The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 26, 1952, Page 5, Image 5

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    Cfitiy News IBir3eff;
TURNER FIRM TRANSFERRED
Changes in operation of Turner
tores were shown Friday in as
sumed business name filings with
Marion County clerk. Harvey A
and Alice M. Meyer filed notice
of retirement from Barber s Mar
ket Grocery Department and as
sumption of the name of Meyer's
Grocery. Assumed name certifi
cate for Barber's Meat Market
was filed by Delmer L. and Lois
M. Barber.
Wheel chairs, hospital beds, rent
and sell. Ten to four o'clock. Max
Buren, 745 Court St. Phone 3-7775.
Fresh killed turkey, cheapest meat
on the market. Orwigs Market,
J975 Silverton Rd. Phone 2-6128.
GROCERY CHANGES HANDS
Notice of change of ownership
and name of a Salem grocery was
filed Monday with Marion County
clerk. Barney and Elizabeth L.
Vander Molen filed their retire'
ment from the name of Bellevue
Cottage Grocery. Henry Alvin and
Alice E. Marr filed the name of
Belleveue H.A.M.-A.E.M. Grocery,
1760 Bellevue St.
Tax returns prepared, $4. Pickup
and delivery service. Phone
2-4805.
New hours, Hollynook, 1997 Cap
itol St. 8 a. m. till 9 p. m. Break
fast and lunches served starting
Mnnlav VptV
APARTMENT HIT
Three rings, a string of pearls
and two brooches were taken
from an apartment at 320 N. 12th
St. Friday afternoon in a day
light burglary. Occupants Marie
Wood and Una Mae Stoyka told
police the thefts apparently oc
curred between 2:30 and 4:30 p.m.
Steam baths, Swedish massage.
Licensed masseuse. 346 N. Capitol,
Phone 3-6253 for appointment
We buy newspapers and maga
zines. Phone 2-2975.
CHANGES BUSINESS
Tinkham Gilbert filed Friday
with Marion County clerk his no
tice of retirement from R. L. Elf
strom Co. Appliance Department
and his assumption of the business
name of Tinkham Gilbert Ap
pliance Co., 260 N. Liberty St
Fur coats restyled and Jackets
and capes made to order. Hager's
Fur Shoppe, 102 West Miller.
Exceptional values 'on coats,
dresses and sweaters at Lorman's,
1109 Edgewater. Open evenings
till 7.
TO BUILD HOUSE
George G. Schaub was issued
a permit Friday by the Salem
City Building Inspector's office to
build a $16,800 house at 620 Ben
Vista Dr. A permit to alter a
house at 2135 University St. at an
estimated cost of $3,500 went to
A. G. Hedstrom.
Another shipment has arrived of
the famous Westinghouse Auto
matic Electric Clothes Dryer. Yeat
er Appliance Co., 375 Chemeketa.
Phone 3-4311.
Landscaping and designing. No
Job too large or too small. F. A.
Doerfler and Sons Nursery, 250
Lancaster Dr. at 4 Corners. Phone
2- 2549.
CHEMEKETANS MOVE MEAL
The annual banquet of the Sa
lem Chemeketans, originally slat
ed for the Mayflower Hall, will
be held tonight at 6:30 o'clock at
the Brooks School gymnasium,
nine miles north of Salem. The
school is located just west off the
Pacific Highway at Brooks.
Therese Lowry hair stylist now
at Price's Beauty Salon. Phone
3- 5859.
Johns - Man vine mingles applied
by Mathis Bros., 164 S. Com'l
Free estimates Pb 3-4642.
Senator Bain Arrested, '
Drunk Driving Charge r
State Sen. John Henry (Jackj
Pain, 53, Multnomah County legis
lator, was arrested early Friday
morning near Gervais on a charge
of driving while under the in
fluence of liquor.
