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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 19, 1953)
. . - . - , t . . ' ....... , - ' - 4-THi CtouWaa,1 iHdaW PraT :tW&t? Ktffot; 383 GRIN AND DEAR IT it byllch "iVo Favor Stcajj Us No Fear Shall Atce From First Statesman, ftlardl U. 1SS1 ' THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY . - CHARLES A. SMtAUUE, Editor and Publisher . Published every morning Business office Sit 8. Commerolal St, Salem, Ore, Telephone 1-340. Catered at tt ooatotfio at Salem. Or, e second uutt oLOar act ronarsas ama . . By carrier la cities: v Dally and Sunday Daily nnly -.. Sttoda only SUBSCRIPTION BATES By auu, Dally ami Sunday (la aavaace) By stall. Soaday only Cla advance) Anywhere ta 0 8. . , IM par ma, . L23 par mo SO per ma. 173 six mo. IN yeer la sia counties (Benton. Clackamai. I.Jnn -Marion. PoU. Yamhill). Elsewhere to Oregon In 0 ft. outside Oregon $ 1M par ma. SOS six mew 10.M rear 1.29 per a LU pet ma. a inflated Frees (Tnt Associated Press a titled exclusively to las use (or republication it all Iocs news printed tn . uua lews paper . atxMnam on of Ue Asacrlcaa Newspaper rueusaert (Advertulni representatives - Ward-Grtlflta New York CbJcaco. fUa rrancisc. Detroit). Co, Aadlt Baraaa at Clrealatteaa House terrace, and was treated to a private viewing of the British crown jewels, and was the honored guest of Winston Churchill at No. 10 Downing Street. ; . The Cowherd and the Queen A man whose mother once whipped- him for begging bread from relatives Tuesday broke bread, with a queen. A man who often in his life has been home- less, ragged, and hungry this week is getting the royal treatment from Britain and may, later this year, visit the United States where the velvet Carpets of hospitality also await him. The man is Marshall Tito of Yugoslavia. As a seven-year-old cowherd, Tito used to dream of being a tailor so he could wear fine clothes. His relatives wanted him to be a waiter, so he could wear fine clothes, eat well and not have to work as hard as most Croation peasants had to work. His father, though, was trying to scrape together passage, to America, the land of opportunity, for Tito. ... . But Tito went to work as a dishwasher in stead and later apprenticed to a blacksmith. Go ing to apprentice school awakened in him a passion for reading and he did odd jobs to get jnuney to ouy uws. xie wis k i-uusuipi. " " culture in wnirh ha i ard. The nrohlcm nf Austria-Hungarian imperial army when World prevention merges into the broader field of War I broke out and, wounded, fell into Russian Sex Crimes Prevention Several shocking accounts of sex crimes in tha news recently point to the sex-criminal problem and to measures being taken to cope with it. Studies of this type of crime are increasing. A 1 group of California doctors and sociologists mad their report to the state legislature a few weeks ago and their recommendations and findings are worth noting.- j The study group made several suggestions r having to do with changes in laws, penalties and legal terminology, but they emphasized that laws are not enough to solve the sex crime prob lem: "Research indicates that the causes of de structive forms of sexual deviation lie deep in -the personality of the deviate and deep in tha i tf: aa4t ' , Wetfare Bills Win Approval Thank yon. Doctor, for Uklng the parents side!... takes conns; these days to speak eat u favor of the unpopular minority.' The joint Legislative ways and means committee - gave - over whelming, approval Wednesday to two House bills to open up Ore gon's public welfare rolls to pub- he inspection, and to put teeth tn the law that requires parents and children to support the needy. ' The vote on the bill to open up i the rolls was 13 to 1. Sen. Robert 1 D. Holmes, Gearhart . Democrat, , cast the only vote against it. The ballot on the measure to tighten up the relative responsi- i bihty law was unanimous. I Opening" up the welfare rolls to inspection is bitterly opposed by i organized old age pension groups. : They also oppose the relative re- sonslbility law. i Sen. Rex Ellis. Pendleton, chair- i man of the committee's subcom mittee on welfare .said making the : rolls open to the. public would re duce state welfare costs. I Rep. David Baum, La Grande, i said. I don't know if the bill actually would reduce the welfare load, but at least it would give the public confidence in how their money is spent.' Baum said mat Indiana, which opened up its wel fare rolls last year, reduced its welfare costs 10 per cent. The bill to tighten the relative responsibility law makes it pos sible for the welfare commission to find from the state tax commis sion how much relatives earn, and thus makes it possible to find out if the relatives can afford to sup port the needy. It .also lets the commission force the reiauves to