Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, March 17, 1953, Page 8, Image 8

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    Pift 8
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Sale, Oregon
Tutaday, March 17, 1955
DkAWING THE LUCKY NUMBER
" v- It l 4
' x T villi
uH't. , V'll' I
nA pi lv : -I'll
mxMt&m " 1
Bill Cooke of Sears Appliance is shown in the Capitol
.: Shopping Center weekly drawing last night. Behind him,
; partly obscured is Lawrence J. Kosack of River Bend. De-
spite rather inclement weather big crowd showed up.
FACES DOPE CHARGE
Long Beach, Calif, UJ9 .
"Bop" singer Anita O'Day was
tree on $2,000 ball today fol
lowing arraignment on charges
she Inhaled pure heroin from
piece of tinfoil. It was her third
narcotics charge since 1947.
BIBLE DELIVERANCE
Mill Cily Community
Church
Presents
Claude C. Hunt
With Supernatural Ministry
Tl ot Is Strictly Spiritual
REV. HUNT will diagnose sickness through the gift of
discernment. (
Many have been healed of blindness, deafness, arth
ritis, cancer, goiters and other, Incurable diseases.
Great Fellowship Service Sunday Afternoon 2:30
Services Every Night Except Monday
Lee M. and Mary Joiner, Pastors
0 m
Palmer Wins
Top Award
C. R. Palmer. 1440 B Street.
won a 17 inch Motorola TV set
Monday night at the Capital
shopping tenter - coronation
days drawing, which was
largely attended despite none
too lavorabje weather.
m
Other prizes were a $50 tool
chest to X. J. Fogle, 474 N.
18th St; Ben Bentz, 1420 N,
Summer, a select caridgan
sweater; Glen E. Wlltsey, 585
N. Winter, a G. E. steam iron;
Roy Hagedorn, 1175 S. 13th.
an Echo harmonica; Vic Espey,
967 Norman, two pairs inter
woven hose; Oren Roberts,
1140 Shipping, an outdoor
clothes dryer.
Frank Reed of Portland won
a table model radio, Mrs. L. E.
Tonseth, 845 Center, Salem, a
box of candy; E. C. Cooter,
route six, four pair nylon hose;
Mrs. David L. Downing, 1100
Chemeketa, a $5 cleaning cer
tificate from Kennedy's; Carl
Podrabsky of Sublimity, an
electric percolator, and R. E.
Pulse, 325 S. 17th, an Arrow
shirt.
Entertainment Included ac-
cordian solos by eight children
from the Salem area under the
auspices of the Music Center.
This was the third drawing.
Two. more will be held March
28 and 80 and the final grand
drawing for the 1953 Mercury
and three complete spring
wardrobes will take place
April 4.
Dave Hoss has been master
of ceremonies and River Bend
has provided the cement mixer
from which the tickets have
been drawn. .
NEW MARAKET FOR KEIZER DISTRICT
ii
ft
mm
.In
Budgeteers
(Continued from Page 1)
Mission Bottom
School Copioiidqted
Mission Bottom Consoli
dation of the Mission Bottom
grade school with the Waconda
and Eldriedge districts was ap
proved Monday in an election
held In the three schools.
The Mission Bottom school
will now be closed and a new
bus will transport the lower
graders to one school and high
er grades to another.
The vote follows: Mission
Bottom, 21 yes, 3 no; Waconda
20 yes, 9 no; and Eldriedge,
26 yes, none no. .
CAR ft TRUCK
RENTALS
394 North Church
Phone 3-9600
To Place Classified Ads
Phone 2-2406
Tfie onlu oats' KfJ-MSIEO
brtlOUmSHBffavor!
All of these Items except
drainage are now appropriated
for In the general fund. Their
removal from the general fund
would relieve that fund of
about $155,000, which could
then be applied to items not
yet covered in the tentative
budget, including salary in
creases, emergency fund, and
zoning surveys.
By having the bills In next
Monday night at the council
meeting two weeks time can be
saved. These measures may or
may not be approved by the
council and others may be pro
posed. Mayor Al Loucks mentioned
that several items not covered
in the tentative $2,527,273.99
budget may have to be consid
ered. One of them is completion
of the one-way grid system
when both the Center street, and
the Marlon street bridges are
in operation next fall, another
a proposed grade separation on
12th street, and third a county
planning survey in which the
city is expected to cooperate.
The 12th street grade job.
which would mean curbing
the railroad and widening the
street, would cost about $155,
000, he said.
The sub-committees named
by Chairman Fry and the activ
ities each will study are:
Revenue, debt service, bond'
ed indebtedness Aldermen
Tlawlrl rUr- VmmJt XT
and Ed Handle.
Police Alderman Robert
White, Robert Powell, James C.
Stone, Alderman Chester I.
Chase, and Russell Bonesteele.
Fire department Alderman
Chase, George Thomason. May
or Al Loucks, Alderman James
H. Nicholson and Ed Randle.
City recorder, pulblc build
ings, non-departmental affairs,
city manaer, and health depart-
ment Alderman Claud Jorg.
ensen, E. u. Thompson and Dr.
Maurice Crothers.
Engineering department Al
derman Nicholson, Russell
Bonesteele, Robert Powell,
Fred Gibson and George Thom
ason.
Alroort. dtv attnrner. II
brary, city judge, and city
treasurer Alderman Tnm
Armstrong, Alderman .White,
ana .. a. rnonvoson.
Water, narks and nlavffrntino'a
Aiaerman ran auric. Fred Gib.
son, James C. Stone and Al
derman David O'Hara.
Planes Crash 20,000
Feet Up, Pilots Safe
Tokyo J R Two F-84 Thun-
derjets, flying formation over
Hokkaido Island, collided at
20,000 feet today, forcing both
pilots to parachute to safety.
The pilots were 1st Lt. Wal
ter L. Rudd, Emo, Ontario, Can
ada, and 2nd Lt. Vernon M,
Dauphis, Jr., Jacksonville, Fla.
A helicopter from Camp Craw-
lord picked them up.
, . is A t , t
This impressive business building, to be built by Market
Builders, Inc., at Cherry avenue and North River road,
will be occupied about August 1 by Berg's. The con
struction contract has been signed with Smith & Nelson of
Salem at $103,836. John Grimmer Groom is the architect.
The building will have the same dimensions as Berg's
Market in Capitol Shopping Center, 100 feet by 120 feet,
with basement space of 60 by 100.
Soviet Leader Halts
West Berlin Slowdown
Berlin VP) Gen. Vassily I.
Chuikov, Soviet commander in
Germany, intervened . person
ally today to end a Communist
"slowdown" which had halted
hundreds of trucks on the high
way connecting West Berlin
with West Germany. ,
Chuikov visited the Soviet
Barricades on the highway at
Babelsberg, just outside Ber
lin, on his way from the resi
dent to American headquarters
where he paid a courtesy call
Privacy?
1
when you go Great Northern
EITIPIRE BUILDER
WESTERN STAR
TWO OMAT STREAMLINERS DAHY '
BETWEEN PORTLAND AND CHICAGO
VIA SPOKANt, MINNEAPOLIS AND ST. PAW
Convntititt anfutthns in Chkap witi fiut
trhu Edsttnt V. S. athst
9 btfoMMrttH Kff49fVaTttttC
t. W. ORftNMAN, Tmt. Pa. Agnt,
607 $. W. Wuhinctoa St, Portland 5, Oregon
mONti MACON ms
sr. josiph
AS PI Bin H
FOR CHILDRSM
.BUYIT
ITODAYi
nuou
i ran man r
on Dr. James B. Conant, new
U. S. high commissioner for
Germany. . a
U. S. Chamber Backs
Emergency Freeze
Wfl.hinffton WPl The Cham
ber of Commerce of the United
states proposed to Congress
Tuesday authorization for a 90
day price, wage and rent freeze
under stricuy oeuneu n
mnKv conditions.
Th chamber reiterated its
oDDosltioa to any general
standby economic control laws.
Its proposal, made in testi
mony prepared for the Senate
Banking Commission by M. K.
M. Murphy, Rutherford, N. J.
a director, called for empower
ing the President to impose the
freeze only when Congress de
clares a state of war or the
President or Congress declares
a national emergency arising
from a foreign source."
No Faster Than Sound
Flight for This Lady
Seattle, Wash. (UW Charles
Pilgrim, Pan American flight
purser, said today he recently
received this rebuff from an
elderly woman passenger:
"Now look here, young man
we don't want any of this
flying faster than sound I've
been reading about. My friend
and I want to talk."
TO CARRY ON IN JAPAN
Tokyo W Japan's foreign
minister, Katsuo Okazaki, said
Tuesday the government will
carry on "business as usual" ex
cept for high policy level deci
sions until the national elec
tions next month.
Journal Want Ads Pay
H3BBP
25th &
SlalsSI.
Phone
3-6997
Free
Parking
W ftMriRlM Our Met! md Ml Y Hi QhIHt
d Viiioinie's
Salvation Army Girls
Here All This Week
The "Good News Herald,
ettes," a group of young Wom.
en from the Salvation Army
Training College In San Frsn.
clsco are spending the week
in Salem and will sing, play ang
speak at meetings to be held
each night at 7:30 to the Salt
vation Army hall, 241 statt
street here. '
The following afternoon
meetings have been arranged
2 p.m. today, for teen agen'
1:30 p.m. March 18. LshiJ
Home league and 2 p.m. March
iv, aw viuiiucu unaer 12,
CLARK BEACHES MANILA
Manila VP) Gen. Mark Clark.
U.N. commander in the Far
East, landed at Clark A v
Base Tuesday from Tokyo. He
Is enroute to Saigon to inspect
French and Vietnam forces
fighting Communist-led Viet-
mum re Deis.
y "
i pav '
i'lfN - 'Ml
Evang;. J. STWatklns
REVIVAL CONTINUES
CALVARY CHAPEL
f143 N. llbortr
BIBU DEHVEJUNCE
with
Evmg.J. S-WahVInx
SING1H6I SH0UTINC1
PREACHING!
PRAYING!
7:45NI6HTIYV
EXCEPT HON.
Kw. md Mrs. $. Mordock, Piston
mm
nu wont miss important calls.,
j - - wjicu vou answer
promptly. When you have only two cards left to play in an exciting grand slam hand
r in any situation where you'd like to say "Wait a minute!"-it's always a temptation
not to answer the telephone immediately. The person calling, though, doesn't know .
what you're doing and may hang up, thinking you are not at home. That way, you may miss
important calls. So, next time your phone rings, won't you try to answer as quickly as you can?
jit'-
faster on g distance service
can be yours if you always give your call
to tne operator oy number . . . rather
than by name and address.
And 't s a good idea
to keep a list of
the out-of-town
telephone numbers
you call frequently, so
you'll have them handy when
you "eed them.'
ibis free booklet
for listing long-distance
and frequently-called local
telephone numbers is
yours for the asking. Just
telephone, send a postcard
or call at your nearest
Pacific Telephone
business office,
Pacific Telephone