: l. 20 Capital Journal, Salem, Or Tuesday, March 10. j953 hhhhmpii i , "' i ' V v 7v 3l J i i f A rl Jrf ' Don Hostetler," veteran from Lebanon, Or., adjusts the camera amplifier of the Eugene Vocational School'i new closed circuit television transmitter. Noisy Muffler Just Too Bad - A mlx-up in directions and a noisy muffler put 17-year-old Sumner, Washington, youth in the Salem city Jail Saturday night on a charge of larceny of an auto; The vouth. Francis Paul Wel der, told police that he stole the ear and started out for Portland but found he was heading soutn after getting about five miles ' from town. Coming back through town an officer heard the noisy car and started to stop Mm lor violation of the noise ordin ance. - .Walder ifinored three sound- - Ings of the police siren so the officers pulled wide to tne leu, opened the siren wide open and cut in front of the car forcing it to the curb. -As the officer approached the parked car, he noticed Walter reaching behind the seat as if after a weapon so he quickly Jerked the door open and pulled the youth from, the car. He found that there was a weapon all right, but the boy had been trying to hide it in stead of getting it. It was a German make revolver that Wal der said he found in the car. He also said he was a Wash ington parole violator and had been convicted there on charges ol larceny of autos and burglary. He recently stole a ear in Chey enne, Wyoming, he said. . Walder said he prowled sev eral cars hi Salem before find ing a car with the keys in it. It Wis the ear he wu driving when stopped. The ear was re gistered to Wayne I. Wlllard, ISM North fourth street . The youth ia being held lor possible return to Washington or Juvenile court action here. Pre-Season Fires Strike Forests Oregon is already having fires that are getting into its forest areas. The unseasonable weather is blamed for these fires, which were started to burn off old fern in farm lands and got into the forested area. Kd Schroeder, district warden for northwest Oregon, reported several such, fires, over .the week-end in his district. There were also fires of this nature in Lincoln county near Burnt Woods and Toledo. Both . State Forester George Spaur and Albert Wiesendanger, executive secretary - for Keep Oregon Green, are urging farm ers burning fern to exercise ex treme caution, noting that frosts and east winds make the ferns even more combustible. It was pointed out that fires getting out of control and burn ing through the forests' are de stroying the small trees hidden away among the ferns. Soon Available A 1 modern television trans mitter, complete with . camera and other necessary equipment, will be available within a few day for the training of radio students, the .Eugene vocation al school announecd today. The complex piece of elec tronic, equipment using 8 0 radio tubes will be used in two major -fields of instruction, school officials said. Radio servlclnc trainees will be pro vided with a steady, reliable test signal essential tor making adjustments on television re ceivers.. At the same time stu dents in the school's radio com munications course will have the opportunity of making clr- cuit adjustments on an actual television transmitter and ob serving the results on a tele vision receiver. Other possible uses of the equipment include training in television studio technlaues in such field as lighting, staging and program production. . Present plans call for opera tion of the television trans mitter on a "closed-circuit" basis confined to the building. If used with an Iconoscope camera tube, ; of commercial type, a picture of standard 525 Mnes-per-ineh quality would be obtainable. The equipment was was designed and constructed by Calvert . Applegate, chief engineer of station KERG of Eugene. The synchronizing generator and associated cir cuits operate In accordance with Federal Communications Commission standards for tele vision transmitters. It is be lieved to be one of the first in stallations of television equip ment for training purposes in the Pacific Northwest and will feature the Salem High school and Willamette university bands in final numbers with the massed choirs. Salter Weathers - is chairman of the committee in charge of arrangements. Mr. and Mrs. John Schmidt, Mrs. A. A. Seger- sten, and Miss Muriel Fitts are committee members. May 3 Set as Date for Annual Choir Festival The Salem Music Teacher as sociation has selected' Sunday. May 8, as the date of its 1953 Choir Festival. . , The festival, en annual affair sponsored by the local teachers group, presents the choirs of all local churches who desire to nar- ticlpate. Each choir nuur nre- sent a number and the combined choirs will present two selections unaer the direction of Den Mel vin Gelst. The festival will be held In the new Baptist church this year New Dental Office Opens on Westside . A new dental office has been opened in West Salem by Dr. F. L. Dilger, DDS, in his home at 1S43 Edgewater street. ' Dr. Dilger is a graduate 'of Creighton university, Omaha, Neb. He practiced a short time at Yankton, S. D., and then or some time at St Helens, Ore. He has lust returned from two years duty in Germany with the U. 5, Army, . Dr. Dilger is married and lives with his wife, Rosemary, and three sons, aged 5, 2, and eight months, at 1343 Edgewater St Early-Day Legislatures