4-(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Mon., April 21, '58
INdUUfldl mil) IGJ II
CHAIN LETTER
"No Favor Sways V$. s; So Fear Shall Awe."
From Ftnt Stairsmna, March 28, 1S51
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor ct Publisher
WENDELL WEBB, Managing Editor
Entered at tht poet office at Salem, Ore., M aecond
clan matter under act Of Congreee, March 3, 1179.
Published every mornlnf . Builnesa office 280
Church 'St.. NE, Salem. Ore. Tel. EM 4-M11
Member Auociated Press
The Anoclated Preaa Is entitled exclusively to the uae
tor reproduction of all local newa printed In
thii newipaper.
'Four Easy Steps
To Halt Slump'
The April Harper's has an article by Ross
M. Robertson, described as a former econ
omist with the Federal Reserve Bank, who
tackles the subject "Four steps to halt the
slump and avoid another." Here is the
stair he offers for recovery:
1. Unbalance the budget -
2. Make the Federal Reserve System polit
ically responsible.
3. Unhinge residential building from mon
etary policy. .
4. Require the Council of Economic Ad
visers to speak forthrightly.
That seems Straight out of John Maynard
Keynes, the British economist who sold pres
ident Franklin D. Roosevelt on "easy money"
and deficit spending. Most Americans pro
fess adherence to' the principle of a balanced
budget, though they do not call for a balance
every year. The Federal Reserve system was
set up as an independent body to prevent its
being "debauched" by distraught politicians.
And it is pretty hard to see how residential'
building can be divorced from the main
stream of monetary policy. As for the Coun
cil of Economic Advisers, one can hardly con
ceive of their making positive, definite pre;
-dictions ILlheyd,theyJouldofteriJbe
abused for puncturing booms.
Robertson pays his compliment to those
whose views differ from his own:
"Unfortunately far the cause of economic
stability, men in their middle years and later
the ones who are running things now learned
their economics in a day when the subject was
more than a branch of philosophy. Unless they
have made a heroic effort to keep up, the
economic principles which they absorbed are of
little use in solving today's policy problems. They
are simply articles of faith, embraced with
religious fervor, that stand solidly in the way of
responsible, adquate government action when it
is required.
That puts this editor in his place!
At a meeting of the advisory committee on
0 4c C land administration the bureau of land
management reported that prices realized on
stumpage sales this year are down about $5
per thousand from a year ago. This of course
reduces the income to the government and
the counties, but larger sales are planned for
the year, so the total may not suffer badly.
The lower cost of logs helps mills to operate
in spite of lowered prices on lumber. Busi
ness shouldn't wait on revival of the prices
of 1955-57 but set about reducing costs to
allow a safe operating margin. But one of the
pains of cost-cutting is dropping of workers
and that has a depressing effect. Eventually
though a footing Is restored and then the slide
is stopped, only to be followed, sooner or
later, by the upward spiral. Our economy still
operates in cycles.
The Statesman is glad to enroll'the Eugene
Register-Guard in its campaign for four-year
terms for congressmen. The R-G believes dis
tricts would get more service from represent
atives if they had longer terms and didn't
have to spend so much time mending fences.
Rep. Walter Norblad told us the other day
that the Senate blocks this reform, which
would require a constitutional amendment.
Senators, with six-year terms, don't want re
presentatives running against them in the lat
ter' off-years. Now to run for the Senate a
representative has to yield his congressional
seat which few are willing to do unless the
omens are very favorable. (We recommend
four-year terms for state representatives too).
Secretary of the Treasury Anderson for
sees a budget deficit of $3 billion for this fis
cal year, and possibly $8 for the next. Just
how big a deficit do the revived New Dealers
require to spend ourselves prosperous?
It must have been quite startling indeed to
hear Moscow Radio playing "The Star
Spangled Banner" the other night. It was a
recording by a military band and was played,
so the radio announcer said, in response to
requests by American listeners in Wisconsin
and Virginia.
Being completely government controlled,
Moscow radio ran no risk of criticism in its
rendition.. But the performance gives rise to'
two interesting questions. How many Amer
ican radio stations would have the Russian
national anthem in their record albums and
how many brickbats would any American
radiv station receive if it played it?
