The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 10, 1955, Page 2, Image 2

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    J (See. fJ-JTafesmarr, Stttrti, Or:, Mob., Ocfo&er t9, 1955
Big Guns, Va
Jets Lend
To French Forces
mpire
Support
RABAT. Morocco JB French
forces numbering possibly ,000
began a big offensive Sunday in
the week-old "Battle or the Tri
angle" against rebelling tribes
men.' ' m
French foreign legionnaires and
native troops, supported by 105
rnrn guns and Vampire jet planes,
started the drive in the Aknoul-Boured-Tizi
Ouzli triangle near the
Spanish Moroccan border.
While the new offensive was un
der way, members of the Presence
Athletes Hear
Pontiff Laud
Sports Ideal
VATICAN CITY on Pope Pius
XII told a vast and colorful audi
ence of athletes Sunday that sport
can be a school "for that great
trial which is earthly life."
Addressing an estimated 150,000
athletes in sun-washed St. Peter's
Square, the pontiff lauded sport as
a potential strengtfiener of body
and spirit .
But he warned against too much
emphasis on "commercialism and
the star system to which high
high ideals, justice, the health of
athletes and the good names of
nations are sacrificed."
The audience was one of the
most colorful ever held in the his
toric square. Competitors of near
ly every- form of athletics were
massed there.dressed in the uni
form and carrying the tools of
their sport. They brought to the
pontiff gifts of great variety from
their native regions in Italy.
: The occasion was the 10th anni
versary of the founding of the Italv
Ian Sports Center, a wing of Ital
ian Catholic Action. In addition to
the -athletes. 11 cardinals, a half
dozen Italian Cabinet ' ministers
and scores of Catholic Action
leaders attended.!
"Sport, an its Christian sense, is
in itself an efficient school for that
great trial which is the . earthly
life." the Pope-told the athletes.
"Its aims are perfection of the
spirit . . . the never-ending glory
of the saints." j
"'. "Sport is only ', a pale image of
that higher game." i
He praised competitive spirit
and exhorted the athletes to avoid
"cold technical excellence, which
not only impedes the gaining of
spiritual benefits but also.' when
it leads to victory, satisfies neither
. the competitor nor the spectator."
The Pope said he was pleased
at. the assiment of. the I960
Olympic Games to Rome. Beside
giving people the chance to see
the beauties and spiritual attri-
butes here "in the center of Chris
tianity," the games will "also offer
the occasion to many peoples to
breathe the airt of universality,"
he said.
Francaise, a strongly nationalistic
group of French colonists is Mo
rocco, - called for a 24-hour general
strike in Moroccan cities, begin
ning at midnight Sunday night
Encircle Rebels
Headquarters of Gen. Henri
Bertron at Fez said the objective
of the offensive was to encircle
Mountains and halt their flow of
supplies.
A spokesman for the general re
peated the French claim that these
supplies have been coming across
the Spanish Zone border. The Span
ish have denied they are aiding
the rebels. .
First casualty reports from the
French side said two men were
killed and 11 wounded.
Rotary Officials Gather in Salem
PARIS m French authorities
cracked down Sunday on North
African troublemakers in Paris.
The move came as Premier Ed
gar Faure. fresh from victory in a
National Assembly battle on ha
Moroccan policy, girded for anoth
er test this week on Algeria.
Sweeping through North African
quarters of this capital, police took
915 persons into custody for ques
tioning about recent disturbances
in Paris and terrorist activities in
North Africa.
They said SO of the group had
police records here and 25 others
were wanted by Algerian authorities.-
Hundreds Demonstrate
The arrests came as hundreds of
North African nationalists demon
strated in various other French
cities.
At Douai,' near the Belgian fron
tier; two North Africans were
killed and five others injured when
police broke up a crowd.
At St. Etienne, 300 collected in
the center of the city. One police
officer was knifed.
Several hundred other North Af
ricans massed or marched jn Ly
on, Lille and Metz, but there were
no serious: incidents.
France has a large North Afri-
can population, particularly ot ai
gerians. fcance Algeria is aamim
stered as a part of metropolitan
France, Algerians can come here
with a minimum of red tape.
