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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1956)
4-(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore, Tues., July 10, 1938: GRIN - AND BEAR IT By Lichty LNo Favor Suxyt Vi. No Fear Shah Awt" fni Flrrt IIiUmm. March tt. ItSl .. Staletman Publishing Company CHARLES A. 5PRACUE, Editor & Publishei sMbliahsa vr; North Cnurrn r morninf Business attlra !M lit., catena. Or. falaphom 4-Stll kniaiM M Id ausioffwa t fcakm. Or . m soros " rlaaa mllr unor act at Coniim Marrh J. lilt. Member Associate freta Tto AHorlttrd Preae U aatitlea xclumvtly to Ins nan far rtpubllcaiion t JI local mi printed la " tlile nswapapor. Study Due on Foreign Aid While the Senate voted to restore 1600,. 000,000 of the cut made by the House in the foreign aid authorization bill, to many doubts were expressed that Senator Mansfield of Montana proposed a full-scale Investigation of this subject by the Senate foreign relations committee. The Senate rules committee has approved a resolution sponsored by Demo crats to provide $300,000 for such a study and the Senate is expected to act on it this week, pone competently and objectively, It could bring in report of great value for determin ing policy In the future. While we have felt the administration was iking for too much money ($4 9 billion) for in foreign aid program, most of which was for "mutual assistance" (military aid) we cer Jjinly would not have enjoyed the company " rf those who voted against the Senate bill. In the opposition were isolationists, anti-administration Republicans and many of the South ern conservatives, among them: Bricker, Dworshak, Eastland, Eltender, Langer, Ma inne, . McCarthy, Stennis, Welker. Young. Some of .these probably -would vote to scale fo;?ign aid down almost o zero. iVow let us have an intelligent review of 'wbat foreign aid has done and it has accom- " plished great things for the free world and a preview of what the United Stales can and jhould do in the way of global benefit. "My Johnny Can't Spell" A Texan who say she is "a desperate par ent caught in the snarls of progressive edu cation" advertises in a New York newspaper for a New England school teacher "to assume full charge" of her three children "in lieu of school." Her 12-year-old boy, she says, "can't spell cat," and neither her two younger daughters, though they have normal IQs. She'll find a lot of sympathizers among parents In wide-spread parts of the country, for certain. Sight reading -replaced phonics a couple of decades ago in a general trend to ward new methods, but as a sole means of in struction, sight reading is a total failure. In recent years, there has been a gradual return to phonics and in most school systems now it appears that instruction combines the two methods. Sad part of it is that children whose in struction was chiefly sight reading, have a life-long handicap, or many of them have, and also that phonics haven't been re-applied as rapidly and generally as such studies as Dr. Rudolph Flesch'i and others have ahown ahould be the case. Apparently Dallas. Tex., from whence came the parent's plaintiff plea, "My Johnny can't spell," isn't doing too well with its "progressiveness." Again, maybe it's just the teacher, or even possibly the princi pal who sometimes injects his or her own methods. Whatever the trouble, it appears there's a good chance for a "competent, ex perienced" New England school teacher to get a free year's trip to Texas with all ex penses paid, an automobile and a salary of her own setting. Hi Worried Hopmen Watch Hot Weather, Danger of Damage Seen if Continued By LIIXIK L. MADSEN Farm Editor, The Statesman "Washington produces five to six times as many hops as Oregon." r J 1 1 J . f. Willamette Valley hopmen are ! . aJ? " i ,Tl I keeping their ling'rs crossed in ' at the new gl.sh varieties now the present hot spill. Fugsle hops .l" rw" ,hcre do lit take kindly to hot weather. 'Hamette Valley right back into and almost all the hops left in he1hup in . blf "y' the valley now are fugglea. iBu"'0? and. GrZ" Cld' , h.e The three-day hot spell in May, w favored tBlish varieties. threw the hop. into . premature: '""J '? bllk.ed b ,h brew ui ..j u i .t .u. ers, dealers said. Valley hops would either be picked HoP "reage m P "' early this year or might not pro-if " "pTi , k perly develop. But the hop, came lar ,0 lhat of yar when J.81S out oi that spell in comparatively crM . hvesled. IMinia good shape and without too much l" lhat, thtfre tota' 0 l..in ( , .,,.,.,.i. 1 a.wi a"" ill ra. in uiikira, um i im.