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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1956)
-(Sec. I) Statesman. Salem. Ort.( Thurs.. July S. 55 GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty 7v'o Facet Stiwyt V. No tern SUU hwf fm fht Mwii. Mire It. IU1 Sutesmaa Publishing CsMipany 1AALES A-SIHACJUE. Editor PublUW ublunM vr) ornlhj animaa of tie JSO North Caa t. Salam. Or Irhpnnni -Ht Una ai MM pulsllic at aalanr. Or u aacona law matiar undci ri ( Cow rua Mrch I. !( Associated Mm AmmM rtas M tnlitiro ami 1 Uia haa tot mmlmiM af til aural saws Bunt la - , ant. rtlirral Aid for Schools Many of the "tn liberals" arc caught ia t crossfire ever tne Pwwefl amendment te t bUi for federal aid for education. Tb w York eonsmmiaa, patter of the largest gro caurca in New York City, offered the icndmcBt to deny federal aid for school yse construction to diatricti whicfc refuaed follow the Supreme Court'! edict against ?egatioa. Tba amendnaeat waa adopted esday, lM-llt, kut the Hoaaa may reverse elf ea a roQ call seta. It seema to be agreed that the bill will not sa with this aaaendaaest. at many itaunch end of federal aid (wbe usually art sup rtera of deeetregaties.) urge defeat of the :endaent They ny abould not mix the 9 issues. It ia probably tm that some eoav natives who oppose federal aid roted for tmeadment just ia the hope f killing i bill ay iU adoption. rhost interested ia proeaotiiig the "feneral Ifare" have bee exerting preaaurei for era! aid to schools for years; and the need better schools seems to be greatest ia .then states. But should federal aaoney go districts which defy federal authority? And iuld federal money go to help finance the il system maintained la the South? rhe bill now being considered sets up a r-year program of federal aid. to be spent the rate of 1300 million a yesr for con action of Kheolhossea. Most of tba states testified they are able to provide their school needs; but it must be admitted t if the government is going to shovel out ney for roads M rant very well deay funds scboolhouaes for the anmber of children be educated is growing faster than the rease In cars sat trucks ea highways, 'he present outlook ft for the school aid : to fail of passage. While the blame will put on the desegregation amendment, the t opposition will come from foes et suck enditure. 1 - . ' Gr: Smith and Hell Canyon - Governor Elms Smith wss quite unrespon sive to Sen. Neuberger's inquiry ea how he stood with respect te the Hells Canyon Bill pending in Congress. Smith told inquiring reporters thst be hadnt read the bill, and hadat got Neuberger'a letter yet. That's a lame rejoinder. Neuberger'a inquiry waa prompted by the statement made by the Republican minority of the. Senate committee on interior and in sular affairs, which declared: 'The Governors of Idaho. Oregon and Washington, speaking for their states, sre unalterably opposed to , S, 1333." Either these senators were correct at to the Governor of Oregon or they were lncemctrThe best source of information is from Governor Smith himself. He should snake up bis mind, if be hasn't already, and declare himself. We are quite aura that Smith opposes the Hells Canyon Bill whether he has read H or not; and he ought to say so. Dodging issues has become something of sn occupational disease among Oregon gover nors. We hope that Smith will not become another of its victims. utiles Before Eternity Yhat a terrifying three or four minutes owed the collision, of planes over the md Canyon as crews and paaaengers re ted they were falling te certain death. One l let his imagination run wide open as ha :culates on the shrieks of terror, the sud a prsyen to the Almighty, the thoughts ring through the minds of all those cased the metal shell or burled out lata space, as ry tumbled through' the skies to the earth low. No time for a farewell note; ae time r a report from sa "eye-witness; Time only realize: This is IL 2 low many fainted or t ceasdousness' before the fstst landing ' do not know. They -were -spsred the end- shock f the impact, but for those who J were conscious that moment was brief ' death - annst bare been instantaneous, 9 fires, sending signal lines into the air, . scorched rock sad then the aU-envelop-' silence for 128 persons the silence of rnlty. Petroleum