The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 16, 1955, Page 2, Image 2

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    Secij)StateSman,.SalenvOr.?WNo,-ia 19551 Sa,em
Planners Reject
Church Request
?By ROBERT E. GANGWARE "
City Editor, The Statesman
Englewood ' Evangelical United Brethren Church wai turned
down Tuesday night by Salem Planning Commission on a request
for waiver of setback requirement for a proposed 30 by 40 foot
Sunday School addition to the church.
The church wanted to build on
the rear of its property on 17th
Street at Nebraska Street, with
out acquiring additional property.
Sunday School Superintendent
Floyd Query told the commission
t City Hall that his church had
reached the point of curtailing
its youth program pr expanding
its building. "Our existing plant
is jammed to the rafters " he
said.
Situation Said Emergency
He and others of the church
termed the situation an emer
gency brought on by rapid
growth of the Sunday School.
They said the church serves a
big residential area with a big
population of children.
The Rev. Lloyd Uecker, pastor,
acknowledged that buying a resi
dential lot to the north of the
church property for location of
the proposed addition was recom
mended as first choice of archi
tects. He said paying the price
of that property would hold back
the building ' program, therefore
the - alternative plan had been
made.
Speaking for the commission
majority. Commissioner Robert
K. Powell declared the church
should buy the adjacent property
which "would be to your advan
tage in the long run." Powell
maintained that the setback waiv-
r paiijr. fer couldn't he hasirt nn'grn...
a musician oiuw ,,,, "T.rr r-
umiu aauaiv me zoning
Symvlwny
Sard Guided 1
By Master
By STANLEY BUTLER
Acsoc Frof. of Musk, Willamette
University
The Portland Symphony Or
chestra gave a magnificent con
cert last evening under the mas
terful leadership of Hs new con
ductor, Theodore Bloomfield.
Bloomfield led his players
through loving attention to de
tails on to an immensely satisfy
in 3 projection of the entire pro
portions of the music. - j
The orchestra is already great
ly improved over last year. The
attacks were miraculously pre
cise. No sputtery brass entrances
here. The violins had a particu
larly opulent tone
Conductor Bloomfield has solid
concepts of musicianship. He
follows a melody through from
beginning to end, moulding - it
4nto persuasive shapes. His care
lor bridge passages in the music
were as absorbing as the atten
tion a gracious hostess gives to
the externals of her party. In
short, we heard
isste.
Precision Noted .
Furthermore, Bloomfield was
ble to easily impress bis play
tn with his intentions. The or
chestra responded to his bidding
ith precision, whether the music
called for a rigid beat or a com
fortable flexibility.
The program was well chosen.
Bow impressive was the. Beeth
oven Overture! The Debussy
Fetes were alive with rhythm.
Immensely subtle, though clear
to the sensitive listener, was the
Suite from Der Rosenkavalier, by
Strauss- The mighty first Sym
. phony of Brahms brought the
concert to an exultant close. :
Less Players
It is a pleasure to record that
one now doesn't need to ; be
plagued by memories of orches
tras from large cities. Oh no,
the sound isn't as ample, but let's
not forget that those orchestras
have at least 25 more .players
than the Portland Symphony.
There were times when the wood
winds and the brass weren't
heard as forcefully as one might
wish. v
This was an occafion when the
audience might have loosened up
aad shouted JbpjbyJITC ;3f
i Ax
it
Marine 2nd LL James Roy Todd, ,23, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Todd,
1560 N.17th St, was missing and feared drowned when a rubber
landing craft capsised early Tuesday morning near Oceanslde,
Calif., in combined naval maneuvers of the United States and
Canada. This photo was taken when Todd was In Naval Reserve
training. ,
E. E. Payne's
Services Due I
Statesman Newt Serrice
DALLAS, Ore. Funeral ser
vices for Edward Everette Payne,
66, of 1111 N. Levens St, who
died Friday in a Dallas hospital,
will be 1 p.m. Thursday at the
Bellman Funeral Home, the Rev.
