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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 20, 1952)
City News UBirSeffs COMPANY NAME CHANGED Supplementary articles of incor poration of Patton and Minto Plumbing and Heating, Inc., were filed Monday with Marion Coun ty clerk, showing a change of name to Patton, Inc. The capital stock, also was reduced to $30,000 in $100 shares in the articles filed by Don B. and Rozeltha Patton and Peter M. Gunnar. Johns-Manvthe Roofing applied by expert workmen, nothing down, 36 months to pay Mathis Bros 164 S. Commercial. Free estimates. 3-4642. WOODBURN FIRM LISTED Valley Television Center, Wood burn television and radio firm, is the assumed business name filed Monday with Marion County clerk by Marshall R. McKee. Fur storage time. Remember Loch elle's. 1348 Ferry St. Phone 3-6814. Cold storage on Premises. FARMERS. LIST NAME REALTY BROKER FILES Pacific Newspaper Brokers, a real estate brokerage firm, is the assumed business name filed Mon day with Marion County clerk by Roy R. Cole 689 N. Capitol St. Coming For Summer Schedule Washington, DC & New York Pianist-Coach (Busoni technical principles) For appointment for audition write G. Gene Prather Studios, 1341 New Hampshire Ave., NW (Duppnt Circle), Wash ington 6, DC. ROAD ESTIMATES GIVEN Bids for improvement of Hud son Avenue with oil-mat pave ment will be called after July 1, as a result of revised estimates presented to Marion County Court Monday. The cpunty surveyor es timated cost at $9,931.02 or $2.88 per ownership foot. No objections were filed at a hearing on the estimate. Fresh killed, clean hen turkeys. A,.mPd husiness name of Ed I 39c lb. Orwig's Market, 3975 Sil- Wanner and Sons, general farm- j verton Rd. Phone 2-6128. ing business at Woodburn Route 1, Box 295, was filed Monday with Marion County clerk by Ed, Mary, Paul and Leonard Wanner. Publie Records TOWNSENDERS TO MEET A social meeting for members and friends is in store for Town send Club 17 at 8 o'clock tonight in the home of C. H. Mahany, 345 S. 18th St. Games and refresh ments are planned. Sewing school at Ralph Johnson Appliance. Wed., Thur. & Fri. 10 a.m. & 2 p.m. daily. Free instruc tion on the famous Necchi Sewing Machine. Everybody welcome. Re- H. B. McNall Succumbs to Brief Illness Death of Herman B. McNall at the residence, 770 S. - Commercial St., Sunday, climaxed a brief ill ness. He had been a resident of Salem for the past eight years. McNall was born in Rock Island, HI., Oct 4, 1879, and attended the schools there. He later married Stella Cox in Sleepy Eye, Minn, Dec. 7, 1898. They resided there where he was an auctioneer and in the real estate business until moving to Salem eight years ago. While living in Salem McNall was in the real estate and insur ance business. Services are to be held Thurs day at 3 p.m. in the Virgil T. Gol den Chapel with Dr. Brooks Moore officiating and interment at Bel crest Memorial Park. Survivors include the widow, Salem; daughters, Mrs. Elsie Beech and Mrs. Emily Ebenhoh, both of Sleepy Eye, Minn.; Mrs. Helen Remus, Ottertail, Minn.; Mrs. Bertha Willhite and Mrs. Stella Flom, both of Minneapolis, Minn.; Mrs. Alice Anderson, Bow don, N. D.; four sons, Everett, Gladstone, Ore.; Floyd, Salem; Samuel, Seattle, Wash., and Eu gene, Minneapolis, Minn. Also survived by 27 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Exchange Helps Connect Patients With Doctors tmxsmm f Jim iniumimiimuuiMiiiiwuHiJ"" 4 '- " ( i I I nmmml puinui m J j"'jwujy; , 0 " , , . , I " - .MMMMMMWII I II I'l II P j - ' v ' - 1 f "J The Statesman, golem, Oregon, To day, Mcrf 20. 1952 S Mrs. Vlnce Elliott Is shown takinjr a call at the little -known Salem Medical Exchange switchboard. The exchange is operated as a publie service by local doctors. Calls, mostly at night, come In over two switchboards from patients seeking to locate doctors. DISTRICT COURT Richard Doyle Blunt, Silverton, , freshments served Illegal possession of alcoholic li-; quor, sentenced to 30 days in tne VANDALISM INVESTIGATED county jail Lewis Frank Tasler, Salem Route 9, Box 616, charged with threatening commission of a fel ony, continued to May 20 to con sult counsel, held in lieu of $2,000 bail. William Wayne Nevins, Port land, driving while intoxicated, pleaded guilty, fined $250. MUNICIPAL COURT i,n oHarJ) irh roruiocc or solicitation on my part. Many . thsnlrc Trtt" vr i r nnminfirinn If A case of vandalism was inves tigated Monday by Salem city po lice at the Kelley Farquar Com pany, 1450 Tile Rd. H. J. Mc Guire, purchasing agent, report ed that three small boys had de stroyed property located in a ware house at the company. No value was stated. Remarkable! Indeed, to have re ceived so many votes without urge thanks for elected tnis