Salem, Ore., Friday, December 21, 1956 Page 4 Section 1 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritu Published every afternoon except Sunday at 280 North , Church St. Phone EM-46811 ! Full Leased Wire Service of The Asnocleted Pre-sa and The United Presa. The Associated Preas la exclusively entitled to the use for pub lication of all newa diapatches credited to It or otherwlae credited In thla paper and aleo newa published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Ctrrlrri Monthly. 11.25; Six Months, 17.50; On Tear, 115 00. By mall - In Orei on: Monthly, $1.00; Six Months, fS.OO; On Year, 9.oo. By mall ' ouuia ureion: monuiiy, tut; six Aionini, unt itar, iis.ira. Anniversary of Saint and Sinner December 21 is observed as the birthday anniversary of two extraordinary men, Saint Thomas, the apostle of Jesus, who helped found the Christian religion and Joseph Stalin, apostle of the devil. One lived in the in the 20th century. The former helped found the religion of Christianity, and the other did everything in his power to destroy it. What little we know of Saint Thomas is due to tradition and legend, but what we know of Stalin is historically verified for history. While Sta lin was worshiped as a god he plunged the world into an organ Ized bloody maelstrom of human destruction and slavery. St. Thomas was known as the not present when Jesus first appeared before the apostles after cruel- ; fixion and said "Except I shall see J and put my finger into the print of ' His side, I will not believe," which vinced. He said. My Lord and my Saint Thomas, also called Didymus (signifying twin) Is said to have been a native of Anlioch, and a step-brother of Jesus, It fell to his lot to proselyte in India, and tradition relates with great circumstantiality that he hesitated to travel there, until Jesus appeared to him in a vision and ordered him to visit the . Parthian king who ruled over Kabul Valley and the Punjab, ' and to build him a palace, which he did and converted and bap- tized King Uonuopnares, whose reigning from A.D. 21 to 52 at Saint Thomas went further Christians of St. Thomas in Malabar and was married at Mad ras, In Ceylon he shares with . on Adam s Peak, reported left on his ascension Into heaven. ' His remains were transferred to Edessa, where his grave was ' reported by.Chrysostom, who four genuine tombs of the Peter, Paul and John. An apocryphal Gospel of Thomas is published in "Evangelia Apocrypha," In his Zoological Myth ology. Stalin, whose real name was Joseph Vissarionovitch Djugash vlli, the son of a cobler, was born in Teflis, Georgia, Dec. 21, 1870, and died March 3, 1953 after a brief illness. He was wor- ! shiped in Russia as a god. His crimes are too many to narrate, but the lengthy summing up of his long career of bloody tyran ny was aptly and correctly summarized by his accomplice and successor Nikita S. Khruschchev before the supreme Soviet , congress, too well known to need repetition. Rut only a few years ago, ail Russia, including its European ! and Asiatic satellites paid, what the ancient Romans called divine tribute to Stalin as god of communism, whose anniver sary was a holy day in all his vast enslaved empire. The civilized ancients of the first century were better judges of saints than the modern barbarians of the 20th century. G.P. How Fast Must the South Move? The rest of the country thinks Texans look upon themselves ', as more of an ally or assoclats of the United States than as ! merely one of Its 48 members. So wa suspect that the doclsion : of Federal Judge William H. Atwell of Texas will be hailed by headline writers as a reversal decision against school segregation. Such however Is not the case. The 84 year old Dallas jurist Is obviously no admirer of the highest court, for he observed that it had no actual constitu tional provision or even a law upon which to base its decision. But he did not say: "The Supreme Court is hereby reversed." Rather he noted that the Supreme Court has left to the lower courts and to the school authorities the implementing of its decision. He concluded that the school authorities in Dallas are trying in good faith admittedly not with any great haste to carry out the integration mandate. Therefore lie refused to order immediate integration, saying he was satisfied they were proceeding properly. The case will be appealed to a Circuit Court of Appeals and probably from there lo the Supreme Court. It will he very in teresting to see what these tribunals say of Judge Atwcll's deci sion. The segregation decision of the highest court will stand. This is certain. The question is: How much haste will be re quired in putting it In effect? It is quite proper for the courts to answer this question. The unfortunate angle is that southerners who are trying lo nullify the Supreme Court's decision will find further encouragement for dragging their feet. School hoards should be entitled to time to bring about this