-C. -
1 v
r
V.
i
Oregon Ketarlaa International officials take time oat from their District 3 counselor's meeting at the
Marion Hotel Sunday for a coffee break. " They are (left to right) John Ellis, Coquille, . Oregon
RoUry lieutenant governor; Don Myrick, Grants Pass, governor; Don Wanamaker, Salem, second
; vice president of Active International; and Jack Ricketts, Salem, president of the local group.
Representatives from Active- chapters in Oregon met to discuss problems faced in running their
service club. Wanamaker, holding national office, is responsible' for supervision of Oregon and
Southwestern Washington Active locals.
Paper Predicts
Barbara Hutton,
Baron Marriage
LONDON UP The Sunday Ex
. press said Sunday dime store heir
ess Barbara Hutton and Baron
Gottfried von Cramm. onetime
German tennis, ace, are planning a
quiet wedding, before flying to
Mexico.
The paper quoted the 45-year-old
baron as saying "It will be a very
quiet affair with just a few friends
present. We have not yet decided
-exactly where it will be probably
somewhere in Europe. Afterward
we will-go to Mexico for a while."
Miss Hutton, who has been wed
five times previously, reached Par
is 10 days ago with Von Cramm
after a vacation in North Africa.
He has been wed once previously.
Memoirs of
Duchess Stirs
Royal Debate
By JAMES F. KING
LONDON IB Princess Mar
garet's friend. Group Capt. Peter
Townsend, returns to England
Jhis week in the midst of a heated
rtuscussion or -anotner royai ro
mance that rocked the Empire 19
years ago.
The Duchess of Windsor's an
nounced intention to publish her
memoirs has stirred up. lively con
troversy in the British press and
with it echoes of the Duke of
Windsor's abdication as king for
the love of the American divorcee.
Townsend is expected Wednes
day on what is officially described
as a holiday away from his post
as' Britain's, air attache in Brus
sels.
Princess Margaret is still in
Scotland but the royal family's
vacation at Balmoral is nearing
an, end. Whether the 25-year-old
princess will see Townsend, 40, is
something never mentioned- at
least above a whisper- in the royal
court.
Two Located,
One Lost in
Canada Area
PRINCETON. B.C. Two
hunters missing in heavy bush
country near here since Saturday
were found Sunday in one of two
searches conducted in the area
during the weekend.
Still missing Sunday night was
John Ewing, a Princeton lawyer
who left his home Saturday morn
ing to explore the old Hope-Princeton
trail in the -vicinity of Whip
saw Creek.
Found in good condition were
Jake Shermatto, 22, and his broth
er, Henry, 28, of Whalley, B.C.
The hunters, lost near Nickle
Plate, 24 miles east of Princeton,
were , found by Royal Canadian
Mounted Police from Keremeos
and Copper Mountain. The broth
ers had left their camp at Nickle
Plate early Saturday and were re
ported missing when they failed
to return by nightfall.
Meanwhile, a plane may he
X-Ray Camera
Reported Made
By Japanese
TOKYO (AP) The English
language Nippon Times Monday
reported the invention of a 16V
millimeter X-ray camera capable
of photographing all interior
parts of the eyeball
The paper identified the in
ventor as Tatsushi Noyori, a 20-year-old
assistant in the opthal
molcgical department of Junten
do Medical College here.
It said the camera could take
pictures of the "inner bottom" of
the eyeball, "one of the most dif
ficult" portions to examine in the
past. '
North India
Devastated by
Record Floods
I ' ; - -
Doctor Says
IkeStiUNot
Out of Danger
j (Story also' on page one.1
i DENVER fl Dr. Paul White,
eminent heart -specialist attending
President Eisenhower, said Sunday
the President isn't 100 per jcent
out of danger but added that few
complications occur after the' sec
ond week. ; )
i He said it is possible that in the
future : the ; President "may not
have as good a heart. But there
is no evidence - of anything! like
that"!
