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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1955)
OrtsonCDCtatwaau f "Ao Favor Sways Vs. No Fear Shall Axcf . From First SUtwmiB. March , 1S51 Statesman Publishing Company CHARLES A. S PRAGUE, Editor fc Publisher Published every morning. Bustneea efflea M - Entered at the poetotflce at Salem. Ore aa aecond claia matter under act of Congreas March . 187. Member Associated Preaa Tie Aaaoeiated Preaa U entitled exclusively to the ue tor rcpublleation of all local sews printed ta thla newspaper. Salk Success in Oregon Oregon' experience with Salk vaccine has been highly gratifying, reports Dr. Harold M. Erickson, state health officer. Among the 49,000 children who were inoculated with the vaccine none who had received more" than one dose developed polio. Of the three cases which did arise in this group one case developed within one day after the first dose, and the presumption is that the infection was incurred before the inoculation. Among children not vaccinated the incidence of polio was 36 per estimated 100,000 population with the rate for paralytic type 23 per 100,000. Thus the early hopes of the protective character of the Salk vaccine have been fully confirmed in this state. The greater care now required in preparation of the vaccine now appears to insure against the polio infection which attended some of the early inocula tions this spring. On the basis of the Oregon record parents surely are encouraged to have til their youngsters inoculated with the Salk vaccine. GRIN AND BEAR IT By Iichry Just Fifty Percenters At last report a few days ago the Marion County chapter of the American Red Cross had received $1,402 of its $2,900 quota for the special Red Cross fund for relief of flood victims in the East That is less than half the chapter share. The showing is a sorry reflection on the people of this community. Spared most of the catastrophes of nature they are only half way concerned to relieve the acute distress of those, in another part of our country who have suffered in a disastrous flood. Our people seem to have forgotten the aid ex tended by the Red Cross to sufferers from flood in this valley: in 1945. The national organization announces that the "requested sum of ten million dollars has been received. This simply means that oth ers more generous than we, overpaid their quotas Really if Marion County had a flag, it should be lowered to half-mast. Access Roads to O & C TimKer Representatives of counties in which O Si C lands are located met in Portland this week to consider the question of diversion of ad ditional portions of receipts from these lands for the building of access roads.! j Under the 1937 act the 18 O & C counties are entitled to receive 75 per cent of the gross income from these lands. The remaining 25 per cent is retained by the treasury and iimore than covers administrative expense. Formerly this county share was 50 per cent, but when the treasury was reimbursed for previous outlays the county proportion moved up to 75 p cent. I For the proper management of these lands and marketing of timber therefrom access roads have been urgently needed. Congress was unwilling to appropriate mtich money from the federal treasury for this road con struction since most of the income was ear marked for the countier. To meet the rotd need, also to head off possible fforts to re duce the county share two years! ago the O & C counties agreed to have part of their extra 25 per cent go for this road work. At the Portland meeting this week the county rep resentatives agreed to let the full; 25 per ce it go for construction of access roads. There was only one negative vote, that of Commis sioner Stan Stoko of Clackamas county who wanted the counties to take the money ahd "Xever heard such idiotic lyrics, cornball sentimentality, and build the roads. i j , repitious, uninspired melodyr ... Man, I think we got a hit on It is the part of wisdom to iise this share our hands! . . " I . . or revenues from these forest lands for ac cess roads. Some of the timber s overripe, -and there are areas where salvage is needed because of windthrow or disease. In any event the timber to be harvested will bear the burden. Unless some publip body buijds the road then the private purchaser of the timber has to build it, and he lowers his bid accordingly. Use of private roads is ofteii a subject of controversy, and this is avoided when the roads are owned byj some public body. i i i $70,500 Damage"" Action Filed by- Trucking Firm - PORTLAND m -ii A $70,500. suit has been filed by Consolidated Freightways in federal court for loss of j a truck and its cargo in an accident near Canyonvflle last month. ij Defendants are i Pacific Motor Sales, I George D.l Dunning and others, including John T. Yar broughj as driver j of a pickup truck involved in the accident A big Consolidated truck left the highway and burned, with a load of turpentine, killing its driv er. Dallas Yo'utE, 11, Wins Top Rabbit Honors at State Fair , 1 Partnership Banker PORTLAND UT West, ii Says of partnership ha? built the West and will continue! 