The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 20, 1956, Page 4, Image 4

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    I) Z:J.;2x Ore., Fri., April tO, 3
HRIN AND BEAR IT By Liclity
v f 4. tj ki-w 'UIUmu
3 Faicr Sucyi t.'. 'o Ffflf SiaJ Au
Tra Firs! Statesman, March"!. 1S31
Elalesinaa Publishing Company
CHARLES A. St'RAUUE. Editor & Publisher
putMitftra ry vornicf Buonraj aftw 2M
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tntarre it Um MMdn aalart. Ort trm
CiM irattrr and art at Cofifrwn Marck s. II.
Men AjooclUrd frtm
Vbt AiMicMtva Prm a tnutita iciuiij to tlx k
tul rapubUcatioa Of all kx-J twwi armud ta
FOX Fluoridation
On the ballot at the May election will be
placed the question of adding fluorides to Sa
lem water for the purpose of averting tooth
decay, or caries as the dentisU call it Two
yean ago a similar proposal was voted down
by a substantial majority. The reasons for
resubmitting the question are:
U The Oregon Supreme CourOas ruled
that adding fluorides to water is a valid ex
treme of municipal power.
X The growing mass of statistics showing
the great advantages of fluoridation, partic
ularly the comparative showings in the New
burgh-Kingston, N. Y, test over a 10-year
period.
Two years ago the proposal was defeated
by appeals to fear and prejudice propagated
either by the timid, the ignorant or the de
signing. Salem voters this year should not
be swept off their feet by the combination
of (fuacks, faddists and self-servers who op- -crated
successfully two years ago. With
amazing uniformity all competent and re
sponsible authorities in this field
there after will be between e!-ht and Ween
cents per capita.
i. fluoridation of water supplies is Dot a sub
stitute (or denial care, but fluoridation with or
without dental care achieves a substantial re
duction in caries unobtainable by ether means.
Recommendation; Your Committee ttronjly
and unanimously recommend! fluoridation of
Bui Run waier i MetropoiiUn Portland as a
desirable public health measure.
Here we have had a careful evaluation of
scientific evidence by intelligent citizens of
Oregon's leading city, and they join with
professional, medical and public health or
ganizations in endorsing fluoridation. In the
face f this we do not hesitate to declare
that opposition to fluoridation now is based
on ignorance, fear, prejudice, self-interest,
save that we would except from this classi
fication those who may be opposed out of
certain religious tenets.
Salem should not be victimized again by
the false propagandists of dire ills that would
follow fluoridation. The experience of hun
dreds of communities where water contains
fluorides within the limits recommended be
lies that propaganda. To defeat the proposal
on the ballot again this year, condemns the
growing children of Salem to the certainty
of dental defects which are noted in all com
munities . whose water lacks the valuable
tooth-building ingredient of fluorine. The
'Statesman urges Yes vote on fluoridation.
; ' y I
Rail Passenger
A cent Assigned
To Salem Office
a 1 : - -
u owning ymv
folice force
David Houser
To Quit Salem
Charles J. Stacy
aenger asent (or the
cific in Portland, has
the Salem area, it was announced ,
Thursday. . , 1 David (Mac) Houser, Salem po-!
Previously serving Salem was lict (orct active (or the past 10
R. H. Hunt, traveling passenger,-.,- K,. ,',;
Lowered Coulee Rcrorvoir
To Cut Snox Runoff Crest
acent at Eusene. Rapid growth
the central Willamette Valley com
men were ia Salem Thursday.
No Memorial
Suggestions
Out of Race
Outfoxed Thrmelvp
controlled fluoridation as highly beneficial
In averting tooth decay and free of all the
Ills that have been wrongfully imputed to it.
Here is partial list of those agencies
which have endorsed fluoridation of public
water supplies under the formula recom
mended: American Dental Associatioa
House of Delegates of American Medical
Association
Americas Associatioa of Pa all e Health
DentisU' ,
U. S. Public Health Service
American Public Health Associatioa
National Research Council
American Hospital Associatioa
Organizations in Oregon which have en
dorsed fluoridation include:
Oregon State Dental Association
Oregon State Board of Health
Oregoa State Medical Society
Reported as opposing fluoridation in .Ore
gon are:
' Oregoa State Association of Chiropractic
Physicians
Oregon Association t Naturopathic Phyji- ,
Clans V '',!' ;'.