-n IIIIIK Ul , UM VI Vitn VIO, 4 , Al 11 .11 Nip Socialists Gain in Voting TOKYO Wt Japanese social ists Tuesday won enough seats in the upper House ot Parliament to block government plans for re armament and revision of the U.S. occupation-era ' constitution. . With near final results from Sunday's balloting pouring in, the socialists', and Iheir supporters had taken 81 of the 127 seats up for election in the 250-scat cham ber. , , Together with the 33 they al ready hold not to be voted on again for three more years they had more than the one-third need ed to block Premier Jchiro Hato yama's conservative coalition. ' U.l .,..,11" Al . I ...... I V, fhi. nm- J,,.m .u mnM rf..o- r a'v Growers who did not put up their l t l n uum yv . uuiiuiki , . , " hnH annaa) lnat Uaiaai aiaimncaul . Kerr, Mission Bottom hop grower, j""1' ."" wi,d Monday. around 400 crM- AMildrw Not To Bad i Growers in the Willamette Val t ley 40 far have not suffered heav ily this year from downy mildew fungus although spraying and dust-: injrhave been regular for Us con trol. Kerr believed. Keportj from Yakima Monday were that growers there were CLEVELAND OH - Louis C. simenng iroin a neavy in.eSla- Stalpr 69 a onHirne carnivai lion. Some growers were reporting , wrretI,.r and street cleanpr frorn tna, tney wouio suiier at least a Aloona Pa laU Monday was; """"' us( convicted of first degree murder, Dwinell. executive secretary of wi(n , rccommcnaation o( mrrcy the Hop Growers of America, the; Tne verdjct wa, returned by association w; h which a large three.judge court. s,atler had nuinwr m niuomnie rllr? waived a jury trial, growera are associated. In an effort to combat the in-' Presiding judge. Joseph) festation. the Washington growers Gilbert, immediately sentenced i have "borrowed" Dr. C. E. Hor- s,allrr ,0 1,,e imprisonment, for ner. plant pathologist at Oregon ,he s'avln5 last fall of his 18-year-State College. Dr. Horner is doing o!d housekeeper. Gloria Ann Fer- research at OSC on hop and mint of these 1303 were "idle acres". WARDEN PROTESTS r OKT MADISON, lowa ir) Warden Percy Lainson of the Iowa State Penitentiary here says prison isn't the place for men convicted of drunken driving. He says therei nothing wrong with them except their drinking. Under lowa law third1 offense ! drunken driving carries a man datory prison sentence. But War- YVHt.. den Lainson says: "What these- men need is the kind of special treatment we're not equipped to give them. Just I t Kidnaper Predicament People all over the country sympathize with Hie distraught parents at West bury, N. Vhos fourweeks-old child was stolen from Jts carriage at the family patio. Their agony rs the more acute in that they have had tel ephone calls, one apparently authentic, from the kidnaper. They have tried to comply with bit demands, so far to no avail; so their grief iJ compounded with each dashing of hopes. The case serves to reveal the fix in which a kidnaper finds himself. Stealing a baby is In itself not too difficult. The hard part Comes in trying to obtain the ransom, return the child unharmed and still make one's own escape. This may be the predicament of the ne who kidnaped the Weinberger child, i Hope is universal that the infant will not suffer the fate of the Lindbergh boy, but that be may speedily be restored to his par ents. After that, may the punishment of the kidnaper be swift and severe. l t-r: anan Riots iti v - The Polish Communist party assumes re sponsibility for "part" of the blame for the Poznan riots. In typical party gobbledegock the CP blames "bureaucratic irregularities.'' That is a new term for hunger and bread; Jrttt it carries a good weight of truth. - For So- -cialism substitutes bureaucracy for individual effort and incentive which are the mainspring (U the productive capitalist system. We want to comment too, on the very itrlk rng picture of a riot scene in front of the lAT works at Poznan. There was the crowd T milling men, one carrying a banner stained "ftlth the blood of one who had fallen under police fire. Standing in the center was jrnung woman clad in a trim light-colored suit, though leading the strikers. For effective photography it reminded us of Joe Rosenthal's Iamous picture of raising the flag on Mt. Suri-bachi. 