The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 05, 1956, Page 4, Image 4

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    4-(Scc. I) Statesman, Salem, Orr., Thurs., Jan. 5, '5fi
f.WN AND REAR IT By IJclity
. rrflrtfttiPrlTfftfintin TV Coniprtition Hurts Movirs
m$o Favor Swayt U$. Ko Fear Shall Au $"
From Flint Statesman. March it. ISM
SlatfMiun TuMuliing Company
CHARLES A. Si'RAGUE, Editor & Publisher
Puhtitnad avary mnrnlnf Buainata offira W
hortk Ctturch - hKm, On. Iruphoni 4-Mll
' fnlarad at tha pnalofliea at Idem, Or a aacnnd
(! mit'ir unuar an ol Conprax March I II. H,
r , "'
Member Aiioflated Preai
Tha AnorttW Praia It antitiad axclu'ilvely to th a
' lot rapubllcatlon at (II local nawa printad la
thia nawapapaf
1 '
Highway Locations, and
Public Policy
Judge Alfred Dobson hewed -to sound
public policy when in denying the tempo
rary injunction nought by Joe Harland, Polk
County farmer, he observed that ,"if the
highway commission'i decision on this and
ther matters is to be subject to the approval
f the county court (and all the internal
pressures inherent therein)' of every county
through which a highway might pass,, the
prospect of Oregon ever enjoying an ade
quate highway system would be remote in
deed." He acknowledge, too, that the com
enission had to rely on the experienced
judgment of its engineering staff.
5 Harland objected ,to the route selected for
Jhe cutoff from Rickreall to the highway
Reading to Wallace Bridge and the Salmon
liver road to the coast because it cut his
larm in two. in the opinion ot engineers,
jowever, this route was one to be preferred.
iVhile one may sympathize with farmers
dk-hnse - lands are hisprtpd ..(for. uhirh ihrv -
feceive compensation), highways cannot be
Jaid down to conform to existing boundaries
jfjf land ownership. They must follow the
jhortest line between points, with reasonable
conformity to the contour of the land. It is
4 mistake to Invest millions of dollars to
feuild modern roads on inferior locations,
fct is a case where public service over a long
fcrm of years transcends the interest of. the
Individual property owner. We assume that
Judge Dobson correctly interprets the law
and are confident that he has accurately
(defined what the public policy should be.
J We look forward to the early completion
pi this serviceable cutoff.
Movie thratrrs are among the few indus
tries which are not sharing the current spate
of prosperity. Local evidence of this is srrn
in the announcement of the Foreman inter
ests that.thry will-operate only the Elsinnr -and
Capitol theaters in downtown'Salrm this
winter. The Grand Will not reopen before
spring. Of two other downtown theaters, the
Liberty on South Commercial has bern torn
down ahd the State on North Church, has
been dark for two years.
' It isn't that the people do not crave enter
tainment, or that they can't afford it. They ,
have more-, money in their pockets (employ
ment is hich and so are wage levels), and
they have more leisure time -IhartjCycr. The
movies suffer chiefly from the competition
of the new medium of entertainment, tele
vision. Pretty hard for even a good movie
to draw folk from their own firesides when
their favorite TV show is on.
Movie producers have finally broken the
seals on their own Jhort subjects and are
offering them for sale. First to move were
the new owners of RKO who sold a large
bundle from their library. Paramount and
Columbia are reported as following suit.
This means that television will absorb a lot
of the short, productions previously reserved
by movie producers. The latter are,' how
ever,, payfng some attention to the com
plaints of theater owners and promise to
release more pictures and more top quality
pictures in 1956 than in 1955. Included in the
lot are the spectacular "The Ten Command
ments' and dramatizations of such books as
Melville's ''Moby Dick" and Tolstoy's "War
and Peace."