And-Vivisection Association of Oregoa, Inc. .
- The very Wing of those for and those
against ought to be conclusive proof of the
Value and the safety of adding fluorides to
water. The vast body of scientific evidence ,
lupporting fluoridation ia convincing to such
guardians of health as the Public Health
Service both national and state and the state
and national dental and medical societies.
In this state the most thorough study of -the
question by a citizen group which we
know of was that of a committee of the
Portland City Club: last year. Its report was
carefully prepared and fully documented. Its
findings and recommendation are as follows:
1. The fluoridatioa of public water supplies
as a public health measure has been probably
as thoroughly investigated as any public health
measure ever proposed.
1 The overwhelming weight of dental, medi
cal and other scientific .opinion in the United
States and Great Britain confirms fluoridatioa .
of public water supplies as a safe and economic '
way of ratting the incidence of dental caries by '
at least one-half.
I. The Committee found ao competent rvt- ;
denes in conflict with this overwhelming weight ;
of scientific opinion.
1 The Initial cost of equipment for Portland
will not exceed $10,000 and the annual cost
Not only did the farm bill fail to get the
required two-thirds vote in the House to
pasa it over the President's veto, it failed of
a majority. The vote was 211 against over
riding to 202 for This is probably a better
index of true congressional opinion than the
previous vote by which the bill was passed.
endorse . rither that, or a scramble of members to
"" maybe the rage to be taking fomcr bosses off pedestal,
comrade husband, but it catching yourself trouble
if you are including comrade mama! ..."
III W J
zr ua wn Y 2?&L
tive job vita a national insurance
firm, Chief of Police Clyde War
ren announced Thursday.
Houser has submitted his resig
nation but will not leave the de
partment until May 2, Warren said.
Houser is the third officer to
leave the Salem police department
for a job with a private concern
within the past eight months. Oth
ers were Detective Ralph Ham
mack and Sgt. Joseph Schuetz. '
In his resignation, Houser ex-'
Dressed reeret it leavin the rf.
"We have taken no vote to ; partment. but stated that he could '
either accept or reject any mod- afford to turn down the insur
el submitted for consideration ance firm's offer. I
for the Carroll L. Moores Pi- . . .. '-.J
neer Memorial,- Karl Wenger.L h' J0,."' 1
official of the Moorei Trust I M'
Fund, jaid Thursday night ' ' m'B "
Wengers statement came In jP'Cfmenl-
reDlv to recent rumors that cer- "Wc realize, however, that it is
tain models of the memorial have j hard to compete with private in-j
been eliminated, particularly the , duslry and business in getting and !
one entiled "Spirit of the Ore- j Keeping good men."
gon Pioneer" by Salem sculp-1 Houser has been with the depart
tress Mrs. Frances Kells Mac j ment since 1MJ, when he started
Collin. lis a rookie. His duties with the
Belief by some that the Macjcjty have included the investiga
Collinj work was out of the run- tm 0( most major crimes within
ning resulted Wednesday in nine ihe city in recent yeara. '
Aaiem cmzens wriuns an open
letter to the city council request
Houser's first assignment with
IngatVculp' K : Jhe company will be in Eugene.
work on the "other side' of the street" fol
lowing the very effective talk of the Pres
ident's Monday night explaining his veto.
Democrats are not going to cooperate with
Republicans in passing the soil bank feature
of the vetoed bilL This appears to meet with
quite general approval, but the Democrats
will have none of it. That may be of polit
ical benefit to Eisenhower. It looks as though
the Democrats in Congress had just outfoxed
themselves on this farm legislation.
We can't quite make out why Judge Frank
Reid gave countenance to the move of Woody
Smith of Hood Rivef to knock out the reg
istration of Wayne Morse as a Democrat. The
Lane county Judge has set April 30th as a
hearing date when Senator Morse is required
to defend his registration switch. In a pre
vious attempt by Smith in Marion county.
Judge Val Sloper threw out the case. Smith's '
claim is that Morse ia still a Republican, and
that this puts him, a candidate for the Dem
ocratic nomination for senator, in the "unfair
and unreasonable position of a Democrat op
posing a Republican in the Democratic pri
' mary election." We had always thought a
person's party affiliation wal what he him
aelf said it was. As for Morse, he can get
.plenty of Republicans to testify he isn't a
Republican and never was!
