4-iSoc. T Statesman, Salem, Ore, Tucs., Fck 14, '5(5 GRIN AND REAR IT Rv Liclitv ".Vo Favor Swnis Vs. .No Fear Shall Au e" From f irst Statesman. March IS, MM Statesman Publishing Company CHARLES A. M'RAGl E, LJ.tur 6c l'uhhslirr fuhlislied every mornfns Busmew flftire 21 North Cnurrh St.. Satrm. Orr folrphnn? 4-rtMl f ntereo m trie poMoffire at Salrrr.. Ore , ai r(-md etas matter under aol nt Contresa March 3. IS78 Member Associated Press The Aisnnstrd Prtss is entitled exclusively tn tht US (or republication nt all Inral nrwa printed in Ihia newsnaper. The Governor Was Not III The irresponsible rcportinr, of a Washing tnn columnist, who said the late Gov. Paul rattcrson "hud been nursing a heart condi tion'' prior to his recent death, apparently Heeds more tluin a simple denial to set the record straight. As this column said last Saturday, the pnverrior had pot teen nursing a heart con dition and had not been ill. To that statement Ve now add these substantive facts: (1) A Toutine examinatrnn by a family physician in Hillsboro 10 years ago showed the governor's heart beat slightly irregular. Such a condition is not infrequent in anyone, and may or may not indicate anything organ ically wrong. (2) In the governor's ca.-e, the Hillsboro physician decided to make certain beyond doubt and sent th governor to an eminent heart specialists Portland. - (3) - The specialist after exhaustive exam ination determined there was nothing wrong With the governor's heart and that any dis turbance was functional, and there never was any "nursing of a heart condition." (4) On the night Gov. Patterson died, Dr. Ralph Purvine of Salem, .who had given him a routine checkup only a few weeks before, said there had been "no sign of any heart trouble or any other physical ailment" and that he had been "in good health." (5) A post-mortem performed in Port land the week of the governor's death dis closed no sign of any unusual pre-existing condition and, in effect, bore out all previous diagnoses. If Columnist Drew Pearson wants to dis pute these facts, let him. If he doesn't want to dispute them, he'd better refute his prev ious ramblings and straighten things out. Happy Rirtlnlay to V la I'.ncl.-md and Scotland hundreds of yritrs ,spo, Valentine's Day brought what might be termed mock betrothals each young bache lor and maid drew one of the opposite sex by lot for the merriment of the day and with no serious intent or permanrwe; - The festivities apparently were based on an oid notion, alluded to both by Chaucer and Shakespeare, that birds chose their mates each Feb. 14. Most reference books seem to agree that Valentine's Day generally did not have a relig.ous significance, although there had been saints by that name one of whom was beheaded in Rome under Claudius, There was another happening on Valen tine's Day that did have a serious intent and permanence, however. It was on Feb. 14, 1859 that President Buchanan signed into law the congressional action making Oregon a state. It was no sudden surge toward federalism that brought Oregon into the commonwealth. In fact, repeated efforts previously had failed. The trend began in December, 1851, when the territorial legislature adopted a memorial asking Congress to amend the organic act to permit the territory to elect its own offices not -directly a demand for statehood but bordering on it. , The subsequent initial votes on statehood itself were discouraging. In June, 1854", the territory defeated a move to request such by 869 votes. The next year the margin was cut l ..Bi.. .;vi.:4.j,flg - Nixon 'Never Said Truman Was Traitor' NKW YORK f - Vice President Richard M. Nixon said Monday Aunt Jemima Plans Pancake Feeds To Back YFund Drive "I didn't get any A's, pop! . . . but psychologists call me a healthy average!" to 415, and the second year following to 249. gmgsgny WBaigg In the meantime, Congress had turned down ., - Country Sympathetic Toward President in Hour of Decision a suggestion that it take the initiative itself to make Oregon a state. In 1857, however,, when settlers became fearful that slavery would be invoked for the territory, statehood was voted 7,617 to 1,679 and a constitutional convention promptly evoked in Salem. The constitution was adopted Nov. 9, 1857. The next year, the ter ritory's statehood demand was ratified by Congress, and the bill eventually was signed by the President 97 years ago today. Valentine's Day seems a good time to re count some of our proud history, prosaic as it may now seem. And certainly as our 100th responsibility is well known. To anniversary rapidly approaches we have day it makes him an object of every right to wish ourselves a "Happy sympainy. Birthday."