It would seem as though a bottom had
been reached in the decline of theater pa
tronage. Most folk like to step out of an
evening for entertainment," and movies re
main the most popular and least expensive
diversion. With a better run of oictures in
terest in movies will revive. anH the fortunes
of theater owners along with it.
i
W. S. Hyde
Riles Planned
On Saturday
Private funeral services for Wal
ter Sydney Hyde. 1520 N. Fifth St..
I who aim TuMdnv in a &a em hos
pital at the age of 81, will be 1 30
p m.t Saturday in W. T. Rlgdnn
chapel. burial In Belcrest Memo
rial Park.
Hyde, a retired barber, had liv
ed in Salem since May, moving
here" from Portland. Born July 31.
1R74. at Albany, he had Jived 33
r- in Prineville.
? leaves "his widow, Mrs. Ruth
Rechin Hyde, and daughter, Mrs.
Maxine Webb, both of Salem; four
brothers, Oscar C. Hyde, Cascade
Locks; Lawrence Hyde, Stevenson,
Wash., and Carl and Edwin Hyde,
both of Prineville; and sister, Mrs.
Elmer Freeberg, Los Angeles. Cal.
. . Is, delegation from U.S. seeking to learn our technical
"know-how"! ... Is attempting to learn how we avoid having
farm, surpluses , . ."
asFsSsaiBsaji
P3LTQ3
Alitti Registration Required
'. For over a century the country got along
pitty well ln ipite of the' fact that a large .
proportion of its population were aliens.
After the alien and sedition laws were re
pealed just after the turn of the century
there was comparatively little organized
Onti-alien sentiment until the rise of the
a a - i A 1 .a I iL .
ivnow-NOinings American pany; in me
first half of the century movement which '
collapsed after 1858 Then after the 'first
World War there wai the second run of the
JCu Klux Klan which fomented hostility to
liens, and that succumbed under public
pressure, . ,
With the rise of -Communism, however,
regarded as an alien phllosoply, aliens them
selves have become objects of suspicion, even
If they never saw Russia. And we have laws
requiring all aliens to register with the fed
eral government, filling out blanks obtain
able at post offices. They are required to
five their names and addresses, under pen
alty of fine, imprisonment or deoortat'on.
Their freedom of movement is not restricted,
but Uncle Sam is able to keep cheek on them.
.Maybe all this is necessary, but we got
along with a far larger proportion of aliens
when we were very weak nation, without
any particular trouble. And as a matter of
fact we have plenty of native-born trouble
makers. Guilt is personal, not a matter of
g-lass, color or birth.
' The New Year is opening in perfectly,
normal fashion: rain and more rain.
Citizens in Henryette, Okla., are up in
arms because they didn't get to see their
high school bpnd on television New Year's
' Day. The band was marching in the Tourna
ment of Roses parade in far-off Pasadena,
but at the orec'se moment it swung into the
ran?e of the TV cameras the band was
blanked out in favor of a commercial. Now
, the good folk of Henryette are described
as "boiling." The rtate representative has
wired the governor and asked for an official
r-ncf. co to fpv those OVlahonnan will
drink no Minute Maid for a long, long time.
FdUorial Comment
UNION CARDS'
The assistant dean of the University of Illinois
graduate college has the temerity to blame in
dustry for the "inflation" of the Ph.D. degree.
He says industry has turned the doctorate of
philosophy into a sort of union card which grad
uates must hold before they can get good jobs
in the free enterprise world
The dean, E. T. Wall, has his eyes on too
distant a horizon. He should look closer. Per
haps the degree has been cheapened until it
. represents perseverance more than brains. But
don't blame industry for that
It is on the campus flat the degree has be
come a "union card." A young teacher knows
that he can't rise far In his profession until he
knocks off work for a couple of years to write
l "dissertation." Suggested topics include "The
Use of the Semicolon by Li Po," "The History
of the Public Waterworks in Mudville, Okla." and
"The Relationship of Point-of-Sale Advertising
to the Development of the Nicotine Habit in 476
Selected Young Men and Women of College
L'JLJth!JJJLf?urseiJ,a!, HPthm.8Vto.dgi
with tr 'young teacher'sleaching ability. Anj"
it delays, for a year or two the quest for knowl
edge and understanding. The experience just
costs him money and makes him ashamed of
himself when some prankster calls him "doctor."
