TAGZ FOU3 1. lttf United MdrJta : "No Favor Sxvayt 17; No Fear Shall Awe" - From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor arid Publisher Member of the Associated Press t ' The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to tha use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. Where the "West Begins i The conference of western republicans at Salt Lake City which was advertised as one in which the western states would unite to drive for re gional recognition adjourned with little ac complished toward that end. Mr. Tickle, the California state chairman is quoted as referring to the 11 western states as the "orphan child" of the federal government and as demanding for the west a "place in the sun." Clarence Buddington Kelland, Arizona's contribution to the national committee and erstwhile pub licity man for the committee proposed: ; "We ought to demand dominion status for the 11 western states and acquire the privilege of 'sending an ambassador to Washington." ; All of which strikes us as smart-alecky. Cer tainly it is not based on facts. The west has its place in the national sun and not in the sunset either. Study war contract allotments, and the west, especially California, has been generous ly favored. The coast has had all the business could, handle. In the matter of public expenditures for re clamation, the act limits the expenditures to the public land states of the west. In the dis tribution of road funds the west is likewise' fa vored because of iU long mileage and its area in public ownership. The west has received such great investments as Boulder, Bonneville and Grand Coulee dams. Eastern states are highly critical of federal bounties to the west. As far as representation in the government is concerned the west had a fine man in as pre sident, Herbert Hoover, and every one of the western states voted against his reelection. The distribution of senators favors the thinly populated states, many of which are in the west. This business of waving a sectional flag is sorry stuff. The south cries around over, freight rates, and even insists on wallowing in its own mire of political and economic discrimination. . The west should attempt a cry-baby stunt. The facts will not bear out the wails. If we start such political provincialism we will have to change the song: "Out where the west begins" and Add a few verses that here dwell the tender feet, the whiners and moochers. We ought not to get in that class. fio Betting Tax One of the most .powerful : "monopolies" in the country is the pari mutuel betting or ganization. Its power in our own legislature is well known. Recently it persuaded the sen ate finance committee to cut out the federal tax on pari mutuel betting which would have yielded over 27 millions of new revenue to the government. So while jewelry and theatre ad , missions, stage fares and telephone charges can be assessed higher taxs the gamblers at the country's race tracks must go scot free of any federal tax. The race' meets generally managed to sur vive even under orders for saving of tires and gasoline. The "statistics show that the "take" of pari mutuel operations is higher than ever before as the flush-pursed public crowds the races to get action on its money. In eastern and southern states the state gov ernments derive a considerable portion of their revenues from a cut in the pari mutuel re ceipts. In 1942 even governors were worried lest this source of income be curtailed. Pro bably the pari mutuel pack used the governors in this emergency to head off federal taxation. While the states do share in the money staked by bettors, the operators of the pari mutuels derive enormous profits. Under the new law, whiskey, which costs about 60 cents a gallon to make, will bear a federal tax of $9. The state adds its toll ei ther in tax or profit. Tobacco is