"W lter Kernon" officiating. Burial
w'H be in Riverside Cemetery,
Albany, Ore.
Born Jan.' 7, 1889, at Albany,
MrT Payne lived 37 years in Dal
las. He was a retired railroad
worker. He and Mae Belle Seeley
were married Oct 22, 1913, in
Albany. She died Aug. 8, 1914.
Mr. Payne and Ella Bertha Seeley
were married Dec. . 8, 1915, in
Portland.
A member of the Free Method
ist Church, he leaves his wife
in Dallas; a daughter, Mrs. Mae
Miller, Albany; and two brothers,
three sisters, two granddaughters
and three great-grandchildrea.
code as to "exceptional conditions
applying to the land" which
might justify a variance permit
Rotebrangh Differs
.Commissioner W. ,W. Rose
braugh differed, with a declara
tion that he considered exception
al conditions applying to use of
ue land a more important fac
tor. Rosebrtugh favored the
church permit, saying the congre
gation could meet its emergency
and later acquire the adjacent
lot
In other business, the nlannin?
body denied a variance of set
back for a garage proposed by
Maurice Blum at 2365 Alvarado
Terrace; granted variance to Mrs.
Blanch Schar. Portland, to alter
a setback which would permit
duplex construction at the north
west corner of Liberty and Oak
streets;-7 recommended name of
West Hills Way for street three
blocks west of Kingwood Drive,
south of Loewen Avenue; recom
mended against removing an
agreement which Clarence V.
Stratton signed with the city in
1953, to remove any part of
building at 2376 State St which
might be within 50 feet of center
of State Street if that street is
widened 1 !
Todd Known
In Salem for
Music Work
(Story also on page one) .
James Roy Todd, 23. missing
and presumed drowned early Tues
day in naval operations off 'the
California coast, is known in Sa
lem for his musical activities.
A 1950 graduate of Salem High
School, he played cornet in school
organizations and dance bands in
the area and later was student
director of the band at Oregon
State College, where he was grad
uated in 1954. He was a member
of Sigma Alpha Epsiloa fraternity
at OSC
His wile, the former Elizabeth
Ann Gibbens, also is known here
as a pianist. They were married
in February and she was living
with him at Oceanside, Calif.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Todd,
1560 N. 17th St., he also has a
younger brother, Grant Todd. ard
a grandmother, Mrs. Katherine
Stofiel. both in Salem.
Born May 15, 1932, in Eugene,
he moved to Salem with his fam
ily in 1947.
At The Theaters
Today
XLSINORB
THt MAN WITH THE GUN"
with Robert Mltchum and Jan
Sterling.
"SHIELD FOR MURDER" with
Edmond O'Brien and John Afr.
CAPITOL
THE DESPERATE HOURS"
with Humphrey Bog art and Fred
rie March.
"THE SCARLET COAT" with
Cornel Wilde and Michael Wild
Ins. GRAND
"ROMEO AND JULIET" with
Laurence Hirvir and Susan
ShentaU
NORTH SALEM DRIVE DC
"SOLDIER OP FORTUNE" with
Clark Gable and Susan Hayward.
"AFRICAN QUEEN with
Humphrey Bofart and Katharine
Hepburn.
BOLLYWOOD
"STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND"
with Jame Stewart and June
Allvson. v
THE NIGHT HOLDS TERROR
with Jack Kelly and Hildy Parks.
County Tax
'Money 'Flows'
To Collector.
Tax money, some of it In quarter-million
dollar chunks, poured'
into the Marion County tax col
lector's office Tuesday ahead of
tb midnight discount deadline.
Mail, containing taxpayers
checks for the 1955-56 county
property tax, was stacked high
in the tax office and Chief Dep
uty Tax Collector Howard T.
