The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 14, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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4 The Statesman, Salem. Oregon. Thursday!) July
.A.
"No Favyr Swayt Us, No Fear Shall Awe"
r Fran First Statesman. March 2 f. ItSI
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY
CH"-"- A RPRAfiUE. Editor; and Publisher
Entered at the postofflce at Salem. Oregon, aa aec nd clasi'matter under act of congress March 3, 187S,
PublUhed every morninc. Business office 215 3. Commercial. SJem. Oreien. Telephone 2-2441.
The Permanente Plan
Henry J. Kaiser is one rrian who has made the
most of the free enterprise system. That is why
he is opposed to a national health insurance pro
gram and why he believes that if doctors
throughout the country would organize their
services on a group basis and make them avail
able through prepayment plans, centered around
modern facilities and stressing preventive care,
many of the nation's medical problems would
disappear and there would be no need for com
pulsory "socialized medicine."
In defending the Kaiser-sponsored Perman
ente health plan against an attack by. the Amer
ican Medical association, Senator Murray of
Montana published Kaiser's review of Perrnan
ente's services in the Congressional Record.- Per
rnanenle serves 100,000 west coast people
through hospitals and clinics at Portland. Van
couver, and five Bay area cities. It is a private
enterprise operated by an independent partner
ship of doctors using the medical center facilities
of the nonprofit foundation.
The group practice plan pools the talents of
general practitioners and specialists. The pa
tient's health needs are met under one roof. A
single investment in equipment and single cost
of overhead administration reduces costs.; Em
phasis on prevention of illness likewise reduces
expense of operation. Subscribers prepayments
go directly to doctors and hospitals, so they ben-
efit most by keeping patron? well.
For comparatively low monthly fees, individ
ual or family subscribers are entitled to 111 days
of hospital care for each illness, which includes
Burner v and all hospital charges. Office cdnsul
ation arid treatment is charged for at $1 per call.
A fixed additional fee covers maternity care and
thefee for home calls is $2 for the first calV
none for subsequent calls.
The Permanente' report is documented with
professional testimonials as to the quality Of the
service performed. The Kaiser plan, like the
Blue Cross and the Oregon Physicians' Service,
offers prepaid medical or hospital care (or both)
2$ costs within reach of low-income groups.
They are an alternative to the administration's
compulsory health program.
Harmony in Capitol Design
As an outgrowth of ideas advanced by the
Salem long r a n ge" planning commission and
members of the civic committee of the Oregon
chapter. American Institute of Architects, a bill
was drafted and enacted creating a capitol plan
ning commission. The commission which drgan
tr.ed Monday, electing R. W. Sawyer of Bend as
chairman, will be advisory to state and city au
thorities respecting state capitol expansion. The
purp )-;e is to preserve architectural and land
etMping harmony in the capitol group and to
protect the surrounding jirea from inharmonious
encroachment on the capitol environs. While the
commission so far h;is no absolute powers, ts
voice will be one of 'authority that will com
mand attention.
Sjlnn has been ciiticized for certain commer
cial invasion of the capitol zone. In the conflict
of views and of interests, concessions were made
which many are not very happy about, This
ttate commission should prove a real trionitor
for the city when future changes in zoning are
proposed.
But the city isn't the onlv body that needs to
watched. Succeeding generations of public
officials, ignorant of past planning, may be in
clined to get out of line. For instance, it has tak
en quite a little resistance on the part of the
aecretary of state's office through the years to
Guerrillas Alter Face of Postwar Asia
fly Stewart AImp
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya,
July 13 The astonishing cf-jet-tiv-iiess
of guerrilla warfare
is- the most
hiking phe
n o m e n o n in
Southeast Asia.
Guerrillas are
th Kremlin's
j5re.1t ' weapon
in this part of
the world,
(iuei rillas have
almost pushed
the French into
the sea in Indo
china Com
munist guerrilla
f )i ..vs are ac
tive irj Burma. And here in Ma-
lava a mere handful of incom
petent Chinese communist ' puer
r i M have forced the British to
aim tens of thousands f tr.en
and' to spend hundreds of thou
sands of pounds.
The reasons arc simple enough.
0"e rn:n. with a percussion tai
tik a Fourth rT July toy. and
a d'w H)unds of plastic exn'o
si e, ran derail a tran. When
th train leaps the trmk. the
m hi can he many. -miles away,
Kmi about his ionccfi.l busi
ngs It is almost ss easy and
tie to mine a road, to ambush
an unsuspecting i envoy, or to
kill the key-men on a Key plan
tation. As long as the guer
rillas' arms hold out. regular
foi-cfs are' amazingly helpless
aaint them., provided1 the
K'loiiillas have two essential
assets.
