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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1956)
Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, November 13, 1956 THE CAPITAL' JOURNAL Section 1 Pa&e 6 Local Paragraphs Oljrn Service! Sel Funeral serv ices or Ben E. Oljen, 78, 818 East Hural Ave., will be held at 3 p.m. Wednesday at Howell Edwards chapel. Interment will follow at Belcrest Memorial park. Briefcase Stolen H. E. Kobb, 2328 Stale St., reported a theft of a briefcase to Salem police Mon day. The briefcase, containing per sonal papers and religious books, was taken from his car while the vehicle was parked in front of his house, Robb said. Hand Cut Judy Gilc, 1976 Fairmount St., suffered a hand laceration Monday afternoon when a butcher knife slipped while she was preparing food in the kitchen. First aidmcn said the services of a physician were not required. Peck Funeral Thursday Final rites for William J. Peck, late resident of 1645 North 19th St., will be held at 1:30 p.m. Thurs day at DeMoss-Durden chapel in Corvallis. Peck died Sunday in a ; Salem hospital. Meeting Wednesday Women of St. Mark's Lutheran church will meet in the social rooms of the church, Wednesday. Dessert will be at 1 p.m. A business session will follow, then there will be a thank offering program. A devo tional film will be shown with Mrs. A. H. Randall as narrator and Mrs. R. A. Horn to lead the devotions. Rulldlni Permits W. J. Johns- Ion, to alter a two-story dwelling at 362 Jerris, 100. Velma Taylor, to alter a one-story dwelling at 3095 Doughton, $500. M. L. Camer on, lo alter a one-story dwelling at 880 Kumler, $250. W. R. Tanner, lo alter a two-story duplex at 346 North 13th, $800. Barclay to Eugene Charles A. Barclay, administrative assistant to the city manager, will speak before the Eugene fire department Tuesday night on public relations. Legion to Meet Tonight Amer ican Legion Post No. 136 will hold a business meeting Tuesday night at 8 p.m. at the new legion hall in West Salem, Commander Jo seph W. Marcroft has announced. Bollywood Lions Pictures tak Len behind the Iron Curtain will be shown at the meeting of the Holly wood Lions club Wednesday noon at the Lions Den; Showing the slides will be John Krause, Din uaba, Calif., who has made three major trips to foreign lands. OSC Speaker ' Miss Dorothy Sherrill, consumer marketing' spe cialist of the Oregon Slate college extension service, will speak at the Thursday noon luncheon of the Sa lem Lions club at the Marion hotel. Miss Sherrill will speak on the re lationship between farm and non farm residents. Grange Chief For Return to Private Trade ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UP)-Her-schel Nescom, master of the Na tional Grange, has urged the re turn to the "private trade sys tem" as the "only sensible way to remedy some of the economic ills of sericulture." Nescom, an Indiana farmer, said there were good points about the notional farm program but thai the private trade system "is the heart of Grange philosophy." Nescom expressed his views Monday as preparations were be ing completed for the 90th annual meeting of the National Grange here, starting Wednesday. He said such devices as the soil bank and government sponsored exports were short term expedi ents. "They should be used to give us a little time to get the private trade system back into operation," he said. "For the long pull it has Report on Salem Included in Fringe Area Problem Studies Separate from Its overall report and recommendations the legisla tive interim committee on local government has prepared exclu sive reports on seven cities of the stale, including Salem, and on one county area. The Salem report is concerned very largely with the fringe area Cars Damaged Considerable damage was done to cars driven bv Shirley Maxwell Grabenhorst, 32, Rt. 4, Box 5, and Leo Melvin tne most t0 0ffert provided we Klokslad, 56, Turner, when they navc income boosting mechanisms, collided at Church and Trade as are required from time to time. streets Monday afternoon, cily po lice reported. No one was injured, police said. Foot Surgery Mrs. Mark Geh- lar, 774 Cascade Dr., underwent