Imports Heavy ' Petroleum Imports last week averaged 1, 651 .200 barrels daily, according to the report of the American Petroleum Institute. Domes tic production stood at 7.055.850 barrels, up from 0.636,700 barrels last year. This shows the large share ef petroleum needs which are being supplied from foreign sources: Vene- suela and the Middle East chiefly. Domestic producers are vexed over the mounting imports. Where companies are un der rationing by state authority the latter is vexed, toe,, for as it seeks to gear production te demand it sees oil imports increasing, which defeats the effectiveness of controls. The big international companies, however, have beea able to fend off restrictions on im- ports. Tbe director of defense mobilization, Arthur Fleming, has been threatening action te limit oil imports, because so far he hasn't been able to obtain much cooperation in the way of voluntary restraint. The quantity of oil coming out of the Middle East threatens to glut the markets, but the foreign governments which get 50 per cent of the proceeds from concession aires, keep pushing for more revenues, so the international oil companies have to keep pip lines flowing and tsnkers steaming out with full cargoes. Demand will Increase, especially in those areas which now are waking to modernity, but any shortage of oil seems remote. It looks ss though the. United States will lean more and more on oil from foreign lands, snd that produces political as well as economic problems. , nrTRTlM BfflMa . (Centlaaed from page mm.) "My wife's a swell housekeeper, a fine cook and a wonderful helpmate, chief! , . . Needless to say, on my salary 1 have trouble krepiug such an employee! ..." jNixon Adds More Stops To East Trip GETTYSBURG. Pa. ( Pres ident Eisenhower Tuesday author ized Vice President Nixon to ex pand hit current Far Eastern trip to include brief stops in the capi tals W Thailand, Pakistan and Turkey. Nixon, who Is now in Manila, the capital of the Philippines, had arranged earlier to also visit Sai gon. Indochina and Taipei, the seat of Chiang Kai-shek's NaUon alist Chinese government en For me. V. Three Mare Slept White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said that at Eisenhower's direction, Nixon was adding to his schedule stops at Bangkok. Thailand; Karachi, Pak istan and Ankara, Turkey. Salem folk like parades, and the one of- fered them on July 4th proved unusually good. For one thing the "River Days" theme was well carried out In the showing of boats, sleek and bright In paint and varnish. The Queen and princesses, visiting "royalty," Soapbox derby entries, floats, etc., gave a varied color for the long parade. It was a good prelude for the events of the Salem's Jujy 4th celebration, whose chief features " were the river evenfs.'The Willamette, after )ong neglect, is really coming into Ms own for recreation. tus boycott by Negroes in Tallahassee col uated la suspension of operations by the company: The fact that Negroes are learn to sue their economic power must be dis-. ing te those long accustomed to tbe status in the South. When whites really com i for the votes and the trade of the col 1 folk, then the latter will begin to make rial gains." Cemetery workers st Saa Francisco have beea ea strike for nearly sixty days, snd as a rem If morticians have nearly 700 corpses on hsnd awaiting interment If the strike con tinues it may be necessary to employ cold storage which will be a great surprise to those sinners who anticipated a warmer cli mate on their demise. luasia, la effect. "Where were you?" (If they were as frank as the Frenchman, Abbe Sieyes, they would merely nae the answer he gave whea asked what be'did dur ing the Reign of Terror. The Abbe, who had trimmed his sails with the changing winds ef the Revolu tion merely replied, "I survived"). When the leaders is the outer ranges ef the Communist world ask these questions they expose themselves to similar questions from their followers. Why did Dennis and Tog tiatti, et al.. follow faithfully the Stalin line, wHh its' sigs and sags, with its prosecu tions and executions of old Bol sheviks, and justify all Stalin's misdeeds to their own followers? Other CanununisU, overwhelmed by the sense of guilt from- the purges and the Hitler alliance and the assault on