.
On asset is the active sup
poit of at least a part of the
lMiiiiiLition, so that the fcocrrillns
rati be fed, hidden, and above
all. informed. The second asset
i a safe place a "funkhole,"
the British call it to which
the 'guerrillas can escape for
ret and reorganization. British
trattjy here is now designed
to deny thee assets to the com
munists. The Malay&ns are
anti-communist: rut nearly half
the people of Ms'rya are Chm
k ese
The Chinese r e are ipflit
encej by what r.s happened in
prevent the capitol from being cluttered up with
cabinets, plaques, paintings, etc.
Criticism was expressed over the recent paint
ing of the light standards fronting the capitol
facade which have just been covered with bright
aluminum paint. Critics thought the standards
were cast bronze, which of course should never
be painted. We find on inquiry that only the
fixture at the top is bronze, the pole being iron
or steel which was showing rust. The color of
paint used is a matter of taste, and some cover
was needed to preserve the metal.
Reorganize UNESCO?
International planning of cooperative under
takings is a comparatively new pastime and we
should not get too impatient when hitches de
velop. One of these is UNESCO, the special Un
ited Nations agency charged with turning the
minds of men to thoughts of peace through edu
cation and sharing of each other's scientific and
cultural achievements. Its accomplishments thus
far are hardly satisfactory
UNESCO's trouble is the same that afflicts
most other large centralized groups: bigness.
The size, the 'enjfmous pretensions," and the
agency's attention to abstract rather than con
crete projects are some explanations the poet
Stephen Spender gives for its failure to live up
to expectations. ,
Its monumental task obtaining international
Intellectual cooperation does not necessarily
call for a monumental organization. But so vast 1
is this organization that its headquarters staff is
chiefly engaged in preparing programs and or
ganizing conferences to discuss it. Scientists,
scholars and educators talk and plan science,
culture and education instead of working in the
field. This bureaucratic secretariat should b
replaced by smaller, localized nuclei in many
countries active in many projects of their own.
These laboratories, schools, museums and other
mediums of culture wjojikhljeTndirect contact
with each otherinstead of having to proceed
through channels? Their work would be coordi
nated through a small commission, Spender sug
gests in an essay ini The Nation.
The question here is a familiar one to na
tional governments and organizations: top
heavy bureaucratic agencies versus individual,
semi-independent groups. Both have disadvan
tages: Red tape and an aversion to brass tacks
hampers the former; duplication and a tendency
to fly off in different directions are risks of the
latter.
Still, it is true that UNESCO seems to move
too ponderously and with too little result. Amer
ican taxpayers who support it are right in de
manding something for their money. Since small
cultural and scientific groups are already estab
lished and are using whatever slim contact they
have with each other, the money might be bet
ter spent supporting their concrete efforts and
strengthening existing cooperation.
Things being quiet on the potato front, be
tween Bend and Klamath Falls, papers in two
other cities, Roseburg and Astoria, resume their
feuding over closure of coastal streams tp com
mercial salmon-fishing. The only trouble ' is
there seems no chance for other editors to serve
as a jury, as was the case in the controversy
between the Klamath and Deschutes spuds, j
Who says eggs will not bounce? The price
dropped away down last spring; and now1 it
is coming back up. Humpty Dumpty got fooled
this time.
China. Thus the communists'
chief sources of support have
been the villages of Chinese
squatters who have settled on
public; or- private land, often
deep in the jungle, to grow
their Hoe or millet. The British
have been driven to using novel
techniques to cut the commun
ist fighters off from the squat
ters villages. First, they are
creating a complex network of
interlocking police posts in or
near the villages. If a village
helDs ' a I guerrilla band, the
' British then employ a technique
they Call screening." Ordinar
ily, caDtured guerrillas are
hung after an extremely rapid
trial. But a guerrilla raptured
In the area of a guilty village
may be given a chanch to buy
his life.
'.'
The, captive is pl.iced behind
a screen in the village police
post. He Deers through a peep
hole while the entire village
fl'es b;' He identifies those
who have helped his band
"S'ie Save food." "He gave mon
ey," 'He is a. bandit." If there
is real evidence to support such
an accusation, the accused may
1m? deported or hung.