surgery on a fool mat was injureo last month in an automobile acci dent near Salem. Hoffsladt Rites Held Requiem mass was said Tuesday morning at St. Joseph's Catholic church for Mrs. . Theresa Hoffstadt, 67, late resident of 750 Rosemont Ave. Mrs. Hoffstadt died Saturday. Final rites will be held in Bcrgisch-Gladbach, Germany. Dewey lo Speak George Dewey, executive secretary of the Oregon Farm Bureau, will speak lo the membership of the Salem Optimist club at the Marion hotel Thursday noon. . Educators to Meet Members Of the Salem school board and Cily School Superintendent Charles Schmidt will attend the fifth an nual Stale Building conference Nov. 29 on the . University of Oregon campus. The meeting is sponsored by educational groups of the state. Big Tanker in From Sumatra SAN FRANCISCO (UP) The 85,500 ton tank Universe Leader, world's largest cargo carrier, steamed into San Francisco Bay today to end its maiden voyage from Sumatra with a record 620, 000 barrels of crude oil. The suDertanker waited for high tide this morning and slipped over the bar six miles out irom tne Golden Gale with a scant six feet to soare. Loaded she draws 46 feet. The Universe Leader's cargo was destined for Standard Oil ol Call fornia. But the channel at Stand ard's Richmond dock is only 34 feet deep so smaller tankers were used to lighten one-third ot me on from the Universe Lender to per mit her lo tie up at Richmond. The tanker was built for Na tional Bulk Carriers, Inc., New York, at a Kure, Japan, ship yard. She is 855 feet long and has "a 125-foot beam. She flics the Li berian flag and has a crew of 58. After unloading at Richmond, the Universe Leader is due to head for the Persian Gulf to take on another cargo of oil. without destroying trade system. the private Two Reckless Drivers Fined Two drivers were fined on reck less driving charges in district court Tuesday. Lawrence Allen Garrett, 21, Turner, was fined $30 afler pleading guilty to the charge. State police said Garrett was ar rested after he attempted to pass a siring of three cars in the fog Friday night on the Turner-Marion road and hit the lead car as it made a left turn off the highway. The arresting officer's car was the second in the string, he said. The incident occurred in front of Cas cade Union high school where Gar rett said he was headed to see a football game, according to police. Arnold Douglas Rahier, New berg, was fined $10 after also Dleadine guilty to reckless driving. The arresting deputy sheriff said Rahier was driving 75 miles an hour on the Newberg-St. Paul high way at 4 a.m. Monday. The high way was wet and mere were patches ol.fog at the time, he said. Rakes Disappear Theft of two rakes from a lawn was reported to Salem police Monday by Helen K. White, 1336 Marion St. Police were told that the woman was raking leaves, went into the house for a moment and returned to find the rakes missing. SEALS SIGN HATTON SAN FRANCISCO (UP) The San Francisco Seals today an nounced the signing of Grady Hat ton, former major league third baseman, who joined the club as a free agent. , Navy May Pull Balky Reactor Out of Seawolf WASHINGTON (UP) Navy sources jam tooay mat . serious technical difficulties may make it necessary to replace the costly atomic reactor of the submarine Seawolf. These troubles already have de layed sea trials of the nations second atomic sub." The difficulty has not been in the reactor prop er but in the liquid sodium system which is used to transfer heat from the reactor for production of sleam. Sodium is a highly corrosive ele ment. The navy announced Sept. 6 that leaks had developed during dockside testing in the steam su perheating equipment aboard the Senwo f. The leaks forced the Navy to postpone a scheduled sea trial of the Seawolf and to prolong the dockside testing program at the Electric Boat Division of the Gen eral Dynamics Corp. in Groton, Conn. For more than two months the Navy has been investigating the cause of the leaks to determine what corrective steps can be tak en. Among the steps under consid eration, Navy sources said, is seal ing off the superheater, which would lower the top power of the submarine but permit