Three or four of the best professors we've ever
known did not have doctor's degrees. And we've,
sat at the feet of a lot of scissor-bills who did
have them. ' ,
If there be,i plethora of cheapened Ph.D.
degrees in the world, don't blame industry.
Blame the colleges. They were the first to be
taken in by the Ph.D. racket. Industry was a
johnny come lately. - Eugene Register-Guard.
(Continued from page one.)
into sober statesmanship. More
probably it will merge with' other
movements or die out as have
splinter parties in this country.
It is much too early, however,
to dust off France as a weakling,
a one time giant shorn of its
strength. Crisis is the common
diet in French ' politics; and if
this one is a little - worse than
others it still seems short of being
fatal. The game of musical chairs
will probably be resumed, though
' the chair-legs are getting quite
wobbly.
Not . being. an expert in any
measure ot French politics, I
hesitate tp,ofi'er a prescription
. for curingTts disease, and offer
a diagnosis with some hesitation.
It has seemed to me that France s
ailment was chiefly psycho
logical. The prewar confusion in
the Popular Front period whose
ineptitude was later disclosed to
border on treason, was followed
by the most humiliating defeat
and then by the Corrosion of the
Vichy government under Pierre
Laval. General DeGaulle, who
might have become a leader to
galvanire Free France into
aggressive postwar recovery, be-
- came instead a victim of his il-
lusions. The postwar constitution
was a compromise which pre
served in the name of democracy
the political paralysis of prewar
Trance. Memories of the two
Napoleons and the innate provin
cialism of the French prevented
concessions to central authority.
r ranee losj the opportunity, which
U. G. Behrens
Succumbs to
Heart Attack
U. G. Behrens, 5050 Silverton
Rd., died Wednesday afternoon
at his homes following a heart
attack Wednesday morning. He
was 55. -.
Born Oct. 14, 1900, at Sibley,
Iowa, he moved to Salem two
years sgo from Slayton, Minn.
He was employed at Oregon State
Hospital. He was a member of
St, Mark's Lutheran Church.
He leaves his widow, Mr. Alms
Behrens, and son, Dsryl Behrens,
both of Salem; daughter, Miss
Beverly Behrens, Portland; two
brothers, Jake Behrens, Alexan
dria, Minn., and Herman Beh
rens, Findley, lows; and sister,
Mrs. E. J. Nightingale, Wheaton,
Minn.
Brief services will be held 1:30
p.ni,., today in lough-Barrick
chapel. The body will be sent
to Sibley for funeral and burial.
y BIO 5'.
jt nutui
pis Af,, "
hAlJ.l7 56.57j
Lawyer Files
For JP Post
At Woodburn
A retired attorney Wednesday
became a candidate for the Wood
burn Justice of Peace post now
held by Harold Eichstedt of Wood
burn.' Patrick F. O'Leary, Hubbard
Route 1, box Is, in filing for posi
tion on the May 18 primary ballot,
became the second person in Mar
ion County to file fur the next elec
tion. . O'Leary's slogan, which will run
with his name on the ballot, reads
"Administer Justice with even
hand without fear or favor to any
one, I am a retired attorney."
Eichstedt has not indicated whe
ther he will be a candidate to suc
ceed himself.
STAR GAMPcy
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French Election Shows National Disunity,
Threat to Republican Form of Government
By J. M. ROBERTS
AP News Aialyit
t
France's well-wishers are won
Bering what would happen to her
tf Premier Faure proves wrong
about the possibility of center 1
coalition government as he has
proved wrong about stabilizing
f ranee through new elections.
I The nation is in a situation where 1
anything could happen,, from a
iopular front coalition to dictator
hip. The former would mean dic
tation by the Communists, the lat
ter the rise of strong man who,
lowever, is not yet in sight.
