SOUTHERN PACIFIC SPECIAL TRAIN LOS ANGELES TO SAN FRANCISCO SEPTEMBER 20, 1959 HIS EXCELLENCY NIKITA S. KHRUSHCHEV CHAIRMAN OF THE COUNCIL OF MINISTERS OF THE UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS AND MRS. KHRUSHCHEVA Wr : . L --‘i 1 "S mm fig 1 teas 4Miy r ...: v;alid foldoutocrFile2a foldoutFile2a m 3ABTPAK HKPA FRAPPE BYJILOH JULIENNE OMJIET C BAPEHLEM, E3KOH KPEBETKH CREOLE C PHCOM HA nAPY 3KAPEHBIE HBinjIHTA B BEJIOM BHHE, AU SEC 3AIIEHEHHAJI BETHHHA COYC CHAMPAGNE 3EJIEHBIK rOPOIUEK KAPTOOEJILHOE niOPE CAJIAT SOUTHERN PACIFIC KYKYPy3HBlH XJIEB rOPHHHE BYJIOHKH MOPOJKEHOE, BHCKBHTLI hbjiohhliH nnpor c jiomthkamh cbipa OTBOPHBIE CBIPBI, BAOJIH flBIHH CRANSHAW CO JIBflA KOOE, HAH, MOJIOKO LUNCHEON CAVIAR FRAPPE CONSOMME, JULIENNE OMELET WITH WALNUT JELLY, STRIP OF BACON SHRIMPS CREOLE, WITH FLUFFY STEAMED RICE FRIED YOUNG CHICKEN, WHITE WINE-FLAVORED, AU SEC BAKED SUGAR-CURED HAM, CHAMPAGNE SAUCE GARDEN PEAS CREAM-WHIPPED POTATOES SOUTHERN PACIFIC SALAD BOWL CORN BREAD HOT ROLLS ICE CREAM, SWEET WAFERS HOT APPLE PIE WITH CHEESE ASSORTED CHEESE, TOASTED WAFERS CHILLED CRANSHAW MELON COFFEE TEA MILK !—ItMirFn&gr'T. I'UTT 1 .11? RMimjanem iWILLIAM G. PAULUS JOHN DANIEL CALLAGHAN ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF THEIR OFFICES FOR THE PRACTICE OF LAW OCTOBER 26, 1959 SUITE 41C - 1 1 - 12 LIVESLEY MEDICAL-PROFESSIONAL BUILDING SALEM, OREGON JUSTICE 1-1551 MISS NORMA JEAN PETERSEN ment W rf U »nf ° >J aSt weekl ' nd was ‘he engage- rfanoL f J 'r„ Norma Jean Petersen, above Wiliam r! B J> rs \ Paul Petersen of Burns, to william Gray Paulus, son of Mr. and Mrs tail Salem! 1 - Pa " 1,1S ° f Sa “ Jose * Cali “foiwriy'ofHAIIHTKH BHCKH, ftHCHH, KOHbflK h rp.: IIIOT^AHXI,CKAH aarpaHH’maji KAHAUCKAH c oaHRepojitio BOURBON OR RYE, pa3HHTaa no SyTtiJinaM c CanRepontio BOTTLED IN BOND RUM VODKA GIN, DOMESTIC IMPORTED SCOTCH CANADIAN, BONDED BOURBON OR RYE, POM BOflKA HJKHH ROManmero nponaBORCTBa BBIAEPJKAHHBia KOHLHK jiynmero KaneciBa KAJIH® OPHHfiCKHil KOHLflK FINE OLD COGNAC BRANDY CALIFORNIA GRAPE BRANDY KOKTEttJIH: MANHATTAN DRY MARTINI VODKA MARTINI OLD FASHIONED COCKTAILS: MANHATTAN DRY MARTINI VODKA MARTINI OLD FASHIONED JIHKEPM: PA3HBIE JIHKEPLI LIQUEURS: VARIETY OF LIQUEURS BHHA: XEPEC HJIH nOPTBEHH WINES: SHERRY OR PORT HHBO H ALE MHHEPAJILHME BOflM h rp.: SHASTA WATER CANADA DRY WATER GINGER ALE ROOT BEER COCA-COLA PEPSI-COLA DR. PEPPER 7-UP PLUTO WATER CALSO WATER WHITE ROCK WATER BHHOrPAHHHft COK OPAH3KAT JIHMOHAH POLAND WATER «HaTypajn>Haa» BEER AND ALE MINERAL WATERS, ETC.: SHASTA WATER CANADA DRY WATER GINGER ALE ROOT BEER COCA-COLA PEPSI-COLA DR. PEPPER 7-UP PLUTO WATER CALSO WATER WHITE ROCK WATER GRAPE JUICE ORANGEADE PLAIN LEMONADE POLAND WATER (NATURAL)Plans for Nuptials Miss Betty Ann Burnside, who is to be married on Aug. 30 to Kenneth Dean Nanson of Corvallis, is announcing plans for the service. The ceremony will be solemnized at 8 o’clock in the evening in St. Mark Lutheran Church with Dr. Paul N. Poling of the First Presbyterian Church officiating. Verne Esch is to be soloist, Jea*a Hobson Rich the or organist. ganist. Miss Jill Robertson of Ontario will be maid of honor. Miss Patricia Sexton, Miss Vickie Ward, Miss Mary Clare Mooney, Miss Cinda Lee of Port Portland, land, and Miss Judith Oliver of Seattle will be bridesmaids. Shannon White, little daughter of the James Whites, is to be flower girl. Dave Gambee of Corvallis is to serve as best man. Ushering will be Sterling Hammack of San Francisco, Tom Conklin of Ontario, Mike Grady of Vernonia, Gene Wall of Corvallis, Robert Burn Burnside, side, brother of the bride; James Nanson, brother of the bridegroom; Kenneth Ackerman of Ontario. The reception following will be at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Burnside. Mr. Nanson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A. Nanson of Corvallis. (Edris Morrison picture, Portland) MRS. WILLIAM GRAY PAULUS BRIDE this afternoon at a ceremony in Burns was Mrs. William Gray Paulus (Norma Jean Petersen), above. She is the daughter of Mrs. Paul E. Petersen of Burns and Mr. Paulus is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Paulus of San Jose, Calif., formerly of Salem. The couple will reside in Salem. Paulus-Petersen Wedding at Burns Today; Couple Will Live in Salem Pretty blonde Norma Jean Petersen was a bride this afternoon, her marriage to William Gray Paulus solemnized at 2 o’clock in the Holy Family Catholic Church in Burns. The bride, who has made her home in Salem, is the daughter of Mrs. Paul E. Petersen of Burns, and Mr. Paulus is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Paulus of San Jose, Calif., formerly of Salem. Yellow and white themed the decorations and frocks of the wedding attendants. White and yellow gladioluses and candles decorated the church. The Rev. Vincent Egan officiated at the service. Rich Richard ard Clark of Burns was soloist and Eleanor Carrico of Burns played the organ. The bride was attractive in a white silk taffeta dress, made en train. It was styled with Sabrina neckline, long sleeves, and a bustle back. The elbow-length veil was arranged from a flat double bow headpiece of white silk taffeta. The bride car carried ried a large bouquet of yellow carnations. Charles H. Clark, brother-in-law of the bride, escorted her to the altar. Mrs. Alfred J. Laue Jr. of Salem and Mrs. Charles H. Clark, Burns, the latter sister of the bride, were the honor attendants. They wore yellow and white silk printed frocks, waltz length and styled with puffed sleeves to the elbows, full skirts, and yellow silk cummerbunds. Their headdresses were yellow silk double bows, and the two carried bouquets of white carnations. Miss Geraldine Petersen, sister of the bride, was junior bridesmaid. She wore a yellow organdy frock, made similarly to the dresses worn by the other attendants, with white dotted Swiss cum cummerbund merbund and a yellow headpiece. Her bouquet also was of white carnations. Mr. Paulus was best man for his son. Ushers were Louis Selken of Bend and Donald Rudd of Eugene. The bride’s mother wore a gray lace over pink dress with small pink flowered hat, pink acces accessories sories and corsage of pink rosebuds. The bride bridegroom’s groom’s mother wore a blue brocade sheath dress with matching stole, a blue velvet headband with wispy veil, and a corsage of white rosebuds. Following the church service, guests were in invited vited to the Petersen home on Riverside Dr., Burns, for the reception. Dr. Doris Carlon of Burns and Miss Sharon Brown of Portland cut the cake. Pouring were Mrs. Bryan Goodenough, Mrs. Jay Rorick and Mrs. John McLean, all of Salem, and Mrs. James M. Burns of Portland. Assisting were Misses Caroline Matter and Gloria Hougham of Salem. The couple left on a trip to San Francisco, Car Carmel, mel, and Las Vegas, the bride wearing a black chemise dress with black straw cloche, lined in white; white gloves, black accessories and corsage of white blooms. The couple will be at home in Salem. Bride Wears Chinese Brocade Dress St. Mary’s Episcopal Church in Woodburn was the scene for a colorful wedding this afternoon when Miss Nancy Claudia Coleman, daughter of Brig. Gen. and Mrs. William F. Coleman, Rt. 5, Salem, was married to Richard Charles Mallorie, Silverton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mallorie of Conneaut, Ohio. The Rev. Donald Eaton officiated at the 2 o’clock rites. Deep and light coral colors themed the frocks for the bridal attendants who preceded the bride to the altar. Miss Jeannie Verburg of Eagle Creek, Ore., was maid of honor. She wore an ankle-length dress of deep coral taffeta with light coral sash, and her flowers were deep coral gladioluses. Miss Ann Parks of Camp Pendleton, Calif., and Miss Celia Weaver were the bridesmaids. Their dresses were fashioned identically to the one worn by Miss Verburg, but were in