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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1944)
"Ho Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Awe' From First Statesman, March 28, 1831 TIIE STATESMAN PUBLISHING C03IPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher L J . Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. War Memorials One can trace a country's military history by the overlapping layers of war memorials. Most every midwestern county seat town has m statue erected in tribute to the "boys in blue;" and farther west we have the familiar doughboy statues which sprinkle the town squares in memory of those who fought in the First World war. In many cases the mass pro duction castings of bronze are condemned as poor art, and so there has arisen some demand that memorials to . follow this Second World war not be of the catalog tombstone type, but be unique; in rendering service to those who ' live, j- ' ... J::: ';' :. f. -:''': - ''';;''?;:';;.''v;V'V Tor example we have just received a circular from a Commission for Community War Me morials for Physical Fitness." It is headed by George M. Trautman, president of the Ameri can Association baseball league. Gene Tunney is a member. The idea of the commission is to stimulate the establishment of war memorials for physical fitness in communities throughout the nation. The circular says: These memorials will be in the form of physical fitness; facilities which will provide the opportunity for the development and maintenance of physical fitness for all the people. '."' For; a pleasing change the commission says' it is '"not a fund-raising organization.1!' It merely is encouraging local communities to finance such things as swimming" pools, athletic fields, recreation grounds, etc. The ! idea sounds pretty good, though war memorials should by no means be limited to sports-palasts. vThere; is even a place, and a large place for art in bronze or stone, provided it is art. Salem for example needs" a large, well located athletic field. It has several fields dinger field for the high school, Sweetland field for Willamette, Waters baseball park fof baseball. But what a wonderful thing it would be to lay out on the Bush pasture flat, which eventually will come to the city, a great ath- j letic grounds, with grandstands of concrete, adequate playing field, dressing : rooms, ample parking space, etc Whether we label it war memorial or not the field would meet a real, need, and the community might well be look ing forward to such a development. Going, Going ... . ', What went up in such abutter and fury one, two or three years ago is now starting to , come" down, but. not in any blaze of glory. Army engineers' are announcing the call for bids Hi Ho Silver! wi wuie i io 9u cruiiaings -m uregon, oemg four army camps and one CCCj camp." Bidders vilf have to dismantle and remove within 30 days all fixtures, materials and equipment. This will include Seating units, plumbing fixtures, lumber, etc. One' of the units being dismantled is at Man- zanna and includes four barracks, a messhall, Oregon's First Novel -f. . j I In the June number of Oregon Historical Quarterly Pro! Herbert B. Nelson of Oregon State college has an article telling About the first novel written in Oregon, It was written ; ' as a work of fiction but. really was a true confession" story, as Prof. Kelson says. The .title of the book was Grains, or Passages in the life of Ruth Rover, with Occasional Pic tures of Oregon Natural and Moral," and it was published in 1854, The author was Mar-1 garet Jewett Bailey, and she was the "Ruth Rovef ot her book ton. Bailey started to publish her work in monthly serial form, about like