The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 10, 1955, Page 19, Image 19

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' Statesman. Salem, Ore., Wed., August 10, 1955-(Sec J-7
S. River Road Project Underxtay
Gets 13 Millions in Federal Road Funds
". r
State
t ' I V.J
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- .i-. r- - s
4 iV
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Nuclear Power May Soon
Compete With Coal Water w
I r y I The Pacific Northi
GENEVA (J) Leading Russian
and American scientists agreed
Tuesday the world is entering an i power,
era in which atomic power plants An American scientist; Dr.
will be able to match costs of the', james A. Lane of the Oak Ridge
conventional coal and water power Tenn.) National Laboratory, said
plants. I i there is a good possibility that
They expressed their vrews be , atomic power will become compe-
how it will apportion to the states
875 million dollars in federal-aid
highway money for the fiscal year
l. , , -
The Pacific Northwest will get
ally speaking, it still costs consid- $35,732,521. Washington will receive
erably more to produce nuclear 10S.0: Oregon, $12,919,044; and
These totals are broken down into
primary, secondary, urban and in-
WASHINGTON tf The feder-. 730.383; Oregon, $2,336,162; and) age of the area which is pub'ic
al government announced Tuesday, Idaho, $1,738,744. I J land within a state. i
seven Dig states get 35 per cent'
lore atomic experts ot 72 nations titive
at the International Atoms-for-Peace
Conference, who also heard
predictions of a worldwide boom
which would see billions of dollars
terstate highway work
For primary highways, Washing
ton will receive $5,231,351; Oregon
fit.- V , :
spent in a gigantic atomic con
struction program.
Just Jiow long it will take for
atomic power to become compe
titive depends on costs in individ
ual areas and the speed with which
large-scale production units can be
built
In some regions far from coal
mines, the Russians said, it is al
ready more profitable to operate
atomic power stations. But gener
with conventional power! $5,410,740; and Idaho, $3,902,559.
"within the next 15 to 20 years,"
in the United States.
-
DifgiBf work 1 tae ef Jake Wright's city engineering department erewi was completed Tuesday
first phase ef the newest South River Road improvement a 122,000 city project extending
about one-half mile from Miller Street to city limits. Here the paved surface will be widened
from IS to 21 feet, a KV -foot sidewalk win be placed on the east side and curbs on both sides.
Curbing work will begin neit week, following a plan designed to keep half the roadway open to
traffic (Statesman Photo.) - ! j
Britain Jobless
At Low Mark
LONDON Lf The number of
unemployed persons in Britain
dropped to 185,000 in July, the low
est since the war, the Labor Min
istry announces. The ministry esti
mates that the total working popu
lation in Britain at the end of June
was 23,870,000. '. '
Pihball Fight
On in Portland
PORTLAND IB A referendum
attack on a sweeping new anti-
pinball ordinance became official
this week when the petition form
was filed with the city auditor.
The new ordinance will go into
effect Sept. 4 unless opponents get
the signatures of 12.211 or more
registered Toters before then. The
measure , would go on ; the ballot
next year. -
Saleih
Obituaries
Reward Set
For Slayer
Of KC Woman
KANSAS CITY l Contribu
tions towards a $10,000 reward for
solution of the Mrs. Wilma Allen
murder began coming Tuesday as
authorities; reported no new clues.
The Kansas City Crime Commis
sion has agreed to administer the
reward fund. A total of $3,000 was
offered Tuesday. It included $1,000
each from the Kansas City Star
and radio station WHB of Kansas
City and $500 each from the state
of Kansas: and a car dealers as
sociation here.
The FBI and other law enforce
ment officers reported there were
no new developments in the hunt
for the abductor and slayer of Mrs.
Alien, whose nude body was found
Sunday in a pasture 20 miles south
west of here She had been shot
twice in the head.
One man was questioned in the
case today but was released.
Walter I. BaBxatyM
Lata raaident ot 411- If. I. D(B
4rivt. Grants Paas. Ort, Auf . . at
tha age of 64. Survived by wife,
Mrs. Winnie Ballantyne. Grant Pass;
children. Joyce Wilcox, Heirniston.
Ore.; Bruce Ballantyne, Hermiston.
Brothers, Virgii R-, Victo A. and C
Donold Ballantyne. all ot . Salem;
Kosco Bailantyne, Missoula. Mont.
Graveside services will be held Wed
nesday. Aufust 10 at t a.m. at the
.Rest Lawn Memory Gardens under
, the direction ox. w. i . jwgaon co.
I Carl Brantley
Late resident of Tillamook. Oreson.
At a local hospital August Sth. An
nouncement of services later by Vlr-
gil T. Golden Co.
