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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1936)
THURSDAY, MAY 21, 193G THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM. OREGON LOGGERS' STRIKE CLOSES CAMP "AT CATHLAMET Portland, Ore., May 21 (D The Crown-Willamette Company discon tinued operations today In the Cath lamet area pending settlement of labor difficulties affecting the lum ber Industry In the Columbia basin. Company officials said the shut down threw 350 men out of work. Some 6,000 men previously had been laid off In 25 other camps of various companies and the shortage of logs lor Portland sawmills saw the start of s cessation of operations here to day which was expected to add 3,500 more men to the ranks of un employed. The shutdown of operations - at the Cathlaniet logging camp marked the latest move In the dispute be tween union leaders and employers over hiring hall control and camp working conditions. The lockout be gan after men walked out In five camps. Employers began shutting down logging operation. Sawmill employers here said for the most part that their supply of logs would be exhausted by the end of this week or the first of next week, necessitating a cessation of .Mietr operations. The shutdown has been accompan ied by a show of violence in the Port land district. Two men were beat en up within the past few days and the headrig of one sawmill was de stroyed. Detectives were investigat ing in an effort to learn whether the headrig had been tampered with. C. H.' Gram, state labor commis sioner, made two efforts during the week to bring employers and union leaders together and called another conference for Saturday. Reports were circulated that each ride had made gestures toward some concessions but all declined to com ment, although Oram said he was still "hopeful" of reaching a set tlement. NO INTERFERING BRITAIN WARNS London, May 21 (P) Prime Min teta nallaHn urv.il o xt.rnnff warn Ino- tn trie hmiKA of commons todav that Great Britain would not tol erate foreign tampering with the affairs of Palestine and Egypt. wi cln.fBm.nt wmt made in renlv to a member's request that he make It clear tnat ureal; jsniam wouia not permit Italian interference In those two countries. Tha DnnMinnmMt rlnR.lv fnl lowed a governmental decision to appoint a royal commission to in vestigate disorders In Palestine which various Brittsh sources have reported as inspired by Italians. Recalling that Great Britain withdrew Its 'protectorate from L Egypt in 1923, Baldwin said: "In so )-notifying the powers, his majesty's government maae n. ciear m iui Mict.if.KiD toi-mK It would regard n imfriendlv act any attempt t. interference in the affairs of Egypt by any power and would consider any aggression against ter ritory In Egypt as an act to be re pelled by all the means at i com- m.nrl. "No further 'statement appears necessary, ww. m.i.ctv' BYw.rament. re sponsible for the administration .nri nrnfArtinn of Palestine in ac- ...wiovw,. with the terms of the mandate, intends to discharge its responsibilities to the run. . The members of the house cheer td Baldwin's declaration." ATHLETIC BOARD NAMED AT U. OF 0. DEATH RAY' REALLY WORKS Federal Road Bureau Asks for War on Loggers North Santiam Highway The federal bureau of public roads lias asked the Marion county court to declare war on logging operators if they at tempt to mar the right-of-way or disturb the trees immedi ately along the right-of-way of the- North Santiam highway. The letters received from the bureau report that according to ad-, vices they have received logging operators have moved in on the North Santiam highway south of Marlon creek and are occupying the right-of-way with cables and logging equipment. Some operators, says the bureau, who recently asked for use of the road had been advised that It had not been accepted from the general con tractors and the bureau was with out authority to give them permis sion and did not give them permis sion or encouragement to occupy the right-of-way. The bureau says it has been in formed that trees are being girdled diversity of Oregon. Eueene.May Jl The athletic ooara oi me iv fw .rlmir.lKterine stu- dent activities at the University of Oregon was named ny ur. v. ,i aM,B iinlvarsttv nresident. Earl M. Pallett. executive secre . -i i,niu.rfiifv. will re Dre- lHly ui ...... ... - tent President Boyer and act as chairman of the board. Other fac ulty members are Dr John P. Bo vard, Virgil D. Earl, Dr. James H. Gilbert, and Professor H. C. Howe. rv aimn1 members will be HUgClK cm...... Lynn S. McOready and Basil T. Williams, and the Foraano aiumni representative will be Paul D. Hunt, Bt,,jB imemhtirK tire Fred B. Ham mond, president of the associated . . . l t ev..,W students, ana uuDen, u. .in.