He was booked at the Marion
County Sheriffs office at 2:30
a. m. and posted $250 bail about
an hour later. He was slated to
appear in Marion County District
Court
GARDNER NOT TO RUN
State Sen. Russell Gardner,
Lincoln and Tillamook Counties,
has advised friends here he will
not be a candidate for reelection
this year. He resides at Newport
Births
AULT To Mr. and Mrs. Clin
ton Ault 1973 Oak St, a son, Fri
day, Jan. 25, at Salem General
Hospital.
MeKHNNEY To Mr. and Mrs.
Robert . McKlnney, 2565 Maple
Ave., a daughter, Friday, Jan. 25
at Salem General Hospital.
NEWMAN To Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Newman, Salem route 8, box
855, a son, Friday, Jan. 25, at Sa
lem General Hospital.
MERTL To Mr. and Mrs. Jo
seph Mertl, 3220 Beacon Ave., a
daughter, Friday, Jan. 25, at Sa
lem General Hospital.
BARTOEZ To Mr. and .Mrs.
Raymond Bartoez, Turner route 1,
a daughter, Friday, Jan. 25, at
Salem Memorial Hospital.
DURBIN To Mr. and Mrs. Ray
rurbin, Albany, a daughter, Fri
day, Jan. 25, at Salem Memorial
Hospital.
Ml I '
SILVERTON FIRMS CHANGE
Moving of Joseph E. Marsh
from South Water Street Grocery
in Silverton to Marsh's Grocery
on Silverton: Star Route was
shown Friday in assumed business
name filings with Marion County
clerk. The ; Silverton store was
taken over by William B. and
Lois C. Starkey, according to the
filings.
Big dance at the Macleay Dance
HalL Saturday, January 26.
Air-Steamship tickets anywhere.
KugeL 3-7694. 153 N. High St
K0G Activity
For 1952 Due
Early Start
All indications pointed to an
other vigorous campaign against
man-caused forest fires, as Keep
Oregon Green Association started
its 1952 program rolling Friday.
Gov. Douglas McKay, associa
tion chairman; conducted the an
nual meeting at the Senator Hotel,
beginning with a noon luncheon.
Officers remain unchanged for
this year, including the governor,
Dean Paul Mr Dunn of the School
of Forestry at Oregon State Col
lege, as vice chairman; Albert
Wiesendanger, executive secretary;
Carl V. Hersey, Portland, treas
urer. New ideas being tried by Wash
ington state in forest protection
were reported to the Oregon group
by M. P. Lazara director of the
Keep Washington Green Associa
tion. He said new parts of the pro
gram will include Keep Green
reminders on blotters to be placed
in all Washington Postoffices
under special authority from the
Postmaster General; a Keep Green
reminder on all Washington auto
license windshield stickers; and
200 "Keep Washington Green" and
"Use Your Ashtray" signs to be
Kin ted on state highways in
ters 6V? feet high.
Lazara has been in Salem three
days to study organization of the
Oregon Green Guards youth pro
gram and other Oregon features
which Washington hopes to make
use of this year.
About 25 attended the annual
session after which they witnessed
a preview of a new Hollywood
color production "Red Skies of
Montana," in the State Theater.
The film, starring Richard Wid
mark, glorifies the U. S. Forest
Service smoke jumpers.
Bar Groups to
Honor Moody
Marion County Bar Association
has started plans for a four-coun
ty bar meeting in honor of Ralph
Moody, new president of the Mar
ion County Bar and a practicing
attorney for 63 years.
Moody was elected this week by
the local bar.
Others named are Robert De
Armond, vice president and Jo
seph Meier, secretary-treasurer.
The four-county special meet
ing will include attorneys from
Marion, Polk, Linn and Yamhill
Counties.
Republicans
Slate Busy
Week in City
A splurge, of Republican Party
activity is "in the making this
week in Salem.
These countywide events em
erged Friday from planning meet
ings of the Marion County Repub
lican Central Committee and of
the county Republican Club's exe
cutive committee:
A pre-primary Republican can
didates' rally and public party, to
be planned for early this spring
by the club, committee and other
GOP units.
