Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1954)
Conflicting Stories Mark Progress of War in Guatemala (Story also on page one.) TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras i Honduras charged Wednesday night that Guatemalan aircraft bombed a Honduran airfield Tues day and said the government is protesting to the United Nations and the Organization of Ameri can States. and he Organization of American States. Guatemala denied the charges. A Guatemalan government radio broadcast heard in neighboring Central American countries said meanwhile that "at this very mo ment, Guatemalan territory is be ing attacked by air, by land and , by sea." The Guatemalan broadcast gave no further details of the as sault by anti-Communist insur gents attempting to overthrow the left-wing regime of President Jacobo Arbenz Guzman. The Honduran Foreign Ministry said several bombs were dropped on the airfield on the tiny village of San Pedro de Copan, 18 miles from the rebel-invaded Guatemalan border. Swoops on Airport Subsequent reports said the at tack was made by one or more planes, which swooped down over the airfield near the village of 630 inhabitants between 1 and 2 p.m. Tuesday. Theministry charged they came from the direction of Guatemala and returned to that country. No one was reported injured. The Honduran complaint ac cused the Arbenz regime of "an un qualified violation of Honduran sov ereignty which could only have been committed by planes of the Guatemalan Air Force." It termed the bombing an "unprovoked act of aggression." Village Bombed The Honduran charge of the bombed the village of Santa Rosa, Foreign Ministry report 24 hours earlier that unidentified planes had bombed the village of Sana Rosa, in the same department of Copan. Santa Rosa is only six miles from San Pedro, and it was not clear whether there had been two separate attacks or the report Wednesday was merely pinpoint ing the target of the raiders. The Security Council president Salem Obituaries Alio B, Aduns Late resident of 1060 Estate Court t local hospital. June 22- Survived by husband. Glenn L. Adams. Salem; sons. William Hugh Adams. Salem; Dwight B. Adams. Stanford. Calif.; Howard G. Adams, Wahington. D. C; grandchildren, James Adams, Salem: Robert. William. Thomas 8c Deborah Adams, all of Stanford. Calif.: several nieces and nephews including Mrs. Esther Southwick of Salem. Services will be Friday, June 25, at 3:00 pjn. at the First Presbyterian church. Dr. Paul Poling will officiate. Inter ment City View cemetery under di rection of Clough-Barrick Co. Vernon Coleman At a local hospital. June 21. Late resident of Portland.. Survived by Jack Coleman. Portland. Announce ment of services later by Virgil T. Golden Co. Magdalen Golda4e Late resident of 955 Union St. at a local nursing home June 23 at the age of 91. Mother of Mrs. Mary French. Mrs. Katie Johns? John Gol dade, all of Salem. Six grandchildren; 9 great grandchildren. Member of St. Vincent de Paul Catholic church. Announcement of services later by HoweH-Edwards Chapel. Jay 4ward'Ree-ss June 23. Late resident of 1980 West Nob Hill. Survived by wife. Mrs. Myrtis Reeves, Salem: daughters, Mrs. Marjorle Schaff. PocateUo, .Ida ho: Mrs. Joyce Beard. San Bernard ino. Calif.: sons, Robert Reeves. Sa lem; Gordon E. Reeves, Eugene; grandchildren. Kathryn, Roger and Steven Schaff, PocateUo. Idaho; Marsha Reeves .Eugene. Announce ment of services later by the Virgil T. Golden Co. Bonier H. Smith. Sr. At a local hospital. June 21, late resident of 875 N. Summer.' Survived by wife. Frances P. Smith. Salem; son. Homer Smith, Jr., Salem: sisters, Mrs. John B. Craig. Salem: Mrs. WiU Howd. Portland: niece. Mrs. Oris Fry, Portland: grandchildren, Jean E. Smith and Nancy M. Srrith. both of Salem. Services will be held in the Virgil T. Golden Chapel Thursday. June 24, at 10 a.m. Rev. George H. Swift will officiate. Private crypt entombment at Mt. Crest Abbey Mausoleum. Casket will be open to friends until 9:00 a m. Thursday. Elmer Thompson Late resident of 409 N. Cottage