- "Aunt Jemima- herself will 20 by 30 by 3 to 3'i feet deep, night he never called Harry S put-on pancake teens ton. .j - v .' 'Wan a traitor, as the f Zn r in the firs, of several special and cooed IJ f rel- Democrat Present complained 'events expected in Salem in the.a .ve y little expense, and its en- "I did not call Mr. Trim n a next few month, to top off the ; ire length .would be u . ired for traitor, absolutely not," Nixon told YMCA building fund , ""!0 I reverters i At $1 for adults and 25 cents young children. Although ill the i . ' '. .kiu.. h cnnnnrinp Sa. .water in the big pool must ha .or, ne aao.cn, iii ne ca tne " '"" -i , i..,a u. th. cVmiinu, .a ... n .u. . ... ... lem .limine rhamhr-r of Com-; heated, only the shallow end can treason'.' or question the loyally of feree is hoping to make up $2 -, he used for therap. anv nfit foaiWa a i 0U OI me rsumairu juiwi iiiir .iiiiir "I have always said mat there is stiU needed to carry through only one party for treason in the complete plans for the ad United States and that is the Com- dition now under construction 'munist party." Nixon declared.! Aun Jpnuma will be well-In all my public speeches and corned at MeNary l ield Feb. .., private talks I have always saidi Myor Robert White and a that the loyaltv of Truman. Ad!ai ! delegation of Javcecs accord, E Stevenson and all the leaders in ,0, l" C.omn,',,C,P, , a of the Democratic partv should not man' cs!Ph'- "e. 5a be questioned - only' their judB-.she J.IJvl?1.t fh"jls and hepi ment. The Alger Hiss ease speaks ;tal children s wards during her for itself. Mr. Truman called it a sUy hrm ! red herring." Downtown Parade I Truman several times-reeently j A downtown parade is sched ; has accused Nixon of calling him uled for Feb. 24. Jaycee Woody -a traitor during -1952 -campaign -Ohert is arranging that. The pan- talks "all over the West." The for-rcake feeds, with the familiar mer President said the alleged re- j trademark t the griddle, will be 5 'to 8 p.m., Feb. 24, and 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., the next day. The YMCA board has under written approximately $57,000 of the contract cost of th? Youth Wine under construction, ac marks, made him f'ghting mad. British Fife On Rioters in Cyprus Area By J.M. ROBERTS t wishes to assume no further re Associated Pre New Analyst ! sponsibilities which might, inter-' COSl Cyprus if President Eisenhower will get ' living out nis ears. troonc Monday fired on a stone- the evidence Tuesday and retire . rom personal experience I have throwing crowd near Limassol. British The YMCA has a color film available for showing to my group on request. It shows pa tients receiving therapy in the big pool. A physician accompan ies I he film to explain the value of the treatment and the need for a small pool. If enough money is fortheom ing, an overhead power dolly W'U be constructed from the alley to the pool to accommodate patients , who have no . other way of get ting to the pool, loore said. It would also make it much easier for patients who now are lifted into the pool only at great inconvenience. $1,750 Pledged Already $1,750 has been pledged in this drive for addi tional funds, Moore said, $250 by a private donor who had pre viously given generously to the cording to Gus Moore, Y" gen- tunri, ana si.ouu ny tne tnemeit rsl secret. This amount is'eta Chapter of Odd Fellowi. Both are ear-marked for the therapy pool. Salem Kiwams Club also hat to chambers," as the jgdges say, learned, however, that one can de- kiIling one ma and W0Jndi'ng a' to ponder it. t velop a certain confidence about woman being able to live even with a riain- Withlw (urn tt iVirAA U'aftL'0 (Via fi mint i-nv vi iiiut ' s. m nn. . . . . country should know his decision. 7BT L T ,C 7 . d:i'rs tu tak" don Creek ' lca.h is heln nn too cnirit under. ... oi i..