pay. The bill contains a scale showing how much each relative is L 'A - A , o 11 ' ' TT vVLAND State Sen. Robert D; Holmes (left), Gearhart, here re- aatJaas Vkl Snria 1 m MtlHaH a Olaa WS f A jajhntrlKnHjafM 4aa aultlAa 4jfhai f. a v v aaa aaai yapiiw am wa smw 47 aiwa. wea iwuhvm bw uvetMVUe Making; the presentation during- annual Oregon Education Associa tion convention is Henry Tetx (right), OEA president and superin tendent of Central School District (Monmouth - Independence). Looking on is Mrs. Sarah Caldwell, president of National Education Association. :. " Just browsing . . . Current issue of Pageant mag. has ah article on Spring Fever which every red - blooded American J expected to contribute male, who is afraid of his wile, should read. Housewives wno I hearing upon OR THE PROPOSED hands. Already a socialist, Tito joined the Bol sheviks (while still a Russian. prisoner) after the October Revolution. It iras during World War H that Tito became a world figure as' the leader -of the Yugoslav Partisan army. Then he and his guerrillas were again often hungry and cold, living in caves, driving herds of sheep before them for food, suf fering from scurvy, eating the leaves of trees aCft drinking the juices of birch bark. Later, Tito learned to drink vodka with Stalin himself, and Malenkov and the others. But the two Red. leaders fell out and Tito became a sy nonym for non-Soviet communism. Which, of course, is why Marshall Tito, the former peasant cowherd, resplendent now in his military uniforms and distinguished in his white tie and tails, was a luncheon guest of Queen. Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace and a dinner guest of Anthony Eden at the swank Carleton mental hygiene. The constructive approach In - prevention requires effective . . . education ... (to) create emotionally healthy environments in which to rear children ... A full-scale preven tive program requires not only increased edu cational services, but also mental hygiene serv ice for detecting and treating personality diffi culties in their early stages, and research aimed at finding answers to the many unsolved prob lems of sexual deviation." What it boils down to is that happy, well adjusted families rarely turn out sex criminals any: more than they turn out bank robbers. And society will be plagued with sex criminals as long as we have other problem people, too. More - realistic laws and means to diagnose - deviates in time to attempt therapy are very important. As people become mora educated about the problem and more alert 16 symptoms, and facilities for treatment are made available, we may hope to make our society safer for chil dren. . . ft AaM sneer throueh their banes when their mates I ganization or mMtiot. finrinif Fovor ehnuM Hit tnlrf that m- BUTTE CREKK. SU1U WflSMAUW " I DISTRICT AND OR INCLUSION Of diral pirnprti have laid off te&rinff onen cisar i additional. TERRITORY WITHIN ets long enough to discover that as the warmer "fift ifxiucT Serctng Have nf enrincr arriva mnct rtAnnlf nrtiiallv nm I LAND LYING IN MARION AWU -J.- w 0 : . .. ri.ArKAMAS COUNTIES. OREGON their temperatures up a few notches, it s tne 1 whereas, on the uth day of reb- Fish, Game Boards Voice Opposition To Pelton Dam fused to let PGE build the dam. Game commission witnesses de clared the'' proposed legislation would relieve PGE from providing nsn passage U tne dam were built : . longer days and more sunlight which bring on ruat, iwa. tha L that balmy feeling. - MBecause of the higher outside tempera ture,' says the article, "the body generates more internal heat than necessary . . . a man yearns to cut loose, seeks adventure, the new. the untried, something, anything, to prove himself!" The average male works off this excess energy by trying to find out hew long he can lay stretched out en a couch without moving. Footloose kings trade la their old dancing glrla on new models, Legislators drub each other the wrong- way. And each spring the internal revenue bureau takes a load off many a feverish dtixea ... Reports Say Russia Making New Interceptor Able to Destroy Attacking B-36$ Intelligence tion Commute at Corvallia. Oregon, peution signed by 82 landowners, pur suant to uie proviuona ox uie wu wm1 ervation Districts Law. Chapter 3 TiUa 109. O.C-UA-. requesting the establishment of the Butte Creek Soil Conservation District, and WHEREAS, on tha 16U1 December. 