St.. at a Salem hospital June 20 at the age of 79 years. Survived by one daughter, Mrs. Mary Ewing. Green River. Wyo., granddaughter. Miss Katherine Pappas. Portland. Ship, ment has been made to Enterprise, Ore., for services and Interment by the Howell-Edwards Chapel. Cool Comfort For Burning Feet Let I-e-IOt with -oothtnc lanolin keep ynar feet la cool, freak comfort while the temperature oar. So easy to apply tbie freety-white medicated cream eo laiUnf m Its oothlaa relief, a real help too ia eofteala stiaainf callouses and cores. Don't delay. Cot Ice-Mint today. Mort Comfort Wearing FALSE TEETH Here Is a pleasant way to overcome loos plate discomfort. FASTEKTH, as Improved powder, sprinkled on tipper and tower plates holds then firmer so that they feel more com fortable. No rummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. It's alkaline Jnon acld). Does not sour. Check folate odor- (denture breath). Get FA8 TEXTB today at any drug counter. f pf) LZCl llewl 0awf llcliy Olrin holi! Zemo, a doctors aniistpiic, nrnmnt.lv relieves itchinf, stops sersvtehinr and so helps hesJ nd clear surface rashes. Boy Extru Strength Zm for stubborn eases! zemo for June, Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., chief delegate of the United States, turned down a second request by Guatemala for an emergency meeting to hear charges that ag gression was continuing despite a cease-fire resolution adopted by the council last Sunday. Charge Not Received The U.N. said it had not yet re ceived the Honduran charge of air attack by Guatemala, and U.S. and other sources would not discuss the probabilities of what might happen until the protest arrived. Following the report of the at tack on Santa Rosa, the rebel clandestine radio claimed it was carried out unintentionally by two European "mercenary" pilots who had been hired by the Guatemalan government to bomb the rebel field headquarers at Camotan, about 20 miles inside Guatemala'! frontier. They missed the target and hit Santa Rosa, the rebel radio said. Honduran Air Force officers were inspecting the bomb fragments at San Pedro Wednesday. Guarantees Safety A Guatemalan broadcast said President Arbenz had assured U.S. Ambassador John Peurifoy in Guatemala City that the safety of United States citizens living in that country would be guaran teed. But the Guatemalan government radio continued to blare out anti U.S. propaganda. In the welter of conflicting re ports from he two sides of the "shadow civil war" going on in Guatemala, the rebels claimed to have raked Chiquimula from the air and followed np with a ground assault still continuing. Col. Castillo Armas was report ed to have moved his rebel head quarters inside the Guatemalan beachheafl from Esquipulas. just inside the border, to a town near Chiquimula. The invaders claimed they were moving on Guatemala City itself from three directions, and the gov ernment radio countered with the claim its forces had repulsed the rebels and sent them fleeing back to Honduras. Aim to Oust Arbenz The rebels launched their attack last Friday in a bid to oust the Communist-supported government of President Jacobo Arbenz Guz man. A rebel broadcast heard in Be lize, British Honduras, claimed the three-pronged attack was converg ing on the Guatemalan capital from north, south, and east. The rebels claimed their planes had damaged severely ammunition dumps and other strategic points in the town of El Progressor, 35 miles northeast of the capital, on the im portant Guatemala City - Puerto Barrios railroad. They also claimed saboteurs were moving ahead of the "army of liberation" and caus ing serious damage with dynamite blasts. From the other side, government broadcasts heard in San Salvador said the "enemy" had been re pulsed on all fronts and was fleeing toward Honduras in the Gualan, Morales and Puerto Barrios areas, all in eastern Guatemala. "Mopping Up" The government broadcasts said the army had begun mopping up scattered groups that had surren dered without resistance. They c 1 aimed that activities were