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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1954)
Cniy :ewi EJirfieffs MUSIC CLASSES OPEN Sacred Heart Academy1 an nounced Monday that its classes la violin, harp, organ, cello, voice and piano will be open to chil dren or adults outside the school enrollment this year, Four train ed music teachers are on the staff. Their classes ', this! fall are not completely filled by Sacred Heart students. ! " r- . i i ' Households sale, entire furnish ings must go. 855 Breys Ave. Sept 24, 25 and 26. s f 1 BEQUEST APPROVED Improvement of 'a street in Brooks for the benefit of the members of the Church of God drew approval of the Marion County Court Monday. The con- fregation recently constructed a new building and improvement of the street was requested by petition. M " Merle F. Brown M. D. announces the association of Philip B. Porter M. D. in the practice of medicine L surgery at 595 S. Winter St. Sa lem, Ore. it' DRIVER ARRESTED ' John Donald Gibson, 3425 Dal las Rd., was arrested early Mon day by Salem police and charged with driving while ; intoxicated. He was released on $250 bail after pleading innocent to the charge. Trial was set for Oct 7 in Salem Municipal Court Public Records MARRIAGE LICENSE , , ' APPLICATIONS ; j! l1 William Eugene : Blank, 22, truck driver, 434 Union St, and Margaret Weigel, 21, clerk-typist, 1136 Leslie St Robert Dan Conklin, 27, civil engineer, 2465 Trade St, and Billyette lone Hogan, 26, secre tary, 1240 Court St ! Alwyn Gilbert Witzel, 47, : la borer, 1599 Market St, and Mar jorie Olive Marz, 38, clerk, Rt 1, Box 854. i Levi Wilson, 26, laborer, Che- mawa, and Elizabeth Lois Seelat .see, 24, at home, Chemawl. PROBATE COURT U ' 1 Nellie G. Carlisle estate: Final account approved and estate dis tributed. ! s. Arnold S. Johnson estate: Net value of taxable estate, $22,745. . CIRCUIT COURT : i Bernard L. Alexander vs. fWar den of Oregon State Penitentiary: Habeas corpus proceeding ' dis missed and plaintiff remanded to custody of defendant - Joyce Huntley vs. 'James F. Mc Manaman: Plaintiff seeks $25,000 in general damages and $755 in special damages after auto-pedes-train accident Dec. 4, 1953. Bruce Huntley vs.j James F. McManaman: Plaintiff seeks $30, 000 in general damages and $526 in special damages, t . r Philip Ehli vs. Grace L. Ehli: Plaintiff seeks divorce, charges cruel and inhuman treatment Married July 15, 1954. i Emzetta Lucille Seagrove vs. John. Clifford Seagrove: Plaintiff granted divorce, custody of minor child. ! Dorothy Wellbrock vs. Paul C. - Wellbrock: Plaintiff granted ; di vorce, custody of minor child, $50 per month for support of child and property settlement i George, Lyerly vs. John Sidre: Defendant denies each allegation of plaintiff s complaint Lorene Elgin vs.-John Elgin: Suit for divorce charges i cruel and inhuman treatment, seeks custody of two minor children, $40 per month support for each child and property settlement Married Sept 29, 195L ! DISTRICT COURT i I - Kenneth Ray Spears, 18, Sayre, Okla., pleads guilty to driving with no operator's license, sen tenced to five days in jafl. Wayne Leo Standish, J9, 2465 N. 4th St, pleads guilty to driv ing with no operator's license, sentenced to five days m jail; David John Le Mond, 52, Mon mouth, pleads innocent to charge of driving while under the in fluence of intoxicating liquor. Trail set for Sept 21. Bail set at $250. .' l , ; MUNICIPAL COURT M John Donald Gibson, 3425 Dal las RdL, charged with" driving while intoxicated; released on $250 bail after pleading innocent; trial set for Oct 7. WHEN COLDS DOES MORE Tiinnvjonn OH GUEST! When a chest cold makes your child miserable, he needs a medication that does more than just work on his chest. He needs Vicks VapoRub . because it acts two ways at once: 1. VapoRub reliever macular rentss