There is' another, more dras
tic method, An incorrigible vil
lage, known regularly to help
the communists, may le moved
bodilv; away and put behind
barbed wire. Thus the British
are isolating the guerrillas. And
the technique is beginning to
work Accurate information on
guerrilla movements is now be
ginning to come in from the
squatters' vil'ages.
The; British have also devel
oped technioues for dealing
with the "funkholes." The guer
rillas hide out in the mountain
jungtes. and it is only neces
sary to fly, over the mountains
to realize whit magnificent cov
er the mountains provide. Hfe
is a (tin'iniious green umbrella,
which wholly screens all move
ments. Since the British learned
to pierce this umbrella they have
discovered large guerrilla camns.
comn.'ete with lecture halls
plastered with pictures of Stalin
11
i
kteamau
I and appropriate quotations from
; the communist classics.
One way of piercing the um
; brella is an "area shoot." The
area of a known communist con
i centration is carefully mapped,
; and planes are dispatched to
; shoot up the green, unprotest
; ing jungle as methodically as a
i farmer plows a field. This kills
few guerrillas (a shallow slit
j trench is almost complete pro
; tection) but it frightens them
; and keeps them on the run.
A more important technique
j is to "beat" the guerrillas in a
i trap, as pheasants are beaten to
; the waiting guns in England.
: Aic drops make this possible,
: since without air drops the
trooDs doing the beating could
: not be supplied. The troops close
: in on a guerrilla concentration,
and the guerrillas retreat (as
; they must, for guerrillas can
; never stand and fight). If all
j goes well (which it often does
; not, since many guerrillas slith-
er out between the "beaters")
j the guerrillas hit a "stop." This
j is a concentration of fire power,
i usually along a river ; line. As
i this is written, two such "ban
i dit hunts" are under way.
i The British also hope to reach
! an arrangement; with Siam to
I close the long Siamese border,
j over which more than 1.000
i guerrillas have escaped since the
j British noose began to tighten.
Thus by destroying the last
i funkholes, by isolating the guer-
rillas from all support, and by
arming 25 men to each guerrilla
I under arms, the British hope in:
jtime to win their war. But few
think that it can be done in
,less than a year
I That a handful of bedraggled
; communist guerrillas could so
i challenge British power!, even
j while most of the people here
iare active British allies, is a
remarkable fact, and a fact
jwhich American military plan
ners would do well to study.
jFor guerrilla warfare, that most
primitive form of warfare, is
changing the face of postwar
Asia.
l Copyright. 1949. New York Herald
Tribune Inc.)
Slibrt term ' "
For Big Theft
Irks Henry
By Htnry McLemore
DAYTONA EEACH. July 13
Richard Crowe, who flew the
National City Bank coop with
$883,660 worth of negotiable
feathers, has been given a sen
tence of only three years, and
will be eligible for parole after
one year in the warden's care.
In my book that is justice with
a little "j," and comes close to
proving that crime does pay.
I don't have the figures at hand
(or at foot, either, for that mat
ter), but there must be tens
of thousands of
poor benighted
souls serving
terms twice as
severe as the
one meted
Crowe for steal
ing such things
as a 1934 Chev
vie, a lawn
mower and a set
of carpenter's
tools, or a ma
ple bedroom set
with matching
HcUatrt
bureau and chest of drawers.
Cor;e. to think about it. t once
got shot at, and darn near hit,
for eloping with a watermelon
from the farm of an acid agricul
turist who didn't think it funny
for twelve-year-olds to invade
the sanctity of his patch after
sundown. And at that time a
watermelon was worth about ten
cents.
Since I read of Crowe's sen
tence I have been doing some
figuring with pencil and paper.
Assuming that he will be parol
ed after one year, Crowe will
be in durance vile one day for
each $2400 and a little plus which
he helped himself to from the
National City's piggy bank.
Had h skipped with one half
of what he did, or $441,830, he
might have gotten only half his
sentence and been a free man in
six months. Working on down,
my mathematics show that had
Crowe been satisfied with a mere
$50,980.50 he might have been
back at home watching the
Giants on a television set in three
weeks. And, bless me, if he had
been a man of simple wants, or
had used a shaving kit instead
of a big suitcase in Which to load
his loot, and picked up only $505,
he would have been in jail only
from about nine in the morning
until one or two in the afternoon.