14 The principle I TOCDIB Loss at Clear Lake After the Oregon game commission grant ed approval of the Eugene Water and Elec tric board's plan for damming Clear lake and diverting water for power purposes from for sap- the upper McKenzie, it was pretjty hard the state engineer to deny the board's plication for water rights. The engineer, Lewis Stanley, has announced his approval ex- life Continued from page 1) Education Bill Tugman had a fine editorial in his Port Umpqua Courier on the importance of our schools, only he got the wrong Hopkins on one end of a log. Samuel and it should .have been Mark. The Jatter was long-time president of Williams College. The reference was made in an address by James A. Gar field and the quotation is variously reported. One version is: MA pine bench, with Mark Hopkins at one end of it, and me at the other, is a good enough college for me." Now it seems necessary to throw in librar ies, laboratories, dormitories and stadiums. of the project. One expert, j biologist pressed fears of grave injury to fish in Clear lake, but evidently theigame com mission didn't agree. The federal power commission has yet to act on; tHe proposal, but with state authorities makihg concess ions to power over keeping the region; prim itive, there is little hope thej federal body will reject Eugene's application. Thus! we stand to lose something rare by malting ciear lane a power reservoirj, a gem lake unmarred by commercialization.: bf a which are chosen. The scholar ship stipend varies from a token $100 per annum where the stu dent has other means of financ ing his education up to $2,000 to cover tuition, textbooks and liv ing expenses. A corporation. National Merit Scholarship corporation has been set up to administer the fund. It invites supplemental donations from other corporations which it will match. The hope is that within five years some 5,000 scholarships will be awarded an nually. The key to this program is the desire to give a greater assur ance that youth of brains and ability will go on to college or university. Presently the com plaint is made that many of the brightest students do not go be yond high school for lack of funds. This merit scholarship plan opens the door of opportun ity to those in this category. The reward to business and to the country lies in the development of the best brain power in the country for the future leadership in the professions, in science, engineering and business. Chairman of the board of the new corporation is Laird Bell, a Chicago attorney, who is also chairman of the board of Weyer- hauser Timber Co. He has been particularly active in the effort to enlist corporation support for private colleges, j It may be men tioned also that he is one of the alternate delegates -named by President Eisenhower to the U.S. delegation to the United Nations General Assembly which con venes this month. The plan appears to have been very carefully worked out. Its magnitude will depend on how responsive other business organ izations are in joining Ford Foundation in providing funds. The offer will prove an additional A. J t U lO UV SU, IMC chairman of the board of the Bank of America said Friday Jesse W. Tapp, jthe banker, told the Western Area Development Conference here ithat the history of the region's, growth is one of private, federal and local co-opera tion. I And, he said, f 'no great diver gence from this pattern of aggres sive pr unwitting partnership can be expected iff the; immediate fu ture Tapp attacked spending of pub projects is mere Coincident with the opening of school the National Safety Council has pui out a j car toon with the caption: "Keep yoijr eye on all Small Fry." That's the whole sfery for mo torists, especially during the school year. And remember the law not to tf-y to pass a school bus when it stops to pick upi or let off school children. j Singer Dick Haymes is beir g sued for $25,000 for legal fees and Singer lario lLanza is being sued by a Las Vegas hotel for $124. 