The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 21, 1953, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    (Lfil News jnirii3irs 1 1?
SIX PERMITS ISSUED
Permits issued by the city
building inspector Monday in
cluded Paul Harcourt, build
house and garage, 545 Johnson
SU $12,000; Otto J. Meyer, build
house and garage, 820 Edina
Lane, $3,200; W. J. Bender, build
private garage, 1132 Hines St,
$1,000; Rena Bush, alter house
and garage, 984 ' Edina Lane,
S500; E. E. Bartruff, alter house
and carport, 720 Waldo St, $300;
and Frances Lehman, re-roof
house, 1325 Fairmount Ave., $230.
Attention Hobbyist: A Homecraft
House store is to be opened in
Salem soon. Every craftsman in
terested in displaying and selling
their hand made articles contact:
Mrs. Mabel Averette, 1310 Pine
St, Silverton, Oregon.
INMATE CAUGHT
The Oregon State Hospital in
mate who escaped from the insti
tution Saturday night was cap
tured Monday night by Beaver
ton city police and lodged in
Washington County jail, Hills
boro, said state police. Hospital
authorities said they would re
turn Carl Fisher Bills, 33, to the
institution today. Bills, described
as dangerous, escaped by tearing
a screen off a sun porch window
at the hospital
Blundell Kanning Kitchen now
open Monday through Friday, 9
a.m.-6 p.m., Saturday 9-2 p.m.
Furs stored and cleaned at Mil
ler's are cold, dry, safe!
BOY'S ARM BROKEN
Clarence D. Olson, 10, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Olson,
2090 Maple St, suffered a frac
tured right arm Monday morning
when he fell from a tree. He was
treated by first aidmen and taken
to Salem Memorial Hospital. He
was later released.
Paint with glamorizing Treasure
Tones. See our outstanding Wall
paper selection. Chuck Clark Co.,
255 N. Liberty.
Steam baths and Swedish mes
sage 346 N. CapitoL Phone 3-6253
for appointment
Mrs. Busch
Succumbs to
4-Year Illness
Mrs. Anna Busch, 75, a Salem
resident for 35 years, died Mon
day at her home, 1490 N. 4th
St., after an illness of four years.
Mrs. Busch was born in Ger
many May 26, 1878, and came to
this country with her parents
when she was in her late teens.
She was married in Texas to
Ferdinand Busch, who died in
1933. In 1911 the couple came
to Oregon, living on a farm near
Turner until moving to Salem In
1918.
A member of Dorcas Mission
ary Society of Christ Lutheran
Church, Mrs. Busch had been a
member of that church since
coming to Oregon.
For many years she was em
ployed at Paulus Brothers Pack
ing Co. here.
Survivnig are one daughter,
Mrs. Chris Battalion, Salem; one
son, Karl W. Busch, Salem; and
a brother, John Neumann, Waco,
Tex.; also one granddaughter,
one grandson and two great
granddaughters.
Funeral services will be an
nounced later by Clough-Barrick
Co.
Public
Records
CIRCUIT COURT
Lovena R. Denbo vs John Rob
ert Denbo: Suit for divorce al
leges cruel and inhuman treat
ment asks for custody of a minor
plus $65 per month support and
property settlement Married Ap
ril 10, 1950, at Stevenson, Wash.
Helen M. Hardman vs Lloyd M.
Hardman: Suit for divorce alleges
cruel and inhuman treatment asks
for restoration of plaintiffs for
mer name of Helen M. Urbach
and for property settlement Mar
ried Nov. 16, 1929, at Vancouver,
Wash.
Rozella M. Morris vs Robert L.
Morris: Suit ' for divorce on
grounds of imprisonment of de
fendant asks for restoration of
maiden name of Rozella M. Wood.
Married Dec. 26, 1951, at Dallas.
Dorothy L. Alexander vs Earl
J. Alexander: Decree of divorce
approves property settlement
agreement
DISTRICT COURT
Jack Oster, 170 W. Rural Ave.,
charged with non-support, contin
ued to July 22 for hearing; held
in lieu of $500 baiL .
Raymond John Rightnour, 1211
S. 17th St, charged with assault
with a dangerous weapon, con
tinued to July 22 for arraignment;
held in lieu of $7,500 baiL
Edwin A. Lyle, 3415 Abrams
Ave., charged with non-support,
continued to July 24 for prelimi
nary hearing.
Lando Barton Williams, Stock
ton. Calit, charged with assault
with intent to commit rape, pre
liminary hearing set, for July 24
following plea of innocent; held
in lieu of $3,500 baiL
PROBATE COURT
Charles J. Thomas estate: Or
der closes estate.
