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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1957)
4 Statesman, Salem, Ore., Monday, January 21, 1957 GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty -5f - mKp Favor Sways Vs. So Fear Shall Aue." From Flnt Statnman. March M. Is5l Statesman Publishing Company CHARLES A. SPRACL'E. Editor & Publisher s. Published ovary mnrntng. Rmineftt nfitr 26 o Korlh Church Bt Salem, pro, Tel. EM 4-ill ntared it'tht postofflca at Salfm, Of . aa arrnd !.' mallar undar act o( ComrtM March 3. II. I V' Member Associated Press Tfco Aainrlatrd Prru li entitled exrluitvrle to the u.a lor republication nf all local neui printed in thi neupaper. Inauguration Day Today Dwight D. Kiscnhower will formally be inaugurated as President of the United States to succeed himself. Great preparations have been made in the national capital for tile proper observance of this important cere monial. The cath-taking will occur at the his toric East front of the national capital. The parade will flow down Pennsylvania avenue in accordance with custom. Crowds will line the streets and fill the nooks and crannies of observation points along the route of march, thus showing their respect for the man who occupies the highest office within their power to give. Resident Eisenhower resumes the duties of his office in a time of strain znd apprehen sion. The sunshine of improved international regions proved only an interlude when cltjijds again gathered and the world again grew tense. The overwhelming vote he re cc&wd last November is testimony to the love anfl"" veneration the people have for Dwight Eitjhower and their confidence in his lead ership. The hope is universal that his strength of ody and mind may be preserved and that u rutty his guidance our nation and the world will progress in wellbeins, and in mutM un derstanding and goodwill. Make-up of Forestry Board Because a substantial part of its timber land is managed as a state forest by the State Board of Forestry, Clatsop County has a con tinuing interest in the work of that board. Its Umber, being readily accessible and of high quality was among the first stands to be logged on a big commercial scale and so its lands were among the first to be cut over. It was these cutover lands which the county had to foreclose on for non payment of taxes that were turned over to the state under a '1941 act. Lack of timber has reduced the number and production of forest products in dustries in the county. The biggest owner of private timberland is Crown Zellerbach whose manufacturing plants are located outside the county. Hence the concern of Clatsop County citizens for early and full realization from the state forest lands, not only for the in come that would go to taxing districts, but also for the economic benefit to flow from the harvesting and processing of the timber. Out of this background of interest the As torian Budget calls attention to the composi tion of the State Board of Forestry. Of its nine members six are nominated by special groups: The Grange, the Oregon Forest Fire Association, the West Coast Lumbermen's As sociation, .Western Pine Association, Wool Growers' Association and one by the West ern Oregon Livestock Association and Oregon Cattle and Horse Raisers' Association. The three other members are the governor, the dean of the school of forestry at OSC and one from the 'Association of Oregon Counties. The Astorian Budget calls this composition "ridiculous" and adds it is particularly so because Clatsop and Tillamook with the larg est acreage in the state forests have no rep resentation. It urges that Governor Holmes and the Legislative Assembly "give some at tention to a board which so openly repre sents the interests' rather than the welfare of the people." The Statesman previously has pointed out the representative lor "unrepresentative") na ture of the State Board of Forestry. A re view of its composition is indeed timely. How ever, we do not believe it can be truthfully asserted that state forest interests have suf fered under this scheme or selection. In the case of Clatsop County the state has adminis tered its trust with care, selling off parcels of merchantable timber, carrying out exten sive replanting of forest species and fighting the fire menace in the difficult Tillamook burn. We think there should be a reorgani sation of the board and dropping of the pro vision for nomination by private organiza tions. If that would be a signal for replace ment of members at each change of govern ors and then replacement of the state forester the plunge into politics could be disastrous. Dave Beck Ducks the Stand Dave Beck, president of the Teamsters In ternational is just back to his home in Seattle from a tour of Europe. While he was able to make the grand tour, he told a Senate sub committee he "couldn't