He wouldn't even have had time
to try on a suit for size, or select
a pickax with a handle that fit
him. And. of course, had he set
tled for $200 or thereabouts, his
sentence would have been so
tiny that he wouldn't have
had time to make it from his
home in Staten Island to Grand
Central station to catch the train
for Ossining. He would have
been given his release around
42nd Street and Fifth Avenue,
probably on the steps of the Pu
blic Library.
Crowe could have gotten 45 j
years in jail. Just what cut this
down to three, I don't know. Did
they knock off ten years because
he didn't insist on a drawing
room coming back from Daytona
Beach, Fla., where he was caught,
and obligingly took a lower
berth?
Was another 15 years shaved
off because he tipped generously
in the diner, and didn't bum any
cigarettes, from his guards?
Could it be that another 18
or 19 years was lifted because he
expressed a strong desire to see
the Army-Navy football game of
1950?
I don't know, but I do know
this:
As the Crowe flies, is the way
to fly with that dough.
Better English
Br a C Williams
1. What is wrong with this
sentence? "I do not propose to
accept their offer."
2. What is the correct pronun
ciation of "persuasive"?
3. Which one of these words is
misspelled? Cauterize, temporize,
revize.
4. What does the word "extol"
mean?
5. What is a word beginning
with du that means "occasioning
doubt"?
ANSWERS
1. Say, "I do not intend to ac
cept their offer." 2. Pronounce
perswasiv. a as(in say, both s's a
in so; not perswaziv. 3. Revise. 4.
To elevate by praise. "The book
extolled Lincoln's many virtues."
5. Dubious.
333JJQ0
(Continued from page 1)
largely because of the monopo
listic character of utility opera
tions. In free markets, compe
tition is the price regulator
and any one in general business
now knows that it grinds relent
lessly. But obviously it is un
equal to have one utility service
under regulation, and the other
outside it "one bound and
the. other free."
Under the order of Public
Utilities Commissioner Flagg,
PP&L can lower its rates, but
any reduction in revenues there
cannot be used to boost rates
elsewhere in its system. He
finds, also, that the rates allow
ed will not result in out-of-pocket
loss to the private utility.
It is hard to see how the PUD
can squawk. It still has many
advantages. It is free from cor
poration taxes, from state regu
lation and reporting. It gets all
V .
'CRIN AND BEAU
"Makes bit blood boil to hear the Air Torre brmi about brine more
efficient than us . . . Gad! have you ever tasted the blue plats
special la THKIR club?"
Hi-Y Tourists
Complete Trip
Around Nation
(Editor'! mot: Jim rook, tit
nation-lourlnc Oretoo HI-Y ot
craor who hi kpt Statesman
readrrs posted on hi adventures,
has Just retarned to his Mill City
heme. The recent Salem high school
graduate and Statesman school re
porter spent a month visiting
Washington. D. C . and many state
capitol and othrr major rtties on
the Hi-Y trip. This is his final re
port of the tonr.
By James Cooke
Special Staff iman Correspondent
ALAMEDA. Calif., July 9
(Special) Rimantic, legend-filled
San Francisco was explored
today by remaining members of
the "Governors' Special." We
found the city of the golden gate
to be, by far, the easiest city
to tour in one day that we have
visited.
The traffic was not bad. even
ror a aaiuraay, ap i
but the hills of v
this fog - swept
city were
enough to make
even Seattlite
Gordon Young
gasp i n aston
ishment a s we
drove down
seemingly per
pendicular i n
clines. San Francisco
is a beautiful
city and a tour- J,m Cook
ist's delight. We saw the hills
and bay from the "Top of the
Mark," a lounge in the top story
of the Mark Hopkins hotel. We
visited the plushy plush" Fair
mount hqiel where everyone but
the janitors wore dinner jackets.
The Safety
Both to Gain in Merger
To the Editor:
In regard to the West Salem
Salem merger a large part of
the people of West Salem have
much respect and admiration for
our mayor. He is our choice and
one must admire his courage.
I think, as a home owner, that
we have much to gain by merg
ing. Better fire protection means
lower fire insurance. Taxes will
be higher either way and by
merging both towns will be bet
ter off in the long run. We
bought in West Salem only after
the school consolidation, but we
thought then, and still do, that
West Salem was moving out of
the cow pasture stage, and is
ready to take its place as part
of the second largest city in
Oregon. I believe that this mer
ger is what the majority of the
people in West Salem want.
The city government is very
good. The people here are friend
ly and homeloving. The business
men and women of West Salem
are second to none. We have
never lived in a nicer commun
ity than West Salem.