1S2. there was duly filed in the office of the State sou uonaer vaUon Committee at Corvallis, Oregon, a petition signed by 14 landowners pursuant to the provisions oz tne Soil Conservation District Law, Title loa. ChaDter 3. O.C.I ..A- requesting the inclusion of additional territory with in the Silver Creek Soil Conservation District, and WHEREAS, the lands descriDeo la Don Harger, the Northwest's answer to Ike Walton, comes I K?ZJZoZ?tZ UD with another nix-word mrfad in tha Artril icnia nf Torr! I described substantially aa. follows: ik. a it . . -.f-,, . , , r , r . I Beginning at a point where too xuues mag. au aooui now mui ireex nerc nas neen set asiae Clackamas and Marion for kid fishermen only. And about the couple thousand kids who annually take part in the Junior Angling Tournament. The help ful state cop in one of the two color pixes is Patrolman Al Es pey, shown helping a youngster untangle (or tangle) something Harger s next pen effort will be an exciting story in the Oregn. on Oregon's smelt run. The yarn will deal with the his tory, biography and social habits of smelt and something of the early-day smelt oil business. - ( The State Fish and Game Com missions lined up solidly Wednes day before a legislative commit tee to fieht an attempt by the Portland General Electric Cora pany to build Pelton power dam on the Deschutes River. John C. Veatch. Portland, chair man of tne xisn commission. warned the House State and Fed eral Affairs Committee that pas day of age of the controversial dam bill would compel tne state to pay a tremendous price in loss of fish eries so that one power company can make money. The bill, sponsored by PGE, would amend the state water code. It would permit court appeals from decisions of the state hydro electric commission, which re- T 1 : : v? By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP (Story also on page one.) WASHINGTON A 6 to 7 bil lion dollar civil defense program currently being studied by ther . . i a. - a rTesiaeni - ana ,.?the National f Security Coun- cfl. is based oh the findings of va .. government t research group, , Project East iRlver. Their recommend a - tions presum ably have been coor d 1 n a t e d uHth th nir ris. 1 1 mWM fense research group. Project Lincoln. The civil defense funds would be used primarily for providing deep shelters for the urban popu lation and special protection for key industries are the main out- lave rtrnrvtcAl t ; President, Ei senhower may decide, after, all, to buy air de fense . . without civil ' defense. i On the surface, it seems essen tial to provide protection for the people of our cities when one in every five attackers is f Stewart AUop expected to - - ; reach his target. - Failure to buy civil defense looks like taking one chance in five that the popu lation of any given city will ex perience the fate of Hiroshima. 1 7m-fact, however, the chance taken will be far smaller. For the odds against an attack being delivered at all will rise steeply as our air defenses are improved from their present sorry state. This grim arithmetic does not alter this additional 1 civil de fense program's very great sig nificance. In effect, the air de fense program may be regarded as the culminating symbol of the great choke history has thrust upon this country between com fortable prosperity for the .short run or national security for the long run. By the same token, the additional civil defense program may be regarded as a symbol of the many new problems that are created by a preference for the survival of this republic. Cheating national security will Bat reduce the need for defense economy. In the sense of the long, over-due attempt to reduce the Ugh emit cost of American de fense. True defense economy win remain as urrent as ever. Cut economies in unit costs will in evitably be swallowed up by new -outlays, necessitated by the re morseless forward march of mil itary technology and the in creasing; power of the Soviet war l?fhtae. c Take, for instance, the curious case of the meteor that fell on one of the Pacific Islands. The first reports, of this occurrence so alarmed the Joint Chiefs of Staff that they held an emer gency night meeting. The reason was simple. The meteor had been 'mistaken for a long-range guided missile. . .( The range was right, for a mis sile flown from the expected testing area in Russia to the place of the meteor's falL If you ' took a string on a globe, the same range would carry a mis sile from Kamchatka to Detroit. The problem was taken with the utmost seriousness, and the sighs of relief were very deep when ': the news came in that the sup posed missile was a natural product of our stormy ; universe, and not the result of man's talent for destroying man. -Behind this story are some further unpleasant facts. A long - range guided missile with atomic war-head, probably a two-stage version of the German V-2, is i now known to be eventually pos sible. In their search for such a missile, the Soviets are using many of the best German missile experts captured at Penemunde. Most of the best American judges think that the Soviet investment in a long range guided missile program is very heavy Indeed. Our investment is relatively light, for the long range missile project is only one among 27 other projects in a Pentagon mis