ; of
Donglas. . .r---S'r"--:
Under present law. it a motor
ist is arrestedwhlle exceeding the
speed limit, the nicer must prove
the motorist' is operating .the car
in aa unreasonable and imprudent
manner. vvA i- s.'
. Under the rronosed law..lf a
motorist' is arrested for violating
7
A
right, le.consnatnlated on his elera-
who gave np his own aperatKns u
All
Consul General
Of East Indies
Dares Japanese
NEW YORK, Jan. IZ-iJP- 3.
A. Schurman, Netherlands consul
general, declared tonight the
Dutch East Indies "would be de
lighted to hare Japan try Inva
sion, for I am sure the Japanese
would get the licking of their
lives by our fleet, air force and
land army of over 200,000 sol
diers. He asserted Germany had made
preparations for "springing, a
coup in the Dutch overseaa terri
tories just as they did In Holland,
but our people were too smart
for them."
"I believe that the Dutch East
and West Indies are the only
countries where the German plans
to create disturbances have utter
ly failed, he said. "We even cap
tured some 20 German ships fully
loaded with cargo for which, the
Germans had already paid.
the speed limit, be must prove be
was driving safely. . .
A system of speed sones would
be provided, in which bodies eon
troling those sones may set either
higher or lower limits. :
. The highway commission would
bare this authority on all high
ways outside of city limits, and
eounty courts would have - Juris
diction over all roads in their
counties which are not designated
state highways.:; -v-:"--,
v For highways through cities,
there would be - Joint jurisdiction
between the city authorities- and
the state i speed control 'board.
Members of this board would be
the secretary of state, snperiateii
dent of .state police and the chair
man of the state highway commis
sion. - -, - - -. v -
Speed "sones 'on all other city
streets would be regulated solely
by the municipal authorities. -,
. pisagtj Says
Land Board Investment
a i r
n Office -Building
is ync rropqsai ,
8 ' :i '
. Compensation,
iReforms Suggested;,
Trucks Discussed
t -
jlr STEPHEN C. MERGLER
With all eyes on tb interna
tional scene and DnrlrAthnnka
about to open wider to oav for
the! ' United States' - sdarlng re
armament program, Oregon's big
task Is to keep its house In order,
its industrial wheels turning' and
its: state government functioning
eujeienuy ana economically, Gov
ernor Charles A. Sprague told the
41st state legislates; assembly
here yesterday afternodn. ,
The state should therefore
adapt no new forms of taxation
an4 should not splurge on ap
propriations - and thereby upset
its closelr balanced 191-43 bud
get, the governor advised in his
biennial message. j I -
But without dtsturbijik the bud
ge and with profit tofthe sUU
land board, the sUfje should
build a new office building with
in the capitol group j to provide
adequate, centrally-located -housing
for such major, self-supporting
sgencies as the public u till t lea
department and the i unemploy
ment COmnensation Mmmiaslnn
I which now rent euarterli in down-
I tnton C.l. .v- Ll.i t 1
.vnu oucui, vu ezeppurs pro
posed, j
Funds for Building 1 I t
From Land Board Bonds
Buch a building, costing
000,000 and to be jeirected on
block 85, across thje capitol
plaxa from the new state library,
conld be satisfactorily! financed,
he said, with fowdkMefived from
sale of land board bonds. The
board " might . well profit from
pifesent favorable market prices
on Its securities and cojuld obtain
a freturn of 3 per eent on ita
investment In the building, to be
paiid for out of office rentals
ovjer a long period i ojt ! years,! he
suggested. i :
jThe governor also OUUinedUhs
board of control's proposed six
year building program, costing
3?00,000 a year, to bring the 12
stfte institutions up to date, and
mde, among other major recom
mendations, the following:
a. Increase weight 'akd length
limits for trucks operating t on
state highways, and make trucks
bear part vf the cost of general
gdyernment. j j
P. Equalize school taes within
counties so that richir Hi.tr-ii.
WOUld. helO ta fiunnnrt
poorer dls-
txicts
. . . " -
I c
3. Creats the office; of sdmia
istrator. subordinate jtp " the iln
dOatrlal accident commission J to
administer th. wn.v... Jl
. w. .mcu com
pensation law; find ajway toin-
luuijjcuMuua awaras fin
the fixed categories isted .
a inethod of appeal frdm commis
sion awaras that "wduld Insure
a greater degree . of i justice to
claimants and eontHKirin.
tke present method of tlury triaL"
Extension of Forestry j l -Program
Is Suggested ' j j
1.4. Extend the adminkstratlon'a
forestry program by T enacting
laws to provide for itrlinr ffM
prevention and suppression meth
ods, by acquiring burned-over and
cutover lands for growth of sew
forests, and by enforcing mini
mum forest standards to permit
nitural reforestation. f
if. Enaet no labor legislation at
thfs session, since the power of
the state, in the light jef recent
national enactments and court
decisions, "does not appear to go
much beyond efforts at mediation
arid local policing." j t
4ff. Let "the much-debated ques
tion of 'experience rating new
a (part of the unemployment com
pensation law) ... .taud . . . the
test of experience." j J i
,lLAmend peopiei utility
district law to permit sale by; ne
gotiation of district ; bonds to the
federal government, j j j
j Governor Sprague devoted fer
eral divisions of bis zaessage to
tle federal and international sit-
uuons. . i i i
NoUng that the president's poll
H (Turn to Page 2, CoL l
onndiof
1 1
islature Is
Offered on Radio
n - - i - i
"! First of a series of breadeasU
designed to present background
material on the Oregon legiala .
inre fa sehednledl for ; tonight at ' :
71 o'clock over radio station
KSLM. The series is! being hr
Ranged by tembersr of -the .
siate; department of I education.
Staff with cooperation of Tbe '
Oregon - Bta teaman and m nam-:,
per of other persons and orgaa :j
tlations. " ' ,";" i Jii -f
l Tonight's broadcast . wH
f'LesteUtores, Past !a4 Pres
nt- and win be presented. ;by
Italph C. CnrOai assistant web-.
lisher of The statesman,
slstedt by Mrs. Cartia, ?
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