The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, December 02, 1956, Page 4, Image 4

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    r. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore.rSunH Dec 2, '53
rconC30tafe$naa
v. t
"No Facer Stcoys Vs. No Fear Shall Awt."
from First SUteiman, March It, 1851
Statesman Publishing tompany
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor k Publisher
Puhlihd evrr mrnln. Buairww offleo Me
Korirt Church S'-, fciin, On. Tlphon 4-tSU -
In'rri t In poitofnce at Salem. Or., aa ,crnd
mtir wndrr acl o t-onT Mu t. U.S. . "
3 Mrmber Associated Press
Tha AiMx-fX"! Prn M tntitna exeiuaivalr to the Mo
lot republication nf local tw print.
iMi nwprr. t
No Governor's Mansion in Oregon
Publication of the news Item that Governor-elect
Robert Holmes had rented a home
in Salem for occupancy during his coming
two-year term, stirred two editors to com
ment ori the need for an executive mansion
in Salem. The Astorian Budget, published in
Holmes's home town, says that Oregon is "re
miss" in not providing an official home for
the jotfernor. It points out that' most states
do hire residences for their governors, main
tained at public expense, and that it is an im
position on the governor to require him to
provide such quarters out of his own pocket.
The CorvalMs Gazette-Times was also alert
ed by the same news. Editor Ingalls' recites
the tenancies of various governors from
Lleier on down to Governor Smith who pur
chased a home which presumably he- will va
cate - and sell after he retires from office.
The fc-T takes note of Oregon's financial wor
ries (which in the past have put to sleep vari
ous legislative proposals for a mansion), but'
it asks the Legislature "to seriously consider
this problem."
The G-T is correct In Hs comment that
most private residences which can be rented
or purchased are not suitable for the official
receptions which a governor must hold. It
goes tni to say: ' . , ' 'i
"If anything ii to be done it should be the '
construction ef a home built especially for the-;
. function hich It is to aerve, -There should be ' ,
amp'e living quarters and privacy for the fam- .
ily as well as enoueh room for the social func-
fjord the Job requires.
"The Capitol Planning Commission, which
wa$ created by act of the 1949 legislature for
the purpose of establishing and effectuating a
lori-ran; plas of development of the capitol
area in the city of Salem, will pose as one of
Us questions whether or not space-should be
. set aside for a Governor's Mansion within the
Capitol area."
With such a push, we may fee sure the next
Lej!s!ature will have this item for consid
eration. Once before when Governor Snell
had to move during his term, an appropria
tion Jot an executive mansion failed by a
narrow margin, being caught in the down
draft at the session ending. ",.'.-.,
CC course, since Oregon changes governors
with preat frequency, perhaps the solution .
wou!.i be for the incumbent to arrive in a
trail:" cr "mobile home." His wife couldn't
hold r .any large receptions there, . but , they
won' 1 have a place to sleep at any rat, and
con! 1 move on easily after the next election.
Ti l arguments en this question ire not
all cn. one side. The family needs of govern
ors v ry, a !o their Interest in the social ao
tivit s which often attach to political per-it..-
-s. Health considerations affect their
TT3r r of living. In these days much en-.
t r; ins Is done at hotels. Mrs. Elmo Smith
f r t ample held "a formal reception at a
lira! hotel where the accommodations were
.. While Oregon provides no mansion,
Eive the governor an expense allow
hich may be used to take care of such
it d
obligations as fall to the
know one wiTe of an ex-governor who
very strongly tV.e state should provide .
"e rc.Mdence for the governor, so he
1 t. t have to house-hunt when he comes
m. "U'e know an ex-covcrnor, however,
rrmr.ins s'omcthine of a skeptic on this-
m. in view of chancing conditions of
n living. In the largest cities the big
a t
tt
r.n
r
vv3 From Syria, Iraq Means Nasser
urcdng AH British Power in Mideast
; Fy JOSEPH a4
STEWART ALSOP
V r;"GTOM, Dec. 1-Fveit
P"w. Eriikh troops st.il on
I - 'lam soil. Esypfi Fre. Ab
r niil Nasser is boltly mov-
i , i to destroy the lat vea-
tiges of British
power in tha
Middle East.