Evans said his office wouldn't be
out from under the pile before
the first of the year. - ,
The county's two biggest prop
erty taxpayers Portland General
Electric and Pacific Telephone
and Telegraph waited along
with hundreds of lesser taxpay
ers until the final hours to get
their payments in. PGE, again the
biggest single payer in the com
fy, turned in a check for $257,
028.73; PT&Ts check was for
$218,418.87.
As of 9 p.m. Tuesday night the
tax office has processed-15,783
receipts covering some $237,
350.23, which represents only
about one-third of the county's
record $7,177,252.05 tax for the
year. But most of the remainder
was represented in in-the-mail or
in-the-drawer returns, Evans said.
Counting the PGE and PT&T
accounts, Tuesday's tabulations to
taled some $891,000. Except for
those two, however, not too much
came in over the counter. Dead
line day lines were considerably
shorter at the Courthouse than
those of Monday.
Those missing Tuesday midnight
deadline, not only lost the benefit
of the three per cent discount, but
face a penalty as well. Two-thirds
of one per cent interest .on first
quarter taxes is in effect now on
unpaid taxes.
$5 Million Camp Adair Work
Rumors
Confirms
Long
Time
1 (Story also on page 1)
J CORVALLIS Plans of the U.S.
Air Force to erect a 13,000,000 com
munications facility in the Camp
Adafr area, disclosed Tuesday,
were .hailed immediately as con
firmation of ton-ame rumors that
"something big is going in at Camp
Adair."
i For several years, rumors have
coursed through the valley that
Boeing Aircraft or some other in
dustry would build a plant at Camp
Adair. .. .
i A Corvallis newspaper report
er said that people here have heard
so many rumors that their first re
action Tuesday was one of skeptic
ism. This was quickly replaced by
a feeling that the new facility may
create a housing shortage here.
Housing already is reported as
?tight" in this state college city.
Some te Be Married
The Air Force said that a num
ber of those stationed at the com
munications center will be mar
ried. It was presumed that many
would want to live "off the post'
, Monmouth and Albany are other
nearby cities that personnel of the
new center might look to for hous
ing. Salem is approximately 25
miles from Camp Adair.
An Air Force spokesman de
clined to enlarge on ta statement
that the new facility would have
"several hundred" personnel.
Dates Back
Camp Adair dates back to World
War II when the government ac
quired some 55,000 acres of land
for the military cantonment Used
as an Army training ground, four
infantry divisions were activated
there. . , ' .
; They were the 70th " Trailblai
er" "Division, tne Slst 'Powder
River" Division, the 96th "Dead
eye" Division and the 104th "Tira
berwolves" outfit
At its height of activity, Camp
Adair had a military population of
some 40,000. - -,
Post War Period "
In the post-war period, "most of
the land has been sold back to far
mers. Today only 400 acres remain
West Rejects
Molotov Bid
UF REPORT DUE
The second annual United
Fund Progress Report lunch was
scheduled for noon Dec. 9 in the
Marion Hotel in a board 'of direc
tors meeting Tuesday at fund
headquarters. Directors will be
elected at the meetine and Chuck
Holloway, Portland 1955 cam-
paign chairman, will be speaker,
Salem President Elmer A. Berg
lund said.
Pro-U.S. Parties
Unite in Japan
TOKYO UV Japan's conserva
tives merged Tuesday into a single
anti-Communist. pro-United States
party with a solid grip on Parlia
ment. . -t-r . -
For the first time since Parlia
mentary government came to Ja
pan 65 years ago, the Conserva
tives were united.
Addition of 18
To U.N. Gains
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. Uft -1
The United States Tuesday called
for an early meeting of the UX
Security Council to consider appli
cations for U.N. membership from
18 countries, including controver
sial Outer Mongolia. j
This sudden move came as near
ly two-thirds of the 60 U.N. mem
bers lined up behind a Canadian i
resolution urging admission of all'
18 applicants. Diplomats said at
least 42 members were committed.
