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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1934)
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM. OREGON SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1934 CapitalJournal Salem, Oregon Established March I. 1889 in Independent Newspaper Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday at 138 8. Commercial Street, Telephone 4G81. Now 4083. GEORGE PUTNAM, FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AND THE UNITED PRESS SUBSCRIPTION BATES Bjr carrier 10 cents a week; 46 cents a month; $3 a year In advance By mall In Marlon, Polk, Linn and Yamhill counties, one month SO cents, 8 months (I J25; 8 months $2 23; 1 year $4.00. Elsewhere 60 cents a month. 8 months $2 75: $5.00 a yeai In advance. The Associated Press Is exclusively ol all news dispatches credited to It paper and also local uewa published ' i,H With or without offense to friends or foes The Water Project Glancing through the newspaper files of December 1931, dated the day before the $2,500,000 water bonds were voted by a small majority of a minority of voters who went to the. polls, we find the following propaganda in the Hollywood Itch which was distributed throughout the city: HERE'S WHAT WILL HAPPEN IP THE WATER BONDS CARRY Unemployment in Salem will be ended. Seven hundred men will go to work on Jobs that will last more than a year. . Salem will nave water equal to that ol any other city anywhere water that we can advertise and brag about and plenty of it. The pavroll of about $4,000 ft day of new outside money expended In Salem would give an impetus to every head-off the mortgages which are about to take tneir utue nomcs irom them. . Their wives and babies will have clothes to wear and food to eat. There will be fuel in the woodshed and meat in the house. The grocery man will be able to collect his bill and the dry goods and clothing merch ants will see a lot of new customers. Salem will be started on an era of prosperous activity while other cities are still waiting ,lor: the. depression to end. The bonds' Were voted, and in the two and a half years since not a single one of these glowing promises has mater ialized. The difficulties in the way of realization were fully exploited by the two daily newspapers as well as the folly of plunging the city into debt a million dollars greater than necessary for a municipally owned plant. But hysteria won the election. As a matter of fact the city is much worse off than as if the bonds had been defeated, for the water company would have gone ahead, completed its purification system, a new reservoir, and expended the $500,000 in improvements it proposed and we would have had pure water, and probably have purchased the plant by this time. The entire municipal water project has been bungled and mismanaged from its false start. The council has continu ously demonstrated its incapacity to solve the problem, and its lack of sound business commonsense. It refuses to buy the plant outright at a fair price determined by arbitrators. It insists on condemnation which will mean years of further delay.' It passes up the RFC offer of a grant and loan that would finance the proposal. It has let a snap contract on a cost plus basis for engineering to the originators of the scheme and authorized some $20,000 warrants for the tax payers to ay without knowing what it was all about. Stam .peded one day by the public ownership league of non-taxpayers and the next by indignant taxpayers, it has gone back to marking time. General Strikes Always Fail William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor has issued a statement at Washington in which he says the workers of San Francisco "made a grave mistake when they engaged in a sympathetic strike, but they acted wisely when they ordered it officially terminated." The