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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1956)
V ' Statesman, Salem, Ore., Wed.,, Mar, 7,'Z3 IK uay 1 HELD TO ANSWER Howard Dlnnkenship was held to answer to the Marion County grand iurv on a chari? nf mHnmu following his preliminary hearing Tucsnuy neiore circuit Judge Jos rph Feiton. The 58-ycar-old ldanha mill worker was arrested on the complaint of the father of two Marion County boys, 10 and 13 years oia. Dr. L. C. Marshall Osteopathy & reciai diseases. Mew office loca tion 1G13 Mate St. rh, 3-5509, ladv.) , CAPITOL WORKER FAINTS " ' Mm Union r rm. - i to the director of the State uc partment of Finance and Adminis tration, was treated by first aid- men auer lamting at the Capitol about 11:20 a.m. Tuesday. She wus ri-punuu recovering Tuesday nifiht at home., 592 Wayne Dr., but not planning to return to work Immediately. Beauty Nook moved to 101 S. High in the Oregon Bidg. basement. Ph. 3 6631. ' (adv.) LEBANON MAN HELD A Lebanon man was being held in Marion Countv tail chnrsm) with violating of provisions of his pro nation. noDcn iiimon usDourn, a 28-year-old mill worker, was ar rested In Sweet Home by Albany sheriff's deputies on a Marion County warrant. Sensational Giftware Sale! off on fine china, crystal, pottery. Jary Florist, Capitol Shopping Ctr. (ad.) LABORER BECOMES ILL D. C. Richardson, 3408 Fairha ven Ave., was treated by first aid men after collapsing about 8:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Labor Temple. He was reported improving Tues day night at home after further treatment by a physician. He is a member of Laborers Local 441. Antique Show & Sale, Thurs. & Fri., 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. 12 noted Northwest dealers showing k sell ing authentic antiques, sponsored. by Chi Omega Alumnae. Tickets 75c, good for 3 days. Randall's Chuck Wagon, 3170 S. Commercial: (adv.) BUILDING PERMITS Building permits were Issued Tuesday to Jack Hindman for a 8500 house alteration at 728 Wilber St.; Ben Katter, $100 relocation, private garage, 483 Kingwood Ave.; J. W. Copeland Salem Yard, wrecking, storage shed, 349 S. 12th St. See the many phases required to put your Want-Ads in Print. Come to the Open House Celebration of the 252nd anniversary of Want-Ads at the Statesman-Journal Newspa pers Classified dcDartment this eve ning between 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. ugni reiresnmems win oe served. (adv.) LODGE TO SEE INDIANS Indian youngsters from the I Chemawa School will entertain Sa lem Lodge 4, AF and AM, and its 'guests this evening following a no-host dinner which will begin at 6:30 p.m. Families are urged to bring their children. Stated com munication will begin at 7:30 p.m. Altrusa Club rummage sale it low priced treasure sale. March 9th & 10th. Over Greenbaums, 240 N. Comml. (adv). CLEARY To Mr. and Mrs, Peter Cleary, Salem Route 6, Box 561, a daughter, Tuesday, March 6, at Salem General Hospital. HARPER - To Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Harper Jr., Canby, a daugh ter, Tuesday, March 6, at Salem General Hospital. HJORT - To Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hjort, 3065 Hulsey Ave., a daughter, Tuesday, March 6, at Salem Memorial Hospital. BARROW To Mr, and Mrs. Douglas Barrow, 2597 Portland Rd., a son, Tuesday, March 6, at Salem Memorial Hospital. MASSEE To Mr, and Mrs. David Massee, Salem Route 2, Box 218, a son, Tuesday, March 6, at Salem Memorial Hospital. NELSON To Mr. and Mrs. David Nelson, 2040 Maple Ave., a daughter, Tuesday, March 6,. at Salem Memorial Hospital No Births A a;frnJLrjfJ ma . .ffltLfl Wotwt-Molos r""m'.'"'l.". ' J "Ll OflN c-Aiir Mill COIN CROUP TO MEET Salem coin hobbyists are re minded that charter membership in the newlV formed Salem Numi. matic Society will close following me group s third meeting Thurs day at 7:30 p.m. In the Senator Hotel. Rummage sale over Greenbaums, a.m., Thurs., March 8th. W.M.S. of the Grace Lutheran Church. (adv.) STATE POLICE SPEAKER Capt. Ray Howard of the state police will discuss, various aspects oi the organization he represents as guest speaker at Thursday's lunch con of the Salem Optimist Club in the Coral Room of the Marion Ho tel. ;t. - ;; . . Shop Hollywood Apparel It Save!! 50 ladies dresses reduced $12 95 4 $36.95 dresses now $7 50. Size 7 to 18. Denim pedal pushers all new colors 10 to 20 regular $8.95 now $2.98. 