sile program with an appropria- tion of about $1,000,000,000. Furthermore, we are not mere ly running the risk of falling be : hind Soviet development of these dreadful weapons, f which in themselves may decide the world power struggle. We are net even making the effort to find out all we can about Soviet programs. The firing of such huge mis siles causes violent I ionization. The resulting ion cloud can be detected by appropriate instru ments as it travels through the through the existing Soviet air defense system, which consists of MIG-15s directed to the gen eral vicinity of the enemy by ground radar. The B-36 will go from being obsolescent to being completely obsolete, however, if and when a critical item of re cent Intelligence is directly con firmed. This mtclligence report Is credited by the usually reliable British aa well as our own A-2. It Is to the effect that the Soviets are now producing a high speed, high altitude Jet-fighter-interceptor, with its own air-intercept radar. Such an aircraft would be able to seek and find the B-3S in the chilly upper air, besides out-performing it in every other way. ' Re-equipment of the Soviet Air Defense groups' with this new aircraft will vir tually render useless all the American Strategic Air Command groups that are still using B-36s. The planned replacement for the B-36 is the B-52, an enlarged version 6f the B-47 jet bomber. The B-47 has just, at long last, been given its final triumphant test. The B-52 has not yet been fully tested, but the Strategic Air Commander, GenJ Curtis LeMay, has such great confidence In the new plane that he utterly dis rupted the Air j Staff, a few months ago, by demanding no less than fourteen B-52 groups at a cost of $10 billion. Single line production of the B-52 has just begun. But the existing pro- ductlon line, even when working full speed, will take a matter of about four years to replace the B-35s with B-52s. Having regard te all these facts, and after the most pre-' longed soul-searching, former Defense Secretary Robert - A Levett and former Secretary of the Air Force Thomas Flnletter, took a very grave budgetary de cision. Although the B-52 was still Incompletely tested, and also the cost was very great, they in eluded funds to start a second Clackamas and Marion County line Intersects the East section Una of Section 1L TSS. R3X W. M.; the followlna the county line in northerly and westerly direction for aDoroxlmately miles to the intersection of the range line be tween B2K and B3K In T7S. W. M.; . thenoa North along tha range line between RZaV and S3M, tor aporoxi mately 91b miles to the south east corner of Section 12, T8S, tuX. W. M.; thence west alon section - lines ' approximately miles to the intersection of Rock Creek; thence along Rock Creek In a northwesterly direction for ap proximately 10 miles to the Inter section of the south section Una .of section 16. T5S. R1E. W. M thence west approximately A mile to - the southwest corner of sec tion IS, TSS, R1Z, W. M.: thence fouowing section lines south 1 mile, west 1 mile, south S miles. - west 1 mile, south approximately J1,,' miles to the Intersection .of Abiaua Creek at a point on the west boundary of Section 19, TSS, R1E. W. M.: thence in a south easterly direction up Abiq.ua Creek tor approximately s miles to point Intersecting the west bound' rr of Section IS. TIS. R1SL W. M.; thence south along section lines for approximately 4ft miles to the southeast corner of Section 35. T7S, R1E, W. M.;; thence fol lowing Section linesuand a subdi . vision lines of sections west t miles, south 1 mile, east ik mile, south V-t mile, east ft mile, south 3 miles to the southwest corner of Section 20, TSS, R1E, W. M.; thence along section lines east 10 miles, north -I mile, east 3 miles and north ap proximately 2 miles to the point 01 Deginntng. NOW, THEREFORE, notice is here. Our Washington spy notes that Republicans, after balancing their books following that million dollar inauguration, report a $109,000 profit margin. And Democrats held their collective chlo rophyled breath, until the GOP brass announced the dough would be distributed te various charities. Demos feared Republicans might turn the cash ever to the Treasury to help retire the na tional debt and then in 1956 campaign on a platform of "pain less debt retirement.'' But at that-rate it would take an estimat ed 2,700,000,000 more grand and glorious inaugurating. And Ad lal probably wouldn't want to wait that long . . . , ... Pretty big crowds (especially parents with kids) have been turning out for the free shows put on three nights a week at the State Fairgrounds horseshow arena by the Salem Saddle Club. The mounted members put on drills and rodeo stunts and horsey games on Monday, Wednesday and Friday nights ... Those three out-of-state prison wardens must have worn sneakers when they