light coral taffeta with the deep coral sashes, and their flowers were the light shaded gladioluses. PRINCESS STYLE DRESS was styled with a satin sash with streamers ex extending tending to the hemline. The fingertip veil was held 4n place by a Mary Stuart cap made of the same material as the dress. For her bouquet the bride carried white roses and stephanotis. Gen. Coleman gave his daughter in marriage. Robert Mallorie was best man for his brother. Ushers were Lamar Coleman, brother of the bride, and Olaf Paulson. For her daughter’s wedding, Mrs. Coleman wore a beige matelasse sheath dress with scalloped neckline effect and Dior panel for back interest, brown accessories and corsage of white roses. The bridegroom’s parents were unable to come west for the wedding. Guests were invited to the Coleman home for the reception following the service. Pouring were Mrs. Maurice Heater, Mrs. Paul Jaquet, Mrs. By Byron ron McElhaney, Mrs. Willis E. Vincent. Cutting the cake was Miss Forrest Bates, Philadelphia, Penn., aunt of the bride. Miss Dorothy Kirby offor Representative Republican Candidate for Marion County Position No. Four 7? A lawyer working for a livable Oregon, who shares your concern about preserving our environmental quality for present and future generations. A parent who shares your determination to solve the crisis in education by reshaping the financial structure of our A school systems. A taxpayer attentive to the need for constant surveillance of priorities and expenditures at the state level to protect your interests. em A citizen convinced that reform in our adoption, divorce and abortion procedures is of vital necessity. A strong, capable leader—qualified by virtue of back- ground, experience and accomplishment to serve as your vr voice. Norma Paulus will work to discover new solutions to state problems. Norma Paulus will work for you.I Norma Paulus—not just another pretty face! This hard-working, deter determined mined lady was born on a Nebraska farm in 1933—grew up in a family of modest means in Burns, Oregon, with six brothers and sisters—and went to work directly following high school as secretary to the Harney County District Attorney. After several years in this capacity, Norma came to Salem and decided to attempt law school herself while working full-time as secretary to the Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court. Accepted on a part-time basis at Willamette after passing tests which waived the customary college requirements, Norma was rewarded for her years of industry in 1962, when she was judged first in Moot Court Competition, graduated with honors, and passed the Oregon State Bar. Norma was married in 1958 to William G. Paulus, a lawyer and native Salemite, and the family now includes Elizabeth and Fritz. Since her marriage, Norma has successfully combined homemaking duties — her career as an appellate lawyer — and responsible participation in a wide variety of community activities. W Norma, who has always displayed a deep concern for justice, discusses her duties as a member of the Salem Human Relations Commission with a group of interested citizens. Her appointment to the com commission mission by Mayor Vern Mil Miller ler in 1967 has provided her with a thorough knowledge of problems affecting all mi minority nority groups, including those of ethnic, elderly and low- income origin. Appointed to the Marion- Polk County Boundary Commission in 1969 by Governor Tom McCall, Norma is shown here with the Executive Secretary. Three such commissions were established by the last legislature in an attempt to guide the orderly growth and development of Ore Oregon’s gon’s population centers.Getting to know her... NORMA PAULUS, the second woman ever to be elected from Marion County to the Oregon House of Repre Representatives, sentatives, first in 1970 . . . again in ‘72 . . . and again in ‘74 has been effective in helping keep Oregon liveable. She has fought for the conservation of our natural resources. One of the first to recognize the importance of solar energy, she has influenced others to study the sun as an alternative to fossil fuels. She has worked diligently to make the legislature an equal partner with the executive and judicial branches of state government. NORMA PAULUS has brought about changes in attitudes and concepts of human rights in Oregon in a dignified, quiet, yet forceful manner. She studies the issues, researches the facts and makes careful, considered decisions. Sensitive and concerned about people, she always has time to listen. Her intelligence, quick wit and sense of humor make her a good friend and a formidable opponent. NORMA PAULUS was one of a large family who moved from Nebraska’s dust-bowl to Burns in the height of the 1930’s depression. Though a high school honor stu student, dent, family finances made college an impossibility. She became secretary to the Harney County District Attorney,- later to a Salem law firm, and in 1955 to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. NORMA PAULUS was accepted as a part-time law student at Willamette University after petitioning to waive cus customary tomary college requirements. Full-time employment and part-time education continued until 1961 when she became a full-time student. Judged first in Moot Court Competition and an honor student, she was graduated and admitted to the Oregon State Bar in 1962. She has since been a self-employed appellate lawyer. NORMA PAULUS has been active in numerous civic and political campaigns for individuals and local issues. She was on the Salem Human Relations Commission, Marion-Polk Boundary Commission and the sub subcommittee committee to INTERACT - Human Resources Center. NORMA PAULUS married Salem attorney Bill Paulus in 1958. They live in Salem with their two children, Elizabeth, 14, and Fritz, 12. As a family, they partici participate pate in many community events and whenever possible enjoy sports activities in Oregon’s mountain and coastal areas.for Secretary of State Norma Paulus Committee, 1645 Liberty S.E., P. 0. Box 426, Salem, Oregon 97308 1/2/76SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION #17 SENATOR CUB HOUCK Carrier FLOOR REMARKS - JUNE 21, 1989 MR. PRESIDENT, MEMBERS OF THE SENATE: IT IS WITH A GREAT SENSE OF PRIDE THAT I RISE TO ASK YOUR SUPPORT OF SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION #17. IT MEMORIALIZES A LIFELONG RESIDENT OF SALEM AND DISTINGUISHED NATIVE OREGON SON, FRED H. PAULUS. FRED PAULUS OFFICIALLY SERVED THE STATE OF OREGON AS DEPUTY STATE TREASURER FOR 35 YEARS. HOWEVER, HIS SERVICE DID NOT END THERE. HE CONTINUED TO ADVISE INCUMBENT STATE TREASURERS LONG AFTER HE LEFT THE EMPLOY OF THE STATE. YOU SEE, HE LIVED TO THE AGE OF 98. ACTUALLY, HE DIED WITHIN 30 DAYS OR SO OF HIS 99TH BIRTHDAY! BUT IT'S NOT THAT FRED PAULUS LIVED TO SUCH A RIPE OLD AGE, THAT WE HONOR, OR BECAUSE HE CONTINUED TO PRACTICE LAW UNTIL THE AGE OF 95. IT'S NOT THAT FRED PAULUS SERVED HIS STATE FOR 35 YEARS IN THE STATE TREASURY THAT WE HONOR HIM.