-iKiH. ,n,rc tn hMh i "? -!"" i complete it lor lull use. It is appropriate that the YMCA should gear its current two-day membership cam paign to the theme of basketball which came int'ff"t1tig the same year as the 'YMCA in 1892. It would be appropriate, too, that the Y receive a good response. It is one of the finest influences for good yet evolved, and the present construction work, on its new building on Cottage Street is of more than passing importance to Salem. Editorial Comment connie: mack became a legend When Connie Mack broke into baseball in Con necticut in the 1380 s, he was just a itringbean Irish kid who worked in a textile mill. Irr his old age, he experienced the thrill of a ticker tape parade down Broadway in New York and was named Philadelphia's 'outstanding citizen. This despite the fact that - his clubs- finished in second division more oflen than in the first and of lack of sufficient funds ' As it stands now, the gymna sium will not have heat, ventila tion nr h.'irilunoH flooring. The The trouble started when sol-i,nm k ,rc, ht it w;n !take an estimated $24,000 to The President's keen sense of ,at.-ihi .... t h,aith no,s ?ver a acnooi in me ""p- w - ... ...... ; village ot holossi. A crowd drove It would he normal for the Pres-. off th , ,fth but rejn. ident to wish to complete the job rj A ho nnHariAL- ca roliu-t ant 1 v in tho . . r PeoDle eenerallv know little, 1.--," ' ' n , L strators with gunfire. about what he is thinking. One j d" r " rms H U1 .The incident olM ,he most thing he has said fairly clearly; j 5S J B'yiSriS L, "d ooes noi warn to accept an mieht nersuari. hlm not to auit. I!".""tu " - ;ronsi campaign 10 montns ago to u t. u,j , fi . enforce their demands for union ef "e. iK5r,d..t0J!eli,' ;thi. British Mediterranean island lean"'"'""" iu H'c "cV"""-"' i rolonv with Greece needed to meet the $440,000 cost of work completed or contracted. An additional $50,000 is de sired for two alternates that were ; agreed to raise additional mon cut from the contract because ey. More said, but the means and the amount nave not been announced. he obligation which he might not be able to carry out. Another thing he has said is that, regardless of how well he has re covered from his heart attack, he hjm jnto the biggest job in the Two British airmen were shot isn't the same man physically he world. He knowS there is a good iJ? W," T,1Cry. 0und, was six montns ago. - chance that the work he has done' nu UK. ."K.v " th.w k. ,.irf dier was m ured by a bomb in for and through the party could eckend vioIfnce uc uriuunc u nc &iu'5 jicai Smalt Pool The other item is a small pool for instruction of very young children in swimming, and for therapy. The present pool has , been used for several years for ther apy for polio and accident vic tims, but it is a time-consuming and expensive proposition to heat 50,000 gallons of water to 90 degrees and then cool it again for swimmers. The small pool would measure The best the doctors can tell mm. to onng n aown 10 generau- ,ij .,,,, if r,.n. ' llf-K. JS LIldL ir dS itrLuvricu 'A i- AA ... ....int. i,.... .. ... ... ----- 51UI-1 tUlUllB U1U IIUl WCllI 1I-UH u-ell as a m.m ni ap" can be ...u .. despite the fact that, while he managed some of ted to recover from his type1,: l "V". T J'LV agreatest teams, he also directed some r i "'Vrt It Tould Vem alm" Covc Mntci.c "iJryU though.. must have bee. unhappy J MatSUS AnPfl Hie ha-HiiVi-'ri Athlttin tumnun m-e atnrA 1U11 u - U - Jiil vv.... -....-. r ..i.u.iv.vno oiaiv imi, wouia nui infiin me vunuiuuiii China Official- An editorial in the Eugene Register-Guard says that despite Uncle Sam's minting of 938 million 1-cent pieces in 1955 "we never have quite enough to hand out to the kids at home Who, -meet Daddy with the (query; "Got a penny?" Looks like our own kids have victimized us. They've sold us on the idea that the modern version is: "Got a nickel?" But they'll still take pennies, too. In fact, anything. With Ford stock dropping to 60 and a frac tion, some of the buyers are finding that the road to riches via stocks may be rough. were sold out from under him in 1954 and the which produced the attack have transaction caused dissension in Ms family. The been overcome. A coronary attack old man's consuming ambition, to win one final can come to almost anyone at al- pennant with the Athletics, was never realized, most any time. Doctors dispute Yet he keg until the last a quiet dignity that quite whether one attack makes the vie- possibly explained his appeal as a public figure tim prone to another. The causes and his position as a legendary character in Ameri- are not clear, can sport. , Connie Mack could become a legend because his There is no dispute, however, life span corresponded with the climb toward re- that the weight of the presidency spectability of the game he loved so well, i i i j man-killing, and only a few have It is said that a Pennsylvania school boy, when long-survived it. asked to name the three most distinguished men Under the circumstances, it in the state's history, decided on William Penn, WOuld seem