Finland and the obliteration of the Baltic states, reaoufgred the party and Statin. . But not Dennis Co. Now they have some explaining to do, just as B K k Col havt to explain to them and to the world why they never challenged Stalin's leader ship, and apparently didn't feel uncomfortable until some of their r group fell the hat breath of Stal in's hounds an their necks. "You were there'' when these colossal crimes were committed. "You were there," busy carrying out orders, hoping to mount in favor oa the corpses of tbe vie tims of Stalin's fury. Before God and history these present leaders stand condemned, and as intelli gence penetrates among Commu nists of all lands they will stand condemned a m a a g them. too. They were there . . , After his attorney, Harry Boivin, advised him his grandpappy didn't reserve mineral rights whea be laid out Linkville, predecessor to Klamath Falls, uranium prospector Earl Sheridan folded his tent and vacated the street intersection. No Al Sarena for Klamath Fails. Time Flies FROM STATESMAN FILES 10 Years Ago July i. v :c. Wilson Declared Guilty of Deceiving Himself With Story of Soviet Inferiority Br JOSEPH and STEWART AUOP WASH INC TON - Both aa a Mil an being and as n political nenomenon. Secretary of Do-' wsa Charles E. Wilson is en of - Ike snoat inter- eating figures ia Waikingta". and his recent ap I pearancea befort 1 the Senate Air ' Power Subcom mittee havt had t ouiet drams of their own. . , A law davt be fore Wltmn InlU M-pa Abwa fled, Sen. Rich- ... . . - ars tuuaeu M eorgis, the respected Chairman ( the Armed Services Commk se. called him s soan '"whose anity snd arrogance havt bees xceeded only by his Ineptitude.' . unnu wucp ess, as Wilson lust know, ac urately reflects general hoattl. r on both sides r the Senate ule. The men wnt eard Wilton, loreover, h s d -eviously heard inch expert atlmnna at H sf Mting that the Wilaan defense licies were risking national di iter. Strategic Air Commander, irtls UMay, for example, had atified that in a few years, ua t the Wilson policies, SAC wld be se inferior te the Soviet rntegie force that it might be troytd altogether by surprise tack, '. . t'nder the clrcumrtances. ft a not surprising that Wilson metimes seemed like- a defend ,t at the bar. The Impression is heightened by the fact that t hearings took place In the aid. .nrtwme. oemi-circular Supreme nirt room in tht center of the ipiH, Th frntnn ft In the 1 " Ml Sarvo Aaiaa) throne-Ilka chairs once occupied by tht justices, on a raised diat under , a golden eagle, looking down on the defendant-Secretary below them. ' A big Ma. with white Uar mad a Wag aaaaaara. eddlj hayleh face, Wllaaa was clearly atmewt ad who caa hlamt him? Ha nanaked laeataaaUy, altea with " Mm elgarvttt SaagNag tram hit anaatb an he tatted (a little babll which hat net eadearee him ia (he Seaate.) He talked Sellberatc- ' rr. In bin flat, na-argaaieat ae twat, aad one aaaaad thai ha waa maklag n M areata effart ta eaw tral alnarM. te avoid laalag Ma lenarr. B wss fanpoxtibU not to feel a sympathy for the embattled Secretary, and a liking ss well. There is an appealing timpleneas ; about kirn. Once, ia his discursive way, he volunteered that his mo ther had had him baptized in the Tuscarawas River ia Ohio, and one caught a quick glimpse of hit long climb up tram email town boyhood ia the Nineties to bus- t ineu eminence snd national pow ", er. , f rats time U time, one ntaa eatfal e gUmas of the special view of the warlS kit areont rllaib ban given him. Oaet, far example, he began talking abaai tht Rttslaaa, and remarked that it wst 1ae ba they Sit away with I ha Cxars eamplelely." If nty. ha aaM. "tame at Uiem wart till! lett In tat piece at Rnasla." Then the Raaaiaat ceaM hate their private eallectiea at Ciara, mm4 "they waald na he batlag oar petalt aa Moeh." Thtt thought was offered aelemaly, at a terieat eammeal an hlalery. It was a meaningful, comment. For k suggested now little time, in his hard-working, brilliantly auccestful career, Wilton bat had to devote to the real nature ed tuck imperial power structures th Soviet Union, It nataral far a man at Wll aaa's barkgranad la heileva eoite alarerely that increaaed taeadiag aad laiea are a a arte threat la the raited Mate thaa Soviet aa clear weapeaa. Balk Wllaaa aad hit