likewise very heavily taxed. But no federal tax is levied on pari mutuel betting. It is hard to explain this tax discrimination among vices, unless one knows the strength of the pari mutuel organization. I MAY AE TO DROP CT V r2TSt- 'mliyiv Freedom of Trespass In a case in his court Federal District Judge James A. Fee upheld the ancient right of a per son to traverse undeveloped country. This se cures to the public a cherished privilege. In the west particularly where farm land merges into woodland and mountainside, the ruling is im portant. Protection against trespass is all right for settled country, though even there posting is necessary to bar those who would cross the land; but in the open country beyond the fence-lines, in forests and mountains, that country remains free for humans to traverse as for animals. The decision was rendered in a suit by the administrator of the estate of a person who was electrocuted by coming in contact with live wires on mining property as she was gathering mushrooms there. Judge Fee ruled the person had a right to go on the property and that the company. was negligent. in failing to maintain its wiring properly and so was liable in the suit. Our Oregon beaches are public property and the public has freedom of access and use of these beaches, which is not the case in many states. Judge Fee's ruling ensures freedom of the wilds to the public also. There are many people who fight for just that sort of freedom. May be it can be smuggled in with the. other four. Unity Against Hitler Great Britain and the1 United States moved first to throw their weight in favor of Gen. Tito and his partisans in Yugoslavia by announcing they were giving him the larger share of military supplies rather than Gen. Mihailovitch, , the "regular" commander, on the ground that Tito was doing more fighting of the axis. Thus is averted a threatened split in support, with the western allies favoring Mihailovich and Russia favoring Tito, whose partisans are reputedly pro-communistic. If a showdown has to come, it is deferred until after the war when the whole problem of Yugoslavia's internal organization will have to be decided. By moving first the western allies saved loss of face by trailing Russia or open competition by preferring Mihailovich. This of course does not settle the issue, but it does keep first and foremost the single objective of unity in fight ing the no. 1 enemy, Hitler. When the Midnight Choo-Choo Leaves for Alabam' Today's tadSo Progiramnis Radio Reporter Returns Charles Collingwood, CBS correspondent in London and later in North Africa, whose broad casts were highly informative during the early days oMhe invasion of French Africa, is back in this country. Interviewed on the radio the other night he reiterated his view that the United States represenatives played along too long with the Vichyite French in North Af rica, and as a result, he says, the United States has lost much prestige throughout the region. Now our representatives are trying to retrieve their ground and we have somewhat better relations with the Free French committee at Algiers. DeGaulle, he says, unquestionably has the support of the majority of Frenchmen. The committee functions, and the government it di rects is by no means a one-man show. ; Collingwood's comments, coming from one who lived through the period from, the first landings up to victory in North Africa, are in teresting because they reveal his now-seasoned opinion respecting the American diplomatic ad venture in dealings with the French. It is al- ? tpgether probable that the widespread public criticism altered the direction of subsequent diplomacy, because the Secretary Hull of Mos cow was quite different from the Hull of 1 942. Rumor Rate If you want to see how fast a rumor tra vels read this AP item: STOCKHOLM, Dec. 13-(P-A roundabout