Clara Batcher estate: Final ac
count approved.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Enoeh J. Welty, 69, carpenter,
4343 Market St, and Sarah B.
Sandusky, 63, laundry employe,
2095 Hazel Ave., both Salem.
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge has
peaks more than 20,000 feet high.
IRA MOORE SPEAKS
G. Ira Moore, Salem Chamber
of Commerce assistant manager,
will describe chamber activity as
luncheon speaker before a YWCA
business girls meeting at the YW
today noon.
Air - steamship tickets anywhere.
KugeL 3-7694. 153 N. High St
Wash Day can be easy! Drop your:
bundle off at the Launderette
It's fast and thrifty. Launderette,:
1255 Ferry St
i
TOASTMASTERS MEET !
Salem Toastmasters Club will
meet tonight with speakers listed
as Al Isaak, Jack Frisbie, Warren
Hunter and Dr. Ralph Gordon.
Carroll Meeks will be acting toast
master. !
1
Apricots, "No. 1 Tilton, tree rip
ened. Direct from orchard at The
Dalles. Will have plenty. First
load July 21st Puritan's Cider
Works. 791 Edgewater.
CORD WOOD STOLEN
Three-quarters of a cord of;
wood was stolen from a lot next
ti her house Mrs. W. Winegar,:
475 Locust St, reported to city
police Monday.
Sale on summer merchandise.
Come early, selections are limit
ed. Lorman's, 1109 Edgewater.
Open 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
TOWNSEND CLUB MEETS
Townsend Club 17 will meet at
2 p.m. today at the home of
Maude Morlan, 2244 Hyde St
Oral "Addy" Jtfatthew greeting:
old and new customers at Prices!
Beauty Salon. !
Feeding Tests
Yield Cheaper,
Bigger Chicks
By LILLIE L. MADSEN
Farm Editor, The Statesman
CORVALLIS Whether it pays?
to go to college or not might del
pend upon whether you look at
it from the chicken's standpoint!
or from the standpoint of Mr. andt
Mrs. Public who want chicken
every Sunday, Dr. J. E. Parker,
head of the Oregon State College!
poultry department remarked!
Monday as he told of feeding ex
periments carried on in the poul
try division there. I
As a result of the tests, 2,000
chicks reached the broiler mar-j
ket weight of three pounds in an
average of 68 days, and required!
only 8.6 pounds of broiler masbj
per chick. Most growers, Dr.:
Parker said, figure on nine
pounds of mash to raise a three-:
pound broiler. 1
But poultrymen can cut expen
sive feed costs for raising broiler;
chicks by using good birds, good
feed from the beginning and!
proper management, the recent!
feed trials showed. i
8 Kinds Used
Eight kinds of chickens were
used to give a cross section of
commercial broilers. Dr. Parkerj
said that he believed any lot of
good chicks would do as well as
his supervised flock did with)
good feed and proper manage-;
merit
The test also showed that the
breed of chickens is not as im
portant as the strain.
The second fastest growing pen
of broilers, and the slowest grow,
ing were New Hampshires of di
f erent strains. Each pen contained!
250 birds. A pen of Cornish New
Hampshire cross showed the best
gain, reaching three pounds inj
62 days en only 7.8 pounds of
feed each.
High-Energy Mash Used
The chicks were fed a high
energy mash, supplemented with
an antibiotic and vitamin B-12
and were supplied continuously
with granite grit I
Five ounces of sulfaquinoxa-l
line were used in each ton of
mash to control coccidiosis. A low
mortality rate of only 2.05 per'
cent was a main factor in efficient
returns from feed, Dr. Parked
it
Careful feeding, rat control and;
other management practices tqi
reduce wastage held down feed
costs. i
Toastmasters !
Schedule 'Trial' j
::
j
Capitol Toastmaster Club, meet!
ing Thursday at 6:15 p. m. at the
Gold Arrow restaurant will stag
a mock justice court trial.