rlaaett cahieet eeilahorater, Sreralary of the Treaiary George Humphrey, are lead of repeaUag Leila's aappaaed dletaia that the Savieta waald tarrt thla eaoatry la destroy ktelf hy evtr-apeadlag. The fact that Leala never laid i aaythlag of tht earl It heeide the Hat ha eaxM la havt said M. it is sbo natural for a man of Wilson's background to resist stoutly and instinctively any sug gestion that the Soviets can real ly challenge the United Slates in production to assume, as Wil son has said, that ''most mt their weapons, of course, really come out of the Western world." The eatlatalet ef Savlrl air paver, thawing the flevieti tar patslag thla country by a wide margin In every category except medlani bemberi, eanM Iram tht "NalleaaJ latetligrace E t i aialrs." Thete estimate are tar mally approved by the Nalieaal Security Couwcil. tad that hy Wlltaa at a memhrr of the eauu ell. Yet WMaea la not really 4U wrhed by the frlfhlealng esti mate! be himself hat approved, partly because he it not arras tamed la thhakiag m terms of tht warld balance of paver, aad part ly herauat ha doet not really he a Uevt them. His Senate critics picture Wil son as a devious man, deliberat ely deceiving the country. Thit it unfair, for Wilson's performance tn Capitol Hid leaves a'clear Im prettion of s ttmplt and honeet man. But it also leaves the im ' prrsslon that, as a defendant be fore the bar of history. Wilton may be found guilty of deceiving himself, which. In s man In Wil ton's position, cm be s cardinal sis. tCopvrtrht Itst. , KtwYm-h Hrald Tribune Int.) Union Agrees To Pay for Lost Cargo ' HONOLULU I - Hawaiian Pineapple Co. announced Tuesday it - had agreed to settlement of a $250,001 federal court judgement against the International Long shoremen's and Warehousemen's' Union ILWU for S10S.OOO. The company said it would drop pending suits against individual members of the union for the loss of some 400 cases of pineapple dumped in a river during 1949 dock strike violence. Neither the company nor the union said whether the tlOv.000 settlement would come from the international "or local treasury. The settlement was made after the Supreme Court refused to re view the lower court judgement against the ILWU, a union headed by Harry Bridges. 500 Votes for Adlai 'Could Swing Demos' Ry D. HAROLD OLIVER WASHINGTON taV-What is likely, ta happen after aa indecisive first ballot at the Democratic National Convention, which it expected to show Adlai Stevenson with a com fortable lead for tbe presidential nomination? Will Stevenson gain ea succeed ing ballots, as it now indicated, if he falls short of the necessary SM h votes on the first? Or will fiov. Averejl Harriman! of New York, Sen. Estes Kefauver of Tennessee or tome favorite son m-Kin io maae uuroaaa mine leader's strength? Few delegations In the pledged class are bound to their candidates beyond the first roll call, so any thing could htDoen. Rut if Ktpvea- SHAWNEE, Okla. ID-Floyd : son polls around SOO vote at the (Redi Moutaw, accused in , the ! start, as his forces claim he will. 3 in Family Leap to Safety From Blaze PORTLAND - A man and kit wife and theiT - 18-year-old ton Jumped to safety from a second s'ory window after fire trapped them in their home in suburban Southeast Portland Tuesday night. Albert Goucher, M: his wife, Blanche, 51, and their son, Ellis, escaped with cuts and bruises. Fireman Bennett Welsh was treated for hand cuts and bums. Search Nabs Kidnaper, Attacker of 2 GERMAN BAND TO VISIT BONN, Germany if) Germa ny's first postwar military band will visit the United States short ly at the Invitation af the TJ.l' Army. The band will tour a num ber of U.S. cities and Hawaii Dates havt not been arranged. hacking of t Tecumseh, Okla , couple and the abduction of their grown daughter, was flushed from a plum thicket Wednesday and Jailed. Pottawatomie County Sheriff Jim Harrington said that Moutaw. 