The businesses in West Salem
are numerous. We have manu
facturing plants such as lumber,
flax, battery, canneries, turkey
cold storage, machinery, petro
leum, sand and gravel. There
are many retailing merchants in
groceries, furniture, dugs,
jewelry, hardware, variety,
clothing, cars, saws, meats, air
conditioning. Restaurants and
service stations are plentiful.
We also have a bank, a radio
station, a bus comoany. Other
service establishments are clean
ers, garages, repair shops of ill
types, real estate offices, cold
storage lockers, barber shops,
prining companies, and voca
tional schools. We have tourist
carols, parks, churches, schools,
its energy at low Bonneville
rates, has prior claim for en
ergy, doesn't provide any stand
by generating plant. When the
PUD passed up the opportunity
given it under the law to con
demn PP&L's property, it elect
ed to compete. It ought not to
complain now over competition.
Admittedly, the future of pri
vate utility operation is dark.
Between the squeeze; of the ad
vocates of public power and the
bait of Bonneville and the col
lusion of government official
dom, the private utilities have
a hard row to hoe. What they
are gambling on is a change in
political climate; but they have
had a long, long wait.
1 Z "" 11
IT " ''fy'Uefity
and wt even uw one mainten- j
anre man wearing an old one. t
We atrolled through the city :
hall and noted particularly the
gold leaf ornaments in its rotunda. I
Some of the state and city build
ings in other states- are cheapen
ed by the Indiscriminate use of
gold leaf.
Other usual tourist's-points-of-interest
we visited were Fisher
man's wharf, Chinatown, and the
Museum of Natural Science in
San Francisco park, where we
saw realistic still-life groups of
animals from Africa and North
America.
It seems strange, but at last our
month-long trip which covered
more than 8.000 miles is about
to end. Yesterday we left Cali
fornia's Hi-Y representative, Joe
Gallegos, in Stockton, and this
week end the remaining trio will
be in Portland to disband to our
homes in Pocate'lo, Seattle and
Salem, and our faithful ' chaper- !
one, Gerry Crockwell. can relax
at last at his Portland home.
Well, the trip is nearly over,
but I can truthfully say we had
a life-time of adventure packed
into a little over a month. We
gained an insight into this great
land of ours, the people and in
stitutions which -bind it together.
But most important we realize
that there is "no place like home,''
as long as it's in the west.
Rloodinobile Colled
75 Pints in Salem
A 4 1 - c : SvlMAJ ......
r tuidi ul puna vii uumu wda
donated by ialem residents dur
ing the Tuesday visit of the
bloodmobile, the local Red Cross
announced Wednesday.
A goal of 100 pints had been set.
About 108 persons had signed up
but many were rejected, the Fed
Cross said. Fourteen of the do
nors replaced blood which had
Valve
doctors and dentists.
This means many jobs for
many people. Jobs mean money
coming in. this means people
working, laughing, playing, liv
ir.2 in one of the best towns In
the west. West Salem. Its rec-:
ord speaks for itself I think ;
Salem has much to gain by this :
merger; I think we both have
much to gain.
Oeland J. Watts
1011 Elm Street
West Salem.
Don's Be "iooped"
To the Kditor:
I read Mrs. McVey's Safety
Valve regarding West Salem's
merger with Salem, and agree
with her 100 per cent, and I
agree with Mr. Musgrave on
one point, namely. West Salem
does need a new mayor.
If Mr. Musgrave is so asham
ed of West Salem why doesn't
.he move out, or is he set in
cement
I have lived in Salem and I
much prefer West Salem In
many respects.
We were doing fine until this
merger question came up. and
run our blood up to a boiling
point Who wants to be under
the dictatorship of a city man
ager, anyway?
They say taxes will be lower;
ask the people on Vista avenue
if they didn't get a higher tax
after they were taken in the
Salem city limits.
Salem water rent was raised
60 cents per month to pay for
its disposal plant. I would rath
er pay $1.25 per month more
water bill and have our own
disposal plant, and West Salem
is a large enough: town to have
its own fire department.
We are paying $3000 per year
for fire protection- to Salem, and
it's very inefficient, so why not
apply that $3000 on a fire en
gine of our own.
In just what way will West
Salem be benefitted if we join
Salem that we couldn't do on
our own if we had men in West
Salem to work and push for our
little city's enterprise? .
Oakland and San Francisco
have lived individual city lives
and have flourished as cities un
der their own laws and manage
ment, so why can't we in West
Salem do the same?