-MDiri.nt. .t n. L'.ndatrom. uni versity business manager, will act as secretary. Appointment of this board is the first step in the definite organlza- . u aoHvltlj). fYir the nomlns year. The educational activities board will Be namea soon, as win the five committees wmcn wui oe part of It. Resounding Bark is 1 Costly to Dog Owner Chatham, Ont. OP it cost mod. ert McCrie 60 to pay for the dam. age caused by a bark from his dog. The velD was so terrifying Thom as McRoberts' cow fell into an. oil tank, and his mare stampeded and was injured when It tripped over wire and fell. McRoberts sued McCrie and was awarded $60. Silver Clirf Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tox and son Floyd, Jr., Mrs. Carrie Townsend and Mrs. E. M. Stone Troutdale returned Sunday from ten-day motor trip to California Upon their return they were calkl to Portland by the illness of Mrs Townsend'a brother, John sieret, Oresham, Mr. Sieret passed way Monday night. GRAND COULEE FUNDS GUT-OFF BY HOUSE VOTE (Continued from page 1) ' Two backers accused Henry Flaur, San Francisco Inventor, of fraud in eonectlon with his "death ray" machine. But while a Jury . watched, Fleur killed a snake, a lizard and some termites with his ray to win a quick acquittal. Here Is Fieur with his apparatus. (Asso ciated Press Photo) DONALD LIBBEY WINS ADVANCE Crater Lake National Park, Ore., May 31 The promoMin of Donald S. Libbey, former park naturalist at Crater lake, to superintendent oi Hot Springs National Park in Ar kansas was announced this week by the national park service in Wash ington, D. C. The appointment came as a part of a new set-up in tmee of the na tlonal narks, resulting from the death of Roger Toll, former Yellow stone superintendent. He was suc ceeded by Edmund Rogers of Rocky Mountain national para, wno was replaced by Thomas J. Allen, Jr., of Hot Springs pai-K, leaving tnis posi tion open for Mr. Libbey. Mr. Libbey, well known in south ern Oregon, served at Crater lake during the. 1931 season and began duties on a permanent oasis in me spring of 1932 and continued until the autumn of 1933, when he was called to Washington lo aid tempor arily in the ECW organization of the national park service in a su pervisory capacity. This work fore stalled his return to Crater lake. Last February he wss named dep uty assistant director in the division of planning and state cooperation. Previous to coming to crater lane, Mr. Libbey was in cnarge of the geology department of the Drury College of Springfielr., Mo and at Crater lake carried on Interesting geological research In revealing more of the past history of the area. He made a careful study of carbonized logs found in the proximity of the lake and brought forh the conclu sion that they had been undoubted ly covered by explwisive material from Mt. Mazama, ancestral moun tain of Crater lake, destroyed cen turies ago. by cables, that cables are strung along the highway and that numer ous trees have been cut and that severe damage has been done along the roadside. The bureau letter says the county .court paid for the right-of-way and doubtless has the necessary author ity to see such trespasses are not allowed. The letter says it will fake a vig orous enforcement of policy to pre serve the roadside appearance of the highway as the bureau has learned from its own experience with small operators. Timber immediately adjacent to the highway should be preserved de clares the bureau. One operator, it says, wanted to construct a haul road on the right- of-way but off the actual road itself for several hundred feet near Idah- na. Apparently, the letter says, this privilege was asked by the operator to keep from paying gasoline tax. To allow such a move, it says, would result in filling existing ditches, and cause an unsightly scar on tne right,of,way. Recommendation was made to the operator to build his own haul road. Commissioner Roy Melson said today the court would take every precaution to protect the roadway and right-of-way CRATER SEASON OPENS JUNE 1 down are 120.000,000 for Grand Cou lee dam in Washington, 116,000,000 for the central valley California project, and (4.000.000 for the Cas-per-Alcova reclamation system in Wyoming. Besides the (58,000,000 appropria tion, the house also rejected senate proposals for a (37,710,500 system of irrigation undertakings on In dian reservations. These numbered 41 projects In 13 states. Debate was warm before the vote. A cry that the (58,000,000 program was a "gigantic pork barrel thrust out of western skies" came from the ranks of opponents. The west erners replied that the program would insure the agricultural fu ture of the west. Besides the items already men tioned, the defeated appropriation included: Boise, Idaho, Payette di vision, (1,800,000: Boise, Idaho, drainage, (160,000; Deschutes, Ore., (450,000; Owyhee, Ore., (400,000; Columbia basin Wash., economic surveys and investigations, (250,- 000; Yakima, Wash., Rosa division, (2,500,000. Secretary Ickes said today that u the house refused to restore to the interior department supply bill, ap propriations for continuing the western reclamation projects, work on the Grand Coulee dam would stop October 1. Other projects under contract also will be stopped as soon as pres ent funds are exhausted, he added. I think our request were reason able." Ickes said. Where contracts already nave been awarded, he added, the gov ernment might be liable to "heavy damages" if "we can't proceed be cause of the failure oi appropria tions." Asked if work relief funds might be nrovided in the event no regu lar aDoroorlatlon was approved Ickes said "I doubt it very mucn. Sips for Supper By DON UP.) DUN (Continued from page 1) construction of an important part of a state capitol at least and this also should help him to design grandstand for a natural enect blending it with the landscape in a manner to which the great Amer ican eye Is accustomed. Go to it, RoUa. Three Brothers Win Foundation Awards Ottawa, Kan. (IP) The Lyons brothers of this town appear to have a monopoly or. the Leopold ScheDn Foundation anards. Carl Lyons, sopnomore at uiiawa university, received a 1100 scnoiar shlp for having lived up to the pledge or tne lounnauon s stana ards for youth for tnree years. A second brother, Emorv Lyons Jun ior at the school, prevlcnisly received (200 from the founoMlon, and a Ihird brother, senior in Sioux Falls, S. D college, also a (100 award. Crater Lake National Park, Ore. May 21 Limited accommodations will be available at crater lane tne first week of June to provide for the needs of early seasor visitors and will be followed i. v..ni ete re sumption of services July 1, nclud- Ing dally stages to Med?,rd and Klamath Falls, launches . nd row boats, fishing, guided naturalist trips, evening lecture programs and postof fice service. The south and west entrance roads have been open to the rim of the lake for sometime and are In excellent condition. Plows are now removing snow from the east en trance to The Dalles-California highway, but so far ro opening date has been announced. Housekeeping cabins and food at the cafeteria will be available in early June on a limited basis but will be increased in keeping with travel growth. Although snow Is still eight feet ceep in the rim area, adequate parking space has been provided for automobiles and with the highway open on a two-way basis, there is no possibility of traffic congestion, Snow depth is slightly over six feet at park headquarters, three miles from the rim, and Is four feet at Annie spring, the Junction of the south and west roads, s,x miles from the rim. The snow conditions are still good for late season winter sports, with numerous slopes avail able for skiing and toijogganing. Park bears have not been a prob lem during the past fortnight but visitors are still reminded not to leave food in automobiles as a temp tation for Inquisitive bruins which sometimes in their eagerness for a free meal cause a great deal more damage to cars than the edibles they seek. TWO ARE GRADUATED Sclo Jim Meuler and Franklin Steyaert were graduated from the eighth grade at Burgen Hollow school nine miles southeast of Scio at oloslng exercises Friday. Mar jory Smith of Crabtree has been elected to teach the school next year, filling the vacancy left by Edna Petersen, who haa accepted a position in another school. ALLEN AND BURT 14 VOTES APART Portland. May 21 (m Revisions of final votes In three counties cut the lead of Jack Allen, Pendleton, over U. S. Burt, Corvallis, for tne demo cratic nomination for state treas urer, to 14 votes today. Re-checks in Klamath county added 13 votes to Burt's total and slashed four from Allen's and prev ious revisions in Josephine and Ben ton counties added two votes to Burt's figure 'and cut Allen's by 17, With returns in 19 counties official ly re-checked, the vote stood: Allen 41,859, Burt 41,845. A. Ray Martin, Lane county, and R. R, Turner, Polk county, were 65 votes apart in the contest for the second democratic delegate seat in the first congressional district, with Martin leading. Joe E. Dunne, Portland, sent letter to republican convention dele gates asking their voces for him as delegate chairman inasmuch as he received the largest vote, 45,ooe, in 1607 out of 1625 precincts. But com petition is in sight. Walter Tooze of Portland, and Harvey H. De Arm ond of Bend, also have their eyes on it. Victor Olllver, Albany Justice of the peace, only repubL'can candidate for re-nomlnatlon, received 32 write in votes on the democratic ticket, and Lee Rohrboughfi name was written