2002 Fairgrounds Rd. Ph. 2-6507. (adv.) GUARD ENLISTMENTS Two new enlistments for Com pany B 162d Infantry, Oregon Na tional Guard are LeRoy J. Foltz, Route 1, Box 59, Aumsville, and Donald D. Kerr, Route 1, Box 312, Salem. . Shop Hollywood Apparel & Save!! 30 ladies dresses reduced $12.99 & $36.95 dresses NOW $7.95. Size 7 to 18. . Denim pedal push ers all new colors 10 to 20 regu lar $8.95 now $2.98. (adv.) BASKETBALL HOOP CONE Theft of a basketball hoop with a 3-foot bankboard from a swing set to which it was bolted was reported to police Tuesday by E. James Klukis, 345 S. 20th St. He estimated value $2.98, police said. Dental plates repaired while you wait at Painless Parker Dentist. 125 N. Liberty, Salem. DELINQUENCY CHARGE A 17-year-old Willamina boy was charged by city police with juve nile delinquency early Tuesday morning following a report that he had been loitering many hours at a Salem bowling alley. Fast efficient roof service, Cascade Roof .Co, Ph. 3-4823. (sdv.) INNOCENT PLEA ENTERED Irving Douglas Bond bf St. Hel ens, charged Saturday with driv ing while intoxicated, pleaded in nocent Tuesday in municipal court. Trial was set for 1:30 p.m. March 29 and bail was set at $250. Mathis Bros. Announces new- revolutionary Miracle Johns-Man- ville Seal-o-Mati c roof shingle. Ph. 4-6831 for particulars, (adv.) TLRE,-WHEEL TAKEN Theft of a scare tire and wheel from a Jeep at Falls City some time in the past two weeks was reported to state police Tuesday night by Donald Bates. 1280 N. 18th St., Salem. 3 act comedy, Macleay Grange Hall, Mar. 8th, 8:15 p.m. Adm. 50c & 35c. (adv.) GAS, CAP STOLEN Theft of a gas tank and five gallons of gasoline from a car parked In front of his home was reported Tuesday to police by Jos eph R. Warden,. 464 S. 24th St. Modernize your bath with Dura- tile, Metal Wall Tile. 1249 So. Comm. Ph. 4-5292. (adv.) Firemen Get 'Smoke DrilV Salem firemen had a good smoke drill Tuesday when inner- tubes, grease and greasy waste at the base of a car hoist caught fire in the basement of Doolittle Master Service Station, Center and Commercial streets. . Fire damage was confined to ctarlr of new innertubes. fire men said, but gas masks and all available blowing and ventilating equipment were required. The residue apparently caught fire shortly after noon from a torch in use on the hoist, lire men said. , SERVICES SATURDAY Funeral s e r v 1 c e s for Mrs. Nancy Weber, 855 Oak St., who died Sunday at the age of 86, will be 1:30 p.m. Saturday in Virgil T. Golden chapel. Burial will be in City View Cemetery. am a I kkfu.i TkaiMA ltd Tops! No Extra Charge for Easy wean itrms m mni . Enjoy Weoring Your GloHts While-faying, on four own reasonable credit termi, QUIC K SERVICE Glasses In On Day mode to your Registered Optometrist's Prescription. Emergency REPAIR SERVICE for Broken Classes. , Smart Sfyles Sit Sow aMV, tthrit fnom Ma n Uo I '" foiMon oNioloy. nrrirra V A A m STAT! I COMMERCIAL SaWQti Mm,m. y!!!!T!!!TTmmmm111' Science Projects of Salem High School, Elementary School . .... a Mrs. Fay Mort observes the first a Leslie Junior High student, at at North Salem High. The project the eye. Public Records MUNICIPAL COURT Irving Douglas Bond, St. Helens, pleaded Innocent to driving while intoxicated. Trial set for 1:30 p.m. March 29; bail, 1250. CIRCUIT COURT George Bellin vs State Industrial Accident Commission: Judgment order favors plaintiff's suit and orders defendant to reinstate plain tiff s original claim for compensa tion for temporary total disability. Jacqueline Creasy vs Donald Ed ward Creasy: Suit for divorce; complaint alleges cruel and inhu man treatment, seeks absolute di vorce from defendant. Married July 29, 1954, at Salem. State vs Howard Blankenship: Defendant held to answer to Mar ion County grand Jury following preliminary hearing on charge of sodomy;' bail continued at $5,000. Credit Service Co. vs Orville L. Johns, doing business as Carlyn's Jewelry: Civil suit; complaint seeks judgment totaling $480 al legedly owefl to plaintiff for non- paymt'nt.oncer.tain. . merchandise. allegedly purchased by defendant. Daniel F. - Johns and Lucille Johns vs Butteville Insurance Co. and Harold Talley: Civil suit; com plaint seeks judgment totaling $4,000 for attorney's fees and for payment allegedly owed to plain tiffs under terms of an insurance policy. Mary Kilroy vs Patrick N. Kil- roy: .Suit for divorce; complaint charges cruel and inhuman treat ment. Married July 5, 1947, at Fairbanks, Alaska. PROBATE COURT Estate of Mary M. Nowak, de ceased: Final account approved and estate settled; executor dis charged. Estate of Belle Archer, deceased: Estate settled and executor dis charged. Estate of Albert Louis Tiede- mann, deceased: Estate closed and administratrix discharged.' Estate of Helen Mercer 'West, deceased: Estate closed and ad ministrator discharged. Estate of C. H. Pounder, de ceased: Estate closed and execu trix discharged: DISTRICT COURT Bert Major Davis, alias. Eagle Storm, 5130 Sunnyview St., ar raigned on charge of, embezzle ment by bailee; requested prelimi nary hearing; bail set at $2,000,. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS Frank J. Righton, legal, sales- manr-San .Francisco, Calif., and Ida Miller West, legal, buyer, 605 S. Summer St. Insects have no lungs. They breathe through tubes running all through their bodies. Trade Down Thrift! . Here's a thrifty way to heat your home ... use our LP Gas, Leased Tank plan. We'll Install a tank for your home for a small rental fee each month . . there's no need to buy ' a tank outright, a real saver. Come in this week. II Propane Gas Coll Dick DofJ GAS HEAT OF SALEM 263 N. Commercial St. Phono 33443 if r 1 1 ' Ji -J place scleaec prelect of Paul Fisher, the annul science fair being held demonstrates the effect ti light Liquor Tax Refund Would Enrich State Oregon would be nearly a mil lion dollars richer if tax refund claims prepared by the Oregon Liquor, Control Commission against the United States Treasury are granted, Gov. Elmo Smith said Tuesdayt W. H. Baillie, liquor commission administrator, reported to Gov. Smith that the claims for refunds from the Treasury Department total $929,746. In addition, the com mission has, a claim against Na tional Distillers, Inc., amounting to $31 ,940' for a refund of taxes paid by the commission through the distillers. The claims for refunds are based on taxes paid by the commission in 1952. The claims contend that the increased rate of tax on all distilled spirits in bond from $9 to $10.50 on each proof gallon, effective Nov. 1, 1951, imposed on floor stocks was illegally and as sessedr-collected and paid - Because the $1.50 additional tax constitutes a direct tax on prop erty, it is contended that the tax as assessed is "illegal under the U. S. Constitution because it was not apportioned nor laid in pro portion to the census as therein provided. The largest of the claims, Baillie said, involves $926,499 for spirits and the other claim ia on wines for $3,251. The claim against Na tional Distillers, Inc., is contingent on that company winnings its suit involving a claim already made by that company. Chickenpox Tops County Diseases Chickenpox was the most prev alent communicable disease in Marion County during the past week, with 12 instances of It being recorded on the health depart ment'! weekly report. The list of diseases also included influenza, four cases; mumps, four; and one instance each of im petigo, German measles, bronchial pneumonia, poliomyelitis, strep throat, and tuberculosis. All told there were 88 health cen ters reporting, of which only 18 reported communicable diseases. ri Mill J M Docs It Better ll Listening Intently at the recelvtnf station of a wire tapping device bnllt by Jaa Hoover ef Parriah Junior Hlfh la Larry Hennlags. a sixth grader at Bash School. (Science award wtnaers la School Re porter story, page 4. sec. 1.) County to List Recreational Areas in Study A list of the county's recreational facilities is being prepared by Mar ion County Court members in re sponse to a request Tuesday from the state highway department which is assisting in a study being undertaken of the Northwest's growing recreational needs. County Commissioner Edward L. Rogers who is compiling the list said it would include seven areas totaling 220 acres that have been set aside by Marion County as public recreation land. - The seven locations range in size from five to 61 acres, and include the 58-acre plot adjacent to and extending about two miles downstream from the Champoeg Historic Park on the Willamette River north of Salem. The list does not include any municipally-owned parks, Rogers said. Ltepper, Wife Back From Reich Lt. and Mrs. Earl E. Pepper have 'returned from- Germany, where he has been stationed with 5th Engineer Battalion for two years. Before entering the Army, Lt. Pepper received his BS degree in forestry at Oregon State col lege and was employed at the State Forestry Department at Kla math Falls. - Mrs. Pepper Is the former Jutta Mayer of Hershfeld, Germany. They drove from New York and are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Pepper. Pepper will be employed with the Forestry Department at As toria. , S'P's : i fa & A h kW1 4 ii J R f ' -v Elections Unit Eyes Use of Register List Restricting the use of registra tion lists to political organizations played an important