Salem is not going to take
us under her wing without a
price that we will pay dearly
for, so don't be gooped into a
merger.
Mrs. Clara Sharpe
1032 Elm St.
W. Salem.
Fees at County
Offices to Rise
After Friday
Fees in several Marion county
offices will increase Saturday, July
16. as a result of laws enacted by
the last legislature.
Recording papers at both the
county clerk's and recorder's of
fice will move up from the pres
ent 75 cents to $1 a page for a
one-page instrument. If two pages
or more the prerent fee of 75 cents
per page will remain.
New fees next Saturday at the
recvideT's offic; wi.l include $2.50
(now $2.25) fo- Tiling chattel mort
gages, $1 (now 75 cents) each for
assignments of magratory mort
gage and marginal satisfaction of
mortgages, and $1 (now 50 cents.)
for conditional sales contracts.
Hunting and fishing licenses will
be upped 10 cents on licenses cost
ing $5 or under and 25 cents on
thce over $5. Next January 1
fihing permits will go from $3 to
Si each and from $5 to $7 on com
bination of the two.
Another law going into effect
Saturday raises court reporters'
f-s from $10 a case or $10 a day
to $10 for more than half a day and
$5 for half a day and an added $5
for transcribing notes.
Certified copies of a birth cer
tificate from county records will
be upped from 50 cents to $1. Co
pies of fee schedules are available
at the county recorder's office.
'Walking Man9
Visits in Salem,
Sure of Win
Paul Smith. Mill City's 64-year-old
walking man visited Salem
Wednesday, brimming with con
fidence that he'll beat a horse
in a 75-mile race at Lebanon
July 24.
Wearing a white golfer's cap.
T-shirt and boxing shoes, the
slightly grizzled one-time gold
prospector said he had walked 274
miles in the past ten days "just
for .practice." He came to Salem
on a bus, however.
At Lebanon he will match
strides with a horse owned by
Glenn Huston of that city. The
Santiam Wranglers, a horsemen's
Kroup. are sponsoring the event.
The winner's purse will be $1,000,
he said.
Smith purchased a year-book
crammed with records while in
Salem, and appeared slightly, dis
gruntled to find no records listed
for distances longer than 25
miles. A New Yorker was credit
ed with walking that far in two
hours and 44 minutes in 1909.
"I've done it in less than that a
dozen times." Smith snorted.
been given their friend? or mem
bers of their families.
The bloodmobile will return to I
Salem again August 9.
A!
l o
Super Reductions!
ON
Through the cooperation with
fine rayon men's wear
the name) we are now able to offer you these finer rayon
1
sport shirts at a TERRIFIC SAVINGSI STOCK UP NOW!
Give your summer wardrobe that needed "liff'l ; j
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O Your choice - - solid colors, patterns,
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95 to
The Man's Slibii
MOXLEY AND
The Store of Style,
416 State Street
' PriiTaaelpnfa,'lTW at theiluhF-
tion between the Schuylkil and
Delaware rivers, is almost 100 mi-
I les by water from the Atlantic
coast.
Jaeph Kuerten - has I pro
poned to build a aoap; and
box factory in Salem : that
will employ no lass than IS
men from the atari at a coat
of $10,000. And all he asks
ia a bonus of $750 as' part
payment on a lot noay tho
woolen mills upon which the
factory I to be built '
j
Recently E. C. CrooaT Sa
lem's enterprising meat 'mar
ket man mads a tour of ln
spection to San Fraadsco
and other points to investi
gate the- matter of putting in
a cold storage plant la Sa
lem. After two weeks re
search among the largest
and smallest plants he has
returned home and decided
to put In what he believes Is
the best in the world -f-Dol-lenberg
expansion system.
Chat. Wilson, confessed
slayer of Mamie Walsh, was
captured today In Yamhill
County.
j
i
Down at the Willamette
Valley Flouring Mill yester
day a huge mud turtle was
caught On his back was en
graved "R. H. L. P. S.IP.O.
1879 indicating that the old
fellow had been wandering
around 14 years with the
message.
i
7. T. Rigdon
58 Years of Serf ire
I
299 No. Cottage Dial 3-3 173
Beaulifnl
Hayoif
Sport!
the largest manufacturer of
(Sorry we can't advertise
H95
HUNTINGTON
Quality end Value
I
Silem
Y 37 Years Ago j I
I The News in j
I'lorluary
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