Some wag pinned a supposed-to-be telegram on the bulle
tin board of the state public service building. It was ad
dressed to the Rainier Brewing Co. of Seattle and stated
briefly: "Sirs: Hah! There IS more life to
Rainier." And signed by the Princess of
Monaco ...
"Dear Editor," reads a letter te The
States maa freaa a bey la West Africa, "I
Icurred yeur name and address from li
brary at Lagos that yea are goed publisher
la I'.S.A. I am African boy 14 years eld
and live in Lagos the capital of Nigeria. I
am 4 ft 2 in. tall. It is ever two years
ago that I have been struggle to get your
1L
name and address ,
"I would like to exchange our products for U.S.A. prod
ucts. African products such as tiger skin, slippers, crocodile
bags, African combs, skins belts, salt, pepper, etc. American
products, sweater size 36, shirts Nylon size medium, cap,
soap, underwear. Editor I promise to reply by air mail. May
Cod help you amen. Thanks. Yours in African,
Aweda, P. O. Box 441, Lagos. Nigeria." ...
reconsidered.
Referring to the letter, Weng
er said, "Someone has the im
pression that we've rejected her
work T. . that's not the case at
all."
A final decision in the Moores
matter will -probably be made
next week, Wenger estimated,
adding that trustees are still col
lecting information on various
subjects, one of the most im
portant being a location for the
memorial. The three sites given
most consideration ire Bush
Pasture, Will son Park and Mar
ion Square, Wenger said.
A trust fund, now equsl to
about $36,000, to erect a memor
ial to the Oregon pioneer, was
set up by the will of the late
Corrol L Moores, former state
employe who died in 1937.
he said..
No replacement will be named
until his resignation becomes ef
fective, Chief Warren said.
Forecast la now given, by the staff of the
congressional economic committee that the
treasury will show a balance of about two
'billion dollars on its operations during this
fiscal year, ending Juno 30th. It was a hard 1
pull to bring the budget into favorable bal-.
ance, a goal earnestly sought by conserva
tives in finance, but thanks to the prosperity
of 19SS, revenues are running well ahead of
estimates and a substantial remainder will
be on hand to apply on the national debt
In California the state teachers' associa
tion and the state superintendent of public
instruction have launched a campaign for
higher salaries for teachers, with the public
to provide an additional (40,000,000 to meet
the cost That'i good news for Oregon teach
ers because wages, like water, only in re
verse direction, tend to flow to a common
level. School boards, though, will wonder
what they can do for money.
Well, looks like Salem's chances of getting its very awn
TV station art about as remote as Desn Martin learning to
sing. Newssteries say that Portland's KPTV has asked the
" FCC to transfer Salem's channel 3 to Portland. Latest Issue
of Broadcasting Magazine says that Clean McCormick, KSLM ,
owner, who first applied for channel J, is willing to relinquish
his claim If KPTV ewaers are ready te accept It Channel I
la a VHP staUaa very desirable. This leaves Salem only
commercial channel 24 which nobody seems to want The
' Harvey interests first taaed Into this channel and later tried,
aneaceesafully to peddle It to radio station KGAE ...
t
Weary-footed workers in the Marion County clerk's of
fice found little food for thought in the gripes from some
voters who stood in long lines to register Monday and Tues
day nights. Lot of the liner-uppers could have easily regis
tered before the 11th hour pileup. And those last two days
of registration, incidentally, were the heaviest in the office's
history. The big registration campaign brought in a lot of
back-sliders. Even persons who were already registered got
excited by all the shouting and either called the clerk's office
or stood in line needlessly to find out they were already reg
istered ...
VISIT PLANNED
BONN I West German Social
ist leader Erich Ollenhauer plans
Yakuhn to visit India and probably Indone
sia in the fall. He Is on a thro
man European delegation with
Britain's Hugh GaiUkell and Aus
trian Vice Chancellor Adolf j
Schaerf that will attend the Asiatic
socialist conference in Bombay In
October.
Boaters Plan
Cruise Sunday
Salem Boat Club will sponsor its
first cruise of the season Sunday,
May t, Ray Morrow, Cruisemas
ter, announced Thursday.