in by 31 voters, one short of forcing Olllver Into a November election contest. Another one-vote winner was W, S. Allen, retiring county commis sioner of Yamhill county seeking the republican judgeship nomina tion. The official vote was 1082 for Allen and 1081 for A. J. Bewley. UNCLASSIFIED TO BE BRAND ON GULLS Uniform Rates Not Mandatory in State Uniform service and rates to all persons within proposed peoples power districts In Oicpon are not mandatory, Attorney-Oeneral Van Winkle told the Oregon hydroelec tric commission. Under Van Winkle's ruling cost of 'extending transmission lines to new customers wouli have to t borne by those customeis, and varia tions in rates could be made at the discretion of the districts, if and when such districts aie formed. Opponents of the proposed units had contended that obligation to serve all potential consumers with equal service would make thickly populated sections pay high electric rates to maintain sen ire to scatter ed users. The hydroelectric commission re cently made reports on power dis trict proposals embracing Linn and Marlon counties, say.ng In both cases that the public organizations would not be feasible unless they could be operated witnout competi tion. The "commission is now study ing a proposal for a seven-county super district. BADOGLIO OFF TO VISIT ROME fCoiwrtKht. 1936. b United Press) Rome, May 21 (LP) Marshal Pietro Badoglio, hero of thfc East African war, hastened to crisis-ridden Eur ope today 12 days after his ap pointment as viceroy of Ethiopia. No reason was apparent lor his sudden, unexpected start. It seemed clear that it meant early develop ments oi major importance to ltaiy and Europe. Sent to retrieve the Italian for tunes in Ethiopia last November, Badoglio electrified tne army and entered Addis Ababa in triumph May 5 and In a statement indicated that he Intended to remain for a considerable time. On May 9 he was named viceroy of Ethiopia. Since that day the League of Na tions council has voted to continue penalties against Italy for Its war on Ethiopia, to Premier Benito Mus solini's open, fierce rage; the Italian delegation to the league has- left Geneva and it has been announced that Italy will not participate In any league activity until the penalties are removed; Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg has seized power In Austria, ousting Mussoiini's protege and satellite. Prince Ernst von Star- hemberg; there has been a somewhat mysterious Italian-British exchange of discourtesies over charges that British firms sent dum dum bullets to Africa. Italian newspapers for days past have talked more and more of the danger almost the certainty of war in Europe. STATE MOVES TO CURB DEATH AT CROSSINGS Berries which farmers heretofore have had to sell as culls can now be branded "unclassified," the state department of agriculture has ruled. Blackberries, dewberries, raspDer lies, loganberries and strawberries were affected by the order. Unclas- sifleds will be those berries too soft, damaged or otherwise unable to meet requirements fir Na i s or No. 2's. New grades for honey will go into effect July 1, but old labels may be used until June 1, 1927. The new grades are : U. S. fancy, U. S. No. 1 and unclassified. Orowers may use special new con tainers for one season on applica tion to the department, and if the boxes are successful they will be designated as standards. Oresham raspberry growers have been allow ed to try out a new crate holding 12 hair-pound hallocks. shallower to ship long distances. ILL IN PORTLAND HOSPITAL Turner Miss Ada Thomas Is 111 at a Portland hospital where she has been for several weeks. A mi nor operation was performed on her hand where infection had set in, and her condition Is slightly Im proved. Mrs. Hallfs Endicott, mo tored to Portland on Monday to visit with her sister returning Tues day afternoon. GUIDED FIELD TRIPS PLANNED Lava Beds National Monument, Calif., May 21. Plans are underway for the establishment of guided field trips to the more important points of interest in the monument area. Two temporary rangers will assist the permanent park ranger now on duty to maks these services possi ble. Visitors will be shown as much of the monument's wearn of natural phenomena and of its nistorlcal re gion as possible with a minimum amount of driving. Captain Jack's Stronghold, recalling the fiercely fought Modoc Indian war of 1872 73, will be an important destination of the guided trips and will reveal how a group of 53 Indian fighting men battled a superior and better equipped force of soMiers for five months before the redmen were forced to capitulate. The battleground erea Is today much as it was over 60 years ago. Bones of slaughtered animals, on which the Indians subsisted, are still bleaching in the