normal again in places where the rebels had been thrown out. The government discounted rebel air attacks as unimportant. In Guatemala City, Associated Press correspondent Jack Rut ledge described the situation as calm. He said reports that the reb els were on the outskirts of the capital were not true. He said the army still claimed the situation was under complete control. Sniping Reported Rutledge reported there was some sniping in the capital's down town area and in the suburbs Tues day night His dispatch, which was delayed more than eight hours in passing through censorship, did not mention air raids on the capital which the government radio report ed later. Prices were reported climbing rapidly in Guatemala City. Eggs went up from 70 cents to $1.50 a dozen. The rebel leader, Col. Carlos Castillo Armas, received newsmen Wednesday morning at his new headquarters in Esquipulas, a Gua temalan town of 12,000 people six miles from the Honduran border. He declared he is ready for a short or long fight to oust the leftist gov ernment. The colonel said heavy rains and a lack of organization in the first stages had been his main obstacles. It appeared to newsmen that the rebel troops were bogged down for lack of transport. Portland Livestock CHICAGO tti Hog receipts fell far below expectations Wednesday and the market responded with gains ranging from 25 cents to $1.00 on both butchers and sows. Top steer price was $27.23 for two loads of prime offerings. Spring lambs sold steady to weak at $21.50 to $24.25 for good to prime types. Estimated receipts: 6,500. hogs, 11,000 cattle, 500 calves, 600 sheep. NOW YOU CAN LICK ATHLETE'S FOOT WITH KERATOLYTIC ACTION T-4-L, a keratolytie fungicide, SLOUGHS OFF the tainted outer skin, exposing buried fungi and kills oa contact. Leaves skis like baby's. Ia just ONE HOUR, if not pleased, your 40c back at any drag store. Today at Perry's Drag Store. . Wheat Prices Close Strong CHICAGO on Wheat came up with a strong advance toward the close on the board of trade Wednes day, ending at the session's best prices with gains extending to nearly 2 cents. Action of wheat did not appear to have any influence on the rest of the market, except for rye. Oats weakend while corn closed mixed, new crop months scoring gains. Wheat finished higher, corn y lower to higher, oats y-l lower, rye -4 higher, soy beans 1 cent lower to 3 Mi higher and lard 7 to 22 cents a hundred pounds higher. Wheat eased at the opening, as it has done on several recent days. That not much wheat was being offered on the free market was evi dent from what was happening in the Kansas City cash trade. Prices were unchanged to 9 cents higher and it was the turn up in Kansas City futures which stirred up de mand at Chicago. Rally Bolsters Stock Market NEW YORK OB A laggard stock marekt was saved Wednes day bj a late rally that pushed prices up vigorously. The advance boosted the Asso ciated Press average of 60 stocks up 40 cents to another in its string of new high marks at $126.40. Not all areas of the market were in on the advance and many ma jor divisions contributed only par tially. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks with its gain of 40 cent went to $126.40, a new high for the year andt he best level since Oct. 23, 1929. Again the volume crossed the two million mark at 2,090,000 shares as compared with 2,100,000 shares traded Tuesday. Portland Produce PORTLAND ur Butterfat Tentative, subject to immediate change Premium quality, maxi mum to .33 to one per cent acidity, delivered in Portland, 58-60 lb; first quality, 56-58; second quality, 53. - 5514. Valley routes and country points 2 cents less. Butter Wholesale, io.b. bulk cubes to wholesalers Grade AA, 92 score, 57 Vi lb; 91 score, 56 V4; B grade. 90 score, 83 89 score, 52. Cheese To wholesalers Oregon singles, 38 -41 Vt; Oregon 5-lb loaf. 41 -44 Eggs To wholesalers Candled eggs, containing no loss, cases in cluded, f.o.b. Portland A grade, large, 47 -48 H; A medium, 42 43 Vi; A grade, smajl, 28 -31 V. Eggs To retailers Grade AA, large. 