f Sometimes, White said, a
scarred heart is not able to return
to the point of doing as efficient
a job as in the past and there's a
possibility , of enlargement. I
Reminded that he had said two
weeks ago that the President's at
tack was primarily a condition of
the arteries a blood clot formed!
in a heart artery the doctor said
it is quite possible there could be
a recurrence in another artery. -
Time Needed I
That is why, he added, Eisen
hower for some time will be given
"anticoagulants to head off any
such developments." ' j
I White outlined a program
doctors have set for the chief ex
ecutive for the next six weeks and
said that- the President "accepted
the program grackyisly" and ask-
ea tne doctors not to rush his treat
ment j "
"He does not." White! said,
"wish to be carried onto his plane
even if by so doing he might get
away from here earlier." i
Two weeks ago White said Eisen
hower ought to be able to get out
of the hospital at the first of the
month if everything went well, The
change appeared to be due, to the
President's desire not to be rushed
and his reluctance to be carried
out to a plane when he leaves,
Rough Guide I
The program as recommended
by White, with others of the at
tending physicians nodding appro
val, goes like this and White said
it is still only a "rough guide":
For the third week of the illness
this week rest still is advised.
But the President's bed; can be
moved out on the hospital porches,
into the air and sunshine, where
be can get a "beautiful view'
the Rocky Mountains. I
A conference scheduled for the
President with Secretary pf State
Dulles Tuesday should not last
more than 15 minutes, but: "this is
Alberta and Saskatchewan. The ; not going to be a rubber j stamp"
airline sent a rescue plane ' affair. The President "is going to
equipped with floats to take Lozie ;oe allowed to express his opin-
AMU
yW mails
Highest Paid Workers Lose
Ground Since Pre-war Era
Lost Canadian
Cargo Plane
Wreck Found
EDMONTON, Alta. Oft A four
engine civilian cargo plane miss
ing for 10 days was found Sunday
in the Northwest Territories.
The pilot, Joseph Cermak, . 40.
of Northern Ireland, was dead.
The co-pilot, Gerhard Lozie, 27,
a former Dutch navy aviator, was
alive. I
Lozie reportedly suffered only;
slight frostbite.
The plane, owned by Associated
Airways Ltd., disappeared on the
way back from a cargo flight ta
the DEW (distant early warning )j
radar line ; under construction in
the Arctic. i
mother ! Associated Airways
plane found the missing aircraft
on the Thoa River, 50 miles north
west of the; territories border With
STAR GAZER'
AM. 21
MAY 21
MAY 22
JUNE 22
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JUNI23
JULY 23
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tj CLAY Jt POLLAN-
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" According f tfce Sfrt.
To develop messoge for Monday,
reod words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodioc birth sign.
I No 31 TV
32 YourMlf
33 Miiploce
34 Trying
35 Over
36 Upon
37 But
38 Up
39 Rocor
40 Any .
41 People
42 Proceed
43 Surer
UMA
SOT 23
OCT. 33
hO-3445-53.
2 ror
3 Best
4 for
5 Making
Vnrts
. 7 Romance
S M
For
to
11
12 Sto
13 And
14 UmeromWe 44 Your
15 No 45 And
16 Don't
17 Depend
It Commit
1 Reconcile
20 Your
21 A
22 To
23 Brine
24 Consider
25 Stir
26 Morfi
27 Difference 57 Heolmy
28 ThougW S Leove
29 Slower 5 Potion
30 Keep 0 Or
)Good
41 Slowpokes
62 Confidently
63 Confidence
64 ftouf
65 Of
66 You
7 Chance
68 To
69 What
70 With
71 Are
72 AintMtujn
73 Clear
74 To
75 You
76 In
77 Purpose
7 A
79 eoly
80 Dm
81 Wont
82 Friendly
83 Security
84 Economical
85 Woy
86 Now
87 Behind
88 Security
89 Morreoj
90 Mood
iaj in
Advene Neutral
OCT- 24 C
4 V, S
NOV. 22
b429-37-43fi
lM-74 84 88VLJ
NOV 23
a
OK. 22
1- 8- 9-10T1
1 1-4642 'M
46 Proceed
47 Joint
48 Now
49 Gome
50 Around
51 Strict
52 A
53 You'll
54 FinoncM
55 Of
56 Affection
DEC
JAN.