logical for the Presi- Benjamin Franklin, and Connie Mack. Not bad dent to say that he, like any man, choices, reallv. when vou think about it. Rolifrinn. , politics, sport-some would say these make up the mmmmmtmmmmm, ruling triumvirate in the American value system. And it's not a bad one, either. Des Moines Register. All the people can do is standi back.1 allow him a peaceful timej in which to think, and wish for him a wisdom that men seldom: have. 0&C Harvest May Increase WASHINGTON - Timber in- Must Be Kept "tPHTTtP IB A,k XT K." Wellington Koo declared here Associated Press he was ma.l.ng Mnndav niphl that Nalinnalkt Chi. ln I? 3"'"y '"' Girl to Gel Final Penny SEATTLE in - A girl in -Texas who said she needed-only one ".en ny to make her happy is about to find her wish come true. H. K. Mvers of Seattle told The It was a very particular copper that Javne Ann Walker, 14, said Congress Colleagues Show Surprise at Norblad's Decision to Run for Governor By A, ROBERT SMITH of the Republican-controlled 80th that his congressional victory mar- Statesman Correspondent Congress, which brought a great gins over the vears suggest he WASHINGTON The prevailing turnover in the membership of could probably hold his congres- reaetion here to the announcement Congress. gional seat wi'h litt'e risk for life. of Rep. Walter Norblad R-Ore. With Norblad In thai "freshman ... inai ne pian io -w -w class ' were several newcomers As one of Oregon's leading Re. u.i vi t - wno juDseauemiy Decamp Safety Valve na is "determined to defend Que- nMJ M.... T 1 1 (U. ! ... "If thoe mjosts should be T f 'ncoin'npa .pennie'' lost." he declared in an address ery one minted except n, . ii,- ..:.... the 1909 coin from the 'San Iran- y vjqi v vj iui nc -nfiii villi 1 1 1 CI SOI dinner of the China Club of Seattle, 'Taiwan 'Formosa and the Pes cadores would at once be exposed ..... .... v, . ,j u .. j;fr:.,,u , ISSU ventones now under way on tne;""" " " "-h . , . .. ft . d m . n r , a f i i (lPlPrin InPIYl. i road grant lands mav show suffi-' . ; amoassaaor oi me tmang cient timber to permit a harvest Kai-Shek government has recently of from 750 million to 800 million ""' '" o turmosa. board feet a vear l'e exPresspd the opinion in an This possible sharp increase in!earlier conference that Rus the allowable cut from the West-'513 ( intervene in any re ern Oregon timber lands w a s nca' of chlnosc hostilities, disclosed today with the release !. tTnpre are people particularly of testimony by Edward Woozlev, : f-uroPp a"d A;'a- who advocate Bureau of Land Management rii- e surrender of these islands to rector, before a House Appropria- ,he Ch:nFse .Communists in the tions subcommittee. namp of P' e fa,d- I Jnnw Th. nni ci.iain0H viiH r,,t ppace is a big theme ... but a tials "VDB" on the back. Myers said he had 50 of this issue at one time and still has a !Jayne Ann. New York City consumes l'j billion pounds of fresh meat every year. was one of eyebrow-lifting sur prise. His friends in and out of Oi gross had known for several years that he nursed senatorial ambi tions. But Nor- "i blad had kept a close friends socially but have has hrpn more of a "lowr" than since gone on to greater fame an organization or party man- This Vice President Richard Nixon, has been true both of his relation Sen. Charles E. Potter iR-Mich.i, ships with state party leaders and Gov. J. Caleb Boggs of Delaware party leaders here in Congress, and Assistant Secretary of State Norblad has steered his own Thruston B. Morton of Kentucky, course to a large degree. While gatherings of this social His relation to the state party m recenl years served as a organization has become closer, stimulating factor to Norblad's however, in recent months follow- It.ferrt Smttk amhilinns In on tilohxr in nnhlii. inn Iki nlnrfinn U'n4n!t U . ntt inuuiiia uu .,....,, ottice. a counteracting force has as GOP state chairman. Wvatt pretty much to himself. been the recognition by many has been associated with the eider One of his congressional col- Democrats as well as Republicans Norblad in an Astoria law firm, leagues even had placed a modest wager that Norblad would return to the nation's capital from his 'rem The Vrges Pioneer Festival To the editor: I watched with great Interest the Gay Nineties Festival in is reckoned at' 538 million board llltle ,hinkin wil1 snow ,hat wi,n Forest Grove. Here is a city ii... ,iti,nnh www caiH that ir. Communist agcressorsand for with relatively small population 'sw1 sa)vage orK.rat'i()ns actual-""that ma,tcr W1,h 8" "Cfiressors