: That is the real
meaning of the
confusing news
from Syria and
j Iraq.
" The basic facts
are simple
enough. Lt. Col.
A b d e 1 Hamid
' Serraj, Syria's
. ' 4 current . dicta
tor,' is Nasser's man from start
U ' i. Nurl as-Said, Iraq's
, ;,;;!ii-!ef, Is about the last
i .-ate Middle Eastern lead-"
rr oiv tii it the fiercely anti-
- ' n Sulci- ,
r K.i'iul.i, :
, v , is alio
f - r's m.in,
1 1'-. n i-i-
)'. i in J.;r- ,
c i
i Is aKo !
! Am!) ,
: i i-
) Ii tie
l r ' t.
v iv s In- t . ' on
1 ! v Ce 1
l and to which Brit-
I :s. 1'herrfore it is
5 r. 4 ohjtrtive to !im
i f .1, and to pull Iraq
'i r ' i r-ict. The So-
. ' r r . rca.'ons, share
-.i e.
' hive t!"refnre bol
r's r- crraj by
r 1 'v.V, :,.( of
. s are cr
' r x r:. t-
, s have
i r
' ! n
r ' :ii!y
i .....
holder of the
-which supports Serraj.. '
There are several Meaai avan
. able to Serraj to ateasa hit tolat
tnasiert. m4 hring old Karl Said
dawa. Iraa Is totally depeaSeat
eraaamlcally ea kts U reveaaes.
Mt af Iraa's U b earrled
la Iwa wlpeUaea whleh aais
thraugh Syria. Tbeae alpetlaea
hare heea HbUge4, and they
ara likely to stay aabaiagei aa
tU Nari la hnwsht dawa. Ira
la already befiaalag .to feel the
' pinch. . . i . '
Subversion Is another means.
There have already been anti- -Nurl
riots in Baghdad, and Nuri
has been obliged to declare mar
tial law. Both Communists and
pro-Nasser nationalists are work
ing hand in hand in Iraq against
Nuri. And the powerful Cairo
radio la another useful instru
' ment of propaganda and subver
sion. Finally, threats and hints
of threats from Nasser's power
ful friends ia Moscow are also
effective in this situation. ,
Canilder tha meaalag af the
altualioa ( tat BriUih. The all
fram Iraq aad fram Kuwait, Bah
reia and Quatar the Peraiaa
Culf are at ttieatial to Brit a la
at blood la to the hamaa bady.
The British art apenly pledged
U flcht rather thaa abaadoa the
Penlaa Golf id aaareet. Yet If
they loie their haaes la Irae aa
well at la Jordia. there it almaat
aa way they eaald prelect the
reriioa Gulf all agalatt Arab
attark. ....
a
Thus !' e obscure goings-on in ,
T'Tia and Iraq, which seem too
c, slant and unreal to most Amer
icans, amount in fact to a Joint
I"j"ptinn-Sovict r'ih to destroy
r.niain once s 4 tor all at a
fTeat power, and m at a via
ble economy.
It he beea tatd tl t fn(
p CV'irmmlst and s! f
If h ot. Put the frt t. t v
Is not tt sat rea'ly maiU r a
private mansions are being deserted as fam
ilies takt more modrtt quarters in apart
ments or the suburbs and do their entertain
ing at clubs or hotels.
Oregon does provide Its college and uni
versity heads and superintendents of institu
tions with residences, so probably It will get
around to providing one for its governor.
FHA Interest Rate Raised
Saturday the Federal Housing Administra
tion announced the permissible Interest rate
on FHA-insured homes would be raised to
five per cent .The present rate Is four and
one-half per cent. The additional one-half
per cent insurance premium remains. This
, will make the maximum interest five and one,
half per cent on. Insured loans. The rate on
housing loans to veterans remains at four
and one-half per cent maximum since it is
. fixed by law.