part in dis cussions by the 1955 legislative in terim committee on election pro cedure at a meeting Tuesday in the Capitol. . State Rep. E. H. Mann, Medford. insisted that use of the lists be restricted to political purposes only, while State Sen. Mark Hat field, Salem, and Vernon Burda, a Jay member of the committee. said civic groups, the grange and labor organizations should have permission to use such lists if county courts or county commit' tees approved. All members of the committee agreed that the lists should not be used for commercial purposes and voted for legislation authorizing the counties to make the lists avail able to both political and civic groups. - There also was some discussion Involving the purging of deadwood in the registration lists. Mrs. Fred eric W. Young, also a lay mem ber of the committee, said she had knowledge of one county in the state where the registration lists had not been purged for at least six years. "There are names of persons on these lists who have been dead for several years," Mrs. Young averred. The committee then voted to recommend legislation authorizing the secretary of state to go into any county where the registration lists have not been purged and eliminate ineligible names with the cost of such operation chargeable to the counties. SHASTA DAYLIGHT TO SAN FRANCISCO 14" Plus Tax 2eM ROUNDTRI UAVI IN THI MORNING. ARXIYI THAT NIGHT Just the day you've been waiting for! Time to relax in your own reclining chair car seat , . . time to snooze, catch up on your reading, yiait the Dome Lounge Car for refreshments and super-sightseeing (high Cascades, Odell and Klamath Lakes, Mt. Shasta, 14,161 feet). Fun eating on the trsln,too meals plain or fancy as you please In the Coffee Shop and Diner. All said, a trip that we think will show yon how Southern Pacific tries to give customers the best there is In modern, progressive railroad service whether they or their freight ride S.P. C5 ttWJUaiUwi MM Students Being Bizilaya Study ef the mechanics ef the fllchl ef Insects Is the porpost ef thus flrst place reject bnllt by North Salem sophomore John Socolefiky. Examlnlni U earetolly is John's classmate Bob Parkhnrst, who ktelped with classifkatloa ef entrtea. Colorado Meet ! Draws Principal Of Keizer School DENVER. Colo. - Mrs. Carma- lite I. Weddle, principal, Keizer School. Salem, Ore., will be chair man of a discussion group during the annual convention of the De partment of Elementary School Principals of the National Educa tion Association, which opens here Wednesday. More than 2.000 elementary school educators will attend the national meeting at City Auditor ium March 7-10. Convention theme will be "The Principal's Role in Instructional Leadership. ' Frank G. Clement, governor of Tennessee, will be the principal speaker at the closing general ses sion. Mrs. Swain, 88, Succumbs Mrs. Edna B. Swain, 88, Salem resident, died Monday night at a local hospital following lingering illness. - She had lived, in Salem the past seven years and prior to that for nearly 30 years in Portland. She was born in Minnesota and grew up and was married in South Da kota. Survivors include daughters, Mrs. Archie Cooiey and Mrs. Fred Conkle, both of Salem; Mrs. Ar thur Fray of Milton Junction, Wise, Mrs. Frank Schiller of Staf ford, N. Y., and Mrs. Leslie Way of Beaverton, 15 grandchildren, 18 great grandchildren and five great greatgrandchildren. Funeral services will be held at the Beaverton mortuary Thursday at 11 a.m. . ' W J.rt 0 C. A. Larson. Agent Phono 3-9244 Housing Real C7 Problem for Hoop Tourney The state A-2 basketball tour nament ,next week . It postal quite a problem for the housing committee of the Salem Ex change Club, sponsors. Sid Boise, committee chair man, said overnight accommo dations for at least 500 boy and girl students are seeded for . Monday, Tuesday and, la many eases, Wednesday nights. Some will come from 300 miles. Teams, parents and teaches apparently ran bo aceomme dated at hotels and motels, bat It's the "rooters" who worry the committee. They'll seed places to sleep. Boise said anyone willing to have students stay overnight, at a nominal charge, may phono 4 9501 during basinets noun, "and we'd rarely appreciate any faculties that could be made available." CARD OF THANKS The recent bereavement which has visited our home has brought to us greater appreciation of our friends. Such kindness and neigh borly thoughtfulness can never be forgotten. Mrs. Edward H. Carlson and family, The Johnson Families, The Minnesota Carlson's, and the Warren Aneys. an JVan I'd"! il vx MAM, IN J. (S.thMAM.Mi