The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 14, 1949, Page 1, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    r . i- -
Scene Set for Special Votes
On Salem
The scene was set last night
for today's . special election in
Salem and vicinity, to decide two
. proposals to enlarge this city.
Quiet characterized the pre
election period in Salem, but a
lively campaign was in progress
"in a proposed annexation area
of some 400 acres southeast of
present( city borders.
Residents and property owners
in the southeast area 'circulated
letters to the some 340 registered
' voters of the area; one group
' favoring the annexation and
another opposing it In addition,
the opposition bad a sound truck
'in the area making announce
.jnents Thursday evening.
To complete this suggested an-
ChestWorfcers
Overtime
Funds collected by Salem Community Chest workers stood at
$61470 Thursday night on the eve of a scheduled victory banquet.
And from chest headquarters came word that Workers! will put in
overtime sessions in an attempt to reach their $105,000 goal.
Encouraged by "over the top" reports from West SaJem and the
South women's division, Chairman Joseph A. II. Dodd hoped to reach
Dtp
SfflJOIB
FOOD EGOS
The senate ' comnuttee that
heard the .testimony, relating to
Senator Hickenlooper's charges of
gross inefficiency against Chair
man Lilienthal.of the atomic en
ergy commission has made a re
port exonerating the latter. While
the Iowa senator protests that the
committee has hot acted: on the
report as prepared by its staff,
there is no doubt as to its atti
tude. Hickenlooper couldn't sub
stantiate his charges. ; ,
Unfortunately." the' commission
cannot make a full report to the
)ublic on what It I has accomp
ished. It is still bound by the
rule of silence for security rea
sons. From what has been divulg
ed, it seems that a. great deal has
been accomplished, primarily with
respect to improvement and pro
duction of atomic" boiftbsV'
When the commission took, over
from army engineers' the! "Man
hattan Project,'' W found the Plu
tonium works at Hanford pretty
well broken down. They had been
pushed to produce materials for
the Nagasaki bomb and the works
were in bad shape. The AEC has
rebuilt the plant there and Is
producing a superior bomb, as the
latest tests showed; and has a
stockpile of bombs, number not
revealed. Since news ibroke of
Russia's cracking the atom it is
reported that effort will be made
to speed up our own production.
. The world, however, is greatly
Interested in the possibilities of
adapting, atomic fission to power
generation for "peaceful purposes.
The commission has so far done
little on this problem. Recently,
however, it announced its inten
tion to erect reactors at Arco,
Idaho, north of (Pocatello, for ex
perimenting in power production
One reactor will test materials
and methods; another is designed
for, a navy power plant
(Continued on editorial page 4)
Freight Rate
Reduction to
es
nxxmir.n rw it -a, a
Spokesman for railroads serving
the Pacific northwest announced
today the roads have approved
freight rate reductions sought by
apple growers in that area.
Recommendations made by exe
cutives of the transcontinental
railroads would cut rates 15 to 25
i cents a hundred pounds on apples
.shipped from the Pacific north
3 west to points east of Chicago.
t elude the major railroads serving
a urn uvmuuuuciiwi turn 111
the Pacific northwest. They are
asking the eastern railroads to
Join them in making the rata cuts.
Animal Crackers
: Br WAKREN GOODRICH
' "Left get oofs here 4 feci
postthtlf AiktdF
Apply to Appl
Area
A
HI-
nexation, a i majority favorable
vote is necessary in both the
city and the special area in
volved. . j !jj
Also on the ballot will be the
proposed merger of West Salem
with the city of Salem. Only a
majority of the Salem voters
who cast ballots today is re
quired to make the merge ef
fective, as the West! Salem elec
torate already has approved it.
City Recorder Alfred Mundt
predicted a light vote in the city,
noting that Special Selections and
annexations traditionally draw
few voters to the polls. "But
I wouldn't be surprised if 80 per
cent or more of the registered
voters vote in the southeast
area," he said. 1 1
. the $80,000 mark in lime for this
noon i no-host banquet. It will be
at the Marion hotel for all leaders
and workers.; . . v ,v
The chest will bav to renew its
plea for funds and Call again on
people who havent been reached
by volunteer jworkerfc said - Dodd.
