Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, December 5, 1956 THE CAPITAL JOURNALi- Section 2 Pajre 5 ft I Kaiser Plant In Spokane to Lay Off Some SPOKANE 11 Kaiser Alumi num and Chemical Corp., which has nearly 6,000 employees here, said Wednesday production curtail ments and layoffs are likely by the weekend because of the power situation. The Bonneville Power Adminis (ration announced earlier it will have to cut off the so - called "interruptible power" supplies by Friday because of low stream flows. William A. Dittmer, power mana ger for Kaiser here, said efforts are being made to purchase steam power in Utah although costs are high. Forty-five per cent of the power at Kaiser's Mead reduction plant is furnished on an inter ruptible basis with the understand ing it will be cut off first when supplies are low. Mead has about 1,900 employees, Kaiser's Trentwood rolling mill about 4.000. Kaiser officials said they are resigned to the belief that some of the eight Mead pot lines will be idled by the power cutback. Pacific Northwe:t Alloys Co., which makes ferro alloys used in steel production, forecast similar curtailments after Friday. PNA has about 350 employees here. Wrong Way on One-Way Street Said Contributory Negligence By JAMES D. OLSON Capital Journal Writer Traveling on a one-way against traffic and entering a through street without first stopping was held by the Oregon . supreme court to be contributory negligence which bars a plaintiff's right of recovery no matter how negli gent the defendant may have been made. This ruling, written by Justice Walter L. Tooze, was given in connection with the denial of a petition for rehearing filed by Tony Senger of Portland in a case against the Vancouver Portland Bus Co. Man Found Dead in Rooms Funeral services are pending for an elderly man found dead in his apartment Tuesday evening. The Marion county coroner's of fice reported the death of Homer Myron Schubert, discovered at his apartment at 685 University St., was apparently from natural causes and probably occurred Sun day.night. He was reported to have been foinid lying on the living room floor by a neighbor. His wife died in Santa Barbara last August. A brother, Ben W. Schubert, Boise, Idaho, survives. Arrangements will be made through Virgil T. Golden mortuary. Educators Plan OE A Season Ten Marion county educators will be present when the represen tative council ol tne uregon tau cation association meets in Port land Friday and Saturday to con duct the business of the state or ganization and outline policy for the year. One of the main items of bus iness will be to outline the organi zation's program for the 1957 leg islature. Marion county delegates include Rex Putnam, A. b. Beck, Dr. James R. Lylcs, Jr., Ray Bur leigh, Richard Hodges, Mrs. lone Macnamara and Alf Sather, all of Salem: Frank Doerfler, Wood- burn; Mrs. Gladys Belden, Rt. 1, Stayton, and Elvin Pitney, Rt. 1, Aurora. "Betty has them buzzing! ... yk.J aMaa. ; ...lai.., Beats me hoie she does ill All those youngsters, that big house anil everything as neat as a pint Yet she has more free time than any of us! Give up, girls? Then I'll let the cat out of the bag. Betty's no euperoroman I She simply find the quickest, easiest way to do every household chore. For example, he uses new, longer-Hearing Bruce Self-Polishing Wax on her floors. Cowboys and Indians? Hetly doesn't care. She doesn't even groan, when dad forgets to take off his grimy work shoes. Bruce's bright, hard shine resists cuffs and dirt. Weari much longer. Try it! Like Betty, you'll find new Bruce Self-Polishing Wax aves you time and hard work. tot floor, use BRUCE I tttHf f ii nm Unui aM n CkiMf laM Df In r u M fifcatu "at Boone Rd. But 40 Feet Wide The official width of Market Road No. 90, more familiarly known as Boone road is 40 feet, according to a report presented by the district attorney's office to the county court. The question of the road's width was recently brought up by the Portland General Electric company which wants the information so it can determine where to locate its high tension line. In spite of the district attorney's ruling, the road