The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 03, 1952, Page 4, Image 4

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    4 Tho Statesman Salem, Orogon. Saturday. May 3, 1951
"No Favor Sway Ut. No Fear Shall Aic
From First Statesman. March ZS. 1S51
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY
CHARLES A. SPRAUIHS. Editor and Publisher
Published every morning. Basiseas office 215 8 Commercial, Salem, Oreron. Telephone Z-Z44L
Catered at the postoffice at Salem. Oregon, aa secand dan matter under act of congress March S, 1S7.
Trouble in Trade
With the Russians offering to reopen trade
with Western Europe, some of our allies, al
most desperate for markets, are getting a little
bolder in calling the United States to task for
reneging on our international agreements.
Britain has said, in effect, "Either you play
the game according to the rules you yourself set
up, or it's every man for himself again."
Belgium has gone further. It withdrew the
tariff concession granted the U. S. on industrial
wax to get even for the American increase of
import duty on Belgian hatter's fur. The Belgian
retaliatory move won't harm us much; it is real
ly just a token slap. But the U. S. can hardly
afford to ignore it because we stand accused be
fore the world of not practicing what we preach,
and we're guilty of the charge.
For years now, since the Marshall plan began
and before, the tj. S. has been urging Europeans
to ease trade restrictions among themselves, ex
pounded the virtues and profits of freer trade,
and promised to simplify our customs laws. We
told Europe that the way of economic salvation
was increased, production and sales for dollars.
Groups of European businessmen toured , the U.
S. to learn advertising, salesmanship, market
research.
The idea was that if Americans bought enough
European goods here, then the Europeans could
use the dollars to buy American goods, and the
American taxpayers would not have to give
away so many dollars to keep our European
friends in food and factories.
The joker, though, is the American policy of
granting protective tariffs to any U. S. industry
which hollers that it is being robbed by the
competition from European "cheap labor." The
Europeans finally discovered that even if they
produced, advertised and packaged to meet our
approval, they couldn't sell.
To them the paradox of U. S. words and deeds
ii hardly a joke. So they are protesting. They
want to make their own living and stop living
on handouts and Uncle's allowances. They are
threatening to junk the whole shining universal
code of trade laws and revert to the jungle law
of survival unless, Michael L. Hoffman says in
the New York Times:
"The U. S. faces the fact squarely that the
world's largest creditor country cannot contin
ue to conduct its commercial policy as if it were
more important to save the blue cheese Industry
than to prevent the spread of chaos and despair
in the non-communist world."
Or, he might have added, see West Europe
turn to Russia and barter its goods for raw ma
terials instead of dollars.
The China Lobby
Oregon's Senator Morse again has called for
congressional investigation of the China lobby.
His publication in the Congressional Record of
pertinent documents and the comprehensive re
view of the lobby in the April 15 and 29 issues
of The Reporter should touch off a public de
mand for the facts on both sides of the China
Issue.
The existence of a China lobby is not in ques
tion. Nor is it a question of whether there ought
or ought not to be a China lobby. Every foreign
government whose destiny is involved with Uni
Victory in Florida Could Give Sen. Kefauver
Solid Inside Track for Democrat Nomination
By Joseph and Stewart Alsop
WASHINGTON - Next week
tn Florida, the Democrats will
hold their last really important
primary - a straight-out test, on
Southern soil,
between Sen.
Richard Rus
sell and Sen.
Istes Kefauver. r
gen. Russell is ,
solidly backed
by the state or--1v
ganization, and! "7
if Russell Vins.j if
the Kefauver! ' , w
boom will be lZT"
sharply deflat- - WW
ed But, at this writing, the
baffled experts quote the odds
seven .and if Sen. Kefauver
wins, he will be pretty hard to
stop.
Hence, this is a good time to
take a hard
look at "this
Kefauver thing"
as the higher
echelon Demo-
! crats peevishly
describe the
Tennessee Sen
ator's grass
roots candidacy.
From such a
look, two points
'unexpectedly e-
merge.
First and most curious, the
Kefauver candidacy has had less
high-level professional help than
any major political movement
since Coxey's army. Very recent
ly. Sen. Paul Douglas, of Illi
nois, has climbed aboard; while
the late Robert Hannegan's as
tute henchman, Gael Sullivan,
has just taken over the Kefauver
national headquarters. But, un
til then, Kefauver! only pro
fessional assistance was provid
ed by the ex-Congressman from
New Mexico, Richard Harless,
while his most eminent intellec
tual advisor was the former chief :
of the Justice Department's Anti-Trust
Division, Wendell Berge.