the Dickens novels of the period, but so far as is known only two issues were printed. Of these only one copy is known to be sextant and that is of the second volume. It is owned by the Oregon State library, but evidently was once the property of J. Quinn Thornton, early day lawyer in Salem. ; , - This writer recalls how the late Miss Long, state librarian, prized this volume when she learned how rare it was. She showed it with pride to visitors at the library,; and hoped that the first volume might someday be obtained. MrsJ Bailey was Margaret J. Smith, an in telligent young woman who came out with the missionary immigration of 1837. Prof. Nelson - He HiiffYA Jnrl H P.Jf fl describes her as "a sensitive, energetic, pioneer "C "W6" "e Fffcd woman ' though withal her book reveals her as "a sharp-tongued school-marm." She mar ried Dr. William: J. Bailey and they settled on a farm on French Prairie. Dr. Bailey who seems to have been both drunkard and panderer, made life miserable for the sensitive Margaret They lived and fought and separated (some. 10 or 12; times) and finally Margaret got a divorce. This made her something of an outcast in those days when a divorce was regarded as quite sinful, so she vented her accumulated grievances in the splenetic book, "Grains." It was such a hot number that it drew universal' disapproval by the book critics of the Oregonian and the Spectator In its frankness it ante dates by a full half century and longer the "confessions" stories and in , Its realism the "Strange Fruit" of modern literature. j It is to be hoped the first volume can. be found; and the few whiffs that Prof. Nelson gives us of the second volume induce the be lief that a reprinting would find quite a market. i . ' r . : 1 2. 1 m . M . -k la. 1 'w- m . , ., bf www sour' Bpr a r .- it m ww. jr m at sn m .. .jaw- mm w i im j nTflxaay's ffiadlo i Programs Western senators to the-number of 25 have asked Pres. Roosevelt to urge' the monetary conference at Bretton Woods to adopt silver as well as gold for any international fund. One feels like sayingj "Good Lord, do we have to go through THAr again?" These western sena tors have made silver a load of lead around bathhouse, latrine and recreation buildin?. The tne neCk of the US treasury for: some 10 vears.' buildings were erected of new lumber about n plea of "doing i something for silver" year and a. half ago. Also coming up is the aisposai or army camps at Newport, Bandon, Waldport and a CCC camp at Woahink lake. This is the opportunity many have been wait ing for. They will want to get the lumber or .the furnaces or the plumbing fixtures for homes or cabins or 'for "farm buildings. Very few per sons however can bid on whole camp layouts congress passed , a bill (and Roosevelt signed it) by j which the treasury pays fancy prices for silver which it doesn't need land can't use. The (evils of bimetalism were clearly exposed in the historic campaign of 1896, but the politic-' al pressure of a few western states, thinly pop-: ulated.l but with two apiece in the senate, has kept going this raid on the treasury for the so the successful bidders will resell in job lots benefit of a few mining companies, tone of the xo me ultimate users. ( richest; of which, the Sunshine,; fought comply-i The realization to the government will be at to with the Wagner act in dealing with em small percentage of the cost because of the loss ployes just as long as it could. " 5 ) of labor both ways, in building and then in How long will it be before congress gets guts tearing down. (In recent sales the government enough to treat silver for what it should be,! has realized only about 20c per square foot.) just another metal? :f But there