app'arently, by common consent had been fixed at 50 feet except for one piece of real property. This width was established during W.P.A. days when property owners petitioned the court to make Boone road a market road. In most instances line fences are back 25 feet from the center line of the right of way. County Commissioner Roy Rice believes that the petition is suf ficient evidence of the desire of the property owners. However, a perusal of the county records fails to reveal that there were any deeds involved. Most of the W.P.A. records were placed in boxes and stored on the top floor of the old courthouse where they remained unclassified until the building was razed. In June, 1956, the supreme court reversed a judgment obtained by Senger for personal injuries in the Multnomah county circuit court. In an action to recover medical expenses amounting to $490 incur red for the treatment of Leon B. Railton's minor child, and in which the trial court granted a judgment for the defendant, Gor don Herman Redmar, was re versed by the supreme court. The amount of the damages was left blank in the original complaint and an amended complaint containing the figures was filed after the statute of limitations had run. Redmar argued that the original complaint had been nullified but the supreme court ruled that the amended complaint did not state a different cause of action and therefore was effective. The court announced the Lane county bar association will present an oil portrait of former Justice Lawrence T. Harris at 2 p.m. Dec. 11. The presentation ceremonies will take place in the court cham bers following which the portrait will be hung in a suitable location in the building. Four Arrested After Hassel Four men were arrested in front of the Lone Oak Tavern about 1 o'clock Wednesday morning on charges of disordorly conduct af ter a police officer observed them in an altercation and using loud ana profane language. The four were Jesse O. Horn beck, 57; Evert E. Hornbeck, his son; Edward W. Stein, Jr., and Vernon E. Wampler. They posted bail and were not held in jail. In city court Wednes day the two Hornbecks and Wampler pleaded innocent and trial was set for December 14. Stein failed to show in court Wednesday. TODAY'S CLOSE Planning Group iI)raOTncr fnr CD D Body Given Up Name Suggested The Central Willamette Planning council may be chosen as the name of the planning group re cently organized here, but so far only on a temporary basis. It had been suggested that the organization be known as the Sa lem Metropolitan Planning coun cil, but since it -would bo con cerned with both Marion and Polk counties some members believe the other name would be more appropriate. David W. Baker, engineer for the county planning commission, has prepared a map in which he uses the Central Willamette Val ley name. The map shows Salem in the center of a circle with a radius of 16 miles where possibly most planning problems would originate. Near the edges of the radius and within the circle are Amity, Dallas, Jefferson, Stayton, Silverton and part of Woodburn. However, the council, composed of heads of various focal govern mental bodies, -such as county cuuiU school districts, planning commissions, utility districts, etc., would be concerned with planning problems in all parts of both counties. II STOCK QUOTATION (By THE ASSOCIATED PBESS1 Admiral Corporation 15 Allied Chemical 94 'h Allis Chalmers . 31 Aluminum Co. America 98 American Airlines 22 Vt American Can 40 'A American Cyanamide 74 American Motors 6 American Tel. k Tel. 168 American Tobacco 72 y Anaconda Copper 74 Armco Steel 179 Boeing Airplane Co. 61 Ys Borg Warner - 44 Y Burroughs Adding Mach. 37 Yt California Packing 43 V Canadian Pacific 32 Caterpillar Tractor 90 Celanese Corporation 14 Ve Chrysler Corporation 70 Yi Cities Service 68 Y Consolidated Edison 44 Yt Crown Zellerbach 55 Curtiss Wright 48 Douglas Aircraft 89 Yi duPont de Nemours 191 Eastman Kodak 88 Vs Emerson Radio 6 ; Ford Motor 56 Va General Electric 61 V General Motors 45 Georgia Pae Plywood 28 S Goodyear Tire 78 Y International Harvester 37 Yt International Paper 106 Yt Johns Manvilie 49 Kaiser Aluminum 51 Va Kennecott Copper 127 i Libby, McNeill 12 Lockheed Aircraft 55 Mi Loew's Incorporated 18 Montgomery Ward 39 Yt New York Central 34 Y Northern Pacific 39 Pacific Gas & E ectric 48 Yt Penney (J.C.) Co. 85 Yt ! Pennsylvania R.R. 21 Pepsi Cola Co. IS V4 Philco Radio 16 I Pugct Sound P 4 L 25 ; Radio Corporation 35 Yi Rayonier Icnorp. 