! There was also the possibility nf
i grouping of Mendes France's left
if center and Faure's right of cen
ter around a Socialist premier,
faure obviously prefers a direct
Enciliation with Mendes-France,
the letter's campaign bitter
made that a bard matter,
J a a
t The bald fact is that the elec
tions, emphasizing national disuni
ty and revealing the number and
jepui of cross-cutting issues, have
prought a grave threat to rcpubli-
!an government itself. The talk is
f electoral referms and a
Strengthened executive set up
pnder I revised constitution, but
what may happen before anything
it done, if anything can be done,
it a matter of wide speculation.
Great pressure is on the present
leaders of moderate tactions to put
aside their political maneuvers for
the benefit of the nation. The press
is alerting the public to the danger
democracy unless they do so.
a a
Trance's allies In the Western
fvorld are saying little and keepirg
their fingers crossed, but there it
clear, evidence of worry In both
London and Washington. For the
time being, at least. France it In
capable 61 participation in solution
f mutual problems as well as her
ewa problems in which there is
mutual interest, such at North
Africa.'
And the worry It not confined
to the present, but extends to what
France's entire future role may be.
Everyone agreed the Commu
nists had scored a great victory
whether they get into the govern
ment -or not.'
a " a a
The extreme rightist Poujadlsts,
a new manifestation of the disrup
tive spirit which so weakened
France before World War II, were
paying directly in the hands of
the Reds. '
For this moment, the initiative
in saving the republic lies in the
hands of Mendes-France, Faure
and Socialist leader Guy Mollet,
who frequently lines up with Mendes-France.
If they fail, the door
is wide open for a strong man.
Time- Flies:
From The
Statesman Filet
10 Years Ago
Pvt Jamet W. Lovegren of
Portland, veteran of a mobile
anti-aircraft unit in Europe,
won the distinction of being the
100,000th soldier to be dis-
charged through the Ft Lewis
separation center.
The new Salem YWCA cen
ter will be constructed on the
association's present site, 768
State Street, it was decided at
the Board's January meeting.
Chairman for the overall build
ing committee is Mrs. Frank
Spears.
A new bank building in Sa
lem was forecast in the annual
report to directort of the First
National bank here when Ted
Gamble, former national war fi
nance program head was named
a director.
23 Yearn Ago
laa. 8, 1M1
A ra'n-soaked monoplare, ear
ning Bobbie Trout and ' Edna
May Cooper, girl endurrnce fl'ers, "
who timply refused to be beaten,
rounded out Its 100th hour in the
air at Lot Angeles. .
The mayor's committee In
charge of arrangements for the
governor's ball and recepUoa
t
snd which is headed by Col. T.
E. Rilea, jias petitioned the Sa
lem council to clear Ferry
Street from South Commercial
to High Street of all vehicles
the night of the ball.
Before the largest basketball.
crowd of the season in Port
land, Salem high grabbed t 13
to 10 win over the Sellwood
Colls at the Sacred Heart Court
when Mark Sachtier scratched a
long shot with only 30 seconds
left to play.
. , 40 Years Ago
Jan I, 1911
Laud Hamilton, well known in
' Salem, formerly connected with
the department store ot H. W,
and M. L. Meyers, now of Mis
soula, Mont., has been awarded
the capital prize for show card
writing by "The Signs of the
Timet. "
Dr. E. J. Stewart, for four
yp? 's athletic director snd foot
tnD roach of Oregon Agririltur-"
t college, hrt been e'ected to a
!rnilirj)os'.tioa .with,, the . univer-..
tity of Nebraska and has an
nounced hit acceptance.
Tjie blacksmith sliup ' at the
Fair Grounds has changed hands,
having been purchased from H.
E. Pembertdn by Andrew Matt
sound currencjr and hold to It
.Inflation complicated the eco-
nomic problem and only the
arrival of Marshall plan aid help
ed tide the country over.