drastic change with a minimum of ill feeling and dislocation. They are not entitled to derail it. No NVjjligonro Horc Salem, regardless of handicaps and discouragements, has not been negligent of the fringe, area problem. And right now It is more on the alert than ever. Hie city council and the city planning commission have done everything legally possible to maintain an orderly frince de- volopment, and the county planning commission has done and Is doing all it can without a helpful county zoning ordinance which the voters have thrice, refused to approve. The Chamber of Commerce Is alert to the siltiation and its president, Claude Miller, by authority of his hoard of directors, lias appointed a committee for research and investigation into me prnuicm. it win direct its attention to each of the local areas. And from the south Salem district, where a Salem Heights coterie recently proposed incorporation of a separate city will come another committee. All of these groups will work cooperatively, although the city and county official bodies will be in a standby status main-''he ly to give assistance if requested. And then there is the state legislative inlorim mmmiiim on local government which has problem. It will report to the l!lf,7 legislature and 'ask for tome action on a statewide basis. Something constructive and beneficial to growing commun ities should result from all this effort hv the time the legisla ture adjourns next spring. Ad lii i as a California Senator? The San Francisco Chronicle Democratic parly is pressuring Adlai Stevenson to move to California, and not for the reasons most people go there, which are: 1. To enjoy the climate, and 2. To make a sockful of money while doing it. No, they want Adlai to come out and locate in order to be come a California senator. There is little hope for him becom ing one in Illinois. He could become eligible in one vear. in time to run against Knowland in lir.8. You'd think a stale like California could furnish candidates without having to import em, oui ineso gentry seem m Anyway it's an idea. Lots of people would be only too clad , r;r bJ. u , i . . . 3 h to move to California In order, o be a senator even a state sen - lor. But its lot easier to migrate to California than from mere to tne U. h. Senate ciiamiier. as many another has dis- covered ere now. Nor would Californians be flattered to be told tnat tllcy must go east for their senators. innse who indicated their choice rocoru-piaying session won inr his nasal metaoonsm is nigher: up me tight and submit to un And the 1952 election, in which Knowland won hv nearlv m,ll e 'he Golden Slate. Iloajrahle Gerald I.ascclles. a cou- he burns up more calories daily conditional surrender. i . .ni:- ' i i... j..- - .. '. . ' .. : Nct in order were (oh onnor- sin of Oueen Eluaheth and editor" than does the female. It would be humili.iiino hut it mreeanuaia, nmiior majority. . .cs u s, mat no v., 11 De easy to aisplace. 1 lis is prooaniy wnj laiiioinia Dcmocra..,ll(.v wouM n(,ar (rlom!s or, tic Kingmakers art looking eastward for a Messiah. relatives if they lived there, and , first century A.D. and the other "Doubling Apostle" because he was in His hands the point of the nails the nails and thrust my hand into he apparently did and was con God , (St. John 20:281 name appears on coins as Peshawar on the Indus. and founded the church of the Buddha the honor of footprints mentions his grave as one of the apostles others being those of of the U. S. Supreme Court's given thorough studv to the savs a "powerful cimm" in the mum not Nehru Takes Advantage of Our By DAVID WASHINGTON The refrain "Recession in Kipling's famous al" comes to mind again and again in these moments when Prime Minister Nehru of India occupies the world stage those memor able words, "Lest we forget. lest we forget For, as Neh ru's speeches with their equivocal phrases and verbal bouquets are reported tnrougnoui me nation ny means of radio and television broadcasts and lengthy news dis patches, what is omitted from the story serves to empnasize now con veniently short are the memories of some visiting statesmen. Only yesterday Nehru was fusing in the United Nations to condemn Soviet aggression in Hun gary. He excuses it lamely now with the argument that he had a differently worded resolution to of fer as a substitute. In the final showdown, however, India was the only non-Communist government to refuse to support the cause of freedom and justice. Only yesterday Nehru was en gaged in a diplomatic conspiracy to secure the withdrawal of United Nations troops from North Korea and to leave the U.N. in a humil iating position In the Panmunjom armistice. Only yesterday the free world was condemning Red China as an aggressor in Korea, where 33,629 American boys were killed and more than 103,000 wounded, along with hundreds of thousands of the brave soldiers of our allies. But Nehru has already forgotten what happened in Korea. He is ready