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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 19, 1952)
J - It t , .1 1: :f' ." (' :?':! ."; f . Vt Ji Thm Stat ancm. Salem, Oregon. Friday. December 19. 1952 Location of McLoughlin, Lee Statues at Capitol Decided Location for the statues of Dr. John McLoughlin and Jason Lee on the State Capitol grounds was decided by members of the State Capitol planning commission and State Statuary, committee at a meet ing in the Statehouse Thursday. The statue of Dr. McLoughlin will be located approximately 45 feet south of the sidewalk extending from the east side of the Capitol building to the Supreme Court j structure while the Jason Lee sta- I to 2onmg the west side of Wjnter tue will be located about the same j Street now tentatively classified distance north of the sidewalk. i as business property. Commission Members of the Planning Com- i members said they were opposed mission and Statuary Committee j to additional business establish agreed the statues should be con- j ments within the Capitol Mall siderabie distance away from tne Circuit Rider stationed in the center of the sidewalk east of the Capitol. The Circuit Rider, now facing east, will be turned around. The statur of Dr. McLaughlin will face north toward Oregon City area. Members of the Capitol Plan ning Commission at the meeting were Dean George W. Gleeson, Oregon State College; Miss Eliza beth Lord and Milton L. Meyers, Salem: Dean Sidney W. Little. and Vancouver, Wash., where he University of Oregon, and Herman had his headquarters as factor for j Brookman, Portland. Statuary committee members at the session included state senators Eugene Marsh, McMinnville, and Howard Belton, Canby, along with Dr. Burt Brown Barker, Portland. the Hudson Bay Company in the early days. The Jason Lee statue will face south toward Willamette Univer sity which as a pioneer Methodist missionary he helped to found. The commission voted to re commend to the State Board of , ? Control the employment of Fran- i cis Keally, New York architect, . .. . r. .H . . t ! io prepare a luu-mouei 01 me Capital Mall and also prepare preliminary plans for the new taie supreme iouri Dunaing 10 SEATTLE UP Frederick W be erected probably within the j Kennedy, widely known journalism next few years. j professor and weekly newspaper Dedication of the statues prob- ! association leader, died Thursday ably will not be before next Feb- ! at age 77. ruary or March. Contract for the j Known in northwest journalistic bases has been awarded and this circles as "Pa" Kennedy, he held Pa' Kennedy, Newsman, Dies work is now in progress. Keally drafted the plans for the Capitol. Planning Commission members later will mret with the Salem Zoning Commission with relation the title of professor emeritus of journalism since he retired in 1947 after 38 years teaching at the Uni versity of Washington. Kennedy ilso was manager for Unions Prepare Children's Yule Program :i p)wwiw:'.yiwM.iiiig-iMMww"ii' i wy ... m ." ' mt.KHffr yiwitia n in mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmBmmm ' . . -.-0;: .i.--' ? , .."-." .' " V . v- - If Doing Santa's work, these women are shown stuffing r oodles Into a few of the 1,000 stocklnrs to be riven out at an all-Salem children's Christmas party Satnrdajr night at Salem HIrh School. The women, wives of local anion members, are (from left) Mrs. Bertha Ewing, 1245 Saginaw St.; Mrs. Paul Fer guson, Salem Route 4, Box 516; Mrs. A. F. Chi vers, 430 Tryon Ave., and Mrs. Harold Chivers, 1599 State St. (Story on pate 5). 38 years of the Washington News paper Publishers' Association. Last year he was given the Nation al Editorial Association's presi -dent's award for outstanding serv ice. Kennedy, whose wife died last August, had been ill for several months. The. funeral will be Saturday at 3 p. m. at Forkner's in the univer sity district. 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Wider discovered sudden ly that one law had been defied in his Superior Court ever since the city hall was built 37 years ago. A glazier had put in one section of a stained glass window upside down, so the sand in an hourglass was defying the law of gravity and ruiining upward. HUNTS BASEMENT GAME NEW YORK (JP) - An archery enthusiast has found a new way to exterminate cockroaches. He shoots them. A strip of board backed with a bale of straw is set in a basement corner. The beaver board is baited to attract the little visitors. When one comes for din ner, the archer in the opposite corner has a dandy moving target. Bronze Age Relics Found ROSSLARE HARBOR, Ireland VP) What may prove to be the largest concentration of late bron ze age (500 B.C.) lake dwellings in Europe outside Switzerland has been uncovered at Lough Gara, County Roscommon, Ireland. So far, 22 of these crannogs, or artificial islands where early men made their homes for safety, have been found. Also brought to light are bronze rings, tools and pots. The first discovery was made last summer, when the Irish gov ernment scheme for draining Lough Gara had been under way for 10 months. A wooden dugout canoe was found in the River Boy le near the lake outlet. A perfor ated stone sinker for flshtef wti also found. ' Experts say that pottery found at tough Gara has definite con nections in Scotland and in York shire, England, and is believed to represent folk migration from tho North European plains to tLo British Isles. . A high proportion of the total area of Scotland is still deer for est, says the National Geographic Society.: 4V HBI FOR i-i -j L-r : i - I O Immediate Delivery 7 O We Do Onr Own Servicing O Low Down Payment HULLS sauac srass ftf A no e A Ci..,t ' " Rrrlm. Ormaan 5 TO oX 9t fO QDTJ For the man on the job, for the sportsman in the field, there's no more welcomed and appreciated gitt! 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