Mrs. Sprick's
Funeral Due
-Funeral services for Mrs. Ethel
May Sprkk. 70, who died Sunday, !
wiu be 2 pjn. today in the May
flower Chapel. Corvallis. the Rev.
H. F. Irvin officiating. Burial will
be in Oak Lawn Memorial Park.
Mrs. Sprick had been a Salem
resident the past two years, living
,with her son, Ellis Sprick. She
was oorn in iowa June it, iw.
She and William Fred Sprick were j
married in 1921 at Mitchell, S. D.
She was a member of the McFar
land Methodist Church and active
in its missionary society until her
illness.
She leaves, besides her son, a
brother, Frank E. Scriber, SUck
ney. S. D., and three grandchil
dren, Carol, Nancy and .Marine
Sprick, all of Salem.
SICATELAND
650 7th St., West Salem f
Enjoy Roller Skating at
This New Modern Rtnk
Please Observe Dress Rules
GENEVA UP) The Western al
lies turned down Tuesday night a
new Soviet bid for an European
security pact based on the contin
ued division of Germany.
They also rejected a draft de
claration by Soviet Foreign Min
ister V. M. Molotov which would
commit the Big Four powers to
consider the disarmament prob
lem in future with emphasis on the
Russian objective of banning atom
ic weapons.
"As long as Mr. Molotov per
sists in his refusal to agree to dis
cuss German . reunification by
means of free elections" U. S. Sec
retary of . State John Foster
Dulles said, "we are not prepared
to consider fragmentary Soviet pro
posals to put asunder what the
four heads of government joined
together.
Annual 4-H
Awards Given
At Gty Meet
Annual 4-H awards were pre-
' sented in the second annual 100-
Per-Cent Meeting Tuesday eve
ning in Bush School .Auditorium.
j Special awards to Salem 4-H
members included a state citizen-1
ship award to Janice Bishop.;
2595 S. 12th St; $100 - college
scholarship to Marilyn Page, 3225
Fisher Rd., co-champion in the
State Fair cake, baking contest;
4-H summer school scholarship to
Carolyn Bishop, 2595 S. 12th, for
the State Fair wool sewing con
test : County winners in ; clothing
achievement Carolyn Bishop;
and May Jo, Anne and Roberta
Meusey, 1740 N. 18th St
County winners in foods prep
aration Kay Smith, 1639 Long
view St; and Susan' Hamstreet,
Salem Route 3, Box 552.
County winner in dairy foods
demonstration Judy Pahl, 3383
Livingston St
County dress revue medal win
ners Brenda Bostwick and Bren
da Suit State School for the
Deaf; Barbara Glodt 669 River
view Dr.; Shirley Govier, 1158
Eighth St; Nancy Tribble, 1025
Lavone; Jerrie Trott 995 N. Sum
mer; Mabel Anderson, 1040 Rat-
i cliff Dr.; Nancy Kenagy, 1975 W.
Nob Hill; Sharon Suran, 2694
Fisher Rd.; Barbara Smith, 582
S. 20th St '
under federal government owner
ship. The National Guard is using
part of this area. About a dozen
industries, mostly small ones, are
using some of the rest . -:
Adair Village, a familiar land
mark to tourists on Highway 99 W.
was used to house married veter
ans attending Oregon State Col
lege after the. war. Finally, these
buildings, too. were sold to the pub
lic and were moved.
The Air Force said the commun
ications center probably would bo
built northeast of the Adair Vil
lage site.
One of the next steps will be to
sell approximately 20 buildings
that are to be moved. Consisting of
barracks and garage-type build
ings. they were used by prisoners
of war when Camp Adair was ac
tive. ' , -
Sale of the buildings' is contem
plated within a month, the Air
Force reported. .
: CoL Etter said the new commun
ications center would utilize "a
relatively small portion" of Camp
Adair's remaining 400 acres. He
said he "presumed" that the gov
ernment would sell the remaining
portion of Camp Adair.
