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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1956)
Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, October 24, 1956 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Section 3 Page . 5 Kitchen With Character This kitchen with its natural wood cabinets has a character all Its own. While It has the modern built-in appliances It has a period flavor, reminiscent of a European or Ecarly American kitchen, achieved by the warm natural wood cabinets, cafe curtains and furniture. There is a rich contrast in color and texture between the naturally-finished cabinets, the white brick In the room divider and the vertically-striped wallpaper and curtains. Closeness of the dining area to the counter-lop range In the room divider makes for convenient serving. I By DAVID C. BAREUTHER, AP Real Estate Editor Progress in the adoption of new Ideas in home building and home modernization new inventions, new materials, new methods sometimes seems to march at the classic rate of the husbands who want to rescue their Sabine women one step forward and two steps backward. Why don't more homeowners jump at a good thing when they see it? Answer: In most cases they don't see it and have no chance to see it. There are no department stores for all building materials and equipment, where you can wander around and feel of every thing from cast iron soil pipe to marble chips for the roof from sump pumps and dehumidiliers to prefabricated fireplaces and chim neys, real wood wallpaper, sliding glass doors, etc. Consider sliding glass doors, for example. The glamor of them may be apparent to you Immediately. But it would take a brave man to order a set if he had no chance to see how they work how they glide at a finger touch, how they are weatherstripped, locked, screened and drained. Where to see them in operation is a problem in the brief time one has to select plumbing fixtures and fittings, paneling, paint, insulation and the 101 items you must choose. It's just part of the headache that goes with home building or remodeling. HOME SHOWS try to solve this problem, but they are compara tively few and far between. Home builders maintain an eight story exhibit building in Washington, but a trip to Washington would cost many distant homeowners more than' they plan to spend on a proj ect. So a chain of permanent ex hibition buildings showcases for materials, appliances, furnishings, financinc and landscaping is be ing planned to dot the country at strategic intersections of the new HAPPY I TIMES POLITICAL CLUB India Suggests Suez Solution Like UN Plan NEW DELHI, India Wl India set forth Wednesday a proposed Suez settlement based on coopera tion between the Egyptian Suez Canal Authority and "a users association." A government spokesman said the plan has been broached lo (lie parties concerned by India's rov ing ambassador V. K. Krishna Menon during his recent trips to Cairo. London and United Nations headquarters in New York. The spokesman declined to say whether any country concerned had oocepted the Indian plan. British Foreign Secretary Sel wyn Lloyd hinted in London that Britain might accept a compro mise settlement of the Suez dis pute if the interests of users na tions were safeguarded by Egypt. The Indian proposal closely re sembled the recently passed U.N. Security Council resolution. It was based on the convention of 1888i .D1,AD under which the waterway had' BUsllNESS M1KKUK Decn operated until Egyptian President Nasser nationalized it July 26. India proposed the 1888 conven tion be revised to provide: 1. Maximum tolls to be levied by Egypt. 2. Egyptian responsibility for maintenance and development if the canal in accordance with mod ern requirements. 