Althoarh anything- but na
tional Omres. Harless, Berge
r and the inner crenn mt Tenne-aerana-f
or-Kefauver are cap
able men. For the rest, Ke-
i- if I
fauver has rallied such a col
lection of ebsenre lame ducks
and minor political Ishmaels
as would whiten the hair of
any conventional-minded po
litical manager. Nonetheless,
Kefauver clubs have sprung
up all over the country, and
Kefauver has won primary af
ter primary, because of the e
vangelistic spirit he somehow
arouses. One eminent support
er explained!
"He's an Institution. That damn
ed coons kin cap has done some
thing. He has destiny on his side.
It really seems like God has
put His hand on his shoulder
and said 'Go forth young man
and be "President.' "
Second, neither destiny, nor
television, nor bull luck, nor
his supporters' notion that Ke
fauver is the special pet of
the Almighty, is the real ex
planation of Kefauver's suc
cess so far. The secret lies,
in fact, in the man himself.
Kefauver is tall, amiable and
immensely slow of speech and
movement, and is thus account
ed stupid by many. He has been
independent and is thus held in
low esteem by the grandee? of
his party. He has occasionaly
gone wandering off after some
pretty strange ideas and is thus
regarded as a lightweight. But
there is one thing about Ke
fauver which no one can doubt
who studies his record. Behind
the smile, the public handshak
ing and the practiced folksiness,
Kefauver conceals real mastery
of politics and a great power of
cool calculation.
His presidential candidacy,
for instance, which ha seem
ed so spontaneous, was in fact
entered upon by a series of
careful stages. Kefauver want
ed to be sure of his own state's
support; and so, last fall, be
returned to Tennessee to bush
whack through almost every
county.
Kefauver also wanted finan
cial support. This materialized
in December, at a large dinner
in Nashville, organized by Gov.
Gordon Browning and Kefauv
er's former administrative assist
ant, Charles G. Neece, who is
now practicing law in Tennes
see, At this dinner, Neece and
tatcsmaa
ted States policy works for its own best interest
in Washington, just as the U. S. lobbies abroad.
The Reporter says that the Chinese National
ist government, however, is "little but a lobby."
The China lobby represents "not a great nation
but a .regime playing at being a great power."
And that, The Reporter feels, is "radically
wrong." Actually, that only means the China
lobby is no different from other lobbies repre
senting special interests. If it represents an out
of-power regime it is no defferent from the
lobbies of governments-in-exile during the last
war; Chiang is still recognized by the U. S. as
the rightful Chinese leader.
Great or small, in or out, good or bad every
one has a tacit right to try to get a sympathetic
hearing in the councils of the mighty.
But the American people to whom lobbyists,
after all, appeal indirectly and who must pay
the bills have an equal right to know who are
the lobbyists, how they operate, and what they
want. Then Americans may have the opportun
ity as well as an obligation to evaluate object
ively the information, requests and policies is
sued by the lobbies, and act or react accord
ingly. The people have not had this opportunity with
regard to the China lobby because we don't
know enough about it. Congress, usually so eag
er to investigate anything so controversial, has
n't touched the China lobby. Wayne Morse is do
ing a service in urging an airing.
The Reporter does a service, too, in publishing
its estimate of the China lobby along with a
concise review of U. S. -Chinese relations, and
a listing of the individuals too many of whom
are unsavory involved. The magazine's "ex
posure" is necessarily incomplete it does not
have subpoena powers but as its editor says,
"somebody had to make a start."
It's an impressive start a take-off that ought
to spark a full investigation to find out how true
are The Reporter's reports.
Right now, with the Korean truce talks again
in the critical stage, Americans wfll be parti
cularly interested in the warmongering charges
against the China lobby. The Reporter says the
Korean war granted Chiang a desperately need
ed reprieve and that his last, best hope is total
war against international communism started by
the U. S. in the shortest possible time. To what
extent, then, are the Chiang lobbyists influenc
ing our officials in this vital question of war and
peace?
Another extremely important charge is that
the China lobby is largely responsible for the
present unhappy state of our foreign service.
The lobby's tactics have been to attack state
department personnel ("get Acheson") as well
as policies, with the result that:
"Now foreign service officers have to restrict
their acquaintanceship to people who will not
seem objectionable. Our foreign service is be
coming more and more like Soviet Russia's,
which confines itself to telling its masters only
what they want to hear. Today, many career
diplomats tend to keep their mouths shut or to
hedge . . . Under such circumstances correct
policy decisions are accidental."