report' reaching here today through Ankara and Budapest said President Roosevelt -had conferred yesterday at Gibraltar, with Gen eral Franco of Spain and Premier Antonio Salazar of PortugaLV : j From Gibraltar to. Ankara to Budapest to Stockholm to the USA; and probably the yam was false io start with. Only Radio Vichy is needed . to complete the TVichous" circle. ' I: Different people-have different defense me- does most of the talking, .thus preventing his interviewers "from driving home their appeals; President. Coolidge took a different tack. While really a somewhat talkative -person among in- as president, and rarely spoke when inter viewed. In that way he avoided committing . himself. Each person develops his own system. Art Perry in Medford M-T remarks that since his ousting "Benito Mussolini has had about everything but the earache and fallen arches." But what about the arche de triumphe for the grand entry into Cairo for Christmas dinner a year ago? Interpreting The War faews By KIRKE L. SIMPSON Tne nazi iront in the Dnieper bend cracked dan geiousty wiiu iUiSiaa recap .cue oi caeiKasy, last nazi mer-bank rampart impeding progress of tne noitnein jaw of the red army driving to entrap the nazis southeast of Kiev. Whether taken by storm, as Moscow indicates, ui , v . -. as iieiMin cUumtu, uie ivsun is tne ame lor uie uivaaers. i ne nazis are tonlronied with a swiit reUeat irom tne vvnoie urueper puueau to save some remnants of forces still deployed there or an equally swilt soilt of forces irom the Kiev bulge io bolster tne Uneaieiiea iront in Uie bend. For the nazi higa command retreat from the Daieyer oena wouia involve abandonment of tne nai army an eauy trapped in tarn Crimea. Yet v. .. ..ui Ui ituws num tne Kiev bulge front to prop the tottering deiense line in the bend would i. . li ieatci' uisaier. ieapue .Russian wiuuuawal at liadomsyl 60 mues wet ox Kiev, toere seems to be little possi bility tnat tne German coumer-oiiensive against tne nucuu southwest, segment of tne wide ana deep Huisian salient west of Kiev will acnieve any tacucal or strategic success. Uemua admission of 11U-..OU uuiacucu upe oriy vo tne south at Cher kasy is aiso an acKnowledgemeat that Soviet troops m t.ie ixiev ouige orougai tu a nalt tne biggest nazi counter attack since Uie reireat from tne volga be gan. mat is a repeuuon of what happened in the bat tle of the Kursk salient montns ago. It is a sure m cucauou uiat wuaiever xuissian leiniorcements were sent into uie oatue or uie Oulge, tney were sent tneie ior oiiensive not neiensive purposes. xvni tnat ouensive, aimed at the communicauons jugular vein of tne whole German right uank in Russia, has now Lctt-ui to ion. It seems clear tnat to find troops and equipment to maintain tne unsuccessful Kiev bulge counter oiiensive ior weeKS, nazi generals were lorced to thin out tueir lines to the soutneast. i. ney are pay ing Uie price for tnat in the loss of Cnerxasy, and tne ever mounting Russian tnxeats to Krivoi Rog and Ku-ovograd, tne bastions whicn are the keys to tne nazis' escape irom Uie Dnieper bend trap. To put it in another way, tne nazi offensive agan tne iviev ourge, unoet taken both to safe guard threatened major commumcations witn tne south Hank in Russia and to ease pressure od the tones wugnt m jlou potential river bend , trap, is boomerang i ng na lact rf H1r-S8 as a diversion ary eiiort is cunironong its .mfirt witn crucial uecisious una cannot -ne noag delayed.! i They must soon sacrifice some part of ihesouth ern uuut w v iu mt -or -xiac m total military disaster in southern .Russia at tha wry Tnoment tne M eneran Ruasian-aUitid war council uaa warned them of coming attacks not only in tne east lout also in toe south and west. "By every xule of iniutary. logic their answer would be .to man defensively against Russian attempts to expand the Kiev bulge southwestward, and meanwhile pull ut of the Dnieper bend under desperate rear guard pro u tection to stand behind the Bug river, or even the Dniester. KSLM WEDNESDAY 13M K. 1. flO News 7:05 Marion" County Farm and Home Program. 