Incidentally, the Russian national anthem
is "Hymn of the Soviet Union," with words
by Sergei Mikhalkoff and S. L. Gistan, music
by A. V. Alexandroff . It is to wonder whether
anyone in Russia ever plays the anthems of
its once-independent satellites, such as the
Baltic Sea and Gulf of Finland countries like
Estonia ("My Native Land, So Wondrous
Fair"), Latvia ("God Bless Our Fatherland")
and Lithuania ("Lithuania, Land of Heroes").
Coins Provide
Interesting Study
Salem Coin Club is observing the 100th an
niversary of the American Numismatics So
ciety (and National Coin Week) with displays
in five Salem businesses in the next few
days. It is expected they will draw wide in
terest. '
The study of coins has long been a fascin
ating avocation for many persons. And there's
lots to study. Coins of various shapes date
back to the 8th century B. C. from Lydia in
Asia Minor, where they were struck from
gold and electrum. China started issuance
at about the same time. Philip II of Macedon
gave the custom its first major impetus with
round coins nearly 400 years later in Greece,
-where gold and copper both came into con
siderable use, Bronze Roman coins came into
circulation about that time, too. English
settlers in Bermuda brought coinage to the
New World nearly 350 years ago, and the
first regular U. S. coinage was begun in 1793.
Being no expert on coins, we won't go into
their ancient values. All we know is a nickel
won't buy as much as it did in our youth.
Country Safe
One can nearly always depend on the good
ladies of the D. A. R. at their annual conven
tion to provide the people with a good dose
of spring humor. They are so mis-cast, so
"Tory-minded." This year they were more
alarmist than usual. Not only did they vote to Joint Commission, the agency
eet the U. S. out of UN. thev oassed a resolu- charged with responsibility for
tion for a study of fluoridation of water, hav
ing been aroused by one member who
warned this might well be a dirty Communist
trick to poison Americans! In one respect,
though, they followed the course of their an
cestors: they want citizens to have guns and
know how to use them, so they can defend
their homes when the Reds land! With such
resolutions we may be sure the country is
safe until next April.
1 ' -
r-af w ' 7v ' p!
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McKay, Neuberger Matched
First Time in Senate Hearing
US. Officials Work Urgently on
Strategy in Nuclear Flight Issue
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Staleiman Correspondent
WASHINGTON The Senate In
terior Committee Monday renews
its investigation of the Canadian-
American .dis
pute over the
Columbia River
in hearings
which will
match for the
first time
across a con
gressional com
mittee table
two Oregon po-i
litical. foes of
long standing,
Sen. Richard L. - Robert amtta
Neuberger and Douglas McKay.
McKay is now chairman of the
U.S. section of the International
settling disputes with Canada
over waterways used by both na
tions. Neuberger is a member of
the committee and will . take
charge of the hearings, calling
McKay as the final witness.
The committee began an inves
tigation of the problem in 1950
after reports from Ottawa indi
cated the Canadians were consid-
'"VI Jr
JPBBa wa: wanwnnnwnannnnnj
ihg the river will not be com
pleted until toward the end of the
year. After these ' investigations
are completed, the statement said
the IJC will make recommenda
tions to the governments of both
countries on what should be done.
"We don't knew what's going
on," contended Neuberger. "Yet
the IJC Is entrusted with decid
ing how S.4 million kilowatts shall
be developed." , ,
Neuberger aald he thought the
best description of the IJC wai
the one Winston Churchill ap
plied to Russia: "It's a mystery
wrapped In aa enigma uuide a
riddle."
McKay could not be reached
for comment. He was in Seattle
pute the IJC chairman was Len
Jordan, ex -governor of idano,
with whom Neuberger frequently
tangled. The Oregon senator
made an inspection of the upper
Columbia -River area in, British
Columbia prior to the committee's
investigation.
- la speeches and magazine artt
eles, Neuberger haa charged that
Jordan and McKay, who sac
ceeded him last rammer, have
made little or ao effort to achieve
agreement with Canada la a man
ner which would permit construc
tion at large storage dams on
the upper Columbia. Be has con
tended that the Elsenhower ad
ministration has aot poshed the
matter because it holds a private
utility bias against Urge federal
for a speech to the American In- .1,11. .m h. mad
ternauonai uw insuiuie. ,,,. by agreement. McKay
Deiure mcnay, uie ei-tauuiei Vhai ridiculed these contentions.
official who unsuccessfullfv ran
for the Senate against Sen. tyajTr'
Morse in 1956, gets his chance
as a witness to explain what s
going on, the committee has
scheduled testimony from five
other government agencies and
conservation groups.