Perhaps there is another side. Perhaps the
China lobby has a good case to put before the
American people. But the necessary prerequisite
to such objectivity is a complete set of facts. An
investigation is in order.
Col. M. M. Bullard, a prosper
ous Tennessee business man,
formed the nucleus of a group
of Kefauver angels. These men
250 Tennesseeans each of whom
pledged up to $1,000 apiece
provided the original sinews of
war, which most people have in
nocently supposed the Kefauver
movement did not have.
Finally, Kefauver wanted a
strategy, and this he quite
clearly worked out for him
self early In January. It was
based on two main conclusions,
which he reached after mull
ing his problem over and talk
ing to a number of other
friends like Neece, Harless,
Berge and Leon Henderson.
Conclusion number one was
that President Truman probably
would not run, and that Tru
man's withdrawal would leave
an open Democratic race.
Conclusion number two was
that the great powers of the
Democrat Party would never
willingly support a Kefauver
candidacy and must therefore be
forced to do so.
From these conclusions ev
erything else the funny,
humble-bold call on Presi
dent Truman, the determined
challenge to the President
himself in the New Hampshire
primary, the subsequent suc
cessful primary fights fol
lowed entirely logically. The
aim was to get out ahead of
other contenders and to make
Kefauver look like a winner.
The results have proved Ke
fauver's astuteness.
Meanwhile, Kefauver has also
disclosed another enviable po
litical trait. Consider his simple,
good-tempered statement after
beating the President in New
Hampshire, his amiable but
tough attack on Sen. Robert Kerr
In Nebraska, his wily approach
to a difficult business in Florida.
All of them prove that Kefauver
knows incomparably well how
to handle himself how to say
exactly the right thing in exact
ly the right way. In short, the
candidacy of this man who has
gone so far with so little help
will become a very serious mat
ter indeed if the first phase of his
campaign winds up with another
victory in Florida.
- New York Herald Tribune. In.)
SEIZER'
Literary Guidepost
By W. O. Rogers
THE MEMOIRS OF HERBERT
HOOVER: THE CABINET
AND THE PRESIDENCY
19201933 (Macmillan; $5)
The first volume of Hoover's
memoirs told of the education
of the engineer, the early years
of remarkable professional suc
cess, the relief job in Belgium.
Here our former President has
come home again, and for near
ly 20 years he was to stay away
from Europe. Almost 45, he
wanted to resume his business,
planned a new home in Califor
nia, turned down 64 invitations
to speak. But in 17 months he
accepted 46 invitations, issued
statements .wrote articles, at
tended meetings until in March,
1921 he found himself Harding's
secretary of commerce.
Defeating Smith in 1928, he
was inaugurated President in
1929, to serve until F. D. Roose
velt beat him in his try for a
second term. In these two posts
. . . before the New Deal, before
the Depression had made its full
impact, and before World War
II, and so in a world strangely
remote from ours today ... he
was active in scores of ways,
from standardizing the sizes of
auto wheels to building Better
Homes, from railway mediation
to matters of waterways1, radio
legislation, conservation, foreign
affairs in the Americas, Europe,
Asia.
Though he comes dramatically
up-to-date in throwing new light
on Quezon and Osmena, there
is a nostalgic quality about other
names he mentions . . . Wicker
sham, Kellogg, Mellon ("in every
instinct a country banker").
Coolidge ("moral courage,
"horse sense," "thrift"). He has
warm praise for Harding: "I
never knew him to give a prom
ise that he did not keep," though
he remarked on an earlier page,
as if merely in passing, that he,
Taft, Hughes, Root and others
announced to the electorate that
a vote for Harding was a vote
for the League of Nations "in
consequence of personal assur
ances from Mr. Harding."
If he had stayed in office he
believes "we would have quickly
overcome the depression," but
that subject is reserved for the
next volume. This book is more
GP'N AND BEAR IT
V V
-s. ywtM
'Certainly
their new fiirnlsMiigs
have
year month Jnst
their hideous
CROSSES THE RUBICON
""a-safcfc Cl , , , i
. e aa- jBy" m eJg la
episodic than the first, in spots
rather a series of notes than a
book; one reads it dutifully, and
that's all. Volume III should
quicken the interest aroused
originally by Volume I.