general strike calls for violation of contracts arrived at through collective bargaining and involves the possibility of losing economic gains. Of such strikes, Green says: No sympathetic strike of any consequence or possessed of any na tlonnl significance was ever won. To the contrary, the record shows that all experiments of this kind have failed. The sympathetic strike is im mediately accepted as a challenge to government, and becauso the gov ernment must be supreme it Is compelled to bring all its resources into action. Everyone must know and understand that In such a con flict the government must win; it cannot surrender. It must establish Its supremacy, and usually the result of such a conflict is that the govern ment wins, the strikers lose, and the employers against whom the original strike was directed become the beneficiaries. It is to be regretted that some such warning was not is sued by the federation chief before the radical leadership of San Francisco precipitated the general strike. However it is in time to serve as a warning to the hot-heads of Portland who are threatening a similar walk-out which would even be a bigger fiasco, than, in San Francisco. The general public figures it has been penalized long enough by a wilful mi nority that rejects reason. Offers the Factory An Associated Press dispatch from Mnnorvillc, Pa., states that when the 50 striking workers of the National Mirror Specialty company presented their demands for a higher wages and shorter hours, the boss shook his head, thought a while, and said: Tell yon what I'll do. I'll turn tho plant over to yon. You do the managing, fix the hours to work, take your wages out o( the profits and pay me a salary as a salesman. After a hurried conference, the men said they didn't have sufficient managerial experience, to which the owner replied, "Then how do you expect a man with experience to do something you can't do?" So tho strikers put their griev ances up to the regional labor board. This concern, like many other businesses and industries, including most of those in Salem, probably had been operat ing during the depression "in the red" and only kept going by stringent economies and drawing upon a reserve accumu lated in more prosperous times and now depleted. But, as in o many other instances, the employes fail to realize the sit uation and demand the impossible, and bring on strikes tlvtt re crippling to both the business and themselves. SAVED THKltt MONEY Bock Springs, Utah U Italian .Mnnti nf thlft tnum Hid not take Prlmo Camera defeat before the mauling fists 01 Max Boer as nam ... fhnu mioht have. Thev raised $15,000 to bet on the Italian man mountain me mgin. ui w ". but they couldn't find any Baer Backers. DIF.D BREAKING LAW ,A-ninn. praniw nm Maurice Oauthler, 35, section hand, father of four, broke the law by bathing In reservoir at Vcrneull. Emerg ing', he brushed nign-wnsioii wira, vu stunned, drowned. Lftblsh Center Mrs. Prank Weln ert and family of Aurora were rls Itors at the home of Mrs. KaUiryn Daugherty during the past week. North Manchuria expects the re turn of prosperity this vpar. editor and Publisher entitled to the use for publication or not otherwise credited In thai herein. Byron line of business. Salem men could 101 YEARS OLD Kelso. Wash. (IP) Samuel Oat ton, pioneer and Indian war vet eran, observed his 101st brltlidny this month. PROVES FISH STORIES Twin Falls, Ida. (IP) Fish stories are fish stories but Millard Stahl man can prove his. He recently re turned from an angling expedition on the Salmon river with an eight pound Dolly Varden trout. It was 27 and one-quarter Inches long, tls Inches around the belly and had ft tall span of Tt Inches, . CURFEW FOR LANDING Mays Landing, N. J. (IP) Curfew may be old-fashioned, but It has Just started here. Twelve men were recently sworn In to enforce