conducted their survey of the state's prison program this week. They were so. quiet newsmen can't seem to find anybody who knows who they talked to or about. Capitol rumors are that if the survey report reaches the Legislature in time it may help lawmakers iron out a bad trouble spot at the prison to wit, the I by given that a public hearing wui be neia pursuant 10 uie saw petitions, on the question of the desirability and necessity, In the Interest of the gen eral welfare, of the creation of such district and or inclusion of such ad ditional territory within tha Silver Creek Soil Conservation District; on the quesUon of the appropriate boun daries to be assigned to such district and or additional territory: noon the propriety oz tna petitions, ana au other proceedings taken -under tha said act; and on all questions relevant to such inquiries. The said public hearing will be held by the State Soil Conservation Committee on tha 2nd day of April, 1933. beginning at 1:00 p.m.. in tha Scott Mills Grade School at Scotts Mills, in the County of Mar ion, state oz ureiron. x.very person, tirm, corporation. or municipal - agency ding title to mora than tan acres of land lying within the limits of the above-described territory, and all other interested parties are Invited to attend ana win oe given oDoortunirr to be heard at the time and place here in Det or. spectnea. STATU. SOU. CONSERVATION COM MTTTEE Or OREGON By Robert C Baum - Executive Secretary Dated this 17th day of March. 19&3, at corvallia, Oregon At. IS, 28. NOTICE TO CREDITORS - r Notice is hereby given that tha un dersigned ha been appointed the ad ministratrix of the last will and testa ment and of the estate of John Raphael, deceased, by - the Circuit Court of tha State of Oregon, tor tha County of . Marion, in probate pro ceedings numoerea jxjm. ana nas qual ified. All persona having claims against said estate are hereby-, notified to pre sent she same, duly verified as te quired by law. to the undersigned.' at the office of her attorneys, Oster man and Williams, 327 Oregon. Build ing. Salem. Oregon, within six months from the date of the first publication hereof. Dated and first published this 9th day of March, 1953. . IDA RAPHAEL, - Executrix M. 3. 12. 19.24. - NOTICK TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that La vina Gipson has been, by order of tha Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Marion County, appointed executrix of the Estate of James A. Gipson. Deceased. Any persons having claims against sal a estate are requested to present them, with proper vouch' era, to said executrix st 310 Pioneer Trust Building, Salem. Oregon, within six (Si months rrom the data ox this notice. 1 DATED this 18th dsy of February, rN. P LA VINA GIPSON. - Executrix of the Estate of James A. Gioson, Deceased, RHOTEN, RHOTEN 8c SPEERSTBA Attorneys at Law 310 Pioneer Trust Building Salem. Oregon. T. 19. 28. M. S, IS. IS. Valley Men On Transport SAN FRANCISCO The Navy transport Gen. M. C. Meigs brought 4,379. service men home from Korea Wednesday, including these men from the mid-Willamette Valley area: Pfc. Lambert J. Feskens. 4820 Auburn Rd., Salem; Sgt. Alvia D. Fetter, Rte. 3, Albany; CpL Robert E. Owen, 1161 7th St., Salem, and Sgt. Lawrence E. Poole, Rte. U Lyons. . . ' ' msV -- al . CsjV 0J0) fojsT 4lfVfsS0)8 Jj"", f J. Iw4 s o lsjIrlOJaflBtOJi K imj ...weaW ...ATA MMIMUM SHYICI CKAJtGS Yea's Sao article. We see SW little it aew, eaeet reelaceate pert! : CALLx 3-9191 For yon Service Dept. Todoyf IL2 550 N. Capitol, Salem divided-authority problem existing with a prison superintend-! ent-and-warden setup . . . JtP bjSEEDQS TO) 0305 ' . (Continued from page one.) ' - . atmosphere, just as the radio- production line, Their aim active . cloud is . now detected after, an atomic explosion. But we have not even purchased the appropriate Instruments to de tect the Ion cloud and thus to tell us definitely whether the Kremlin has, or has not, this all important new weapon. What are we to do about these related deficiencies? 'Again, there ts'tbe ease of the was to speed B-36 replacement. u order to forestall the expected Soviet fighter-interceptor with air intercept radar. The new regime at the Penta gon has recently shown signs of questioning this decision. They say, quite rightly, it Involves a heavy gamble. But what of the other gamble? What of the risk that anywhere up to threeMruar- seven groups - f B-JSs, which ' ers of the most important groups new constitute the backbone of or - Strategic Alt ( Command. These ' are our only bomber groups with y inter-continental range, and thus the only groups not dependent on foreign bases. They are also, in an probability, the only greuos that can carry : the hydrogen bomb. ' , As is well known, there Is eon-1 slderable argument about wheth er the lumbering B-38s can get in