7:13 Rise 'n' Shine. 7:30 News. 7:49 Morning Moods. 8:00 Cherry City News. S: 10 Music, t :30 Tango Tina. 8. -00 Pastors Call. 9:15 It's the Truth, 9:30 Popular Music. 10:00 News. 10:05 A Song and a Dance. 10:30 Music. 11 KM News. 0 m 11:05 Music. 10:30 Wohl Sophistications. 12 :00 Organallties. 12:15 News. 12:35 MaUnee. 1 :00 Orchestra. 1:20 Mai HaUett's Orchestra' 1 :30 Milady's Melodies. 1:45 Spotlight on Rhythm. 2:00 Isle of Paradise. 2:15 US Marines. 2 :30 Music. 2 45 Broadway Band Wagon 3:00 KSLM Concert Hour. 4:00 The Aristocrats. 4:15 News. 4 30 Boys' Town. 5:00 Nat'l Industrial Information. 5:15 Let's Reminisce. 5 :30 Melodies. 6:00 Tonight's Headlines. :15 War News Commentary. 6:20 Evening Serenade. Ten-Two-Foui . 6 :45 Music. 7 :00 News. 7:05 Charlie Himp'i Ballads. 7:15 This Is Your Business. 7 :30 Keystone. 7:45 This Is Your Business. 8:00 War Fronts In Review. 8:10 Interlude. 8:15 Holly wood 8 :30 Mustangs. 8:45 Treasury Star Parade. 9:00 News 9:15 Old Timers. 9:45 Between tha Lines. 10 :00 Serenade. 10:30 News. 10:15 Ruth Forbes. 10:30 News. 10:45 Art Baker's Notebook. 11:00 The Guiding Light 11:15 Today's Children. 1130 Light of the World. 11:45 Hymns of All Churches. 12 :00 Women of America. 12:15 Ma Perkins. 12:30 Pepper Young's Family. 12:45 Right to Happiness. 1:00 Backstage Wife. 1:15 Stella Dallas. 130 Lorenzo Jones. 1:45 Young Widder Brown. 2:00 When A Girl Marries. 2:30 Just Plain BiU. 3:45 Front Page Farrell. 3:00 Road of Life. 3:15 Vic and Sade. 3:30 The Personality Hour. 4:00 Dr. Kate 4-15 News of the World. 4 30 Caribbean Nights. 4:45 H. V. Kaltenborn. 5:00 OK for Release. 5:15 Rhythm and Romance. 5:30 Day Foster. . Commentator. 5 :45 Louis P. Loc finer. 6 :00 Eddie Cantor. 630 Mr. District Attorney. 7:00 Kay Kyser's Kollege. 8:00 Fred Waring In Pleasure Time. 8 :15 Commentator. 8:30 Beat the Band. 9:00 Mr and Mrs. North. 9:30 Scramby Amby. 10 00 News Flashes. 10:15 Your Home Town News 10:25 Labor News. 10:30 Gardening for Food. 10:45 Voice of A Nation. 11:00 Music. 1130 Music. 11:45 News. 12:00-2 A J. Swing Shift 4:45 News. 5:00 Initiation to Romance.' 5 :15 Superman. 530 Show Time. 5:45 Norman Nesbitt. 6:00 Gabriel Heatter. 6:15 Grade Fields. 6 -30 Soldiers With Wiags. 7.-00 John B. Hughes. 7:15 Fulton Oursler. 7 30 Lone Ranger. 8 :00 Main Line. 8 :30 Bulldog Drummond. 9.-00 News. 9:15 Todays Top Tunes. 9 :30 General Ma lone. 9:45 Fulton Lewis, jr. 10:00 Treasury Star Parade. 10:15 Bien Venidos Amigo. 10:30 News. 10:45 Music. 11:00 Halls of Montezuma. 1 1 30 Orchestra . . 11:45 Songs of the Service. KOW NBC WEDNESDAY 2 Ke. 4-00 Dawh Patrol. 5:55 Labor News. 6:00 Music from Manhattan. 6:30 News Parade. 6:55 Labor News. 7:00 Journal of Living. 7:15 News. 7 30 Reveille Roundup. 7:45 Sam Hayes. KX) Stars of Today. 8:15 James Abbe Covers the News 8:30 Robert St. John. 9:45 DavM Harura. 9.-00 The Open Door. 9:15 Glenn Shelley. 9:30 Mirth aiwl Madness. ' 10:00 Across the Threshold. The Safety Valve FIRST WHITE CBUD Amity, Ore. Dec 11, 194 J To the Editor: In the Statesman of Decem ber 10 appeared a news item under a Walla Walla dateline telling of the death of Leander Kirk, and claiming that he was the first white man born in Oregon, giving the date of his birth as 1847. I claim this is an error. I had a half brother, Alonzo Umphlette, who was born January 9, 1847 at Knox Butte. He was thought to be the se cond white child born in Linn county. Marion Crabtree, son of Fletcher Crabtree, has the dis tinction of being the first white child born in what is now Linn county in 1846. When Mr. Kirk was born, Jane Earl Umphlette, mother of Alonzo, died at the