the new law, which stipulates that no children wUI be allowed on the streets without their parents after 10 p.m. News Behind The News By Paul Mallon Washington, July 20 When, in the first week of last March it was announced that Richard Washburn ChUd had been named special ad viser to the secretary of state, there was considerable mystification over the appointment and speculation as to why it had been made. As far as any one knew, Mr. Child had no special claims upon the administration and, in some re spects, quite the contrary was true. He had been in the diplomatic ser vice before, as ambassador to Italy, but, previous to being named for this new post, he had been writing articles for publication which were decidedly critical of the adminis tration. In fact, some practical per sons found in this the cause of his being given a job, and the only sufficient cause. As special adviser to the secre tary of state, it was stated that Mr. Child would attend the session of the London economic confer ence, that he would travel in Eu rope to study and report on- the present and prospective state of the economic situation there, with special reference to the resolutions of the economic conference which had been passed or were pending. He was to have the rank of ambas sador and draw the ambassadorial salary of (17,500. Mr. Child's appointment was an nounced on March 6 and now, just about four months later, he is back in this country. And the mystery of his original appointment Is only deeper because he Is again writing articles for publication which point out faults and fallacies in the program of the administration In which he has just served. At the state department, It is said that Mr. Child is no longer connected with the diplomatic service. It would be somewhat Incongruous If he were because one of his latest articles Is devoted to telling the political opponents of the adminis tration how to embarrass it and hamper Its proposals. As to Mr. Child's brief career under the new deal, it is being asked: "If It was to be so soon done for, wnat ever was it begun for?" Don't Click A certain Incongru ity exists in the roles being played at the moment by General Hugh S. Johnson, recovery administra tor. In San Francisco, he Is ap pearing, either by Invitation or by intrusion, as mediator in the strike. As such, he is expected to maintain an impartial attitude between em ployers and employed, between companies and unions. While this is his status In San Francisco, in Washington he is be ing publicly denounced as a foe of unions and labor. As a result of the Donovan Incident, the department of commerce building, housing the NRA, is being picketed and, at the lunch hour and closing time, marchers walk around the building bearing placards reading; "Chlseler No. 1, Johnson", "Johnson a sell out." ' Voices Stilled Absence of the president Irom Washington and the usual summer doldrums have put an end for the time being to what, earlier in the season, was one of the copltal's most flourishing in dustries. Before this lull set In, an activity with which politically minded society people were busily occupied was trying to get another well known woman into the diplo matic service. The Ice having been broken with the naming of Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen as minister to Denmark, it was thought by pro moters of women's rights and priv ileges that the example should be followed up. Specifically, the friends of Mrs. J. Borden Harriman believed that she was Just the person to fill the vacant post of minister to the Irish Free State. A campaign of "men tioning" her for the place, or say ing that she was being considered for It, was carried on for some time without any apparent sub stantial results. Then, tho friends of other wom en prominent In democratic or new deal circles decided Mrs. Harriman was not