and tightness, stima lates chest surfaces. S. At the same time. VapoRnb's tpeeial medicated , vapors sis bring relief with every breath. You can't tee these vapors, but your child can leel them . . . feel then u they travel UF GROUP TO MEET I The Marion County United Fund organization will meet at United Fund : headquarters, 317 Court St, at 8 o'clock tonight to hear a progress report, according to Samuel H. Smith, Woodburn president The group is composed of representatives living outside of Salem, bat who reside in the county. Plans will be made for the campaign kick-off Oct 2. j .- v.- . . i ' : - , " ' : Wanted middle aged lady to train as nurses aid. Must be under 50 years, a non-smoker and have transportation. Apply in person to the Boyce Sanitarium, 4515 Sun nyside Rd. s HOUSE VANDALIZED f , A hammer - swinging , 'woman smashed all the windows on the south and east sides of the home of Phil Eli, 815 Wildwind Dr4 Monday morning, Salem police reported.- The woman, who arriv ed in a taxi, left before police ar rived, at the scene. See outstanding wall papers with matching fabric and glamorizing Treasure Tone paints at Clarke's 220 N. Com'L j 1 MINISTERS PLAN TALKS I The Salem Ministerial Associa tion will gather this morning for fellowship and business meetings, Coffee and doughnuts j will be served at 9:30 and at the business meeting at 10 officers will i be elected. The group will gather at the First Congregational Church; Marion and Cottage streets. ; Look for your opportunity in the "Business Opportunities" column in the Classified section today! PERMITS ISSUED , !j The Salem city engineer's oft fice Monday issued building per mits to Sidney Llambias for the construction of two $14,500 houses at 915 and 925 Kumler St A permit was also issued to I. M. Henderson for $195 of repairs on a house at 1525 N. 17th St ! ROAD ACCEPTED j ! A short stretch of road on the highway . leading to the1 Little North; Fork on the Santiam River was accepted Monday by. the Mar ion County Court as a portion of the county road system- The stretch is a relocated portion of county road 960. j . ! i ' i i- I ! Watch the back page of this pa per next Tuesday lor our Grand Opening Announcement Capitol Furniture1 Co. FRACTURES HIP , I Mrs. Elizabeth Odegard, 85, suffered a fractured hip Monday afternoon when she fell at her home at 1660 N. Commercial St She was taken to Salem Memorial Hospital by ambulance. Attend ants said her condition was fair. Watch the back page of this paper next Wednesday for our Grbnd Opening Announcement Capitol Furniture Co. NEW ZEALANDER VISITS Mike Nelson, a New Zealander studying at Oregon State College, will show slides of mountain climbing in his country Friday at 8 p.m. before Salem Chemeketans members - and friends at the Chemeke-den. j - f I :. . . . ! Rummage i Sale by Lions Auxil iary over Greenbaum's on- Wed-- nesday, Sept 22. 7 LETTER WRITING URGED Letter writing will be urged bjf posters and other publicity in the next jew weeks, reports Postmasfc er Albert Cragg, in connection with ! National Letter Writing Week; Oct 3-9. sponsored by the U.'SPost Office Department! Look for the Sign of Quality in your hew home a Crawford Ga rage Door, ' S . POLICE REPORT THEFTS ' Five cases of cigarettes have been stolen from the (warehouse of the Salem Navigation Co., 295 S. Cottage St, during the month of September, Salem police re ported Monday, ' , j ;' 4i" M i j . .i Enjoy: the security, happiness It pride ! of Home Ownership. See the many lovely homes listed in the STATESMAN-JOURNAL dur tng National Home Week, Sept 19th to 26th & every week. - x. u . . ; TOWNSEND CLUB MEETING f Townsend Club 17 win meet at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the home of E. E. Just at Brooks. Transporta tion will be furnished from Or- cutt's Market in Keizer. Plants in foreign countries are