h9-27-35U7rl
B4-60-83-89
AOUAMUS
JAN. 2f
FC8. It
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FEB. 20
MA. 21
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fc.975-7981
WASHINGTON UB The high-!
est paid wage and salary earners;
have been losing ground since
1939, the lowest paid have gained
nothing, but the middle 60 per cent
have gained considerably, accord
ing to a study of incomes made
public Sunday by the Census Bu
reau. ,
The bureau said the study, based
on what happened to incomes in
this country from 1939 through
1951, showed in general that a
rapid rise in wages paid to lower
income bracket workers had
brought about a more even dis
tribution of wages in American in
dustry.
Ne Gain
ing fifth of wage and salary earn
ers, mis group receivea ia per
cent of all wages and salaries in
1939, 17 per cent in 1945, and 19
per cent in 1951. ' -;
Fifttf Climb j '
The second ranking fifth rose
from 8 per cent in 1939 to 10 per
cent by 1943 and to 11 per cent
by 1951. - ! .-
The share received by the fourth
ranking fifth increased from 24 per
cent: of all wages and salaries in
1939 to 28 per cent by i 1945. but
i showed no further gain in 1951.
The study indicated that' among
the greatest relative gains in in
come were those made by manual
i" Sj t ,v 'workers, such as laborers and
in'ihVbm
receive 3 per cent of total wages Lv'
and salaries paid in 1951. That was nue . w"c ""u B.u'f
the same as the share they re- earners, including professional,
ceived in 194? and in 1939. workers, were
tv. r,m. .v. , . reponea as naving more wan oou-
4UC IUUO AAA, VAJ Wd Ul VIAAJT I
group to lose ground. Workers ,in
this bracket received 49 per cent
of all wage and salary income in
1939, 44 per cent in 1945, and 42
per cent in 1951,
The study in all cases was based
on income before taxes.
The biggest gainers, percentage
wise, were those in the third rank-
bled their earnings.
AtAc u nrn ArirtnH 4 on rt anrl Hitn.
. . . 1 m t I 1 LUO n Ll L 1 I. lVl l V4 VJ VJe I IIV4 iiv!-
pressed into the search for Ewing. dreds of tnounds homeiess Sun-
wnu iaiitu tu return iiomc oaiur
NEW DELHI. India UP - Hun- lo " veriije.
iiic uisa spiral aiiv.c vi uic yian
was the latest in a series of mis-
day night.
jr Color-bright hoirV I
yT starts with ' I
( MARCHANtfSl
RADIANT
i HAIR
RINSE
I RINSE
IV I RINSES 25!
I X. kowtiW shWM
Fred Meyer Drum
eimitnjfiiu ev
148 N. Liberty
GOP Leaders in
Utah Mum on Tax
Threat hy Lee
SALT LAKE CITY ift-Tbe lead-
U.S., British
Split 'Would
Be Disaster'
NEW YORK Wl Sir Winston
Churchill, Britain's wartime Prime
Minister, warned Sunday night Jiat
a split between his country and the
United States "would surely le&d
sooner or later to a catastrophe
such as mankind has never
known."
In a speech, recorded for a Free
dom House anniversary dinner, the
British statesman said:
"I believe in the essential and
fundamental unity of the English
speaking people not at the ex
pense of other countries, nor by
the creation of elaborate ma
chinery,, but as the natural realiza
tion of a great truth."
"The safety of the world de
pends upon it," he added.
Sir Winston received the Free
dom House award for 1955 for "de
votion to liberty, courage in ad
versity, leadership in victory." .
Sir Winston is the first non
American to receive the award.
Freedom House, an organization
incorporated in 1941, describes it-
haps to hit Associated Airways
planes on the DEW supply run.
The company last week withdrew
as prime contractor for air trans
port of supplies for the project.
day night in North India's worst
floods in more than 70 years.
Prime Minister Nehru, after fly
ing over the devastated areas, or
dered mobilization of all resources
to help the homeless.