53; A large, 49-50; AA me dium, 45-47; A medium, 44-45; A small, 30-33. Cartons 1-3 cents ad ditional. Live chickens No. 1 quality, f.o.b. plants-Fryers and roasters, 29; at the farm 28; light hens, 15; heavy hens, 17; old roosters, 14-15. Turkeys To producers, for breeder types, heavy hens, 26 f.o.b. farm, New York dressed basis; toms, 23, same basis. Rabbits Average to growers Live white, 3 H-4 lbs, 18-22, 5-6 lbs, 14-18; old does, 10-12, few higher. Fresh dressed fryers to retailers, 58-61; cut up, 62-65. Wholesale Dressed Meats Beef-Steers, choice, 500-700 lbs, 39.00-41.00; good 374)0-40.00; com mercial 35.00-38.00; utility. 32.00 35.00; commercial cows 25.00-30.; utility, 24.0-27.00; canners-cutters, 22.00-24.00. Beef cuts choice steers Hind quarters, 50.00-54.00; rounds, 47.00 51.00; full loins, trimmed, 71.00 76.00; forequarters, 31.00 - 35.00; chucks, 35.00-38.00; ribs, 50.00 53.00. Pork cuts Loins, choice, 8-12 lbs. 61.00-63.00; shoulders. 15 lbs, 41.00-44.00; spareribs, 55.00-58.00; fresh hams, 10-14 lbs, 61.00-64.09. Veal and calves Good-choice, all weights, 36.00-42.00; commercial 32.00-39.00. Lamb Choice-prime spring lamb under 50 lbs, 45.00-47.00. Country-dressed meats, f.o.b. Portland: Beef Cows, utility, 36-28 lb; canners-cutters, 22-23. Veal Top quality, lightweight, 33-34; rough heavies, 25-30. Hogs Lean blockers 37-38; sows, light, 32-33. Lambs Best light springers, 40 42; yearlings, 25 and up, depending on quality. Mutton Best, 10-12; cull-utility, 8-10. Fresh Produce Onions 50 lb sacks Oregon yel lows. No. 1, med, 2.25-75; Calif, med yellow and red, 2155-75; Texas white wax, 3-in min, 2.75-3.00; yel lows, 3-in, 2.50-75. Potatoes Oregon local Long Whites, No. 1, 3.00-25; Klamath Falls Russets, 4.50-5.00; Deschutes Russet, No. 1-A, 4.00-50; 10-oz min, 5.25-50: California Long Whites. 100 lb No. IA, 4.00-50; name brands 4.75-5.25; No. Is, 4.25-75. Hay U. S. No. 2 green alfalfa, baled, f.o.b. Portland, nominally 27.00 ton; U. S. No. 1 timothy mixed hay, Portland and Seattle, 29.00-30.00, ton, baled, f.o.b. cars. Stocks and Bonds (ConapUed by the Associated Press) June IS A VISAGES BOND 20 10 Ralls Xndust Net change D.l Unch Wednesday M.8 M.6 Prev. day 88.7 99.8 Week ago 88.3 99.4 Month ago 98.8 99.4 Year ago 90.8 94.4 10 19 uta rgn . D.l D.1 99.8 82.9 99.9 83.0 100.1 82.8 100.0 83.1 92.4 78.2 STOCK AVERAGES 30 13 IS 80 Indust Rails Utils Stocks Net change A.8 A.8 D.l A.4 Wednesday 171.7 M l 60.0 128.4 Prev. day 171.1 93.8 80.1 128.0 Week ago 170.4' 93.9 80.1 125.8 Month ago 170 5 92 5 0 5 125.3 Year ago 137.8 86.8 91.1 106.8 Arabian Horse Performs ' t J' r - u 1 1 -J r Leonard Gray of KalispelL Mont., famed feature rider, will be an attraction at the 8th annual all-Arabian Horse Show in the Horse Show pavilion at the Oregon State Fairgrounds June 26-27. He is pictured here with Indar, his highly trained Arabian stallion, in his kneeling act. Many Distant Entries Due at Horse Show Eleven Western States, British Columbia, and points as far dis tant as Minnesota and Indiana will be represented in the 2th an nual Arabian Horse Show which will open at the Horse Show pavi lian at the Oregon State Fair grounds Saturday. A total of 280 Arabians will compete for ribbons ! and trophies. I Headlining the area show will j be Leonard Gray, Kalispell, Mon i tanan, on his pure bred Arabian, I Indar. The Clackamas County ; Sheriff's posse will be seen in a , precision ride without bridal. I Among horses which were check ed into the fairgrounds so far are those from the Cross E. Bar Ranch at Big Horn, Wyo. Breeding classes will be pudged at 9 a.m. Saturday by Colonel M. L'Abbe of Kelseyville, Calif. Arena Shows will be at 7:30 p.m. Satur day and 1:30 Sunday afternoon. No charge is being made for admis sion to the Saturday morning judging. WHOLESALE CATCH MOBILE, Ala. UP Walter Ev ans set a trap for a rat and, over night, caught eight opossums. A mama 'possum with seven little ones in her pouch put her foot in the trap. New York Stock Markets By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Admiral