-2- IT IS BECAUSE FRED PAULUS EXEMPLIFIED THE VERY BEST AS A PUBLIC SERVANT AND STATESMAN. THAT IS WHY WE HONOR HIM TODAY! WE HONOR HIS FLAWLESS INTEGRITY. HIS WORD WAS HIS BOND. AND, HE WAS A FINANCIAL GENIUS. HE HUSBANDED THE STATE'S RESOURCES AND SAW TO IT THAT THEY WERE INVESTED WELL. FRED PAULUS WAS THE BEST OF THE BEST. BY HIS EXAMPLE WE SHOULD BE LED. FRED PAULUS STORIES ARE LEGION. MORE THAN ONE ARE REFERRED TO IN THE RESOLUTION. CAN YOU IMAGINE, WERE IT NOT FOR FRED PAULUS, THE STATE OF OREGON WOULD HAVE GONE BANKRUPT DURING THE DEPRESSION! IT WAS ONLY UPON HIS PERSONAL PLEDGE THAT THE BANKS AGREED TO HELP BAIL OUT THE STATE. A SECOND STORY IS ONE CONCERNING FRED'S CONCERN FOR THE FUTURE. . .NOT HIS, MIND YOU, BUT THE FUTURE OF OREGON GENERATIONS THAT WOULD REAP THE BENEFIT OF HIS WISDOM AND PERHAPS NOT EVEN KNOW IT. I REFER, OF COURSE, TO FRED'S PLAN TO FINANCE THE REFORESTATION OF THE TILLAMOOK BURN. AS THAT-3- TREMENDOUS RESOURCE NOW COMES ON LINE, IT IS US, OUR CHILDREN, AND OUR CHILDREN'S CHILDREN, THAT WILL ENJOY THE BENEFITS OF THIS IMMENSE LEGACY. I SINCERELY HOPE, WITH THE PASSAGE OF THIS CONCURRENT RESOLUTION, THAT IT WILL HELP MEMORIALIZE FRED PAULUS AND KEEP THE MEMORY OF HIM, AND HIS4t&NS£9fc9- CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE STATE OF OREGON, EVER ALIVE IN THE MINDS OF ALL OREGONIANS. CH: rkRaiders hammer San Diego 34-21; details in Sports VOL. 135 —No. 44,555 Forecast: fair; high, 58; low, 40; report on Page A2 SUNRISE EDITION TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1985 Copyright © 1985, Oregonian Publishing Co. 90 PAGES 25 CENTS P Rajneeshee sweep jails Sheela Bhagwan followers still merry By ROBERTA ULRICH of The Oregonian staff and JEANIE SENIOR Correspondent, The Oregonian RAJNEESHPURAM — Despite the departure and arrest of the man who drew them to the Central Oregon des desert, ert, followers of Bhagwan Shree Raj- neesh worked, laughed and danced as usual Monday. For the second night in a row Mon Monday, day, virtually the entire community — 1,000 to 1,500 people — gathered in Rajneesh Mandir, the commune’s giant meeting hall, to learn about the arrest of Rajneesh and a number of current and past leaders of the community. For the second night in a row they learned little. Anaradha, president of Rajneesh Neo-Sannyas International Commune, provided no information about Raj- neesh’s arrest or current legal situation. “I was really happy to see in the midst of all we’re going through right now that, this commune is hanging in there so beautifully,” Anaradha said. She said news reports would be placed on bulletin boards around the community and arrangements were being made to show videotapes of events. Her two-minute talk was preceded and followed by enthusiastic dancing and singing by most members of the assembled community. Before the final dancing began the sannyasins — most still wearing the traditional clothing of the sect — knelt facing toward Char Charlotte, lotte, N.C., where Rajneesh is being held in jail on federal immigration charges, and chanted prayers. After the meeting a handful of Raj- neeshpuram residents said they were satisfied with the amount of informa information tion they have received. To followers of Rajneesh the guru was the reason for them to be in this remote corner of Wasco County where they have labored four years to build an Eden in the high desert country. With Rajneesh gone the followers are bewildered but blase. “My head freaks out, but my heart feels fine. I don’t know what will hap happen pen but I feel good,” said Deva Wadud, Rajneeshpuram community develop development ment director. “I don’t know what will happen to the community. I think it has a good possibility of continuing on.” Wadud also said that Rajneesh’s arrest did not make his leader a saint or martyr in the eyes of his followers. “I don’t feel anybody feels that,” See MOOD, PageDI. BRENT WOJAHN/© 1985, The Oregonian lotte, N.C., by marshal. Behind guru (face blocked) is his physician, Devaraj, with Michael O’Bryne(left). BOUND FOR COURT — Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, in chains, is led from the Federal Courthouse in Char- Murder try charged; U.S. holds bhagwan U.S. and West German authorities Monday rounded up Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh and at least 15 of his follow followers ers — including Anand Sheela — in response to federal and state grand jury indictments charging attempted mur murder, der, assault, immigration crimes and conspiracy. Rajneesh and six others were arrest arrested ed in Charlotte, N.C., after fleeing the ranch Sunday in two rented Learjets. Sheela, the guru’s former secretary, and three other women were picked up near Freiburg in southern Germany, about 40 miles from the Swiss border. One woman surrendered to Scotland Yard in London, and four others sur surrendered rendered to U.S. marshals in Portland. The most serious crimes were the Class A felonies alleged in sealed Wasco County grand jury indictments that were returned last Friday. Charges of attempted murder, con conspiracy spiracy to commit murder and first- This story was written by Scotta Callister, James Long, Leslie L. Zaitz and David Whitney of The Oregonian staff. Full coverage on Pages D1*4. degree assault were leveled against Sheela, 35, a native of Baroda, India; Shanti Bhadra, 40, an Australian also known as Catherine Jane Paul Elsea; and Anand Puja, 37, a Filipino nurse practitioner also known as Diane Ivonne Onang. The three are accused of attempt attempting ing to kill Devaraj, 41, last July 6 by injecting him with an unknown sub substance. stance. Devaraj, also known as George Alexander Stowell Wynne-Aubrey Meredith, is Rajneesh’s British doctor. Conviction on each of those charges carries a possible penalty of up to 20 years in prison and a fine of $100,000.. Bhadra and Puja were arrested with Sheela in Germany, as was Yoga Vidya, 38, a South African also known as Ann Phyllis McCarthy, who was wanted on a federal indictment charging immigra immigration tion crimes. The women are being held in Waldshut, a town near the German- Swiss border south of the Black Forest. Paul M. Keller, chief investigator for the state Criminal Justice Division, and two Portland-based FBI agents, Hadley McCann and Paul Hudson, were in Ger Germany many to help with the arrests there. Federal indictments handed down Wednesday charged Rajneesh, Sheela, Vidya and five other women with 32 immigration crimes and conspiracy. One of the five, Prem Karuna, 46, a Schenectady, N.Y., native also known ANAND SHEELA as Wendy Cutler Wyatt, was in Medina Rajneesh Neo-Sannyas Commune in Herringswell, England, and reportedly agreed to surrender to Scotland Yard in London. Karuna has been in Europe with a group of Rajneeshee children in recent months. The remaining four women flew from Rancho Rajneesh Monday to Port Portland, land, where they made preliminary appearances in U.S. District Court and were released on their own recogni recognizance. zance. The four included Prem Arup, 40, born in the Netherlands as Maria Gemma Kortenhorst and now vice president of Rajneesh Foundation Inter International; national; Prem Padma, 36, a Californian also known as Suzanne Pelletier, who is vice president of Rajneesh Neo-San Neo-Sannyas nyas International Commune on Ran Rancho cho Rajneesh; Prem Mukta, an Irish woman also known as Mary Agnes Evans; and Deva Navena, 38, a Brook Brooklyn, lyn, N.Y., native also known as Emily Jane Goldman. Six other persons were arrested with Rajneesh in North Carolina on accusations of conspiracy to aid and abet a fugitive — Rajneesh — because the guru’s entourage was trying to reach Bermuda. See BHAGWAN, Page D2. Walker admits spying; son spared life term By STEPHEN ENGELBERG Now York Times News Service BALTIMORE — John A. Walker Jr. pleaded guilty Monday to charges that he spied for the Soviet Union and that he recruited his son, friend and brother into an espionage operation that authorities have called one of the most damaging in American history. Under a plea agreement approved by a federal judge Monday, Walker admitted his role in the spy ring and is Index Seven sections SECTION A Foreign 3-7 National 8-14 SECTION B Metro/Northwest 1-4 Editorial 6 Forum 5,7 SECTION C Living 1-3 Arts 4-8 Comics 6,7 Crossword 3 Movies 8 Radio, TV 4,5 SECTION D Bhagwan behind bars 1-4 Classified 7-14 Local News 5,6 SECTION E Sports 1-6,8 Classified 7 Funerals 7 Obituary 6 SECTION F Business 1-8 National 8 SECTION FD FOODday 1-30 Classified advertising ... 