come'' to be interro gated because of the advice, of his doctor. Frank W. Brewster, Hock's right bower on the West Coast, took the stand, but he re fused to produce the books of the union and to answer questions of the senators. Other teamster representatives took shelter behind the Fifth amendment. The Senate subcommittee, headed by Sen. McClcllan of Arkansas, is encaged in an in vestigation of the handling of union funds. Numerous reports have come of mishandling, of looting of trust funds or of union treasur ies by the officers running the unions or their cohorts. In New York a gang got a charter for a local union which they proccded to ex ploit and then to milk its treasury. In the West the inquiry Is pointed at the job of building Dave Beck's fine house in Seattle. Suspicious that union funds went to pay the contractor the latter was called but backed off from testifying. This is the house the union later 'bought ' and presented to Beck. The teamsters' attorney advises the repre sentatives not to testify. Claim is made that the subcommittee lacks proper authority; and that would be determined if the committee cites the recalcitrant witnesses for contempt. In any event the teamsters have been hostile, using every trick in the book to get out of testifying This obduracy needs to be cracked. The workers themselves deserve to have the facts spread out. They can't get them now. for ?ny member who rebels against the hierarchy would lay himself open to union "discipline." I'nion funds are indeed trust funds, not slush funds for officers to dip into. Unions have grown in power and in wealth. Some are very laggard in adding responsibility to power. This whip-cracking in Washington is needed to enforce hone;ty through publicity in the management of union funds. "Is merely clnim; duty, comrade mamma! . . , Was catching him try ing to slip ac ross Ixmtcr! . . ." Congress to Face Problem Of Senior Citizens Bureau Savings Bond Interest The treasury department is considering raising the interest rate on savings bonds which at three per cent for 10-year holding is below the going rate. In fact the govern ment has been abused for some of its adver tising of savings bonds because of the deteri oration in purchasing power of the money in vested over the term. It is true that in spite of the accrual of interest, a bond has less buying power than the original sum. How ever, there is this difference: Money spent 10 years ago has no present buying power, whereas the bond does represent buying power. What the government ought to do is to work harder to prevent the erosion ef the value of money. Its liberal spending policies before and during and after the war have contributed to the lowered worth of the dol lar in the marketplace. By A. ROBERT SMITH Statesman Correspondent WASHINGTON. .January 20 Creation of a Bureau of Older I'er--on in the federal govern ment In Innlr after the most f" pressing prob lems of the na t i o n's senior citizens is ex pected to be one of the is sues to come up before the . Pith Congress has written its ! complete record. Two Northwest lawmakers rU'P Don Masnuson iD-Wash.) and Mep. Kdtlh Green H)-Ore ) ire among the sponsors of leg islation that would establish for the first time an agency devot ed exclusively to finding solu tions to the varied problems fac inj older persons. The Eisenhower administra- ' '13 A. Rokt. Smith JtP mnm King Saud is lying to Washington for con ferences with government officials. They will discuss the Far Eastern situation, also the renewal of the U. S. treaty permitting use of air base in Saudi Arabia. King Saud remains friendly to the USA (and the U. S. oil inter ests!, but he is apt to raise the ante for rent on those bases. He probably will hold to the present ban on entry of U. S. Jews as mem bers of our armed forces, which is galling to our government to concede. The Arab king is in position to apply the squeeze, and has a reputation for not hesitating to do it. Construction figures for 1956 do not hold up the theory now being cultivated by poli ticians that Oregon is in a state of decline. For overall volume of construction, Oregon matched Washington at 12 per cent increase. Idaho was up nine per cent, and British Co lumbia, where business is quite active, the gain was 14 per cent. For residence construc tion the drop in Oregon was only 3 per cent. That in Idaho and Washington was 20 per cent and in B. C. 5 per cent. Maybe we are not as sick as the political diagnosticians report. 