970 for failing to perform at jts ppenin last' spring. Sour notes for these songbirds. Time Flies Speaking about the health of youth, which we did Thursday, we neglected to mention the Four-H clubs Health is one of the four i-is. Ana at tne state fair tne judges picKea the "healthiest youth" among the state's Four-H-ers. That award went to Miss Nor ma Belt of Carlton. Fact is', the physical fit ness of American youth was never as high as 4 4 U -U 4L.I 't 41 I - at picacui, muu&u uiai uueau t mean uicic is no room for improvement. Sure Capt. Richard S. McCutchen wsll go for the $64,000 question on CBS-TVj next Tuesday night. He's a Marine, isn't hel And hell have the situation in hand, too. The government is going to purchase sur plus prunes. Just as well be full of : prunes as wheat and peanuts. Ike Said Acting Like Second-Term Candidate; Decision 'Due to Prestige Gained at Geneva' ph ,AUop By JOSEPH ALSOP WASHINGTON In the secret drama that has been unfolding in the White House for many months, i it is pretty clear that what may be called the faction of the antis has sustained a hea vy setback.. In other words, President Eisen hower is acting much more like a candidate to succeed himself than he would be called upon to act, if he merely wished to control the Republican con vention and to dictate the choice f his own successor. On this head, the goings-on in Denver speak for themselves. Probably this outcome was al: ways inevitable. The most ex perienced of all observers of the American political scene, Frank R. Jsent. has long held that it was an immutable law of Amer ican politics that first-term Pres idents cannot possibly resist the forces driving them to run again.. But in this case, the problem was more interesting than it usually is, because of the charac ter of the faction of the antis. Tne leader of the satis. of course, has beta Mrs. Elteaaaw er. It has aftea beea rumored that tk President's wife dis liked the idea of his raaaiag gala. It ea w he stated adoabted testimony that the " nmon aaderrepreteate4 the real litaatiom. Mrs. Eiseahawer k as act merely disliked the idea I a second term. She has straagry aad eeaalsteatly ated her very great lailaeaee agalaat It. Farthermere. it eaa alse he revealed that the iaflaeae e at Mrs. Eiseahawer has heea pwer fally seeaaded by the iaflaeaea f Majer Jhn Elseahewer, which Is alsa very frt -' The combination of a man's wife and only son would be pretty formidable in most fami - fees aad it is tapedaHj formid able in the Eisenhower family. In addition, Mrs. Eisenhower and Major Eisenhower had formid able arguments that the Pres idency was too heavy a burden to be taken on a second time at the President's time of life; -that the President had done his duty and could gracefully retire: and that this was the moment for the President to escape to the Gettys burg life he loves. The President was much af fected by the pleas of his wife and sba. His response was shawa the warld, sa ta speak, at the lament press conference when he publicly repeated their argnmeat that a m af his years should not seek another four years ia the White House. But the faction of the antis was tiny, while the faction in favor of an Eisenhower second term was enormous, comprising every member of his staff, every Republican politician of any con sequence except Senator Joseph R. McCarthy, and virtually every one of the President's circle of close personal friends. More over, the Geneva meeting at the summit proved to be a heavy blow to the faction of the antis. Tt the legions wha have arged him ta ran agaia the President hat alway had a stock response that the American political sys tem did net recognize the exist ence af such a ereatare as "The dispensable man." Bnt at Ge neva, the. President seemed to prove the contrary. However transitory and even dangerously deceptive the other Geneva results may prove, there Is no doubt whatever about one result. Single-banded, with no lever but his smile, the President raised the reputation of this coun try abroad from somewhere very near the depths to somewhere very close to the heights. In a single week, the rest of the world's opinion of America's aims and purposes was radically . and happily transformed by Ei senhower alone. The teat Baelf faite BatwaHy It exhilarated the President, giving him a sense of achieTement that he has not always ' had ia the White House, j Furthermore, the very fact of this j: feat. at once gare a heaven-sent argument to those who wanted him to run again. In our domestic politics, they said, it j may be that man is indispensable; bnt it has now been proved that at this criti cal juncture, the President is the Indispensable man on the world political scenej According to per suasive reports, it was this new argument introduced by Geneva that rather decisively tarned the White House debate la j favor of a second term. i f All sorts of thing's can of course happen between fnow and the Republican .Convention! It is more and more likely for in stance, that the free half of the world will suffer disastrous de feats in the Far Rast in the next six to eight months. What this may do to the President's post Geneva glow is anyone's guesi. Again, the