32 Republic Steel 57 j Reynolds Metals 65 Richfield Oil 25 ' Safeway Stores Inc. 65 St. Regis Paper 44 i Scott Paper Co. 59 Yt Sears Roebuck 4 Co. 29 Mi Shell Oil .Co. 87 Vi Sinclair Oil 63 Yt Socony-Vacuum Oil 53 Southern Pacific 45 d Standard Oi Calif. 48 Standard Oil N.J. 58 H Studebaker Packard Yt Sunshine Mining 7 H Swift & Company 41 Y, Transamcrica Corp. 38 ' Twentieth Century Fox 22 Union Oil Company 59 Union Pacific 29 United Airlines 39 i United Aircraft 89 i United Corporation 6 4 United Slates Plywood 35 H United States Steel 71 Y, Warner Pictures 26 'I Western Union Tel. 18 Westinehouse Air Brake 28 'i Westinghouse Electric 52 H Woolworth Company 44 4 Now Modem Rub Formula J MADE ESPECIALLY FOR I Child$r0 Misery CummingsPTA Board to Meet The Cummings school P.T.A. ex ecutive board will meet at the schoolhouse at 7 p.m. Monday. Be cause of a change in plans Cum mings school children will present their Christmas pageant Tuesday, uec. 17, in connection with the regular P.T.A. meeting. Dads will have their night later. Plans are being formulated for the school carnival scheduled for Jan. 18. BLM Auctions Timber Tracts A total of $222,644 was bid for 9,713,000 board feet of timber at an oral auction sale hold Tuesday in the office of Salem district for ester, Otto C. F. Krucger. Among the successful bidders was the Crown-Zellerbach Corp. with a total bid of $186,826 for 8,795,000 board feet of timber lo cated in Clackamas county. The highest bid received by the Bureau of Land Management was or Douglas-fir at 540.25 per 1,000 ooara leet by the I. p. Miller Lumber company of Monroe. The lowest bid was placed by Don H. Pearson, Cornelius, who bid the appraised value of $12.24 oer 1.000 Doara teet lor approximately 23, 000 board feet of salvage Umber in wasnmgton county, at the time of the accident. The plaintiff states she sustained numerous injuries and charges the defendant was negligent. Searchers have failed to recover Ihe body of 27-ycar-old Gaylon Dwayne Amen, Salem, who drowned in the Willamette river Sunday near Wheatland ferry. State police said the body ap parently caught on a snag on the river bottom or was carried down stream by the current. The drowned man's father. Earl B. Amen, 2320 South 12th St., suf fered a possible heart attack Tues day and was taken to Salem Me morial hospital where his condi tion is reported "fairly good." Dragging was abandoned Tues day evening after more than sev en miles of the stream had been dragged. Suit Filed Over Injury A complaint involving $17,500 in general damages and $333 special damages was filed in Marion county circuit court Friday by India Kemp. The Montaville Lum ber company is named defendant in the suit. The complaint states . that - they plaintiff was a passenger in a car operated by Terry G. Zimmer man when it was struck by the machine driven by the defendant. Both vehicles were traveling north on Capitol street in the 1400 block Tabwsj for coins Feverishness.pamj jjflOHoT&SAvT j ill The ."Green Stamp Way at mmBreM Silem . only txcluilveiwen i Store I Giving iW" Green Stamps I l '""""""-J- ' r Center Anto 1 Molested Homer Nor- dyke, 360 East Washington St., re ported to police that someone tried to break into his automobile Mon day night between 6 and 9 o'clock. Handles were broken off both doors of the car. . THAI' SUCCEEDS SCHAKY HOLLYWOOD Ifl Benjamin Thau a top film executive little known to the public has been appointed administrative head of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio, suc ceeding Dore Senary. Schary resigned last week after stockholders' complaints over lack of profits. Thau previously wu vice president, WESMMM l SACRIFICING I 40,000 sh6e . WcTnrif I 1 I V V l I I HJffi WE NEED ALL PROFIT DISREGARDED DRASTIC OpenMon. l&Fri.Niqfitl WE ARE TORCED TO LIQUIDATE OUR