3. Egypt to give the U.N. an annual report on her Suez Canal Authority. Notes on the News . I O A 102.4 1aM eke tat. K. Put, tM. ff "Instead of health insurance, led promise a cure for the com mon cold!" Chance of Poland Getting U.S. Aid Pushes Up Grain Futures Fall Ideal to Plant Trees (Cont. from preceding page) trees that are comparatively insect free and thrive in all types of soil situations. They are both deep rooted and may reach a height of ao feet with age. The Moraine Locust is thornlcss and seedless, a quality desired in a lawn tree. The Sunburst Locust is noted for the bright, golden yellow leaves on the otside branches, adding a tone of color found in few other large trees. Other trees worthy of considera tion for home ground plantings are: Cataola. Hawthorne. Golden- chain (Laburnum'. Beech. Birch Paulownia. Augustine Elm, Pin Oak and Scarlet Oak. Yor nurs eryman can advise you on which of these trees may be suitable for planting in your own grounds. network of superhighways now be ing linked up. The first of these showcase buildings is scheduled to be open' ed shortly in New Jersey, where it will be within reasonable driv ing distance from the population centers of New England, New York and Pennsylvania. It is spon sored by Built-in Age, Inc., whose head, Charles S. Cohan, announces that similar buildings will follow on sites already obtained near Chi cago and near Dallas. California and Massachusetts projects are on the drawing boards, he says. Cohan's first intention was to provide a permanent exhibit for the use of architects, builders, en gineers and bankers. "When 1 realized that perhaps 80 per cent of the families in . this country want to improve their homes or build a new home, I changed my plans," he said. "Each building not only will be open to the public, but will also be a vast television stage, designed and built to carry the message of modern housing In to every home within the reach of TV." IN THE MEANTIME, the Sliding Glass Door and Window institute, comprising various manufacturers of those products, has issued a new brochure on standard sizes now be ing made. It is distributed from the institute headquarters. 7421 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles 36, Calif. "The use of sliding glass doors," it says, "originated, in Southern California where temperatures are comparatively even the year round. Today, through advances in manu facturing, improved weatherstrip ping and the perfection of double glazing to withstand both heat and cold, they can be installed and en joyed in all parts of the country." 'Ttvas Smith, Not Jones, Who Tried Portland Robbery PORTLAND IP) A man ac cused of trvine to rob a savings and loan office here lost week has a new name listed on police records. When arrested the man identi fied himself as Frank Jones. Po lice were reluctant to believe that and asked the FBI to check finger print records. The answer came back Tues day: The man had been arrested some time ago for attempting to enter the United States illegally Estes Scoffs At Claims of Clean H-Bomb DETROIT (- Sen. Estes Ke fauver said today it was not "Democratic politicians" but nu clear scientists who first revealed the dangers of radioactive H-bomb fall-out. The Democratic vice-presidential candidate made -lis statement in reply to Sen. Hickenlooper (R-Iowa), who was quoted in news accounts as saying a "clean" H tomb has been developed. Hicken looper said he wanted to straight en out" some "democratic poli ticians." "I presume he is talking about Adlai Stevenson and me," Ke fauver said. 'I would say that we 'Demo cratic politicians' wouldn't have known a thing about the deadly dangers of H-bomb fall-out if we hadn t been told by nuclear scien tists." Kefauver stated. He quoted physicists Dr. Ralph Lapp, Nobel laureate Linus Paul ing ana Dr. David rial to back up his contention, and added: "This 'clean bomb' nonsense re minds me of the story of the crazy assassin who . tried to assure each victim just beiore shooting him that he need have no fear of infection, for each bullet had been washed in good soap and water. By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK UB Turmoil in Poland sets American business men to wondering today if a new twilight zone of world trade may be in the making. While they wait to see how things turn out in Poland and in Hungary whether these and other Communist lands join Yugo slavia in squirming out, at least partially, from under the Krem lin's thumb Western business men weigh the chances of a boost in the near future to the already slowly reviving East-West trade. First reaction came on the Chi cago Board of Trade Monday, where grain futures advanced smartly on the