224-4511 Circulation hot line 221-8240 to be sentenced to life in prison. In return, the judge agreed to a reduced prison term of 25 years for his son, Michael L. Walker, a Navy yeoman who faced up to two life sentences and more than $500,000 in fines. Walker, a retired Navy communica communications tions specialist, told U.S. District Judge Alexander Harvey II that he would give government investigators a com complete plete account of the material that he and his associates delivered to the Soviet Union in 17 years of espionage. He also agreed to testify in other cases, including the trial of Jerry A. Whit Whitworth, worth, a retired Navy radioman described as Walker’s closest friend, who is charged with stealing secrets that were delivered to Soviet agents. The agreement calls for Walker to submit to periodic polygraph tests to verify his statements. Harvey said he normally would not accept a plea agreement in which sen sentences tences had been negotiated between prosecution and defense. But he called the case “exceptional” and said he was convinced the public interest would be served by Walker’s cooperation with authorities. Walker and his son are to be sen sentenced tenced after investigators complete their interviews, a process that offi officials cials Said could take six months to a year in the case of John Walker. Michael Walker will be eligible for parole in about eight years and John Walker in 10 years. The government’s desire to find out exactly what secret information Walk Walker er gave the Soviet Union was the main reason for striking the bargain. “John Anthony Walker has some something thing that is of vital interest to this country, something the government wants very much to have,” said Michael Schatzow, the assistant U.S. attorney prosecuting the case. “We need to know what has been broken and what must be fixed. It is impossi JOHNA. WALKER JR. ble to do that without his cooperation.” Schatzow said the 25-year sentence that he had recommended for Michael Walker was less than the government would have sought had he been con convicted victed on all charges. Additional details on Page A8. Paulus kicks off campaign for GOP gubernatorial bid, calls for debate him, and 42 percent supporting Paulus and 14 percent undecided. This poll surveyed 691 voters. By FOSTER CHURCH of The Oregonian staff SALEM — Norma Paulus removed any doubt about her political intentions Monday when she told a crowd of about 500 gathered at an airport hang hangar ar that she was definitely a candidate for governor. “You bet I’m running,” said the 52- year-old former secretary of state at a campaign kickoff breakfast in the hangar. Paulus, a Republican, immedi immediately ately challenged her likely Democratic opponent, former Portland Mayor Neil Goldschmidt, to a public debate and said she would be ready to meet him as early as 5 p.m. that afternoon. “I invite Neil to enter into a public dialogue on the issues,” she said. “I think there is plenty of time for that,” said Tom Walsh, a Portland building contractor who is Gold Goldschmidt’s schmidt’s campaign chairman. “I would expect that at an appropriate time, there will be a debate.” Goldschmidt, a vice president of Nike Inc., is traveling on business out of state this week and was not avail available able for comment. Following the announcement, Paulus and her family boarded a twin- engine jet and embarked on a four-city campaign swing to Medford, Eugene, Portland and Bend. Paulus’ annnouncement marks the formal beginning of a contest that is likely to be a costly struggle between two popular, experienced politicians. It is also expected to divide the state politically along unusual lines as Gold Goldschmidt schmidt — who espouses the more business-oriented politics of some of the new Democratic politicians of the ’80s — meets Paulus, the liberal Republican who has occasionally tan tangled gled with the state’s business commu community. nity. A poll taken for The Oregonian in August by the Portland market research company Bardsley & Has- Paulus has been raising money and building a campaign organization since early this year, and there has been lit little tle doubt that she would run. But the Monday announcement frees her to speak and tour the state actively as a declared candidate. She has no serious Republican opposition at this time. “I know our state like the back of my hand, and I know the people of Oregon,” she said. “I understand and share the concerns of Oregonians, and I will be a leader for all the people.” Delivering a campaign stump speech that was long on enthusiasm and short on specific proposals, Paulus called for a partnership between gov government ernment and the private sector, and declared that she would manage gov government ernment carefully with limited resources. “What I will not do is dig deeper into your pockets,” she said. “I prom promise ise you that.” But she acknowledged that she had no qualms about asking for campaign donations. “I said I would not dig into your pockets after the election,” she said in response to a question. “Before is a different story.” Responding to reporters’ questions, she estimated her campaign would cost “at least $1 million” and promised to raise the bulk of it through small indi individual vidual donations. A $500-a-plate cam campaign paign fund-raising campaign kickoff dinner will be held Nov. 8. Late hurricane hits Gulf A late-season storm turned into Hurricane Juan, leaving a trail of death and destruction along the Gulf Coast Monday. Page A11 NORMA PAULUS lacher showed Paulus and Goldschmidt virtually tied, with 39 percent support supporting ing Paulus and 43 percent supporting Goldschmidt and 18 percent undecided. Goldschmidt made his announce announcement ment in early July. The poll was based on telephone interviews with 689 reg registered istered voters throughout the state. It asked, “Who would you vote for gov governor ernor of Oregon if the candidates were Republican Norma Paulus and Demo Democrat crat Neil Goldschmidt?” A more recent poll taken by the same firm Oct. 14-15 showed Gold Goldschmidt schmidt with a hairline lead over Paulus, with 44 percent supporting\ V :TPOUNDED 1651 110th YEAR 2 SECTIONS—20 PAGES The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Thursday, June 16, 1960 Deputy State Treasurer, Desk to Retire : red H. Paulus, deputy state treasurer who will retire on his 70th birthday June 27, sits at his 50-y'ear-old rolltop desk that will probably retire at the same time. Paulus first state job was in 1913. (Statesman Photo) c red Paulus to End Long State Service By TOM WRIGHT Itate Reporter, The Statesman Fred H. Paulus, who has uarded the state treasury 5 deputy state treasurer irough fire, depression olitical changes and un sr eight administrations, 11 retire June t}7 on his 70th rthday. At that time, Paulus, credited th setting much of the financial i urse, and writing most of the ajor fiscal laws for Oregon, will nd up 35 years service with the easury Department. Joing Treasurer's Work" During those years, when the ite’s business grew from $80,- >,000 to $1,375,000,000, he has en been described as the “man ing the treasurer’s work.” Though Paulus’ tenure with the easury began Aug. 1, 1925, when took a "temporary” job, he st went to work for the state an $85-a-month claims auditor der Secretary of State Blen 01- t in 1913. That dates his state •vice back beyond any others 1 active. Eventful Service It’s been an eventful service, | and Paulus expresses no regrets j , for passed-up opportunities for I ’greater financial success else-£ where. He served as secretary of ; \ the State Bond Commission under ; 13 governors and has played a • major role in shaping state finan- K cial policies. He also found time to serve 20 years on the Salem Budget Com Committee. mittee. Though tempted on more than one occasion, he never sought the top job in the department. He served instead under Treasurers Thomas Kay, Rufus Holman, Walter E. Pearson, Leslie Scott, Walter J. Pearson, Sig Unander and now under Howard C. Belton. . Amendment Author Paulus is credited with writing t the constitul^pnal. amendment un- j der which Oregon has financed its reforestation program, and the amendment for self - liquidating bonds for building dormintories and dining halls at Oregon col colleges. leges. He was co-author of the Vet Veterans erans Loan Act, and architect of such legislation as the sewer bond revolving fund act, school bond act, serial bond act, sinking fund act, soldiers bonus law and the city refunding bond act. Paulus To Leave State Job (Story also on Page L) "The state of Oregon has been very fortunate to have men of high caliber serve as state treas treasurers,” urers,” spys Fred H. Paulus who retires this month after serving as deputy under eight of them for the past 35 years. (Picture on page I.) In the process, Republican Paul- us weathered two changes of political administration, serving under two Democratic treasurers, the Ipte Walter E. Pearson and his son, State Sen. Walter J. Pearson. A lot of money has passed through Paulus’ hands since 1925. State investments and reinvest reinvestments ments have totaled more than two billion dollars. Right how that state has some $250,000,000 in se-; curilies, including $100,000,000 is < In the State Retirement fund. \ Has Done Some Growing The treasury business, like Oregon, has done some growing in 35 years. When Paulus first ! went to work — before such things as state welfare and in income come tax refunds — the depart department ment paid about 6,000 warrants a month. In a single day last week it paid 30,000. ,! kl' Despite that the office force | hasn’t grown much. New meth methods, ods, such as machine records, have kept the positions in the de department partment down. Paulus’ roll-top desk has survived the general switch to modern furniture and equipment. It will probably be retired along with Paulus. Probably the most critical time in Paulus service was the night of April 25, 1935, when the old Capitol building burned. He only grins at reports he used personal influence with Fire Chief Buck Hutton to concentrate fire fighting on the treasury end of the doom doomed ed structure. Not Even a Stamp At any rate State Treasurer ; Rufus Holman was able to say the next day that the department didn't even lose a postage stamp as a result of the fire. Part of the reason the treasury didn’t suffer any great loss in the blaze was due to some prior plan-1 ning by Pauius, and a trust in j Douglas McKay who was then' mayor of Salem. In 1927, Paulus ’ had decided the Capitol wasn’t I the safest place to keep securi- j ties, so some $10,000,000 worth | were safe in the new Ladd and Bush vault downtown when the fire struck. However, some $3,000,000 of State Highway revenue bonds were in the Capitol vault when the fire struck. While flames ate at the building, Paulus gave the bonds to "McKay who transferred them to the Salem police station; for temporary safe keeping. Paulus takes most pride in his role of developing laws which j have set the course of Oregon's;! state and local finances. Among (hem were such as im- j posing a debt limitation of 10 per' cent of assessed valuation upon cities, a serial bond act requiring cities and school districts to issue bonds in serial form and to re- I tire them in installments. Was Chief Architect He was chief architect of a city refunding bond act in 1933 ! under which cities may refund bonds without holding an expen- I sive election. Another law allow allowed ed cities to refinance their debts with large savings and minimum j cost. Paulus wrote the constitutional amendment to provide for financ financing ing of reforestation in Oregon which was approved by the vot voters ers in 1948. Rated the outstand- . ing reforestation program in the nation, some $6,650,000 in refore reforestation station bonds have been sold by the State Forestry Board. Among the programs has been reforesta reforestation tion of the Tillamook Burn. It has been estimated the state has saved over $1,000,000 in in interest terest in refunding revenue bonds under the law written to imple implement ment the constitutional amend amendment ment for financing self-liquidat self-liquidating ing dormitory projects for higher education. In 1949 Paulus wrote the sewer bond revolving fund act author!- 7-rng the state to purchase un unmarketable marketable sewerage bonds of small Cities as an investment en enabling abling them to install sanitary systems. He also wrote the final draft, of the State Office Building Construction Act which allows the state to borrow from trust funds to build state buildings. I he plan adopted for financing construction of the new Capitol building by the 1935 Special Ses Session sion of the Legislature was writ written ten by Paulus. "Was a Mistake" Paulus, on the eve of retire retirement, ment, says the action of the 1959 Legislature to abolish the State Bond Commission was a mistake. He suggests reenactment to pro provide vide for a three or five-member commission to make investments for all state funds. While the state has been free from scandals for half a cen century, tury, Paulus feels the present system is not adequate to protect the public interest. For a three- member commission he suggests] the state treasure?, a member of the State Retirement Board and a member of the State Industrial | Accident Commission. 1 Paulus says such a commis- i j sion, with a full-time administra administrator. tor. and an investment analyst j with legal training could make 1 all investments, prepare model forms for bonding procedures and advise all state departments and cities on bond financing. He is quick to state he has no | designs on a position with this commission. At 70, he plans' to ] catch up on his vacationing, then perhaps go into law practice in Salem. A native of Salem, he was edu educated cated in the public schools and at Staley's Capital Business Col College lege after doing post-graduate work. He took the part-time job with the state treasurer's office in 1925 on a temporary basis while getting his law degree from Willamette University. Earlier he attended Harvard Business School after federal service at the end of World War I. He left the secretary of state’s j office after nearly five years in 1918 . to enlist in the Signal Corps,' serving until 1919. Paulus shares a prominent fam family ily name in Salem. Three of his' brothers, Robert, George and Wil-1 liam, have long been associated ! with the cannery business here.! Ted Paulus is a hardware dealer in Grants Pass. A fifth brother. ' Otto, is dead. I — ' t - r ■—.. -. ;\t.. ^ ,.r, Wia. G. Paulus SEND TO 'Wj : V HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE COMPANY Ltd. fifth ano Virginia streets, san jose 8. California June 20, 1960 iir. Fred H. Paulus Deputy State Treaa. State Oregon State llouee Salem, Oregon Dear Freds The OREGON STATESMAN Autobiography of yourself la most enlightening and the praise uuch deserving. T e on-the- spot office picture Is exceptionally good and brings to mind the satisfied look of tue cat tiiat uad Just caught a rouse. In enduring and reaching the compulsory rctiro.jQ.it age, yours tiirough the years has probably seeruod Ilka a thankless task at times, but the satisfaction of a big job veil do -e Is no small reward in Itself. Cer Certainly tainly tiiat satisfaction Is yours In abundant measure, also the pleasure of knowing tiiat you liave the gratitude of Oregon citizens as well as local and national financial circles should be quite consoling. It nas been said t at to some the taking of a vacation is just the matter of cHanging loafing places. 1 know tiiat this does not apply to you. Olga and X sincerely Invite you to do some loafing at 4091 Blackford Avenue, San Jose, where you can do some yard work and take in tue San Francisco ball games and other things of interest. Until we again see you please accept our sincere best wishes for every happiness in your well earned retirement. 