The cruise will be a one-day af
fair and will travel upriver to Hay
den Island at Eola. Games and
family picnics will be included, j
This is the first of more than a !
dozen cruises that have been plan
ned for .the summer. Morrow said, j
Boaters wishing to go on the trip
or obtain additional information
may call 36952 days or 36398 eve
nings, Morrow said. I
PORTLAND 1 The huge res
ervoir behind Grand Coulee Dam
ia Washingto will be lowered
this Spring in an attempt to ab
sorb the worst of the Columbia
River flood crest and ease flood
danger at downstream points,
Army Engineers said Thursday.
Brig. Gen. L H. Foote. North
Pacific Division Engineer, out
lined the proposal Thursday at a
meeting of the water management
sub-committee of the Columbia
Basin Inter-Agency Committee in
Penticton. B.C. Bureau of Recla
mation - officials approved the
plan.
Thirty-eight tunnels in the dam
Sheriffs Bond
Case Appealed
Appeals were filed in the State
Supreme Court Thursday in cases
involving Terry IX Schrunk sher-
iff of Multnomah County, and the
Fidelity and Deposit Company of
Maryland hjuvd nn ih rrrtvrv
of $12,271 for failure of Schrunk's
office to complete service in a
civil action within . the statutory
period.
A jury In the Multnomah County
Circuit Court returned a judgment
against Schrunk in the amount of
$12,280. which was in excess of
his $10,000 bond. Thular B. Ham
mons was plaintiff in the action.
Following return of the judgment
Schrunk filed a supersedeas bond
to guarantee payment of the Judg
ment.
The Supreme Court gave no indi
cation when the cases would be
set for hearing.
will be opened to lower the pool
behind the dam below spillway
level. This could mere than dou
ble the storage space behind the
dam to absorb, the "flJbd crest
when it comes, engineers said.
Maximum effects of this action
j would be obtained only if the rre?t
is ot snort duration. Prolonged
flooding would raise the reservoir
level and erae the cushion effect
of the pool. Lowering of the pool
will result in some loss of power,
but this will be minor, engineers
reported.
Warm weather this month has
reduced the flood threat a little
by starting the snow runoff aead
of time. But a huge amount of
water remains in the mountain
snowpack and forecasters are not
ready to revise their earlier pre
dictions of a major flood poten
tial The U.S. Soil Conservation Serv
ice said a mid-April snow survey .
showed snow water depth at 32.
Snow courses dropped an average
of 2.2 inches since April 1. Snow
melt was greatest at lower eleva
tions.
HI
I mU. V iH I ii I l.-W V M-W
CmUmm4 trtm paf
War Danger in Mid-East Cut by Cease-Fire
Pact; Doubt Seen for Permanent Agreement
y J. M. ROBERT! I rations for reconquest. Hammar
AP News -Analyst skjnld has made no apparent dent
Tear of aa Immediate war in h determination for recon
the Middle East has been greatly quest.
eased by the cease-fire agreement Something also will have to be
between Isrsel and Egypt pro- bout the arms race. So far.
duced by Dag Hammarskjold'a Rui'i offer to help solve Middle
mediation mission, I Eastern problems has not included
iv. .v--,- mi sa.. ..a any definite suggestion on this
Syria should not be so difficult to
Obtain.
The Important point ia whether
this return ta the armistice terms
of 14 can be made lo stick.
There la considerable doubt
If the Western powers, having
obtained this first objective, now
slacken their efforts to produce a
lasting settlement, another crisis
will begla building up immedi
ately, For this is not merely a political
conflict It involves personal ha
treds, especially on the Arab side.
Arab forays into Israel will aot
appear that the Communist ship
ments to Egypt had actually upset
the balance of power. Israel is
still credited with being able to
take care of herself for the time.
If the Communist buildup ot
Arsb military strength continues,
however, the West will be unable
point. The test can be made. to stand Idly by until Israel can
through Westers offer to make really be threatened with exterml
arrangements about the amounts nation.
and types of arms which anyone The U. N. secretary general,
caa sell ta the nations In the area. , following a program suggested by
The United States has not fur-1 the Western powers, has set the
alshed arms to Israel during the I stage. The acting, however, must
current crisis because it did. not I be done by the powers.
Your Health
Dr.