The change was authorized in recognition
of prevailing higher interest rates. Without
doubt the authorities hope that it will slim
ulate house. construction which has been de
creasing in recent months partly because of
the scarcity of credit it the old 'rate. ThU
will be good aewsjor lumber manufacturers
who have seen -sales drop off and prices de
cline since midsummer. . , '.',;
The government is by no means happy over
increases in interest rates. After all it Is a
heavy borrower itself. Much of its debt is
short term which means that renewals are '
. frequent and an increase In thr interest rate
take immediate effect Just now new gov
ernment note issues carry an effective inter
' est rate of a fraction over three per cent '
The budget item for interest alone will pasj
seven billion dollars in the next fiscal year.
The treasury faces . another problem in
having heavy maturities of term bonds next
year some 40 billion to be refunded. Plac
ing of these refundings will require care as
' to, timing lest the general market for credit
be upset, and care as to terms so the bonds
will be readily marketable and yet . not too
" "sweet" at cost to the government
. It is most unfortunate that Secretary of
the Treasury Humphrey wasn't able to get
farther in the funding of the accumulated
- short-term indebtedness. With' inflation again
. raising its ugly head and with new pressures
for bigger defense spending, the economy is
reaching a peril point The Federal Reserve
Board's manipulation of rediscount rates is
not a powerful enough lever to control the
whole credit structure. The outlook, there
fore, is for "choppy seas" in the world of
business and finance.
, Decline in residence construction has af
fected the lumber market Perhaps one rea
son for the former is the rise in demand for
mobile homes, built out of steel or aluminum.
Sales of these trailer homes, many of which
do little over-the-road trailing, will run to an
estimated half-billion dollars this year. Some
115.000 of them carried a price tage of around
15,000, so they are not cheap. Trailer parks
number about . 12.000 and represent as in
vestment of another half-billion dollars. So
it looks as though trailers, or mobile homes
if you prefer the term, are here to stay, even
If the units are "gone tomorrow." '
Editorial Comment
PUT CHRIST' BACK IN CHRISTMAS
The Junior chamber of commerce members are
to he' commended for selecting a religious theme
for their city-wide Christmas scene display contest
this year. Public sentiment has been growing in
recent years to again center the Christmas celebra
tion on the Nativity the birth of Jesus Christ. The
theme of this year's contest in Wood burn is another
step in the right direction. '
Santa Claus. gifts and a decorated tree are trifi.
tional parts of Christmas in this country and prob
ably will always continue. However, they have
become so overemphasized ' as to largely ever
ahadow the true religious background of the
Christmas celebration. The curtent Jaycee contest
will help point up the fact that Christmas is to cele
brate the birth of Christ first and that the other
traditional elements of the Yule season are Just
pleasant sidelines. Woodbura Independent .
i iff i ii ii iiiiiiiini i i ii 'VMvmtvwa
whit, alaee his eaatral
aad. the Sevlet eeatral starpaas
la the Middle East are prerltc
ly similar to ellmlaato all Weit
' era laterettt la the area, altl
saately toeludiag Aaaerteaa hv
teretta.
; Nasser and the Soviets are,,
moreover, in a fair way to gala
this end. for if the British aad
French jow withdraw from
Egypt, under the oddly combined
pressure of the United States and
the Soviet ttnion, Nasser will of
1 course be the cock of the Walk
throughout the Middle East De
feated utterly by the Israelis,
faced with the combined might
of. Britain and France, he will
emerge absolutely unscathed,
' without having beea even asked
to make a single commitment
- about the future of the Sues Ca
nal, the Western nations' access
to vital oil resources, Israel's
frontier, or any other import-'
ant isxue. 1
la shari, If tha British aad
French withdraw "forthwith," la
aecardaaee with the V. Sup
ported United Natloat reaatailea,
Naiaer't triumph will ha com
plete, Nurl Sald't fate will he
sealed, and the Middle East will
la the ead ga dawa the drala, as
far at Wesiera influence aad In
teretts ara concerned. It la that
not entirely enrprlting that the
British and French are new ae
riaatly considering digging la
their heelt, defying Waahlagtea
and Motraw, and refusing to
evaraato Egypt wltheut at least
aama eemmitment aa she future
ef the canal. . . . (
If they do dig in their heels
it will make endless further trou
ble, and they will no doubt be
very naughty. But since the only
official American response to the
predictable results of Nasser's
triumph is that "We'll Just have
to play it by ear," one can hard
ly blame them. X .
(CepyrlrM !
w York ktfiA Tribune Inc.)