A Washington's Birthday party
at 8 p.m. February 21 in the Sen
ator Hotel, with state club leaders
attending.
Silverton - Republicans' , break
fast meeting, set for Tuesday at
7:30 a-m. at Tony's. .
Marion County representation
at State Central Committee ses
sion Feb. 2 at Portland.
School for precinct workers, to
be sponsored by County Central
Committee in February.
The Washington Birthday event
has replaced a proposed Lincoln
Day rally in the club's calendar.
EXECUTORS' NOTICE .
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
WILLIAM J. VOGT and IDA OLDEN
BURG hav been, by order of ta
Circuit Court of tha Stat of Oregon
for Marlon County, appointed execu
tors of the Estate of JACOB VOGT.
DECEASED. , Any persona having
claims against said estate are request
ed to present them, with proper vouch-'
ers .to said executors at 310 Pioneer
Trust Building. Salem, Oregon, within
six months from the date of this no
tice. Dated this X9th day of December.
1951.
WILLIAM J. VOGT
IDA OLDENBURG
Executors of the Estate of JACOB
VOGT. Deceased.
R HOT EN. RHOTEN Ac SPEERSTRA
Pioneer Trust Bulidicg
Salem. Oregon k
Attorneys for Executors
. D 29 J. t-U-lt-tt
EIPOnTAIIT
Spstfsl Unica Heeling
CALiFomim PAcraiiG
COUP. IMIDEfiS OIILY
- v Wednesday. January; 3X 8:00 P.M.
1 ' Nearly Buried by Cave-In
i . ', - ' ' ' ' ' ' ' -
IT4, i
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&
LOS ANGELES Firemen lower
Ted Wlebers, almost completely buried by a eave-ln as he worked
In a 15-foot sand pit at Los Angeles, Calif. Fellow workers quickly
threw a barrel over bis head to protect him from further slides.
Then the barrel was removed after a huge metal tube was lowered
around him. Firemen then dor away the sand and brought him to
safety, two and a half hoars after the slides. He was not Injured.
AP Wlrephoto to the Statesman.)
County Zoning Gives Rights,
Eugene Consultant Says Here
A county planning and zoning program benefits people by giving
rights rather than taking them away, Howard Buford of Eugene told
a Salem meeting Friday.
Buford, planning consultant and secretary for the Lane County
Planning and Zoning Commission, addressed nearly 100 persons at a
meeting called by Salem Board of Realtors. He said the plan had
worked well in a rapidly growing
Lane County and also would bene
fit Marion County.
Coburn Grabenhorst, board
president, said the group expects
to push such a project for Marion
and Polk Counties this year, with
decisions as to the nature of its
efforts to be made next week.
Marion County Court members
said they would study the proposal
further.
Buford said a planning and zon
ing authority granted by vote of
the people would provide such
things . as subdivision standards
"that make sense," construction
standards, road and drainage
standards, master plan for road
development, protection from en
croachment for schools, a building
code to protect people by prevent
ing their spending money in sub
standard houses needing later
change, more even distribution of
the tax load by revealing new
values through county-wide build
ing permits, setbacks for road
widening and other purposes.
County planning allows "doing
the right thing with less expense"
than in heavily built-up cities
said Buford. He pointed out that
extensive farm and forest areas
would not be zoned, but planners
would be mainly concerned with
aiding the areas where people live
and work. He added that zoning is
not the first but the last phase of
planning.
Marion County
Draft Age at 21
Marion County men of draft age
will not be affected for another
month by the Selective Service
policy of bypassing 19-year-olds
for older men, officials said Fri
day. Notices have already been is
sued to 18 men to report in Feb
ruary, and most of them were in
their early or mid-20s. However,
this was not due to the new order,
but to a local board policy of
taking the eligible men in order of
age, oldest first, according to Mrs.