iau l will oo every thing in my power so that you will never regret your voting for me. A. M. Vistica. HEALTH GROUP ELECTS Election of officers to the board of directors of the Marion Coun ty Tuberculosis and Health As sociation will take place tonight Christena Viola Glunz vs. Carl a a b031"? meeting at 8 o clock in Arthur Glunz: Complaint for di-1 e association headquarters, 1345 vorce alleging cruel and inhuman ate treatment. Married Sept. 15, 1950, ; Rummage sale tomorrow over at Vancouver. Wash. Greenbaums. Katherine Murnane vs. Virgil 1 N. Simmons: Complaint seeks FIRM ADDS PARTNER Judgment of $2,431.47 special and ; Addition of Nick R. Klein, 393 driving Edwin Kenneth Chilcott, Salem, found innocent of a charge of driving while intoxicated by a jury trial May 15. CIRCUIT COURT Erma O'Toole, administratrix of Joseph Frolich estate, vs. Lee Sut ton: Plaintiff's demurrer to an swer sustained Veterans File 86,000 Bonus Applications A total of 86,000 applications for World War II veterans bonus has been received by the State Veter ans Department, officials reported Monday. Of this number 83,750 of the ap plications came from veterans and approximately 2500 from next of kin. Only 358 applications were dis approved. Applicants whose appli cations are disapproved havp ri-M of appeal to the State Veterans Department Director. The liiue for filing applications expires De cember 1 of this year. Officials said first mailing of bonus checks probably would be early in July. These checks will in volve all bonus applications ap proved up until late in June. City Medical Exchange Keeps Track of Doctors' Whereabouts If you want a doctor at night in Salem chances are good that you will get him through the Salem Medical Exchange only you probably won't know it. The exchange is a little-know public service participated in by some 70 medical doctors of Marion-Polk County Medical Association in the immediate vicinity of Salem. It is really a round-the-clock telephone switchboard which Births $50,000 general damages for in juries sustained Dec. 2, 1951, in auto-pedestrian accident at Cot tage and Marion Streets. Jimmie Staggs, administrator of Martha G. Staggs estate, vs. Mer ton F. Cox and V. D. Bryant: Com plaint seekse judgment of $15,000 damages for death of wife March 3, 1952, allegedly as a result of fuel purchased from defendants. State ex rel Catherine LeMay Meek vs. Wallace E. Crowder: De fendant released from order to show cause in contempt action Tryon Ave., as a partner in Pa cific Insulation Co. with Clifton ETKER To Mr. and Mrs. Wal ter B. Etker, Marion, Box 6, a son Monday, May 19 at Salem Me morial Hospital. HARLAN To Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Harlan. 1595 S. Cottace L. Cass, 375 Tryon Ave., was ; St., Salem, a daughter, Monday, shown Monday in assumed busi-1 May 19 at Salem General Hos ness name filings with Marion 1 pital. County clerk. i I FORSTER To Mr. and Mrs. Water hyacinths - Hollywood A- , H. Ford Forster, Jefferson, a son quarium - 1958 McCoy. 1 block I Monday, May 19, at Salem General east of Hollywood Theatre, then i Hospital. J-j block South. 1 , FHRULL To Mr. and Mrs. Les LIONS TO HEAR WHITE , ter Fhrull, Brooks. Box 54, a son. The Hollywood Lions club will Monday, May 19, at Salem Gener hear Salem Alderman Robert ! al Hospital. White at their Wednesday noon I Martha Odenthal Glnvpr nn A i luncheon meetine in thp T.ion; KL BISHTA To Mr. and Mrs. others vs Uniknown heirs of A- Den. He is to discuss the plans! Nick Kubishta. 2164 Hazel Ave., melia Caroline Parker and others: for the new high school in South Salem, a son, Monday, May 19, at Default decree quiets title to real! Salem. Salem General Hospital, property for plaintiffs. i ! v,rrvn t -r- i Viola Wvtaske vs Stanlev and i Landscaping and designing. No MENDENHALL To Mr and .lhn c utocbo- tm w "r.Mob too large or too small. F. A. ! Mrs- waiter u. Aiendenhail, 1405 appointed guardian ad litem. State vs. Pete Graves: Defend ant's motion for new trial denied; Doerfler and Sons Nurserv. 250 i Hickory bt.. baiem, a son, Mon- Lancaster Dr. at 4 Corners. Phone I daX. May 19 at Salem General 2-2549. ' Hospital. keeps tabs on the whereabouts of your doctor or a suitable alter nate. It also handles other contacts including a list of private duty registered nurses. When hospitals call for blood the exchange routes the call through to Red Cross. Opened here In April, 1950, the exchange is operated by Mr. and Mrs. Vince Elliott and an assist ant, Jerome Welch. Headquarters, where theh switchboards are lo cated, is in the Pacific Building. Elliott says there are about 3,000 such exchanges in the United States. Portlands, founded in 1917, was one of the first. The program operates simply. Nearly all doctors have their