will be considerable salvage, and in " "f '-' ;' - 1 :-- i '' ' ' 1 view or the fact that building materials are now so scarce the prices on resale oughi to be fairly The big question around here is what will TTBl i" Writ "I ft happen to Camn Adair. The-buildinthw U BBV- w W CJ1 liVV.iJ Interpreting: Camp Adair. The-buildings there are of temporary Construction, and'while the camp will surely be retained until the Pacific war is over it it doubtful if it will be continued after that. There will surely be a lot of used lumber and housing futures on the market, when that camp comes down. If anyone wants to go into the junk business on a big scale, junk of build ings supplies, he should try his hand on these government sales of abandoned camps. Gen. De Gaulle still says he! is coming to Washington to visit Pres. Roosevelt. He will be about as welcome as ragweed at this season ' to hay fever sufferers in Ohio, but the convic tipii is growing that Roosevelt's ! French policy: is na better than his French accent Says the Astorian-Budget: "We have de fended Finland before, "and more particularly - the Finnish people as we understand them." Since Astoria must be about the second largest Finnish city the A-B ought to understand the - Finns, if anybody does. By KIRKE L. SIMPSON ASSOCIATED PKXSS WAS ANALYST The nazi grip on all the Baltic states is fast sup-; ping under the Russian offensive in White Russia, f giving rise to speculation that a general German retreat may be in progress in the north to the Bug x river line covering northwestern Poland and east ern Prussia. That could explain nazt failure to hold j such powerful White Russian defensive bastions as i Polotsk; and Minsk. .ff1. r if ' . . '. ; ' Berlin admission of the collapse of the so-called Fatherland front in Russia within" 11 days from the onset of the Russian attack implies that a flight to the 1839 nazi-Russian partition line in Poland may have been ordered ' from Berlin. It -would mean abandonment of all the Baltic states; but if the Russian drive could be held long enough to permit their complete evacuation, it would effect a drastic shortening of the nazi defence front in the east It also would permit employ Jiit.of the "east fall" defenses, built along the Bulrom Brest Xitvosk to link up with Russia's eastern frontier. The Russian attack, however, already is menac ing German escape routes from Estonia, Latvia and northern Lithuania, v . There have been recent bints of nazi prepara tions to; fall back in the Baltic states. Strenuous German efforts to turn the Aland islands off the tip of the Finnish peninsula into an upper. Baltic Gibraltar have been reported from Sweden. -Nor can Berlin officials doubt that the Russian offensive to force Fiijjand out of the war is closely f linked with the westward drive tvr r-A fnrr 1 . , . . - - . , it . Taken together, the two Russian summer opera- According to trade reports there wffl be, U-ns Teiet.'B massiv ove to clear whole up- 1 enough brooms thk vpAr so that rh famitv .Bauc of enemy and threaten German can have a new one. Well, new brooms, sweep KSLM MBS Wednesday 1IM Ke; 3iw husicu xim keeper. . 6 JO It's The Truth. 6:4S News. ' i ' . lK News4 j ' ; 7:15 Farm i & Home Program, n 70 Handy Man. i , !j 7 AS Today Top Trades. , . : i i b :u ut, xaioot. f SJfr-Newsi 8:45 Orchestra. 9.-00 Boak Carter, 9:15 Pastofa Call. 9:30 Midland USA; ' ' i 8:45 Araazins Jen&lfer Lofu. ; 10:00 News i f 10:15 Jack Berth. I 1 10 J30 Luncheon with Lopez. 10:45 American Woman's Jury. 11 0 cedrw Foster. i. 11:15 Walts Time, r ! 1 ' 11 JO Skyline Serenade. 1 1 1145 Kello( Musical Library, i 12:00 OrsanaliUes. ii 12J5 Newi.f ! ' 1J -.30 Hillbilly Serenade. ! ! 1235 Nashville Varieties. ' ! 