to extinguish the fires of liberty and freedom that still burn in For mosa as a symbol for all Chinese. He wants to reward the aggressor Red China even though no act of atonement or repentance has come as yet from the Peking gov ernment. Indeed, Red China still holds many Americans as prison ers of war notwithstanding the provisions of the armistice of 1953 that they must be given up. But Nehru has come neverthe less to the White House this week lo present some "complaints" from Chou Kn-lai, whose govern ment in Peking ordered the mur der of hundreds of American pris oners captured in Korea. Nehru has recognized the Red China government and is cliam- California the Of Some 9,000,000 Americans By GEORGE GALLUP (DtrKtor. American Instltut or PubUo Oolnloa) (EDITOR'S NOTE: Following fi (he first In a series of two reports on the public's rating of the states on six counts: the state lo which they would most like lo move, the state with the healthiest climate, (he most beautiful state, the state with the best job opportunities, and the Ideal winter and summer vacation slates.) PRINCETON. N.J., Dec. 20 The familiar strains of that old stirring melody, "California. Here We Come," have not fallen on deaf ears as lar as about g.omuwo Americans who now reside, else where are concerned. That's the number of adults across the country who say Ihey have entertained the idea of some day moving to another state and, of all the states in the union, the state of their choice would be California. Not too far behind is Florida. About 6.000.000 adults have thought they might like to move there someday. Another 2.000.000 say their choice would be Arizona, Either .because of state loyalty or because of the fact that they are perfectly happy in the state .where they now live, about two I Americans in rverv three say they have never thought about moving o another stale. i,,.iiiin ,n.ri.r. ii,. ri. lowine nursiinn in inii-nows with''011 ,v',h Israel in the attack on an accurate cross-section of adults across the country, with each goo-1 graphical region represented in its correct proportion: 1 Have you ever thought you """" llkc " move 10 nnoiner s-,eV' !!" J-,pc' ' Th, ,igmn n(1ic1(1 ,,. an estimated inj.oon.ooo adults in country today, some 3fi.oofl.ooo jhnve entertained the idea of mov- ,ns someday to another state to live. The 35 per rent who said they had thought about it were next asked : "To whlfh alAlf." When Ihe replies from across the country of Ihose who said ihev had thought about moving lo an-1 Lawrence U. Dcrthick. in declar other state were added up. here ling his support of the Supreme is the list of the top 10 state ! choices in order of frequency of.tion in the schools 1 mention: 1. California 2. Florida 3 Arizona 4 Colorado S. Texas 6 A ashington 7. Oregon R. Illinois 9 Ohio-New York All who mentioned a s then asked: Hhal would be your '"r "nll" move to that sialr?" 1 ;di ,h, , , f f ',, tV,ovl '.o CaWorn.a its climate. Thi uaa mentioned hv nearlv six out of every lo of (un f,,,,,,.,. ,',. ,,,, ,. Very Short Memories LAWRENCE pioning it in the United Nations. Yet, when asked at the press con ference here on Wednesday why, even though his government recog nizes the little Republic of Israel, he has not sent diplomatic repre sentatives to that country,, he said the situation was too serious now to do so in view of recent events in Kgypt. Long before the Suez crisis, however, Nehru refused to give full recognition to Israel. Nehru came here well coached. He handled his press conference and television broadcast with the mastery of a public relations ex pert. These techniques are studied in advance by foreign visitors of prominence because it's all a form of "brainwashing" that means getting across some effective pro paganda. Thus, the usual advice given in advance is to "softsoap" Americans by extolling Jefferson and Lincoln and talking about the American revolution. That's what Sukarno of Indo nesia did on his trip here last spring. As soon as he got back home he resumed the policies of ruthless dictatorship. Nehru and Sukarno have visited the United States after being im portuned to do so by some med dling Americans and starry-eyed diplomats of the school of thought which believes a "giveaway" of American money solves every thing. what does America get out of these visits? A gesture of friendli ness, to be sure, to the Asian world and a manifestation of our policy of the open door everybody is welcome to come and speak his views and those ot his country men. But there Is really ho common interest, geographically, commer cially, or militarily, between the United States and India. Even sen timentally, relations between the United States and India are the same as those of America with many other nations in the world. There is no special position that India occupies which would war rant the prominence and attention being given here this week to her prime minister. There are far closer tics with Britain and France and the other peoples of Europe and with Latin America and the Philippines. But, nevertheless, as long as there are billions of dollars which many misguided Americans want to give away "without strings" that is, without even as suring America an ally in time of war there will be pilgrimages to this country by prominent states men, hat In hand. 