the only one fitted to rep resent this country In Ireland, and they got busy with the same meth od. It was hinted that Mrs. Mary Harriman Ramsey, chairman of the consumers' advisory board of the NRA, had Just as good chance as Mrs. Harriman. This kite flew for a while along with that of Mrs. Harriman. Then, as the president went away without doing anything about it, the strings broke or the kites were pulled in and the sky in that quar ter is temporarily dull and lifeless. Rustic Repartee A young lady who attended the famous Tugwell hearing some weeks ago was con siderably Impressed with tho fact that certain senators considered Dr. Tugwell unfit for public office because he did not have enough mud on his boots. The day after the hearing, a sud den heavy rainstorm drove the same young lady scurrying Into a shop entrance. A moment later, she was Joined by Dr. Tugwell, who was also seeking shelter from the storm. "Awful rain," he remarked good naturedly, shaking the water off his coat. "Seems to me," she replied as she recognised the handsome brain truster, "a little mud wouldn't do you any harm." Dallas Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Pem- bcrton who have been visiting In eastern Oregon ore expected back in town Monday. Dallas Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Hcn- klo have as their honseguest this week Mrs. Aloha Basaua ol Son Francisco, Calif, Shanghai Cafe Chinese and American Dishes IWr Entertainment Open 11 to 1 a. m. I62S4 N. Commercial, rh. 5747 New Office Building Debt Is Cut Down The debt Incurred by the state when the new state office building was constructed in 1920 Is being steadily lowered, the state treasur er reported yesterday. Of the original $511,137 cost of the building, $357,209 has been re paid. The $15,000 July payment re duced the Indebtedness to $153,928. Payments on the building started in 1927, two years before It was completed. orum; Contributions to this col umn must be confined to 300 words and signed by writer. To The Editor: Helen Taylor withdraws from Le- glon contest. Helen says: "When I entered this contest I did not ex pect to have to compete with lodges and leading stores. I tnougnt it was to be a campaign of girls, and not to see which was the strongest lodge or club in Salem. All of my votes have been gather ed by myself or members of my family, while the other contestants have the Elks, Eagles, American Legion, state house or some other large concern behind tnem. One merchant claims a book of 50,000 votes was stolen from his counter another leading merchant tells me that for $12 (twelve dol lars) he could guarantee any girl to win. Also one big business house was holding back 40,000 votes for their candidate. With this going on what chance of winning is there for some one trvinor to run alone and square. I want to thank all of the people who have cooperated with me in any way.. Helen Taylor Lyons Mrs. Lcroy Hiatt Is spend ing a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Weddle at Stay ton. She has as her house guest there, Mrs. Kenneth Beech of Rose burg, Scotts Mills Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Smith Friday eve ning were the Misses Eugena Shanks and Burga Zumkeller of Dallas and Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Brougher. Dallas Mrs. John Casper of Sier ra Madre, Calif., is the guest this week of her sister, Mrs. Albert Smith. She Is also visiting her sis-ter-in-law, Mrs. Ora Cosper. Old Age Pensions The following is the official pub lication of the record of payments from the Old Age Pension Fund during the monthly of July, 1934, as allowed by the Old Age Pension Commission, according to records In the office of the County Clerk. All pension payments are for the month of June. Flora Abbot, (10; James B. Ab bott, $10; Sylvester S. Ackley, $12.50; Frank Adams, $10; Mary