'Young, Impatient Men' in Command of Arab World May Spell Danger to West By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Ferrfgn News Aaalyat Running through much of to day's comment on the Middle Fast is the theme it amou"ts to a wishful thnufht that President Gamal Abdel Nas?er can and pos Siblv will he toppled as the ruler of Egypt. That could be. but what comes after Nasser? The danger to Western interests might be evern greater. Passions and rivalries of the Arab East, stirred recently to the edge of explosion by events there, have brought about a condition which is little appreciated in the Western world. The Communists understand it. Peculiar to countrirs like Syria. Egypt, Iraq and to some extent all the rest nf the Arab Kast. is the retirement to the background of moderate political forces and old guard leaders. The reason seems to be that these forces re un willing to take the risk of leading. In today's situations, even if the opportunity were there for them to grasp, they could hardly come to the fore without outiide help. The young, inexperienced and impatient men of the Arab East are steadily moving in. Among them, often, are the extreme young men of the Arab world's small educated segment. There is a gap, between the young men and the old experi enced leaders, and it leaves open the way for a real lunatic fringe to attempt filling whatever politi cal vacuums there may be. Nasser may be guilty of the dic tatorship charge against him. In deed, in a country like Egypt, one could hardly expect order today under anything but an authoritari an government. What really mat ters is the direction in which that government has been going, will ingly or through the force of events. The promises of the Egyptian revolution oi 192 are fading away. Already Nasser's Revolution Coun cil, upon which the United States once pinned high hopes for a forward-looking Egyptian national ism, has been pared down to a half-dozen men under Nasser. The Revolution Council men, all formerly from the ranks of the army, have grown somewhat in political wisdom. They are aware of the danger to Nasser's position inherent in the Sues Crisis. They know he suffered a defeat. The public thinks the opposite and Nasser is both a hero and martyr Sa (for the time being, because no body who knows will dare say what is the truth of Egypt's po sition, u Rulers and many a politician in other Arab countries would like to be rid , of Nasser. Actually, , some of them plotted to get rid of him. But in this respect, the Briiish and French did Nasser a big favor. Talk about an Impending fall of Nasser seems I to overlook the potentialities. If the takeover were by force, it could come only from i extreme elements. The moderates ' already have demonstrated their I unwillingness and their fear of "the streets," whose mobs wor- hp Nasser as a hero in he Arab world. The result likely would be I more chaos in the Middle East. j (Continued from page 1) certain flood control works: Ama zon creek in Eugene, two in Mult nomah County, one at Pendleton. Hydro dams now under con struction get . gobs of money: $19 million for The Dalles, $18 5 million for Ice Harbor, with smaller sums for Cougar, and Hills Creek in Oregon. Liberal allowances were made for Bon neville Power administration and new transmission lines. What does stand out is no pro visun for work on John Day dam. This is desired in order to insure an abundance of electricity in 10 and after. However priv ate companies have olfered to finance the power costs of this project, but the boosters of feder al power object. It also looks as though the bureau of the budget has killed the Reclamation Bureau proposal for a high dam at Pleasant Valley nn Snake river, to flood out Hells Canyon site. Secretary Seaton was said to be inclined to endorse this proposal, but hasn't done so publicly. Omission of reference to it indicates disapproval by the budget bureau and the White House. It would have been "eat ing crow" to reverse the -administration stand on hydro de velopment, even if Northwest districts did elect Democrats. The power issue will come up again in the revived Morse, et al , bill for Hells Canyon. This is in with 27 signers. Again it will have a hard row to hoe in Con gress and presumably would meet a presidential veto if passed. To sum up: the President's budget is very generous jn its recognition of needs for North west development. However the political stalemate continues as the administration withholds ap proval of new hydro starts and our Democratic delegation vetoes any partnership with private utilities either at John Day or in Idaho. Now we shall have ei'her a test of "mandates" or a revision thereof. Time Flies: From the ' Statesman Files 10 Years Ago Jaa. It, 1M7 Strange as fiction is (he case of Joseph Hettwer, veteran of the Pacific and blind for more than a year, whose parents. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hettwer of ML- Angel, received word that an accidental falljiad restored his sight. 25 Years Ago Jaa. 11, 1K For the third time in two years the, Sehreiber building, housing the Stalt cafeteria and Hju'an s cigar store, next to the Masonic Temple, caught fire. The first fire damaged the occupants around $7,000. 