sun and here and there bits of leather and spent bullets are still to bs found. And even yet occasionally is found the disintegrating skeleton of some un known person the victim of a war time bullet. Some 300 caves are located In the monument, the result of volcanic activity as recent as 5 000 years ago. The more important of these caves from a scenic, geologtral and histor ical standpoint will be visited, in cluding those with pedographs, In dian ochre paintings believed to be in close kinship with the earliest ap pearance of mankind oi this section of the west. These guide serving will be of fered the visiting public without charge and neither is there a charge to enter the monument. The worm ha turned on the Klamath Falls-Lakeview highway. Down a narrow gorge comes a logging train to the highway crossing 35 miles east of Kla math Falls. The engineer stops, makes sure no cars are coming, and cautiously pilots his train across the road. "A high-speed highway, a low-speed railroad and a par ticularly blind crossing," ex plained Public Utilities Com missioner McColloch In order ing the railroad to do the stopping. By NEWTON STEARNS Grade crossing accidents are on the increase in Oregon and the state Is going to do, something about it. With cooperation or tne stale highway commission and railroads operating In Oregon, Public Utilities Commissioner McColloch's depart ment has launched an intensive campaign to end "murder at the crossroads. Uniform warning signals ' and crossing markers ana accident re port requirements have been draft ed by T. O. Russell, chief engineer, and John Bagley, transportation engineer, working under McColloch, The program, patterned after stan dards of the American association of railroads, the engineers hope to have ordered by the commission af ter necessary hearings are held. A greater problem will be getting the cooperation of the motoring public, but the commission is pre pared to recommend legislation re quiring compulsory stops at danger ous crossings and other regulatory laws to the next legislature in an ef fort to keep automobiles and trains from arriving at the crossings si multaneously, with usually most damage to the automobile, The number of crossing accidents increased 40 percent lust year over 1934 and four months of 1936 are ahead of that portion of 1935 by 11 percent, according to records in Bagley's office. That everv automobile-train acci dent last year on main highways in Oregon was at an intersection "pro tected" by a movable wig-wag signal was one quirk in the records. Al though half of the through highway grade crossings are not so protected they were charged with not one ac cident. One obscured, "dangerous" crossing on the Pacitlc highway south of Roseburg has not had an accident In 53 years. While it Is not a rule that modern crossings with visibility a half mile each way have the most accidents, motorists seem to watch their step more closely on crossings that look dangerous, Bagley said. In any case the commission uses no guesswork in recommending phy sical changes In the intersections. Filed are records of each of the state's 4000 grade crossings, most with a diagram, exact location and accident report for the last two years. In addition a wall-size map is stuck full of colored tacks, each re presenting an accident, injury or death, showing at a glance danger ous"' spots on Oregon's highway railroad picture. Frequently very, little correction Is needed to eliminate the danger of a crossing, according to BsgKyT After three .accidents in eight days in April 1934 at the 17th and Powell Intersection of the Southern Pacific in Portland, the city erected stop signs and the toll was Immediately halted. In a year since there have Turkey's 1935 raisin- crop was the largest since thn World War. been only two inlnot train-auto crashes. Other points named by Bagley as having high accident records were the Pacific highway crossing at Broadway in Eugene and a crossing in Bend where an underpass is now being constructed. RAILWAY LABOR PACT FORMED Washington, May 21 w Success ful conclusion of negotiations on an agreement for the protection of employes thrown out of work In railroad consolidation was announ ced by representatives of rail labor and management today after a con ference with President Roosevelt. The agreement was signed in the early morning hours today. George M. Harrison, chairman of the com mittee of railway labor executives, told reporters the call on Mr. Roosevelt was merely to report what had been done. Asked what the president's - re action was, Harrison said. "He asked us to do this and we simply reported It had been done.' Harrison referred to a plea from Roosevelt in March that rail labor and management get together on a voluntary protection agreement. The