E. Adams, $10; Silas L. Aklns, $10; Berthold Alblker, $5; FrankUn B. Alford, $5; Missouri E. Alford, $5; Lcora A. Alllngham, (8.75; William M. Aliingnam, $8.75; Lillian Q. Ap plegate, $10; Frederick W. Arens mcier, $5; Sophia M. Arensmeler, $5; Dora A. Arnold, (5; WUford E. Arnold, $5; James R. Arthur, $10; Lemlra S. Baker, $8.75; WiUiam M. Baker, (8.75; Annon J. Baldwin, (5; Rosan Bailer, $7.50; Edith M. San ta, $10; Joseph Barber, $10; Evan E. Bnrnett, $10; Mllo Barnett, (7.50; Lllllc Barrett, $10; David M. Bart lett, $5; Melinda Barzee, $5; Eliza beth Baylery, $15; Marcus T. Bay ley, $15; Orace F. Beaman, $5; John J. Becker, $17.50; Thercsla Becker, $10; Lena M. Bellinger, (10; Wil liam Beringcr, $10; Nelson Bliss, $5; Emma A. Boatwright, $8.75; Valen tine Boatwrlght, $8.75; Caroline Bocsch, (5; Henry Boesch, $5; Clara Bope, (5; Caroline E. Boles, $10; Clora Bondshu, $8.75; Earnest J. Bondshu, $8.75; George L. Bowman, $5; John Bowman, (8.75; Katie Bowman, $8.75; John E. Boyer, $12.50; Lewis E. Bradford, $7.50; Emma Brasher, $10; Mary E. Brass field, $5; Aslak Brauti, $7.50; A. W. Bricklcy, $5; Sarah A. Brock, $8.75; John W. Brock, $8.75; John Brooke. $10; Elizabeth Z. Brown, $10; Fred D. Brown, $12.50; John A. Brown, $8.50; Mary A. Brown, $5; Marlon H. Buell, $7.50; Willis E. Bunn, $10; Edwin Burnett, $5; John T. Cald well, $7.50; Sain J. Calnan, (5; Da vid Canoy, (17.50; Martha R. Car- den. (10: Rlrhnrd W. Carey. $5; ATTENTION Mr. FARMER! We wish to announce that we are agents for the KOHLER ELEC TRIC PLANT known the world over for its dependable operation. The Kohler is an electric plant espe cially designed to meet all the re quirements of the country home at a low cost The Kohler brings City comforts and conveniences to the farm. It is simple to operate and easy to in stall. For further information inquire NELSON BROS. 355 Chemeketa St Phone 3810 Millie Carlson, (10; John O, Car son, $10; Elizabeth Chamlee, $10; Albert B. Chapman, $7.50; Eugene L. Church, $7.50; Charles L. Clapp, (10; Ella J. Clark, $8.75; Louisa J Cloyd, $10; Martha J. Coffey, $5; Franklin G. Coleman, $12.50; John B. Colwell, $5; Charles D. Compton, $8.75; Mallnda M. Compton, $8.75 Andrew J. Cone, $10; Heman B. Cone, $7.50; Frank H. Cook, (7.50; George W. Cook, $12.50; Jefferson M. Cothren, $5; Hattie B. Coulsen, $5; Jesse E. Coulsen, - (5; Rasle Crete, $10; William R. Cross, $12.50; Antonette Crump, $10; Mary E. Cummings, $10; Warren a. Cum mings, $10; William T. Davidson, (12.50; Allen J. Davie, (10; Cuth bert K. Davis, (; Henrietta Day, (10; John F. Day. (5; Mrs. N. V. Day, $10; Ida L. Dedrick, (10; Hen ry R. "DeGuire, (5; Mary J. Dc Gulre, (5; Peter DeGuire, (12.50; Jacob J. Denzel, (8.75; Minnie Den zcl, (8.75; Fredrick R. Dewttz, $12.50; Sarah J. Dickens, (10; Oscar F. Dickson, $5; Fredrick Dierks, $8.75; Hannah Dierks, $8.75; Isaac A. Dixon, $8.75; M. Alice Dixon, $8.75; Rachel I. Douglas, $10; Eliz abeth Drake, $10; William C. Dun can, $10; Mrs. Mary L. Dunkle, $10; Mary Dunn, $7.50; Thomas J. Dunn, $7.50; Octave Duval, $7.50; Maria J. Ellis, $8.75; William Ellis, $8.75; Alice R. English, $5; Frank Enz, $12.50; Louis Eppers, (10; John B. Erickson, $10; Zarilda J. Eskcw, $10; Catherine A. Evans, (10; John H. Evans, $12.50; Sarah Evans, (5; John Feller, $10; Mary Fielding, $10; Valentine Fisher, $12.50; Wil liam B. Flagg, $5; David W. Forbes, $5; John E. Forbes, (10; David H. Foreman, (10; Addle M. Franklin, (10; Henry P. Freeland, (5; Joseph Frohlich, (12.50; G. Adam Froh mader, $12.50; Susan A. Froman, (10; David M. George, (12.50; WU liam P. George, (12.50; Jim C. Gib son, (5; Jennie D. Gilbert, (10; Lucy A. Glllbert, (10; Ira W. Gil mer, $10; Mary J. Ginter, $5; James B. Gipson, $12.50; Sarah E. Given, $10; John C. Glaze, $8.75; Sylvia J. Glaze, $8.75; Charles H. Glover, $10; William H. Goodell, (1230; Charles