Forrest Gleam Falton
Late resident of 284S Pioneer Dr.
naxned awav Sundav. Auf. 7. at Port
land. He was born June 16. 1904, at
Xlcin, Ore. Survivors Include his
Wife, Mrs. Glaayi i. runon. oaiem;
anna. Frank Fulton. Salem, and Nor
man c Fulton. Bavward. Calif.:
step-son. Gail Wrifht, Salem: sis
ters. Mrs. Charles Yeager, Oakland,
Calif- aad Mrs. Charles Catalano,
Oakland. Calif.: brother. It. A. Ful
ton, BcddinC. Calif. Services will be
16:30 a.m. weanesaay ai me virgii i.
Golden funeral home, with the Rev.
L. Vbiit officiating. Interment at
Belcrest Memorial ram. Masonic rit
ualistic service. Kingwood Lodge No.
a04. AF&AM.
I a A Itmr
Lata resident ef Pacific Beach,
Wash- at the residence August .
Survived by wile, taiui May strong.
Pacific Beacb. thre aona. Donald
Gena Strong. Pacific Beach; Vein
Dale Strong. Salem; Lee A. Strong,
Cottage Grove: ont sister, Mrs. Ilia
Pettman. Clear Lake. Wise. Seven
grandchildren. Services will be
conducted at ' the Coleman Chapel,
Hoquiam. Wash, Tuesday, August
at 10 a -m. Graveside services
Thursday, August 11 at 3 p.m. at
tha City View Cemetery. Under the
direction ef Clough-Barrtck Chapel.
Casket wiU be open to friends in the
Cloufh-Barrick funeral home Wed
nesday and Wednesday evening.
W. X. Weinberg -
Lata resident ef Ml Illinois street
at a local nursing home August S at
the age f 74 yean. Survived by
wile. Virile Weinberg. Salem: threa
daughters. Mrs. H. Z. Ztller of Scio.
Mrs. Joe Shepard and Mrs. Carol
Lurty ef Salem, and one son Wm. F.
Weinberg: two sisters. Mrs. Fred
Cole. Kansas City. Mo. and Mrs.
. Fannev Cunningham, saiam. iwo i
brothers. Henery Weinberg. Topeka.
Kana.: Charley Weinberg. Wood burn.
Member of the First Church of God.
SenrteM will K Wednesday. August
16 at 11 a.m. in tha Chapel ot How I
ell-Edwardi Funeral Home. Rev.
Harold Mclntire officiating. Inter
anent in Zena Cemetery.
Ivaa W. Crass T
At Hoseburg August 1 Survived
yy wife, Mrs. ,Katherine Crum of
Roseburg. Three sons. Jamas Ray
Crura, Roseburg; Gary Lee. Rose
burg; Michael B Roseburg. Mother,
Mrs. Mary Crum of Medford. Ore.
Services at VirgU T. Golden Chapel
Thursday. August 11 at 1 Pro. Dr.
Brooks Moore officiating.
Cearge Weus
la this eitv at a w.i tanital at
tha age ef 17 years. Announcement I
ef aanncea Utar by W. T. Rlgdoa Co.
Mrs. L. Gall Mlasuck :
LaM resilient f .is uih ct
aiea at a saiam hospital Sundav.
Aug. 1. Survived by husband John T.
Minnich,- Salem. Daughters. Mrs.
Iloise Beyle. Salem and Mrs. Coran
11 Prcszybilla. Salem. Ststers. Mrs.
Maurane Greer. Spokane, Wash4
Mrs. Harriet Blankenahip, Salem
Mrs. Paulina Nichols and Mrs. Verle
Petersen. Chicago. Five grand chil
dren. Service In the Virgil T. Gold,
an Chapel Wednesday, August IS.
: at S p.m. Interment Belcrest Me
morial Park.
Daniel Bale Reberts "
In this city e August 1 at rh
age ef IS years. Survived by par
ents. Mr. and Mrs. T. Roberta, Salem:
four brothers. Duane. David, Charles,
Salem, and Richard. Portland: threa
sisters. Mrs. Evelyn Fouppert. port
land: Mrs. Eva Ever. Brooks: Mrs.
Eleanor Wiltsey. Salem. Services
will be e)d in, the HowelMdwards
Chapel Thursday, August 11 at 1:30
pjn. Rev. Glenn HiUegoos offldat
in, laumneat Cty View Camatery.
ABVXBTISKMINT FOR BIDS
Sealed bids for the construction ef
an addition: to the Perrydale School
Gymnasium in Perrydale, Oregon,
wilt be 'received at Perrydale
School until S:00 o'clock p.m- PST,
August U. 19M, and will then be
publicly opened and read aloud.
ina plans, speculations and other
contract documents may be exam
ined and copies thereof may be ob
tained at the office of James L.