He instructed officials to collect
children from flooded homes and
look after -them in schools, so that
their parents could throw all their
energies into the work of rehabili
tation. The first official report of casu
alties said there were at least 150
dead in Pepsu State, 100 miles
viapi U tiiApf tf nr TtAlhi an1 ett
least 50 dead in Amritsar. where j believed by police to have been
Crude Bomb !
Rocks Theater
In New York
NEW YORK - A crude bomb,
the flood waters swept into the
city.
Nehru told India in a broadcast
Sunday night that "Our problem
of relief and rehabilitation is a
colossal one." '
self as dedicated to perpetuating
er of the Republican party in ia- un t u';m,i-
Two Escanees
Captured With
Teenage Girl h
OKLAHOMA CITY tf - Two es
capees from the Medical Lake,
Wash., mental hospital were cap
tured here Sunday by FBI agents.
N. R. Johnson, chief of the Okla-
fashioned by "the same maniac
who left similar devices in other
public places recently, exploded
Sunday in a crowded Broadway
movie house.
One person was injured slightly.
There was no panic among the
estimated 1,000 moviegoers.
The bomb, a small "stubtoy" de
vice, was Jnade of a capped length
of iron pipe about two inches in
diameter land about four inches
long. Police said the detonator was
timed by a cheap watch-works. It
had been placed under an unoccu
pied seat through a slit in the up
holstery, j!
Police quoted persons inside the
Paramount Theater as sayin? the
blast was; "soft" and "muffled,"
Bomb squad detectives determined
. i l l i i t il. j A
. " ' c h 5f Tor
...-A n.;i.All n Inhn Wac Atr -J""vl-
nmu ii iavuu, m, aiiu wiiii ii iivj
18, were arrested on
ions. I
. He will be allowed to 6ign letters
of his own, rather than those that
have been ' prepared for ; him by
others. !
Short Conference j
If all goes well, there may be
another short business conference
later in the-week.
The fourth week the doctors are
going "to get him setting iup more
each day." At the end of the week
(it- may be-"sitting up practically
all day," either in bed or in a
chair. If all goes well, Eisenhower
may begin to do a "little painting."
If next week's conferences work
out all right and White said they
may be good for Eisenhower rath
er than harmful there j will be
more of them in the fourth week.
He may "even have daily con
ferences" with members of Ihe
Cabinet "who will get from him
some actual help and advice with
out hurting him." Probably all of
the conferences will be held to 15
j minutes or less. -
The fifth week ordinarily, this
is the development in the average
case: A few steps will j be taken
then "to the bathroom for exam
ple." This gradually will be in
creased without the President's
"really walking." j
Utah said Sunday he had "No
comment at all" to make on Gov.
J. Braken Lee's t statement that
he would refuse to pay part of his
federal income tax for 1955.
State Chairman Oral J. Wilkin
son also said he saw "no need for
a. reply" to Utah Democratic
party charges that the Republican
governor's statement was "ridicu
lous" and a "direct attack" upon
President Eisenhower which the
Democrats felt should have been
"challenged" by Republicans.
Lee said Thursday he would hold
back payment of federal tax on
his income over and above his
gubernatorial salary of $10,000 a
year in order to bring about a
test court case on the constitution
ality of using tax money for
foreign aid. .
Thomas, 18, were arrested on a
federal complaint charging them
with th theft and interstate trans-
A message from Vice President portation of a vehicle from Wash-
Richard Nixon, on behalf of ailing
resident Eisenhower, was read to
the dinner audience.
It said the President felt the
selection of Sir Winston for the
award "will be gratifying not only
to those who have been privileged
to know Sir Winston as a friend
and associate but to the people
throughout the world who prize
freedom."
New Typhoon
Aims at Japan
MAN CHARGED
Ray Ted McKee, 760 Highland
Ave., was arrested by state police
Sunday and charged with driving
while intoxicated. He was releas
ed on payment of $250 bail.
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ineton.
