The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 10, 1948, Page 2, Image 2

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jtne Stcfosmon. Sdin. Orocjon. Wedn day. Wot. 10, 1948
Bid on Air-Conditioning Project
At Capitol Wins Board Approval
Br Winston H. Tayler
Staff Writer. The Statesman
Air-conditioning at the state
capitol building and a request for
more funds to purchase capitol
cone properties here were approv
ed Tuesday by the board of con
trol. The board also asked for a
survey of off-street parking possi
bilities for the capitol area, whose
congestion is . increased by the
highway.
: The ventilating and cooling con
tract will go to Western Engineer
ing Co. of Portland on a bid of
(62,896. which engineer's fees will
boost to about $66,000. This will
provide for a refrigeration plant
of the reciprocating type, cooling
of offices on the first floor and
basement and of the governor's
suite and the cafeteria. The house
and senate committee rooms will
also be ventilated, but the work
will not commence until after the
1949 session. v
Westerns bid was the lowest of
four submitted. The air-conditioning
fund of $52,375.09 appropriated
by a prewar legislature will be
augmented by receipts fron state-
owned property;
Te Ask Legislators
The legislature will be asked for
$115,000 to buy the remainder of
the eastern half of the block just
north of the state library and to
divide Summer street between
Chemeketa and Center streets. The
board, which owns two parcels,
hopes to have the half block by
the time the highway department
starts its new office structure in
the block just east of Summer and
north of Chemeketa street.
Building Date Uncertain
When that highway building will
be started is as yet uncertain. The
department has purchased all but
one piece of property in the block
and has authorized drawing of an
agreement with Whitehouse,
Church Newberry and Roehr, ar
chitects who designed the state of
fice building now under construc
tion, officials said Tuesday.
The board of control has $22,210
left in the land-purchase fund, out
of $100,000 appropriated in 1943.
It is expected that $60,000 will be
needed to' buy the three remaining
pieces of property in the half
TTcDmcGfflnr
ELVIN THOMAS & HIS ORCHESTRA
Dinner From 6 P. M. Tin Midnight - - Open Till 1 A. M.
Legionnaires, Auxiliary Members and Their Guests
$15$ 8. Commercial. Salem Phone 2-6949
WHAT'S NEW?
Tiro-Hece
SUIT DRESSES
by
Charles Hymen
ONLY
!
$flg)95
SMART SHOP
115 N. Liberty
I " i V
block, along with, $65,000 for pav
ing and landscaping to aline Sum
mer street.
Authorized preparation of plans
for new boilers at the state hos
pital, to replace boilers which the
state boiler inspector has served
notice he will cut down to 50
pounds pressure next July 1. That
cut would eliminate their utility.
said officials. Funds for the proj
ects are in the next budget.
t r
494 Names on
Bates' Petition
The name of Floyd E. Bates,
Salem route 4, was injected into
the race Tuesday for the state
senate seat to be vacated soon by
governor-elect Douglas McKay
when a petition in his behalf was
presented to the Marion county
court.
A total of 494 names of voters
and taxpayers from various com
munities outside Salem arc con
tained on the petition. Bates,
president of the Oregon Jersey
Cattle club, was described in the
petitions as "a dairyman living on
and operating his farm a man
fully conversant with all forms of
agriculture."
Meanwhile John Ramags of
Wood burn spiked all rumors con
necting his name with the senate
seat when he informed the court
that he is not interested in the
post for himself. The county court
will make the senate appointment
in mid-December, it has reported.
Legion Post
Initiates 23
Salem post 136, American Le
gion, initiated 23 new members, in
a meeting Monday night at Legion
hall.
The Rev. Louis White was speak
er for the special Armistice day
service held during the meeting,
discussing the subject "The Salva
tion of the World Peace Lies in a
Democracy That Works.
Robert Green was named chair
man of the ways and means com
mittee. George Donaldson, Arm
istice day program chairman, out
lined plans for the observance.
Crimson "O" ol
Oregon College of Education
PRESENTS
DEAR
RUTH
Campbell Hall Auditorium
Not. 11. 12. 8 P. M.
A dm. Adults 80c; Students 50c
(Tax included)
Tickets on sale at door
Jurisdictional
Dispute Blocks
Dock Peace
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. P-CSV
A Jurisdictional dispute of the
AFL and CIO was injected today
into the 69 day old west coast
Maritime strike.
The AFL 16,000-member jailors
Union of the Pacific raised it.
Kept from working by the picket
lines of the five striking CIO un
ions but not on strike itself, the
SUP voted against returning to
work until certain jurisdictional
matters are cleared up.