30, it could influence loosely held dele gates on subsequent roll calls. It might be hard to deny a nomina tion to anyone getting that close to a marity. Around tSt VA..... .1.: ' I :,, L Harjo. Okla.. surrendered without ' 'd" . n Z JvTn Z.ZnZ incident near Brooksville. . small ""L2" !? community about two miles south' west of here: , Mrs. Katherine Hudcins, 77, was found with him clad only in a nightgown, Harrington said, and was suffering from shock. At Shawnee city hospital, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Duggan were de scribed as in critical condition with head injuries suffered when an intruder bludgeoned them, then dragged their daughter into his car. Car Located Harrington said bit search par ty, alter an all-night trek, found Moutaw't car hidden in the plum thicket. "I walked Up to the car with my shotgun pointed to the ground and shouted to Red to come out with his hands up," Harrington said. , "He got out of the car and didn't give us any trouble. But we found a loaded .32 caliber automatic on the floor board of the car." "The girl was clad only in her nightgown and had been roughed up a bit and was aufferirig from shock because Red threatened to kill her several times during the long ordeal." No Statement The sheriff said Moutaw made no statement but to say he was "drunk when it happened. A lug wrench found in the car waa described by Mrt. Hudgins ss the instrument used to beat her parents, Harrington said, The Duggans were found in their blood-stained Tecumseh home Tuesday. Three grandchildren wit' nessed the beating which, officers said occurred before daws 1M Out-state motqrists, Instead of getting police summons for over lime parking hereafter will be in formed they are "really welcome in Salem." Over the signature of Chief of Police Frank Minto, cards were being printed. 25 Years Ago July I, 1U1 The first regular concert for the season of the Salem municipal band will be held at Willson park Kva Roberts will he soloist.. The director it Oscar Steelhammer. 40 Years Ago July I. Itlt F.xpressing the appreciation of Company M, in Mexico, of thethe ,,d couPle in,id ,h muaM lnt frnm h ml aim I hi. l vMii. grounds Fourth of July celebra tion, a message In reply was re ceived by Benjamin Brick from Capt. Max Gehlhar. Pretty Young Mother Admits Killing of 3 COLUMBUS, Ohio 0W-A pretty 32-year-old mother of three walked Into police head quarters here Wednesday night and said, "I want to report a double murder." Officers said she admitted stabbing to death a Groveport couple whose bodies were undiscovered" for three days until she reported the killings. Lt Herman Beck, chief of the city homicide squad, identified the woman as Mrs. Blanche Jacobs of nearby Groveport, wife of an Air' Force major. He said she admitted stabbing A. J. Robinson and hit wife, Maude, both in their 70s, last Monday after fearing they would expose her forging of three checks totaling $1,149. Officers went to the Robinson home. broke down the door and found Marine Drill Chief Jailed In Violations PARRIS ISLAND. S C. I-A 14-yrar-oid Marine drill sergeant con victed of maltreating recruits by kicking and striking them has been sentenced, to 12 months of hard labor. A court martial Tuesday ordered that Sgt. Arthur E. Ashcraft. twice commended for his outstanding work with trainees, be given a bad conduct discharge after he serves his sentence here. Ashcraft also lost his rank along with forfeiture of $75 a month pay for the next year. , The court heard 17 prosecution witnesses testify. They accused Ashcraft of either kicking or strik ing them or other members of his platoon. The sergeant, testifying in his own behalf, denied the charges. He said he had "tapped" several of the trainees in the stomach but never struck any blows. "Every thing I did." he testified, "I did for the good of the platoon." Harriman rackers expect him to have close to 200 None of the three Iradlne candidates has anywhere - near the totals claimed for them in votes now pledges or otherwise committed. Although anything can happen in a "wide open" convention, as Har riman dubs the one opening in Chi cago Aug. 11, prent signs point to Stevenson standing to gain more in second choice support than either of his leading competitors. To Get Kefauver Votes Recent convention actions and polls indicate Stevenson would get many Kefauver votes in Minnesota, Montana, and possibly Indiana if ithc Tennessean pulls out. Harri man also could pick up some Ke fauver strength in Indiana. Kefau ver says he will not accept any thing but the presidential nomi-1 nation and he seeks no deals with any other candidates. , Where the favorite son votes would go on succeeding ballots is anybody's