'By Reason of Insanity" The plea of "not guilty by reason of insan ity" is relatively common in murder trials -too common in the opinion of many who think its success sometimes perverts the cause of justice. The plea is, however, comparatively new in American jurisprudence. How it came into use and prominence is told in a new book by Earl Conrad, "Mr. Seward for the De fense," Rinehart 4 Co., N. V., publisher. This is a well documented report on how William M. Seward who had twice been governor of New York, undertook the defense of a Negro accused of the murder of four persons in a home near Auburn. Seward had resumed the practice of law at Auburn and became the attorney for the defense. His case was based on the claim that the murderer was insane. Prosecuting the case was John Van Buren, 'state attorney general, "handsome man with a golden beard." son of Martin Van Buren, eighth president The eminence of the at torneys added to the popular interest in the case. Public sentiment was strongly against Seward who had volunteered to defend the colored man without pay. Some of his fellow citizens scorned him for defending one who . had committed foul crimes. Seward felt, how ever, than n insane person was not respon sible for his acts. The Negro was convicted, but the Supreme Court reversed the verdict and ordered a new trial. The defendant died before this was held. A post-mortem said that his brain "pre sented the appearance of chronic disease." Since that trial In 1846, proof of Insanity .lias becemt legal ground for dismissal of a criminal charge or acquittal of the accused. Prosecutors know they may be confronted with this plea: and often we have conflicting testimony from alienists and psychiatrists re- fASt i am W I ka aonSlu Ar aa aiuiiiaail MAaAM YlTat J V." ""U7U - f The Southerners are being told m.Vy this stems from the defense of "Crazy wih Mmt emphaliit bv Vir um rreeman oy aewara at AUDurn; oui inai would have developed sooner or later any way. People have a much fuller comprehen sion of mental illness today, and more sym pathy with those so afflicted, even though they do regret abuse that is made of the plea of insanity in criminal cases. "Nonsensr! . . . we've plenty of room, clear . . . they all came in one car, so they wouldn't mind sleeping together in one bed! ..." Close Battle Seen in Senate For Hells Canyon High Dam Utah), who led the successful campaign in Congress for the $760 million federal Upper Colo rado reclamation-power project is turning into a leader of the opposition to Hells Canyon. Re portedly, this is in payment of his debt to the administration for its help in putting the Upper Colo rado project through. Slayer Given Life Sentence By A. ROBERT SMITH Stateamaa Corresooadeat WASHINGTON All the prog nostications on the outcome of the Hells Canyon fight that is due to start in the Senate thia week' are for a touch and go affair all the way. Both Democrats who are pushing V the bill to auth orize a h I g h federal dam and Republicans who are trying to kill the bill concede that t h e issue may be decided by only a vote or two, so closely divided is the Senate on the question. The outcome could even be determined by timing more than anything that is. who. happens to be out of town when the vote is taken. Even the whereabouts of President Kisenhower may affect the result, for at Gettys burg he is largely mmoved from the immediate scene of legisla tive battle on Capitol Hill and unlikely to be intervening per sonally. . If all the Senate Democrats voted for the Hells Canyon bill, it would be passed by at least the 49-to-47 margin by which they ran outvote Senate Republicans. But despite the fact that t h e Democratic leaders are making this a major party issue, they can't count all their members in the fold, especially several from the Southern wing. locking them up doesn't do the SI(I jv. ii;h Street Phone J.JS1J job." I r "Sam" Samuel Buying a car? MY BANK PLAN MAY SAVE YOU '100 ON FINANCING AND AUTO INSURANCE n One western Republican, who has yet to announce his decision. ; has confided that some time ago he was telephoned by Kisenhower who personally asked him to op pose the high dam bill. This is the administration's big gun, of course, and the fact that Eisen-! hower has since fallen ill and is now convalescing at Gettysburg may reduce its immediate fire power on wavering Republicans. ! Among these are the North Dakota senators. linger and Young, who often vote with the Democrats on farm and resource' issues, particularly those involv ing public power. It would prob ably take as much party pressure to line them up against Hells Can-' yon as it would to get such South erners as Son. Harry Byrd to! vote for the bill. The additional factor leading to uncertainty is absenteeism. It