The dispute concerns one ship,
the lumber carrier Rolando, tied
up at Coos Bay, Ore. SUP claims
jurisdiction over the cooks, stew
ards and deck crew as well as
saying it can handle lumber load
ing and unloading. The CIO mar
ine cooks, engineers and steve
dores charge this is an "invassion
of Jurisdiction."
The Waterfront Employers As
sociation and the Pacific Ameri
can Shipowners Associatioq held
a joint meeting today at which it
confirmed acceptance 44 in prin
ciple" of the Roth plan. This plan,
advanced by Almon E. Roth,
president of the San Francisco
Employer Council, calls for the
council and the National CIO to
underwrite any agreements
reached. -
20-30 to Back
Teen-Age Dance
Salem's 20-30 club, meeting
Tuesday night, announced that
plans have been completed for the
organization's sponsorship of a
teen-age dance at the Glenwood
ballroom December 17.
Albert Wiesdanger, executive-
secretary of the Keep Oregon
Green association, was featured
speaker for the dinner meeting
and showed colored slides and mo
vies depicting the activities of his
association.
McMinnville's 20-30 club was
guest of the Salem group, bring
ing the evening's total attendance
to 55 persons.
z:
The PIKE
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You harm been waiting
for this flavor in our
Quality Ice Cream
138 S. Liberty
150 N. Comml
Phone 36828
HAKE
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Wk
Schramm Named
School Instructor
Salem district school board
Tuesday night appointed : Frank E.
Schramm an instructor in the vo
cational program for veterans and
gave Ethel Sundlie, Middle Grove
school teacher, status as an assign
ed substitute. Schramm's salary
will be paid by the federal govern
ment. He is an instructor in the
veterans program.
Salem Men, Women on
Roadside Council Board
PORTLAND, Nov. 9 -&- The
Oregon Roadside council re -dedicated
its work to preserve scenic
beauties and motoring facilities
along state highways today.
Officers were re - elected. Ad
vistory board members include
Leo Adler, Baker; R. H. Baldock,
Salem; Albert Weisendanger, Sa
lem; Karl W. On thank, Eugene;
Charles A. Sprague, Salem; and
Mrs. Blrdena Bird, Salem.
DOCTO DRAFT HINTED
CHARLESTON, W. Va., Nov.
W)- The selective service system
soon may be faced with the ne
cessity of drafting doctors to fill
vacancies in the medical sorps of
tne armed services, Major Gen.
Lewis B. Hershey said today.
HISTORIAN TAKEN ILL
HUNTINGTON, W. Va., Nov.
9 (iTV Carl Van Doren, Ameri
can historian, critic and author.
was taken 111 shortly after arriv
ing here today. The nature of the
writer s illness was not immed
iately disclosed.
RUMOR NEW TO DOUGLAS
NEW YORK, Nov. 9-;P)-Lewis
W. Douglas, ambassador to Great
Britain, said today a report that
he might become secretary of
state was "as much a surprise to
me as the result of the election
was to some people."
A covered bridffe at Lucerne-
Switzerland, built in 1333 is be-
uevea to ds tne oldest such sran
still existing.
mm
ENDS TONTTE!
3.
Tarscm and the Mermaids"
Danny Boy
MATINEE TOMORROW!
Shews Centnnuons From 1:45
mokes love to IANA
... acf yovVe never seen
svefc lov-maklng beore I
T y-S.
ANNE
JOHN
BAXTER HODIAK
r f-
PI as Edrar Kennedy Cemedy
"TROUBLE OR NOTHING"
Color Cartoon News
Cop-Whippers
Whipped; Pay
$330 in Fines
Two traveling salesmen who
"Just wanted to whip a cop were
fined $330 in municipal court on
three different charges.
They are Clayton W. Ebele,
Oregon City, and Sam Matthew
Ivison. Portland.
Eisele paid $125 on a charge
of being drunk and disorderly.
While his companion. Ivison, was
fined $205 for driving while in
toxicated and, without an ope
rator's license. Ivison also was
handed a 30-day suspended sen
tence and had his driver's license
revoked for one year.
The episode leading to the
men's arrest began in the Holly
wood district earlv Tuesday
morning as Officer Harley Cor
dray was walking his beat
Cordray said he stopped a panel
delivery truck to question the
operator about his driving. Sud
denly, he said. Eisele and Ivison
piled out of the truck shouting
we can lick any cop in Salem.
In the ensuing scuffle Cordray
broke his right hand as he flat
tened Eisele. Noting the fate of
his partner, Ivison jumped Into
the truck and fled. A few min
utes later he was arrested by an
other officer north of Hollywood
and charged with driving while
intoxicated.