The last time the committee ex
plored the Columbia River dis
ering diverting a portion of the wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
Kooteney ttiver into tne uoium-
Before McKay is called, the
committee will take testimony
from the State Department, from
Gen. Emerson C. Itschner, chief
of the Army Engineers? Assistant
Secretary of Interior Ross Leff-
ler on fisheries, Bonneville Power
Administration and Federal Pow
er Commission.
33
bia and, in turn, diverting part
of the Columbia into the all
Canadian Fraser River system in
British Columbia.
The Kootenay diversion would
make the proposed Llbby dam in
. western Montana economically In
feasible, for it would decrease
the flow of the river substantial
ly. The Columbia diversion would
reduce the flow of the region's
largest river and thereby slash
Its hydroelectric potential for the
Pacific Northwest.
Both diversions, however, would
Increase the power potential on
the Canadian aide. But fishing In
terests In B.C. are stoutly op
posed to the Columbia diversion
and the dams which would ac
company it on the salmon-rich
Fraser river.
"We just want to find out
where we stand," declared Neu
berger on the eve of the hear
ings. The International Joint Com
mission met here last week in
closed sessions for its regular
semi-annual meeting. Afterward
it issued a formal statement
which said the commissioners
plan to inspect the Columbia
Basin, scene of the disputed use
nf th river, next summer. It
(Eugene Register-Guard). .aid an engineering report on the
j various alternatives ror aeveiop-
Back in the days of the Hoover adminis
tration the Democratic national committee
had Charlie Michaelson, an old press hand, to
do a superb job of "smearing" Hoover. Now
the committee doesn't have to hire a man to
do that job on Eisenhower, Dulles and Nixon
it just lets the Washington Post's cartoonist,
Herblock, do the job.
It is safe to assume that Soviet planes make
practice runs all the time too. They have
maps and have pinpointed their targets. '
Editorial Comment
Modest Proposal
Wernher von Braun, the rocket expert, told a
special House of Representatives committee on
space problems that Americans should .confine
themselves to the sun, the moon and the planets
for the time being. Space problems beyond the
solar system, he added, should be theconcern of
future generations, not this one.
And that seems like a modest enough way of
looking at things. After all, we must leave some
thing for our grandchildren to do and someplace
lor uiem to live.
Time Flies:
From The
1 Statesman Tilts
10 Years Ago
Apr. 21, 1941
It was announced that Dr. John
C. Evans, Oregon State Hospital
superintendent, will resign within
a few weeks to become a con
sultant at the institution. Dr.
Charles Bates, acting superinten
dent, has been offered the posi
tion. Willamette Collegian, student
weekly newspaper at Willamette
University, received word that it
had been selected All-American
by the Associated Collegiate Press
at University Minnesota School of
journalism.
25 Years Ago
Apr. 21, 1933
Erma Oehler, of Salem, was
elected president of the girls'
division of the Northwestern
Girls' League conference at
Corvallis. More than 300 girls
from 29 high schools attended the
conference.
Three Salem youths took first
places in divisions of the state
music club's 1932 contest, held
in Portland. Salem high winners
were Margaret Wonderlick, Lola
Burton and Charlotte Hill.
40 Years Ago
Apr. 21, 1918
In checking up the registration
at the city hall, the following
totals were made up for the re
spective wards. First ward 637;
second ward 1,137; third war 416;
fourth 1,311; fifth 1,170; sixth 1,069
and seventh 831.
Teaching of geography of Ger
many is to be modified by a
critical note to be inserted in the
texts now in use in the public
schools of Oregon.
Safety
Valve
Story also oa page one)
WASHINGTON -State De
partment officials worked through
urgent Sunday conferences to map
strategy for Monday's V M. secur
ity , Council battle over Soviet
denunciation '.of U.S. nuclear
bomber operations in the far
north.
Under the direction of Under
secretary Christian Herter, de
partment policymakers gave the
UN. fight priority over prepara
tions for summit conference nego
tiations in Moscow.
No Separate Talks
However, the United States,
Britain and France, it was
learned, have decided they will
not conduct separate talks with
Russia on summit issues but will
insist on negotiating jointly.