NEXT SUNDAY!
Hilarious Addition Te
Our Art Film Policy
J
n
I M
fir tm
Kucsnn
Bonn npfl&w
SBtCtSSUI Ab'-fJ
mm !l '
W f'tV
, jCnajM'Wnwiy
Not For Children! Please
Good Music Big Crowds
WED. NITE
Crystal Gardens
Ask for Tour Free Prise Tickets
1 -
Ike Asks Israel,'
Egypt Settlement
NEW YORK un President Ei
senhower, in a message to a
packed Madison Square Garden
rally, said Tuesday night the need
lor a peaceful settlement between
Israel and the Arab countries "be
comes daily more imperative."
"As I said the other, day." the
President's message said, "while
we continue willing to consider re
quests for arms needed for legiti
mate self-defense, we do not in
tend to contribute to an arms com
petition in the Near East."
Candeaux Leads
Salem Rose Group
r George Candeaux was elected
president of the Salem Rose Soci
ety at a dinner meeting Tuesday
at the YMCA. .
A. D. Brown was named vice
president; Miss Ruth Squier, sec
retary ; and Mrs. J. J. St Clair,
treasurer. '
Mrs. Nat Schoen of Vancouver,
American Rose Society, was speak
er, describing new varieties of
roses. -
CORNS FROM THE
WITH DEL MttNt
WE'RE
READY
ALREADY!
We've ordered the birds
We're fixing the trimmings
We'll be open to stuff you
Full to the brimming!
Both
the
OA ROOM
and
DIN1NO ROOM
Open from noon 'HI 8
Thanksgiving Day
XtmimUr In SA1IM it'i A
Hotel r.lcrion
Tmw In H -Mawry Tmw" h KSIM
Mam, Wad. I Kit :30 PM
Dine & Dance
At Th
BAMBOO
ROOM
LAUREL CAFE
Woodbnra, Oregon
iSway I9E Closed Sundays
SOt Phone 4-4713 20
STARTS TODAY OPEN 6:45
I MIS (Willi
0!KG
M,, i
Mitjiniittfftif
AND
"The Night
Holds Terror"
-STARTS TODAY!-
- I .
It begins
when three
killers
CONTINUOUS
FROM I P.M.
walk
through
the door !
j A Y
, v ,i r. 0
Looking for escape -looking
for money -looking
- for women! It reaches
a screaming crescendo
with a teen-age; girl
fighting to escape them!
And it goes on
to a flaming
finish that'll
leave you
easDine xor
breath! Ll:
END HIT
n
V. ...
i V 1 J
n
STARTS
TODAY!
Paramount p'tset
HUMPHREY
BOG ART
ar
FREDRIC
MARCH
WILLIAM "WYLER'S
Production of
THE
DESPERATE
HOURS
to arhf
Arthur Kennedy
Martha Scott 'Dewey Martin
Gig Young Mary Murphy
ftary f
Cour8,
Dorlngl
1 M Ji, r,y
". 7
3 V.U
cstm Bcua
WILDE VtlLOINQ
SINK SCSSGt
FRANCIS SANDERS
mar mblu ra tana
IS&nBSSCDLL
Takes Its Stand Beside "Shane", "Red River", and
"High Neon" As One of the All-Tim Western
Orwtsl "
ROBERT
MITCHUM
JAN
STERLING
-IN-
THE
WITH THE UM"
SUSPENSE-FILLED CO-HIT!
THE FINEST FLOWERING OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE IN
AN INCOMPARABLE FILM.
The most
beautiful
love story
of all
time!
a 1 riT"11 r t-T'
- - -i i Tin i
TR William Shakespeakes,
omeo
mi; m
fSSA
vrztt . an
7pA
mi
rUrL TECHNICOLOR
Laurence HARVEY . Swan SHENTALL . Flora ROBSON
SHORT
SUBJECTS
ADDED
LATEST
NEWS
COLOR
CARTOON