and of just average prosperity. v boosted the cut -to 644 million apiasement .gets nowhere his publicans, Norblad in recent yeart J,anned and enthusiastically i"'?. possible we could when'!u?t and ,0 P'oke greater de ve has hren more of a "Inner than f . . . l. ...i..i.f 11 r"""" o"". wmn ,. . . backed oaceant. The whole , ;.ri ,m,i.'j ,., mands on their part." town took part in it and gave 750 millio1 ,0 m milljon He noted that the Tachen Islands their whole to make it a great fpet eacn yfar and slill stav wjhjn were abandoned to the Commu success. This kind of an affair , sustainccl yield program," he nists a,yMr,ag0' "on ,he advice not only put Forest Grove on declared. m,r 'rlenis- wno believed that journey to Oregon without any plans to run for either governor or senator. A factor in the veteran congress man'i decision, some here say, was the sentimental factor that his father, A. W. Norblad, was gover nor more than 25 years ago. By curious coincidence, the elder Nor blad became governor following the death of an earlier Go. Pat terson L L. Patterson in 1929. . Now young Norblad has found aa . opening through the death of Gov. Paul Patterson. . While his father is not especially active in sU:te pcF.ics any longer, he has provided, the congressman - with almost daily advices from his home at Astoria on what is hap pening around the state politically- Some believe that Norblad, who is 47. is now making a move that will ultimately lead him into the U S. senate perhaps sooner than had he stayed out of the governor ship contest this year. - According to this appraisal. Nor. -blad is a good bet to win the gov ernorship this fall and. thereafter, to be re-elected in 1958 for a full four-year term. This political achievement would make him as much top man in Oregon's Repub lican party as was Gov. Patter n before he id and from tiirt point he could rk nis ,ime r(' his opponent for the senate, either in 1ES0 when Sen. Richard L. Neu bergcr's term expires, or in 12 when the other senate scat will be in contest. . Norblad came to Congress just a month over 10 years ago. after ' the death of Tup. James W. Mott. ttat was the year of the election Time Flies: the map, vis television and, newspapers, but also was a great tourist attraction. , It makes s person wonder why Salem has no such attrac-1 tion. We have a large popula tion, and, sccording to the iat- j est report, high prosperity, wei are the capital city, yet wei have nothinif in the way of fes tivals to attract much needed tourists. Salem has a Unemployment Up in January it would calm and satisfy the Com munists." hut he declared the Red demands are undiminished. Jackson County's New Welfare Giief To Take Over Job MEDFORD iif - James L. Pull- Statesman 'ilea Unemployment rose gradually very his- last month, hitting a new winter- toric past going back to the j time high, during the first week man, 34, will take over as Jackson first days of the Old Oregon in February, largely as a result Countv public welfare administra territorv, it is the center of the ! of the continued " wet weather fol- (or March 1 to succeed Mrs. - m . im4 2d "Arf Hotscher 626 X. High Street Phone 4 2215 Y.ur Stat. Farm R.pr.t.ntativ. To ktlmCmt-ansa' Caart At( laiaraaca PrttacUM Far Taur DoHaT . . , with Stats Fana. "I have thowa any automobile driven bow a save money rbe Stan Farm war. )nat me the opportunity to prove to yen iba wtoaef aviag advantage ot the Baiqna dtffemc Inwranit ptaa pioneered - br Saai Parak" J STATE FARM Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. Bloomington, Illinois 10 Yeurs Ago Feb. 14, 1 Harold B. Jory, for IS years an administrator in the school system of Everett, Wash., has been named to succeed Walter E. Kriekson, Willamette's newly appointed athletic director, as registrar and director of admis sions at Willamette university. Chemawa Indian school will celebrate its fifth birthday later in February. The Chemawa school was founded in 1380. First established at Forest Grove, Che mawa was moved to its present site, five miles north of Salem, in 1S3S. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Barn ford. Jr., formerly of Salem, are receiving congratulations on the birth of a daughter in Portland. Mrs. Alice t. Steiwer of Salem is the great-grandmother. 2. Years Ago Feb. 14. 