maintained by 27 Connecticut firms. MAKE HIM CRY deep into the nose, throat and t large bronchial tubes. The i congestion starts breaking up. i Coughing eases. Soon he en ; joys wonderful, warming re lief that lasts for hours. So when colds strike, use i the best-known home remedy ' to relieve such suffering t Vicks VapoRub. - ; tvbon Rtlitf ... I - Breath In teliel VAPORUB h - - 1 -;; . ' . , . : - i i' " " 1 " " "s' 1 V ' - ' - " ' i I . K Griffin Building, formerly showroom and garage fori Shrock Motor Co., takes on revamped look as remodeling into a business and of fice building nears compIetion.Majority of space is already occa- - pied and remaining effices will be filled as soon as 'alterations are Last Sp ace in New Griffin BuildingFillcd (Story also on Page 1.) Leasing of all space in the new Griffin Building at Church and Chemeketa Streets in Salem was near Monday with the announce ment that The Commercial Bank of Salem would occupy temporary quarters there. Tentative I lease of the last re maining space in the reconstruct ed building was also reported by Richard Schmidt of Nelson and Nelson Realtors, in charge of managing the. property, formerly the Shrock Motor Co. building. Seven tenants for the two-story building are already located in cluding the Homer Smith Insur ance Co., Al Isaak & Co., Realtors, Rawlins Realty, Dewitt & Krause, Realtors, Prudential Insurance Co. of America, Willamette Alum inum Co. and J. Henry Helser & Co., investment managers. Special events have been slated for this week by the two insur ance firms, Homer Smith setting 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. hours Wednes day for an open house, and the Prudential Co. hosting civic and business leaders of the city at a luncheon Tuesday at the Marion Hotel. Still to move in besides j the new bank, tentatively planning its opening for the month of pecem ber, are the Salem Clinic, now in the Livesley Building, offices of Drs. Morris and William Croth ers, Capital Drug pharmacy and offices of Dr. Forrest Bodmer, dentist A general practitioner will be added to the clinic which now in cludes Drs. Ralph Purvine, Hugh A. Dowd, C. A. Downs, Arthur A. Fisher, Charles W. Mills and D. R. Ross. I The new doctor, scheduled to join the clinic about Oct. 1, is Dr. Charles Weebler, graduate of the University of Iowa, now com pleting duty as a flight surgeon with the Air Force at Sauna, Kan. Three parking areas, providing space for some 35 customer auto mobiles and 40 for tenants, are included in the building's setup. Customer parking will be located west of the Central Church of Christ on Chemeketa street, Schmidt reports. i FULLER To Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Fuller, Independence Route 1, a daughter, Monday, Sept 20, at Salem General Hos pital. KRAMER To Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kramer, 2210 Laurel Ave., a daughter, Monday, Sept 20, at Salem General Hospital :WALKER - To Mr.and Mrs. Gordon Walker, Independence, a daughter, Monday, Sept 20, at Salem General Hospital. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our many friends for their expression of sympathy in the recent loss of our beloved husband and father. Mrs, George Van Santen Elvin Van Santen and Joy Gilmer and family. A Births ONE-EVENING COURSE 1 ON HUMAN RELATIONS IN SUPERVISION AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT i Lecturer Lecture . . 4-Hour Course Covers Basic Elements of Vital Importance to Employers and j WED. SEPTi 22-6:30 P.M. STATE - HIGHWAY BLDG., ROOM 418 For Information Phone 3-5987 Sponsored byt Salem Chapter of the Pacific Northwest Personnel Management Assn. Temporary and Future Homes of iVeio V".