iPresjdent'p state of health is obviously magnificent. Yet ao man of his years can be absolutely guaranteed against the kind of! little apset which would be trivial for most men, but ia the situation ia the White Honse would give; much greater force to the) pleas af (the Pres ident's wife and son. For these and other obvious reasons, Elsen hower's course cannot,' be abso lutely forecast. Bnt one point, one may now be nolle certain. I ; f : Tht President power of choice in this matter has been invisibly bul rapidly diminished. He no longer has ; the'; option of saying that! he will not run be cause he does not Choose to. His moral commitment to the Repub lican party is now too great. He cannot possibly escape running, unless he is; willing to shield him self squarely behind an opinion from his doctors that; he ought not to do so. That is the only argument Which is not sure to be shouted j down, j jj Copyright 1953,1 New York Herald Tribune Inc. FROM STATESMAN FILES 10 Yean Ago Sept It, 1945 Denying that he had ever planned or would plan to op erate a night club, Michael (Mickey) Flax announced he had purchased the Rose Lawn Funeral home at South Com mercial Street, and late this fall would reopen it as a first class restaurant (1955 it is the home of The American Le gion). E. Burr Miller, district mana ger of Safeway stores in the Salem area for four years, is returning to be permanently as sociated with Valley Motors company, it was announced by W. L. Phillips, general mana ger of the firm. A $100,000 plant, including a main building 130 by 195 feet, will be constructed soon by the Interstate Tractor and Equipment company on the Sil verton road a half mile east of the Portland road "Y", it was disclosed. 25 Years Ago Sept. 10, 1930 Mrs. Herbert Hoover's ability as a roller skater was recalled when aji item in the Waterloo Courier of May 28, 1884, told that the wife of the president two days earlier had won a beautiful silk parasol by mak ing two circuits of the hall and blowing out 10 candles in 38 seconds. She competed as Miss Lou Henry. Judge Percy R. Kelly of Al bany was appointed associate justice of the Supreme Court in succession of the late Judge Thomas A. McBride bv Gov. Norblad. Judge Kelly is well known in Salem, having served as judge on the circuit bench. ' J. S. Sleighter of Salem an nounced that beginning next week, he will operate a bus line which will serve the Salem Heights and Liberty districts. Pasengers in these districts to be picked up as far as the city limits. 40 Years Ago Sept 10, 1915 Improvements to the Grand Opera house to cost approxi mately $3,000 are being contem plated by the trustees of the Odd Fellows lodge, which owns the building. A change in the stairway, refinishing the lobby and a marquee are the plans. incentive to students to work in order to qualify for the rich prize : as long as the! ot a couege education with Iree dom from financial worries. Some may be skittish over cor porations giving to colleges, but here the selection of institutions is free for the student so the col lege itself is not compromised in any way. So here we shall have benefices with full freedom both for the scholar and the col lege. I I Safety Valve assumed that should run for Ike, Adlai and Steva To the Editor It seems to be rather solemnly if Eisenhower Da d. reelection, ne the idea that ic! funds for big ly a displacement of private finanpej He cited the "geographic tunneling of public revenues from One! section of the country to anotHeK" The banker said that "in the case of the WestJ federal funds have been flowing an at a rate in excess of the iunis removed by the (Treasury. $inee the end of World War II. the jfederal govern ment has disbursed a total of about 13 billiori dollars more in the 2th Federal Reserve District than; it has received from taxa tion and borrowing iwithin the dis trict' Added Income These federal funds, he said, have generated! additional income which would not haVe appeared if government expenditures in the West had been limited to the amount of its receipts. . As; for private money, he said. West continues to "offer attractive opportunities and purposeful outlets for investment tunas, tnese lunos jwiu De avail able: for continued growth and de velopment of bur area." Earlier the conference heard a review of the Hoover Commission Water and P6wer j Task Force's highly critical report of federal activities in those fields.. William D. Shannon, a task force member, said the group's studies actually showed deficits for such projects as tie Tennessee Valley Authority, the Bonneville System, Bowlder Canydn. Parker-Davis, the Southwestern Power Administra tion and the Southeastern Power Administration. i The deficits, he said, exist based on what would have been the fi nancial