p ; CAMERAS RECORD HISTORY Pictures Contrast Salem of Sixty Years Ago and Now By Ben Maxwell Sixty odd years ago, when East school (now the abandoned Washington) was new, a photographer with a heavy view camera trudged to the roof of the structure to record the northerly vista of Salem on a glass plate now in -the Cronise collection. That splendid landscape, when compared with another recently made from the same location- ' " itJiT:iH J? v-v3. L,,: . h" 1 rj! - .1 14 rtV v, ... -If Views Made Sixty Years Apart Show Salem's Expansion Top: Photograph made from roof of Washington school in the late 1880s showing Salmon Brown's home in the fore ground and the undeveloped area to the northward. Eli Stege's house alone appears on D street and Market street was yet a country road. Below: Recent view from the same location and in the same direction showing northerly development of Salem during six decades. Four Corners Brownie Troop Makes Dolls for Children Four Corners, Dec. 13 Brownie troop 107 held their meeting after school with 19 girls present. Sixteen dolls were completed to be given to under privileged children. Patricia Anne Backe, 4410 Hudson avenue, became a new member. Visitors for the day were Myra Wilson, Patty Etzel arid Joanna Weekly. . There will be no ittownie meeting tms week. The Christmas party will be after school December 19 at the Lincoln school. There will be a gift exchange. Each girl is to bring a small gift. Host esses for the day were Sharon Dillard and Leta Thayer. House guest in the LeBarron Force home for two weeks was Mrs. Toppleton of Denver, Colorado. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Shrake and children Janice, Dick and Gregg drove to Gates, Ore., Sunday to visit the Charles Tucker family. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Prock and family who formerly lived here have returned after spending several months in Burns, Ore. Marvin Benz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Benz, Mahrt avenue, has recovered from serious burns received recently sufficiently to return to his classes but is not yet able to take his bicycle pa per route. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Ander son had as their house guests this week Mrs. Anderson's bro ther and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Dickson of Orando. Wash. The Dickson's were en route to Santa Cruz, Calif, where they will spend the winter. Main Transmission Power Lines Fail Portland, Ore., Dec. 12. (U.R) Bonneville power engineers said a mysterious failure of three major transmission lines Sun day cut electricity to lower Columbia river aluminum plants and Southwestern Washington. The three lines were North Bonneville - Midawy, Chehalis Longview and Chehalis-Coving-ton. The blackout lasted 11 minutes. Although, most people in the Middle Ages thought the earth was flat, Eratosthenes, who lived 2,200 years ago, taught that it was round. Everyone Knows Only Caterized Oil Leaves NO CARBON! SOOT! 35622 35606 Salem'i Exeltulve Cateriied Oil Dealer Howard J. Smalley Oil Co. 1405 Broadway USE Organic Fertilizer The Right Way to Rebuild Soil Free of Weed Seeds Odorless 6 sacks $5.00 B"Yton $10.00 a ton..... 17.50 FREE Delivery Anywhere in Salem area Phone 3-8127 and approximately in the same direction, is a revelation of Sa lem' expansion during six dec ades. 4 1 Marion County Pictorial An nual for 1886 gave the popula tion of Salem as about 6000. In mates of state institutions were doubtless included in the esti mate. The early view from the roof of East school does not sug gest any congestion of popula tion tdthe northward. In the immediate foreground facing Marion street, and flank ed by a wooden fence, is an old dwelling that then stood near the center of the block. Some decades ago this structure was moved and in the recent view stands to the right and behind more modern houses. Here during the 1890s, and perhaps even when the first pic ture was made, resided Salmon Brown with his sizeable family. Salmon was the second son of John Brown who, in 1859, was hanged for his raid on the arsen al at Harper's Ferry, and whose body "lies a mouldering in the grave." Salmon Brown conduct ed a meat market at 13 th and Center streets where the Nazar ene church now stands. He was not distinguished on account of a generous prosperity. North Mill creek flowed be hind Brown's house and ample vegetable garden in what is ap proximately its present channel. Shown in the old view is a pool between the house and barn where two generations of Salem oldsters learned the dog stroke and called their swimming pool the "Live." Here in the 1880s and 1890's the boys went swim ming in the raw to the amuse ment or amazement of passen gers on trains creeping across a nearby trestle. Beyond, on D street adjacent to the railroad, was a single house then or later the dwelling A helicopter survey Friday failed to show why the same lines failed that day. Engineers thought wind or falling tree branches could have caused tem porary short circuits. of Eli Stege, a section foreman of long standing. This home was dismantled a decade or so ago and the large conifer that now marks the approximate site is not even visible in the older pic ture. Beyond was a county road that has since become Market street. Jn the 1880s this locality was a farming region and the toot of the threshing engine was heard hereabouts even in the first decade of the present cen tury. Beyond and distantly are the fairgrounds and what appears to be the judges box or bandstand in Lone Oak track. Sixty years has brought the transformation indicated in the recent photograph. Houses in the foreground with their appurtenances extend to Mill creek now obscured by 20th century construction. North of the creek is the municipal play ground and its swimming pool. And there are among those of an older generation people who presume to doubt that supervis ed youngsters swimming in chemically purified water have any more fun than boys of three generations ago who raided Sal mon Brown's garden and dis ported themselves in the Live during the 1890s. Beyond the confines that were D. G. Murray's cow pasture in 1910 is the modern high school, and behind this an athletic field well populated by frogs and an occasional wild duck during the wet autumn in those bygone times. As the landscape stretches northward are chimneys of to day s industries, where an at mospheric haze caused by their production obscures vision short of the fair grounds. Item; of Interest, including current newspapers, will be bur ied for 100 years in a stainless steel cylinder at Alexandria, Va, to relievo coughs aching muscics Muaterole not only brings fast relief )DUt iv great paiu-reiMiviuK (ueuicauuu breaks up congestion in upper bron- cmai tuDes. Aiusieroie oners aijLi me benefits o( a mustard plaster without the bother of making one. Just rub It on chest, throat and back. Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, Dec. 13, 1949 17 YOU'RE.stp TO PLEASE WHEN GIVING THESi... - ;fff I E S Wy'tJJ Mllf 'Al oil Uodlng L """Vi jKfly V M J ' F'""l,l''n THIS Xjf tyii Jf tAX'lff Daparlm.nl Storti $0V Jysy $i,o$350 Department S What do YOU want in a drink? Moil folks want better laste. That's why they twitch to lighter, milder, smoother CALVERT! CALVERT reserve Blended Whiskey -86.8 Proof-63 Grain Neutral Spirit. Calvert Distiller Corp.. New York City How America's first service station was born One day back in 1907, a Stand ard of California man stood watching a line of impatient motorists in goggles and linen dusters waiting to bay fire-gal lon cans of gasoline at Standard's Seattle plant. He had an idea for serving customers more efficiently, more conveniently. The next day a thirty-gallon tank which had been a kitchen water heater was installed opposite the main gate at the plant. To it were attached a valve-controlled hose and a glass gauge... so gas could be poured directly into the customers' cars. That makeshift arrangement was the first service station in America. Today there are more than 10,000 Company and Independent Dealer stations selling Standard of California products. The services and con veniences they offer. ..the improved products they sell. ..would prob ably make them hard to recognize by the men who developed the first station. 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