Edna Wilhelm, clerk.
Marion County has been call
ing 21-year-olds normally, except
for some volunteers. Last fall the
normal list was at the 19-y ear
level, but a vacation from induc
tions here raised the age group
ing, along with reclassification of
4-Fs and married men.
BeCtone
MONO-?AC
hilar
Discover hew
too. may bear agate
yetBMeyotsr
Bess. Write, pi
Beltone Hearing Center
James N. TaXt Associates
22 Oregon Bldg.
Cor. State High Phone 2-4411
MO MnTM Stowi
V
a line to an asphalt plant worker,
Polk County
DA Files for
Renomination
R. S. Kreason, Polk County dis
trict attorney, Friday filed as a
Republican candidate for nomina
tion to the office he now holds.
Filing of the Dallas attorney
was made with the state elections
office.
In another filing, State Tax
Commissioner Robert D. MacLean
filed his declaration of candidacy
for delegate to the Democratic Na
tional Convention from the First
Congressional District.
"I stand for efficiency in gov
ernment with fair and equitable
taxation," MacLean's ballot title
reads.
J. S. Bohannon, Tillamook, filed
for reelection as Circuit Judge of
the 19th Judicial District, posi
tion No. 3. He is listed as non
partisan. Bohannon is now serv
ing his first term as Circuit Judge
under appointment of Gov. Doug
las McKay.
Robert Nelson Resigns
As Appraisal Engineer
Robert Nelson, for 14 years an
employe of the State Tax Commis
sion, Friday resigned as of Febru
ary 29. He served during most of
that time as appraisal engineer in
charge of research.
Nelson is second vice president
of the Oregon Chapter, American
Institute of Real Estate Appraisals.
He will open an appraisal office
in Salem.
3 LID MUTE
TRIAL AT
$3rown J
Find oat for yourself what
it's like to get a closer, clean
er shave in LESS TIME than
it takes with soap-and-blade.
Mora comfortable more
convenient no nicks or cuts,
moss or fuss. It will take only
3 or 4 minutes at our store
Skip your next shave and
come fa.
Jewelers
35
Eofgren Now
District Agent
For Insurance
Cornelius W. Lofgren, who
came to Salem from Wisconsin
in 1949, is the new district agent
for the Northwestern Mutual Life
Insurance Co., it was announced
Friday. .
Lofgren succeeds Paul Acton,
district agent for 25 years, who
asked to be relieved of managerial
duties but who will remain a full
time member of the agency and
continue to serve his clientele of
policyholders from his Masonic
Building office.
The agency in this district now
includes Marion, Polk, Yamhill,
Benton and Lincoln Counties.
Lofgren was a leading agent
with Northwestern in the Eau
Claire, Wis., agency for many
years, the announcement of his
appointment said. He is also
member of the half-million-and-over
club, recipient of the Nation
al Quality Award of the National
Association of Life Underwriters,
and is described as a specialist in
tax and estate planning.
Store Blamed
In Suit for
Woman's Fall
Injuries allegedly sustained In
a fall two years ago in Salem's
F. W. Woolworth Store are the
subject of a $25,765 suit filed Fri
day In Marion County Circuit
Court.
Bessie Mae Sloan filed the suit
against the Woolworth Company,
asking $25,000 general and $765
special damages.
The complaint alleges that the
plaintiff fell Jan. 26, 1950, due to
the negligence of the firm, result
ing in injuries to her left leg, hip,
shoulder and spine.
Fuel Supply Bids
Called by County
Call for bfds for Marion Coun
ty's 1952 supply of gasoline, diesel
oil and kerosene was issued Fri
day by Marion County Court. Bids
will be opened at 10:30 a.m., Mon
day, Feb. 11.
The approximate needs for the
county were estimated at 58,000
ENMEY
W ft.
1 00
SHEER,
51 GAUGE
15 DENIER
HOSE
New Agent
1 .. T
V
s
Cornelius W. Lofrren, new Salem
district agent for Mutual Life
Insurance Co.