The two men met again at the
city jail a few minutes later when
Cordray brought Eisele into the
station to be booked for intoxi
cation and disorderly conduct.
Despite his fractured hand Cor
dray was back working Tuesday
night. They said they could lick
anyone on the force, but they
weren t even able to whip me-
the smallest man on the force," he
remarked at headquarters.
Salem Baptists
Refused Seat
At State Mtet
PORTLAND, Nov. 9 -ajK The
Oregon Baptist state convention
today refused to seat a group of
delegates reDresen tins an estimat-N
ed 60 per cent of the 91 state con
gregations.
The dispute will come on the
floor again tomorrow morning,
however. But in the meantime the
group refused seats .registered at
a separate table after a fruitless
three hour debate.
Dr. Ralph Walker, pastor of the
first Baptist cnurch, Portland, r
ported tne ousted group repre
sents a conservative element
which had been dissatisfied with
activities of the more liberal par
ent organization.
A delegation from the Salem
First Baptist church was among
tnose reused a seat at the meet
ing.
Record Vote
Cast in County
A total of 81.49 per cent of Mar
ion county's 41,558 registered vot
ers an all-time high cast ballots
in the general election last week,
Marion County Clerk Harlan Judd
reported Tuesday.
Previous voter representation at
the polls in this county, Judd said,
was indicated last May when about
65 per cent of the 38,982 registered
voters' went to the booths.
In last week's election a record
total of 33,866 cast their ballots in
the county's precincts. Of this
amount 15-491 voted in Salem. Vot
ers inside Salem and those outside
had almost an equal representa
tion at the polls, Judd figured,
with 81.45 per cent of Salem's reg
istration and 81.53 per cent of the
registration outside the city, cast
ing their ballots.
EARTHQUAKE REPORTED
BERKELEY, Calif., Nov. 9 -(JPh
Arnoderate earthquake 1.400 miles
south of here possibly in Mexico
was reported on the University
of California seismograph at 1 39.5
pjn. today.
Comet Seen
In California
CAMBIDGE. Mass.. Nov. 9-P)
The most beautiful comet since
Halley's paid an earthly visit 38
years ago swept through the skies
tonight and gave astronomers
NEW TODAY!
ROARING ROMANTIC
ACTION!
Adventure tnat puis a man
te Danger a woman to Leve
Dana ANDREWS
Jean PETERS
Fun and
Song-Filled
CO-HTTi
IK
at.a
Extra: Jee MeDoakes News
a merry chase In trying to char
ter its course. C
A Californian got the first
American glimpse of the new
comet and an Arizona astron
omer reported later that it ap
peared there moving in a south
westerly direction.
This means the southern Unit
ed States stood a good chance to
see the phenomenon tomorrow
just before dawn.
Dr. Dinsmore Alter, director of
Griffith observatory in Los An
geles, said he followed the comet
forNin hour with naked eye and
field glasses and called it "the
most beautiful comet since Ital
ley's in 1910." : . i
CenUnuens Shews Tomerrewt
K W W W W K -BSSSQH
Vrr " ir!
NOW snowiNGt
Opens :4S-Starta 7:15
Blng Crosby
Joan Fontaine
In Technicolor
"EMPEROR'S
WALTZ"
TOPEYE A RIVETS"
-UNTRAINED SEAL"
LATE NEWS '
Mat Dally From 1 F3L
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CO -HIT! John Emery
"GAY INTRUDERS'
NOW! OPENS :4S P. M.
MONTE HALE COLOR
"UNDER COLORADO
SKIES'"
I Ends Tonight! ! I
I "Repe- ' f I '
I I "Xmbrseeable YeaT I I
TOMORROW!
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WllOll'DOMt
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ARlEflE DAHU
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tnd Major tilt
Pc4' -Ji
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)M I ITl tim urt
, TECRNIC0LOI
I AlfllTIII 1ST!
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COMM. SOWItT , IT. KOSCKT IT, VH 1
TOMORROW!
MATINEE FROM
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PH. J-J721 CONT. SHOWS FROM 1 P. M.
AnrnsTiCE dayi
TWO BRAND IIEV7 HITS! A
RIOT TO KEEP YOU III STITCHES
ENDS TODAY! (WED.)
William Bendlx
"BABE RUTH STORY"
Rebert Lewery
"HEART OF VIRGINIA"
1 WBiTIASTI
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mid TnniLLinG
ADVEimmES AT
TOE BOTTOII OF THE SEA!
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i-A- , feS -"s ' ' ' 'tj -
I jisa ctnscx . cum teura .vfH JTj v fu
&s i 1 niUBGES FELDARYW
J rWh I TANIt CHAMPUK V j
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PLUS! LATE NEWS OF THE WORLD I
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