is the rarest of occasions that all! M senators are on hand for any! vote, no matter how vital. So whether there will be more ab sentee Democrats than Republi cans or vice versa when the roll is called may tip the balance for or against the bill, despite all the carefully laid plans of both sides in this titanic political struggle in Congress. diseases Zenek Gives Control At a recent growers' meeting. The state charged he brought ' her to Cleveland and strangled her, to keep her from being a! Dr. Horner urged spraying and witness against him in Altoona. dusting to arrest the fungus. He He had been charged there with recommended the use of zeneb, ! contributing to her delinquency, sold under various trade names.! Slatler's court-appointed attor or of copper-lime dust. jneys said "they would file a mo- Dr. Horner also said another ,t ion for a new trial. effective method of control was to remove bottom growth which con tains the so-called "spikes" which in turn harbor the mildew fungus infection. He recommended the use of IV) to 200 gallons of spray material to the acre. a If control measures are given from the air. Dr. Horner thought dust would give better control than spray, as the 'latter is too heavy, and undersides of foliase would not be reached as readily by spray as with dust. Weekly sprayinss were also recommend ed by Horner. Mar Move Research North Dwinell said that some efforts were being made to move some of the hop research from Corvallis to the Prosser experiment station in Washington. "After all." he explained, Before you buy that car, just tell me on the phone the total cotti of the car, the financing and the insurance. Within five minutti I'll call you back and tell you what it will cost you to buy, finance, and insure the same car through my Bank Plan. Chances are, for exactly the same deal, it'll be J 100 less! I know it's hard to believa but it's worth a phone call, isn't it? Theft is obligation. h payt H Inn yar STATE FARM Agent Phone 4-2215 I I - 626 N. High Streot Another dividend from our stay-at-home Fourth ot July celebration: No bad traffic accidents. ' U.S. imports resched a new peak in the year ending June 30th last $11.3 billion. In the last ten years imports have climbed 177 per cent. This reflects revival of production abroad and continuing prosperity at home. Principal items imported were petroleum, iron ore, lead, copper, and other raw materi als. In numerous important commodities the United Stales is becoming, if not a have-not nation, at least a deficit nation. Final Try for' Disarmament Pact With Russ Among Many Decisions Faced by President By JOSEPH AND BTEWART rr. alhop --WASHINGTON Whan Preai "dent Eisenhower returns to the White House in a week or so. he find hit desk loaded high desk loaded high with all sorts of grave and press I n f decisions. I! ) . i ; Among them will be this ...IIm. fa II " nrth rnaklnr one last try , to negotiate seri ously on disar- ( :it. iw. Tb Alp. g,, -Since Andrei Gromyko's fro-"ten-faced performance at the United Nations on July third, in ' which he seemed to slam the door on any agreement which the western pew ' ers could con eeivably accept, the logical an- wer . might .seem to be no." But the .'President Is an optimist by na Tlure, and eon- ;trol of the new weapons is ' crohnbly doner x the PmMeat mm after hi re tarn, la still riatshrd. But al ready a basic approach ha bee agree: apoa. It la agreed that H l ! early la despair, and that some real advance mar still b made, provided only the hard, demonstrable self-interest of both aides la considered and all at tempt, la achieve Meal eolations Is abandoaed. In this aew appraaeh to dis armament, baile aannmp tlatM hat keen Made. Flrat, It hi tacitly recognised thai the world kaa already paaaed the point of M retnra, as lar as total control of In aew weapons Is roaeerned. A hydrogen bomb, after all. can be hidden in a hay barn, and there is absolutely no way of de tecting It, short of searching through the hay. Both this coun try and the Soviet Union have already produced great numbers of nuclear weapons, and there are plenty of hay barns and other hiding places In both countries. Se it is futile to try to negotiate the kind of control of the new weapons envisaged in the old Ba- ' ruch-Acheson plan. lhat no fnlnre Mkssollnl ar Peroa should achieve the means to threatea the grent powers wllk total rula. Preventing the emergence of a "fourth country" is obviously po litically difficult, since It involves national sovereignties. But it is at least