'Dream Home' the see nice beauty of the state. Reasons for choosing Florida were much the same as those for California. The one exception was tne tact that some adults felt taxes would be lower in Florida. California has shown the great est population gains of any of the 4fl slates over the last 16 years. Between the 1940 Census and the 1950 Census, the population of the Golden State jumped from 6,907.387 to 10.586,223. The latest population estimate, in November of this year, showed 13.591.000 lamornia res I d e n t s almost ' jears ago, They Say Today Quotes From The News Ily UNITED PRESS PAItIS French Premier Guy Mullet, defending the Anglo French attack on Egypt: "In such a situation, to give way to provocation, to resign oneself to violations of law, to accept the accomplished fact, was to expose oneself to new provocations, to new violations of the law and to new successes up to the moment when the general peace would be in peril.' to LONDON - British Pi'me Min- ictnr Anlhnnu krln,. l a....;.... mat ois government was in couu- kPt: "There was no foreknow ledge that Israel would attack Egypt, But. ..there was. . .a risk of it, .and in the event of. a risk certain discussions took place, as 1 think was absolutely right." . BERLIN The newspaper Her Tag, quoting Soviet Communist Chief Nikita S. Khrushchev in a talk before a meeting of rebellious i university students at Moscow: j "If you do not like the way we do things, then go to work in the ; factories and we will replace you with others in the universities." WASHINGTON Ncwly-appoint- ed Commissioner of Education I ouri necision outlawing segrega- "I am committed to the princi ple that this is a country of law. and that law must be respected and supported MONTGOMERY. Ala -The Rev. Martin Luther King, in announcing that Negroes will end their year long boycott today backed by a Supreme Court order eoding bus segregation here: "We hope this transition (to non- segregated seating i can be made j without difficulty. However, we , rrTarrd ,0f th, ,.:. LONDON -Louis "Satchmo' i Armstrong, following a three-hour of London an magazine: ..Th , r(.,,n.y dis, ), w. had a ball. He s tot a sharo ear." tlHi 6k. ' I . THE ' a. Nehru's Smart, Him a Long Time to Learn By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press Newt Analyst WASHINGTON. W Indians Prime Minister Nehru is an intel lectual but, nevertheless, there are some things he has to learn the hard way and it seems to take him a long time. His visit to the United States and his talks with President Ei senhower may have persuaded him at last that American foreign policy is neither rigid nor aggres sive and that the U. S. govern ment's intentions are good. If that has been the effect on Nehru and he has given some indication it may he the results will have to show up later. Neither he nor Eisenhower has revealed what they talked about. It may seem strange to think that Nehru would have to talk to Eisenhower to develop a better feeling toward the United States, especially after he had dealt first-hand for years with two fine American ambassadors, Chester Bowies and John Sherman Coop er, both men of good will. But the record shows it took Nehru a long time to learn the facts of Indian life. He had led a sheltered life. Until he was 16 hi, wealthy father hired tutors for him. Then he was sent lo Harrow and Cambridge m England. He stayed there until he was 2.1. While there he became con scious of world affairs and made up his mind India should win its independence from Britain. But he was 31 before he made his first visit to an Indian village. When he saw what life was really like among his people, he had a prac tical and earnest reason for want ing independence and fighting for it. Still, it was not until he was 36 and made a second visit to Europe that he realized that independence without a social, political and economic program was an invita tion to chaos. He returned from (hat trip a convinced Socialist. It is Nehru who, when India won independ ence, took the country down the road lo socialism which it is following now. It wasn t until he was about 37 that he became conscious of labor unions and saw a need for them inuia s ui'vciopiiiK iiiuii.'