birth of her son. She was the first white person to be buried in what is now Linn county, ac cording to C H. Stewart, his torian of Albany. Her grave is in Meeker's Gap, now ;- called Millersburg. I believe overlook ing . the t busy,; Pacific highway. Mrs. ' Charles Alexander in an - article in the Oregonian also gave her death as the first white person to die in Linn county. " If 1847 is the correct year of Mr. Kirk's birth it is reasonable to think that he was not the first child born in Oregon, a there had been a heavy immigration to Oregon before that year, be sides the missionaries who were already here. Let's keep the re cord straight. - John M. , Umphlette Amity, Ore. KOIN CBS WEDNESDAY S9 K. 6-00 Northwest Farm Reporter 6:15 Breakfast Bulletin. 6:20 Texas Rangers. 6:45 KOIN Klocfc. 7:15 News. 7 30 News. 7:45 Nelson Pr ingle. News. 8:00 Consumer News. 8:15 Valiant Lady. 8:30 Stories America Loves. 8:45 Aunt Jenny. 9:00 Kate Smith Speaks. ' 9:15 Big Sister. 930 Romance of Helea Trent 9:45 Our Gal Sunday. 10:00 Life Can Be Beautiful. 10:15 Ma Perkins. 10 30 BernadineFly no. 10:45 The Goldbergs. 11 .-00 Young Dr Malone. 11:15 Joyce Jordan. 1130 We Love end Learn. 11 :45 News 12 :00 Neighbors. 12:15 Bob Anderson. News. 1230 William Winter. News. 12:45 Bachelor's Children. 1 :00 Home Front Matinee, 130 New Horizons. Z:O0 Mary Marlin. 2:15 Newspaper of the Air. 2.-45 American Women. 3: 00 News. 3:15 Lynn Murray Show. 330 Carols. 8.-45 The World Today. 4:00 Stars of Today. 4:15 Sam Hayes. News. , 430 Easy Ace. 4:45 Tracer of Lost Persons. SAO Galen Drake. 1:15 Red's Gang. 530 Harry Flannery, News. 8:45 News 8:55 BiU Henry ' S .-00 Sunset Serenade. 630 Jack Carson. 7:00 Great Moments la Muaie. 730 Music. 7:45 Hello Soldier. 8:00 I Love A Mystery. ' S.1S Harry James Orchestra. 830 Dr. Christian. - 8 55 News. - 9:00 Sammy Ksye. 930 Northwest Neighbors. 10 .-OS Five Star FinaW 10:15 Wartime Women. 10:20 William Winter. 1030 Music. 11. -00 Music. ' 1130 Manny Strand Orchestra. 11:45 Air-Flo f the Air. 11:55 News. , . Midnight to 6 KM a jn. Muaie & News KEJCBN WEDNESDAY 1199 KS, 6:00 Musical Clock. 6:15 National Farm ' and Home. 6:45 Western Agriculture. 7 .-00 Music. 7.-05 Home De.-nunstraUon Agent. 7:15 News. 7:30 News. 7:45 The Humbard Family. 8 $0 Breakfast Club. 9. -00 My True Story. 9:30 Breakfast at Sardi's. 100 News. 10:15 Commentator. 1030 Andy and Virginia. 10:45 Baby Institute. 11:00 Baukhage Talking. 11:15 The Mystery Chef. 1130 Ladies. Be Seated. 12.-00 Songs. 12:15 News 12:30 Livestock Reporter. 1235 Organ Reveries. 12:45 News. 1:00 Blue Newsroom Review. 2:00 What's Doing. Ladies 2:30 Voices, Harmony. 2:40 Labor News. 2 :45 Gospel Singer. 3:00 Hollywood News Flashes. 3:15 Kneass With the News. 330 Blue Frolics. 4 :00 News. 4:15 Letters to Santa Claus. 430 Hop Harrlgan. 4:45 The Sea Hound. 5:00 Terry and the Pirates. 5:15 Dick Tracy. 530 Jack Armstrong. 8:45 Captain Midnight 6.-00 Band Wagon.. . 630 Band. 635 Sports. 7 .-00 Raymond Gram Swing. 7:15 This Is Your Business. 730 Down the Ways. " 8.-00 News. 6:13 Lum and Abner. 830 Battle of the Sexes. 9:00 Inspector Hawks and Son, 9:15 Oregon en Guard. 930 News. 9:45 Art Baker. 10 KM Down Memory's Lane. 1930 Broadway Bandwagon. 19:45 Music. 11:00 This Moving World. 11:15 Organ Concert. 1130 News. tvALE-MBS-WEDNESDAr-l4 KS. 6:45 Dave West. 7.-00 News T:15 Texas Rangers. 730 Memory Timekeeper. 8:00 Bible Institute. 830 News -.f - .. . 8:45 Ws shop 85 How Do You Say It? KOAC WEDNESDAY 859 StS. 19:00 News. 19:15 The 'Homemakers Hour. 11:00 School of the Air. 1130 Concert halL 12 KM News. 12:15 Noon .Farm How. 1.-00 RMin the Range. 1:15 U P. Chronicle. 120 Variety Time. 2:00 Problems of Youth. 230 Memory Book of Music 3.-O0 News. 8 as Music. 4 KM A to Z Novelty. 4:15 Red Cross. 9.-00 Boake Carter. 9:15 Woman s Side of the News. 5 :30 Music. r 10. KM News. - ' 10:15 What's Newt 1030 This nd That. 11 .