situation if the government had received! annual 3 per cent interest on it investments and if federal and state taxes, like those of J the private utilities, had been An 11-year-old Dallas boy. Steven Grimes, exhibited the best of breed, an intermediate doe, in the New Zealand whites, which had the largest number of rabbit entries in 'any one breed at the Oregon State Fair. Judging was completed Friday. Fifty-four rab bits competed for the New Zea land breed title. Steven received the Lowit Blueblood Rabbitry special award of: a New Zealand White junior doe. Rabbit exhibitors from seven western Oregon counties shared honors for 4-H rabbit breed championships at the State Fair. Winners were from Benton, Clackamas, Hood River, Joseph ine, Polk, Marion and Multnomah counties. , Champion Buck Pat Evans, Grants Pass, showed the champion New Zealand White buck for the best "opposite" of the breed. i Pete Kaida, northern Clack amas County 4-H'er of Portland, exhibited the best Californian, a senior doe. "Best opposite" was shown by Louanne Douris, Salem The best New Zealand Red. also a senior doe, was exhibited by Mary Lou Sohler, Hood Riv er. Her brother, Dick Sohler, showed the "best opposite," a junior buck. Marilyn Douris, Salem, had the champion Black; Silver Martin, a senior doe; and Charles Logan, Hood River, showed the cham pion Peruvian, a junior doe. Silver Fox The champion Blue Silver Fox, 17 Extension Courses Due Seventeen courses will be offered in Salem this fall through the gen eral extension division of the Ore gon State System of Higher Ed ucation. The extension terra begins Sept. 26. The courses will cover fields of education, history, industrial ed ucation, physical education, sci ence, sociology, business adminis tration, philosophy, English and Spanish. Eight; of the courses carry graduate credit. Further information on the courses, which will be offered on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednes days for 11 weeks, can be obtained from the Salem school system s adult education office. could not possibly be beat. If he runs, I believe Ike will be trounced. I When I talked to Adlai Stev enson in September, 1952, in Portland, he commented that he .had three overwhelming jobs: 1. To remake the National Democratic organization he remarked, Rail Service Probe Starts Technical experts of the Pub lic Utilities Commission Friday launched an investigation to determine, if possible, whether the recent action of the Portland Traction Company in reducing its operating schedules on two interurban passenger lines was justified. Interurban lines involved oper ate between Portland and Oregon City and Portland and Bellrose. The investigation, officials said, is preliminary to a public hearing to be called by the utili ties commissioner later. Investigators for the utilities commission spent Friday in the Portland area." a senior doe, was exhibited by Patsy Manning, Corvallis. Pat Evans, Grants Pass, had tha champion Black Dutch, a senior doe. First place market rabbit, with all breeds competing, was a New Zealand White shown by Mike Grimes of Dallas. David Stevely. Warren: Mari lyn Douris. Salem; and Harry Baker, Grants Pass, won the Tri angle Milling company special awards for their 4-H rabbit ex hibits. Their record books showed the best work in developing their rabbit projects and made them eligible for a $5.00 order of rab bit feed. , Other Winners ? First place winnings include: New Zealand White Mika Grimes, Steven Grimes, Dallas; Stanley Frison, Tigard; David Spence, Pat Evans, Grants Pass; Joe Davis, Grande Ronde. Senior Buck Richard Davis, Grande Ronde; Donna VanDeven ter, Jefferson; Gerald Pavelek, Salem, and Guy Monroe, Corval lis. Intermediate Doe Jerry Zieg enbein, Walter Galer Jr., Hood River; Harold Vreeland, Wanda Lee Dewey. Tigard. Junior Doe Kim Roberts Jr., Steven Grimes, and Mike Grimes, Dallas; Larry Morgan, Rickreill; Niamey rrison and Wanda 'Lea Dewey, Tigard; Guy Monroe, Cor vallis; Gordon Watkins, Portland, ana juay BjacK, Albany. Junior Buck Steven Grimes, Dallas; Joanne Gray, Salem. Californian, Senior Doe Eldon Beckman and Duane Beckman, Milwaukie, and Jerry Mohr, Hood River. Oregon City Winner New Zealand Red, Senior Dot Wayne Stalick, Oregon City. Junior Doe Wayne Stalick, Oregon-City. . j Lilac, Junior Doe Jeannt Flett, Milwaukie. Black Silver Martin, Junior Doa Wanda Mae Fereil, Grant Pass. Blue Silver Fox, Senior Doe Peggy Manning, Corvallis. Black Dutch, Senior Doe Bob by Vreeland, Tigard. Skillful handling of a New Zea land White rabbit won the 4-H senior rabbit showmanship titlt for Gordon Watkins. 