Fiscal recovery was halted by
the drainage of the war in Indo
china which now is repeated by
the troubles in North Africa where
France clings to authority to pre
serve its status as a world power.
These internal and external prob-
i a a
icms nave loomea larger in
French minds than the menace
of Soviet Communism, so France
has been rather a fitful member
of the western alliance.
Because this hat engrossed
American thought and policy
making since 1947 Americans have
been critical of France and Ks
kaleidescopic changes of cabinets.
In this attitude we fail to appre
ciate the outlook of the French
man on his world, and we fail
to make concessions for the Gallic
temperament which accepts or
welcomes political changes. Fin
ally, we must grant to France the
right to solve its own problems
and try to achieve its destiny in
its own way. Forty million
Frenchmen can be . wrong; but
they are loath io adnvlt to 165,
OC0.000 Americans. I have often
said we had to use patience in
our dealings with Russia. That
same virtue must be employed
in our dealings with our friends,
especially France.
Elites Set for
Mrs. Lynes
Of Jefferson .
Utaamaa Naw trrvtr
JEFFERSON, pre. - Funeral
services for Mrs. Katherine C.
Lynet of Jefferson, who died
Tuesday in an Albany hospital
at the age of 75, will be 2 p.m.
Friday in Howell-Edwards chapel,
Salem, Rev. Robert Mcllvenna
officiating. Burial will be at
Jefferson.
Mrs. Lynet, a Jefferton area
resident most of her life, was
born at Platteville, Wis., May 20,
1879. She came to Jefferson
Salem Gunman
Pleads Guilty
luwimaa Nawi tarrira
DALLAS, Ore. - Robert Scott
Kennen, 31-year-old S 1 1 e m man
held in Polk County jail since the
Nov. 20 Rickreall Tavern robbery
In which his partner was killed
and a state policeman wounded by
gunfire, pleaded guilty Tuesday to
a charge of. assault and robbery.
Judge Arlie Walker of Polk Coun
ty Circuit Court postponed senten'
cing until after investigation by
the State Roard of Parole and
Probation. Maximum sentence pro
vided by state law would be life
imprisonment.
Kennen't companion, Wallace
Cunningham, 35. of Portland, was
killed in the attempted robbery.
State Patrolman John Mekkert of
Salem was wounded by gunfire
from Cunningham.
A man from The Dalles, charge
ed Wednesday morning with driv
ing while intoxicated, pleaded in
."-' " ...4 r.lin U.'1H CU. .-J Munixinol
and Caroline Wied. She and
Earl Lynes were married in Sa
lem Jan. 7, 1914. He died in
1949.
Mrs. Lynes was a member of
the Methodist Church and WSCS.
and Euclid Chapter 20, Order of
Eastern Star.
She leaves a sister,. Mrs. Ethel
A. Roland, Jefferson, and sev
eral nieces and nephews.
Belter Knplisli
By D. C WILLIAMS
State Ships
4,687 Cars
Of Produce
Oregon shipped 4.687 carloads of
fruits and vegetables to other
states and countries during No
vember, the State Agriculture De
partment said Wednesday.
The total was 1,300 more than
in November, 1954.
Fifty-four per cent of he ship
ments were potatoes, 13 per cent
onions, and 6 per cent walnuts and
filberts.
Innocent Plea
Made to Drunk
Driving Charge
Municipal Court and was released
on payment of $230 bail, police
said. Trial was set 1:30 p.m.
March 9.
The man, Jesse Warren Glasgow,
was apprehended about 3 a.m. in
the 2O00 block Fairgrounds Road,
police said.