Gordon, (10; Martha Gore, (10; Frank G. Gosha, (5; Thomas C. Gosser, $7.50; Stanley Granatzkl, $12.50; Grant Graves, $12.50; Rhoda M. Grltton, $10; Charles Groshong, $10; John W. Haines, (12.50; John Hamilton, (5; Anders C. Hansen, $20; John L. Harman, $10; Michael J. Harrington, $12.50; Eliza L. Har ris, $8.75; William H. Harris, $8.75; John F. Harris, (12.50; Hiram E. Hart, (730; Addie Hartley, (5; Charles L. Hartley, (5; Hiram A. Hartley, (12.50; Abram Haverly, $12.50; Mary Hawkins, (10; Thomas Hayes, $10; Samuel A. Henry, $10; Francis J. Henson, $10; Jacob P. Herbst, $1230; John Hibner, $8.75; Margaret Hibner. $8.75; William R. Hicks, $1230; Alice B. Hlldeorand, $10; Emma E. Hinkle, $5; James R. Hobbs, (7.50; James M. Hoke. (10; James T. Holtz, $5; Edgar A. Hoop er, $10; Fatlma Horning, (5; Jacob R. Horning, (5; James B. Hoss, (15; Stcphan Huber, (10; Joseph Hughes, $5; Thomas Hunt, $10; Isaac Jac' - son Hunter, $10; George R. Hurd, $5; Truman H. Ide, $10; John W. Inman, $11; Daniel Z. Jackson, $1230; William T. James, $10; Min nie Jelderks, $5; Mrs. Edea E. Jewell, $12.50; Albert Johnson, $5; Julius Johnson, $7.50; Laura J. Johnson. $10: Augusta W. Johnson, ( 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 II I II 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' I ... for any kind of a ; party . . . You'll Please Your ' Guests With "Patrick Henry Limerick Ale" and "Old Dublin : Stout" (Style) Ask for them ; At Nearly All Dealers 3 j GIDEON STOLZ : Phone 4458 : 'i 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i $5; Peter J. Johnson, $5; Thomas E. Johnson, (12.50; William M. Johnson, (10; Anna B. Jones, (10; Hans Jorgenson, (5; Clarence C. Jory, (5; Hugh F. Jory, (10; C. Ela Kavanaugh, (5; Humphrey, J. Kav anaugh, (5; John T. Kearns, (7.50; Leonora Kempton, (12.50; Eliza A. Kepplngcr, (10; Rose H. Kimball, $5; Rebecca Kimscy, $10; Albert W. King, $12.50; Mirah King, (10: Sam uel King, (5: Nazalre Kittson, $17.50; Ferdinand Klutke, $5; Jacob A. Koch, $10; Elizabeth Kraemer, $10; August G. Kufner, $730; Louis La Bunte, $1230; Gordon M. La flar. $7.50; George F. LaFleur, (10; Margrite LaFontaine, (10; Louyse Lamberson, (5; August Lambert, (5; Addison W. Lane, (7.50; George Lawton, (10; John E. Larson, (7.50; Adelaide Lavler, (10; Pauline Led tke, (5; Anna Lewis, (10; Mary Lightfoot, (5; William B. Lindsay, (5; Elizabeth V. Lisne, (10; William A. Liston, (10; Martin Loken, (12.50; Ell B. Lowe, (10; Jack Low ry, $5; Clara Lucas, $10; James E. Lytic, $8.75; Susannah Lytle, $8.75; Louis A. Marshand, $1230; William Marcho, $10; Genevieve Marsters, $10; Elmer Martin, $10; Marian Masterson, $8.75; Robert A. Master son, $8.75; Collin D. Matheny, $7.50; Lily D. Matheny, $7.50; Mrs. Ella Matteson, $10; Donald M. Maxfleld, $10; William McCallister, $10; An gle W. McConnell, $10; Mattie Mc Danlel, $15; Eliza J. McGee, $10; Robert McGilchrist, $10; Adell G. McGrath, $10; Daniel G. Mclnnis, (5; Sarah McKaq, $5; Mrs. Edna C. McLeod, $10; Herbert W. McNeal, $5; Lucretia E. McNeal, $5; Phillip J. McPoland, $5; Phoebe McTim monds, $10; Julius M. Miller, $5; Rufus B. Miller, $10;Charles Mitch ell, $10; Ellen R. Mitchell, (10; Na than R. Moon, $730; Martha Moon, $730; Elizabeth Moore, (10; John B. Moorman, (5; Martha A. Moor man, (5; Daniel W. Morley, (14.50; Olevia C. Moser, (10; OUve J. Mo scr, (10; Charles A. Mote, (5; Alice D. Myers, (10; Mahlon W. Myers, (10; George L. Neal, (8.75; Isabelle L. Neal, $8.75; Zach Nerness, $12.50; or Your Vacation May We Suggest That You Have the Capital Journal Delivered To Your Vacation Address Every Day that You Are Away ...Thereby Keeping Abreast Ol The Times At Home Let the Capital Journal Be A Daily Visitor While On Your Vacation CapitalAJournal Sofle M. Norgaard, $10; John Nor ton. (5: William F. Nutting! $10; Benjomln F. Nye, $12.50; Maud Oh ler, $5; Benjamin