Stolen Auto
Recovered
At Jefferson
An auto and a windshield wiper
assembly attracted non-discriminating
thieves in Salem early Fri
day morning.
A 1949 model car, stolen at 2:40
a.m. from Security Motors Car
Lot at 2225 Fairgrounds Rd., was
recovered later in the day near
Jefferson. State police found it
abandoned on the Pacific High
way south of Jefferson.
The office on the lot also w&s
broken into and a coat, cigarets,
about two dollars in cash and the
keys to the stolen car were taken.
Kenneth Parker told Salem city
police Friday that sometime dur
ing the previous night someone
had removed the wiper assembly
from the windshield of his car
while it was parked at 2140 S.
Commercial St.
Meanwhile police reported they
recovered an auto here Friday re
ported stolen Jan. 18 in Corvallis.
The abandoned auto was found
parked in the 100 block of W.
Wilson Street.
gallons of gasoline, 5,000 gallons
of diesel and 1,000 gallons of kero
sene.
Perf
w v
tleek, sheer nylons that ere perfect . ts
very lest stitch, Colors are keyed to your every
Springtime 'need. 1.
PENNEY'S MAIN FLOOR
The gterteamfriv geflomy Oregon, SarnrdaylcnmarY 3.1352-5
60 Downtown
Merchants
In New Group
Sixty merchants Friday organ
ized a Downtown Salem Merch
ants Association for the promotion
of their business and the prosperi
ty of Salem.
They elected John Adlon, man
ager of Miller's Department Store,
president; Ralph Nohlgren, res
taurateur, vice president; Law
rence R. Fisher, Ladd & Bush-Sa-lem
Branch, U. S. National Bank,
treasurer, and James R. Beard,
Montgomery Ward Co., secretary.
Operation of the association's
program on a budget of at least
$1,000 a month was proposed by
Nathan Stein bock of Raemars Shoe
Store, chairman of the organiza
tion committee which brought its
report before the merchants at
I luncheon in the Senator Hotel
i yesterday.
Steinbock asked consideration of
a membership dues plan by which
member firms would pay $2 to $30
a month based on volume of busi
ness.
.V
Other committee proposals: A
board of directors to represent all
classifications of retail business;
close cooperation with Salem
Chamber of Commerce and other
civic groups in promotion of new
industry and attracting more
trade in Salem; general advertis
ing promotions planned by six
months periods; employment of an
executive secretary.
The group heard Carl Wendt,
manager of City Transit Lines,
recommend support for bus trans
portation as a business stimulus.
In" this connection, he suggested
that more merchants provide pack
Jb
0
Rockets to Netv Highs in 1952 with:
That New L-O-N-G Look!
New 16 h.p. ROCKET Engine!
Oldsmobile's Own New Hydramatle Super-Drive!
New Hydraulic Steering Latest GM Contribution te
driving ease!
r New Comfort New Ride New Luxury Inside!
This Really IVeiv OLDSMOBILE on Display
AW ...AT
LODER BROS. rS
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CORCIOU1
NIW SPRING COLORS
fiista Jusiin
MAKOI GXAS
age delivery service to customers.
William Hammond of Hawkins
& Roberts urged increased sup
port of that firm's off-street com
mercial parking facilities - as a
boost to downtown business by al
leviating parking congestion oo
the streets. - .-
Hearing on Gas Rates
Due Late in February
Hearing on an application of the
Portland Gas and Coke Company
for a rate increase probably will
be held late in February, Public
Utilities Commissioner Charles H.
Heltzel said Friday. - -,
ASSOCIATED FUEL OILS
,oucn 5
HOME FUEL CO;
JSS 2-4119
I fh At I
i Sef,ee
DSMOBUE 1
Income Tax
Returns Prepared
jlcon Afiscus -
1509 N. 4thJFh;is235
3
184 N. liberty