chance that a more independent Poland might become eligible for American aid in the form of surplus farm products. - Movement of American surplus es into world markets has in creased sharply this year. The Hanf ord's Hot Equipment Put In Mausoleum Dick Matches His Foe With Presley Joke Agriculture Department reports agreements signed for the sale of surplus commodities come to a to tal commercial export value of 114 billion dollars. (They original ly cost the government 2Vt bil lion under its price support pro gram.) Wheat and flour lead feed grains, rice, cotton and fats and oils in these government-directed export movements. But private cotton shippers have exported nearly one million bales since Aug. 1, which is about three times as much as in the same period a year ago. Some ex pect these exports to top five mil lion bales by next August, com pared with the 2V1 'million that moved into world trade in the pre vious season. Private shippers buy surplus cotton at cut prices to sell over seas at world price levels, which are lower than the support price here. Businessmen, however, are look ing beyond farm surpluses when they discuss the chance how ever "iffy" It may be now of a pickup in East-West trade. Americans recognize that tight curbs on trade with Red Russia and Red China will continue. But if the Eastern European nations break away from Moscow domi nation,, there is at "least an off chance of a twilight zone of in- creased trade. These nations pre sumably would remain Commu nistic like Yugoslavia and not notably friendly to the United States, but trade with them might seem more desirable than it has while they were doing Russia's every bidding. Unionists Face Perjury Count In S.F. Hassle SAN FRANCISCO (i -The grand jury recommended a per jury investigation early today aft er refusing to indict four men charged with beating fellow union members of the bakers union. Jury foreman Fred Parr Cox read a statement saying, "It is ap parent thisis a case of simple assault, which is a misdemeanor and not a felony and accordingly does not come within the jurisdic tion of the grand jury. "The case is rampant with per jury and we recommend that the district attorney s office pursue th matter further." . Joseph G. Kane, 42, of Local 825 on Long Island, N.Y., told po lice that he and others were roughed up by a group headed by James G. Cross, 44, president of the International Union of Bakery and Confectionery Workers. Kane is opposing Cross for the presidency at the union conven tion which opens today. Kane said Cross led the attacks in three San Francisco hotels while trying to stop opposition to his continued presidency. Cross denied the charges and said the case was a "frameup." Those accusing Cross beside Kane are Louis Genuth, 45, secre tary of New York Local 50; Na than Ehrlich. 58. manager of New York Local 51; Ehrlich's wife Lil lian, 54; Harry Lorbcr, 42, secre tary of Local 51; and Lorber's wife, Beatrice, 36. Cross and George Stuart, 47, Washington. D. C; Frank Gar done, 31, Pittsburgh; and Frank Mykalo, 35, Scranton, Pa., vere arrested Sunday for investigation of kidnaping and assault. They were released , on i5,uuo bail each. EN ROUTE WITH NIXON, In Illinois Ufi Vice President Nixon has added an Elvis Presley joke to his repertoire to match his ad versary. Sen. Estes Kefauver, in this respect. Kefauver has been telling audi ences all over the country that Republican orators this fall are making promises which remind him of a record by the Memphis rock 'n roll singer. "The title of that record is, Want You, 1 Need You, I Lov You," says the Tennessean. "But after the election is over, the Re publicans will put on another rec ord by Elvis, 'You're Nothing 'Ccpt an Ole Hound Dog." At Nilcs, Mich., yesterday, Nix on unveiled his own Presley joke alter a small noy bskcq mm .or York by pane was frecd o an,.v 0 lf it, i loni a grand larceny charge yesterday ,uu nun, . K. p. .,.. , h (he alrcr0fS owners, told he crowd that reminds me Thomas Fit7.patrick of Emerson. Huge1 u . L Z . a N-J-. is still in trouble, however, equipment from uimp , , with city fathers who looked ask- "Do you want to give the second one to your brother or sister? I 3 Arab Chiefs To Visit Front