This decision is based on the
belief, officials said, that the Rus
sians are now engaged in a large
scale effort to play the Western
Allies off one against the other.
That may be one purpose of
their charge Friday that the
United States was risking World
War III by sending its nuclear
bombers" flying toward Russia.
U. S. officials, denying that a war
could be started accidentally, said
the planes turn back automatical
ly before they get near Soviet
borders.
Even More Obvious
An even more obvious effort to
divide and confuse the Allies, offi
cials said, was the proposal re
portedly made by Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko to U.S.
Ambassador Llewellyn Thompson
on Thursday that he should
deal separately with Thompson
and the British and French am
bassadors in conducting prelimin
ary negotiations on summit
conference questions. This actual
ly created a new problem at the
very outset of diplomatic discus
sions on the issue. -
The Soviet Union took its charge
against Arctic aerial operations to
the Security Council Friday. The
U.S. State Department denied the
flights are provocative and said
they will be continued because
they form a vital part of the free
world a defense.
Dramatic Conflict
Gromyko s statement that an
accidental war could start in the
Arctic appeared to conflict dra
matically with a statement last
June by Soviet leader Nik its
Khrushchev that it was quite
comical to think of having, an
aerial inspection zone in the Arctic
area. The United States had pro
posed that Russia and the Western
powers join in supporting an aeri
al test inspection system there.
Khrushchev argued that nothing
ever happened in the far north;
now Gromyko says so much is
happening that Wortd War III
could start there.
West May Have
Soviet Union Off Guard
Caught
By JAMES F. KING
LONDON Ul Sudden Soviet
caution in approaching the sum
mit has created an impression
among diplomats here, that the
West has caught the Kremlin off
guard.
For the first time, the Western
Powers seemed to have seized the
initiative in the bid for world opin
ion by agreeing to preparatory
Route Set for
Powder Puff
Derby Flyers
LONG BEACH. Calif. UP! The
annual all-woman transcontinental
air race, better known as the
Powder Puff Derby, will be flown
from Montgomery Field, San Die
go, t Charleston, S.C., starting
July 4, race officials said Sunday.
The women will compete for
$3,000 in prize money.
The 2,177.4 mile race will be
flown in daylight hours only. The
official refueling points are Yuma
and Tucson, Ariz., El Paso, Mid
land, Abilene and Tyler, Tex.,
Jackson, Miss., Montgomery, Ala.,
and Macon, Ga.
The contest is sponsored by the
Nintey-Nines, Inc., an internation
al organization of women fliers.
10,000 Eager Stamp
Collectors Besiege
Tokyo Post Office
TOKYO WV-Ten thousand stamp
collectors besieged Tokyo's cen
tral post office for seven hours
Sunday.
Each was sold a maximum of 300
new memorial stamps at a time.
Most queued up repeatedly and
kept encircling the big office. A
police riot squad1 had to be called
after several post office workers
were injured when the crowd
surged and broke windows.
The new stamp bears a repro
duction of a famed Japanese
painting of some 200 years ago.
Contrlktraoiif "to th Safoty
Valv mait k dene by th con
trlkator, (lrinf also bis addrcu.
T- ii l r r ll r I
100 vuich Peace possibly bad grin and bear it By Uchty
At Present Time for Khrushchev
Rejoinder
By WILLIAM L. RYAN
-T AP Foreign News Analyst
Soviet propagandists have a
knack for making the best of awk
ward situations.
The ruckus kicked up by the
Kremlin over alleged American
flights of planes with nuclear
weapons toward Soviet frontiers
is a case in point.
' The Russians appear to want a.
summit meeting badly. Just as
ardently they seem to want that
summit meeting to avoid discuss
ing any of the issues which the
West believes contribute in large
measure toward international .ten
sions. Too much peace might be bad
for Khrushchev at this particular
time. It could lead to all sorts
of internal pressures, not the
least of which would be pressure
for relaxation of the Soviet con
centration on building world pow
er potential through heavy indus
trial might That is one side of
the Internal Soviet picture.
The other side seems to be that
Khroshchev still has considerable
f litical opposition within the nil-
ing Communist party, from those
who fear his domestic measures
already have gone too far. His
programs for decentralizing man
agement of -industry and for dis
mantling some of the vast bureau
cracy impeding Soviet agriculture
obviously aroused fear among die
hard Stalinists that the Commu
nist party is in danger of losing
some of its iron grip on the
people of the Soviet Union and
the satellites.