12:45 The Smoothies. ' 10 Newi.i - 1.-05 Interlude.: ! i 1 :15 Afternoon Melodies. 1 :30 Your Army Service Forces. 2:00 News.; j 15 Broadway Band Wtfon. JJ5 Concert. j . u ... 2:45 Radio Tours, i 3.-00 Newa.1 . f 9:05 Concert Hour. j 3:45 Johnson Family, i ;, k I. -00 Fulton Lewis, Jr. 4:15 Merry Moonsi .1 JO World's Front Page. i 4 :5 Roundup Revelers. 9:00 News, t . j . I : ( :15 Superman, j ! I JO Tom Mix. j 9:45 Gordon Burke. 0 Gabriel Heatter. ' . :15 Screen Test. 1 9:30 First Nichteri 70 War Commentary. ! 7:15 Lowell Thomas. j 7 JO Lone Rangers ! 9.00 Would You BeUcve It? :15Jan Gsrber. I i 9 JO Bulldog Drummond. 90 News 9:15 Cecil Brown. ! 9 30-Fulton Lewis, Jr. I 9:45 Orchestra. I ! 100 Old Tuners Orchestra. ' iff JO News. I 10:45 Music I U:00 Sign Oft ; KGW NBC WCDNCSDAT 29 Ke. 40 Dawn patrol i i i 90 Mirth and Madness. 9:30 News Parade- ( 7:00 Journal of Living. ! 7:15 News, j r . 7 JO Reveille Roundup, i T:4S Sam Hayes, i ' i ; ! . , 90 Stars rf Today. - I ' '' ' i S:l5James Abbs Covers the News UU MUSIC ' i - 9:45-Dsvid Haruml ! 90 Personality Hour. 100 Music T ! 10:15-Ruth Forbes. i 10 JO News, j J 19:43 Art Baker's Notebook. 1140 The Guiding Ugbt i 11:15 Today's Children. 1 11 JO Women in White. ! 11.-45 Hymns of All Churches. 120 Women of Amertca. , 13:15-Ma Perkins, j 22 JO Pepper ; Young's Fsmuy. 12 .-45 Right t Happiness. I 19 BacksUge Wits. J v 1:15 steQa Danas. 1 JO Lorenzo' Jones. 1.-45 Young Widder Brown.' 20 When A Girl Marries. 2:15 We Love and Learn. 2:30 Just Plain Bin. 2:45 Front Page FarreU. 30 Road at Lite. 3.15 Vie ana Sade. 3:30 B. Boynton. " 345 Rambling Reader. 40 Dr. Kate. 15 News of the World. 4 JO Voice of s Nation. 4 :45-H. i V. Kaltenbom. ) 50 OK for Release, i . 5:13 Sophisticated Swing. 9:30 Day Foster. Commentator. 5:45 Louis P. Locnner. : 90 Alan Young Show. 5 JO Mr. District Attorney. : 70 Kay Kysers Kollege. 90 Mercer's Music Shop. 9:15 Commentator. 9:30Best the Band. 90 Mr and Mrs. North. 9:30 Scramby - Amby. 100 News Flashes. 10:15 Your Home Town News. 10 35 Musical Interlude. 10 J0 Orchestra. -10:53 News. 11 0 Music II 30 News. 120-2 AJlv-Swlng Shift. KOAC WEONESOAT 559 Ks. 19.D0 Ntws. 10:15 Homeraakers Hour. 110 Southland Singing. , . i 11:15 Listen to Leibert. 11 JO Concert aJL 120 News. 12:15 Noon Farm Hour. 10 Ridln the Range. ! . las Treasury Salute. 1 JO Variety Time. 20 Homemakers' Half Hour. 2 JO Memory Book of Must. 3:00 News. . 3:15 Music. 40 A to Z Novelty. ; 4:10 Treasury Song for Today. 4:15 General Smuts. 4 JO Lawrence WeUc. 4:45 Book of the Week. 50-On the Upbeat i, I JO Story Time.. . S?tS It's OreenS Was. ! 90 Treasury Song. 4:15 News. i 930 Evening rarra Hour. 7 JO Music of Czechoslovakia. . 90 Marching to Victory. 9:15 Beyond Victory. i JO Music That Kndures. 930 News. 9:45 Evening Meditatloaa. 100 Sign Off. EOIN CBS WEDNESDAY 959 90 News. 9:15-pTesas Rangers. ' 9J0 KOIN Klock. ' 7:15 News. . 7 JO News. t 745 Nelson Prtngte. News. I 10 Consumer News. 9:15 Valiant Lady. i ajeUnt of the World. 9:45 Aunt Jenny, II 90 Kate Smith' Speaks. ; 9:15 Big Sister. -: a JO Romance ct Helea Treat, .' 9:45 Our Gal Sunday. 19s Lite Csn Be BeaottfuL -19:15 Me Perkins. 10 JO Bernadine Flyna. i ilt:45 The Goldbergs. 11 0-Pectis Faces Life. 11 J 5 Joyce Jordan. -11 JO Young Dr. Malooe. 1145 Perry Mason. 12:00 News. I2:15-Nel-hbOTS.' ' 1230 Bright Horizons. 12:45 Bachelor s Children. 10 Broadway Matinee. 125 Dorothy Fisher. Songs. 1 JO Mary i Merlin. 1 :45 Mid-Afternoon Melodies. 20 Open Door. - 2:15 Newspa per of the Air. . 2:45 Wilderness Road. 30 News. 3:15 Lyn Murray Show. 3 JO Stars of Today. 3:45 The World Today. 3:55 News.' - 40 Lady of the Press. 