our Strategic Air Command will suddenly be rendered use less for a period of years? . These are.' questions thai can not be eluded. Just as the air de fense problem cannot be eluded. But when such questions are , answered, and such problems are taken in hand, our who'e nation al policy Is bound te be trans formed in all Its branches. ..' .. (Ceoyrifht I9S3 New York Herald Tribune Inc.) is more vulnerable under its use than is a country like Russia, . Here we have huge cities, heavy concentration of Industry, ex posure on the margins of the country (New - York, Washing ton, Detroit, San ' Francisco) targets for enemy action as vital as our fleet nestled at Pearl Harbor on that fateful Decem ber 7th. Russia has been moving ; its industries behind the Urals, and those, in European Russia are dispersed and relatively re mote. , These facts underscore the gravity of the problem which : the reliable Alsop Brothers re port as weighing heavily ' on President Eisenhower's - mind: whether to develop the defense-in-depth' in the North to give the few hours' ! warning without - which our exposed cities and in dustries might be just sitting ducks, like the - ships at Pearl Harbor. If the Alsop report is correct, and it is based on the authentic documents of the re port of scientists to our govern ment under Project Lincoln, then this surely is hardly the time for U. S. swaggering. David Lawrence, one of our more re sponsible Journalists" who lately has become provocatively anti Russian, in the current issue of U. S. News and World : Report urges U.S. planes to apply the doctrine of "hot pursuit' and drop bombs on air bases from which enemy planes are flying in their hit-and-run attacks. He thinks this would be a good time to warn. Russia that unless it - stops : sending arms over " the Trans-Siberian railroad to Ko rea, we will bomb that rail road. This Is his line of reason ing: - - : . .. "There comes a time In a crisis when .to 'falter, to appease, to cringe'is to Invite a major war. JSFSgi oj sumuiug una now, wo wui i holdin avoid such a war. For the Soviet people, when they know the par pose of their rulers to involve them In a war will not support another conflict in which they are again to make heavy sacri fices." , r There is danger in such a line of reasoning. How can we get word to the Russian people that their leaders are provoking war? Since the latter control the -organs of propaganda they, would use them to rally the people to protect the soil of Mother Rus sia,.' - :. - - - ' V REVIVAL ' ' ' - Vifcsloycn Methodist Church s So. 15th and M1U StreeU i- Rev. Pearl Poa Evangelist Spirit Fillecl B&lkal Messages ivangel!sric Singing '. - Each Evening, 7:30 . Admittedly we are at a heavy ' handicap with our sincerity in - wishing to avoid war and refusal to bomb Russia now" before its . atomic arsenal Is filled. But we cannot break the law of interna- tional morality by ballooning very irritating incidents' into full-scale warfare. - The times are fraught with . danger. Rarely in history is such a deep gulf between nations bridged peacefully. We do need to . walk cautiously, with our - guard up, but without excess of eagerness io fight the world bully. It is rather a time to draw together our natural, allies, to consult with them (for they are in a most exposed situation) ; and to wrestle with our adversary through channels of diplomacy - before conceding there Is no end . but the chaos of atomic warfare which ' dooms "victor and van quished. . ; NOTICE TO CREDITORS The undersigned has been appoint ed executrix of the Estate of George M. Whipple, deceased, by the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Mar ion County and has qualified. Persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to oresent the same to the undersigned at 21( Masonic Building. Salem, Oregon, within, six montns from the date hereof. Dated and first published March 12. I9M ; Viola B. McOroy, :' , . Executrix Roy H. Wassam. attorney. Sit Masonic BuUding R-i Oregon j. u. isv as. ad. a, w. "-mm 1 - 1 UDDM rFOR SIM The Oregon SUU Highway Department Is offering 40.000 board feed of 2xW T G Fir In place In a flume at Sardine Creek oa the North Santiam Highway. 'Vf ; '" ' This frame U n longer required, therefore wHl sell this lumber upon the highest offer received until 2:11 o'clock P. M, April L 1S53, subject to the final approval of the Oregon State Highway Commission with the right reserved to reject any and all bids, - Successful bidder will be required te pay cash for the lum ber prior to its removal and have the same removed within sixty days from date of acceptance of offer, FOX INFORMATION contact Mr. C W. Parker, State Highway Bunding; Salem; Telephone No. 4-2171, Ext. 717, Oregon SUU Highway Department, Salem, Oregon. OREGON STATE HIGHWAY DEPARfwiftT . . - SUU Highway Building . , Calexa, Oregoa :