Participating as judge, parties
and attorneys will be Al Thomasj
Andy Foster, Omar Halversonf
Carl Damaske, Vernon Gleavef
and other club members. I
Births
RENAUD I To Mr. and Mrs
Ronald Renaud, 1572 Chemeket
St, a daughter,! Monday, July 201
at Salem General Hospital
CAIN To Mr. and Mrs. Don
aid Cain, 175. Cunningham Lane
a son, Monday, July 20, at Salen
Genreal HospitaL
DO RAN To Mr. and Mrsi
Jim Doran, 903 Pine St, Silver
ton, a son, Monday, July 20, a
Salem General HospitaL
PETERSEN To Mr. and Mrs
Kenneth Petersen, 1106 Ogle Stj
Woodburn, a son, Monday, July
20, at Salem Memorial HospitaL
SCHWAB - To Mr. and Mrs
Airnur acnwaD, ail vngei, i
daughter, Sund-y, July 19, a
Salem Memorial HospitaL
a i n d
Famed General Meets Salem Cahners
( : - I u . - -
Gen. Lucius Clay (left), former high commissioner for Western Germany, in Salem Monday expressed
high confidence in the fature development of! the Northwest Now chairman of the board of Contin
ental Can Company, the general met with food processors at luncheon here. Pictured with him are
(left to right) Henry Hohweisner, Salem, Starr Foods; Sherlock McKewen, San Francisco, Continen
tal Can vice president, and O. E. Snider, Salem, Blue lake Packers. (Statesman photo.)
Clay Believes
Reds Still Aim
To Rule World
World domination remains the
aim of Communism and any truce
-approved by the Russians in
Korea would comprise largely a
move to allay Western fears and
prevent formation of a European
army. Gen. Lucius Clay said
Monday.
The general, formerly high
commissioner for Western Ger
many and now chairman of the
board of Continental Can Com
pany, was in Salem to meet with
two-score valley food processors
at lunch, at the Senator Hotel. His
company plane flew him to Walla
Walla last night
Sees No Recession
Gen. Clay, whose comments on
the international situation came
during a press conference pre
ceding the luncheon, told the
processors that his company "is
confident there is no recession"
and "we intend to continue to
expand," He made no definite
commitments, but did not rule
out Salem as a possible point for
future development
Accompanying him were Sher
lock McKewen of San Francisco,
Pacific Coast vice president of
Continental Can; W. M. Blinn,
San Francisco, division manager;
W. W. Hodgson, Seattle, north
west district manager; George
Van Kleek, Portland plant man
ager, and J. J. Harris, Portland
sales representative. Among those
greeting him were Supreme Court
Justice James T. Brand, who pre
sided at the Nurenberg, Ger
many, war crime trials.
Revolt Could Spread
Speaking in answer to ques
tions, General Clay said he be
lieved the revolt in Germany
could well spread to other satel
lites, and that because only Rus
sian force could quell them "the
Soviets will lose whatever good
will they had with the workers
whose friend they pretend to be."
He said Russia next would prob
ably work for a neutral Ger
many, requiring the withdrawal
of all troops.
Hopes for European Army
Gen. Clay said he saw "a very
real hope" for a European army,
"which to be effective must have
Western German participation,"
altthough "Europe is prone to
take any Russian (peace) move
as a change in basic purpose"
. . . But Americans are more re
alistic. Soviet motives have not
changed."
The general formerly was with
the Army Engineers and spent
some time in Oregon during con
struction of Bonneville Dam. He
is currently on a tour of Conti
nental Can plants in Walla Walla,
Portland, Seattle and Vancou
ver, B. C
Vista Variety
Store Postal
Site Protested
A petition carrying 284 names
was telegraphed to the U. S. post
master general Monday protesting
the awarding of a postal contract
station to the Vista Variety Store.
The petition said signers under
stood that the low bidders for the
station were Neale V. and Mary
L. Chaney, doing business as
Dickson's Market, and that they
"urgently request you to investi
gate." The petition was tele
graphed by Neale V. Chaney,
Copies also were sent to Oregon's
two senators and four representa
tives. Vista Variety took over the con
tract station April 1, 1952. It was
re-awarded the contract July 1 of
this year. Salem Postmaster Al
bert Gragg said all bids were sent
directly to the postmaster general
and that the awarding was made
from that office.
DON'T
WORRY-
HAVE DEPENDABLE
INSURANCE PROTECTION
Guy Jonas,! Ins.
2035 Fairgreuds Rd.
Phone 3-9431
Bark From
Second Growth
Timber Sought
A price of $20 a ton for Doug
las fir bark from second growth
timber ordinarily considered a
waste product is now quoted by
Willamette Valley tanneries,
State. Forestry Department offi
cials reported here Monday.
The price quoted is for dry
bark.
Officials said the bark, used
in the manufacture of leather,
must come from second growth
fir. It also must be dry and not
more than one and one-fourth
inches in thickness. Sellers were
cautioned that bark from logs in
rivers and ponds for a long pe
riod lose much of their tannin
content
Foresters said this is the time
of year for peeling the fir bark
Store Hours for
9 A.M.
Oceans of
Ready to
Housewives of West Salem,
Salem, Amity, Dayton, Mc
Minnville, Dallas, Rickreall,
Independence and surround
ing territory.
FOB
- 1 v;L
Pi
'53 Oregon Laws
Printed for Sale
First printing of session laws of
the 1953 legislature were de
livered at the State Elections
Bureau Monday.