-00 Buyer's Parade. 11:15 Marketing. 1130 Music. . 11.45 Rose Room. 12 KM News. 12:15 Music. 12:45 Farm Front. 1:00 Harrison Woods. 1 :15 All Star- Dance Parade. 130-FuU Speed Ahead. 2 KM Ray Dady. 2:15 Texas Rangers. 230 Yours for A Song. 2:45 Wartime Women. 230 News. - 3 KM Phillip Keyne-Gordon. foran zzz- Y' V TUIIE III USUI Every Mon. Wed. At 6:30 P. ! 'tPCD IJjQl-ri (Continued from Page 1) become f soiled and insanitary, and after a few weeks the re quirement were, lifted. Whether the masks did any 'good or not is difficult to say At least they have never been revived for popular wear. y... Since 1918 research Into the source and treatment of influ enza has been continuous. The cause is traced to a virus so minute that it passes through the porcelain filter of the bacteri ologist. f Treatment for preven tkm and cure is still in the test ing stage, with sulfa compounds now the iavorite remedy, as in the case of certain streptococcic infections lke pneumonia. There has been a favorable report on a nasal spray developed by University of California doctor In cooperation . with the navy. But uniformly . doctors -prescribe rest as the first essential in com bating the disease, y y Will there be a general epi demic of influenza or other dis ease accompanying or following this war? . That is hard to say. The present Influenza attack is "in mild form, not different from peace-time flu. Thus far typhus has n o t caused" very serious damage among armies or civil ians. The general- incidence of disease is probably higher than before the war, especially in oc cupied ; countries. For instance "Netherlands Newi" (r o m sources within The Netherlands reports increase in cases of boils attributed to "the complete lack of soap." A Rotterdam paper re ported "a veritable plague of lice among the city's children," dif ficult to combat because of lack of soaps. And we always think of the Dutch housewife as the soul of cleanliness! The News further reports the greatest epi demic of diphtheria on record and an increase in number of cases of scarlet fever. The allied countries have been spared serious epidemics. While there is no reason to predict a serious epidemic merely because they have occurred in former wars, it is not at all impossible for some virulent form of disease to arise and spread. There i is every reason for people to guard their own health, to keep them selves physically fit. They should treat promptly with rest and suitable medicines such ailments as the common cold which often is merely preliminary to more serious illness. This obligation is the more serious because of the shortage of doctors and nurses and the heavy burdens on hos pital facilities. Care in diet, avoidance of physical exhaus tion, suitable exercise will help. though germs are noted for be ing no respecters of persons. Today's Garden By "1-IK U AIADSJM F. R. C. has asked for "the names of six nice single" roses. Perhaps the best known is Dainty Bess, but recently when I visited a rose grower he told me that he was dropping this variety and in its stead carry ing Kathleen Mills as the best pink single rose. It has ten petals, wavy and of very heavy satin finish. The petals are pink edged with wine-rose. It is fragrant and of immense size. . ' I still like the Dainty Bess with Its dark stems. Innocence is a twelve-petalled "rose of a delicate peach, opening into a big showy bloom centered with golden stamens."1 Lulu has one of the finest buds in any rose. It is a salmon pink. Cecil Is the finest yellow sin gle rose. ' Another good yellow is the sulphur colored Mutabilis. ' Sunday Best is crimson with a snowy white eye. This last Is a semi-climber. - ' 3:15 Stars of Today. J 30 Music. ' 3:45 Bill Hay. 4 KM Fulton Lewis. 1r. 4:15 Johnson Family. 4 30 Rainbow Rendezvous. 430 Treasury Star Parade. 