4:15 Bob Andersen, News. 4:30 Easy Aces. 90 Galen; Drake. - 5:15 Red's; Gang. 330 Harry Tlannery, News 545 News J ?- ... 9:53 BUI Henry. 90 Jack Carson. 930 Mildred Bailey Show. 70 Music 7 JO Manhunt. 745 Manhattan Melodies. 901 Love A Mystery. 3:15 Passing Parade. 9 JO Dr. Christian. , j 9-55 News.! I 90 Allan ! Jones with Frank , Carles Orchestra. r 130 Northwest Neighbors. i 100 Five Star Final. I 10:19 WarUme Women--10 JO Western Stars. 10 JO Report to the Nstton. ! 110 News.! 115 Jack Teagarden Orchestra. 1130 Air-Flo of the Air. . 11JS Manny Strand Orchestra. 11:45 Dale-Jones Orchestra. 120 Serenade 1230-90 ajn. Musie and -It stc Battered Carrier Plane Cotton goods sheets, pillow cases, house dresses, men's work clothes will all cost more because the southern senators jimmied the OPA bill to force higher prices for cotton. That is one way of financing their reelection. clean, and ii the voters get thera before elec tion day, and use them. ... . San Francisco papers the other day reported news of an earthquake recorded on the seis mograph at Berkeley: "The quake was mod erate, estimated at 28000 miles from Berkeley." No fire in SF, either. The Oresonion has an editorial on. the sub ct'IIow to cook a fish." Our recipe is the - t.2 5 f:r Eievv-cd rabbit first catch .him. supply lines on the lower Baltic, . Ether from, air bases'm-the Baltic states or by use of submarines and smaller surface warcraft the Russians could dominate ihe whole reach of , the BalCc and virtuaUy blockade the flow of hih grade Swedish iron ore to Germany., In . the east as in the west, however, the nazi , high command is faced by baffling uncertainty as to real Eusslan allied grand strategy. It knows that rested ; and recuperated Ukranian armies, now backed by adequate supply routes, are poised all the way south, from the Pripet marshesi to the Black sea. ' v That lorbids any weakening of the nazi fron southward cf Brest titovsk. Their plane was a krasnalty ef the battle cf the rfcilriae sea, but 1 tLcse three navy fliers returned unhurt ta tieir carrier. EUnilnz i la a tele in ha tail surface of their plaae, caused fcy. Jap ack-ack. are C J.: Cash. Ann. te, Daacter Epriajs, Kt4 (Jj C C , Eriict, Santa, Eosi Cif, andij. G. r.IcLacsLIla. Anna. 2e. KU- L'i, (ArsocLl:! Press ihcto.) ' " .' ' ' KEXBN WEDNESDAY 1199 Ka. 90 Musical dock. :15 The Homesteaders. 95 Western Agriculture. - 70 Home Harmonies. : T5 Top of the Morning. T:15 News - T JO James Abbe Obaerves. T:45 The Listening post. 90 Breakfast Club. 9:00 Building Morale. ' 9:15 Voice of Experience. 9 JO Breakfast at SardTs. 100 .News. 1 10:15 Sweet Rtver. 1030 My True Story. 10:55 Aunt Jemima. 110 Baukhage Talking, lias The Mystery Chef. . , 11 30 Ladles. Be Seated. m 120 Songs by Morton Downey. 12:15 Hollywood Star Tune. 12 JO Mews, r-.i . 10 Sam Hayes. ' 1:15 Radio Parade. , lJS Time Views the H 145 Postwar News. 1 30 Kdward Jorganson. I:45-Ethel and Albert 130 Voices in Harmony. 90 Hollywood' News Flashes ' 2:15 Lawson McCall. - 230BaIhe Truitt Time. 1 1 , 9:49 BN. 40 Cennee BosweQ. 4 JO Studio. . 4:4Tbe Sea Hound. , 19 Terry and the Ftrstea 9:!9-Diek Tracy. 9J9 Jack AimsUung. 9j5 Hop Harrigan. 930 Livestock Reporter. . 95-Musie. 9.-15 Chester Bowles, ' 9 JO Spotlight Bands.- 939 Story Teller. .' :r - so liBiuiutid Grass Swing. - t J 5 Ted Makme. . -: Yjs-Sokuers With Wings i 9e Mvws. - - 8:13 Lun asMl Aboer. 9 JO My Bert Girls. '-. t30 Duaninser , ' . JO-Newe. ' l- 95 Johnny HarreD's' Gang. : 10 e Musie. - U Jo Broadway Bandwagon. 