He urged such persons .to make
pledges now, either by phone, mail,
to neighborhood workers or to the
midnight radio show
The West Salem report showed
$2,632.50 collected . and workers
still busy. Rex Gibson! and Junior
Eckley are leaders,. The south; sec
tion of the women's group, under
Mrs. RobertvWilson, Jr reported
$2,536 in with a promise of more
to come. . ;!i
Latest totals reported by other
divisions were: Automotive and
transportation, $7,533.50; contrac
tors and builders $3,920.60; educa
tional, $1,275.33: general gifts 85.-
542.75; governmental, $7,518.78; in
dustrial, $7,976.87; mercantile, $10,
234.75; professional. $6,054.00; ru
ruaL $345.00; utility, $1,043.20;
women's divisions north, $1,045.10:
central, $3,690.32. m
Community chest funds help sud-
port the YMCA, YWCA, Camp Fire
Girls, Boy Scouts, Girl Scout. Sal
vation Army the Legal Aid Clinic
and Catholic Charities.
Modi
to Form
New
cli
nment
PARIS, Friday. Oct. 14-UP)-The
national assembly early today ap
proved socialist Jules Moch as the
next premier of France by the
narrow margin of two votes.
An official announcement said
311 votes were cast in Moch's fa
vor and 223 against.: He needed a
bare minimum of 310 votes.
The announcement of the tally
came after almost three hours of
turmoil occasioned by the protest
of an absentee vote. Moch's mar
gin was the lowest vote of approv
al given oy me assemDiy to an in
coming premier iriy post-war
France. t ' !li
Moch, 56, now Is free to form a
new government to: succeed the
cabinet of Henri Queuille. - Que-
uille, leader: of the radical social
ist (moderate) party, resigned as
premier October s after a split de
veloped in this government over
how to solve France's mounting
wage-price crisis. IB
Bank in Mill City
To Move into New
Building Nc&aeek
l) Statesman Nwt Servte
MILL CITY. Oct ! 13 The Mill
City State bank will move into its
new building neat week, marking
another major business develop
ment in this rapidly : growing city.
The new f building is of stucco
and frame construction and will
also house Baker's Jewelry store
and the Mill City Furniture store.
It is located on highway 222 in the
center of the business district
: Shirley's Beauty shop will move
into the old bank building and
Hendrickson's Variety store will
locate in thf Dawes building,
which housed the furniture store.
elan
Sessions
bov&r
ShitleyiTeiple-Jolin Agar Marriage
To End on Hollywood Divorce Shoals
HOLLYWOOD, QeL 13-jF)-Shirley
Temple's rnarriage to
handsome John Agar ended on the
Hollywood shoahi today. The
little Miss Marker of yesteryear
filed suit for divorce;
"For two and a half years we
have been; trying to make this
marriage work." 21-year-old Shir
ley, onetime child idol of movie
goers, told: reporters. "We have
both tried hard, we really did. But
it just didn't work.;,'
We reached a 'decision last
night John is no longer living in
our home." vi - 1 j
Even blase filmland inured td
such things was surprised at the
split-up. Only a year ago, Shirley
bad said: "We haife never ex-t
changed a single harsh word, two
nnexations
"-4 The recorder's office at city
hall t was besieged with callers
Thursday inquiring where to
vote.. Mundt stressed that, for
this election Salem voters will
vote at only one place in each
ward plus a special polling
place in the Kingwood area of
Salem across the river (but not
including the city of West Sa
lem) at; 1094 Kingwood dr.
Salem polling places are at
Grant school, Washington school,
city ball, state heating plant,
Mayflower hall, Salem high
school and Leslie Junior high
school, j ,
, In the. southeast annexation
area, the polling place will be a
garage at the Walling residence,
2830 S. 12th st. i
Aulee Puts Stop
To Talk of Early
General Election
LONDON. Oct 13 Prime
Minister Attlee put a stop today
to Britain's big political j guessing
game by announcing there will be
no general election in 1949.
The announcement came as a
neatly timed wet blanket smack
in the middle of the three-day
annual rally of the conservative
party, the major opposition to Att
lee's labor government !
Winston Churchill and other
conservative leaders had called for
an early vote as a test of the gov
ernment's economic policies. Att
lee gave the nation his decision in
a formal statement after' the first
meeting of his full cabinet since
the government slashed the value
of the pound.
Brothers Slain,
Rancher Held
In Coast Feud
TOLEDO, Oct. 13 (Special)
An old, family dispute over a
boundary line was under investi
gation Thursday after two bro
thers were slain on a wooded trail
in the Nashville area 40 miles
northeast of here.