Payne, Architect. 725 South Commer
cial Bireet.i saiem. Oregon.
A deposit of $25.00 per set of draw
ings will be required. Any bidder
upon returning his set promptly will
be refunded his deposit and anv
non-bidder upon returning hia set
win no rexunaeo ene-nau ot nis de
posit This project involves the construc
tion of" a wood frame addition.
All classifications will be covered
under the General Contract Pronosal.
A base bid, and unit prices are re
quired. All proposals must be ac
companied jby certified check, cash
ier's check; or bid bond made pay
able to the Owner in an amount of
not less than 5 of the bid.
A performance bond will be re
quired in accordance with terms of
contract documents.
Tha Owner reserves the right to
waive any i informality in, or to re
ject, any pr au Difli, or to accept
any bid. i
No bidder may withdraw or mod
ify his bid after the hour act for lh.
opening thereof, or before award of
the contract, unless said i mH
delayed for a period exceeding thir
ty 30 calendar days after o Renins
of bids.
SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. Jl,
ruiaiuAU, Un(iON
Aug.9.10,11
Solon Seeks
Senate Probe
Of FPC Action
WASHINGTON l Chairman
Murray (D-Mont) announced Tues
day he will ask ht Senate In
terior Committee to investigate the
Federal Power Commission's
(FPC) handling of the Hells Canyon
Dam project on the Idaho-Oregon
border.
He made public excerpts from
a letter he addressed to FPC Chair
man Jerome K. KuykendaD expres
sing : "consternation" at what he
termed FPC's suppression of its
decision in the controversial pub-
lic-versus-private electric power
project until after Congresss had
adjourned.
Favored Rival Plan
The FPC announced on Aug. 4,
two days after Congress had ad
journed, its decision to license the
privately owned Idaho Power Co.
to construct the project.
Murray and some other senators
had favored a rival plan calling
for construction of a single high
dam at Hells Canyon as a public
power project The Idaho Power
Co. s plan calls for construction of
three smaller dams in about the
same area on the Snake River.
Murray's letter said the TPC ap
parently had delayed from July 27
to Aug. 4 the announcement of its
decision to license the private pro
ject. This, Murray wrote, indicated
to him "a desire on the part of
the commission to escape what
would undoubtedly have been a full
airing of this hurried procedure
on the floor of the Senate. .
CABSetFee
For Airline
Mail Carrying
WASHINGTON m L The Civil
Aeronautics Board ruled Tuesday
that West Coast Airlines, Seattle,
should receive a lump sum of st,-
607.209 for carrying mail dur'vng
the 1-month period which ended
Oct. 31. 1934.
For each month after Nov. 1,
1954. the CAB ruled. West Coast
shall receive mail pay at the rate
of 52.53 cents a plane mile.
West Coast, meanwhile, asked
sjhe CAB to certify Pendleton, Ore.,
as a permanent part of its route.
not on a temporary basis as was
proposed in the board's tentative
findings of July 22.
West Coast also objected to the
proposed elimination of Tacoma
and Olympia from its Portland-
Seattle routes No. 2 and 3.
The airline urged that McCall,
Idaho, be granted to it as a new
route, No. 9. West Coast has been
serving McCall on flights between
Lewiston and Clarkston, Idaho.
LdlM-r-1
IN 0U
45"
TEAS or-SERVICE
m4 eriter radoi disease
. C019S. A ST0IACI AUKsTi
rsataf vttsett ssssltal karstM.
cKtrr ti lorowiiu mm
FREE
Wrrt m CmH Mm
DEAN CLINIC
Obm 10 a.au nl I a a. Mm.. WW., hi.
It m.m. wmnt i m. Im. ad Than.
901 M. E. SAM0T SOUUVUS
tArtSTlS PerHa 12, i
:
t
YOUR DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTION IS
A 'TICKET TO HEALTH"! '
But remember this it must be filled ac
curately if his faith in the medicine he
prescribes is to be justified. We are long
time prescription specialists. Our fine Reg
istered Pharmacists are second to none in
the country when it comes to accuracy and
complete dependability. So whenever you
have a prescription to be filled whatever
it is bring or send it to us. It will get
"the right of way," so to speak. And it will
be a "ticket to health" that your Doctor
wrote.
Adequate ventilators placed in
bins of ear corn help dry high
moisture corn and prevent spoilage.
The apparent flowness in the
United States program is mainly
a question of meeting the unusual
ly low production costs of conven
tional power production. The na
tional average, cost of electricity
in the United States ranges from
four to seven mills per kilowatt,
depending on how far the station
is located from fuel supplies. This
compares with 10 kopeks (25 mills
at the official rate of exchange)
per kilowatt for Russian central
stations. (Story also on page 3,
Sec 2.) !