17, of Park Rose. Junior champion showman was Wanda Lee Dewey, 12, Tigard, who exhibited a New Zealand White junior doe; and champion of the intermediate age group 4 H'ers was Kim Roberts, 13, Dal las, who also showed a New Zea land White junior doe. First place winners were: Sen ior Showmanship Charles Lo gan, Hood River; Pat Manning, Corvallis; Pat Evans, Grants Pass; and Harold Urleland, Ti gard. Intermediate Showmanship Larry Morgan, Rickreall; Peter Koids Portland; Sandra ZweifeL Tillamook, and Wanda Mae Fer-rill- Grants Pass. . Junior Showmanship Steven Grimes, Dallas; Janice Sprague, Tillamook; Guy Monroe, Corvat Wis. ... 3 FACE ARRAIGNMENT OLYMPIA UFi I Dr. T. A. Harris, state director of public institutions. Tax Burdea fThese deficits. "obviously . j . . had to be borne j Friday announced that three ring by the taxpayers. leaders in the July 5 riot at the Shannon reported these deficits ( penitentiary will be arraigned in through W53: TVA $99,547,167, Walla Walla County Superior Court Bonneville $96,626,893; B o u 1 d e r on charges growing out of the dis- Canyon $101186,839 ;j Parker-Davis $21,200,338, Southwestern Power 2. To try and write considered -692,305 ahd Southeastern Pow- speeches. 3. To meet and talk to so many people- I He said if he could run again, he would have the speeches largely written beforehand, that the organization would be in far better shape, and that he would devote himself! more effectively to campaigning,. Stevenson's campaign in 1952 was of about month's duration. This time it will be one year. The polls indicated that he was steadily gaining ground on Eis enhower toward the end of the campaign and that had the cam paign lasted a few months more, he would have overtaken Ike. We hear no more about Ike's "Crusade," or budget balancing; the Communists have not been driven out of Washington by the thousands as was promised; the farmers hav0 been clearly double-crossed; Ike's is obvious ly a special-interest government. (Imagine the hullabaloo if a Democratic president had ap pointed nine farmers or nine labor leaders to his cabinet!) Eisenhower was elected in 1952 because of the many de fects in the Truman administra tion, defects which have been paralleled in this administration. The enthusiasm and hope en gendered in the '52 Republican campaign cannot be rearoused. The momentum and offensive will be with Stevenson when he opens up, and lead him to the White House regardless of who the ' Republicans put up as a candidate. I I might add that I am equally confident of the reelection of Wayne Morse. I Steve Anderson $41 Court St, er $10,692,305 Obviously! the claims of profits earned for the federal government onj these projects cannot be sus- ned," Shannon said. ta I Better Enirlisli By D. C. WILLIAMS 1. Whati is wrOng with this (sentence?! "I subscribed to that magazine ilast week, and 1 ex pect you Idid, too. 2. wnat is tne correct pro nunciation of "obesity"? I 3. Which one if these words is misspelled? Idiosyncrasy, il legable, illicit, illustrious. 4. What does the word "con temporary" mean? 5. What is a Word beginning with inn that means "too many to be counted"? j ANSWERS 1. Say, "I subscribed for that magazine last week, and I pre sume you did, Jtoo." 2. Pro nounce e-bess-i-tl, accent sec ond syllable. 3. Illegible. 4. Liv ing or occurring at the same pe riod of time. "His work ranks with that of contemporary auth ors." 5. innumerable. turbance. HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS Station KSLM 1390 K. C Sundays 10:15 A. M. SAVING MONEY 4 0WClUtHt AT SALEM FEDERAL : 4(4 yoW C&6Q4c! I ' Any Amount Any Timt Save - By - Mail Save At Our Office Earn our current 3 return on savings 560 Statt Street Facing Court H'le Salem, Oregon - T 1 One of the new features of 1,1 TC 11 1 1 OreaKCr the State Fair is to be a kinder- . I a i i garten to be maintained by the Contract 'A Warded Oregon Congress of Mothers in . . the old art room on the fair PORTLAND (UP) - A contract grounds. Miss Nellie Christina for construction of U circuit break- Casebere, Salem, will be in for the Bonneville Power Ad- charee ministration was awarded here Friday to General Electric Co. of Jesse L Lasky's picturization Portland on its bid of $322,400. of Harold MacGrath's famous Six of the 230.000 volt breakers romance, "The Puppet Crown," are scheduled for installation at is the attraction at the Grand The Dalles, four; at Bridgeport,! theatre, starring Miss Ina Claire wash., and one at Covington, and Carlyle BlackwelL Wash. 3 Ortj&onC$latfjman 1 Pboo U11 Subscription Rates By earrlck la cities: Daily and Sunday 1 45 per mo. Dally only 1 1.25 per mo Sunday! only : JO week I i By mall Sunday oaryj u advance) Anywhere In U. By mall. . .50 per ma. 1.75 six mo. 100 year tin advanoel la Oregon Daily aa Sunday! In D. outside Orefon; Aadrt Bureaaj Jt 1J0 per mo. S.50 tlx no 10.50 year S 1.4Spermo. 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