Life Insurance
Forms Mailed to
Vet Loan Holders
Court Receives
Paving Petition
Petition for paving some 2,300
feet of Durbin Ave. in the Four
Corners area was received Wed
nesday by the Marion County Court
and referred to the county engi
neer for action.
a The street, which will .have as
phaltic concrete paving for 20-foot
width, will be improved under the
county's paving program which as
sesses cost of the project against
the benefited property owners. '
School Reporter
BY WILL BATESON AND BARBARA BONIFACE
'''
Student Rotarian Selected
BOl TH SALEM HIGH
John Hammerstad,- son of Dr.
and Mrs. Lynn Hammerstad, 710
Winding Way, was nominated
South Salem
High honorary
Rotarian for the
month of Janu
ary at a meet
ing Tuesday of
the student coun
cil. Music is t h e
primary activity
of John. He is
active in the
school pep band,
band and orch- b. Beniiaca -estra
and a member of the Salem
Junior Symphony. .
In school, he is a high honor
student, was elected Homecoming
host and is president of A. A.
Stagg and Encore clubs. Last sum
mer he visited Germany as a part
of the American Field Service' pro
gram. Pep Band Forms
A small group of students have
organized, under the direction of
' music advisor,
"V" Wallace Johnson,
" " PtP b a n d.
I ; a These ttudents
I 1 P 1 F chool
M'Vr'M-fv0 n ,nd
W Thome basketball
v
Goodman, Dcanna Lee, Dick. How
aid. Joan Kleinke and Gary Me
Ilnay. Their distinctive dress it a com
pletely white outfit topped by pow
der blue sport coats.
NORTH SALEM HIGH
The student body of North Sa
lem High Wednesday saw a movie
that students acclaimed tht most
interesting seen this year. "Be
yond Singapore", was a movlt ac
count of a 13 month trip acrost
Malay by a safari numbering over
1700. - "i:-, - :
The filmt were made and nar
rated by Capt. Harry Schneck whe -led
the expedition. In the movie
were scenet of charging elephants,
tigers and jungle wild life. The
program was sponsored by the
student body.
Long Illness
L
games and also
provide enter
tainment during
game and as
sembly intermit-
win Bataio sions.
Members of the band are Lane
Olson, Jack Moore, Jim King,
Dave Johnson, Ronald Johnson,
Wayne Bryan, Art McEldowney
Dave Ingham, John Hammerstad,
Barbara Leiseth. Don Marsland,
Robert Seegar, jerry Pekar, Mike
aiTBound to
Grand Jury
A 43-year-old Gervais man was
bound over to the Marion County
grand jury Wednesday after waiv:
ing preliminary hearing in Marion
County District Court on a charge
of forgery.
Spnrgeon Fitzhugh Beckner, Ger
vais Route 1, box 94, was arrested
Tuesday by city police on a com
plaint that he had cashed a $34.50
check at a N. River Road tavern.
He was serving a five-day sen
tence in the city jail for vagrancy
when he was served with the
felony warrant.
Takes Life of
Salem Man
Herman Pearson, 2210 Ctrletoa
Way, died Wednesday in a Salem
hospital at the age of 78. A
Salem resident 13 years, he had
been ill since June.
Born March 22, 1879, in Swed
en, he came to the United Statei
in 1902, settling first in Minne
sota but moving (ater to Canada,
Montana, California, Idaho and
then Washington. He -was a mem
ber of the Lutheran Church.
He leaves his widow, Mrs.
Frances D. Pearson.' Salem; tit
ter, Mrs. Caroline Swenson,
Sweden; and two brothers, Gun
ner and. Swan Pearson, both of
Spokane, Wash.
Services will be 1:30 p.m. StU
urday inTIrgil T lioldeh chapel.
Rev. Lowell W. Holte officiating.
Burial will be in City View
Cemetery. ,
M. I A. WHEATLEY
II AMklAI IKtrCC
The Reopening
of Hit Office
72S Court St.
II for the practice w I
j) Optometry (
1 Haaa l-44a I
'Portable Town'
To Close Down
KLAMATH FALLS 1 The
portable town of Shevlin, owned
by the Brooks-Scanlon Lumber
Cq.v is. being closed down.