The bodies of Melvin Longyear,
25, and Charles Longyear; 22, were
found by a sheriffs posse after a
rancher told Sheriff Tim Whelp
where to find them.
Norman Homer Edwards, 50,
drove to the sheriffs office last
night about dinner time to report
the incident The Associated Press
quoted him as saying: i
"Get the coroner and an am
bulance and go up the Siletz river
and get the Longyear boys. I hurt
them about noon. You'll find them
if you go up the trail on brush
creek. It was either them or me."
Edwards was Jailed,! but no
charge was filed against him. The
sheriff said he was considering a
possibility which he did! not ex
plain that Edwards might not
have fired the fatal shots. He said
Melvin was shot bet ween, the eyes
and Charles in the back of the
head.
The sheriff said the Edwards and
Longyear families had been dis
puting for years over a j boundary
line, but the matter never appear
ed to be of feud proportions. State
police were assisting with the in
vestigation. Timber Cutting
Bids Rejected
DETROIT, Oct 13 (Special)
AU bids for clearing timber for
power distribution lines from the
Detroit dam site to Detroit were
rejected today by the Benton-Lincoln
co-op on grounds they were
too high.
Bidding on the 30 -foot wide
strip approximately seven miles
long were Cascade Electrical Con
tractors, Inc., Corvallis, $31,395;
Thompson, Henrickson Logging
company, Detroit $46,800, and
Baker Seabold and Seabold, Hills
bo ro, $72,000.
New bids will be called for with
in two weeks, the co-op announced.
STEEL TALKS PROCEED
NEW YORK. Oct 13-Hyp-Fed-
eral mediators reported tonight
they found "basis for further dis
cussion" in exploratory talks with
the Bethlehem Steel Co. on efforts
v teiuc u i-uaj tunc,
careers in one family works out '
wonderfully for us." -
The divorce suit followed a fam
iliar Hollywood pattern, charg
ing "extreme cruelty and grevious
mental suffering.' Attorney
George Stahlman, who filed 4 it,
said there is no community prop
erty. Apparently Shirley, who re
putedly made a million before she
was in her teens, and Agar had
kept their finances separate.
She asks custody of their only
child, and return of her maiden
name. j f
Agar, 28, declared: ? I have
nothing to say other than that I
hope the thing can be handled
in a dignified manner.; I haven't
thought it out dearly as yet but
I do not think I will contest
$3th TEAB
jnl elpless
p .- . :
$my PeDoEbeiraes FaSe off 3. 3,
Federal Jury
Resumes ! Talks
This Morning
; NEW YORK, Oct.. 13 -WV A
federal jury was sent to bed at
10:21 pjn. EST tonieht leavingi
the late or the nation s 11 top
communists still in doubt after
about five hours of. deliberation?.
; The jury was directed to re
sume its secret debate at 9:30
a.m. tomorrow. j
The jury got the historic case at
3:53 p.m. this afternoon.
, They argued it in private until
5:40 pm. when they went to din
ner. Then they resumed delibe
rations at 7 o.m. and continued to
the overnight adjournment.
: In all, they were closeted for
five hours and 8 minutes with
out reaching a decision.
As the hours rolled by, eight
Of the 11 defendants idled in the
first floor courtroom or In the",
corridor outside. Three still are
behind bars during off-court
hours for contempt of court.
Before the jury went to the
Hotel Knickerbocker at 120 West
45th street for the night, it had
twice sent out for : evidence used
in the nine-months trial heavy
books on communist tactics and
logic.
; Their second request for the
book "Problems on Leninism" led
to a 58-minute discussion by . at
torneys in the judge's chambers.
However, the judge eventually
decided to let the jury have the
book.
Federal Judge Harold R. Me
dina gravely handed the case to
the eight women and four men
jurors after instructing them that
neither the communist party nor
its textbooks were on trial
"Do not be led astray by talk
about thought control or putting
books on trial," he warned, "No
such issues are before you "here.
"And, you are not to pass on
the merits of communism, -capitalism
or any other isms."
The 11 defendants, the elite of
the communist party on this side
of the Atlantic, are charged with
conspiring to advocate the violent
overthrow of the U. S. govern
ment Conviction carries a maximum
penalty of 10 years in prison and
a $10,000 fine for each man. How
ever, a guilty verdict almost cer
tainly will be appealed.