40 Years Ago Jan. II, 1117 The marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Steiwer took place in Seattle. The couple will make their home at the Steiwer ranch near Jefferson. Mrs. Steiwer was Miss Janet Gray of Seattle and a granddaughter of the late gov ernor Chadwick. i HDrffionGrjililtsmai Phona CM 4-MU flaooriiptlon Rales By rarriar In ciuaai Daily only ... lis par mo ' Daily and Sunday IMS par mo Sunday only .11 waafe By mall Dana and laadayi I in advancal In Orrgoa 11 ID par mo" 1 90 ii mo 10 50 year By mall Sanday only: 'In advam-a) Anywhtra In US. I SO par mo 1 7ft fix mo, 100 Mar In ti l. oulaldo Oragon II U par mo. Mambor Aadll Bureau of Clrcalanna Buraao of artm AMPA Oreffao ftawapaaar Pnbllshara Aeeoelatlae Advartlalni ftenraeaolaliveai Ward-r.rlffltk Ca tan rranriar patron Waal Mallidaa (a Hw fork Cklrato tion has indicated it Is opposed In creating a new bureau for this purpose, believing that the established aencirs which ready are workins in this field tan do the jnh. Last spring th" president created a Federal Council on Agir.j to try to im prove the effectiveness of exist ing government agencies, each of which hs a representative nn the council Its chairman is Mar ion B. Kolsom, secretary of Health, Education ard Welfare. The adminiitralinn'i attitude was voiced by Aitant Secre tary Itoswell Perkins, whose Idea the enuncil was. He nld he thought It wrong to create a bu reau which would hair the psy chological effect of gathering un der its wing everv person when he reached a stage in life oherr he wai considered "older" and no Innerr capable of being a part of the mainstream of American life. The issue is beeominj more imoort.in! because of the inerens ins number of otdrr p-nnns in this cot-ntry. There are nov aboi-t I4'i million persons in this country. ho have reached or passed the ase of 6o, and the number is rapidly increasing, thanks to medical science which is lengthening the life expect ancy. This indicates why mem bers of Congress are growing more and more responsive to the nerds and desires of the nation's older persons, who as a grmm represent a very sizable voting bloc. Whether or not Conrrrai and the Eisenhower administration get together on this Issue, con tinued a'tcntlon will be given to Improving conditions tor eldrr persons in other ways. The Labor Department recent ly started a acw program to help older womra gala employment af'er it found that about one third of the unemployed1 la this country are regarded as nld-r women. The Civil Sc-vlce f mlssina has taken the lead In breaking down the age harrier to rmnlnrmrnt by eliminating the age fxc'or In hlr'n considera tions for federal Jnbj. The Housing and Home Fi nance Agency is working out new methods of encouraging con struction of housing designed es. pciallv for older persons, with such features as non-skid floors and strategically placed ' hand grip "round bathtubs and show er stalls. t'nder a housing bill passed last year HHFA hai alto bee working out financial terms to permit more older persons on limited Incenes to purchase modest, pleasant homes. This is to rope with the situation today which finds It per rent of the men and It per rent of Ihe wom en who have reached U not hav ing homes of their owa la which to enjoy their years of retire- OSC Paper Industry Training Up CORVALLIS, Jan. 20 (SpeciaD- . Oregon State College is expected to become a national leader in training graduates for the pulp and paper industry as a result of an enlarged program now under way. Expansion of teaching and re search programs in pulp and pa per chemistry has been prompted by the tremendous demand f o r trained workers, especially in the North-vest where the industry is making its- greatest growth. Dr. F.rvin E. Kurth. professor ! of forest products chemistry at the i college, is in charge nf the new program, which operates within the chemistry department and the Science Research Institute. At present, OSC is one of only four schools offering , graduate work in the field of pulp and paper. It has been estimated that the industry needs some 7.000 new .graduates each year wilh the cur rent supply only a fraction of that total. A new $2,.')00 research fellowship in pulp and paper chemistry was ! established this fall at OSC by the j Cn wn Zellerbach foundation to help encourage outstanding science students to maior In pulp and paper chemistry. The founda tion also has had a I1.0X) under graduate chemistry scholarship at OSC for the past three years. Two $200 undergraduate scholarships for pulp and paper students are offered by Longview Fibre Co. The program at OSC was streng thened this fall also when Dr. F. E. Brauns, retired head of the i lignin department of the Institute 'of Paper Chemistry, Appleton. Wis , joined the OSC staff as a consultant in forest products , chemistry