technically feasible. Even northern colleagues that the out come of this question may affect the result of the two hot Senate election campaigns in Oregon and Washington this fall and if Sens. Wayne Morse and Warren G. Magnuson are defeated, Demo crats will probably lose control of the Senate and Southern Demo crats who now hold' the chair manships of many committees will lose these commanding posi tions of authority. But it was not until the Repub lican National Committee an nounced 10 days ago that Wash ington Gov. Arthur B. Langlir. Magnuson's challenger, was to be the keynoter of the GOP conven tion that Southerners began to realize how much the GOP is go ing to put into the effort to boost I.anglie and defeat Magnuson. And reportedly many were con verted to the Hells Canyon cause for this political reason. On the opposition side, the ad ministration, which has backed Idaho Power Co.'s venture in the Snake River, is doing all it can o stop the high dam hill. For this reason most western Republicans are splitting away from the usual bloc of bipartisan western supporters of new federal pro jects. Sen. Arthur V. Watkina (R- DIP TETjTH mnm JJettcr fcnnlisli I BY D. C. WILLIAMS Time Flies FROM STATESMAN FII.F..1 10 Years Ago July It. IMS Stewart Alwp in hia heart than any other ob- .4 'ive. - P fore his recent illness, more rvcr. the President ordered a --irtliing, root-and-branch re "view of American disarmament ; I liry. T" review has been con-,.ict-J by a high level commit ;tii, headed by apeeial Preslden--l ,, Assistant Harold Stassen and ! iiii luding representatives from - the Slate ' and ueiense iiepartv I menls and the ..Central r-nce g ncy. - ' " f Th .second aasuimptloa la thai there are, neverikelesa, at least two areas where Die hard self interest at Ike Called Mates and Use Soviet I aloa raiaclde. and where practical meaaarea eaa he takea la serve those latere!. The v first area concern Ike "loarth eoantry problem,' a phrase eolafd by lb British. It hi by a means fanelfnl la eavloage a Ivlure la which a Ha noi dictator eosild threaten both East aad West. Far there ar no longer any real atomic secrets, and H I fatally easy la torn oat intef"narlear weapons, once the neces sary mnaiiaiHHsn arc nnm. nam Ir, H la argned. H Is a mark I a very limited global inspection HIBRMnW1 system wouia detect tne building of a new nuclear installation, Some sort of freeze on nuclear production, at a given cutoff date, with inspection under Uni ted Nations auspices, is one ap proach being considered. Another area of mutual interest i some form ot mutual insurance against surprise attack. In this area, the Soviets have already shows tome willingness to nego tiate seriously their proposal 'for limited ground Inspection is considered more than a prop, ganda gesture. And despite Gro myko. the Stassen group believes that hope for progress' on this front should not be abandoned. Varloaa way ot making "one fast try" on disarmament have been dloraaaed hy the 8tasea group secret approach throned regalar diplomatic channels. Ill despatch at a special Presiden tial emissary la Moscow, or a ma)ar new Initiative ky Ibe Pres ident himself. Ilka kit "atom far pene" (Coatinaed from page I.) tha.t Democrats were less loyal1 than Republicans, and Sen. H. I Alexander Smith. Republican of : New Jersey, took the floor to de-, nounce the implication of the ' pamphlet and disavow (he accu-, sation. , This method ot campaign ing is old, commonly called the "smear." It consists in linking the opposing candidate or party with something or some one heinous. Democrats kept running against Herbert Hoover long af ter 19:12. Republicans propped up Alger Hiss for a Democratic tar get through several campaigns. The theory is that the side or snide attack .may be more fruit ful than a dirVct attack; and ot tcn it is! ( Senate Republicans should re call that memorandum and quit trying to brand the Democratic party as a tool of the Commu nists. Surely they can provide ammunition with greater validity than that for the coming cam paign. Besides, in the present irJlux in Moscow Khrushchev might decide lo throw his arms around Ike. 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "Did she danre any while she was there?" --- 2. What is the correct pro nunciation of "mesmerize"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Nonchalance, nuptial, nicntine, nonpareil. 4. What does the word "dissi dence" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with lo that means "a kind of eyeglass"? Answers 1. Say, "Did she do any danc ing while she was there?" 