Suspension of
19 Higli School
Boys in Effect
Nineteen Salem high school boys
were suspended for the remainder
of this school year Thursday when
Principal E. A. Carleton passed on
to them an order of the Salem
school district board of directors.
The boys were suspended after
the school board decided Wednes
day they were members of a secret
organization of the type banned by
state law. School officials identi
fied them with an "American Boys
club" or "ABC" group.
Carleton told all 19 boys, most
of them seniors, they might com
plete the week of school if they
wished; meanwhile, they were to
turn in their locker keys and other
school property.
Attorney Lawrence Osterman
and Reginald S. Williams have
been retained by parents and re
latives of 18 of the 19 students
to contest the school board action.
NEW HARRISBURG MAYOR
HARRISBURG, Oct 13-(yP-
This town had a new mayor today.
He is Clay Stone, who succeeds
F. S. McEldowney. The latter re-
signed to. accept a post with the
son conservauon i service.
Shirley's divorce suit" ,
Although Shirley's voice sound
ed calm and matter-of-fact when
this reporter talked to her, she
later a friend reported was
put to bed by her doctor "with
a bad - case of nerves."
Hollywood has buzzed with
rumors for several weeks that
trouble was brewing. But ' they
kept up appearances to the end
In public their marriage seemed
the storybook affair it started
out to be.
The wartime romance between
America's sweetheart and the
tall, good looking air force 'ser
geant put her back in the spot
light she had vacated when awk
ward adolescence hobbled her
screen career.
2 Sacfiotaat 28 Tag
Th
siini tomi Avjailts Am val If Ked Mm
;
Talbot Hop Yard Fire Kills Girl,
3
JEFFERSON Linda Lenora Spence, 4, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Spenee burned td eeath Thurs
day when fire swept threugh a. row of eight cabins at the William Krebs Hop farm, .three miles north
west ef Talbot Sam Taylor, a workman at the farm who attempted to rescue the girl. Is showing in
specting the ruins ef the cabins
Detroit-ldanha Sector
Rejects Merger Plan
Statesman Newt Servt.eo
DETROIT. Oct 13 (Special) Voters in a special election today
voted 206 to 99 against the proposed merger of Detroit and Idanha.
The 2 to 1 defeat of the proposal came after a heated campaign
over the consolidation move. Because it has not been decided whether
$138,850 in
Construction
Permits Issued
Permits for $138,850 In con
struction were issued in Salem
Thursday. The city engineer's
records showed an $80,000 build
ing in the Capitol Shopping center
topped a list that included two
new duplexes and two, new houses.
The building at 410 N. Capitol
street will house ah Owl drug
store. It will be two stories; Pa
cific Mutual Life Insurance Co.
is the owner.
Two new duplexes in Mapleton
addition are planned by Bresto,
Inc.. Salem builders, who obtained
permits to erect5 them at 2680 and
2685 Broadway st. Cost was listed
at $13,400 each.
New dwelling permits went to
D. N. Sermon, for a $19,800 house
at 1018 LeFor dr.; and Herman
Boese, for a $9,500 structure at
890 Glen Creek dr. Jess S. Juarez
Obtained permission for $2,500 alt
erations on a house at 450 E. Lin
coln st
Collejrian Wins
'All-American'
Another in a long series of "All-
American" ratings by the Asso
ciated Collegiate Press was added
to the Willamette university Col
it TV.nr
day. The campus newspaper is is
iwT 'T' " " " . V.
sued weekly by the student body.
Eric Bergman of Salem was edi
tor for the semester judged, that
of last spring. The judges paid spe
cial compliment to the cartoons of
Ed Fitzsimons of Salem.
The Collegian began rating as
Ail-American early in the 1940s
and has varied from it only to re
ceive the higher Pacemaker rank
ing. This year it was judged with
colleges of from 1,000 to 2,499 stu
dents.
Ceiling Falls on
Church Choir
YORK, Neb., Oct 13-6?V While
choir members rehear d the an
them, "Lord Have ITercy," the
furnace blew up and the choir
loft ceiling fell down. It happen
ed at the Evangelical United
Brethren church here last night
Fire i Chief John Deprez said
the explosion occurred when the
janitor, A. R. Caldwell. 74, at
tempted to re-light the pilot light
on a sax furnace.