AMMAN. Jordan (v-Heads of three Arab armies will visit the tense Israeli-Jordan frontier with in the next two days, an official Jordan spokesman announced. The , spokesman said Egypt's army commander, Gen. Abdcl Hakim Amer, Syrian army chief of staff Gen. Tcwfik Nizam el Din and Jordan Gen. Ali Ah front lines in the next two days. Amer and Nizam el Din have ar rived in Amman for "talks co ordinating , military plans." The spokesman ' said both Syria and Egypt are giving Jordan military aid to counteract the alleged. Is raeli military threat. i'Plane Owners Drop Charges In Hop to Bar NEW YORK tfl A 26-year-old man who went bar hopping RICHLAND, Wash, pieces of "hot the Hanford atomic plant arc be ing buried in a concrete mauso leum deep beneath the sage and n SclHU Ul SUUlll-CUIHI Ul OTH3IIIHKIU1". , Rolled into the huge, 500-foot ; tomb on railroad flatcars arc gi ant concentrators and other pieces of equipment too "hot" to be re paired and too heavy to be bur ied." General Electric Co., which op crates the plant for the Atomic Energy Commission, devised the mausoleum as a solution to the problem of disposing of large pieces of dangerously-radioactive machinery. Once a flatcar and its death dealing cargo rolls into the mau soleum it is scaled off by a huge, water-filled concrete barrier. Two of the tunnels, 19 feet high and 23 feet wide, have been con structed. When the first has been ance at his landing the plane at 191st St. and St. Nicholas Ave Magistrate Francis X. O'Brien dismissed the larceny charge aft er being told that the airplane's owners refused to sign a com plaint against the man. iril-Fnatrir.!, lanHntt Alt th hllcv snows our campaign is reaiiy roi s(rc(,t ma (avern on rcc(.nt ing. A couple of weeks ago, it took, Sunday morning Hc told police " 'Naw.' hc said, 'it takes two of yours to get one of Elvis Pres ley.' " "But," Nixon went on, "that four of mine for one of Presley.' fmm rananV The fineernrint rec ords list his name as Fred Smith. ! filled with worn-out. contaminated equipment, me oilier win uv pui ROMANIANS SIGHTSEEING LONDON HV-A visiting Roman ian delegation Interrupted talks with President Tito in Belgrade into use. Each tunnel will hold 12 flatcars. Smaller pieces of radioactive equipment are taken to a remote today lo take a six-day tour of.scction of the atomic reservation Yugoslavia, Belgrade radio said. I and buried. Alter the tour, the visitors will!- resume talks with Yugoslav offi cials at Tito's villa on Brioni Island. Un i a t i 1 1 a 1 1 i gh way Project Awarded The Oregon Highway Commis sion awarded a contract Tuesday to Rogers Construction Co., Port land, for a $1,050,740 job in Uma tilla County. It calls for grading 3.05 miles of Emigrant Hill-Dcad-man's Pass section of the Old Oregon Trail Highway, about 15 miles southeast of Pendleton. he had attended a bachelor party in Manhattan earlier, had a few drinks, then drove to Teterboro (N.J.) Airport and "borrowed' the plane. lie was continued In $1,000 bail pending a hearing In Municipal court Oct. 30 on violation of city regulations. The Sheik of Kuwait, a 6.000-squarc-mile-area at the head of the Persian Gulf, gets $200 million a year in American-British oil royal-lies. Light Touch IN CUTTING NIW McCULlOCH DIRECT-DRIVE D-44 For the easiest woodcutting ever, try the McCulloch direct-drive D-44 -the only chain sw thit cum with a light touch! The D-44 it ielf-fdin ... it sftcat pwwf and fast thtin h menAy ui. tl Fw M Tft f mis is called for, the direct-drive D-44 is tops ..- it ily outperforms all other direct-drive saws! Only (238. on any term I 7 j I 11 C & S Equipment Co. 908 Idaowiter St. WIST SAIEM, ORffBOfl O70lV" famous-make 30-gallon Om-ffm Water Heater only . . . . FOOLER G-3 GAS WATER HEATER Here's the BUY OF THE YEAR in the home appliance field! The new Fowler 30-gallon capacity automatic gas water heater has e r erf thine: GUss-linini ... a Fowler feature lor 20 years... protects tank against rust and corrosion, economy, mushroom-ri pe burner; finest con trols; tnicK rirjcrgias insuianon; hack! by J-year guarantee and 5-ycaf prorated warranty. tftUiis BIG water heater value! Acm& Plumbing & Heating Co. Inc. Touch Owl "M m 9 Mj Natural Oai TWrhncm At IaM tuhy