research and instruc tion. Brauns is a world authority i on lignin research. I Construction of the proposed new physics-chemistry building in the ; r.ear future will prov'rie additional teaching and research facilities to he'p meet the needs of the North west pulp and paper industry '56 Seen as Year of Progress For Oregon's Highway System The year ISM was one of sub stantial progress in improvement of Oregon's highway system, ac cording to a summary nf activi ties frrom the State Highway Commission. Improvement projects during the year were designed to re duce distance and travel time and sdd to safety and convenience of motorists. Figures showed that construe- 2 Mt. Angel Youths Hurt In Accident SILVERTON. Jan. 20 Two Mt. Angel boys were in serious con dition in Silverton Hospital Sun- : day, as a result of a two - car ; collision on slippery Route 214. a ; mile and a half west of West i Woodburn, Saturday. I Jack Schmitz, 1&, suffered a rup tured bladder, broken pelvis, and several other injuries, a physician 1 at the hospital said. Leltoy Fessler, 17, sustained a : possible skull fracture, several head cuts, and possible additional injuries, the doctor said. j Woodburn police reported the accident occurred at 4:35 p. m. j when Fessler's car containing Schmitz as a passenger collided i with an auto driven by Marvin Ka- hut. 19, of Woodburn. The Fessler machine then bounded into a ditch. Schmitz and Fessler, who were taken to Silverton Hospital in an t ambulance, were both on the hos pital danger list Sunday evening. : Schmitz in the more serious con dition. Kahut did not require hos pital attention. tion work done and paid for dur-lin highway construction, ing the year amounted to $29! Among projects comnleled dur. million. Construction work under ing the year was paving; work oa contract but not done by the end i 24-nulc section ol the i o,. j. of the year will approximate $23 Salem expressway known as the million R. H. Baldock Freeway. A tntal Out of the $2 million expend 2 T rrsiloss of four lano hiKhway ed on construction during the! have been completed be. wren year, $5 m.llion wa. bond money, ! Battle Creek Junction and Ilia $12,200,000 was federal aid, $U,-h" u ( 0,ml1','IH" "f !''"'1. unit 200,000 was state funds and $tO0,- ' lh,ff ' of '"j18 w'" fr,,v"i1f 000 was eountv funds used in the 1 divided route from Bat- matching of federal-aid on coun- l,!(,l ri'('k ''""""I s North ty roads Jeflerson Junction. . ' . , , . . Other projects included rad- JLnn"SS'0n rp0r. eA thal line and paving of a section of $12,600,000 was used m the main- he W(,odburn-rtacad Highway taining of 7.800 miles of state ; jn cb(.kamas t ounlv at a cM of highway system. Maintenance, im- lS37 00. (fading, of t',e Sublimity provement and expansion of state (;u fuh.siout' free': action of parks cost $1,150,000. f North Samialn Highway at a The commission said parks inmost of $2C2,00'J; ending of Wal the system now number 162. An iacc Bridce-Sheriiian u-vt of Saf- estimated 7,500,000 persons vis-jmon River Highway in Polk and iled the parks during 1936. Progress on Bond Program Indicative of progress made to Yamhill counties, cost $70fi,70;i; Grading and paving I'nion Street- P.ellevue Street section (Salem) Rites Monday For Schulson Statesman N'ewi Bervlca DALLAS. Ore , Jan. 20-Serv-ices for Antone Schulson. 63, who was killed here Friday in a saw mill accident, will be 3:30 p.m. Monday in Rollman Funeral Chapel. The Rev. M. M. Mohr will officiate. Burial will be in Dallas Cemetery'. He leaves his widow, Mrs. Doris Schulson, Dallas; brother, John Schulson, Salem; four sisters, Mrs. Dora Rosenau and Mrs. Jennie Bottenberg, both of Dallas; Mrs. Anna Kittleson, Milwaukee; and Mrs. Sophia Payne, McMinnville. Better English By D. C. Williams 1. What is wrong with this sen tence? "Only three or four people were present when I finally got to the meeting." 2. What is the correct pronun ciation of "chignon "? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Idollatry, ignomini ous, illiterate, idiomatic. 4. What does thi word "solicit ous'' mean? 5. What is a word beginning with ro that means "existing at birth"? ANSWERS 1. Say, "Only three or four PKPSON'S were present whea I finally ARRIVED at the meet ing." 2. Pronounfe sheen-yawn, accent first syllable. 3. Idolatry. 4. Full of desire; eager. "He is solicitous of the good will of "cry person." 5. Congenital. Mrs. Vogl of Salem Dies Mrs. Theresa Vogl. a Salem resident 36 years, died about mid-1 night Saturday at her home, Brooks Ave. She was 87. j Born at Koltdting, Bavaria, Ger many, on Dec. 23. 