her to un dergo sea trials. " Another possibility, if It is de cided the molten sodium coolant reactor type has no future, would be to replace it with the kind of reactor used in the submarine Nautilus. The Nautilus reactor, which uses pressurized water as a coolant, has performed tar beyond Navy expectations. problem. A paragraph In the fore word makes this general com ment on the Salem situation: "Steady expansion has charac terized the Salem area, with the most rapid growth occurring in areas outside the city. By 1956 a total of 16 governmental units were providing services in the area. As in fringe areas elsewhere, sewage disposal has become the most seri ous problem in tne simurnan area, although water supply, tire and po lice protection, and street and road maintenance also present problems that are not yet fully solved." In much detail the report goes into a gederal description of the area, its growth, governmental organization and problems. Studies arc made ol topography, school lo cations, subdivisions, dwelling types and construction, annexation history, taxation, water districts and utilities, fire protection dis tricts, soil conditions, drainage, lighting and road maintenance. The report has 13 maps and is tables. The Interim committee, set up by the 1955 legislature, has these members: Ormond R. Bean, com missioner of finance in Portland, chairman: Paul E. Gcddes, stale senator, Roseburg: Stewart Har die, slate senator, Condon: V. Ed win Johnson, slate representative, Eugene: George Layman, state representative, N e w b e r g: Al Loucks, stale representative, Sa lem; Raymond A. Lathrop, county judge. Grants Pass: John P. Mis- ko, Oregon City; uurtiss xi. Everts, Jr., state sanitary engin eer, Portland. . Kenneth C. Tollenaar is now ex ecutive secretary, having succeed ed Robert R. Johnson Inst March. The committee's general findings and recommendations will be given public hearings in various parts of the state before the 1957 legis lature meets, including a hearing at City Hall in Salem Thursday night of this week. Stickup Men (Continued from Page 1) News of Record CIRCUIT COURT, Elizabeth Camcnzlnd vs. John Clements Camenzlnd: Divorce complaint alleging cruel and Window Broken A window was broken, apparently by a BB gun shot at the Nob Hill motel. 2515 South Commercial St.. Laurence Young, owner, reported lo Salem police Monday night, Open House Thursday At Cummiiiffs School ODcn house will be held at Cum- mines school Thursday as a part of the American Education week , numan treatment. Married in observance being conducted by Sa-j Dallas, Ore., Oct. 11, 1952: Plaintiff lem schools. I asks custody of minor child and All classrooms in the building fso monthly support, will he ODcn from 7:30 until 9:30 i Ellen Wllser vs. Theodore Wll- p.m. with parents and friends en- sey: Divorce complaint, alleging couraged to come. In Hospital Roy Madcn. for merly of Sulem and now of Gear hart, is in the Good Samaritan hospital in Portland, where he un derwent major surgery Monday. Weather Table By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 24 hours to 4:30 a. m. Tuesday Max. Mln. Prep. .01 First Mayor of Stanfield Dies BOSTON, Mass. (UP) Maj. George C. Coe, 71, first mayor of Stanfield. Ore., will be buried with military honors in Arlington Na tional Cemetery at Arlington, Va., tomorrow. He died Sunday in Boston. Maj. Coe was the son of Dr. Henry Waldo Coe of Portland, the founder of Morningside Hospital in Portland. Maj. Coe erv5aged in the real estate business with his father in eastern Oregon and was elected mayor of the newly creaeld city of Stanfield while in Washington. D.C. He took his oath of office be fore the United States Supreme Court to establish a national precrdent. His home was ot Cen ter l.ovell, Mass., at the lime of his death. Survivors include his wile. Hel en, and two brothers, both of Portland. Baker 55 38 Eugene 54 43 Klamalh Falls 58 41 Lakeview 59 34 Medford 45 39 Newport 52 46 Nortn Bend 56 48 Pendleton 61 43 Portland Airport 50 40 Roseburg 49 44 Salem 52 41 cruel and inhuman Ireatment. Married at Orofino, Idaho, Jan. 5, 1954. Plaintiff asks custody of two minor, children and $50 monthly support for eaoh. PROBATE COURT Arthur F. Zleienhaa-el estate: 04 Order fixing Dec. 11 as time for neanng unm autuum. John E. Ellison estate: Order ,20 fixing Dec. 21 as time for hearing 25 final account. MUNICIPAL COURT '.! Llovd Ernest Wright, 667 North .08 .0.1 Front St., charged with driving while intoxicated, pleaded guilty. sentenced to 10 days in jail and Men or materials, new capital or , p.Mck . R0den, 246 North another partner, wnaiever yum HorantoSeek Water Storage Clear Mandate SPOKANE Rep. Walt Horan (R Wash.) said Tuesday he will prepare a bill to give the Army j Engineers and Interstate agencies a "clear mandate and full con gressional authorization lo store water as stored water" in the Columbia Basin. Horan said a bill . lo provide "stored water as stored water" may seem superfluous since up stream development usually adds some storage water to the Colum bia River system. "But storage up to now," he said, "has been merely incidental. It has not been the initial and therefore the prior consideration." Horan spoke at a regional meet ing of the National Rural Electric Coooperative Assn. which passed a resolution calling for construc tion of dams to provide storage. Horan called stored water "the simple key to our future power development" in the Columbia River drainage basin, and added: "Stored water should be the main accent on our plans for future j development" in Ihe Columbia! River drainage basin, and added' "Stored water should be Ihe main accent on our plans for future power development and future power supply." Since the Army Engineers' "308 report" for comprehensive devel opment was issued in 1948, he said, we have effected only 5 million acre feet of effective storage" and still need at least 16 million acre feet of stored water. In other resolutions, the associa tion called for authorization of the Nez Perce Dam; the high Hells Canyon Dam, Paradise Dam, Glacier View Dam, Bruccs Eddy Dam and Penny Cliffs Dam "to control and regulate Columbia River floods; said the Columbia River program of navigation to Lewislon, Idaho, should be prose cuted and appropriations mado by Congress for John Day Dam, Low er Monumental Dam, Little Goose Dam and Lower Granite Dam, Veep George Krellzberg, Salem, who was elected regional vice-president of the National Aviation Trades association al the organ cntlon'a convention in SI. Louis, Mo., this month. Included In the region are Oregon, Washington and Idaho. Kreltzbrrg Is retiring president of Ihe Oregon State Avlnllon Trades association. (Capital Journal photo) Porter Plans District Tour EUGENE (UP) Congressman elect Charles Porter, first Demo crat elected to Congress in Ore gon's fourth Congressional dis trict, said today he would make an "appreciation tour" of the dis trict before leaving for his new post in Washington. Porter said "I am deeply grate ful and humble for the trust re posed in me by my constituents in the 4th district and am enter ing the most important honor of my career with personal freedom from special interests, and a sin cere desire to represent all the people." The Eugene attorney defealed Harris Ellsworth of Roseburg by 4,396 votes in Ihe general election last week. Ellsworth had repre sented the district since it was first created. Porter said he planned to wind up his law practice and leave for Washington Dec. 2. He said he would announce his staff mem bers by Thursday. get it for you. Dial 4-6811 23. Posted $50 bail. Salem Association for Retarded j Jar), shobe, 463 North Front St., Children rummage sale, 1 day only, pcadr-d guilty to November S Nov. 14. Open 9 a.m. o-Grcen- charge of assault and battery, fin baum's. Clothing & household arti- d 535. Tipsy on Highway Brings $20 Fine William Edward Wanker, Jr., Collage St. pleaded innocent to of be November 9 chorge of reckless ; , . ' ... h,hw.,. drivine. trial set for November i"'5 ",'"", r" '.r:j .1.. " i .. 