vwitd, iwliftBt, cir culating U natUr with Ttmeh-Coni cabinet can't poaaibly harm IHtta nncera, rup, walla, drapta. nai nr cut tea from front no amudfed walla, no aoiled etilinff. oio-Hnt ra diant. Hiih Crown burner, 100 anfety pilot. Smart furniture atyltnf three popular aiw. (w afl rffM tl fm Lovers Die in Suicide Pact OAKLAND, Calif. Uv-The note said Mazio Soo Hoo, IB, and Ed ward Kwong, 21, were going to Reno to get married. And it added "don't try to stop us." Mazie's father. Henry, told how he went to Reno to find Ihc young couple not to stop them but to tell them to come home "and have a church wedding or at least Dig reception. When he. returned he learned his daughter, a University of Califor nia coed and Edward, a sopho more at Menlo College, had been found dead with arms around each other, in a car in the East Oak land foothills. Four suicide notes told of a love pact. We never opposed their mar riage. Mazie s father said. "We would have done anything to see mem nappy." He said the two would be buried side by side. . LEGALS ADMINISTRATOR'S FINAL NOTICF. NOTICE IS HF.REBY GIVEN That SAM F. SPEERSTRA as administra tor of the estate of Jean Paul Mestre tat. Deceased, has filed his final account as such, and by order of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon tor the County of Marion, the I2lh day o( November. Ia56, the hour of 9:30 In the forenoon of said (lav has been fixed as the time, and the courtroom of said court has been fixed as the place for the hearing of objections to said final account and the settlement of said estate. DATED and first published; Octo ber loth. SAM F. SPEERSTRA Administrator of the Estate of Jean Paul Mestrezat. Deceased RHOTEN. R1IOTF.N SPEERSTRA .110 Pioneer Trust Building Salem. Oregon Attorneys for Administrator Oct 10. 17. S4. 31 LEGALS ADMISISTRATRrX'l NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thai FRIEDA HANNAH STADELI naa ' been, by order of th. Circuit Court of the State of Oreson for Marion County, appointed administratrix ot the Estate of Fred Gottlieb Stadell, deceased. Any persons having clrimi against said estate are requested to present them, with proper vouchers, lo said administratrix at 207 McGll christ Building. Salem, Oregon, within six months from th. date of this notice. Dated this 17th day of October, 1956. , Frieda Hannah Stadelt Administratrix of the Eilate of Fred Gottlieb Stadell, deceased. R. W. P1CKELL ,' 207 McGllchrlst Building Salem. Oregon Attorney for Admlrlstri'trlx. ' Ocl. 11, H. 31. Nov. 7. Seniors Take Merit Exams EVANSTON, 111. WV-Some 160.- 000 of the nation's high school seniors today take the first bat tery of tests in competition for more than three million dollars in scholarships. The students, from 12.700 high schools, will compete for four-year grants awarded by the National Merit Scholarship Corp. The 7,500 with the best grades in the ex aminations will enter the merit program finals and further tests. Funds for the scholarship cor poration come from the Ford foundation and various business and industrial firms which use the merit testing program to select students for help. rsCustom-Made Draperies, Shades, Venetian Blinds Combination Screen & Storm Doors Kirsch Drapery Rods and Hardware Manufacturers of Salem Venetian Blinds Cut to Measure Window Shades Capital Shade and Drapery Shop 1695 Fairgrounds Rd. Phone 4-1856 New Beauty Windows for Your QUEEN BACK IN IRAN TEHRAN, Iran W-Queen Sor aya returned to Tehran today aft er a two-month holiday trip to Europe. LEGALS ADMINISTRATOR'S FINAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That Pioneer Trust Company, as adminis trator with the will annexed of the estate of William C. Van Cleave, Deceased, has riled its final account as such, and by order ot th. Circuit Court of Uie State of Oregon for the County ot Marlon, the 20th day of November, 11196, the hour of 8:15 In the forenoon of said day lias been fixed as the time and the courtroom army Chief of Staff - place for the hearing of oblectlona to Ali Abu Nuwar will visit the ' ",d ','V"1 "unt no the settlement Dated and first nub Ished Octo ber 17. PIONEER TRUST COMPANY Administrator with the will annexed oi the estate ot William c . Van Cleave. Deceased. RHOTEN, RHOTEN & SPEERSTRA 310 Pioneer Trust Building . , Salem, Oregon Attorneys tor Administrator. Oct. 17. 