Had Their Humorists Too Legislative levities in Oreson started early. The 1845 session at Oregon City illustrates the point. Jesse Applegate, breathless and burst ing with excitement, dashed in to the house and demanded that all rules be Instantly suspend ed. After the disconcerted members bad regained their composure Applegate introduc ed a bill to prohibit dueling and hurried it to final passage within an hour. He hoped his law would be come effective soon enough to stop Sam Holderness from gun ning ror ur. .Elijah White, a member of the Methodist mis sion on the Willamette. Dr. White's friends were forever grateful to Jesse Applegate for that law against dueling. Sam Holderness had a reputation for being a lethal man with a pis tol. Since 1846 legislatures have occupied many buildings serv ing as capitols In at least three Oregon towns. But it was that year, 1846, that 16 members of the . provisional legislature agreed to pay H. M. Knighton ?2 a day as rental for the ses sion conducted in his Oregon City home. Actually it worked out even better than that for Knighton. He got himself ap pointed sergeant-at-arms and received additional pay. When the 1847 session came around times were tough in the Oregon country. "Maybe," the legislators rum inated, "we've been paying too much for session rentals. So they offered Stephen Meek, By BEN MAXWELL brother of the more illustrious Joe, $1.25 a day for use of his modest Oregon City dwelling But they stayed with Steve for only a single day. Next morn ing they adjourned for 20 min utes and reassembled in the Methodist church where rent was free. Then, it was that James W Nesmith, later Oregon's distin guished Civil War senator in congress, pulled a fast one. He succeed 1 in .amputating the south end of Yamhill county to form Polk. While, his opponents were amusing themselves with refreshments and . horse . billi ards in Lee Barton's tenpln alley Nesmith called up his bill and got the measure passed. , Provisional and early terri torial legislatures heard dl vorce cases and granted- de. crees. They were numerous, too, but the legislators were considerate. Rev. Thomas H, Fearne, the Methodist circuit rider who came to Oregon in 1851, tells why. Shortly after his arrival Rev. Mr. Pearne made acquaintance with an interesting little girl, apparently eight or nine years old, "whom I caressed and pet ted as a child." A few weeks later he saw her in another part or the country. He renewed his attention to the child and Inquired: "Have you left home to at tend school? "La, no," the precocious youngster replied. . "I'm mar ried.".--: ....v....-:.-.. :'. . ... i . "Amazed," Rev. Pearne re called, "I let her down from' my knee. I thought you were only a child. How old are you.1 "I'm 10, going on 11," she answered. Before that child was 18, Rev. Pearne sadly mentions, she had several times been mar ried and divorced. Oregon's donation . land law for 1848 gave to each married person a half section of land and a full, square mile section to those joined by wedlock. , And the age for wedlock did not' seem to matter. . Swing Young, whom Meth odist missionaries dissuaded from starting a distillery and making firewater from black strap molasses, died early in 1841. He was well-to-do and probation of his estate was jus tification enough for laying the foundation for a provisional government. His estate' was taxed to defray the expeness of a session of the provisional legislature and $1500 appropri ated out of his funds to build Oregon's first jail at Oregon City. ... Came 1848 and the gold rush ghost session. Members of the legislature for that year num bered 23. On opening day only nine showed up. The rest had Joined the gold rush to Califor nia. -John Carey, Yamhill pio neer, commemorated the event in poetry: , "At sound of gold, . Both young and old - . . Forsook their occupation: ' And wild confusion seemed to rule ' . . ' .- In every situation." . ; In early statehood times the legislature needed a chaplain and some of the members thought it would be diverting to engage Rev. Joab Powell, Baptist brimstone preacher from the forks of the Santiam, whose hell fire and damnation theolosv was distinctive. ' On the morning that the sessior opened Joab looked them ovei cooly and then prayed: ; "Oh, Lord, forgive them, for they know not what they do." ; No shorter prayer has been beard by any legislature. . ' First woman to attend the legislature in an official capa city was Mrs. Woodworth who; in 1877. acted as correspondent for the Portland Standard, Members protested and avow ed that some ' subjects - could not. with propriety, be discuss ed in her presenee. ' Sixty . year ago Oregon's senators in congress were elect ed by a joint vote of both legislative houses.. In 1882 and again in 1897 no' senator was chosen because political ant noiitles became so violent that n .ereement on any candidate ?ould not be reached. . And when graft was mention ed in later years there was this story about a rustic member from a remote county in an early-day legislature: The Janitor entered the chamber after the house had adjourned sine die. He saw this hill-billy huddled by the stove. . ... "Sick?" the janitor asked. "Nope," the yokel replied, "just waiting for this old stove to cool, off so I can take it home, too." 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