I WISH
- r.. fxx?.
(CaaUael
against Germany, and Austria,
and the United States became in
volved ia 1917.
The Treaty of Versailles left
Austris impotent and Germany
defeated. Turkey, which had
sided with Germany and Austria,
lost much of its Asian territory
(previously its hold ea North
Africs and Egypt had been lost).
While it retained a toehold ia
Europe at Constantinople, re
named Istanbul, Hs lost Asian
territory was organised into a
number of succession states:
Syria and Lebanon under French
; protection. Iraq and Trans-Jor-daa
and Palestine under British
mandate, Saudi Arabia bad pre
viously established its Indepen
dence. To the aormal difficulties
attending the birth of the indepen
dent sations was added the estab
lishment ia Palestine, under the
Balfour Declaration of U17, of a
"Jewish National Home." This
led to .the conflict between tha
Israeli and the Arabs whose per
sistence embitters relations, be
tween toe Arab states and the
Western nations which sponsored
the new state of Israel.
. What has developed in the
Middle East is a sort of historic
parallel with that ia the Balkan
peninsula prior to tha first world
war: a break-up of former Turk
Jsh territory, the emergency of
new countries with people and
leaders little experienced in gov
ernment, with rivalries among
themselves (plus bow a common
hatred of Israel) and again the
rivalry among European nations
for hegemony in the region. This
rivalry ia accentuated by the im
mense store of petroleum under
lying the littoral of the Persian
Gulf. Added is the concern of the
United States over Russian (Com
munist) expansion and ever the
stake of its nationals in the
Middle East oil. To this complex
must be added the Sues Canal,
an essential segment of the route
of this oil to market.
This ia a lengthy recital of his
tory, but it is valuable la provid
ing background for the under
standing of this Middle East com
plex. Of a suddea now we see
' Syria and Iraq bristling at each
other. Iraq, independent aince
1932, has the most stable govern
ment aside from" monarchical
Saudi Arabia, baa been definitely
pro-British. Syria has been flirt
ing with Russia and accepting
arms from Russia. Both, how
ever, are -entMsraeL The weak
est ef the succession states ara
Syria and Jordan. They are
politically unstable. Jordan was
long sustained by Britain, but
under . Egyptian pressure. Is
breaking away from that tute
lage.. .
The Middle East has become
"balkanlzed," fragmented Into
small and hostile states. Its stra
tegic position and its oil reserves
KTime Flies
V a
FROM HTATE5MAN Fn.ES
10 Years Ago
Dee. S, IMS
Lee Domyft resigned Tuesday
as superintendent of the state
flax plant at the state peniten
tiary. , . .
25 Years, Ago
'; " Dec. I. 1931
The goal set by the Community
Services Committee in the drive
to aid the needy and unemployed
here this winter is $30,000.
A 40 Years AgoX
fc . Dee. S. 1111 V7,
' An editorial in The Statesman
supports the flax industry "ex
' periment" at the state prison and
concludes "Once fairly started,
the industry will grow from with
in itself, in fact, there will be
no stopping its growth."
1 MSY. TWISH f
0 A ;., 4
V . FORCE X
r . .
tram aa(a 1.)
make it the pawa of power poli
tics. One would expect history to
repeat itself with a succession of
border incidents end small wars
which might explode into general
warfare. United Nations offers a
barrier a moral barriero such
a development, and fear of the
catastrophe of aa atomic world
war acta as a deterrent. These
are two strands of hope.
Even the Balkan states made
.soma progress toward peace with
the passing of years. Ia 1934 Tur
key. Greece, Yugoslavia and Ro
mania made a treaty for mutual
guarantee of frontiers. After the
second world war Yugoslavia,
Greece and Turkey arrived at a
mutual understanding, which was
put tinder great strain, however,
over the conflict regarding
Cyprus. So time may act as a
mediator within the Middle East
countries and ia their relations
with the greater powers who
covet the region's riches.
Sec. Wilson
To Attend
NATO Confab
By ELTON C . FAT .
WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 un-Sec-retary
of Defense Charles E. Wit
son will bead for the North Atlan
tic Treaty Organization confer
ence in Paris a week hence. There
he will face again the question
whether the United States plans
reduction of Its forces in Western
Europe.