24, 1, Nov. T, H, LAND SALE The State Highway Commission will tell at public auction on the property described below at 1:30 p.m., October 25, 1956 A parcel of land lying In Section 12, Township 7 South, Rango 3 West, W.M., Marion County, Oregon, and being portion of that tract of land described In that certain deed to G. C. Farmer recorded in Rook 301, Page 623, of Marion County Records of Deeds) the said parcel being described as follows: Beginning at the most southerly corner of said property, said corner being S97.6 feet south and 517.6 feet west of the north west corner of the Towner Savage D.L.C. No. 37. Township 7 South, Range 3 West, W. M. thence northwesterly along the southwesterly line of said property 108 feet to the true place of beginning; thence North 16" 30' 55" East, 230 feet: thence North 17" 37' 05" West, 45 feet; thence North 50 15' 27" West, 73.23 feet, more or less, to a point on the nor-thwester-ly line of said property, said point being 25 feet from the center line of the Clazter Road right of way; thence south westerly along the northwesterly line of said property 262.lt feet to the most westerly corner of said property; thence southeasterly along the southwesterly line of said property 179.15 feet, more or less, to the true place of beginning, con taining 0.80 acre. The property is part of the former G. C. Farmer property on Clax- u-r noau, locaieo. near tne nayesville interchange north of Sa lem, and is Property No. 19985. . . The minimum price which will be accepted is $4,250.00. Conveyance will be by Bargain and Sale deed with accesi to Claxter Road at the most northwesterly 73.23 feet of aald tract. umy. The State will not furnish abstract or title Insurance. The deed will contain a condition that the property shall never oe used lor tne placing, maintenance or display of any advertis ing sign, bill or poster, except such thereof as mav advertise the use to which the property conveyed is devoted, or for the sale or lease ot salu properly or any portion thereof. TERMS OF SALE: Cash. The right Is reserved to accept or reject any or all Dlds, INFORMATION: W. II. Haskln, Property Manager. OREGON STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION . STATE HIGHWAY BUILDING SALEM, OREGON Were Afeiv TashForce 57 Chevrolet Trucks J Performance-proved in a history-making test, on the ALCAN Highway to Aiaska The Alcan Highway Is the road where trucks grow old beiore their time. The road where gravel end lessly sledgehammers the life out of trucks. Where a fog of superfine dust chokes engines, and vicious ruts subject chassis to months of wear in a few hundred miles. Six new '57 Chevrolet trucks, heavily loaded wilh cargo, roared north from Dawson Creek, D.C., through 1,520 miles of mountains and mire, rain and h.Mjl to Fairbanks, Alaska. Running around the clock, they made this tortuous trip-normally a 72-hour run-in less than 45 hours. As a special lest during the run, two of the trucks went the entire distance without once having their engines stopped! Come in and see how well these new Alcan champs measure up to your job. FIRST WITH THE MOST MODERN FEATURES I New 283-fubfc-fnch Taidmail.r Vf It standard In S.rl.l 5000, 7000 and 8000, optional In S.rl.l 6000 at .xtra coif. Hon.pow.r rang. i up to 210 In Ch.vrol.t's com pl.t. Iin.-up of modern V8 and 6 truck engines. Revolutionary Pow.rmat'c Trommliilon extluilv. with Ch.vrol.l trucks! This tlx-ip..d automatic, d.ilgn.cf specifically for h.avy-duty hauling, It an .xtro-coit option in S.ri.t 5000 and 6000 and all h.avy-duty truck models. Hydra-Motlc It offered In 3000 and 4000 S.rl.l mod.lt at .xtra coit. L.C.F. mod.fi oufdaf. C.O.f;. frueht In .very way; y.t offer all th. traditional C.O.E. advantag.t, Htavywtlght Champl with Trpf.-forqu. tandem aro rated at 32,000 lbs. GVW, 50,000 Ibt. GCW. Sp.clal features Includ. built-in 3-tp..d pow.r divider. 1122 S. 12th St. Ph. 2-6450 DONKINS PROPANE GAS & APPLIANCE COMPANY Natural Cat Appliancoi AND MATING 1YSIIMS 13.7 Fettlinil . Phone 3-5098 ' " ' , a V as-" f ' " - eaavWI -a? 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