Caldwell suffered burns on the
chin and arm but choir members
escaped injury. Damage to : the
furnace and church was estimated
at 13,000. i !
Oregon Stat man, Salem, Oregon, Friday. October 14. 1949
; :
4t .
j ,S.a
a short time alter the fire. (Statesman photo.)
a small Detroit area was included
in the territory involved, the re
sults will not be official until con
firmed by county election officials.
Proponents of the merger con
tended the merger would lead to
improved street and water facili
ties. Opponents said the Santiam
canyon cities, six miles apart, were
too far separated to make the mer
ger practical. Detroit proper will
be under water when the Detroit
dam basin is filled in late 1952.
DP 'Filibuster'
Halts Plan for
Adjournment
WASHINGTON, Oct. 13-fP-
Democratic leader Lucas tonight.
abandoned hope of congress ad
Jquming by Saturday. He said
a senate "filibuster" against legis
lation to liberalize the displaced
persons law was responsible.
The Illinois lawmaker said Sen
ator Cain (R-Wash.) had made it
clear that he and other opponents
of the measure intend to talk at
length gainst it.
"It's a filibuster, of course,"
Lucas said.
He talked to newsmen when
Cain was more than four hours
along in a speech against the bill.
Congressional leaders had been
shooting at adjournment by Satur
day evening.
On the other side of the capitol.
Democratic Leader McCormack
told the house the outlook now
is for congress to adjourn Wed
nesday or Thursday.
The DP bill, already passed by
the house, was pried out of the
I juuiciarj cunuimice jeswiudjr uj
7 to 3 vote despite the opposition
of McCarran. It was sent to the
floor without recommendation. It
increases from 205,000 DP's who
may come here in two years to
339,000 in three years.
Truman Asserts ILS. Defenses
Adequate, as Navy Issue Rages
By John B. Owen j
WASHINGTON, Oct 13-UP)-
President Truman today described
the nation's i defense as adequate,
although the navy's No. 1 officer
complained ; that naval aviation
and the marine corps are in danger
of being scrapped.
i Admiral Louis E. Denfeld, chief
of naval operations, made the com
plaint before the house armed
services committee, investigating
a bitter row in the high command
over grand strategy.
Denfeld said that under the
unified defense setup, the army
and air force can actually control
the navy, and often do. He said
also that the air force has argued
for complete elimination of the
carrier task force, the "most pow
erful instrument of modern war
fare." Tht army, h said, has urged
-
Top oomioiniiioiniosft
!
Burns 8 Cabins
-1
fill;
Daughter of
Farm Worker
Dies in Fire
atatesmaa Kewi Serrlf
JEFFERSON, Oct 13 (Spec
ial) The 4-year-old daughter of
a transient farm worker was
burned to death today In a fire
that destroyed aeight cabins at the
Williams Krebs hop farm three
miles northwest of Talbot.
The victfm was Linda Lenora
Spence, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
H. B. Spence, who had been
working n the farm about three
months.
The blaze broke out in the
Spence cabin about 10 a.m. while
the parents were in the ranch
laundry a block- away. Three
other small children playing in
the cabin with Linda escaped un
hurt.
Jefferson . firemen found the
girl's body beside a bed in the
cabin ruins The father told fire
men he built a fire in the cabin
at 4 a.m. but had put it out be
fore leaving for the laundry short
ly before 10 a.m.
The blaze spread rapidly, level
ing seven adjacents unoccupied
cabins before firemen could reach
the scene.
The family was preparing to
leave for California when the
tragedy occurred. The young vic
tim was born in Albany, but the
family has been living in Cali
fornia recently.
0 Surviving besides the parents
are two brothers, Denny Edward
and Junior two sisters, Ronda
Marie and Sandra Kay, and her
grSndmother, Mrs. A. E. Wine in
Oklahoma.
The Howell-Edwards Funeral
home in Salem is in charge of
funeral arrangements.
GRIPPE GRIPS VISHINSKY
LAKE SUCCESS, Oct. 13 -JP)-Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei Y.
Vishinsky was reported today to
be ill with grippe. He has been in
bad health since he came here last
month for the fourth United Na
tions assembly.
its '"serious reduction."