Corporation 20 Vi Allied Chemical 89 Alii- Chalmers 57 American Arlines 13 H American Tel. k Tel. 165 4 American Tobacco 57 Vt Anaconda Copper 37 Atchison Railroad 110 7 Bethlebem Steel 69 Boeing Airplane Company 43 Borg Warner 83 Burroughs Adding Machine 19 California Packing 27 4 Canadian Pacific 26 Caterpillar Tractor 55 Celanese Corporation 20 Y Chrysler Corporation 63 Cities Service 101 Consolidated Edison 44 Vs Consolidated Vultee Crown Zellerbach 46 Curtiss Wright 9 Douglas Aircraft 70 Vi du Pont de Nemours 126 Eastman Kodak 59 4 Emerson Radio 10 General Electric 45 General Foods 73 General Motors 71 Georgia Pacific Plywood 10 Goodyear Tire 64 V Homestake Mining Company 41 Vt International Harvester 31 International Paper 71 Johns Manville 71 Kaiser Aluminum 36 Kennecott Copper 82 Libby, McNeill 9 Lockheed Aircraft 33 Vt Loew's Incorporated 14 Long Bell A 23 Montgomery Ward 65 Nash Kelvinator New York Central 21 Northern Pacific 56 Pacific American Fish 9Vi Pacific Gas It Electric 43 V Pacific Tel. & Tel. 123 Packard Motor Car 3 Penney (J. C) Co. 87 V Pennsylvania Railroad 16 Pepsi Cola Co. 15 Philco Radio 33 Radio Corporation 29 STARGAZBIV Dy CLAT Dor According ro th Sfers. To beveiop messogt for Thursday, oeod words corre$ponrrtg to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. tgl-g 2-32-44-631 -81-861 jf Tum 1 31 33 2 Ooy I I MAY 21 3 Ad 4 Don 33 tTW22-33--l 34 JS M64-7S-85-8aI 5 6 Shorn 7 YouTI I Oa. 9 A ro ym .11 Events 12 Be 13 Test 14 Doat 15 For U Art 17 Artoar U Of 36 t - 37 38 39 40 MAY 39 AM 22 KUl-79-84 41 42 CANCZI JNE 23 43 The 44 An 43 But 46 47 48 9 50 51 52 53 54 55 SO You uo 21 Should 22 Need 23 Pleasure 24 Papula 25 Your JULY U UG 23 $?)17-l-7-2d -9.73-87 26 Be 56 vwco 27 Confidential 57 Don't AUG. 24 SEPT. 22 28 Nature 58 29 Brtght 59 30 Keep 60 ssaH A J T it ; ,. v , T Investment Trusts (Zilka. Smither & Co.. Inc.) Bid Asked Affiliated Fund 5.29 5.73 Canadian Fund 12.85 13.91 Century Shares Trust 19.72 21.33 Chemical Fund 22 83 24 69 Delaware Fund 17.82 19.70 Diver. Invest Fund 7.53 8.25 Dividend Shares 2.09 2.30 Eaton 8c H Bal. Fund ... 34.71 37.11 Fund Invest 22 52 24 68 Gas Indus. Fund .21.09 22.80 Incorp. Investors 12.19 13.18 Key. Cust. Funds: B-3 19 10 20.84 B-4 11.09 12.11 K-l 1808 19.73 S-2 9.75 10.84 S-4 7.44 8 12 Man. Bond Fund 8.09 8.87 Mass. Invest. Trust 23.19 2 5 07 Natl. Sec. Series: Income Series .... 5.05 5.52 Stock Series 5 85 39 Pref. Stock S. 7.83 8 56 Spec. Series 3.63 3.97 Tel.-Elec. Fund 8.49 9 24 Salem Market Quotations (As of late yeeterday) BUtTMFAl Premium No. 1 Bcnit Wholesale . Retail M .88 .84 .89 EGGS (Buylac) (Wholesale pneee range boo 6 to 7 cents over buying price). Large AA J .44 Large A .42 Medium A A .35 Medium A . -33 Small : 18 POULTRY Colored Hens .16 .15 .25 J25 .13 Leghorn Hens Colored Fryers Colored Roasters Old Roosters Rayonier Incorp. 37 V Rayonier "Incorp. Pfd. Republic Steel - 58 y Reynolds Metals 71 Richfield Oil 53 Vt Safeway Stores Inc. 45 Scott Paper Company 94 Sears Roebuck & Co. 64 !4 Socony-Vacuum Oil 43 4 Southern Pacific 42 Standard Oil California 61 Standard Oil N. J. 88 Studebaker Corporation 19 Vi Sunshine Mining Swift & Company 46 Transamerica Corporation 34 Twentieth Century Fox 20 Union Oil Company 45 Union Pacific 134 United Airlines 22 United Aircraft 65 United Corporation 5 United States Plywood 27 United States Steel 48 Warner Pictures 15 Western Union Tel. 40 Westingbouse Air Brake 24 Westinghouse Electric 71 Woolworth Company 42 Portland Grain PORTLAND OR No bids or offers. Car receipts: Wheat 109; Barley 4; Flour 6; Corn 6; Mill Feed 7. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed proposals lor furnishing valves and fittings will be received at the office of the City Manager. City Hall. Salem. Oregon, until 2:45 pjn. on Friday, July 9th. 1954. and will be publicly opened at 3:00 pjn. on the same date by the City Manager at his office. Specifications and other documents required for bidding may be in spected at the office of the City En gineer or City Purchasing Agent. All proposals must be upon regular blank forms furnished with the speci fications. The right is reserved by the City to reject any or all bids, or to accept the proposal or comblnaUon of pro posals which appears most advan tageous. CHAiXS A. BARCLAY. J.24 Purchasing Agent X. PCLAN ActfWTy Ctmfe JK serr OCT b0-44-7lrf Take e4 And Hour 63 Luck OCT U Vonttr 63 We Today 64 Frier. And 65 And a - iwies 66 Mendahto 67 Todoy OwfCDnrideM68 Anger Cam : 69 Todoy UnexpecMd 70 Dsctston Expenditures 71 The Wrd - n 72 Evening Ti Be 74 75 And 76 fcfltaty 77 Yo Or Today Good Inrtiaflt New Hunch To Write 7 79 Be SO fie tl Locks 82 Handled 83 Can 84 Aggressive 85 Freih 86 Harmony M6-29 Abound 87 Successfully nscH MAR. 71 O- . Loyalties In eo cut ;ook 89 Afford MoUng 90 Colm fl r 1 M W ICOsFjp SAorrMHUs 5-15-23-350 47.-.7 CAHtfCOtN AQUAH0S JAM. 21 Stcrto racm. Salon-. OrtM T-uin- Jun 24, 1954 (Soc. 2) 7 v NOTICE - NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that on the th day of June. 1854. there has been filed with the County Clerk of Marion County. Oregon, an Application for Judgment and Decree of the Circuit Court of the State of Onto let Marion County, foreclosing the tax liens appearing in the within foreclosure list of said County, and tttateleh of the Properties described in said foreclosure list, unless Teoeemed to the manner provided by Uw Wfll be sold to Marion County. Oregon, for the respective amounts of taxes and interest for which such pronertie. are liable, in conformity with said Judgment and Decree to be hereinafter entered; which said foreclosure hst is as iduowi, ra-wii; STATE OF OREGON ) ) ss. County of Marlon .) WHEREAS, taxes upon several real properties herein described have been dulv levied and charged thereon AND. WHEREAS, the liens for unpaid and delinquent taxes on the respective parcel- of such real proo erties are subject to foreclosure by Marion County. Oregon, as provided by law: NO WTHERETORE: by virtue of authority vested in me as the tax collector for said county. I have pre pared this foreclosure list containing the names of the several persons appearing in the latest tax roll as -the respective owners of the tax delinquent properties, a description of each of such properties as the same appears in the said latest tax roll, the year or years for which taxes are delinquent on each property together with the principal amount of delinquent taxes for each year and the amount of the accrued and accruing interest there on to February IS, 1954. All the property described herein is situated in Marion County, State of Oregon. Where the word "year appears herein it has reference to the year of delinquency of the taxes upon the respective properties described herein. Where the word "tax" appears herein it has reference to the principal amount of delinquent taxes for the year and Upon the respective properties herein set out. Where the word "interest" appears or its abbreviation ''int." appears herein it refers to the amount of ac crued interest to February 15, 1954. on delinquent Uxes due for the respective years upon the respective prop erties set out herein. Where the word "total appears herein it refers to the total sum of the delinquent Uxes plus the accrued Interest thereon to February 15. 1954. for the respective properties described herein. Where the abbreviation "Vol." appears in the first column herein it refers to volume of the deed records for Marion County, Oregon. Where the abbreviation "Sec." appears herein it refers to section of land in Marion County. Oregon. Where the abbreviation "Twp." appears herein it refers to Township in and for the County of Marion. Oregon. Where the words "Range E" appear herein it means Range East Where the words ''Range W" appear herein it means Hange West. Where the abbreviation "W.M." appears herein it means Willamette Meridian. Where the symbols IA. IB. 2A and 2B ippear under "Tax Roll Vol.." they refer to the volume of the Tax Roll for Marlon County. Oregon. Where the abbreviation "PGE" appears herein It re fers to a Page of