195 Music -if,; . . ':-:r- U30 Coacsrt Hour. the Russian campaign for sheer speed; how It made happy head lines back borne. Bight now he only hopes that every foot forward means the day of victory and peace and rest- Is that much closer. ... . For more than S3 hours the column inarched. There had been Pursuit of Defeated Nazk In Italy No Fun for YanliG , By KENNETH L. DIXON ' WITH TIIE AEF IN ITALY, June 22-(Delayed)-PHt is one of the ironies of war that the triumphant pursuit of a defeated and fleeing army becomes to the dirt bound doughboy making the chase just another nightmarish chapter in the long campaign. Some day,f coming back from the fighting to regain bis per spectives, he will see how grand it looks, in the light of world strategy; how it surpassed even Plane Output Drops Badly During June WASHINGTON. July Aircraft production in June skid ded to the lowest level : in 10 month, with only 8049 planes de Uvered, or a drop of 9 J per cent from May, the war production board reported today. ;t " Any possibility of another sum- mer time- slump like last years sag, which; brought about drastic manpower ; controls on the Paci fic 'coast, was discounted, how ever, by Charles E. Wilson, cutive jWPB vice chairman who issued the June report. . Wilson told a press conference that the June total, more than 1000 plane short of the 9118 peak reached In March, was not alarm ing and would be dangerous ''only if it continued, which It won-or if caused "by something basio like manpower, which it wasn't.7 Wilson said that three compan ies croducing smaller types of planes had failed to meet sched ules, that 200- trainers failed of , of delivery because of difficul ties with certain, parts, : and that the shorter work month account ed for 300 of the deficit under May. The huge B-29 Superfortress al ready used against the Japanese mainland was satisfactory both as to production and performance . during 1 June - fsatisf actory to everybody but the Japs." One unidentified B-29 plant was ahead , of production sched ules, Wilson said, and the others were on schedule. Over-all heavy bomber output, including Liberat ors - and Flying ' Fortresses, con tinued to exceed the goals. A "regretable" 'slump at the Curtiss-Wright plant, in Buffalo cost 63 cargo planes of the C-46 type, Wilson said, and one of the companies making nary fighters fell behind. a one-hour break for sleep some where back there, no one remem bered exactly when or where; but after that only a . few minutes rest once in while. At the foot! of a steep hill on the road to Ravi they called an other break and the men crumpled into a nearby ditch. They didn't lie down, they didn't Iall -down. they collapsed. Packs, ; equipment and all fen in the dirt. , - Looking at that straggling line of. sheer : exhaustion it I seemed impossible that it ever would be revived. In 'a j matter of seconds several had dropped off to sleep, others dragged out cigarettes. lighted them, pulled in great gulps of smoke and then lay there blow ing it upward through the dusk of the evening. I.',;.,;,-;. Some tore open K rations or D rations others did nothing neither slept nor smoked nor ate, but sat or lay there staring into space, thier bearded "faces blank, - A rifleman eased his arm ' out of a carbine strap, took off one shoe. His foot was red-splotched and swollen. He straightened his filthy socks, pulled his shoe back on slowly, painfully. . : ; "Afraid, to take -the. other one off," he said. Couldn't get It back on. Like the . time my girl took her new shoes off at the movies and had to Walk home bare footed." He grinned fleetinaly. r A few of the others started talking , in short sentences. One couldn't forget i the bed he never got to sleep on! back in Rome. "Had a mattress a foot thick, he said. "Just as I was about to get set" we got orders to move. The bed had a pillow, too. Hadn't slept on a pillow for so long: Guess I1T have to get used to it again." Home must be a nice place," said another. "Hope to get to see it again some day." Then he added speculatively, "Wonder what Pisa is .like.