Herman N. Baaoeom,
UJX.
characters involved a "Seattle
and Spokane race track figure
... and the man who repre
sented the teamsters in some of
their political campaign activities
lo Oregon In the faU of 1854." waa
manager of the campaign of Wil
liam M. Langley for district at
torney ot Multnomah county. The
Oregonlan promises further dis
closures of the sequence of events
as reconstructed by two of their
top reporters, Wallace Turner and
William Lambert
This will shock Portland and
Oregon and might to shock the
Teamsters' union. It shows how
unscrupulous labor leaders who
seize union controls may subvert
the legitimate interests of labor
fur their own purposes. By using
union power to threaten public
officials and union power to dis
cipline business non-cooperators,
those in the racket can drain off
Time Flies
FROM STATESMAN F1LU
Public
Records
huge profits from illicit vice and
gambling. Not long ago the names
of some of those mentioned in
the Oreeonian storv were Uicluded volving a petition tor a
in a civil suit over amusement ' habeas corpus dismissed
CIRCITT COURT
John G. Harms, Ralph Harms
and Ads Harms, Vernie Harms
and Thais Harms, Mildred L. A.
Doran and Andrew Doran, Neva
P. Owen and Dean Owen, Charles
E. Cheffings, Clarice M. Stovall
and James Stovall. Vivian M. Mil
ler and Victor Miller. Thelma M.
Royse and Robert Royse vs Rollin
O. Pope and Florence E. Pope:
Civil suit; complaint alleges fail
ure of defendants to fulfill terms
of a certain written contract, and
seeks judgment totaling $43,250.
Richard J. Philbrick vs Ruth M.
Philbrick: Divorce decree granted
to plaintiff; property settlement
confirmed.
Thomas J. Thompson vs Clar
ence T. Gladden, warden of Ore
gon Slate Penitentiary: Plaintiff's
petition for writ of habeas corpus
granted.
Cecil T. Bradley vi Carence T.
Gladden: Defendant's action in-
Wreck Brings
Damage Suit
A $15,102 personal injury suit
basr ' on a New Year's Eve traffic'
accident was filed Thursday in
Marion County Circuit Court by
Rose Marie Knofler against James
Pollard.
The complaint alleges negligence
on the part of Pollard in n col
lision on Highway 99E about four
miles south of Salem shortly be
fore midnight on Dec. 31, IMS.
Mrs. Knofler. who was a pas
senger in the car driven by her
husband, is seeking judgment for
$15,000 general damages, $V) doc
tor's fees and $52 for ambulance
and hospital expenses. ,
Summer ntesns bugs, and plen- he has swallowed, give him milk
, ty of them: bugs mean Insecti-1 mixed with the white of an tet.
stop until the. cease ta Be wet- cues ana poisonous powders In, milk and flour, or baking soda
corned by the authorities of their just about every home; and these and water.
' governments. mean potential danger to your If you can, determine what the
It also involve the Russian children. - ipotioo contains. You caa usual-
effort ta obtain a position In Mid-j When using insecticides, don't; iy learn thla from the label on
die East affairs, and the Western spray them widely about a room, the eooUlner. The following an
detormlnatioa that she shall not Instead, direct them toward the tldotes should be used for the
aurceed. apoU where they are aeeded. It's following poisons:
They recognise her presence not food idea, too, to keep the cbtt- Arsenic Clve a mixture of two
tnrt aa a threat to peace and out of a room until you tablespoons ot po rdered burnt
stability, hut also to then- accesajH flnlshedprsylng.
The grestest danger to young-
Iftha cease-fire can be extended j"- are the Inject!
toast, one spoon of milk of mag
nesia snd four spoons of strong
tea
DDT Give two tablespoons of
10 Year, Ago
Increasing the guard at Oregon
State Penitentiary was declared
necessary and first steps were
taken when the State Board of
Control inspected the prison from
which 10 convicts have escaped t.xrf
in recent weeks.
better hnplish
devices (pinballs?) in Multnomah
county!
Meantime, Portland Journal re
porters quote one of the princi
pals named by the Oregonian as
blaming a Portland figure with
controlling illicit operations in
Portland with connivance of the
police, and quotes Langley, the
DA, as claiming his life has been
threatened because of his at
tempts to clean up vice and gam
bling in the city and county. He
denies plotting with teamsters.
and called the ruckus a fight of
"thug versus thug."