.ir.v. All that may seem pretty slow on the uptake for an intellectual. But that s the way it was Nehru has been critical of the West for years and apparently suspicious of the Inited Mates. But before he left here this week he. said "I gathered the im pression" from Eisenhower that American policy is not rigid the way he said it seemed to indicate It's Tragic, Men, But We Arc Losing Out to the Women Raltlmore Sun To men struggling to hold their .than is the female, eround at all cost in the Battle But these two factors have of the Sexes the Census Bureau ! existed for a long time. They hard brings alarming news. According ; ly account for the sudden numeri to its usually impeccable figures cal superiority of the females, females now outnumber the males ! From here we seem to enter the in the United States by about ' realm of conjecture. It has been 1,381,000. suggested that male occupations Six years ago the female excess ! are on the whole more hazardous was ooly 600 thousand, while in than those of females. 1940 the males were actually in ! majority. The bureau offers two explanatioos. j One is that the mortality rate j is higher for men. The other is that in recent years there have; been fewer male immigrants. T Reasons Cited What are the reasons for the higher mortality among the men? ' Biologists give two. I They say that the male has a higher rate ot pnysicai activity, I Thev point out also that, because , gmftK reasons, the male is I more prone lo hereditary defects I Never Use the Main Gate But It Takes . he was surprised and Is a flexi ble one which can adapt itself to changing situations. While he was here Nehru had some critical things to say about Russia, although he has been very hesitant about doing so in the past. A Smile or Two Telephony Asked the difference between a mistake and a blunder, Mark Twain explained it this way: "If you walk out of a restaurant with tome one's silk umbrella and leave your own cotton one, that's a mistake. But if you pick up some one's cotton umbrella and leave Ike and Nehru Talked Alone For Almost Fourteen Hours By MERRIMAN SMITH United Press White House Writer WASHINGTON (UP) - Back stairs at the White House: 'p'rime Minister Nehru t 24 hours at Gettysburg, Pa., ' u n.:- ...t- ii, in almost continuous conversation for more than 14 hours Mr. Eisenhower has a deep respect for Nehru and he played the role of a gracious host up to the hilt, even to the point of serving tea at the proper time in the afternoon. A man close to Ihe President. one who should know, his moons , rather well, said that Mr. i-.isra- hower's day with Nehru probably was the chief executive's "most difficult" day in the White House. This was not meant in any way as a detractive attitude toward the Indian Prime Minister, but (he look of puzzlement and per mrrclv renresented the rigors of haps boredom on Nehru's face as one man talking to another for; the President displayed his be what appeared at times to be an gloved black Angus cattle in Get- endless period. A veteran's State Department of- ficial said: "l'm all for the hest goodwill u. run venerate with India, but j - ve always thought that it was a ni stake to put Ihose two mco in- S(,her all day and into the even- ing. After Nehru and the President spent most of last Monday to gether in Gettysburg, a friend of the Eisenhower family who must have had some sort ot inside track on the results of the meet ing, said: "I think this (Monday) has un- .Men no douDt would contend that they are under greater strain in mines, factories, fields or offices than women are at home. Mothers of growing children would be likely to deny this, Time te Surrender? It is pointed out that men are more susceptible to high blood pressure than are women. Here evidently is a fruitful field for discussion. Perhaps the time nas come lor tne males to give might result ,n their h Join ,n fewer calories and consequently , havine a hotter chance ot survival. It's Outmoded Astorlan-Budget The United States elected a pres ident this week, but the news was buried on the inside pages of most newspapers, ignored by most radio and television programs, and given scarcely more than a casual glance by most readers. That ana chronistic institution, the electoral college, met in M state capitals and cast the votes which consti tutionally re-elected President Eisenhower. We no douot will con tinue to have the obsolete electoral college so long as it docs not change the results of the popular vote. One of these years a candi date is going to get the popular majority, but an electoral minor ity, and then we will see the abolishment of the electoral col lege system by popular demand. your own silk one, that's a blun der." doubtedly been the most strenu ous and exhausting day he Ithe President! has had since he first became President." Another member of the official family said: "If he came through a session like this, he can stand anything." None of these comments are derogatory of Nehru they merely represent the fact that the two men were thrown together under somewhat artificial circumstances. Mr. Eisenhower has a quick mind and can absorb a problem within a matter of a relatively tew mm- u(os u th) hcck out of hjm (o havc a probicm or prop. j osjljon state(i sni rcstated. The prcsjdCnt and Nehru ended up on very good terms, but shiny communique