a volume of the Deed Records for Mar-Ion County. Oregon. Where reference Is made In this foreclosure list to townships, plats, additions, rededicarjons or additions, sub divisions., extensions, heights, town and parks, such descriptions refer to the duly recorded map and plat of each of said descriptions duly filed and of record in the office of the County Recorder of Marion County. Oregon. Names of Owner as Shewn ee By Latest Tax Roll & Description of Property Devine. Chester N. 6c Grace G. (WiU. Shelby L. & Delia C V 3021 Pacific Highway So., Eugene. Vol. 225. Page 211. Vol. 285. Page 340 4 908 Acres Service. WiUiam O. 8 I 1W IA 53 11 i952-53 6 84 .48 Rt. 1. Woodbum, Ore. IA 52 39 1951-52 7.08 1 06 Vol. 378. Page 352 IA 52 20 1950-51 7.71 1.77 Fr. Acre, Lenner s Highway IA 51 15 1949-50 3 85 1.81 32 64 Sub-Div.. Lot 6. Blk. 3 Evans Lumber Co. 33 6 1W IA 126 13 1952-53 31.90 1 23 Silverton, Ore. Pers. 1265 24 1951-52 1.014.60 152.19 Vol. 416. Page 330 IA 121 37 1950-5! 38.71 . 8 44 4 J! Acres IA 120 17 1949-50 i 20.06 5.82 1.271 J5 Fresken. Gerhard 34 6 1W IA 126 39 1 952-53 95.8 1 6 71 410 Grant St.. Silverton. Ore. IA 125 27 1 951-52 84.70 12.71 Vol. 314, Page 188 IA 122 21-22 1950-51 89.79 20.65 2 Acres IA 121 1-3 1949-50 40.94 11.87 363.18 Shields. Volene Ac H. C. I T 3W IA 317 2 1952-53" 33.30 2.33 (Davif. D. G. Ac B. J.) IA 309 29 1951-52 35.35 5 30 c.o Lappin, Gerald IA 298 17 1950-51 39.55 9.10 Cummings Lane, Salem. Ore. IA 282 33 1949-50 34.80 10.79 170.53 Vol. 255. Page 139 Vol 276. Page 246 Vol 320. Page 185 Ex Vol. 370, Page 217 2 Acres Reimann, Ben Sc Ann 10 3250 Portland Rd.. Salem. Ore. Vol. 384. Page 194 .01 Acre Pringle Creek Park Add. N 2 Ft. Lot 9 Hedges, Irving V. Rt. 9. Box 493. Salem. Ore. Vol. 286, Page 576 Ex. Vol. 334. Page 71 Vol. 394. Page 238 3.74 Acres Redlands Orchards Fr. Lots 4 to 7 Cain. Darold r Beulah I. II 30 Rt. 9. Box 846. Salem, Ore. VoL 406. Page 247 10.5 Acres Hartley 6c Craig Fruit Tracts Let 12 Drury. James C. ic 31-31 Beatrice Rt. 3. Box. 806, Salem, Ore. Vol. 353. Page 501 Ex. Vol. 280. Page 3. Mtg. 55.68 Acres Drury. J. C. Ac 32 Beatrice C. Rt 3, Box 806, Salem, Ore. Vol. 309. Page 264 3.75 Acres Bunker Hill Fruit Farms Lot 16 Hoflich. Hermon 14 c. o. Maus, Forrest L. P. O. Bo 524. Salem, Ore. Vol. 234. Page 604 1 Acre Rivervitw Shb-Div. Lot 20 Neymeyer. Otto I. 4c Joseph G. Stay ton. Ore. Vol. 251. Page 191 VoL 352. Page 395 Ex. VoL 157, Page 468 VoL 358, Page 447 Vol. 379, Page 420 Vol. 418. Page 88 1.68 Acre Sprungman. Charles tc 18 17 Toletha wRt. 1, Box 82. Turner, Ore. I Vol. 212. Page S9S V .5 Acre feeringer. G. E. T Hit. 1. Box 163-E. Lyons, Ore. Vol. 189. Page 613 30 Acres Beringer. G. E. T. Rt. 7. Box 163-E. Lyons, Ore. Vol. 142. Page 423 Vol. 377. Page 330 120 Acres Beringer, G. E. Rt. 1, Box 163-E. Lyons, Ore. Vol. 234. Page 285 Vol. 377, Page 122 Vol. 392. Page 263 Ex. Vol. 395. Page 66 39.9 Acres Beringer. G. E. Box 163-E. Lyons, Ore. Vol. 142, Page 423 Vol. 392. Page 265 88 Acres Case. Raymond R. 8c Helen L. 23 Mill City. Ore. Vol. 378, Page 430 SWi of NW',i 40 Acres Case. Raymond R. 8c Helen L Mill City. Ore. Vol. 378. Page 430 45.3 Acres Lot 1 23 Short, Leo ic Lucy C. 27 Mill City, Ore. VoL 399. Page M5 .80 Acre Bogynske VoL 402, Salem Mabel Page 149 Brooklyn Add. Larsen, E. M. ic Alta 263 E. LefeUe St. Salem. Ore. VoL 402. Page 182 Salem Kraus. William Aurora, Ore. 1-3 VoL 390, Page 429 Aurora Und. ',i Int. Hurst's Add. Thomas. W. L. Sc Cleo 8 Min City. Ore. Vol. 430. Page SS4 Mill City Also Fr. Adj. Bar-tad. Elmer M. it Ida S. Tr. Hi-37 728 W. Main St. SUverton. Ore. VoL 360. Page 801 Ex. Vol. 385. Pages 293-637 Phelp'a Add. Barstad. Elmer M. 8c Ida S. Er. 12c37 T 728 W. Main St SUverton. Ore. VoL 406. Page 171 Silverton Phelp' Add. Choquette. F. A. 8c M. A. Rt. 1. Wood burn. Ore. VoL 225. Page 433 West Wood bum Marlon County (Choquette. Kenneth) Woodbum. Ore. Vol. 223. Page 74 West Woodbum 18c 2 4 8c 5 Notice of this foreclosure proceedings lg Clven exclusively ,by tour weekly publications of the foregoing tai foreclosur list In the Oregon Statesman, a dally newspaper of general circulation in Marlon County, Oregon pursuant to the order of the County Court for Marlon County, Oregon, mad and entered on the ilUt da) otMay, 1954. Any person Interested In any real property Included In the foreclosure Hit may flic an answer and defense to said application for judgment and decree within 30 days after the date of the first publication thereof, ex elusive of the day of said first publication. Date of the first publication of this notice is June 17, 1954. and the date of the last pubUcaUton Is July 8. 