The charges are of such gravity
that they cannot be ignored by
public officials. Governor Smith
called the district attorney of
Multnomah County to bis office
for a conference; but clearly,
since Langlry's own name is in
volved, he cannot be- told to in
vestigate himself. Attorney Gen
eral Robert Thornton has advised
the governor ot his willingness to
pursue an investigation, which
would require his assignment to
the task by the governor. While
this is an election year, with can
didacies sprouting all over the kit.
there ia only one course (or public
officials to follow and that ia to
perform their duty without re
gard to political consequences to
themselves or anybody else.
Justice Rossman
Plans Address
In Washington
Justice George Rossman of the
State Supreme Court will speak
in Seattle, Wash., Saturday before
the University of Washington Law
School upon the subject of Sir Ed
ward Coke and Lord Francis Ba
con. Sir Edward Coke. 300 years ago,
was Lord Chief Justice of Eng-
writ of . land, and Lord Francis Bacon was
Lord Chancellor. Coke is common
ly deemed the fountainhead of the
English common law, and Bacon,
who was also a brilliant lawyer,
is regarded as the greatest of the
modern philosophers.
Marion County vs Darwin Scha-
ber, H. A. Zulsdorf, Irene L. Meier,
Melvin G. Burgher and Helen L.
Burgher, Francis Luby, Anna Mc
Guire, Bill Aldrich, A. E. Beckett
and Sayde R. Beckett, Arthur
Berg and Helen Berg, Alta M. Lar
sen, Eugene Bloom and Oma
Bloom, G. W. Strandt and Clara
M. Strandt, Charles E. Collins and
Greta M. Collins, Rny M. I I n I Fnrfslprs
and Pearl Harrison. Oka Irson. i -n.. nrpsim Forpsrv Droartment
Trained Workmen
Shortage Facinc
Gold and !
said Thursday it is having a hard
a. -it W IrTriVboTders and thecid 9ikh ,rt l" Mi salt lo two glasses of wa
.SdZ0t2r . - important, of , Ur, The. give 1. of strong te.
cross-boundary rslds stopped, the
rhl nroduct will bo time. Time
In which ta seek permanent settle
ments of such things as bounda
ries and the Arab refugee prob
lem. . . ... .
The refugee problem cosua "e
beea settled a long time ago. The,
Western powers have been pre
pared ta see that the displaced
Arabs were reimbursed and ro
aettled under circumstances at
lestt as good as they enjoyed be
fore they let Israel.
svulement has beea prevented
by the Arab gorrwmoia, wkkB
ki n' ft lnt4 la their prepa-
course, that such poisons be kept
on a fiign abeii or in i locked
cabinet out of the reach of In
quisitive little hands. - - - -
But, no matter how much I
caution you, some ot your chil
dren are going to swallow some
of these Insecticides or powders
accidentally thia summer. If
your youngster Is one of them,
you'll want to know what to dn.
first, call your doctor. Hell
give you the proper advice.
If yon eant reach aim. you 11
nave to give your vounister an
antidote, U jot don't know what
or not cot tee.
Phosphorus Four ounces ot
hydrogen peroxide. One table
spoon of sodium bicarb la a quart
of warm water. Thea give four
ounce, ot mineral oil. Do not
give animal or vegetable oil
Keep all oils snd fata out of the
diet for several days.
Sodium Fluoride Give two
tablespoons of milk of magnesia.
Then give him I glass of milk.
Strychnine Give the tame
25 Yeara Ago
Apr. M, 1931
A highly polished, cracked
three-Inch shell cssing was re
turned after more than 13 years
to the former gunner who fired
the first Americas artillery shot
ia the World War. He waa Alex
Arch of South Bend, Ind.
40 Yrara Ago
Aer. M, 111$
Earl Flegel. IT, was chosen
president of the student body of
Willamette university In the elec-
N. Parrish, Agnes B. Cramer, and
AJonzo Hoover and Haiel Hoover:
Complaint in equity for judgment
and decree foreclosing tax liens.
Rose Marie Knofler vs James
Pollard: Civil suit based on traf-;
fie accident: plaintiff seeks Judg
ment totaling $15,102. j
PROBATE COI RT
Estate of John A. Gregg, de
ceased: Final account approved.