-. ' V m'''t"U'" " rpsw- - , Fl : : - ! A?l ; p r ; ) . p I it, ,! ! " -j-, L 3 I 'Av r if" " O 1 h h 1 : ; "lJ . , i, ; ..r ."v..i-r x- :, - y ., . . -i ' J j ' f y JtoMMQ. mmmm nwi iium mn -m y r "' .: . A'- : : : x----c-- Sbhwi' 'itwwwu. "iiiiiihi i aj tlly t - I Interior sketch shows plans for the corner of Chemeketa and Church streets. Perspective looks; east through story-high glass entrance of the one-story building with the cashier's windows and counters on the left! A basement is also in corporated in plans for the bank, organized last April with $350,000 capital. Girl Recovering J From Operation Statesman Nevt Service AUBURN Recovering Monday from an emergency appendectomy was eight -year old Glenda Lee I Moody, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. bienn Aiooay oi jzu Midway vr. The little girl was rushed to Sa lem Memorial Hospital Saturday where the emergency operation was performed. Her condition Monday was described as "slight ly improved." - - State Aulditors i i i t Jobs Opened ii U : The audits division of the sec retary of state office has imme diate vacancies tor revenue audi tors. I The positions are in Portland, but approximately; half of the working time is outside Portland. Qualifications for the work call for five years of accounting ex perience. Starting pay is $336. There are ! also vacancies with the audits division! in Salem for fiscal auditors. The starting pay is $284 to $309. I These positions involve a civil service' examination. . Illness Fatal to -' 1 1. j Dayton Woman, I Rites Wednesday Statesman Jfewi Serviea DAYTON Funeral services will be held Wednesday morning for Hattie S. Pierson of Dayton, who died Saturday in a Salem hospital after a long illness. , Survivors include her sisters, Mrs. Emma V. Barnick of Salem, and Mrs. Anna E. Pearson of Daytott. Graveside services will take place in the Brookside Ceme tery at Dayton at 10:30 a.m. Wed nesday j Children's Shoes Expertly Fitted at the Junior! Bootery 231 N. High. Sen- Hotel BIdg. (sag) A wnouncina , . . Dr. J. L. Rpsenste'in 1 ' ' Professor, Department of Management - Loyola University, Chicago, Illinois Conference . . . Discussion Personnel Supervisors Admission $60 per Person 1 finished. Latest tenant .announced for the building is the Commer cial Bank which expects to occupy quarters on the Church Street side in December. (Statesman Photo.) . u lobby of the ne w Commercial Night Classes Planned Here For Adults I - -. i Two new classes will be Offered this!, year to employed workers in industry in Salem's adult edu cation program. ' Money has been set aside by the Salem board of education for welding . and machine shop classes in West Salem. . Persons employed in industry and agriculture, other than ap prentices, may enroll for welding instruction. ! The machine shop will offer additional instruction to employ ed persons on machines such as millers, shapers, lathes and grind ers. ... :f : ... i Information on the opening of classes and locale will be avail able at a later date, reports the state division of vocational edu cation. . Planning for a nursing class which leads toward licensuere is continuing. An advisory commit tee to help with an agenda for the class has been 'appointed. Additional information on vo cational classes is available from Paul F. Wilmeth, School Ad ministration building. f WORK APPROVED Improvements to Lantz Avenue and Bartlett Street were formally approved by the Marion County Court Monday upon the recom mendation of the late Hedda Swart The recommendation was one of the: last official acts of Svart's career. 