- r Someone mentioned the fighting in France, a few faces brightened. That was a big thing-. That was a great thing. They could even talk about the strategy tip there. The order came- to move on. They passed It down the line, shook a few sleeping soldiers. The other soldiers rose slowly. ' The reeling wave j '.'' of , movement trickled on down; the line. The column started up the hill, tired. burning, swollen, dragging feet kicking up the settled dust again1 as they stumbled stubbornly on after a fleeing: foe. AMERICA'S WAR PLANES OtF 8 rtOOS TOD (Continued from Page 1) passed on, or else scores of business establishments would fail, because in ' normal times they couldn't stand three per cent of their grass income. Manv . ered. wood floor. win. of the largest businesses operate Plywood and fabric, externally WRIGHT FIELD, Ohio (This is one of a series of brief sket ,ches "i of American warplanes produced ' under the supervision of the AAF materiel command, which is charged with the de- -; velopment, ! procurement, pro duction And inspection of all ar my l air forces equipment Au-' mofitative data on a different plane will appear daily.) The CG-1S Cargo Glider , . World's largest glider. It play ed a large part m the Invasion of the European continent Descriptipn: Waco design.: bunt by several manufacturers. .Crew consists , of pilot and co pilot 4 I Dimensions: Span: 85 feet 8 Inches. Chord: 10 feet inches. Wing area: 872 square ; feet . Weight (empty) 7500 pounds. Ifsign gross weight Over 17,000 pounds... -j ' - ..'. .v-. Useful load: Over 8000 pounds. Carries 30 fully equipped men. Design, tow speed: Ove. 150 miles per hour. Construction: , Fuselage weld- ruoe construction, fabric cov- PoKf2e Arrest 113 Juveniles One ; hundred thirteen Juveniles were involved, in cases dealt with during June by City Juvenile Of ficer Fred Beck, the monthly re port of Chief of - Police ,i, Frank Minto reveals. . ; 'l-si K--y: Of these, 30 were children from outside the city limits; three were involved in burglary; 19 in lar ceny; three in sex offenses; three, neighborhood troubles; two, traf fic violations; two were described to officers as "uncontrollable Juv eniles;" 12, vandalism; 22. first of fense "curfew violations; six, sec ond offense curfew violations. One case was that of neglected children; two, carelessness or mis chief; five bicycles were recover ed; 10 old cases were followed up and 22 investigations were not classified. Six girls ran away during the month and six were returned to their homes; nine of the 11 boys reported as ruzaw2ys were re turned. ' "-'-;-:-' - - on a margin of only a cent or two net per dollar of sales' and three percent tax would wreck them unless they added it to their selling prices. : Sixty at sixty, the sibilant al literation will prove catchy, the more so as older wmkeig fear the lay-offs that will coma with decline in war production. This Is not the first time that pen sion bfli has been voted on in Oregon. In'USt a "citizens re tirement annuity plan" to be fi nanced by a transactions tax was defeated by a vote of 219,557 to 112,172; but that is no guaranty that the present bill will be de feated. It will not be unless busi ness interests wake-up and put on a real campaign against It The proponents and the prospec tive beneficiaries will be eager to push-for $60 at age 60. braced. ) UEUJS - YBL1E ; Stevens 1 The Only ( . Manufacturing Jewelers . I in Salem ---l ;:r '. . . ' J - . '. . Jewels Ha-Cet You VTcdl . , "j, " j j fpaj jewelry, r-cet dia monds and modern mountogs. I! . without i a.'v.if .4 C - - ' l Ad