agreement provides a scale of dismissal wages ranging up to one year's salary for employes who have been in service 15 years' or longer. At their option, workers also 'would-be entitled to accept partial salary payments over a period of months. . For employes who had worked 15 years, this latter scale would pro- AUSTRIANS GET THREE FUEHRERS (Copyrliht, 103S, bj United Preul Vienna, May 21 (LP) A three- man dictatorship was envisaged by the cabinet today to end the dan gerous situation precipitated by the ousting from power of Prince Ernbt von Starhemberg, Heimwehr leader. At an emergency meeting which extended late into the night, the cabinet gave final form to the draft of a law by which the country would have three "Fuehrers." They are: Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg, as commander of the fatherland front, . the combined semi-private armies. . Vice Chancellor Eduard Baar von . Barrenfels, as national commander . of the new armed "front" militia, army auxiliary. Prince Starhemberg, as national sports leader and head of the moth erhood protective association. . Schuschnigg would be the su preme head. Starhemberg, however, -despite the trivial titular nature of his status, would be restored to co operation. Each of the triumvir a to would be termed Fuehrer. There was no immediate indica tion whether all factions would ac cept the drafted law. ' The attempted compromise In a situation which some have feared might lead to civil war came prom ptly after Starhemberg's return from Rome, where he consulted Premier Benito Mussolini, his po litical God father. vide 60 per cent of regular salary. for 80 months. BUY THE CAR THAT BEAT THEM ALL A AH AM Sweepstakes Winner Over 30 Other Cars Los Angeles to Yoscmite 26.66 Miles Per Gallon Winner of Style Award for 1936 We Invite Your Inspection LODER BROS. 445 Center Street Phone 6133 , Salem, Oregon For Seven Years Your Graham Sales and Service for Marlon and Polk CotmUea HOME OP GOOD USED CARS Associate Dealers i ' FRANK HIEBERT, Dallas, Ore. W. G. ABRAHAM, Corvalllf, Ore. r IT CUTS DOWN THE COST OF THE PARTY Itealty transflctiorui In Australia laat vear were It per cent above 1934. - DANCE - WITH Kenny Allen MELLOW MOON Tomorrow NH FH.) Piles All . Gone Without Salves or CutUnf Itching, bleeding, protruding piles go quickly, If you remove the cause, Bad blood circulation In the hemor. rhoidal veins causes plies by mak ing the affected parts weak, flabby and lifeless. Salves and cutting of ten fall because only an Internal medicine can actually correct these conditions. Or. J. S. Leonhardt dls covered a real internal Pile modi cine. After a fine record of success with it In his own practice, he named it HEM-ROID. Petny's Drug Store and all druggists Invite every Pile sufferers to try HEM-ROID with guarantee of money back If not Joyfully satisfied with the help one bottle gives. ll;lj3xl.lj CO Ul to O o n o o M z o We Will Sell at rublic Auct ion nrrH , 95c DISTILLED FROM ORAIN PEORIA, ILLINOIS Journal Want Ads Pay AT THE CUNNINGHAM PLACE One-half Mile Northwest of Liberty . , ' AT 10 A. M. MONDAY, MAY 25, 1936 The following described property: 1 30-Cletrao; 2 Cletrac; 1 14-Inch tractor plow, 2 bottom; 1 18-Inch tractor plow, 3 bottom; I 18-hich tractor plow, 2 bottom; 1 18-Inch tractor plow, 1 bottom; 1 24-Inch tractor plow, 1 bottom; 1 grub plow; 1 Tractor disc harrow; 1 7-H. Tractor disc harrow; I 1-It. tractor disc harrow; 3 6-in. metal wheel wagons; 1 metal wheel wag on; 1 buzz saw; 1 Gas engine with pump; 2 Gas engines; 1 4-seelion spring-tooth harrow; 1 heavy duty fTesno scraper; 15 Peppermint Oil drums; 1 2-horec cultivator and parts; 2 Centaur Tractors; 1 Digger cultivator made from plow; 2 Onion planters for tractor; 3 Splko Tooth 4-sectlon harrows; 1 corrugated roller; 1 drill; 1 8-fl. grain drill; 2 flax drills; 2 John Deere mowers; 1 drag saw; 3 mint cultivators and weedcrs; 1 flax puller; 1 1-inch tractor grader and scarifier; J 4-inch centrifugal pump; pipe for 4-Inch pump; 1 Rco truck; 1 truck hoist; I Fairbanks scale; 1 weeder on wheels; 2 Hand cultivators; 6 garden cultivators; 1 corn aheller; 1 Johnson grass harrow; tools of all kinds, like shovels, hoes, rakes and wrenches. We will also sell at auction: I peppermint still located on the Ada Skiff place near Chemawa, and, 1 peppermint still located on the Hicks-Jones property in Lake Labish. LADD & BUSH F. No & GLEN WOODRY AUCTIONEERS PHONE 5110 The Capital Journal Classified Advertising Department offers a greater service to the residents of Salem PHONE 3571 A representative will call for your advertisement No advertisements' taken over the phone Call The Capital Journal classified department today Service Effective Economical tttmtm 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiittma