Bids on New Social
Security
Be Awarded in May
., Bids on a new $75,000 office
building at 645 Union St. NE, to
house the Salem offices of Social
Security Division will fee opened
May 15, it was announced Wednes
day by State Finance Company
who will administer the office
space.
Construction of the one-story
structure is expected to start im
mediately after the bid opening
with occupancy scheduled for Aug.
1, according to R. J. Schmidt of
State Finance.
1,(00 Feet of Space .
'- The building, which will abut
the west side of the alley between
Church and Cottage Streets, will
measure 38x148 feet. Approximate
ly 3,600 square feet of floor space
will be devoted to the Social Se
curity offices with another 1,200
U.S. Promises:
Allies Missiles
By Year's End
PARIS bn-Tbe United States
told its NATO Allies Wednesday
it can begin regular deliveries of
meaium-rangc oauisuc weapons
to back up the European defense
shield before the end of this year,
The defense ministers of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organiza
tion received a briefing on, the
highly complicated modern arma
ment aimed at bolstering the fire
power of Allied forces manning
the ramparts across the center of
Europe.
umcers and experts accom
panying U. S. Defense Secretary
Neil McElroy displayed charts and
motion pictures covering all types
of new arms, from pocket rockets
to the intercontinental ballistic
missile with a range of 5,000
miles or more.
In most cases they were dual-
purpose weapons, capable of firing
either conventional or nuclear ex
plosives. They included ground-to-ground,
ground-to-air guided mis-
cues and artillery-type arms.
The first of the intermediate-
range ballistic missiles, capable
of hurling nuclear devastation on
targets 1,500 miles away, will be
in place on a base in Britain be
fore the end of 1958, informants
aid.
They said tha over-all plan Is to
place American - built Thor mis
siles on four bases in Britain, be
ginning lata this year and at regu
lar Intervals through 195940. Talks
are going on with continental na
tions for similar abases, probably
in Holland, France. Italy and
Turkey.
Giant Fish
Has Surgery
MIAMI, Fla. UV-Old Abe. a gi
ant jewfish, received a massive
dose of tranquillizer Wednesday,
then underwent what was billed
as the first underwater fish oper
ation in history.
Hundreds of spectators looked
on at (he main tank of the Miami
Seaquarium as Dr. Robert
Knowles, veterinarian, put the
knife to a suspected tumor on the
fish's underside.
Old Abe, a 500-pounder capable
of crushing a man or bending steel
with a swipe of his tail, offered no
trouble.
But several divers had to stand
guard against attacks by sharks
and other tank inhabitants which
become excited by blood.
The operation was a success,
Knowles reported, although a tu
mor wasn't found. It turned out to
be a five-pound weight the 8- or 9-year-old
fish had swallowed and
which had become heavily en
cysted. I
, i i I, i I.,, M i., I,, -i
fekSlW OR
i?Mli'SRlTHRUA. j
UlKvj. REALTOR I
Bj TURN TO I
MATERIAL QUOTATIONS WANTED
SAGE SUPPORT FACILITIES
CAMP ADAIR AIR! FORCE STATION, OREGON
OLYMPIC HOTEL ' ' MULTNOMAH HOTEL
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON PORTLAND, OREGON
PHONE MUTUAL 2-700 .- PHONE CAPITOL 8-7441
APRIL 23-24, 1958 APRIL 23-24, 1958
j ..l...umjuj.wDw' iiTiii.ir rirr "ir-r- ). m , i i i n . "."
Building
to
square feet open to professional
occupancy. '
There will be parking spaces for
about 16 cars.
Entire cost of the building, in
cluding property, will be near
$100,000. Ernest Weber of Salem
is architect.
A house owned by Dr. Charles
Wood, formerly occupied the 66x151
foot site.
Now Court Street
Salem Social Security offices
are now located at 547 Court St.
on the second floor of the Court
way Building. Before moving the
offices occupied space in the Post
Office building.
State Finance was awarded the
opportunity to provide the office
space by General Services Admin
istration after competative bid
ding. There were several other
Salem sites offered.
The Internal Revenue offices,
also a State Finance project, are
located at 685 Cottage St. NE,
only a' few. doors from the new
office site. Office buildings in the
1100 block of Chemeketa Street,
now being used by State of Oregon
Finance Department and Indus
trial Accident Commission, were
provided by State Finance Com
pany. Film Actor Dies
On Birthday
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. Wl -Comedian
Roger Imhoff who be
came a character actor in the
movies, died in his home Tuesday
night on his 83rd birthday.
His best known screen role was
Gen. Herkimer in "Drums Along
the Mohawk."
Born in Rock Island, 111., he
toured the Empire and Columbia
theater circuits as a minstrel
man, then entered burlesque. La
ter he organized his own act with
his wife, known professionally as
Marcelle Coreene, and they toured
the Keith and Orpheum circuits.
Imhoff i screen roles include
"The Barker," "San Francisco"
and "High. Wide and Handsome."
He played in many Will Roger
films.
His widow is the only survivor.
Army Studies
Missile Shot
From Chicago
CHICAGO HI The Army said
Wednesday it is studying the pos
sibility of firing a ne-tonvNiVo-
Ajax guided missile over Lake
Michigan from a. site near Chi
cago. Brig. Gen. Peter Schmick, com
mander of missile sites in the
Chicago-Gary, Ind., area, said the
demonstration would be a way "to
let the public know we can shoot
from here,
Schmick commands the 45th
AAA Brigade, with about 3,000
troops at 20 sites. Tha brigade is
charged with missile defense of
the heavily industrialized Chicago-
Gary area.
The final decision on the firing
will be made in the Pentagon,
Schmick said.
The missile would be fired in
aortheasterly direction, Schmick
said, at a radio-controlled air
plane. The -airplane would be fly
ing "about 15 or 20 miles" off
shore, Schmick said, and would
not be visible to the naked eye.
The proposed firing would be
the first missile launching outside
military range in the United
States, Army public information
officers said.
Local Votes
For Strike
PORTLAND (I) Strike author
ization was voted 41-1 by the
Lumber and Sawmill Workers Un
ion local at the Crown-Zellerbach
veneer plant at St. Helens, James
Bledsoe said Wednesday.
Bledsoe, secretary of the Port
land Coast Columbia District
Council, said other locals are in
the process of taking strike votes
and will have them completed by
May 15.
The union seeks a 31-cent in
crease package made up of 15
cents an hour in money, 10 cents
in health and welfare and a 6-cent
equivalent in paid holidays, he
said.
CALLOUSES
Te ie e eo as, burn f,
tenderness cm bottom of feet
tlBDOtig,ooatrif;pcs.
SUB-BIDS REQUESTED
DALE DENZ, INC.
1912 W. GRANT
PHOENIX, ARIZONA
CONTACT REPRESENTATIVES AT
Plies Trade 50 Years
Ernie Lentx, 64, will mark 50
Saturday. Currently employed in the Public service Build
ing, he has been at his trade in Oregon for the past 28
years. Lentz resides with his wife, Margaret, at 1348 Ferry
St SE. They have one son in Salem, Harold Lentz. (States
man Photo)
County Budget Requests
To Face Pruning Shears
Marion County budget requests
of $3,726,168 indicate that some
$68,312 must be pruned to stay
within the 6-percent limitation,
Margaret Reznicsek, chief county
auditor, said Wednesday.
Present requests would neces
sitate a levy of $1,769,567 as com
pared to last year's county levy
of $1,604,957, she added. '
County Judge Rex Hartley ex
pressed the opinion Wednesday that
the amount will be brought within j
the limitation by slicing away re
quests or receiving unexpected rev4
enues.
Committee to Meet
The budget committee will meet
May 19 to 21 to consider requests
and take the shears to the budget
to keep it within the limitation,
said Hartley.
Of the requests, $1,921,58$ was
in the general fund, $1,273,015 in
general road requests; sisg.ooo for
market roads and $351,570 in . the
county school fund.
The total is further increased
by allowing $265,436 for expected
unpaid taxes, said Mrs. Reznicsek.
Revenue Estimated
The county expects to receive
$1,362,022 from revenues, which
represents gas taxes, forest ren-
651 Apply for 2
Portland Jobs
PORTLAND tfl A total of
651 applications were received for
two job openings at the bunny
Brook Farms Milk and Ice Cream
Co. here, Roy Sinner, company
manager, said Wednesday.
Jobless men lined up oy tne
hundreds in front of the com
pany's offices to apply for one
position as a milk route driver
and another as a milk plant work
er. Company officials were forced
to cut the line short and refuse
to accept more applications after
651 were received Tuesday and
Wednesday. , .
Sinner said it was the largest
number of men he could ever re
call lining up for jobs at the
plant.
' i
Benton Coiinty
Pinball Operator
Asks Court Order
CORVALLIS 01) A Benton
County pinball machine owner,
Ed Heideman, has asked for a
temporary restraining order nro
tecting free-play machines from
seizure.
Heideman said he has 15 ma
chines' in the county which give
free games. Atty. Gen. Robert Y.
Thornton said recently that such
machines are illegal.
Since then, restraining orders
have been obtained in a number
of counties, pending court test of
the opinion.
Contractor
it
4-
UJULJminfflifT amiidWiianiftnrinnrmrriiiiTinnnni t
1
yean of servicing typewriters
tals, equipment sales, tax recov
eries, office fees, O and C forest
lands revenues and delinquent tax
recoveries.
The county also has some $860,
015 in expendible surplus, which
is in effect, money left over from
this year, said Mrs. Reznicsek.
The budget committee consists of
the County Court Judge Hartley,
Commissioners Ed Rodger and Roy
Rice, T. Harold Tomlinson of Sa-
Jem. WjUiam A. Merriott of Wood-
burn and E. B. Henningson of Jef
ferson.
Hitchcock Hits
Exclusive Party
Tie by Labor
CORVALLIS An exclusive labor
alignment with one political party
is not in the best interests of labor
nor of the nation, Philip S. Hitch
cock, candidate for the Republican
nomination for Congress from the
First District, told an audience at
the Labor Temple here Wednesday
night. r
"Labor should stand outside the
parties, free to criticize or support
candidates in the light of circum
stances, he said.
On the other hand, he, declared,
a legislator should be responsible
to all the people in his district and
should not "have to jump through
hoops every time a special-interest
boss whistles at him."
He praised the GOP as the "par
ty of free enterprise" and pointed
out that no socialist or communist
system can show so little differ
ence between the rich and the poor
as in the U.S.
Truman Era
Money Chief
Asks Tax Cut
WASHINGTON W Marriner S.
Eccles, Federal Reserve Board
chief in the Roosevelt - Truman
era, called today for a tax cut of
six to seven billion dollars.
Eccles, whose views carry
weight in the Democrat-controlled
Congress, appeared before the
Senate Finance Committee in its
hearings on the nation's financial
condition.
He said it is generally recog
nized that the government must
act. i
'I strongly favor the tax pro
gram over the public works be
cause that action can be taken
more promptly and the- effect
would be more immediate," Ec
cles added. .
While Eccles was testifying,
Sen. Lyndon Johnson (D-Tex)
struck out at Republicans who
are trying to whittle down & bill
to lend a billion dollars at low
rates to states and cities for
municipal public works construc
tion. Johnson, the Senate Democratic
leader, accused the Republicans
of adopting delaying tactics as a
party matter.
In the American financed oil
fields in Sumatra, workers tave to
use snow tires and chains to get
their trucks over the muddy tropi
cal roads.
Helps You Overcome
FALSE TEETH
Looseness and Worry
No longer bt .nnorl or feel Ul-M-mlm
because of looee. wobbl falee
teetn. FASTEETH, an Improved alka
line ( non-acid ) powder, sprinkled on
your plata holds tbem firmer so they
feel more oomfortable. Avoid embar
rassment caused by loose plates. Get
f ASTEETH at any drug counter.
Five Escape
Jail; Officer
Shot, Killed
AKRON, Ohio, uv-A policeman
shot and killed one of five prison
ers who broke out of the summit
county jail Wednesday.
.Three of the men,, believed
armed with two pistols and two
riot guns taken from the jail, are
tiU at tare. Police described
them as dangerous. The fifth pris-T
oner was captured shortly alter
the escape. ,
Virgil . Akers, 21, of Akron, was
killed by police Sgt. Nick Van
Doros when he refused to obey an
order to drop a .38-caliber pistol.
George Huff. 23, of Reseda, Calif.,
surrendered when the stolen car
in which he and Akers were riding
was stopped by police.
Sought are Frank Sprenz, 28,
charged With armed robbery;
Richard Hoskinson, 28, breaking
and entering; and Jack Adey, 23,
burglary and larceny. Akers was
being held for parole violation and
assault With attempt to kill. Huff
was held on suspicion of rape and
burglary. '
Huff said Sprenz and Adey led
the ojail break which had been
planned for weeks. A key; fash.
ioned from a piece of metal taken
from a jail cot, was used to open
the door of a large cell housing
the five men.
Carrying wooden rollers taken
from a mop wringer, the prisoners
attacked two deputies after hurl
ing a pot of hot coffee in the face
of a third jailer.
Portland Man
Goes on Trial.
In Murder Case
PORTLAND HI Lee Parker,
a Portland cement finisher, went
on trial here Wednesday, charged
with killing a man whose body
was found in a lime-coated well
near Vernonia last fall.
Oscar Howlett, a deputy district
attorney, told the jury in his
opening statement that the state
still is not certain how Robert E.
Holloway of Portland died.
Howlett said it appeared that
the- 40-year-old cement finisher
either was killed by a blow on
the head, or was drowned in the
well.
One of the motives for the mur
der, Howlett said, was that Park
er, 31, believed Holloway to be
the father of his wife's child.
The prosecutor told the jury
that after Holloway's body was
dumped into the well, Parker and
Harold Keith of Vernonia attempt
ed to retrieve It.
Parker, he said, had lowered
Keith, into the well but they failed
to recover the body.
- Keith -also -bits been - charged
with first degree murder and will
be tried separately.
The state's first witness was
Maxine Cole of Portland, who tes
tified that she had "lived with
Holloway for seven years" in a
hotel here.
Miss Cole said that she last saw
Holloway when he, Parker and
Keith left a bar here together last
falL
Teller Opposes
Efforts to Halt
Nuclear Tests
WASHINGTON (-H-bomb ex
pert Edward Teller testified
Wednesday any halt in nuclear
testing would slow down U. S. ef
forts to devise a defense against
the intercontinental missile.
The bushy-browed Hungarian-
born scientist spoke out against
all current proposals to suspend
nuclear tests the Eisenhower
administration's as well as the
Russians'.
He told a Senate Disarmament
subcommittee in 2tt hours of im
passioned testimony: "If we stop
testing, we ara stopping at a place
where we know how to use nuclear
explosions to destroy but not how
to improve man's life. . .
"If we are supercautious now,
we might sacrifice millions of hu
man lives in a dirty nuclear war
later."
Teller said the only kind of nu
clear test suspension he could
abide would be "the human way."
That, he said, would require Rus
sia to open itself up aH the way-
admit large numbers of inspec
tors, permit her scientists to talk
freely, open up test devices to
prove they were not secret mili
tary weapons being tested, and so
on.
Scientists do not know enough
yet to be Sure they can tell
whether nuclear tests are being
secretly held, he said.
Limiting tests would slow down
perfection of peaceful uses of nu
clear power as well as defense ef
forts to develop "clean" bombs
with little or no radioactive fall
out, he argued.
Idaho Youth Wins
Northwest Legion
Oratorical Prize
ALBANY, Ore. Wl The winner
of the Pacific Northwest American
Legion oratorical contest is 17-
year-old Roy Hovey of Lewiston,
Idaho. .
He was selected from four final
ists. The other competitors were
Janis Jeffrey, Seward, Alaska;
Steve Hansen, Grants Pass, Ore.;
and John Prestbo, Chinook, Mont
Hovev will compete in a sec
tional contest at Lodi, Calif.,
April 18. ; ; ,
MOPS '
SHALL I REAP IT BACK?)
WITH MY USUAL RE- T
, "
1 . CVOVSmi Lmf
1 fm m I,? T'Y--?B
Pair Get Life
After 7 Years'
In Death House
NEWARK, N.J. Un -Joseph
Grille and Silvio De Vita Wednes
day night were sentenced to life
imprisonment for the murder that
had kept them in the New Jersey
death house seven years.
It was the second trial of the
pair in the 1951 holdup-shooting of
policeman Joseph Law outside a
Newark grocery store.
Their conviction in 1952 put
them in the death house of the
Trenton State Prison. But seven
stays in execution followed.
After a series of appeals, the
3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
finally ordered the retrial that
won life imprisonment Instead of
death for the two. Grillo is now
27 and De Vita 26.
The court said one of the orlg
inal Jurors had been a holdup vic
tim and may have been preju
diced.
A Superior Court jury of two
women and 10 men deliberated
more than 7Vi hours before re
turning the guilty verdict.
Sentence was then passed by
Judge Gerald T. Foley.
Dealer Attacks
Obscene Book
Indictments
EUGENE UH Magazine dealer
William Jackson Wednesday at
tacked indictments charging him
with selling obscene and indecent
publications.
Jackson had been expected to
enter pleas but instead his attor
ney attacked the indictments on
a number of points.
The attorney said that the In
dictments fail to state a cause of
action in that the law under which
they were brought is unconstitu
tional. Ih addition, he said, their word
ing fails to conform to state laws
and they charge more than one
offense.
Jackson is operator of a news
stand in downtown Eugene.
The indictments charge him with
selling books and a magazine
which are obscene.
The publisher of the books, San-
ford Aday of Fresno, Calif., also
was indicted, roe district attor
ney's office here was advised that
Gov. Holmes has asked Califor
nia's Gov. Goodwin Knight to
have Aday turned over to Lane
County sheriff's deputies.
BPA to Wheel
Pelton Power
PORTLAND W) The Bonne
ville Power Administration
Wednesday said it has completed
a long-term contract to carry
power from the Pelton Dam over
its lines.
The dam, on the Deschutes Riv
er in Central-Oregon, recently was
completed by the Portland Gen
eral Electric Co.
Bonneville will wheel a peak
capacity of 120,000 kilowatts of
Pelton power over its lines to
Portland load centers, BPA Ad
ministrator William Pearl said.
The contract was signed for the
period of the Pelton license, or to
Dec. 31, 2001.
"The wheeling or transmission
charge, based on average water
conditions, will amount to about
$235,000 a year, or approximately
six-tenths of a mill per kilowatt
hour generated," BPA said.
Elizabeth Taylor,
Mike Todd's Son
To Share Estate
NEW YORK? tfl-Actress Eliza
beth Taylor will share the estate
of her late husband, Mike Todd,
equally with his 28-year-old son by
a former marriage, the Journal
American reported Wednesday.
Todd died in a plane crash last
month. His production company
declined to confirm the account of
the will's terms, but said the will
is to be filed for probate either
Friday or the first of next week.
It was previously reported that
the estate will total from three to
five million dollars, practically all
of It in proceeds from Todd's last
film, "Around the World in 80
Dv " Immediate assets, accord-
i.n i. k . ! i h,
...s,. u.c iw- v
1230,000. ' i
By GLADYS PARKER
Man Crushed
Beneath Auto
HILLSBORO W A car veered
off a highway Wednesday. and its
driver was crushed beneath the
vehicle when it overturned.
The victim was Identified tenta
tively as Wayne Era Swagger, 33,
said Washington County Coroner
Graham Young.
Young said papers found on the
body indicated the man had lived
in both Portland and Beaverton.
The car veered off a road near
Progress, Young said, and over
turned after clipping off a utility
pole.
It was Oregon's 106th traffic
fatality of the year, and the 23rd
this month, according to the As
sociated Press tabulation.
Navy's Test
'Spacemen7
Doing Well
PHILADELPHIA ( - The six
stimulated Navy spacemen under
going a seven-day test under con
ditions close to those expected on
a flight through outer space were
reported doing well Wednesday.
They engaged in such extra cir
ricular activities as a "hot poker
game in addition to regular du
ties. The men entered the sealed
pressure chamber Tuesday at 1:14
pjn. Working in shifts they are
keeping Instrument panels in con
stant operation. Handling of the
controls actually constitutes a
complicated test. Results will de
termine how the lone' confinement
affects their daily efficiency.
Capt Charles F. Cell, director
of the Air Crew Equipment Lab
oratory directing the test, said the
volunteers have been scoring ex
cellently in performance tests.
Mickey Cohen
Fined $500
LOS ANGELES Gft-Mlckey Co
hen was fined $500 Wednesday for
slugging a waiter.
Municipal Judge Gerald C. Kep
ple remarked as he sentenced the
ex -convict, ex -gambler: "...Re
gardless of provocation, real or
imagined, Mickey Cohen can't af
ford to punch anyone in the nose
any more than I, as a judge, can
determine cases by cracking a
few heads together as much as I
might have the urge or that jus
tice might be served in that man
ner." Cohen was convicted April 7 of
battery. Waiter Arthur H. Black
alleged Cohen slugged him during
a restaurant party Jan. 29 for
singer Sammy Davis Jr.
Salem
Obituaries
Olga King
At the residence, 6006 Stevens St.,
SE, Portland, Ore.. April 16th. Sur
vived by daughters. Mrs. Given
Wain. Salem, Mrs. Geraldine Burt.
Seattle, Wash. J sisters, Mrs. Eda
Beat, Yakima, Wash., Mrs. Rose
Sloan, Portland; brother, Max Baum
berger, Portland. Services will be
held April 18th at 11:30 a.m. in tha
Chapel of the Virgil T. Golden Co.
Rev. J. Dwijht Russell wul offlcata.
Interment, City View Cemetery.
Michael Shane Phillips
Late resident of 10791, Elm St.,
Salem, April 14th. Survived by par
ents. Mr. & Mrs. Roy Phillies.
Salem; sister, Debra Jean Phillips.
Salem; grandparents, Mrs. Ruth
Phillips,
Sa
alem, Mr. 6c Mrs. A. W.
Statter, Salem, Mr. Harry Edwards,
Salem; great-grandparents, Mr. 6c
Mrs. Albert Tscheu, Salem, Mr. 6c
Mrs. Roy Chamberlln, Bremerton,
Wash. Services will be held Thurs
day, April 17th at 10:00 a.m. in the
Chapel -of the Virgil T.- Golden Co.
Rev. Elmer Hiebert will officiate.
Interment, Belcrest Memorial Park.
Garrett D. Post
At the residence, Rt. 2, Box 12,
Sllverton, Oregon, April Kth st the
sge of W years. Father of Edward
Post, Twin Falls, Ida., George Post
snd Ray Post, both of Kuna, Ida.,
Mrs. Nellie Stucklik, Salem, Grace
Stucklik, Sllverton, Mrs. Maggie
Smith, Hill City, Kan.. Mrs. Jane
Gibson. Odessa. Neb. 22 grandchil
dren and 40 great-grandchildren also
survive. Shipment has been made to
Logan, Kan. for services. Interment
at Pleasant View Cemetery at Logan,
Ksn. Services will be under the di
rection of the W. T. Rigdon CO.
Gall Stacy
At the residence, 1055 23th St., SE.
Salem, April 15th. Survived by wife,
Helen Ruth Stacy, Salem. Announce
ments of service will be made later
by -the Howell-Edwards Chapel.
Jan Bryan Stepanek
Late rseident of 5935 Frultland Rd.,
Salem. Bom in Salem. March 11th,
1958. Survived by parents, Mr. and
Mrs. William G. Stepanek, Salem;
brothers, William Lee and Bradley
Chin Stepanek. both of Salem:
Jrandparanta, Mr. and Mrs. William
. Stepanek. Salem, Mr. and Mrs. V
B. Jones. Buford, Ga. Private serv
ices will be held Thursday. April
17th in the Chspel of the Howell
Edwards Funeral Home. Rev. Luther
Baker will officiate. Interment, Bel-
crest Memorial Park,
Statesman, Salem, Thurs.,
Tax Increases
Due for Bentoii
Timber Owners
CORVALLIS, Ore. (AV-Taxes for
some Benton County timber own
ers will be Increased as a result
of higher county timber values set
by county tax assessors.
Assessor Richard Wegener said
Wednesday that evaluation of
some private timber in the county
had been Increased four times.
The increase in timber evalua
tions will result in lower taxes on
other real property in at least four
school districts, Wegener said.
The state Tax Commission and
the assessor's office have been
reappraising the county's timber
for several months. .
The values are based on spe
cies, age, quality and nearness to
market. The county tax is com
puted from 27 per cent of the true
cash value. True cash value
equals 90 per cent of the market
value.
The market value of first class
Douglas fir is now listed by the
county at $19.60 a thousand board
feet, up from $8.30 I thousand.
Class A reproduction trees, nev
er before taxed, are now valued
for tax purposes at $35 an acre,
Wegener said.
Classified Index
placed under S feneral hVadlns
Sli in numerical ormr.
300-PERSONAL
Lost snd Fauna ..
Meetlnf Notices ......
Personal
Stamps and Coins
Transportation
400-AGRICULTURE
Auction sales .
Farm Equipment
FertUlzer
Lawn a Garden .
Livestock For Salt.
Livestock Wanted
Food Column
Pate
Poultry Si Rabbits .
sea r ooas
Seeds k Plants
450 MERCHANDISE
ipplisnces
licycles
Bufldin( Materials
Boatins
Do It Yoursalt
Floor Covering -
For Rent Miscellaneous
For Sale Miscellaneous .
Fuel
Household Goods
Machinery Tools
Miscellaneous
Musics! Instruments
Plumbing, Heating
Sewins Machines
Sports Equipment
TVarin MtRcellaneoua
TV and Radio
Wanted Household Goods
Wanted Machinery Tools
l ran
Wanted a-iaceuaneoue
.... 483
RftftRIISINKSS AND FINANCE
TniMitm nt DID
T n4 S13
Money to LosA , HQ
MF.MPLOYMENT
Baoysminc ixuur xium- wivn
r-w!l,l Cmrm . SIS
rut or Contract 620
Education -. r 1. 1, ; ,,,
Main Wants- 003
Help Wanted, Lady 60S
Help Wanted, Man 604
Job Information 617
Pickers Wanted 608
Sales Help 610
Work Wanted. Lady 614
Work Wanted, Man 61S
7rtfV RENTALS
Apartments For neni
Business Rentals
Conveleicent Homes
Daplexes
Farms For Rent
705
715
718
706
... 708
707-A
707
780
716
702
.. 709
71J
, 710
703
Furnished
Houses For Rent
Moving snd Storsga
Resort Rentals
Sleeping Rooms, Board
Wsnted To Rent
Wanted Rent Apts.
Wanted To Rent Houses .
Wanted Rooms, Board ...
800 REAL ESTATE
Apts., Courts For sale
Business OpportunlUea
Business Property
Coast Property .-
Exchange Real Estate
Farms Tor Sale ,.
Homes Tor Sals
. 807
801
. 802
. 815
812
810
806
825
808
818
. 803
. 818
Insurance
Tjit. Tor Sale
Resort Property
Suburban
Wanted Real Estate
850 AUTOMOTIVE
Aircraft
880
860
. 853
. 864
. 862
Auto Miscellaneous .
Auto Parts Repair
Heavy Equipment , .
House Trailers
MntnrpvclM
858
. new tare -........
Trucks, Trailers For Sale ... 854
Used Cars For Sale 852
Wanted Care. Trucks 856
. r, - K,
FINAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
have filed in the Circuit Court of
the State of Oregon for Marion
County my duly verified final ac
count as administratrix of the estate
of Frank E. Warner, deceased, and
that said Court has fixed Monday,
May 26, 1958, at the hour of 9:15
A. M. and the courtroom of said
Court as the time snd place for
hearing said final account and ob
jections thereto.
BeVilah E. Warner
Administratrix
Joseph P. Meier
Attorney for Administratrix
2nd Masonic Bid.
Salem, Oregon
April 17, 24, May 1. 8, 13. 1968
NOTICE OF ELECTION
FOR MEMBERS OF THE RURAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT BOARD
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to
the legal voters of the Rural School
District of Polk County, State of
Oregon, that an election will be
held at the schoolhouse (except as
noted below) in each of said dis
tricts on the 5th day of May, 1958,
beginning at 2:00 p. m. and contin
uing until 8:00 p. m., for the pur
pose of electing the following:
One member from Zone IVj for
three years
(Falls City (Grade School), Oak
hurst, Valsetz, Pedee, Bridgeport,
Antioch, Guthrie, Oakdale, Wild
wood.) One member at large for three
years
(All districts st schoolhouse ex
cept Monmouth-Independence. City
Hail Monmouth. Independence
Elementary School Independence.)
One member from Zone IH (Dal
las) for three yean
(Library, Junior High School.)
Dated this 31st day of March, 1958.
VERNON MURPHY. Chairman
Rural School District Board
F. C. GREEN, Secretary
Rural School District Board
April 17, 34.
. NOTICE
CALL FOR CITY OF SALEM
IMPROVEMENT BONOS
Notice Is hereby given there being
funds on hand applicable to the pay
ment thereof, the City of Salem,
Marion County, Oregon has elected
to caU for redemption on May 1,
1958, the following enumerated ''City
of Salem Improvement Bonds, Issue
of 1955-A, Nos. 37 to 137 inclusive.
Holders of -these bonds will present
them for payment at the office of
the Cit- Treasurer, as interest will
cease a. May 1, 1958. -
HOWARD D. BRANDVOLD.
City Treasurer
April 10, IT and 14.
April 17, '58 (Sec. IV)-21
Statesman Journal
Newspapers
2M Chore St NE,
PHONE EM 4-6811
LOCAL RATE
WEEKDAYS
Per dsy 1 I 1 4 It
Pr lins .40 .40 M J2i JtO 13
TOTAL CHARGES
(Mia. t lines) WteMui Saa.
per Una. 1 time 40 JO
per Una 3 times . tl.05 W
per Una S times II 50 11.40
per line 1 mo. .. $5.50 tine. Sun.)
Minimum, wnen cnarsea, si.uu
I LOCALS
35s per line per paper ,
Classified ads will be run tn both
papers to give advertisers the ad
vantages of the tremendous nulling
power of 17,074 combined circular
tions.
When an ad Is ordered three of
six times and a Sunday issue is in
cluded (for example Friday, Satur.
aay, sunaay) tne lower Sunday rates
apply because only The Statesman
publishes Sundays.
Classified ads will start tn the
morning Oregon Statesman, conclude
in the evening Capital Journal but
ads wUl be accepted for Sunday
Statesman only.
The deadline for classified sds la
1:00 p.m. tha day before publication
except for Sunday- when deadline la
6:30 p.m. Friday. Emergency ads and
small line ads received after 1:00
p.m. weekdays and until 12 noon
Saturday for Sunday may fee placed
In the Too Late to Classify column.
Ads for Monday papers must be
tn by 6 p.m. Saturday.
The Statesman Journal Newspa
pers reserve the right to reject quea
tlonsble advertising; it further re
serves the right to place all adver
tising under the proper classifica
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pers assume no financial responai
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per is st fault will reprint that part
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A "Blind" Ad sn sd containing
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protection of the advertisers and
must therefore be answered bv let.
ter. The Statesman-Journal Newspa
pers are not at liberty to divulge in
formation as to the identity of an
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Ads in other columns which require
investment in siocks, samples,
equipment or cash bond should be
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paying out any money. Advertisers '
requiring a cash investment for
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etc. must so sneclfv In their ads.
THIS NEWSPAPER STRIVES to pro
tect its reaaers against iraua. decep
tion, or Injuries. Readers are cau
tioned to make NO PAYMENTS to
get a position advertised in .the help
wanted columns. All help wanted sds
MUST SPECIFY THE NATURE OF
THE WORK. Sales help wanted ads
must state if the pay Is in the form
of salary, commissions, guarantee, or
include firm name. Bona fide offers
of employment with pay belong to
tne tieip waniea columns. Kindly
report any exception to this rule to
tha classified advertising manager.
AOS IN THIS QOLUMN
RECEIVED
Too Late to Classify
S4 INTL. s T. pick-up. 4need.
Excel.- eond. Take older plck
up In trade. EM 4-3903.
'SI MERC. apt. cpe., very nice.
3495. EM 3-1641 or EM 4-100T
after
'S3 LINCOLN sdn. Good cond.
Power equipped. SeU to high
est bidder. EM 1-7801 after i.
1947 STUDE. 1 T. 4 speed trans,
dual wheels, make good fsrm
truck, low ml $395. 41C0
Portland Rd.
BY owner: 13 A., nice home,
deep well, chicken house, lg.
ahop, family orchard. 12 ml.
from Sllverton EM 3-8867.
FOR sale a plot of 14 lots for a
buUder. 2983 Fisher Rd. EM
3-5088.
NEW house. 4 bdrms. all on 1
fir., family rm., 2 frpls., 1,
baths, dbl. garage, nice view
in S. dist. Price at 814,500 for
quick sale. Low dn. pmt. EM
4-4474 days. EM 4-9327 eves.
OPEN house daUy by owner. 2
bdrm., 9 yrs. old, priced for
quick sale. 2230 Lansing Ave.
4 CORNERS, 2 bedrms. attch.
gar. FA heat, paved st. city
water, 37.500, possible finance.
EM 3-3333.
3 BDRM. unfurn. Englewood
Diet, nice Iocs. 373. EM 4-3687.
CLOSE in, ground fir. bedrm.
with refrig. range, steam heat,
free auto, washer st dryer,
adults 336 Oak St.
WOOD for sale. Summer rates.
EM 4-6083.
FIBRE glass boat, cover k trail
er perfect cond. also fishing
equipment. EM 4-8693.
FRIGldaire Dlx. auto-wshr. Like
new. 3149.93 EM 3 5130 eves.
DBL. innerspring mattress k
springs 320. 2230 Lansing Ave.
REFRIG. Uke new 359. Elec.
range apt. site $29. Power
lawn mower reel type good
cond. 329. Bendlx auto, washer
like new 349. 20 ft. Cold Spot
deepfreeze 3149. Solid oak
table k 3 chairs 329. 4160
Portland jRd .
EVERGREEN BlaFkberry tips
5c ea. L.J. Maxwell EM2-8793.
FOR sale or trade AKC Labra
dor pups 10 wks. EM 2-4493.
1 BUCK skin mare, 6 yrs. old,
gentle for ladies et children,
addle, bridle, breast coUar.
4185 Sllverton Rd.
LOST blue parakeet ans. to
name snippy rretty-Boy, can
talk. Reward. EM 4-(
100 Disploy ClossifieT
LIVESTOCK
AUCTION
Have some good quality
White Face Stocker Heif
ers. A - small outstanding
Childs Horse.
THURS., APRIL 17TH
Sale Starts Promptly
AT 1:00 P.M.- ...
Salem Livestock
Comm. Co..
3915 Sllverton Rd.
pltl 36098
m mm
in
7. :. Ji)i -