Olson, $10; Anna L. Olson, (5; Nels A, Olson, $5; Su sannah Ott, (10; Ole O. Opesahl, (5; Stephen E. Osborn, (10; Benjamin F. Padrick, (10; Lincoln Paris, (5; Charles W. Parker. $5: Hogne Par- rish, $12.50; Arietta Payne, (10; Ed win Payne, (12.50; James R. Payne, $5: Robert Pcarce, $10; John W. Pease. (7.50: Mary L. Feck, (12.50; George E. Penrod, (5; Nancy A. Perkins, (10; Eliza E. Perrin, $iu; Marie Petersen, (10; Nels C. Peter sen, (7.50; William L. Pettie, (7.50; Jessie Phillips, '(lO; Celina Picard, (12.50; Calvin Plesslnger, $10: Wil liam C. Polka, $10; Alice Potter, (10; Helen Patter, (10; Mary A. Pottorff, (10; Jane E. Pratt, (10; Esther A. Pritchard, $10; Susie E. Prosser, $10; Eva Qulnn, (10; Niels M. Rasmus sen, (8.75; Ollie L. Rasimisscn, (8.75; William Ray, (5; Mary E. Redding, (5; Mary E. Rccs, $10; Christopher C. Reeves, $17.50; Charles S. Reistad, $12.50; Edward B. Revnolds, $10; Robert Richer, $17.50; Hannah M. Rickard, $5; Hi ram M. Rlcker, $12.50; George H. Robblns, $12.50; Harry C. Roberts, $12.50; Charles C. Robinson, $10; James D. Rodgers, $8.75; Rosic D. Rodgers, $8.75; Daniel W. Ross, $10; Fred C. Rouse, $10; Amy C. San ders, $10; Mary A. Shafer, $10; Frank Scharf, $5; Katherine Scharf, $5; Charles E. Scott, $1230; David T. Scars, $5; Mary Shaffer, $5; Samuel Shaffer, $5; William A. Sharp, $12.50; John E. Shaveland, $15; Louisa C. Shepherd, $10; Emanuel Shuts, $8.75; Matilda Jane Shuts, (8.75: Amanda J. Shilts, (5; James M. Shlles, (5; Alice I. Shrum, (8.75; Francis C . Shrum, (8.75; Commodore P. Shrum, (10; Fred Slevers, (730; James B. Simpson, (7.50; Monroe Slyter, (730; Anna E. Smith, $10: Edgar A. Smith. $10; Elva E. Smith, $10; Horace Albert Smith, $7.50; Matt Smith, $12.50: John K. Snyder, $5; Annie Souther, $10; George A. Spencer, $1230; George M. Stafford, $5; Louisa ULJ2D 11 Just Call The Circulation Department. Phone 4681 And We'll Do the Rest SALEM'S LEADING NEWSPAPEB Stahl, (10: John Stalzer, $8.75; Rose Stalzer, (8.75; Andrew J. Stark, (5; Annie Stark, (5; Henry Stcnder, (5; E. Wallace Stevens, (10; James K, Stewart, (12.50; Rachel J. Stewart, (10; Hezekiah W. Stowell, (7.50; Al bert B. Straw, (12.50; Mary L. Strong, (10; Joshua Sutter, (5; Ger rlt Swelnink, $10; John A. Swen son, $7.50; Henry L. Talbot, $8.75; Iva M. Talbot, $8.75; Henry Tesch, $1230; George R. Thomas, $5; John F. Thomason, (10; Hiram A, Thompson, (5; Mary A. Thompson, $5; Mike C. Thompson, (1030; Jesse L. Tooley, (12.50; John Uebel, (7.50; Adelbert A. Underhill, (1230; Anne Underwood, (10; Monte A. Vanden burg, (10; Norton Vanderhoof, (12.50; Charles Vaughn, $5; Richard D. Vibbart, $5; Peter Waber, $10; Mallnda J. Wale, $10; Daniel M. Wagner. $12.50; Mike Waldespiel. $730; Mrs. Virginia Walker, $5; Em ily L. Wallace, (8.75; Samuel D. Wallace, $8.75; Jackson M. Walter, $5; Mary L. Walter, $5; Mary T. Wargnier, $10; Katherine Webb, $10; Lewis N. Webb, $12.50; Samuel K. Webber, $7.50; Katherine Wels- senfels, $5; Matliios Weissenfcls, $5; Pauline Welter, $8.75; Peter Welter, $8.75; Emma Wengenroth, $10; Caroline West, $5; Hugh Westen house, $5; Charles H. Whitcher, $8.75; Llla L. Whitcher, $8.75; John H. White, $10; Nancy J. White, $5; Dora Whitney, (10; Sarah M. Whit ney, (10; Martha J. Wiggins, (5; John N. Williamson, (7.50; William J. Windes, (10; Malisa T. J. Wood, (10; Jennie Woolery, (5; Ransome Woolery, $5; Lucy M. Wray, (10; W. J. Wright, (5; Calvin L. Young, (1630; James . Toung, (5; Walter C. Young, (10; U. G. Boyer, postage, $34.06; Capital Journal, Publ. claim, $15.50; Multipost Company, multi post, (10; Needham's Book Store, rental, (5; Oregon Statesman, Publ. claim, (16.20; Salem Deaconess Hasp., Hosp. care, (61.25; Salem Drug Co., medicine, (1; Salem Mor tuary, burial, (41; Unruh-Knapp Printing Co., printing, (15.90; A. J. Johnson, clerk, $65; Myrtle Stewart, clerk, (18.75.