For secondary roads. Washing
ton.will get S3.494.756: Oregon. $3,
781.446; and Idaho, $2,744,957.
For urban roads, Washington will
be apportioned $2,616,940; Oregon,
$1,390,696; and Idaho, $333,787.
For' interstate superhighways,
Washington will be awarded $2,-
GENERATOR STARTS
SEATTLE UH Power generator
number three at the Albeni Falls
dam on the Pend O'Reille .River
went on the line Aug. 5 four weeks
ahead of the scheduled date the
Corps of Engineers here announced
Monday.
of the total; New York leads ti.e said in announcing the apportion-
usi wim aoouuj ana iexas is ment that the alloments were being
next with S52.S94.859. , made five months ahead of the
Involved in the apportionment j "me limit set by Congress.
are 315 millions for the primary
road system, 210 for the secondary
network, 175 millions for interstafe
superhighways and 175 rhillions for,
urban roads.'
The highway program is the reg
ular one authorized in the past by
Congress. Bills for a big new pro-'
gram were considered at the last,
congressional session but! not
passed. j
The states must, with certain ex
ceptions, match 50-50 the federal i
money put up for the primary, sec-i
onaary ana urDan systems; The i
federal government supplies 60 per!
cent of the money for the inter-;
state network.
In states containing oublic ! land 1
the federal money for all but the SINGiiS from 6 00 DOUBLES from S.00
interstate system is increased I GIANT AVINUI AT IUIH"
above 50 per cent by half the per- . CAM CD A KIT ICfO v
centage of the area in the! state' L JM rKMniel3V.V .
which is public land. ( TiTT? 1 J i
The federal allotment for ! inter- vanre h '""f"tript' .
state roads is increased over W per OlrneVtkl,,, u iwUi,.
cent by four-tesiths of the percent-1 . M"i r "ow
. iw - . j tha -m m - -
I .a,. 1 - 3 ss Li-ti "
4b.
DEAFENED!
Now at Last Get
RELIEF!
with the
NEU-VITA
method of heme treatment - self administered in the privacy of your own heme.
This is NOT a HEARING AID. Absolutely nothing of any kind to be worn AT ANY
TIME. Originated in Europe highly successful for yoars new being
the first time in the United States.
shewn for
IN SALEM AT MARION HOTEL
One Day Only.
WED., August 10th
Ask for Mr. L. P. Lacy.
If unable to attend, mall coupon for Information.
NEU-VITA-USA, Box 5009
Portland 13, Oregon, Dept. H
Send Literature ( )
Name
Address L
City L State
Have Rep. Call ( )
mm
-1
NOTHING
(not even the
high-priced cars)
HAS GOT SO MUCH
TO GO WITH r
The most up-to-date VS
like a (Oheinrolet 'TO !
CAPITAL DRUG STORE
Male Stare. 405 State
Prescription Shop, C17 Cbemeketa
WE GIVE VC GREEN STAMPS
Shortest . Fastest
to the '
SOUTHWEST
t: -ijiii.
aat V !',,
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Phon el4I15
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1 I.I Hi! StSaalBlVS -1 W7'Y-. : ' f
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W . I i aw H ! tJmjt J 4T- T- "NJ1 wulwwi.ui iiapj.BMHM nwfngf?
t--a X- I eVV r A S-rZs 1
Y,,rz,i0 K 5 fcsfjatT I r" ' W 1 1 SH
JU'..i.JSapiaBSJH)jay 19
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Drivs with cart . . . EVERYWHERE!
It's the new winner in stock car competition . . .
and it's winning new, young-minded friends faster -
than you can say America's hottest V8.
Because of its liveliness, its looks, and because it holds
the road like it loves it which it does.
Come try it, won't you, if okly for the fun of it!
So advanced in
design and so
efficient in op
eration that it needs only 4 quarts
of oil instead of the usual 5.
Shortest stroke of any VS in the
industry. Delivers more horse
power per pound than any en
gine in Chevrolet's field.) Jake
your choice of the 162-h.p.
TTurbo-Fire" or the 180-h.p.
"Super Turbo-Fire,M optional at
extra cost.
Two Sizzling 6's
They're the most
powerful 6 s in
Chevrolet's: field
a j im.- v. trot.
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they give you the
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the only 12-volt electrical system
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i
Powerglide,
Overdrivt or
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Chevrolet gives
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A new and finer Synchro-Mesh
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options, oil-smooth Powerglide
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New engineering advances
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Special ball bearings in the steer-
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wheel to reduce friction.) Glide-
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DOUGLAS McKAY CHEVROLET CO.
S10 N. Commercial St.
Phone 3-3175