Estate of Jacob Muellhaupt, de
ceased: Order sets June (. 195$ as
dale for hearing estate's final ac
count. , . ,
Estate of Margaret A. Martin,
deceased: Final account approved,
estate ordered closed and execu
tor discharged.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
APPLICATIONS
John Lee Brenllinger. K, stu
dent. Lowell, and lla;el F.liraheth
1. What Is wrong with this Dotsnn. 25. student. Independence.
sentence? "It says in the paper .
, M... I MI Ml IP At. rot RT
Otis F. Rock. 44 N. ltrd St..
charge of driving while intoxicated
i taken umlor advisement; charge
i . . . . ...... -, ,
I. m:...ni- rv.t,t, . -.:M anvitig wmie license suspeooeo
Capital Consolidated
Silver Mining Co.. P. J. Hewitt, !tim(. f,ding trained men
Everett Staals. J. G. Vogt. W illiam i The department has 15 vacancies
Manning Estate. Lloyd E. Close, fur junior foresters. Only two have
Evelena II. McCoy, I. McCully. G. i been hired in the past year.
A. Seyde. Helen P. Kendal. Jack Don Maus. department personnel
By 0. C WILLIAMS
director, said the trouble is that
the state doesn't pay salaries as
large as those paid by the federal
government and private industry.
He said the shortage will handi
cap the department's fire fighting
program.
More old people, proportionately,
are in very low and very high
income groups and (ewer are in
middle income groups than other
sectors of the L'.S. population.
that ram is due.
S. What la the eorrect pro-
nuncistion ot "oeiusri
'4. 1 -k ... f ,l . ,
nnics unr sh inn woruS)
misspelled? Prejudice, preci
pice, Derogative, perorate.
1 What does the word "in
dissoluble" mesn?
ASSWE1S
dismissed on motion of ctty attor-i
ney: found innocent of driving with
no licence.
Juhn Frederick llassel. 140 N.
ISth St.. forfeited bail on charge,
mixture as the one need to com ' Hon ot student officers. Violet Me-
bat arsenic. Lean was elected vice president
la each case you. samt jlsa la- and Fannie McKennoo was cbosea
aua re ml Hag. secretary.
1. Say, The paper says that i Hruir. mhii ininirtai rvi J
thai "arcen. MSZl Turt- !, S-
PrerogS i'n hle It M
being dissolved; ondnne. brok i3'
en, or the like. "We want this' Mirhael Karrlrae Johnston, list
to be a sacred and Indissoluble' Fairmont Ave , rharte of disor
nnioo." dcrly conduct, fined $3.
r-tioo 4-esu
Subscription Islet
? rirnrt ta ttttni
Dtl only . It pT IX.
Inl and Sunday I I ptt m.
Oundu ni .It SMI
t mail laiieav Mlyt
I in advance I
Altthfll IB II UlaitlM
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By aaill Dalt aat taaSiyl
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la Onfoa I It eat me
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W!-C.fimta Ca.
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laa traawiara Btra4
t.rjrir--Wt!r (i Cti
SURGICAL
SUPPORTS
Of AH Kindt, Trustee,
Abdominsl Supports,
Elastic Hosiery Expert
Fittert Prlvtte Fitting
Roomi
"Ask Your Doctor"
Capital Drug Store
405 Stste Street
Corner of Liberty
Green Stamps
2
mi
See and Select a ,
WURLITZER
PIANO
Thousands are doing If, you
can tool I
RENT or IUY tor at little at
$3.77 a week.
lossont Individual or group
available
'
Phone
2 5281
IXQ
PIANO COMPANY.
12$ State SL, Salens, Ore.
n
JjiecialJuH
Mr. Leonard Hanauer
Kuppenbeimer style
. -ii i
w expert wm oe m
our store
IS
ritiuAi,
APRIL 20th
with an advance
showing of
'4 Kuppenheimer
Made-to-Measure
-
Clothes for
Foil and
Winter
We arranged t special trip by this
Kuppenheimer expert . . . and a special
showing of Kuppenheimer'i new custom
exhibit ... to help you make a smarter choice
in made-to-measure clothes. We can only
illustrate a few of the many fabrics and stylet
vifinter ; comt n md tea -
the whole show, here for Friday onlyl
An investment In good tppearanco
An 'un'itmtri in good oppeoronca
i t wtn
i
REMEMBER ALWAYS . . .
til -t. . '.;', ' I
v, ' V"'" V ". ansa, m .jm- a .