4:45 Book of the Week. 5K0 On the Upbeat. 530 Story Time. 5:45 It's Oregon's War. 6:15 News. 8:30 Evening -Farm Hour. ' 730 Shorthand Contest. Anniversary Of First Plane A petition 1 to Orville j Wright asking that he permit jhisj world's first successful f flying machine" which has been resting 'for the past 12 years in ! a museum at South Kensington, I England, to be returned "to this countr after the war, is to be signed lere today by pilots, co-pilots, s ewardesses and maintenance work rs of Unit ed Air lines. ;. " - '; t !: The petition, which rill be pre sented to America's o iginal air man, is to be signed as part of Unixed's observance today of the 40th -anniversary of Wilbur t and Orville Wright's first pight Jn' a power-driven airplan at Kitty Hawk, NC- ! ; j ' ! The petition, which v. ill bear the signatures of hundreds of United's personnel along its i ntire $300 mile system, reads: WHEREAS: we, the pilots, co pilots, stewardesses, an 1 mainten ance men and women of United Air lines owe so i mu :h to j you, Orville Wright, and yoi ir late bro ther Wilbur, for the ireless ex perimentation and research which today makes aviation tftfc powerful economic, social and m litary force that it is, and ' y " i; WHEREAS: ye revt re the tra ditions and heritage 3f aviation in these, United States and i ' WHEREAS: your po ver - driv en flying machine which fiijst; flew at Kitty Hawk on December 17, 1903,! and, which no tr rests in England, is tangible p -oof of this nation's role in pioneer ng aviation 40 years ago, and 11 WHEREAS: we belie ve this air plane should be enshrined in these United States rather than in a for eign land -. ;! , WE, THE UNDERSIGNED, be lieving our sentiments will be ' shared by all those En aviation as well as by the public gener ally, respectfully I petition: '. That you grant your permission to have man's first successful, power-driven airplane returned to this coun try when peace again domes to the world. '. ; 1 Li I - Salem Hig Students Enter Science Search Margaret Jane Emmbns, George Frum and Jerry Leedi took apti tude tests Saturday at Salem' high school which may put khem in the running in Westinghodse's annual science talent searchl" Examin ations were given under the direc- high school r- ii i ng in these tion' of June Philpott, science instructor.: Forty students lead examinations will be sent to Wash ington, DC, to attend the science talent institute for five days and to take ; final examinations, j Sub mission of 1000-wardl essays is a portion of the preliminary exam ination. Winners, one 'boy and one girl. will receive $2400 scholarships for four-year training courses; eight $4h0 schol ional $3000 in smaller ! :1: others will be awarded! arships, while an addi will be distributed scholarships. i In 1942, Alan Voigjt of Salem was awarded one1 of Washington where he first j alternate, j Bob awarded an honorable 1943. Marks' Condition Said Improved PORTLAND. Dee. Condition of Wlllard state beard ef higher; president and Albany attorney he trips to placed as Bisbee was mention in L. Marks. education who , collapsed at a sioa ; yesterday, waa Improved today at here. '!.. i board jses- reported hospital !;.' Ii Mr. PtH-lc f n Snklr - j o Ideologists The Georlogical sodiety, meet ing Thursday night at in Collins hall on the! university campus, will hear Dr. Morton . Peclc, ! curator of the Willamette herbarium professor of biology versity here, lecture oA plants and parts of Oregon seldom seen 8 o'clock Willamette .- and former at the : unl- 8 40 Music. i 8 :30 Music. ' 30 News. - :45 Evening MediUtions. ib w sign Off. Credit as Uszdl " en Watches, Diamonds and Jewelry - . We will pack and mail your gift for you FREE! We carry only Uty, brilliant every price in superb diamonds at any size. i :-.'." OPEN SATURDAY 1 UNTIL 0 O'C re m M qua- EVENINGS CliocK : i