1 RUBBER STAMPS NOTARY ft CORPORATE SEAiS made to order in our shop urrnuAU'c stationery iiLkviinm f OFFICE SUPPLIES 465 STATE ST PHONE 2 2485 0: 1 BanTt Bank of Salem, soon to rise on the Salem Insurance Man Recognized I While attending the 95th anni versary celebration of the Equit able Life Assurance Society in New York City, Edward Maiek of Salem was notified of attaining membership in the Group Million aire Club, i : The distinction represents sales of group insurance in excess of $1,000,000 during 1954. tour Corners Teacher Hurt ' Statesman News Scrrlca I FOUR CORNERS Confined to her home with painful injuries suffered in a fall on iron pegs around a flower bed is Mrs. Kath leen Toycen, 4315 Macleay Rd. second grade teacher at Four Cor ners School. Mrs. Toycen incurred a punc ture wound below the right knee, and lacerations of the face and head which required stitches as a result of the tumble Friday night She was taken to Salem General Hospital for sutures and removal of gravel and facial wounds. Der-Ma-Mol Ointment For External Us Particularly Useful for Pimples and Blemishes j . AT !:: ") SCHAEFER'S ; Drug Store The Penslar Agency Open Daily 7:30 a. m. to S p. m. Sundays 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. 135 N. Commercial Afree of VjlMPURITIES 6 6 IGNITES EASILY FAST WARMING i Alow carbon Jresidue 6 (sww CLEAN BURNING V Howard J.' Smallsy Oil Co. 1405 Broadway ' ! i PHONE 3-5606 FOA-5X Exclusive with Shell The.magle anti-clogging ingredient that keeps burner fil ter screen eleaa all winter long keeps your bonier operating economically, and at peak ef ficiency. .......;);,;..- . . , . Statesman. Salem, Oris.. Tues., Slate Announces Appointment of Speeqh Consultant Orville W. Wensley. speech correctionist and school psyeho- ogist m the Portage, Mich- schools, was appointed Monday as speech consultant in. the state department of education. - State Superintendent of Pub lic Instruction Rex Putnam, who appointed Wensley, said he would aid Oregon children who are handicapped by speech difficul ties. Wensley replaces Lloyd T. Thomas, who resigned to work in the Tillamook schools. Former Salem Druggist Dies Death of Guy L. Weaver, form er Salem druggist, in a Tacoma hospital . has been learned here by relatives. Weaver, who has re sided in the Washington city for severaPyears, suffered a broken hip in a fall a month ago. Survivors include two sisters, Mrs. Maude R. Rae and Mrs. Gladys Winship, both of Salem, and brother, Grove Weaver, also of Salem. Funeral services jwill be held Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. in Ta coma. Salem Girl Wins Award Shirley McCauley, 18. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle "McCauley, 1930 Market St, Monday receiv ed a bronze cup for, winning se cond place in the annual state reporting competition among Young Oregonians, an organiza tion sponsored by the Portland Oretoman. Miss McCauley was graduated from Salem High School last June. She served on the staffs of the high school's Clarion and Viking publications and this month registered as a iresnman at Willamette University. FOA-5X Heating Oil Every drop gives you more for your money! IN O COMFORT . O HEATING EFFICIENCY O ECONOMY O SATISFACTION Miller "Oil Co. 2680 Portland Road . PHONE 3-3186 SepL 21, 1934 (Sec 1) 3 GOP Groups I Meet Today Two Marion County Republi can groups will meet today. J, Convention committee workers and officers of Marion Covfnty Chapter, Oregon Republican Clubs, will meet for a 7:30 break fast at the Senator Hotel to plan for tire state convention for the clubs in Salem, Oct 15 and 16.; At 8 p.m. Tuesday, the execu tive board of the county central committee will meet at the Sena tor Hotel. 1 Itoday's biggestVNJ Y DRYER BARGAIN J WC2E i j 'AUTOMATIC ! Fall Size. " f Flues la Anywhere. 110 sr 220 tsttt.i 5 Way Self Venting. Ready to use., i Fast Crying. Low heat, giant 21" ft f ; Safe for all fabrics. i 30-Day Money-Back 6narantet. ALLAUE , REFRIGERATION 2350 Stat St. Ph. 3-5443 Your Choice of 3 Salem Shell O Jobbers " to V"v ' j. Serve You Accurate metered deliveries Reassuring -keep fined" service Free -Sonltor" , Corrosion inhibitor serv ice that leoethens the life ef your storage ta.k. Urmer TRANSFER & STORAGE 889 N liberty PHONE 3-3131 A n5 o