1954 DENVER YOUNG. . Sheriff and Tax Collector of Marlon County. Oregon. KENNETH X. BROWN, June IT. 14. July 1, I. 1953 TAX FORECLOSURE LIST Twp. Range Tax BoU er South or K. or W. Lot Block W.M. 34 4 1W Vel. IA IA IA IA Page 27 27 27 26 Line 2ti . 15 11 26 Ore. I 3W IB 492 13 1952-53 J9 M IB 478 25 1951-52 .65 JO IB 4M 24 1950-51 J9 .14 IB 439 18 1949-50 .37 At 2 84 8 IW IB 506 40 1952-53 28.05 1.96 IB 492 30 1951-52 " 31 JO 4 67 IB 473 1 1950-51 28 05 6.45 IB 451 IS 1949-50 26.23 1.14 134.87 8 3W IB 320 30 1952-53 33 87 2.37 IB 506 16 1951-52 26.72 4 01 IB 486 24 1950-51 37.32 8 58 IB 464 25 1949-50 34 10 10.57 15734 8 3W IB 521 6 1 952-53 161.95 11 34 IB 506 32 1931-32 212.80 31.92 IB 486 40 1950-51 - 107.33 24 S9 IB 465 1 1949-50 102.85 31.88 884.78 6 3W IB 521 18 1 952-53 7 81 .55 IB 507 5 1951-52 17.07 2.56 IB 487 1 3 1 950-51 8 61 198 IB 45 14 1949-50 8.25 2.58 45.39 8 VW IB 535 29 1952-53 3 47 -14 IB 311 20 1951-54 3.63 .54 IB 491 19 1950-51 3 85 , .89 IB 469 19 1949-50 3.30 1.02 ISM - t 1W IB ' 534 4 1952-53 - 36.04 2.53 IB S19 36 1951-52 33.94 5.09 IB 499 16 1950-51 38.13 8.77 IB 477 17 1949-50 25.73 7J8 158.24 9 2W IB 557 30 1952-53 36t 2 55 IB 541 36 195152 42.43 8.34 IB 520 30 1950-51 40.44 9.30 IB 498 21 1949-50 29 32 9 21 171.19 9 2E IB 621 40 1952-53 23 22 1.83 IB 604 24 ' 1951-52 23.59 3.54 IB 582 22 1950-51 26.54 6.10 IB 557 34 1949-50 20.34 4.31 111.27 2E IB 622 1 1952-53 122.59 1.58 IB 604 25 1951-52 123.88 II 58 IB 582 23 1950-51 136.65 31.43 IB 537 35 1949-50 106 53 33.02 181.24 9 2E IB 622 23 1952-53 11.33 .79 IB 05 6 1951-52 11 67 1.64 IB 583 4 1950-51 10.38 2 39 IB 538 14 1949-50 17.01 tJXI 19.90 2E IB 622 29 1952-53 02 51 45 IB 605 12 1951-52 95.13 14-27 IB 583 10 1950-51 107.00 34.61 IB 558 20 1949-50 84 80 26.29 IB 627 8 1952-53 20.09 1.41 IB 609 25 1951-52 35.66 3.85 IB 587 18 1950-51 66.00 15.18 IB 561 38 1949-50 67.00 20.77 IB 627 10 1952-53 15.29 1.07 Pers. 1338 7 1952-53 40.11 281 IB 609 27 1951-52 17.98 2.69 Pers. 1328 18 1951-52 61.28 .H IB 587 18 1950-51 ' 40.23 26 Pers. 1323 19 1950-51 189.13 43.SO IB 561 40 1949-50 41.47 12.84 Pers. 1228 37 1949-50 203.00 62.92 IB 632 23 1952-53 27.52 1.9 IB 614 31 1951-52 35.39 5 31 IB 592 17 1950-51 11.27 2 39 IB 566 19 1949-50 21.24 f 56 2A 7S9 10 1952-53 8 27 TT 2A 739 20 1951-52 4 83 .72 2A 739 34 1950-51 4.37 1 01 2A 639 14 1949-50 4.33 1.34 IA 808 30 1952-53 3 76 JH 2A 806 31 1951-52 4 03 .60 2A 806 30 195Q-51 3 65 .84 Pers. 1221 20 1950-51 43.74 10 06 2A 705 26 1949-50 3.81 1.12 2B 1015 30 1952J3 20.01 1.40 2B 1014 27 1951-52 22.31 3 35 2B 1002 26 1950-51 22 07 9.08 2B 903 20 1949-50 19.68 6.10 2B 1046 32 1952-53 32 47 2.29 2B 1045 't 1951.52 .59 .09 2B 1037 . 1950-51 1.16 .25 2B 933 37 1949-50 MS JM 3B 1083 32 1952-53 18 85 1J1 2B 1082 18 1951-82 17 08 2.58 2B 1073 13 1950-51 18.19 4.16 2B 98 37 1949-50 16.46 1 10 2B 1083 3J. 1952-53 11 19 .78 2B 1082 19 1951-52 10.68 1 60 2B 1073 14 1950-51 . 11.31 3.60 2B , 969 36 1949-50 10.29 3.19 2B 1112 IT 1952-53 10.28 .72 2B 1110 9 1951-52 10.62 1.58 2B 109 9 1950-51 11.57 2.66 2B 994 34 1949-50 8 78 2.72 2B 1112 II 1952-53 9.57 .17 2B 1110 10 1951-52 9.91 1.47 2B 1099 10 1950-51 10.79 2 48 SB 994 35 1949-80 8 19 2 54 2E 2E 3E 11 14 14 14 Int. to Tear of Amount or Feb. 15, yjelinqueney. Taxes 1954 Total 1952-5.1 1951-52 1950-51 1949-50 84.79 94 87 81 94 80 14 5.94 14.23 1885 24 84 40588 450.74 219.94 TUAI 111.83 S3 JI4 TI.I7 100.00 33.50 83.40 11.8- 48.91 4583 District Attorney for Marion County, Oregon.