2. Pronounce first syllable as "mezz," not -as "mess." 3. Non pareil. 4. Disagreement. "There were signs of dissiHenee among the people." 3. Lorgnette. CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF 3715 South Commercial, Salm, Oregon AT CLOSE OF BUSINESS JUNE 30, 1956 ASSETS Cash and Due from Bankt $ 2 11,719.99 U.S. Government Securities 445,469.36 loans 333,074 31 Leasehold Improvements 23,651.97 Furniture and Fixtures 27,342.(1 Other Assets 1,943.15 Total ..! $1,070,272.36 LIABILITIES Capital $ 100,000.00 Surplus 20,000.00 Undivided Profits and Reserves 12,408.3 Total Capital Funds. $ 132,408.85 DEPOSITS J 929,809.51 Interest Collected, unearned 8,054.60 Total , .$1,070,272.36 We are pleased to publish this statement at the close of our first five months of busi ness. 1. C. PFEIFFER, President DIRECTORS: fticrWd A. Raw It moo, Chnirmn of ikfrf Owner, Rawlinion't Cptl City Laundry I. C. Pftifftr, Frtft.dent ChtMter I. Chat, Vic rVeaidnni Vict P'tdnt, Paulut Bros. Packing Co. Arthur M. (nekton, Vtc Prttidtni Prttident, Erickton't Super Marktti teynoldt Alln A Han't Hardwart Chariot A. Barclay, Adminitirativ Atttttant to City Manager, Salem Milan C. Bonifact, Owner, Aynb Motors Cob urn L. Grabanhort, Puriw Grabcnhortl ftrot.. Realtor Jarrtct L. Payne, Architect William Schlitt, Pretident, Sanitary Service, Inc. YOUR INDEPENDENT 100 SAIEM-OWNED BANK Ceylona Buddhist fishernirn in list thry never kill anything, not fvrn insects, thry hist take Ihp' On el O Wrii of edvrtiimnn) to omwer your questions obout Mount Crtt Abbyf Salem, Ortgon i .ill Frank Rrnvvn nhvciml nHitra. lion director at Parrish junior (ish of -walrr- high school and known as an mil standing developer of basketball players, hasnevered his connec tions with Ihe local school sys tem. Brown began his coaching career 23 years ago at Ihe old McKinley junior high. I - :: !' I ' -V JQfJ ,i IBTTDOWD FOR I YOUR LOVED ONES The wnrk ef the rammlttea, Ihe Interrsl a Ihe (Uriel ralna t,!.!tk U! repart 1U flaaiaga le aa el the tallest Stairs ar Brttaia In view of Gromyko's speech, and Niklla Khrushchev's scorn ful remarks about Western dis armament plans, Ihe last try aeema very likely to come lo nothing. But the President, being the kind of man he is, will prob ably decide to make It all the aame. And In View of the bleak alternatives, no doubt It la worth making, (CnpvrlfM 1M, Nsw York Herald Tnbunn Inc.) 25 Year Ago July It, Itlt Paul Franklin of Salem was awarded first place in the senior division of Oregon for his Napo leonic coach entered in the Fish er Craftsman guild contest. As a reward Paul will get a free trip to Detroit. $.V in gold and the, chance to enter his model in the national contest. 40 Yrart Ago July II. 111 ' Charles L. McNary of Salem, former justice of the Oregon Su preme Court, Is Ihe new chair man of the Republican Slate Cen tral committee of Oregon. I 3v'(S)rf26nfI(alt3raan Prion S-Stll Subscription Riira B rsrrirr in clllrsi , Osih. only is per mo fisUr snd nundiT MS per m kiinrtsv oniv JO week ' JL&t snsll ana aalyi tin lavanrii Anyhr In U I I M per ma f ?S six mo I 00 vear Bt null nH sat tuBay Mn srivanrsi In Oti no . I I lo per mo I M six ma It 10 rtr In Dl ouialO , Orsion .... 1.41 par m. Menintr AiHH Burrau ! rimlatlMI Barns n( Aaorllilns ANfA Orrmn Nrwspsswt Flkllshort Anorlatlen , 1( ASvirlmni sKarssanusmsi Wr-f)rlfllla Cf. Ik Hl Hollula New York rhlraia an franelarn Dttraft Everlasting care, beauty and permanence is as sured through an endowment fund established in trust for Mount Crest Abbey. This fund is irrevocably set aside in trust, and assures con tinued care1 which includes maintenance of buildings, furnishings, gardens and necessary utilities. Present maintenance is being paid entirely from current operation, leaving all endowed income to further increase the fund. CENTRALLY LOCATED in the Willamette Valley, Mount Crest Abbey is situated on the crest of the heights in South Salem. Turn west at Hoyt Street off South Commercial (Hwy. 99E). tainiTe sNts nunsie tna smib FREE INFORMATIVE BOOKLET VJ You ir invited 10 visit Mount Crest Abbey. Please phone Silera ' j-MfM or S-S133 to make in appointment for an instructive, tour. No obligation, of course. Out-of-town residents, please call collect Wc are open seven days a week. . ATn' V ro&b 7s-! bid CREMATORIUM and MAUSOLEUM If UnoW Dfracrfon ! Salem Mausoftwm nW Cmmoforhim, Irrc. fHONI SALEM 3-S4M IF NO ANSWER PHONE 3-51 M TURN WEST ON HOYT ST. FROM SO. COMMERCIAL, SALEM, OREGON '