The question has new meaning
at this NATO meeting, for several
reasons:
1. The continuing reduction in
U.S. Army manpower.
J. The suggestions of Russia
undoubtedly for propaganda pur
posesthat she will withdraw her
forces from occupied areas if the
United States pulls its troops out
of Europe.
Remato Feasibility
J. The apparently still remote
possibility that the NATO struc
ture itself might crumble because
of tensions among its leading
members the United States on
one hand, Britain and France on
the other.
Up to now, Wilson hat Insisted
that the steadily progressing cut
in total Army manpower is 'not
affecting the combat effectiveness
of the five Army divisions in West
ern Germany. Whatever trimming
has been done in Army troops in
Europe. Wilson has insisted, has
been among service-type, support
troops, not in fighting elements.
Budget Meetings
However, Wilson leaves for the
Paris session fresh from budget
making meetings. At those meet
ings, the "force levels" of the mil
itary services for the next fiscal
year art determined. A decision
to accelerate the reduction of to
tal Army manpower could com
pel some changes id combat
strength in the five divisions as
signed to NATO forces.
At the NATO sessions, which
begin formally on Dec. 11, the
foreign ministers and defense min
isters of the member nations will
ratify troop strength plans for the
ensuing year.
The Soviet hints about a mutual
withdrawal of Russian and U.S.
troops to their own territories are
described bere as another insin
cere play of Soviet political strat
egists. Disbelief tinges any dis
cussion of the possibility that the
Western European military, alli
ance might fall to pieces.
Letter From Msrilyn
CHESTER," England, Dec. 1 (A
Jeremy Spenser, 19, graduating
from a military school here, said
among his letters of congratula
tions was one from Marilyn Mon
roe. He declined to say what she
said. Spenser recently worked
with Miss Monroe In a film she
made ia England,
MIGHT-4
. w
Cuba's Chief
Acts to Crush
Rebel Forces
. (Pletaro ea Wh-eanete Faga.)
HAVANA, Cuba, Dec. 1 un-Pres-ideot
Fulgencio Batista tonight
suspended constitutional guaran
tees in four provinces and sped
troop reinforcements to rebellious
Santiago de Cuba. -
The government insisted It had
stamped out organised resistance
of rebel civilians, but sniping
continued.
Col Maria Rubio" Bare, chief of
the Santiago Naval District, said
the frigate Macao was fired ea by
a so-caliber machine gua from a
boose ea Santiago do Cuba Bay.
The frigate Siboney was re
ported patrolling the southeast
coast off Santiago.
Reports from Santiago said a
man was shot dead by police
when be ignored a command to
halt This brought to IS the num
ber ef persons slaia la the up
rising against Batista's govern
ment yesterday.
The rebels were believed to
number about 900. They tried to
seize tne national police and mari
time police stations. Troops bow
are being sent in by air and sea
to mop them up.
Batista signed a decree suspend
ing for 4S days the constitutional
guarantees of free speech and as
sembly In the provinces of Oriente
In which Santiago is located
Pinar del Rio, Las Villas and
Camaguey.
This decree embraces all Cuba
but the provinces of Havana and
Matanzas. And saboteurs were re
ported at work in Matanzas, next
door to Havana.
Military planes were used
throughout the day in reconnais
sance ia Oriente Province, strong
hold of the rebels. The govern
ment baa named Fidel Castro, a
former student leader, as the lead
er of the rebellion. His where
abouts are not known but until
recently he had been living in ex
ile in Mexico. ,
Poriland-Salt Lake
Buses Remain Idle -
. - 1
PORTLAND. Dee 1 tm North.
west Greyhound buses on the
Portland-Salt Lake City run were
idle train today and ' eomoanv
officials said they could see no
hope of change before Monday at
the earliest. Drivers walked out
Wednesday in protest to discharge
of one of them. The company said
the man was fired because he
failed to stop at railroad cross
ings. Many Flee Commies
BERLIN, Dec. 1 Un-West Ber
lin's refugee center has registered
150,000 refugees from Communist
East Germany this year. This is
nearly 10,000 more than were
registered in the same period last
year.