guess. But Stevenson forces are eyeing hopefully the M Texas votes pledged to Sen. Lyn don Johnson, a 1952 Stevenson supporter, after they plump for Johnson at the start. . Missouri Delegate! ' There also have been signs Ste venson might get Sen. Stuart Sy mington's big Missouri delegation if the senator's darkhorse b t o m fades. Gov. Frank Lausche. Ohio's fa vorite, and Gov. G. Mennen Wil liams, Michigan's hopeful, have not intimated where they might throw their votes in later balloting. Stevenson supporters count heav ily on additional delegate strength now uncommitted in Georgia, Ilk noise, Louisiana, Massachusetts, N!i,ur lonoV anil Panneirlo.ni. The Harriman forces expect to pick ' up Oklahoma's uncommitted bloc under the unit rule, and more western voles before the conven tion opening. j Put This ( In Your Bonnet uu,Bio... i and It's At BISHOP'S S00H! lr i . II 1 1 . f X :' ' ' .' ' ' v Nl b .-; Better 'English BY D. C. WILLIAMS 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "Directly the appear ed on tbe stage, the audience applauded. " 2 What it the correct pronun ciation of "abdomen"? t 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Indefatigable, navigable, managahle, incorri gible. 4. Whit does the word "rep aration" mean? 9. What ia a word beginning with fi that means "unduly dainty"? ANSWERS t. Say, "AS 'SOON AS ahe.p- Lay Sister of Convent Gets Pen for Killing NAPLES, Italy (IO Rose Muk sone, s lay sister of the Convent of Santa Chiara. was sentenced Wednesday to 4 13 years in jail for shooting to death t young wood trucker. ,, The prosecution had asked for a sentence of nine years. The trial jmlpe said he gave a lesser sentence "because of mnul mo tives" behind the shooting. The court was told that Rosa, 2 was seduced by tht trucker, Vincenm F.sposito, brfure the en tered the ronvrnt two years tgo. He refused to marry her. Price of War Hikes French Cigarette Cost PARIS I - The French cabi net Wednesday decided to rtise the price of cigarettes to help pay for the fighting in Algeria. The price of a package' of a popular French brand wat jumped from 80 francs '23 cents i to 95 francs M cents. A package of pipe tobacco will cost 115, francs i S3 cents) 'instead of 100 francs 1 2 cents), i Tohacco is processed and dis tributed in Frsnce through a gov4 eminent monopoly. Hint of Federal Units m whrorreZVIHal for nrc.vrn syllable. 3. Mintgeable. 4. The act of . making amends. "He made reparation for the wrong bo had done." S. FlaicaL The Mayflower of the Pilgrims Wat dismantled and the timbers aaed for a building whick still stands ia England. WASHINGTON I The Senate has passed and sent to the House a bill to forbid any collection or detective agency to employ lan guage or emblems that would con vey that they are federtl igencie. It would Impost penalties up to ia yttrt in pritoa and $10,000 fine for violations. v (Drr S8rtQ?3Maltsman Man - 1 1 Snbarriptlta Rates xir mrt ig clUui . DH only. I 15 or mo , Daily ana uniT t I s PI oia Sumla aim It k Si auil Sui aalyi tin advanrtl AajwlMr II ti l S M art ana. t TS an ma I M vrar . Sy aaalL lallr aat Saar,.. i In advaactl la 0t oa t I In par ma S st aix mo ,, tS St vaar Vi O S asiand Ortfon S I 41 awt ma Nfaatf .. Awttt iHtfii f rtrratatMMi Braa ml AOanoliit 4NPA Orra newspaper PvbllalMn Aawrtatlaa Attartuiai liattaaautfau Wart-Orimtk Ca. W Rolhta i m htm Vwh Cklrate uVggy banks are okay, of course; but I have a savings account all my own at tha grownups' bank. What' more, it's earninf interest all the time!" , , . 0P(N SAVINGS ACCOUNTS AT OUR IANX FOI YOUR YOUNGSTERS, AND DEPOSIT RECULARIYI Start your account before July 10th and you will receive interest from July 1st. If your initial deposit it $200.00 or mere we allow the use ef a safe deposit ben for ene year rant free. -7Z faiwwc Batik f)FSA FM , tir-.Rl 77 fWf wia-a.r 1 1 r -wanjwanBBtw- CHUKH od CHEMfKfTA STtfrft j " aotawrttt' , Vi ' ' ' , ri"E fi I I.' lilies i , ' ' w a B T . t f l aVaBBBTastaa r1 "r k. 7?iaa,-t., li "Wr mm ma C5 ' SHCiat orrrat a sraaf r ava MtN'S SOCKS SAVf$2.1SMM ' V mm Smmrthf Sryleof MEN'S DRESS I & SPORT SHOES m m 1 ajtatoU.lt mwm ' 1 ?J -i V ' V. laiSa ) SALEM, OREGON f ARGYLES ipairM la bast al caiar aaaaaiaatiaal STRETCH SOCKS SaaMaaaWr. t. aiaan I paMam 59 paii 100 N. COMMERCIAL ST.