9( Hl'KS SURRENDER MANILA UH An army spokes man said today 94 Communist Huks gave up in a mass surrend er at Bacoor, just south of Mon- ila. It is one of the largest sur renders in the eight-year history of Ihe now dwindling Huk movement. County Assn. Meet to Open On Wednesday PORTLAND l The 51st an nual convention of the Assn. ol Oregon Counties opens here Wed nesday with a full day of com mittee meetings. County Judge Lloyd Rea of Baker, president of the organiza tion, will give his annual address at Thursday's session and officers are to be elected Friday. Several other county officials' organizations will hold their meet ings at the same time. The Assn. of County Engineers and Surveyors will meet jointly with Assn. of Oregon Counties on Thursday. The Assn. of County Treasurers opens Its meeting Wednesday in Ihe office of the Multnomah Coun ty treasurer. Agnes Eckman of Corvallis will preside. She as sumed Ihe presidency recently on the death of J. T. Summerville, Multnomah County treasurer and president of the organization. The 44th annual convention of Clerks and Recorders will be held Thursday and Friday at the Mult nomah County Courthouse. The Assn. of Oregon Counties, made up of county judges and commissioners, will hear address es Thursday by: Forrest E. Coop er, counsel for the Public Lands Committee; State Sen. Rudie Wil helm, chairman of the Legislative Interim Tax Study Committee; Robert R. Johnson, director of the Oregon Department of Finance and Administration; W. C. Wil liams, state highway engineer; Col. Arthur M. Sheets, Ortfoa Civil Defense director; and Stat. Sen. warren A. McMinlmee, chairman of the Legislative Inter im Committee on Highways. The annual banquet will M Thursday night. money from him personally, Mellon said. They never asked for his billfold or other valuables, he slated. Police said the amount of money taken was not known as store owner Arthur Erickson declined lo estimate the amount token. How ever, the thieves took len money bags and some olher rolls of coins in the sale, police said, ine amount taken included about $350 in coins. Checks, Cash Gone Erickson said the money bags taken included cash and checks from the day's receipts. He asked that persons who has cashed checks at Ihe store during the day notify Ihe store of the name and amount of the checks so that stop payment orders could be made. While detectives were investi gating at the scene, other officers and a deputy sheriff patrolled the area and checked main roads out of (own looking for the thieves. Two men in one car were found to answer Ihe description of the two rohebrs but were released afler they voluntarily went lo the sta tion for questioning and were look ed over by Melton, who said thev were not the men who robbed him. A Salem man told officers he saw a car leave the store parking lot at high speed about 10:20 but pnid little atlenlion to it and couldn't Identify Ihe car. The holdup was Ihe third In Ihe cilv in 16 days. On October 27. robbers but were released afler Ihe Safeway grocery at 1.1th and Center was held up and an undis closed sum Inken from, several tills. Six days Inter, Ihe Cover Girl women's apparel store, 190 North Liberty St., was held up and about 5.100 token. Two days later, cily police arrest ed a Porllnnd man who admitted the latter robbery. A good shore of the money was recovered. U. S. Court (Continued from Px 1) V The talk -: of the Season. ..11 'HIS' BXCBLLHNCV DBMJXB DUO eta. M After Shove lotion mni ; Cologne Gleaming gold- finiih bottle, eointype ! . bell, sculptured closure. A -gift for a king 1 Only . . ,,. s.n 054-X Deluxe Duo-After Shire Lotion and Balanced Talcum ...... 5.0 ilHM CAPITAL DRUG STORE 405 Stale St. Corner of liberty We Civ Wf Groan Stempt What's 2020... at 70? 4. Agreed to rule on an appeal by John Stewart Service in which he contested his 1951 dismissal from the State Department. Serv ice appealed trom a decision by the U. S. Court of Appeals here refusing to order his reinstatement but directing that references to disloyalty findings be stricken from the record of the case. 5. Denied James J. Moran, for mer first deputy fire commission er of New York city, a review of his conviction for evading 1131,307 in federal income taxes, Moran, one-time political righlhand man of former Mayor William O'Dwy- er, was lenlenced in federal court ' jjj Court there to two years in prison and $22,500 fine. A driver may have "perfect 