C)rflonjpMatc9inai
Phona -ttll i
Sabterlptloa Rates
By eamar la cltMii
Dally only 1 St ptr ma
Dally and Sunday 1.4t ar me.
Sunday only . JO wean
By man. Oally and Saadayi "
On advance)
la Orsea ,-. fl It par ma
t SO its ma
1040 year
By man Sunday enlyi
(In advance)
Anywhere In U J I JO per mo
. t.TS ma.
' teo year
In OS. outride
Onto ' II er mo.
Member
Audit Bureau of Circulation
' Bureau at Adverttilns ANPA
Oreton liawipapor , '
rakllahera Ataoclatrea
Atvarttftfii aiprmntattTMl
Ward-onimn Co
Baa PranriiH- Detroit
M Hninday Co
Mew fork Chicago
Slow Bidding Satisfactory Prices '
Marie Milking Shorthorn 'Sale Here
By LILUE L. MADS EN
Farm Editer. The Statesmaa
' Slow bidding, but comparatively
satisfactory. prices, marked the
seventh annual aale of the Oregon
Milking Shorthora Breeders Asso
ciation held Saturday afternoon
at the Oregon State Fairgrounds.
"We would, have liked higher
orlces. of course." James. C. Ad
ams, Jefferson, salt committee
chairman; said, "but considering
prices being paid for animals in
the sale rings recently, we are nut
eomola mini. Anyway all our an
mala sold and we did not have to
take any home as has beea done
at tome recent cattle tales.
The 2 females sold brought a
total of $4,590 tor an' average of
13.
The sale was beld in the small
animal auction ring at the fair
grounds, where beat waa main
tained throughout the afternoon,
keeping bidders warm and good
natured. Wives of the cattlemen
sold coffee and waffles throughout
the three aad av half, hour. event:
"AH you can eat for 25 cents".
They reported they "broke even"
on materials, and oonaiea -tneir
time.
Oet-ef-Stale Bayers
About half of the animals went
out of Oregon, many of them to
new breeders in the Milking Short-
Police Troops
Of U N. Widen
Peace
By LEONARD LEDDINGTOtf
U.N. OCCUPIED ZONE. Egypt,
Dec. 1 UK Danish infantrymen
widened their peace zone on the
Sues Canal today and set up house
keeping under the blue aad white
nag of the United Nations.
The flag was hoisted on a 15-foot
strip of second-band lumber to de
note occupation by VJi. police of
the battle line where a cease-fire
order halted the British-French
drive jhst north of Qantara Nov. 7.
A company of ICS bhie-helmeted
Danes, which relieved British
forces west of the canal yesterday
took over foxholes of a French
Foreign Legion platoon east of the
canal today.
The Egyptians kept their. old
front-line positions. About a mile
of territory, including the U. N.
buffer sons, sow separates the
two armies.
C. N. BoadWoets
' The fid battleground ef sand
and swamp was ringed with U.N.
roadblocks to cover a sector 1,900
yards long and about too yards
wide. -
At nooa the tone waa officially
closed to all but U.N. personnel
Evea reporters from neutral na
tion were ordered out If they were
uniformed aa war correspondents
accredited to the British or French
armies.
A UJf. detachment of 28 Cana
dian engineers did aome mine
sweeping for the Danes along the
Egyptian front and came up with
three antipersonnel mines de
scribed as of Russian manufac
ture. Mines aeeret - i
"The E gyp tins don't teem to,
know exactly, or are reticent ia
telling us, where their mines are,"
said Capt Norman Henderson,
commander of the Canadian detail.
"So we're taking no chances."
The British had assured the
Danes yesterday there were no
mines in the no-man's-land ad-
iclninc tha British nositions. The
dav cleared their own minefields
t nuj i
oeiurv wiuiurawing.
The Dsnish police, commanded
by Maj. N. C. Larson, erected
. . M A . . . I
tenia ana uug cnircnraniciHa.