Political Parade
(Editor's note: Stories in the "Po
litic jU Parade" are written by or for
the candidate!, on Invitation of The
Oregon Statesman, and viewi ex
pressed herein may or may not be
la accordance with the opinion of
this newspaper. The articles are
published In the public Interest, and
without obligation on the part of
anyone.)
Today's Subject:
KENNETH V. LOTTICK
Candidate law
CITY COUNCIL (Ward S)
Kenneth V. Lottick, candidate
for alderman from the 3rd ward,
was born In Indiana, where his
father sprvpH
as prosecuting
attorney a n d"j
as judge of the I
Third Judicial jj
circuit ior
many years.
His mother
was active in
Eastern Star
and D. A. R.
circles.
He was edu
cated in the
public schools
and attended
Hanover College. Later he did
graduate work at Ohio State,
Columbia and Harvard univer
sities, serving as an assistant at
Columbia.
Before coming to Salem, Lot
tick had seven years' experi
ence as principal and superin
tendent of schools, later becom
ing a college teacher of Ameri
can history and government. He
served as deputy to the prose
cuting attorney at Corydon, Ind.,
and has been engaged in adver
tising and sales work, as well
as teaching.
Lottick now acts as director
of teacher education at Willam
ette University and is a mem
ber of the state committee for
high school curriculum revision.
He also serves as chief of train-
by Lichty
--S3
1 t?::
were atrocious, bat yon eoald
once to compliment them oe
taste
SM0 L
K. V. Lottick
Sawing Sound
Tips Deputies
To Escape Try
Another attempted break Friday
at Marion County jail revived au
thorities' longing for a top-floor
prison, as in the proposed Court
house, rather than the present
basement quarters.
And It probably made the pris
oners hope anew to get farther
away from the office of County
Treasurer S. J. Butler. For it was
Butler who heard hacksaws at
work below his office yesterday as
has before there and in the old tax
office.
He heard the noise about 11:30
a.m. and reported to the- sheriffs
office. Deputies descended in the
early afternoon when reinforce
ments were available. They were
unable to apprehend the prisoners
actually sawing, but found one
blade and two halves.
Working along the south corri
dor, the prisoners had cut a two
inch gash in heavy screening out
side the bars and were about
three-fourths of the way through
one bar when discovered.
Friday's visiting schedule was
cancelled.
This is the second attempt of its
type within a few weeks.
Navy Training
Center Toured
The Naval and Marine Corps
Reserve Training Center here got
a May Day inspection Thursday
by five Naval officers from the
13th Naval district.
During the afternoon the five
officers inspected the facilities and
administrative staff of the center.
Thursday night the officers in
spected some of the classes held
for the reserves.
ing of the Marion County Civil
Defense organization.
He is a member of the First
Presbyterian Church, a number
of professional asoclation, and
is a 32nd degree Mason. Dr. and
Mrs. Lottick have a daughter,
Sylvia, a junior In the senior
high school, and live at 883
South High St.
Lottick is interested In the
development of the City of Sa
lem as a good place in which
to live and work. He believes
that he is qualified for the of
fice he seeks by his training and
experience. He will appreciate
your support.
(Clayton Jones also is a can
didate from ward 3. but did not
respond to Invitations in time
to participate in the Parade
series.)
Better Enalish
By D. C. WILLIAMS
1. What is wrong with this
sentence? "The two railroads
connect up at that place, and
from thence one of them goes
to Smithville."
2. What is the correct pronun
ciation of "emeritus"?
3. Which one of these words
is misspelled? Grandiloquent,
grandaughter, grandeur, grandi
osely. 4. What does the word "sopo
rific" mean?
5. What is a word beginning
with an that means "true, or
credible'?
ANSWERS
1. Omit up and from. 2. Pro
nounce e-mer-i-tus, first e as in
me unstressed, second e as In
merit, both i's as in It, accent
second syllable. 3. Granddaugh
ter. 4. Causing sleep. "The seda
tive had soporific effects on the
patients. a. Authentic.
Gov. Stevenson
Avoids Politics
In Salem Visit
(Plioto on page I.)
Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Il
linois was a breakfast guest Fri
day of O.egon's Gov. Douglas
McKay, and both said they avoid
ed mentioning politics.
Stevenson, entered In the Ore
gon Democratic presidential pri
mary, and McKay, a Republican
for Gen. Eisenhower, said they
talked about Orrgo i scenery, de
velopment of the Columbia Basin,
and Gov. McKay's troubles over
daylight saving time.
"We didn't mention politics be
cause we're on opposite sides of
the fence," Gov. McKay said.