Khrushchev is in an awkward
position because he seems to need
more peace and to be unable to
afford it. If he is to make his new
programs work he will need to tap
the vast pool of manpower and
resources now tied up in a gigan
tic military establishment.
But at the same time, Khrush
chev appears to need external
tension as an excuse to keep the
consumer public in the U.S.S.R.
and the satellites from clamoring
for a better share of the Commu
nist economy.
What Khrushchev appears to
want, ultimately, is controlled ten
sion that-is, tension which does
not entail the risk of a major
explosion. ,
While be is wrestling with in-'
ternal contradictions, Khrushchev
has no intention of surrendering
any of the diplomatic gains he
has rolled up. Thus, a stray acci
dent in the United States with an
A-bomb plane and a few imagina
tive reports on how the United"
States might -react to the threat
of a missile attack were seized
upon avidly by the Soviet propa
ganda machine.
Khrushchev can thus attempt to
kill several birds with one, stone.
He can revive tension. He can -employ
diplomatic blackmail by
maneuvering the United .States
into a position .where it will be
blamed for any failure of negotia
tions, leading' to a diplomatic con
ference. At the same time he can
hope to scare Western Europeans
and oriental neutrals alike with
the phantom of an accidental nu
clear bomb explosion which would
plunge the world into war.; .
The accusations look like a slick
Soviet gambit. The United States,
by welcoming a U.N. inquiry, may
be able, however, to turn this
latest Khrushchev weapon into a
boomerang. fc
To' the Editor:
' With reference to Mir. Hullette's
comments regarding Mr. Donald
Thorn's letter of April 17, any
one taking the trouble to refer
to the city directory can easily
see on which side Mr. Hullette's
bread is buttered.
However, I do agree with Mr.
Hullette. All the cads, rascals,
and bounders who violate the
law should be hustled off to city
. ball and made to pay for their
atrocious crime.
Within a few years Mr. Hul
lette and the downtown mer
chants will, have their beloved
city all to themselves.
Irving J. Wagner
765 N. ,16ta St.
Better English
By D. C. WILLIAMS
"After a swing around the country, I find that there's still ,
plenty of money about . . . But everyone seems to
owe it to everyone else! ..."
1. What b irtong With this sen
tence? "We don't doubt bat what
John will be back in a few days."
2. What .is the correct pro
nunciation of "divorcee"?
- 3.' Which one of these words is
misspelled? Cafateria, cadaver
ous, calamitous, caravan. ; .
V- ANSWERS ;'
1. Say, "We don't doubt but
THAT John win RETURN in a
few days." J. Prononce di-vohr-say,
principal accent en last syl
able. 1. Cafeteria, -t
Sterilization Plan Set
MADRAS, India ffl-An official
spokesman for the Communist
government of Kerala State says
Indian men and women' who vol
unteer to be sterilized will be
given 25 rupees $5.50 each.
The program, the spokesman
said, will be put in operation soon
as part of a plan to cut down the
state's high birth rate.
Artificial Birth
Control Termed
Repugnant Act
WASHINGTON (1 A spokes
man for the Catholic Church has
declared that artificial birth con
trol is repugnant to the moral
sense of men, of good will of all
nations.
The Rev. John E. Kelly, direc
tor of-the Bureau of Information
of the National Catholic Welfare
Conference, issued a statement
recently in reply to a Protestant
leader who called the Catholic
Church's attitude on the matter
"theologically wrong and ethically
weak."
This criticism was voiced ThurS'
day at Buck Hill Falls, Pa., by
Dr. Richard M. Fagley, execu
tive secretary for international
affairs of .the World Council of
Churches."
Disastrous Consequences
Dr. Fagley said "a population
explosion with disastrous conse
quence s Is in the making in Asia
and other underprivileged areas.
He placed the blame on the Ro
man Catholic Church.
"Dr. Fagley 's argument must
be . termed 'theologically wrong
and ethically weak,' " Father Kel
ly said. "He must be aware of
what the Bible says: (Genesis:!
28, King James version)' and God
blessed them (Adam and Jive)
and God said unto them, be fruit
ful and multiply, and replenish
the earth, and subdue it.'