The town which hat followed
logging operations hat been locat
ed in three different counties in
the past 35 years.
Families in the town, now locat-
Application forms for mortgage ed south of LaPine, will move to
cancellation life insurance are Bend.
being mailed this week to more I Brooks-Scanlon purchased t h e
than 11,000 veterans who have , town when it bought out the Shev
borrowed money from the stale lin-Hixon Logging Co. in 1950. It
to buy farms and homes. r jwag- located in Deschutes a n d
IF n C A -f ... If - .: ft.f I. ' I
11. v-. aaaiiciu, uii rm.i in vn- ume I'uujiues wiure wing moveu
1. What is wrong with this sen
tence? "Each of us have their, erans affairs, said 75 per cent of to Northern Klamath County.
pan iw (Kiiuriu, una we snau me Dorxowers musi iaxe oui ine
surround the building complete- j insurance if the plan it to be
ly." conie effective. The insurance
2. What is the correct pro-1 will pay off mortgages if the1 vet-
SAVE
Where Saving Is
Convenient-
0 use our large parking lot
c 1 use our drive-in ,window.
0 use our day & night depository
0 use your nearest mail box'
"Homo sapient
r
erant die
The insurance company is Stan
dard Insurance Co., Portland.
nunciation of
(mankind?
3. Which one of these words is
misspelled? Denunciate, delin
eate, delegate, demitasse. ;
o.u4.t?hmeaT?S '"1 YoUtllS FaCC
5. What it a word beginning
with der that means "ridicule;
mockery"?
'. iveu'rne
1. . Say,. 'Each of ut kn kit ttopped arly Wednesday motp
part," and omit "completely." l. ,ing on a minor ' traffic count
Pronounce hoe-moe say-pi-ens. were charged with illegal pos
with accent on first syllable of tession of liquor when beer re
eich word. S. Delegate. 4. In- portedly was found in the ear.
suffirent. 'The mrney they re-. Fined $25 each on pleading
cei -ed wrt iradrmnte for their gu'lty were Rebecca Jane Run-
Liquor Count
- daily needs." Derision.-
PARKS HEARING RET
REEDSPORT, -"-The gover
nor's advisory committee on parks
will bold a public hearing in Port
land Feb. 24-25, William M. Tug
man, chairman, said Wednesday.
bols, 19, of 119 C Birch -- St,,
Dallas, and Linda Ruth Beck, 18,
of 753 Ferry St., police said.
Released on payment of $33
bail each were youtht identified
by police as Charley Barlow Wat
kins, 20, Willamina Box 833, and
Gordon Wallace Spurgeon, '18,
Grind Rpnde Box 683.
Phona 4-tBlt
Subteriptioa liter-'
By rarrlar la cltiat:
Daily and Sunday $ 145 par mo.
Daily anly 1 2t par mo.
Sunday anly .10 waak
By mall luntar anly :
tin advanca)
Anywhara la U.S. f M par mo.
2 71 fix mo.
I N yaar
By avail, Dally a luadiyi
(in advanrai
In Orcfon , f 1 '4 par mo.
1 50 ii x mo.
10 59 yaar
t 1 41 par mo.
In VS. oulilda
Oraon ;.. ...
Mam bar
Aadlt Riirraa of Clrralatina
Buraat al Atvtftmni A SPA
Ortffoa Nawapapar
Puallshrrt Aitorljtloa
Aevartlilnf BapraaaiUHTMl
Wart-Orlffllk fa.
Waat HoUlday Ca
N Vara Chirac
aa rraadar Dairalt
All fiesi conveniences ore yours' when
you love of this bonk
Alt savings account! opened with n initial deposit of
$200.00 or more on or before January 10th will receive
oho year'i ute of a tafo depotit box without cott.
for banking homtlow style
sjef ocquoinferj wifh tht folks of
&MMdd Sauk
a . i ' i r
2 OF SALEM
CHUfiCH end CHEMEKFTA STRCETI