own and the exchange numbers listed in the telephone book. If a pa tient, or anyone else seeking a doctor, cannot locate the medico at his office he calls the exchange. The exchange is then supposed to know where the doctor is, where the doctor can be located, or will have the name of an alternate doctor. Most of the calls are from pa tients seeking their doctors. Lots of calls, though, have an enor mous human interest element. The exchange has handled long dis tance doctor-seeking calls from Ohio, Iowa and New York. Drunk Requests "Then there are the drunks." says Elliott. "Especially on week ends. They are out some place and get blotto. They think they need a doctor and of course we have the dubious honor of handling their requests." At least twice Elliott has rubbed voices, so to speak, with dope ad dicts. One narcotics addict called the exchange for a doctor. He got one. The doctor hurried to a hotel room where the addict writhed in supposedly intense pain. He talked the medico into giving him a shot of dope, which is what he wanted. The next day the addict tried the same trick but Elliott recognized the voice and stymied the plan. No Medical Information Another problem are persons calling for medical information, which, of course, the operator is not qualified to give. These range from the worried mother whose child "has a pain in his stomach," to the woman who wonders how to treat her bunions. City first aid crews also have had occasion to place a hurry-up call for a doctor through the ex change. Once the exchange received a call for "any doctor, but quick!' from a man. It developed the caller, a resident of Tacoma, Wash., was driving through Salem when an elderly man halted him at a downtown street intersection to say his wife was dying. After some frantic telephoning the ex change finally located a doctor. "You might say," says Elliott, Zoning Hearings Set on Projects in Capitol Street Area Teacher Lack To Continue There will be no marked im provement in the teacher supply situation when the public schools open for the fall term next Sep tember, Rex Putnam, state super intendent of public instruction, said Monday. Hr said the time for current tea chers to sign contracts with their present employers expired April 1 and the turnover was approxi mately the same as last year. Put nam said there has been no re duction in the number of emer gency teachers' certificates issued by the state education department under legislative authority. Most serious situation, accord ing to Putnam, is in the smaller school districts. Specialized tea chers in the larger school districts also are in demand, he averred. Attendance at the state colleges of education which specialize in tea cher training has not been as large as anticipated at the end of World War II. Sherman County First to Report Sherman has the distinction of being the first county in Oregon to report its returns of Friday''' primary election to the state elec tions bureau. David O'Hara, registrar of the state elections bureau, said it pro bably would require at least three weeks to complete the official canvass, due to the large number of candidates on the state ballot. State election bureau officials warned Monday that candidates at the primary elections must file their expense statements within 15 days. Committees have 10 days in which to file their expense accounts. Mrs. Sheridan Dies, Rites on Wednesdav BEE LINE KENT, O. (INS) -If cultivated bees can buzz around certain kinds of shade trees, they're .-,pt to produce more honey. So says Martin L. Davey Jr., president cf the Davey Tree Expert Co. Honev I bees, according to Mr. Davey, par ticularly like to make a bee-line for the linden, honeylocust. tulip tree, tupelo, sourwood, black lo cust, eucalyptus, willow and palm etta palm during flowering periods. Mrs. Anna M. Sheridan, late resident of Salem Route 5, Box 507, died at a local hospital Sun day following an extended Illness. A She was the widow of the Public hearings on two proposed former owner of H.zel Deil Dairv business developments in the North Capitol Street area will take place tonight at City Hall during a 7:30 p.m. meeting of who died last August. Mrs. Sheridan was born Sept. 21. 