"Dr. Fagley would divide and
subtract, not multiply. His state
ment indicates that he favors that
the earth subdue man, not man
the earth . ! .
Very Different 1
"What the Bible -says about
marriage is very different from
what Dr. Fagley says it says.
Dr. F a g 1 e y s 'theoIogicaUy
grounded position' is exactly - con
trary to the teachings of Chris
tian theologians from the days
of St. Augustine. It is against both
the natural and divine law, as
based on the first book of the
Bible, is opposed to healthy fami
ly life and the well being of the
nation."
Father Kelley called Dr. Fag-
ley's contention that birth control
is needed in the face of an ex
panding world population a
"neo-Malthusian argument." He
said it has been discredited many
times.
Many Problems
That there are many problems
in feeding a vastly larger popula
tion is not denied," Father Kelly
said. "But the solution lies in the
fields of economic, technological
advances and redistribution of
the food supply . . .
"We ask Dr. Fagley to keep in
mind that artificial birth control
is repugnant to the moral sense
and the family tradition of not
only Catholics, but to men of good
will of all nations where birth
control advocates wish to intro
duce their contraceptives and
chemicals."
talks for the top-level conference.
Britain, France and the United
States were reported united in a
determination to press forward to
test Soviet sincerity. Soviet For
eign Minister Andrei Gromyko ap
jf eared to be maneuvering for
time by meeting the Western am
bassadors individually, instead of
together.
Blunt Challenge :
The Russians have been con-
trmtmA with what amount tn
blunt challenge to show their ' old
enthusiasm for a summit meeting.
British Foreign Secretary Sel
wyn Lloyd accused the Russians
of stalling by telling a Conserva
tive party political meeting Satur
day: "They met the three West
ern .Powers together around the
table at Geneva In 1955. Why they
should now refuse to receive the
three Western ambassadors is be
yond my comprehension." .
Amone7 diplomats in this caol- -
tal hopeVadmitteclly are not high
of a summit conference achieving
concrete rcsuua even r among
those favoring talks, The Ameri
cans particularly have accused
Moscow of merely waging prop
agandaand opened themselves
to some criticism among neutrals
and even allies for taking a nega
tive attitude.
Often Been Critical '.
In Britain, the influential Man
chester Guardian "has often been
critical of the attitude of Presi
dent Eisenhower and U.S. Secre
tary of State John Foster Dulles.
But Soviet maneuvering since the
Wast agreed to preparatory talks
at the ambassador level drew this
comment from the Guardian:
"It will be surprising if the
world does not now feel that it is
the Russians who are dragging
their feet along the road to the
summit."
Miss America
Of '55 Weds
(Picture on wirephoto page.)
SAN FRANCISCO in Lee Ann
Meriwether of San Francisco,
Miss America Of 1955, married
Frank Aletter, New York actor,
at St. Francis Episcopal church
Sunday.
The bride, 22, wore a cream
lace wedding, gown and spoke her
vows before a capacity crowd of
400 people. About 300 others
waited outside to wish the couple
wen as they posed for camera
men. . ' .
Aletter, 12. has been appearing
in the Broadway play "Bell's Are
Ringing." He arrived from New
York Wednesday.
The Rev. Edward Pennell. cas
tor at St. Francis," performed the
45 minute nuptial Mass in the
flower-decked church.
Followine the ceremonv tha
couple went to a reception at the
California Club then left on a
honeymoon at an undisclosed
location.
Drouth Hits Jamaica
KINGSTON, Jamaica (' Ja
maica is suffering one of the worst
drouths in its history. The Water
Commission says the Kingston
and St. Andrew Parish areas will
be without water unless rains
come within a month.
Phono Ell 4-CS11
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New Talk . Chi cage
390 W. Hoyi St. EM 3-8652 ST
I?: . ... m
In 1893 '
hi
i
HERMAN M. JOHNSTON
OWNER AND MANAGER
Grave Spaces From '50 to MOO
TERMS ON BEF6RE-NEED SALES, NO INTEREST ON CONTRACTS
ONE OF SALEM'S FINEST CEMETERIES
VISITING CAR AVAILABLE IF YOU LACK TRANSPORTATION
1 390 W. Hoyt St., n i
I the crest of the hills I
I overlooking Salem." 1
"It Pays to Be
Prepared?
Perpetual, care,
years of proven de
pendability, easy te
reach by bni service.