1931 Mire. Ne'lie Melha, famous slnrcr died in Syd"ey. Australia. Capt. Charles N. F. Armstrong, fornier husband of the singer, and their son, George Armstrong, lived in Klamath county, near Olene, for several years. The fellowship committee of the in Salem announced Miss Kath ryn Miller of Portland as the ap plicant selected for the three year $1200 fellowship loan given, by the Oregon division of the A.A.U.W. Tex Rankin, Portland, aviator, .... set a new world record for out side Wops. He completed 78 con secutive loops in 88 minutes. The former record of 46 loops was made in three hours by Paul Mantz of Palo Alto, Ca. 40 Yean Ago Feb. 14, ll Ignatius T. Lincoln, self-confessed German spy who escaped several weeks ago from a United States deputy marshal in Brook lyn, was arrested in New York by agents of the department of justice. England .also wants him on charges of being a forger. Salem may be justly proud of a young violin genius, Miss Mary Sc iultr, dsuKhter of the H. fM FcliTltrcr, who recently won in start favor at a concert of the Pnrt'and Amateur Orchestral so cie y, at the Portland Masonic Temple, "when she was featured as a violin soloist. ' Purchase of an automobile for use by the members of the street committee of the City Council was authorized at its meeting. American AMociauoa of Lniver- The car he purchased ty Ai sity women, following Its meeting dcrman Cook will cost $443. area to which the erly pioneers headed over the famous Ore gon Trail. It seems to me that this city could easily supoort sorre kind of a pioneer festival that would be fitting our his tor'c past. It would make Salem a great tourist center, thereby giving much needed . business to the city and If the whole town took part in it, it would hHo build uo community spirit. The com plaints I have heard most from tourists are that Salem is a beautiful city to visit for a very short time, but that there is nothing In the way of commun ity entertainment to make them want to stay for any length of time. , Donald P. Evsni, 20W S. Commercial St., Salem, Ore. Democrat for Narbla4 Tn the Fditor: I am a lifelong Democrat, but 'if Hen Wi'er Norblad runs fori governor of Oreicn I 'ill vote for him. I have knwn h'm since J he was one of the young people in my church. ; By anv and all stannaris ei measurement he is equal to the task. He has served his country all over the world and in almost every capacity. His wide ex perience will be good for one of the fastest growing states jn the union, Oregon. DAVID J. FERGUSON, Tratum, Ore. lowed by snow and freezing, the Blanche Lyman, who was dismiss Mate unemployment uompensa- cd last month tion Commission reported Monday.! Tne Siale puhlic Welfare Corn Layoffs as measured by initial mission removed Mrs. Lyman J in. claims at local employment offices j, accusing her of lack of loyaltv. jumped to 6.209 for the week. ;Tnis resultcd rom her attempt j0 About 4.000 jobseekers were ajd a subordinate who had gotten added to local office lists during jnto lroubie wjtn , ba(1 cncck the past 30 days which brought the,.. Pullman, whose appointment was number to 51,200. Virtually every announced by County Judge Rod section contributed to the increase ney Keating, has been Union Conn but the heavies, proportion were ty public welfare commissioner s-t in western Oregon timber areas. La Grande since September, 1934. FJelter Mnplisb By D. C. WILLIAMS 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "Before proceeding on with the work, he got up a com pany of his own." j 4. What is the correct pronun ciation of ''attache"? - 5. Which one of these words is misspelled? Anomaly, anonimous, annoyance, annihilation.- - 4. What does the word "ana chronism" mean? . 5. What is a word beginning with b that means "no longer in use"? ANSWERS I. Omit "on," and say. "he or ganised a company of his own," 2. Pronoun e at-ah-shay, with ac cent on third syllable. 3. Anony mous. 4. A error in chronology, by which events are misplaced in order. "The many anachronisms in the work make it unreliable." 8. Obsolete. i-Iiuii. 4-toll Subscription Rates Br earner la title: Daily and Sunday I 1 45 per mo. Daily only ,,. 1 25 per mo. Sunday only .10 week Bf mall Suaday .oly: I in advance Anywhere In U.S. I 50 per mo. 2 15 aix mo. I 00 year By nail hally ani SanSayt i in advance I In Orefon I I 10 per mo 5 50 ix mo. 10 50 year In U S outude Oregon S L4S per mo Memker Audit Hurra m of ( Irralailoa Hurray o( Advertiilai A .SPA lirrion Newipaprr PublUheri Aiaix-talioa Advrrttilni KepreseataUveei WarS-r.rlffna fa. Wett Hnlhday l a. "k thlraso ' Saa rranrlar. Detr.it BANKING HOMETOWN STYLE YOUR PROBLEMS ARE NOT RELAYED BEYOND OUR WALLS FOR A DECISION feci Month Incrtesfig Nmhtrt OlMlamtttt Voley hlks Art iiai II fill ' OF SALEM CmusCH t4 CHEMEKf TA STREETS