Approximately 2,500 of the ses
sion laws are being printed which
will be sold at $8.50 each. David
O'Hara, chief of the Elections Bu
reau, said the sale price covered
the actual cost of production.
Several hundred session laws
will be placed on sale in the Port
land branch of the Secretary of
State's office, O'Hara said.
because it slips easily from the
logs. In another 30 days, officials
said, the bark will cling tightly
to the log and be difficult to
remove.
An estimated 1,500,000 tons of
tannin producing bark goes to
waste each year, foresters
averred.
Your Convenience
to 9 P.M.
FREE Parking
Designed and Arranged for Quicker,
Serve
And the Traditional
Entertainment for
Are Effective at . . .
' it '
New Quarters
For Welfare
BureauSousrlit
A new home for the Marion
County Welfare Department now
housed in thet Salem School Ad
ministration office building on
North Church Street, was dis
cussed at a meeting of the Wel
fare Commission Monday.
The sprawling department will
have to move soon when the old
high school building is torn down
to make way for construction of
a local Meier and Frank store.
"Our department will need
about 5,000 square feet of floor
space," said Administrator Ken
neth Peterson.
No space has been provided I
for the welfare department in the '
new Marion county courthouse
now under construction. Welfare
housing is more, complicated than
other county offices, Peterson
said, because it is financed by
federal, state and county funds.
Only about half of Oregon's
coupties, he said, house welfare
departments in their courthouses.
The commission's discussion
Monday, he said, only concerned
tentative plans for renting new
space or for acquiring a new
building. The commission expects
to take up the matter again in
a meeting soon.
Transient Worker
Pleads Innocent
To Assault Count
Lando Barton Williams, tran
sient fruit worker from Stockton,
Calif., pleaded innocent in Marion
County District Court Monday to
a charge of assault with intent to
commit rape.
His case was continued to Fri
day for preliminary hearing. He
is held in lieu of $3,500 bail.
Williams was booked by state
police Sunday and held on a
charge allegedly involving the
five-year-old daughter of two
other fruit pickers at a Central
Howell orchard.
M
Finest
Kfeuesi
THE
(in
Be One of the First
To see this beautiful IGA Store.
Enjoy its many conveniences of
free and easy .shopping.
Ribbon-Cutting
All! Many Extra
All Special Prices in Weekly IGA
Statesman, Salem. Orocron. Tuesday. Tuto 21. 1953 S
Salem GI Ends I
Bapic Training
SA LUIS OBISPO, Calif
Pvt. Frank Nies wander, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Nieswan-
der of 935 N.
19th St, Salem,
Ore, has fin
ished his basic
'training and
?now is in cable
'school with the
9605th Techrii
cal Service Unit
.at Camp Luis
Obispo. Nies-
: I wander. 19. was
'i i A graduated from
!? leawander Salem High
School in 1951 and was employed
by the telephone company in
Salem until he enlisted in the
Signal Corps last March.
.
I n Scotland there is one teach
er to every 24.4 pupils in the
public schools.
i
y ill-
r
0)15M1T
hi Ifi U
KELVIHATOR
00 WEEK!
No Strings
Attached
No Gimmicks !
No Obligation!
1
! I
4k
To Buyl 1
2SO CHEMEKETA SALEM, OREGON
BOORS AE5E
o
Salem's Largest
&3osf Modern and
Complete Food Sfiore
mm
www
Easier Shopping
YOU'LL LOVE IT!
The 100 Self-Service
'and You'll Save Money
COME
rxn
JJ
by Mayor Al Louclcs
Special Values!
IGA Foodlincr
Wallace Road
at 7th
Abortion VerHct
Anneal Date Resei
Sunreme Court
Rearguments in the case of Pr
George H. Buck, Portland, undci
five years penitentiary sentenct
for manslaughter by. abortion,
have been set by the State Su
preme Court here for Sept 10. .
The rearguments originally
weri fixed for early in June but
wer postponed because of tne'
illness of the defendant's atttr-.
ney.j Buck was convicted in tne'
Multnomah County Circuit Court
and later appealed to the Su
preme Court
Liletii
ROOFING
'etime Aluminum is Your
Best Buy! See Your LOCAL
DEALER
I FREE ESTIMATES
Willamette 'Aluminum Co.
I Ph. 2-8058
A BRAND
HEW. FULLY
AUTOMATIC
WASHER
with' exclusive
"Shampoo" Action
. . . Xcentric agita
tor. Overflow Rinse.
CALL
3-3169
HOW!
MOW
and SEE
fn
Ad
West
Salem j
i
t