1879 in Sublimity, and moved with her parent"; to Salem. She the Salem Planning and Zoning had resided in Salem ever since. She was married in Saiem Feb. 11, 1901. Recitation of the Rosarv Is to Commission One proposal to be aired is a request for special business zon ing on the south side of Center!11 heId tonight at 8 p.m. in the Street near North Capitol, to per- ; Chapel of the Clough-Barrick mit location of a two-store busi- j Company. Requiem mass is to be ness building ther by Giles Smith. ! held Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. in The other concerns application I St- Josephs Catholic Church with by V. J. Osko, insuranceman, for j interment at St. Barbara Ceme permission to add a second story j ter"- to his office building at 1465 N. !, Survivors include daughters. Capitol St. The addition would rs" Iar-v. ob'nsor3 Stfem: be space for business rental. ! J rs" THaze "arriin- Portland: y Mrs. Loyal M. Jory. Salem: son, ' Lawrence G. Sheridan, of the U. "the exchange is the expediter of ! S. Marines: sisters. Mrs. Rita B. Salem's medical program. Doctor Gamble, Salem; Mrs. Sarah Four- and patient are more closely j nier, Sea View. Wash., and Mrs. linked, communication-wise, and Emma Atterbury, Portland. Also the community benefits as a re- 1 survived by a grandson, Phil suit." Hardin, Portland. i Instruction for Confirmation SAINT PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH -ITS HISTORY -SACRAMENTS CEREMONIES -praye'r BOOK -DOCTRINES CUSTOMS THURSDAYS 7:10 - 7:55 P. M. In the Church Study Rev. George H. Swift, Rector if n !( ft. 53 7S, Htm (0 mi(!& (0Qp(w mm ffi 8 A, given six-months suspended coun- I rr it npr rnrr t rn 14 senJence, placed on 18-; E Eav months probation. Clara Bcisell vs Benjamin night at 775 Belvue Ave. was put out by u c 1 . . . -. : i . . Ri11- riv.,r- oiicui -'i ut-parimem. to T mcVease support PmenTs" Dy!N damage was rePrted' defendant from $40 to $50 monthly '; Air-Steamship tickets anywhere and to change visitation provi- Kugel, 3-7694. 153 N. High St. sions. Doris M. Parks vs Theodore R. WARRANT CARRIED Ol'E Parks: Divorce decree grants the1 A district court warrant charg plaintiff ownership of personal; ing Jay Y. Burnett, 260 Marion property, restores her former St. with obtaining money by false name of Peterson and confirms pretenses was fulfilled at Burnetfs property settlement. I residence Monday by Salem city tate vs Jack JLldon Green: De- police. He was being held at city fendant pleads guilty to charge of attempt to commit larceny in a warehouse, continued for pre-sentence investigation. State vs Melvin Leedy: Defend ant pleads guilty to charge of ob taining money by false pretenses, sentenced to three years in State Penitentiary; sentenced to con current 18-month sentence on the charge of larceny. Joe Shields vs Louretta Shields: Divorce decree to defendant re stores defendant's former name of Hayden. Opal La Verne Johnson vs Dan iel Athon Johnson: Plaintiff is granted $70 support money pend ing settlement and denied con trol of auto. jail in lieu of $2,500 bail. Tourist Travel in Oregon Increases Tourist travel in Oregon has in creased materially during the past two weeks, based on registrations at the capitor information bureau here. Saturdays and Sundays regis trations included tourists from eight eastern and middle western states and Canada. Minnesota, Michigan and North Dakota top ped the list of out-of-state registrations. HOW TTl Ca vv SfiLE at Now in progress . . . the biggest shoe sale In Salem . . . Fa moos brands ... all at exactly 2 for the price t It Buy the first pair at the regular price get the second pair FREE . . TRAVEL'S GAYER ON THE TO CHICAGO So much that's glorious to Bee. The green Cascade and the Rockies a Yellowstone side trip, if you wish spec tacular Montana Canyon, the cattle and wheat country, the mighty valley of OP Man River. The Olympian Hiawatha features de luxe private room cars with Sky top Lounge . . . thrifty Touralux sleepers, built exclusively for this train. . . Luxurest coaches with big lounge-dressing rooms. Wonderful meals in the diner, beverages and snacks in the Tip Top Grill car . . . friendly service wherever you are. Relax while the engineer does the speeding. For information, tickets and reservation, ask Portland Office &rs 2 S W" YamhiH $ ment Aiwaitr U4 I Cm. V. ValUy, District Pass'r Agent E. L White, General Agent its easy to 6e a good telephone neghboc too If yours is a party-line, it's easy to be a neighborly telephone user. Just keep these simple points in mind when you make telephone calls: When you have a series of calls to make, allow s few minutes between them Make sure the line is clear before you call Replace the receiver properly in its cradle after calling. These suggestions will mean still better party-line service for you, too. For if you make them a habit, you'll find that they give people a better chance to call you. may arise while you are using your party-line. If a telephone neighbor breaks in and explains the emergency, it's always thoughtful to hang up and complete your call later. 6 tip you cengfoe the youngsters They won't miss incoming calls . . . w hi eft are often more important than those they make . . . If they remember not to tie up the line with lengthy conversations. Pacific Telephone