1869, she came to the United States about SO years ago with her husband, the late Carl Vogl, and 10 children. They lived in Wisconsin for 14 years before moving to a farm between Salem and Silverton. Mrs, fogl moved into Salem shortP after the death of her husband K years ago. She was a member of St. Vin cent de Paul Catholic Church. She leaves seven daughters. Mrs. Frances Heine. Mrs. Anna Keen, Mrs. Marie Kircher and Mrs. Elizabeth Dornbuch, all of Salem; Mrs. Theresa Martin, Rainier; Mrs. Sophie Gronn, Clatskanie; Mrs. Grace Rubeck, Hillsboro; seven sons, John, Joe, Carl, George, Frank and Herman Vogl, all of Salem, and Bill Voc', Toledo; two brothers, Frank Raith in Pennsylvania and Louis Raith in Wisconsin, and one sister in Germany; 35 grandchildren and 29 -great-grandchildren. Arrangements are pending at Rigdon's Mortuary. date on the $72 million bond pro-! i silvrr 'rcrl iilh Hifiway, gram authorized by Leg.slatures $-61,000. of 1951 and 1D53 is the fart that. 1 AmonR Protects partially con as of the end of 1956, $71,800,000 ,'tructed in 19oH and due for corn had been put under contract and I P1''1.10" ,n 19r'7 ls K"ding and $70,700,000 had been paid out onlPav,l,nK "f the D!'ll,h c'rner-!!.ek-work performed jre?ll section of the Willamina- .u , .. ,, .. Salem Highway in Polk County, The Mr,ftrt vatit mi, u uri i. 1 . ..." Jt , . . . , . ft.".. . tying progress has been made on j the state's program of federally aided construction work, cost of which is shared 60 per cent by 1 the federal government and 40 per cent by the state. The total ol Ihe three-year program for which federal-aid ahd state funds were currently available (fiscal years 1955, 1956 and l!)57j amounted to $49 700,000. Of this' amount, $49 million or 98 per cent is completed or under con tract, and $.17 million has been expended for work performed. Expenditures on 1 1 d e r a l aid : work during 1956 amount to $2h-; 700.000. Collections of cost of which is placed at $370,- 400. People 60 to 80 APPLY f OR OLD LINE LEGAL RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE If you are under R0, you can still apply for a $1,000 lite in surance policy to help take care of final expenses without bur dening y.Air family. You can handle the entire transaction by mail with OLD federal-1 AMERICAN of KANSAS CITY. kind. No ia auring tne year amounted to No obligation of anv $14,500,000, of which $12,200.000 ' one will call on you! represented federal-aid in high-1 W rite today for free inferma way construction and $2,300,000 tion. Simply mail postcard or represented federal aid in the 1 letter (giving age) to Old Ameri payment of principal on bonds, ! can Ins. Co., 3 W. 9th, Dept. the proceeds of which were u H .T.'3SB, Kansas Cit' . Mo meat. The problem la basically became the average Income of older couples Is $I.SM anally. , Sen. Richard L. Neuberger D Ore.) has said he will try to get tlv age for women to receive social security benefits reduced to 60 years. Congress last ses sion dropped ti from 65 to 62. Other proposals are expected in the weeks ahead, as Congress pays increasing attention to con cerns of senior citizens. 6it THIS 'N THAT about your everyday insurance problems PT QIESTION: What Is the insurance which cavers the extra expense Involv ed In maintaining a temp orary home If your own borne is destroyed by fire? ANSWER; You probably refer to Additional Living Expense insurance which provides money to cover extra expenses in curred because of fire or other insured loss. Better yet, you should attach the new "All Physical Loss" form to your dwelling policy which automatically provides a certain per centage for "extra" expenses, you'll address your own insurance questions to this olfit e, ue'll try to five you the correct answers and there will he no charge or obligation of any kind. 1 , J INSURANCE 373 N. Church Phona EM 3-fllt Scio Youngster's Rites on Saturday Staleaman ffaoi tervlra SCIO, Jan. 20 Graveside serv ices for 4-year-old Michel Young, who choked to death Saturday while eating, will be, 1 p. m. Mon day in Shelburn Cemetery. He wa the son of Mr. and Mrs. 0. D Young. The boy, who had experienced difficulty in swallowing several times since birth, apparently strangled on food, according to Linn County Coroner Glenn Huston. ! .1 A 1 N rtal Bargains wfcilt luYY 9 you htlp vt clear our j V1' 1 Jfock. I I ff Wa Give &C II I f V j 9 Groon Stamps I I J ta" wisaV Ju ' n Capitol Shopping Contor -....- . ' ' - V l ijii ',.t .i ' jjjj Pi! Protect 1 1 pjf Now against HIHl jj! J jjjj ' Polio - JJjW j ill According to Studies conducted by twenty-two state and New York City, polio vaccina reduced the Incidence of the d incase from 29.2 casee per 100,000 population among those not Immunized to 6.3 caaea among those who had been immunized-a reduction of 78 percent. Don't take thancea. Provide maximum reoiatance sgainat polio for yourself and your family. Be immunized. See youf physician today. CAPITAL DRUG STORE 405 Stat St. l7ChemeketaSt. Wt Give JMf Grcea SUnpa i it IS ill nut isilllIlSIIiliiilli !!!!!! h ijij fjiii mi Hi ii i! U ! ilililH tlil if i UK! m 1 Hi! I'iiiiill.H!