Right after the chief of naval
operations had smashed at hand
ling of the unification law and
the navy's treatment in the penta
gon's top levels, reporters heard
from President Truman that he
sees no reason to change funda
mentals of defense policy. : :
j Mr. Truman declined comment
on testimony of Denfeld or other
admirals . who have rapped air
air force emphasis on the B-36 for
atom bombing while they contend
ed naval aviation is being neglect
ed. He said the defense policy is
adequate.
i It is fixed, he said, by the Pres
ident as commander in chief after
consultation with the defense sec
retaries and the chiefs of staff
and is based on the advice of the
chiefs of staff.
I No, 201
I !
Quit Gty; Red
Take Airport
HONG KONG. Friday. Oct 14 1
- (AF) -Chinese command!
troops have seised 1 Cantos'!
civilian airprt aevea t ui)
northeast ef the city, telephoned j
reports from there said today:
Eight. Chinese Air Lines plane
were said to have been caught
on the field, which ts "Whtte
Cleod" airport j j
Chinese press dispatches from ;
Canton said the city was achef - ;
sled to be turned ever to the j
communists this afternoon.
CANTON, Friday, Oct 14-.
Intermittent gunfire today fangi
through the center of Canton,
which, has been abandoned by! its
garrison. -j 1
Up until 7:15 a.m. Canton timsk
however, it was established thai
the communists had not entered
this big south China city, i . I
Resistance in the north has colt
lapsed. The tense population ex
pects red regulars to enter som4
time during the day. 1 '
There was little looting.; Policy
were on the job. Markets whicll
hurriedly closed last night reopen
ed this morning. A few national
ist soldiers were seen on Wai Of,
the main street J
Left on Highway
The main body of nationalist
went west on the highway. !
(Estimated to total about 80,000
men, they may be aiming at
linkup with the 200,000-man fore
of nationalist Gen. Pai Chung-Hsi
Pal, who earlier in the week pull
ed southwest from the front north
of Canton, has his headquarters
at Kweilin, 250 Grilles northwest
of Canton. The swift communist
advance might -prevent i such a
junction and hem the .garrison
against the seacoast in southwest
Kwangtung province, i , ! I
Most Residents Indoors .1 I
Most of Canton's million resi
dents stayed indoors; Families
had organized all-night ! watches
to guard against looting.
HONG KONG, Oct. 13 -(V
Abandonment of Canton has
smashed a fatal hole in the nation
alist air and sea blockade of com
munist China. j j
Only a few disorganized gov
ernment units stand between red)
China and British Hong Kong.
Trade can soon start flowing from
Hong Kong up the 85-mile stretctl
of the Canton-Kowloon highway.
This should make the blockade 0$
Shanghai and other red ports lit
tie more than an annoyance, j
Nursery Gets
License Again
PORTLAND, 'Oct. 13--SheW
wood Gardens, which yesterday1
was ordered - to stop operating
without a nursery license, got It
license today. j j
The state department of fegrif
culture granted the license afteg
an investigation. It was only ; yea
terday that the firm was told nof
to operate until the license actioQ
was taken.
Sherwood Gardens!
bought
equipment from the i
defunct
Sherwood Bulb Gardens, whictt
took bankruptcy after losing its)
nursery license.
14 Degrees I
In Bend Area
By The Associated Pre I
Another cold day was forecast
for the Pacific northwest today,
after the mercury dropped beloW
freezing in many areas. !
Oregon's coldest towns yesterday
were Bend and Prineville, with 14)
degrees. Potato diggers held off
work . until the sun warmed th
ground, to prevent the APtatoe
from freezing. i f i
Madras recorded 18 degrees ye
terday. Baker had 18, Redmond, 19.
La Grands 22, Lakeview 27. Med
ford 31, Eugene 33, The Dalles 34L
Salem 33, Roseburg 31, Portlan4
38. ' i I -
Max.
. M
.a
. 78
Salem -
Portland ,
Saa rrmncisco
Chicago
. n i u jo
. 70 j w Ji
New York
wmamctt river S of a foot;
FORECAST (from UA wMthcr bo
low clouds bfttng by nooaj rlr th
ll.kr stlM fill, k .
-4
arteroeoa wlta gradual taereaaiAg ni
cIoudUteM tonight. Hign tooay near
low -tonight near 3. Weather wtU
favorable for most farm activities
day. i 2
SALEM TECr-TTATIO!f
This Year
2.72
lW Vear
4.M i
K-nal
MS .
PRICE 5c
Nationalists
aa I
4 i JM
'17.