Some, off duty, stripped and swam
in the canal Others fished from
rowboats.
t1 . , . avrth
Vlgll T. Golden w,hl
a
-.
t . i
o03 I. Commercial $1.
er oc-xoowe- :. :-jecc-r
Zone
" ' "v ' ".Tl
"e-MinnaW,-. . .
r ' j
horn business. W. E. Eckard. Tol
edo, Wash., who bought four ani
mals, said that hs had been run
ning (0 milk cows of a cross be
tween Milking Shortnorns ana
Guernseys, and liked the cross so
well that he decided to try aome
purebred Shorthorns.
LeRoy and Myrna Sather, a cou
ple of Howell Prairie 4-H Clubbers,
each bought an animal to start out
on. 4-H projects.
Salem Auctioneer
The sale was cried by Earl GU
laspie, Salem, with James Jorgen
son, Jefferson, president of the
state club, assisting about the
grounds. Assisting Adams on the
sale committee were Charles R.
Leddy, Oregon City: Verne Bron-
son, Eugene; W. M. Merritt. ys
kims. Wash.,, snd Roger Dumdi,
Yamhill.
List of sales were: Consigned by
Harry and Thelma Throde, Che
halis. Wash- to W. L. Eckard, To
ledo, Wash., for f 263; to Mrs. Wil
liam Smetzler, Mossy noes, wasn.,
for fe, and re. Earl Srt, Hugh
son, Calif., for 7S.
By Bose Bros., Albany, to Jaroea
Jorgenson, Jefferson, for 1115.
By James C. Adams, Jefferson,
to WE. Boss. Jr., Salem, for $160.
By Harry Wicks, McMlnnvffle to
Roy Streeter, McMinnville. for
S14S; to James Jorgenson, $140.
By Paul E. Muller. Tangent, to
Oakway Farms. Tillamook, for
$170.
By Edgar P. Denning, Portland,
to T. J. Allison, NoU, for $140.
Br C. R. and C. U- Leddy, Ore
gon City, to Verne Bronson. Eo
cene, for $250; to Earl Squire,
Hughson, Calif., for $133.
By R. O. Stearns, teosnon, to
W. L. Eckard. for $265; to Bose
Brothers, for $160. v
Salens Bayers . .
By Chesley D: Tlppery, Kelso,
Wash., to Roscoe E. dark, Salem,
for $170. . - '. .
By Chris J. Jorgenson, Jefferson,
to Bose Bros., for $210; to Brace
and June Grosvener for $93.
By J. H. and M. L. Vtmce. Hal
sey, to LeRoy Salter . Salem, for
$140. . .
By C H. Farmer. Beaver, to
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Virgil T. Golden Qfirt
:-, Serving Salem and .
Vicinity as Funeral
Directors for 25 Years
Convenient lecatl.n-S. Commercial
Street on a but linedirect route te canv .
ereriet-no cross traffic fe hinder servr ' .
ces Salem's most modern funeral home '
seetlng capacity for 300. Services I, ,".J
vnur maana. ahoava. Crate S. Ooldefi
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FUNERAL SERV1CI
Oakway Farm, for $105. t
! By H. Lundqulst k Son, New
berg, to Brooknook Farms, Yam
hill, for $265; to Eckhart for UN;
to Chesley D. Tlpperary, Kelso,
Wash., for $300; to Myrna La Set
ter. Salem, for $154.
By Brooknook Farms, McMinn
ville, to Eckart, for $265; to M. H.
Gildcrsleeve, Albany, for 1215; to
Earl Squire, for $135.
By J. C. Godknecht, Dufer. to
Bruce Grosvener, for $15; to T,
J. Allison, for $135.
. By Paul E. Muller, Tangent, to
Lora B. Nix, Tacoma, Wash., for
$80,
KODArv'ftvUJ 135
CAMERA OUTFIT .
Rouni-thelock out ft for .
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For taloavwwrmy color iMet
crlap Wock-emd-wjlo a4dvrea,
tfl MW KdJotl tofty CafMMaSp
Model C, wMl Sua f3J lana,
nHwItee tywchroaliod tor Soak
Indoors end el night, apoeai I
1300 tor CKtien. FlUS nanV
Mer wWi award end Tww-edioaj
Hold cote to protect rbo comer.
WW o aril It metes!
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CAPITAL
DRUGSTORE
40S Hale St.
Corner el Liberty
We Give StC Green Stamps
. -
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Phone 4-93S7
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