Gov. Stevenson talked to re
porters briefly, but didn't com
ment on whether he is a candi
date for President.
The others attending the break
fast at a downtown hotel were
former Gov. Charles A. Sprague,
Salem newspaper publisher; Sec
retary of State Earl T. Newbry,
State Treasurer Walter J. Pear
son, and four members of Steven
son's party.
The Stevenson party left after
the breakfast by car for Medford.
From there he was to go by plane
to Sacramento, Calif.
New Minimum
Wage Boost
Due Tuesday
A five-cents an hour minimum
wage hike for women and minors
employed in O. ;g. ' mercantile
industry will become effective
next ues . State Labor B u
officials announced Friday.
Begr'-ning May 6 no woman or
minor empl-.-ed in Oregon stores
shall be paid less than 70 cents
an hour. This is the first mini
mum wage raise in the mercantile
trade since March, 1943, and was
adopted this spring by the Oregon
Wage and Hour Commission after
a public hearing.
Copies of f ; commission's new
ruling have been sent to stores and
retail trade bureaus for distribu
tion. The order will apply to both
retail and wholesale establish
ments. Salem
Obituaries
GRAYSON
Clarence Poncy Grayson, In thU city,
April 28. Late resident of 615 N. 17th
St. Survived by wife, Bessie Grayson,
Salem; sons. Aubrey and Warren C.
Grayson, both of Saem; Burrell Gray
son. Ephrata. Wash., and Moore T.
Grayson, Hamburg. Ia.; daughters, Mrs.
Virginia Bachlet, Monarch. Wyo., and
one brother ia Emerson, ia. Also sur
vived by four sisters. Services will b
held Saturday. May 3, at 3 pjn. ia the
W. T. Rigdon Chapel with Rev. Dudley
Strain officiating and interment at
Belcrest Memorial Park. Ph. 3-3173.
McKEE
Mrs. Lillian McKee. at a local hos
pital May 1. Survived by daughter,
Mrs. M. N. Sisovich of Pittsburgh, Pa.
Announcement of services later by the
Cloufh-Barrick Co.
ROSS
John Marcus Ross, three-year-old son
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ross of 1060
DieU Ave., at a local hospital May 1.
Also survived by two brothers, James
and Stephen Ross of Salem; grand
parents, Mr. and Mrs. X. M. Ruliison
of Salem; great grandmother, Mrs.
Mary Ross of Hoyt. Kan.; great grand
father, James Henry Lant of Salem;
uncle, Marcus Crawley of the U. S.
Navy; aunts. Mrs. Gladys Deibert, Mrs.
Mary Baillie, Mrs. Hazel Gritton and
Mrs. Velma Cooley, all of Salem. Ser
vices will be held in the Howell-Edwards
Chapel at 2 p.m. Saturday.
May S. with the Rev. Harold Lyman
and the Rev. Alex Sauerwein officiat
ing. Concluding services In Belcrest
Memorial Park.
FERGUSON
Archie El wood Ferguson, at 411 W.
Rural Ave.. May 2. Late resident of
Pequot Lakes, Minn. Survived by
widow. Mrs. Genevieve Ferguson of
Pequot Lakes. Minn.; four daughters,
Mrs. Nanya SUrling of Salem; Mrs.
Vivian Giertsen of St. Paul. Minn.;
Mrs. Alice Reitzel of Burlington, Wash.;
Mrs. Melv4n Nelson of Pequot Lakes,
Minn.; son. Kenneth H. Ferguson of
Albuquerque, N.M.; sister. Miss Mattie
Ferguson of Chatfield. Minn.: brother.
Arnold Ferguson of Austin. Minn. An
nouncement of services later by the
Virgil T. Golden Co.
LARWOOD
Clara M. Larwood, at the residence,
1623 Center St., May 2, at the age of S3.
Survived by three nieces, Florence
Buckles and Mrs. Helen Matheson. both
of Portland, and Mrs. Helen McKemie
of Eugene: six nephews. Homer Rey
nolds of Agency, Idaho; John Larwood
of Salem; Donald Larwood of Fresno,
Calif.; Mark Larwood of Redwood City,
Calif.; Walter Larwood of Eugene, and
Leonard Larwood of Oakridge. Services
will be held in the W. T. Rigdon
Chapl t 1:30 p.m. Monday. May 5.
WEBB
Thomas A. Webb, at a local hfcpltal
May 2. Late resident of Independence
Route 1. Survived by a son. Don Webb,
of Independence, two sister, Mrs.