ENTIRE STOCK LJffi Our Statement to the Public Faarrfal 11 mliiel hrtH d lit Utl elmtle Itllla hi Ulia AT OXCE"! We it tmmiti la Ih nfl. tit. We anil UNLOAD Ihli GIGANTIC STOCK RE' GARDLLSS QT COST ar LOSS. Ai isintdUl ACTIOS Ii ftitallil, it llrrlnf tht neil SPECTACULAR net DifiiM ih tor taurt to turn rmiery;! rer mm ytm Til Shai Bel Mi itld nithlaf bit la itftti ) tJPM l Ttcaftlttd QUALITY thlti. The uni ! t ti ll U pi Iky at uimil aitlilittlsa ti bttk ! tvti; ttsllir't rlk rartktMf la Ihli Mir. Wa vial I Inarm aa J REDUCTIONS. If ii nUt mr hiriuitara' 4i- iinvltjl Harbin far Venn If! Il'i iina ! HrUaJlr Uil 4m Prt auTME SHOE BOX MEN'S DRESS SHOES SpeeiilPirrchm 8 STYLES R9 10.95 300 PAIR $5 88 WOMEN'S ARCH SHOES 99 VilllM Tl I4. vmi o Mrs llHMK 2 WOMEN'S famous Brands HORSHIIM INNAJETTICK FHYSICAl CUITURI NATURMIZERS AIR-STIP ' VMvn to ti.n 5 88 Vf SM':Gi SAIL LI COME EARLY! AVOID THE RUSH! Mciuen M THIS Drastic Liquidation IsABankruptStock SHOES '3.88 V5.88 Nationally Advertised . NationallvFaous m NAME BRAND SHOES WHY PAY MORE Y0UK DOLLARS 11 1 MORE AT THE SHOEIOX WOMIN1 SADDLES TMNf (ma MM Mi lute hf. Il l) 3" ion Heavy DufyShoes "! I IMS 3W FLATS lhkM NaiUlK r Heivy Duly Ingineer Booti Ret. $15.95 tJ88 SALEM'S FIRST AND ONLY CUT RATE SHOE STORE Wt ill tut prill tiara. Wa hlvt NATIONAL HAND ihH (if Kary tfiamkir l tha limlly. N Mtandl , . . n firtafy ttll, Ivary pirrlitrt-ulity. N Iinty fiitu. HO KtOH HIS lit If, NO HIOH RINT, SMALL HO FIT itta IAIOI VOLUME roiU it piitUi Iff w It Qtva ur tuilimirt rtttia Hrlfic tivini. Cyna In, brawi ravtW ana prava H yavmrf I till TJi JKi laa will im yaw manty SAVE V SAYE $ SAVE $ SAVE ATTENTION AIL MOTH I M-0 WAN TIC CIO SI-OUT OH CHILDREN' SHOU-5AVIN01 W TO 70-IUY NOW AND SAVt CHRI1TMAS IPICtAl CHI10MN1 House Slippers Reg. $2.95 CHIIKMAI IMCIM MINI Mocciilns hi. CHIIITMAI IMCIal MINI ' Romeo's S4.S $ 2 MINI LOGGER TYM BOOTS Miny Cite IMMIUm I no. in n ...... 9 OIII1-IOOK YOUI HIT IN A Mil Ol OUI NIW FLATS 211 (hlldrtnSiiMS VMUIS TO U.M VitvH in MH owll IhrlH I m ChMM ttm ' MINI Inch Work ShNi HO. 17.11 AM K..vr Duty ....... W Hid 11 H IS MINI BirtelbillShMt . MxIatWMta aio. IMS .... Why Pay Mori? NO REFUND, OR . EXCHANGES, ALL SALES , FINAL The "Family Shoe Ston" Viimir) f.YiT VULVAS CVaI 357 STATE ST, Buy Quality Hen for Lent 7 Opan Mon. O Frt. Night Till 9 P.M. Phont 2-1047 LADIES NOW IS THI TIMI adiesHi-Heels VAIUK TO SIMS 90 LOAFERS HI OOINJ TO MM teoN SAVE UP TO 50 oh lunn locrwtu , Wwnin'j Seml-DieuSliMS , AIR-STIPS KICKIRINOS . vuun TO 10.M 2 99 KNEE BOOTS v,n ap uvoim noM rumi Amarlnf OM-7 ffly col monosallcylate) plui oil of muatard ipeedB tteper relief to ache, paint, local Droncniai conieiuon. n . . I Jt J J . . . . . . . ill il aral TT 1 lib aa V. V. law I.TV 1 At Woodry's . . . So. Commercial St. save! mm wJturji,MtMium Gifts for So Pleasing, the home . . So Practical, So Lasting ' ' (B) ' (C)'''''" (D) (I) "m colossal mmmt mm Hardwood JnjSalemf Finish 3 aPaTS I ;2 twin tab lt8-drawer double chest $(o)(o)00 (Q)(Q) No Money Down Long, LoW, Easy Terms (F) (G) j Tiie"who!e'"fmiltj''wlIl ienjoy tit Tlia'rtch7i"Ilot 4 lone of thli Salem mapla flnlah add graeloua ? charm to any bedroom! Here ti ihe Ideal ipaee I laving aolullon for boyi' and gtrt' rooma "until , fry" aa well u teen-agen. All bardwood conalruo lion and nntiiualljr atlraetlve atyllng. So aeleet Juil l lhoe piece you wiih from open Hock. Big Savings On YOUR Choice of These Authentically Styled Colonial Pieces $55. $19. $36. A. Night Tablet Rag. $19.95 $16. 8. CoHige Bad Rag. $29.95 $24. C. Bunk Bad fteg. $59.85 $46. D. Student nk .'. Reg. $49.95 $38. E. Drwier Reg. $89.65 $58. f. Double iiwivt" Reg. $109.65 $79. O. Four-fuwer Cheit Reg. $44.95 $29. Flve-Draw.r D.k-Chit (Not III ) Rag. $69.95 Pinal-Poitar Bed (Not III.) Twin or Full Site Reg. $24.95 Bookcase Bed (Not III.) Twin Size With Foot and Rails Reg. $49.95 "Jenny Lind" Bed (Not III.) Full or . Twin Siia Reg. $39.95 Trundle Beds (Not III.) Reg. $79.85 "Pineapple" Poller Bed (Not III.) Twin or Full Siia Reg. $37.95 $29. $49. $26. STORE HOURS. Daily 9:30 to 6 Frldayi and Mondiye Noon Til X rj. P. ? .4 Alio ItetWa m Uttt ioa$ fa dwJti