4 ;*• Sincerely,oO/? AJ,4-<— IT SEEmS TO mE One man in state government I who has earned the title of “Mr. Oregon” is Fred H. Paulus, de deputy puty state treasurer, who is scheduled to retire under the state plan on June 27th. While his first employment with the state was in 1913, which gives him the earliest dating among all pre present sent employes, one can't think of Fred Paulus as "old." He is a brisk 70, physically fit and mentally alert who probably will shift from his rolltop desk in the state treasurer’s office to a law office in downtown Salem. Paulus is a graduate of Willamette Col College lege of Law and member of the bar. A news story in Wednesday's Statesman reviewed in consider considerable able detail the career of Paulus in state service. I want to add some facts out of my long ac acquaintance quaintance with him and four years of close association in state service. Fred Paulus has been the sheet anchor for public finance in Ore Oregon gon for many years. When he : went into the state treasurer's of- ( fice in 1925 many units of state government were in trouble. Cities had overbonded, irrigation districts were struggling under debt burdens. State Treasurer 1 i ‘ 11 Kay found that some of the bonds owned by the state were pretty shaky. It became the task of j Paulus to help involved school i districts and cities and ports to solve their financial problems. I (Sick irrigation districts were treated by the Reclamation Com Commission). mission). The problems became ; acute in the depression years of the 1930s. Two things were necessary: re refinancing financing by the distressed dis districts tricts and Reception Will Honor Mr. Paulus A reception will be given in the office of State Treasurer : Howard C. Belton on Monday, June 27 between 3:30 and 4:30 pm. honoring Fred H. Paulus. ij. Mr. Paulus, who has been Dep- J Jlty State Treasurer of the state ■f iff Oregon for the past thirty-five *' , years, is retiring from state serv service ice on that date. State Treasurer Belton is invit inviting ing all officers and employes of the state and interested friends of Mr. Paulus, to attend the re reception. ception. IT SEEmS TO HIE (Continued from Pago 1.) new legislation to avert the evils that had contributed to the dis distress. tress. In the former task Paulus conferred with officials of eilics and school districts and ports, spending many, many hours with them in Salem or on their own grounds. He labored to get communities to shoulder the bur burdens dens they had assumed, and where defaults had occurred to remedy them by new Issues whose requirements were within their capabilities. (One of the communities which was helped was Astoria. On this page today is reprinted an editorial com comment ment on the help given Astoria by Paulus, from the Astorian- Budget). The second task was to tighten up laws under which govern government ment units could incur debt. Debt limits were revised, and serial payments required, so bonds would not fall due all at once and then be refunded. Gov Government ernment units were forbidden to sell bonds save on public bid bidding, ding, curing the evil of advance contracts with bond houses, which gave them an inside on the issue. School district bonds were given a preferred status by requiring the setaside of rev revenues enues for their servicing. Vir Virtually tually all of the numerous laws covering issuance of state bonds have been drafted or worked over by Mr. Paulus. In still another area Paulus has discharged duties of great importance. That was in the investment of public funds. These funds included not only the current balances but the va various rious trust funds of the state. As secretary of the bond com commission, mission, Paulus was the primary agent in selecting investments. He also directfid the investment of excess current funds which results in substantial earnings for the state each biennium. This is not in derogation of the eight state treasurers under whom Paulus has worked. He has been constant in consulting with the head of the department, but each, no matter what his party, has respected Paulus's ability in the field of public fi finance nance and relied greatly on his judgment. Smaller matters have claimed his attention, too, such as col collection lection of state share of fines in lower courts, at one time sadly delinquent because of indiffer indifference ence of justices. The title of "deputy" is not very distinguished, but in this S case the title has been decep deceptive. tive. All those at all acquainted with public finance in Oregon for the last quarter century and longer have been aware of the unique role of Fred Paulus in state government. He abundant abundantly ly deserves a Distinguished Service award for his great con contribution tribution to integrity and pru- ’ dence in matters of public fi- ' nance. "irm—ms.:aa«eaffr:-mum-:' ipsioiii ei iseniMnseins i•**<- r* Editorial Comment Astorians Recall Service To City by Fred H. Paul us (Astorian* Budget) Fred H. Paulus, deputy state treasurer, is retiring June 27 at the age of 70. This notice will remind many Astorians of the great service done by Paulus for the city of Astoria and port of Astoria a quarter century ago, when he helped work out settlements with bondholders after these two agencies had defaulted on payment of their vast bonded \ debts. ' Today we are reaping the fruits of the work done by Pau Paulus lus and a small group of local citizens who arranged for meth methods ods of repayment to save this community from what amount- I ed to bankruptcy of two major | public agencies. Paulus was called upon for much adice and counsel dur during ing those hard times, and gave j it abundantly. His service to this community was immeasur immeasurable. able. Today the city of Astoria looks j forward to the final payment ! on its bonded debt on June 30, i only a couple of weeks away. Today the Port of Astoria is so far ahead of the payments on its small remaining bonded debt that it was able to ask and get voter permission to di divert vert bond money for capital ex penditures long deferred. The city of Astoria hopes soon to do the same thing. It would be fitting if both these agencies sent to Paulus their greetings upon his retire retirement, ment, for he was of great help to them in their difficult times. tmtmsmmiimmmmmMissa it?/ Ti o t- irnal, Thurs., June 16, ’60 Fred Paulus Will | Fnd State Service Deputy State Treasurer Fred II. Paulus, who has played a key role in the writing of much of Oregon’s financial legislation, re retired tired June 27, his 70th birthday. He has served as deputy to eight Oregon treasurers of both political parties since 1925. Actu Actually ally his service in state govern government ment dates back to 1913 when he was first hired as a claims audi auditor tor by Sec. of State Ben Olcott. Preparation of the constitution al amendments for Oregon's re reforestation forestation program and self- liquidating bonds for construction of dormitories at state colleges was done by Paulus. He also had a hand in pre preparation paration of the veterans loan and bonus measures, the sewer bond revolving fund law, the school bond act, serial bond act, sink sinking ing fund act and city refunding bond act. Paulus also has been secretary of the State Bond Commission under 13 governors. For 20 years he was a mem member ber of the Salem Budget Com Committee. mittee. totesman, Salem, Ore., Fri., July 1, '60 Business and Public Leaders Honor Paulus Business and public leaders Thursday honored Fred Paulus, who retired this week after 35 years service with the state treas treasurer’s urer’s office, 33 of them as dep deputy uty state treasurer. Among those a 11 e n d i n g the luncheon in tribute to Paulus were his four brothers, Robert C. Paul Paulus, us, San Francisco, William C. Paulus, San Jose, Ted Paulus, Grants Pass and George Paulus, Salem. Speaking