Florence Pullen of Zion, 111.; and Mrs.
Berdella Schwery of Trevor. Wis.;
brother. James Webb of Winter Park,
Fla.; five grandchildren, three great
grandchildren. Announcement of ser
vices later by the Virgil T. Golden Co.
Genuine F. Hybrid
Petunias
Ballerina
Silver Medal
Fire Chief
Unusual Annuals
Dianthus Gaiety
Iberis Umbellata
OPEN SUNDAY
Egan Gardens
5 Mi. N. of Kmzmr
on St. Paul Hwy.
Load Limits Lifted .
On Lancaster Dr.
Load limits on Lancaster Drivo
east of Salem have been removed
by Marion County Court, which
said it would reimpose them if
damage results.
A 15,000-pound restriction has
been on the road for several
several months, but it was report
ed to the Court that trucks had
been hauling considerably heavier
loads recently for bypass construe
tion in the area.
Public Records
CIRCriT COURT
Yvonne Moore vs. C. L. Plumb:
Case dismissed as settled, on
plaintiff's motion.
Jos. S. Cohen and Sons Co,
Inc., vs Greta Thompson and Sam
uel H. Starr: Proceedings by
plaintiff for appeal to State Su
preme Court dismissed, upon
stipulation.
Merrill D. Ohling vs C. V. Steer
and Calvin J. Brcssler, doing
business as Salem Excavation
Co.,: Default judgment of $2,077.27
granted plaintiff.
Ada Emmtt Cole vs. Eugeno
W. Cole: Divorce decree to plain
tiff ordered, defendant to pay
$368.86 to plaintiff and confirms
property settlement.
Delia Chase vs Fred E. Chase:
Complaint for divorce alleging
cruel and inhuman treatment
seeks division of property rights.
Married June 22, 1943 in Spring
field, Ore.
State Unemployment Compen
sation Commission: Default judg
ment of $106.33 granted plaintiff.
Emmett and Elizabeth Kleik
vs. James Humphrey and James
S McClelland: Judgment of in
vountary non-suit entered.
Cascade, Inc., vs R. F. Polanski
and Margaret Polanski and oth
ers: Robert K. Powell appointed
receiver to manage real property
involved.
Slate Finance Co. vs Marvin
E. Clark and others: Sale of real
property confirmed.
Hawkins and Roberts Building
Corp. vs J. L. Franzen and oth
ers: Plainntiif allowed to file a
mended complaint and to includo
Pay Less Drug Store of Salem as
additional party plaintiff.
Rudolph R. Vegh vs Geneva
J, Vegh: Complaint seeks annul
ment of marriage on ground that
defendant had not been divorced
from former husband for six
months, seeks ownership of real
and personal property. Married
Feb. 3, 1952, at Stevenson, Wash.
PROBATE COURT
Alice L. White estate: Appraised
at $3,350.59.
Martha T. Hatteberg estate:
Sale of personal property author
ized. , Edna Anderson Close estate:
Final decree.
: Mildred Woodcock Carver Es
tate: Final account approved.
1 Hattie Tomlin estate. Final
hearing set May 31.
Edna P. Baal estate: Appraised
at $11,202.50.
DISTRICT COURT
Dale E. Haley, 1225 S. 25th St.,
petit larceny, pleaded guilty, con
tinued to May 5 for sentencing,
held in lieu of $250 bail.
Calendar of Events
SALEM
3-770
May 3-D.A.V. Circus Ro
vu, SaUm Son ior High
Auditorium
May 3 May Day festivi
ties, W. U. Campus
May 3-Track Moot, W. U.
vs Whitman, dual moot
May 3-Auto Race, Holly'
wood Bowl
May 10 Mock Convention,
Willamotto U. Oym
May 10 Boy Scout Circus,
Goo. E. Waters Ball Pa.'.
t
May 10-Track Moot, Wil
lamette U. vs Lewis &
Clark, dual moot, McCul
loch Stadium
May 10 Auto Races, Holly
wood Bowl
May 16 - Salem "Gate
Swingers" 4th annual
Blossom . Time' Festival
(Square Dance), Albany
May 30 Memorial Service,
Court House f
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Juno 1 -Shrine Club Golf I
Tournament, Salem Golf
Club.
Above Events covered by
Universal Sound Corp.
Louis du Buy,
Salem Representative
PUBLIC ADDRESS
The Sign of Full,
Crystal Cloar Sound
tubuc address J!
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