could wipe out uysourg. When Nehru arrived at the White House last Sunday, the pho- tographers were busy snapping , shots of the President and the ' Prime Minister on the north port- ico oi me nue nousc. A shot overlooked in the bustle of Nehru's arrival was the num ber of men. women and children sitting proudly in the $too-a-seat inaugural stands near the White House northwest gate. This was the best viewing point for the Nrh ru caravan as it moved into the White House grounds. Why Not! A HANO COMPANY; Open. Mon. A Eri. til 9 i State St. Ph. iS2M I ;. ; POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Florida's Enjoying a Boom On Top of a Boom, Hal Says By HAL MIAMI. Fla. on Leaves from a sunburned notebook: Florida today is one of the states enjoying a boomlet on top of the general American boom. It is growing so fast they may soon have to pave the Ever glades and turn them into a park ing lot. You can always tell when times are good here where every other resident seems to be in the real estate business, at least on a part tim basis. The natives quit swap ping land back and forth for practice and get busy selling it to new settlers. Actually, however, they seem to go through the tortures of the damned when they do finally part with a parcel of property they have held for any length of , time As one man put it: "You hate to let go of some thing when you feel that if you just hold it for another 5 or 10 years you will get maybe triple the present price. Tourists are now streaming in at the rate of 10.000 a day. and various sources estimate that be tween 3,000 and 4,000 new fam ilies are settling permanently in the state each month. This accounts for the present Florida version of the Oklahoma land rush. The phrase you hear most often is "If I only had. . . " It ex presses someone's regret over be ing asleep when opportunity ham mered on the door like thunder, than passed on, perhaps never to return. This is the usual version: "I came here 20 years ago and waterland in the Florida Keys was selling for two bits an acre. If I'd only had $5,000 then and bought up some of that acreage, I'd be worth better than a million bucks today." Florida is full of millionaires, some retired, many still active. But for every rea 1 milionaire , it has a dozen "memory million aires." the men who mourn "if I only had..." Many of them court opportunitv now by buying a $2 ticket on the daily double at the racetracks where, if they'd been right smart 20 years ago, they'd now be run ning their own horses. Northerners who have Ihe idea of finding peace and plenty in buying a small Florida fruit or vegetable farm were warned in a recent newspaper editorial here wlf III pi hi ft m IT COSTS NO MORE TO SAY "CHARGE IT" AT CO) ?l Robes by 1! y Rabhor Q KVGrS Wool Flannel ESyJ $r Full Lined Rayons EM yflSgl Orion and Wool Era tjj Plains - Plaids - Patterns BOYLE that the hazards are high In such small-scale ventures. If a man seeks independence on five acres here, the best crop he can plant for a quick profit seems to be a housing project or some apartment houses. Salem 16 Yrs. Ago CJ 1-18 ed. Salem 16 Yrs. Ago By BEN MAXWELL Dec. 21, 1940 E. B. Millard, oldest employe at the Ladd & Bush bank in re spect lo service; had retired after serving since Dec. 27, 1902. Fellow employes had presented Millard with a gold wrist watch. Said he in return, "during 38 years of service this is the first time in my recollection that em ployees have joined together as a unit to give such a present out side of collections for someone getting married or for flowers." , A request to conduct dog rac ing at the 1941 state fair had been rejected by the state board of agriculture. The board felt that to conduct both afternoon and night racing would take the fair out of the agricultural class. On this first day .of winter 18 years ago spring-like weather prevailed all over Oregon. Rain had fallen in every section of the state and nowhere did the mer cury dip below freezing. Two men and two women were dead and a man, woman and child were in hospitals seriously injured as a consequence of a collision near Salem between a car and an ambulance returning from a crash near Hazel Green. Hannah Martin, city recorder elect, had taken the oath of of fice and anounced that Miss Catherine Zorn would be her sec retary. Alfred Mundt would re main as deputy recorder. Relative to "The Farm Head ache" The Capital Journal had editorialized: "The income certif icate plan is too complicated for farmers or newspaper men to understand. Only Harvard erad- uates and New Dealers, who nev ed walked a plow, can fiugre It out." Salem Catches Up Albany Demorrat.Herald Now when you phone Salem you will dial Empire, or will have the operator dial it for you. At last Salem has caught up with Sweet Home. We've dialed "Em pire" numbers at Sweet Home for a year or so now. OPEN EVERY DAY UNTIL CHRISTMAS tVEBT C A Tlinit i ui 9?.n. - 9.m. Divided Payments No Extra Charge