They were apprehended at the
home of a relative and offered no
resistance. Ramona Lee Mayo, 13-year-old
niece of Driscoll, was
with them. T r
The fugitive! i have been i charged moved n(rth MomJa
W1U1 Kidnaping me gin irom ner
Tulsa home Tuesday. The girl had
been reported missing when She
didn't show up at school. !
50 Phone 44713 20 1
NOW SHOWING - OPEN M5
INTERRUPTED MELODY"
la Color and Cinemascope
AND
UNCHAINED"
The Prison Without Bars! ! !
Always a Good Show at the
HOLLYWOOD
Rifle Fatally
Wounds Tot I
TOPPENISH (JB An 11-year-old
girl who wanted to show off
her uncle's guns accidentally shot
and killed a 3-year-old Pasco boy,
Yakima County Sheriff Bert Guns
i reported Sunday.
The victim was Thomas David
St. Clair, young son of Mr. and
! Mrs. Thomas A. St. Clair of Pasco.
The boy was shot by Cathy Alex,
ander, the daughter of Mrs. Cath
erine Alexander, whom the ; St
Clairs were visiting while St. Clair
went hunting.
TOKYO; W A typhoon with
center winds of 95 miles an hour
y at a speed
which should put it within 550
miles of Tokyo by Monday after
noon.
If it maintains its course, it could
hit the southern island of Kyushu
where another typhoon. Louise,
killed more than 30 people Sept.
30. i
The new typhoon, Nora, which
Sunday bypassed the U.S. base of
Iwo Jima, did not pack the wal op
of Louise and could die down be
fore reaching Japan.
Police Report
Two Wrecks
Accidents reported by state
police Sunday evening included
a car driven by Detmar Ray
Hamilton, Willamina, which left
Highway 211 at a turn near
Brush College School.) The car
was damaged badly but none of
the three occupants appeared in
jured, police said.
Cars driven by George Clark.
Salem, Route 2, Box: 266, and
Joe Haynes, Independence, col
lided on Highway 22 near the
Eola Auction Market with minor
damage and no injuries, state
police said. j
U.S. Houses ,
TV Antennas
Astound Reds
NEW YORK WB Ten Soviet
housing experts left for a tour of
the Midwest Sunday, impressed by
Americifn construction methods
and . "simply astounded , by the
number of television antennas they
saw during their visit to the East
Coast.
At the same time, a spokesman
for the group inserted a word of
praise for things Soviet in the con
struction field. He said Soviet
apartments are "more comfort
able than those in this country,"
because they are heated by hot
water and not by steam. He said
scientists have found that steam
heat is "harmful to health."
The group, headed bv Soviet
Minister of City and Urban Con
struction I.K. Kozuilia. is here as
part of the recent Soviet-American
rapprochement program. They are
guests of the National Assn. cf
-Home Builders,
i They spent two days in Boston
and two days in the New York
metropolitan area, touring giant
apartment projects and single fam
ily houses in fashionable West
chester County.
0.
with (Kmeroui -
COLOR-HIGHLIGHTS
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It adds sparkling color
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6 rinses 25, 14 rinses 50.
DRIVER ARRESTED
I Maurice Lamont Smith, 130 E.
Owens St., was arrested Sunday by
sheriffs deputies and released on
payment of a $15 fine and $3 court
costs on . a charge of operating a
vehicle while his license was suspended.
12
Fred Meyer Drugs
148 N. Liberty
Cetee Ope :4S Shevret 7
: New! Beth im Celer
I Jack Webb
; Janet Leigh .
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j I. CinemiMeee .
; Alee "
: John Derek
hi
NOW PLAYING S
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iwZLClTeT3
lARKEt
no
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Tonight Hear Mary Barton
Play the
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j From 6:30-7:00
I1 'm
Robert MITCHUM I
SheHey WINTERS
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every family a year's in
come standing ready to see
you through illness ... un
employment Save every
payday to build your funds
regularly and sensibly. And
ve here because we
keep your account growing
steadily, in steady safety.
Salem Federal
caving
560 State Street
Salem, Oregon
V v " Aft
Member
Federal
Savings and Loan
Insurance Corporation
Annapolis Story
19th & State Sts. 'Salem, Ore.