2020 vision" when silting still end reading from a motionless chart. But what does that mean at 70 miles per hour? Just think no visual teat exists to ahow how well an auto driver can aee at high speeds! So every driver owes it to himself and others to bring hia vision up to the highest possible efficiency. Belter get your eye . exaimnedl DR. 5. A. WHEATIEY , OPTOMETRIST Phone 2-4469 GEDUHE! ' that man! Watch him closely ... he's the modern man . . . the example , of modern living the magazines talk about. You'll notice that he often wears a sport coat and slacks much more often than he did a few years ago. And if you look on the in side'pocket of his sport coats (and on the waistbandtof his slacks), you'll : probably see the Hart Schaffner & , Marx labeM Oh 1. go ahead and -look . this man may well be you! Hi membir . . . o woman's smartest ' accessory is a wtll drtsstd man BISHOP'S Salem's own itore sine 1 890 cles. (adv.) First Congregational Church bazaar, 10 a.m. Friday, Nov. 16. Sandwich lunch. 11:30: ham dinner, 5:30, 65c and $1.25. (adv.) Stale police said the arrest was made after Wanker's car left Ihe iWjlsonvillc cutoff north of Hub I bard and was wrecked. Time of Ihe accident and arrest was sel al 1:30 a.m. Tuesday. MARRIAGE LICENSE Irwin Dale Dalke, 19. student. Aumsvillc, Route 1, and Margaret Delnres Boyer, 20, office worker, Turner, Route 1. Olives grown east of Ihe Missis sippi are green. Olives grown wesl of the Rockies ore largely black. Wallpaper , Sale We Give Z"H- (Jrem Stamps HUTCHEON PAINT STORE 163 N. Com'l. Phone 3-66S7 Want takers for things you want lo sell . . . ? Then tell 'em Ihe details in a Classified Ad. Dial 4-6611. Mid-Valley Births SALEM MEMORIAL HOSPITAL McCLlNTOCK To Sgt. and Mrs. William N. McClintock. Rt. 1, Box 125. Lvons. a bov. Nov. 12. SALEM GENERAL HOSPITAL McDl'FFIN-To Mr. and Mrs. Gerald J. McDulfin, Rt. 5, Box 175. a girl. Nov. 12. HL'IETT Mr. and Mrs. Glenn E. Huilctl, 630 W. Third St., Al- banv, a girl, Nov. 12. ODGERS To Mr. and Mrs. F. Srott Odgers, Woodhurn, a boy, Nov. 12. to oumiioim ; r- INT OTHft Mil CtOTH KC4IMII! 01 WCII & I in if. . CARD OF THANKS We wish lo express our most sin cere appreciation to all our friends, neighbors and relatives for their sympathy and kindness in our sor row. Mrs. .1. C. Burton and families. NO NEED TO WEAR A TRUSS FOR RUPTURE Tttat Hindu, Oil. GoiifH, SMpf ftnrf Dm Not Hold H rHi mutt wetr t Tniti tot Kuprtirc. don't mi ihi. A Pxt Cifd. with name ind ddre, H you FRFF- ind without ojlt' tiofl, the compttMe, mfdernied Rire plan of Reducible Rutmire Control. Now tn duly uf by thouiindi who Mf they neer dreamrd poiM Mich troire, dependable and mnifortihle rupture protKimn. 5felr hlftfkt rupture op4rm pwen cape, without nrd fr t-ikio. oimbef m Tnine4itPrtinjt irtng of hirh, (touKinf I' pmu. Re jurdleu of how loft r9ir tire. ocrupttKWi. trui ! ht wr. TRY THIS, ind tend ymir i m.' ( NOTHING ' I INTHISEAR Xlj ; , ' v -4b 1 H If 's ,,. V IN THIS EAR l 1 A i' j NEW Maico SLENDER LINE Hearing Glasses r $ I wear hoir t I 1 YHhtto fk U i cover your e I i , . . vi flUORIDf TOOrHPASTI audi ir COtGATr Contains Ihe same fluoride denliilt utet Brisk' fluoride is the fame tooth-decay fighter proved for 10 years in drinking water! Ifljk molrti teelh ilronor-ilrik'i fluoride roni-en-train in weak or -inft" pol whrre decay llMially M. rl and ran lliii' prnerl asain.l ravitiei oJ no olW kinJ ilrrny fihlPr n er cnuld! I ladies! I wear fioir ( I no need lo ) I coveryour ears ! i u NO BULKY BOWS! NO DANGLING CORDSI NO TUBES TO EAR I duclivc-type deafness. Use your present glasses or select a modern frame of your choice. Wonderful for occasional use. Slips on or off just like ordinary glasses! See them now! End deafness handicap confiden tially with nothing in cither ear. Hear clearly, comfortably with powerful 4 transistor aid as part of slender bows. Ideal for con- SALEM HEARING SERVICE MAICO 31 1 Stall. SI. (AcroM from IaM A Btnh Bank) Open Dally 9 5 Phone 2 0702 . Til Ni(in on Saturday Maico Salem Hearing Service 311 Stat Si,, Salem, Oregon Pleat Send Free Booklet Name AHdrcsn - Cily ale ... L . 1 r-nt Ci-4 to V. S. Rice, lot. dm. K. Y. Dept. 77 r