in tribute was Leslie M. Scott, former state treasurer under whom Paulus served as deputy for eight years. Paulus was presented with an attache case by Elton Thompson, vice president of the U. S. National Bank here. Master of ceremonies for the occasion was former Gov. Charles A. Sprague. Included among the 60 present were several bank and bond of officials ficials from Portland, and Mayor Harry Steinbock and City Auditor O. K. Atwood of Astoria. Paulus was a guest of the city of Astoria Wednesday night in thanks for his aid to that city in setting up a bonding program.rtgomnti ES'l ABLISHED BV HENRY L. PITTOCK An Independent Republican Newspaper Published Daily except Sunday hv The Oregonian Publishing Co, npany_ Oregonia Bide Broadway, Portland I Oregon, which also publishes The Sunday Oregonian P MICHAELJ FREY. President and Publisher HERBERT LUNDY. Editor of the Editorial Page EWIS J CASCADDEN'f’Ma'tion'jIamier HAROLD V MANZER. Advertising Director LEWIS J ( AM AUDr.iN. m 30 FRIDAY, JUNE 24, I960 Barker ! Succeeds Paulus Gordon A. Barker, 54, will replace Fred H. Paul Paulus us as deputy state treasur treasurer. er. Announcement of Bark Barker’s er’s appointment was made today by state treasurer Howard C. Belton. Paulus retires June 27, his 70th birthday, after many years in state servipe and Barker will take over the next day. Barker has worked with the treasurer’s office since 1955 and has served as Paulus’ assistant since 1955. For the past five years he has been working with invest investments, ments, statistics and supervising the administration of the ac- j counts department. In announcing the shift, Belton said: “Fred H. Paulus has given years of devoted arid outstanding service to the treasury depart department ment and the people of Oregon. He has earned his retirement and j the thanks of the people of the State.” Barker said he considered it a privilege and honor” to have worked under Paulus. ate subcommittee will go through with its order to Dr. Pauling to pi-oduc.e the names on Aug. 9. Surely, befor time the investigators will that they do their own and America s cause more harm by pursuing these ai b - ' ” - than they would by foi get-/ ' * * ’ • 1 1 ■ The retirement from state service June *>7 of Fred II. Paulus, deputy state treas treasurer, urer, should be the occasion for some kind of an Oregon-wide observance. We cannot think of any man, appointed or elected, Who has been of greater value to the citizens of the state in shaping and pro protecting tecting 1ho sound fiscal policies with which Oregon has been blessed. Tn Ihe performance of his quiet and efficient work, Mr. Paulus has served under eight elected treasurers, any one of whom, we believe, would have testified that Ihey could not have got along without him. In depression years, he worked tire tirelessly lessly with struggling cities, ports and other districts that had got into bonding troubles. He had a great deal to do with the grafting and amending of laws on state bonding. As secretary of the State Bond Commission, his investment of state money was wise and profitable. Various financial interests in Oregon have arranged a few dinners of tribute to Mr. Paulus on the occasion of his re retirement, tirement, at 70. They know his worth. And so do many others, Including the press, who came to him for guidance and counsel. The taxpayers of the state, some of whom may never have heard of him, are equally in’ his debt. The Oregonian , joins in a statewide vote of thanks. j MRS. PAULUS HERE 50 YEARS SUNDAY Tomorrow will make the fiftieth year Mrs. Elizabeth Paulus, 1556 North Church street, has lived in Salem. In 1886 she came to the stales from Germany and it was on JiUyl9 that She arrived at the home Mpr ,m W Charles Gies. was married to Christoier /,.j»uIlls in Portland January 6 1888 ey Father Summers of the Catholic church. The ceremony was per performed formed m German, as the bride did s P eak English. Attendants were Mis. Mary Wendle mid Ernest Sum- m.ers. The couple had six children- ert Paulus of New York,’ Ororge, Billy 'll of Sa^m. ■■ .«-T> r Rob- Fred, Otto and Theodore!\ P ictured in her silk taffeta wedding gown is Mrs. William Gray Paulus, above, who was Norma Jean Petersen before her marriage Saturday afternoon at the Holy Family Church in Burns. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Paul E. Petersen of Burns and the bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. William H. Paulus of San Jose, Calif., former Salem residents. Following a Cali California fornia honeymoon the couple will be at home in Salem. (Edris Morrison Studio, Port Portland). land). y J Statesman's HOME /anorama Women ... Music... Fashions... Features (Sec. 3) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Sunday, Aug. 17,1958 Norma Petersen Married to' Mr. Paulus at Burns Rites A large number of Salem people were in Burns on Saturday after- oon for the wedding of Miss Norma Jean Petersen, daughter of Mrs >aul E Petersen of Burns, and William Gray Paulus, son of Mr. and Trs. William H. Paulus of San Jose, -Calif., formerly of Salem. The 2 'clock nuptials were performed at the Holy Family Church. Father Vincent Egan officiated at the afternoon rites before a set- ing of yellow and white gladio uses, the color scheme for the en enure ure wedding. Charles H. Clark gave his ste steer-in-law er-in-law in marriage. She wore 3 handsome white pure silk taf- 'eta gown simply designed with ong sleeves and a low-, scoop uecklina. The extremely full skirt .vas enhanced with a large pouff 3f the. material in back and ter terminated minated in a chapel train. Her short illusion veil cascaded from i headdress fashioned of a double bow” of silk taffeta. She carried a Douquet of yellow carnations. Attendants Wear Yellow Mrs, Alfred J. Laue of Salem was the matron of honor and the bridesmaid was Mrs. Charles H. Clark, sister of the bride. They wore yellcAv print silk dresses styled with full, waltz skirts, Sa Sabrina brina necklines and puffed sleeves to the elbow. The dresses were enhanced with yellow silk cum cummerbunds merbunds and they wore- head- pieces of double yellow bows and yellow pumps. Miss Geraldine Petersen was her sister’s junior attendant and she wore a yellow organdy dress with white cummerbund, a yellow or organdy gandy double flat bow in her hair and yellow pumps. The attendants " carried white carnations and L ier son's marriage. She pinne white roses to her gown. A Garden Reception Follows all wore short, white gloves. Mr. and Mrs. Paulus came north for the wedding and he served as best man for his son. Ushers were Louis Selken of Bend and Donald Rudd of Eugene. A grey lace gown over pink with a ..small, pink flowered hat and A garden reception followed at the home of the bride's mother in Burns. Pouring were Mrs. Bryan Goodenough, Mrs. Jay Rorick and Mrs. John C. McLean, all of Sa-. lem, and Mrs. James M. Burns of Portland, the bride's godmother. Cutting the cake were Dr. Doris Carlon and Miss Sharon Brown of Salem. For their wedding trip to San- Francisco, Carmel and Las Vegas the new Mrs. Paulus donned a black chemise dress with black straw cloche lined in white and; ■black accessories. The couple will be at home in Salem' after Septem September ber 1. Mr. Paulus graduated ini June from the Willamette Univer4 sity Law School and his bride is 1 secretary to Justice William M. IMcAUister. long pink gloves was chosen by the bride’s mother. Her flowers we sele' k rosebuds. Mrs. Paulus „„„:ed a blue brocade sheath gown with fringed stole and blue velvet headband with tiny veil forThursday, August 11, l’ 60 Japa, Wegon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, "Hyiiitemraulus Badly Wounded by Burglar William H. Paulus, long-time Salem cannery official, was shot by a burglar and critically wounded Wednesday night at liis Salem home, 1025 14th St. NE. He was rushed to Salem Gen Genial ial Hospital for emergency 'treatment of gunshot wounds in the back and face. Police said Paulus, 60, who has been living in San Jose, Calif., for the last few years, was putting away clothes in an up upstairs stairs bedroom of the home, now occupied by his son, William G. Paulus, and wife, Norma, when ■ he apparently surprised a burglar '•hiding in a closet about 10:35 p.m. The burglar fired three shots, hitting Paulus twice, then es escaped caped downstairs and out of the house. Police launched an inten intensive sive manhunt. Mrs. Paulus, also visiting from San Jose, witnessed the shooting. Her screams attracted a neighbor, Mrs. Melvin Propp, 995 14th St. NE, and she called police. The gunman was described by Mrs. Paulus as about 25 years of age, six feet tall, 190 pounds, and wearing light colored slacks. He left behind a gun holster, a flashlight and some .22 caliber bullets. One bullet hit Paulus in the cheek and lodged in his head. Police said the carpeting was soaked with blood. (Additional details Page 2.) re Mrs. rauius as auuui to ui % Paulus Shot by Burglar After Arriving for Visit P e d al 0- ;d or | 51! be 1 c- ho us a (Story also on page 1.) William H. Paulus, 60, critically wounded by a burglar Wednesday night, had just arrived with his wife in Salem from San Jose, Calif., for a visit. .They were putting away their clothes in their Salem home, 1025 14th St. NE, occupied by their son, William G. Paulus, when 1 the elder Paulus opened the closet and surprised the burglar, i Mrs. Melvin Propp, a neighbor, was getting ready to retire for I the night when she heard -the screams and shooting. She im immediately mediately called police and first aid about 10:35 p.m., then rushed to the house, Cars Heard in Araa The gunman had fled when she arrived. J. L. Sparks, who lives I across the street, also heard the three shots. He said he also heard cars in the area at the time. , 1 Robert L. French, 1540 Nebras-, ka St. NE,: said he heard someone | running.upi the alley from Paulus home immediately after the shoot- Police immediately began checking the grounds and the house'and wdre following up addi additional tional leads this morning. Mrs. Paulus said the burglar wore a silk stocking over his head and face. . Paulus and his Wife have been living since 1956 in San Jose where he is a vice president of Dole Ha Hawaiian waiian Pineapple Co. Paulus formerly was vice president of Paulus Brothers Cannery in Sa Salem, lem, now a part of the Dole firm. Help Found Cannery A native of the Willamette Val ley Paulus was one of the found founders’ ers’ of the Salem cannery in 1926. It became a subsidary of Dole in 1956. . Police believed the burglar was either looking for clothes to wear or ran into the closet when he heard Mr. and Mrs. Paulus ar- I n ve - , , j After the shots, Paulus slumped to the stairway and fell. The shots barely missed Mrs. Paulus as she screamed. Police said they didn’t know whether two men who escaped from prison at Jesup, Ga., recent recently ly and were the object of a State polfce and Salem police search earlier in the day, bad any tie-in with the Wednesday night shoot shooting- ing- .The prison warden at Jesup, J. E. Thompson, informed law en enforcement forcement officers Wednesday that the escaped pair, Ernest W. Schick, 28, and John L. Crabbe, 26, may be in the Salem area. The warden said they are considered dangerous and probably armed. At least one had a relative in Sa Salem, lem, it was believed. ;on an- lol- nd. of be ock ild- om to of the se- jn- not en- ry- Jn- vt- ce «®fJvionday incil. residential to uig of property Street between eets and a small cet. The Jersey vacant lot, will age space by Electric Co permission to ting the two \k property to »n the old city et, provided it dump with a petition ask- of the Keene -s tabled by die planning tes its final •ty. Istralian ter- called “Com- :truct slablike ds invariably’ nd north. 71, up 25.4 per, ia, 934, down 11.8: f Jo, up 29.6; Yamhill,' j.4; Albany, 12,841, up 624, down 7.6; Aumsvil? 5.7; Aurora, 272, up 12.4; 2,165, up 20.6; Dallas, 5,' 5.5, and Dayton, 669, down 7. _ ~V-23-&0 \ Paulus Out Of Hospital Cannery official Wiliam H. Paulus, 60, has been released from Salem General Hospital and is convalescing at the home of his son, William G. Paulus, 1025 14th St. NE. He was badly wound wounded ed there when shot twice by a burglar. 13 days ago. Paulus, vice-president of Dole J Hawaiian Pineapple Co. at San Jose, Calif, and still active in Paulus Brothers Cannery in Sa Salem, lem, will remain under doctor's care for an extended period. RADIO STATIONS TALLIED MEXICO CITY (AP) - A new report from the Ministry of Com Communications munications says Mexico now has 8,160 radio stations. That total in includes cludes both commercial and pri private vate stations.Capital A Journal 72ml Year No. 189 * * * Salcm < n.urs.lay, August 11, 1960 40 Pages !».,".«*$SPrice 5c Paulus Shot 3 Times by Bandit in Son's House ★ ★ HIDING PLACE—A closet which hid an arme’d burglar in the William Paulus home Wednesday night was checked after the attack by Salem Police- '*~ian Dale Olson. (Capital Journal Photo) Dole Executive Close to Death By SCOTT McARTHUR Capital Journal Writer A silk stocking bandit, flushed from his hiding place in a- bedroom closet of a Salem home, gunned down and seriously wounded a former Salem can cannery nery official Wednesday night. William H. Paulus Sr., 60, remained in critical condition at Salem General Hospital today with bullet wounds in the face, chest' and hand. Paulus, a former official in Paulus Bros, cannery here, now lives in San Jose, Calif>where he is a vice president of the Paul Paulus us division of Dole Pineapple Co. of Hawaii. UNANNOUNCED VISIT He and his wife arrived about 10:30 Wednesday night to visit their son, attorney Robert Paulus Jr., and his wife at their home at 1025 14th St. NE. The younger couple was not at home. The elder Mrs. Paulus said her husband went to the spare bed bedroom room on 'the second floor of the house to put away two suitcases. She told detectives she followed him up the stairs and rounded a cpraet in the upstairs hallway to see-a gunman with a silk stocking over his head and a gun in one hand leap from the closet and over the prostrate body of her husband, who lay bleeding on the floor. Mrs. Paulus said the gunman waved his arms violently and dashed past her down the stairs and out the front door. Authorities said one bullet en entered tered Paulus' cheek and lodged at the base of his brain. Another entered the chest and lodged near the spine. The third creased one hand. " SHE DIDN'T HEAR SHOTS Mrs. Paulus, who is partially deaf, said she did not hear the shots. Detectives said the gunman left behind him a tattered, stained tweed jacket, a scuffed leather holster, a flashlight and a partial partially ly filed box of .22 caliber bullets. They said he apparently entered the darkened house by breaking out the glass in a rear downstairs door. Officers surmised a bur burglary glary effort was interrupted by the arrival of the elder Paulus. WILLIAM H. PAULUS Wounds Critical Several nearby neighbors re reported ported hearing someone crash through their yards at about the time of the shooting. The assailant was described as about 25 years old, six feet in height and weighing about 190 pounds. Paulus’ son was working at his office when the shooting occurred His wife was attending a civic theater production. Paulus,, one of the founders of the family-owned cannery here in 1926, narrowly escaped death about eight years ago. He, attorney Edward Piasecki and Don Young, manager of Cap Capital ital Securities Co., were thrown into the water when Young’s cabin cruiser overturned while crossing the bar at Newport. Young and Piasecki were drowned and Paul Paulus us was washed ashore by a freak wave. Police today were probing the possibility that the shooting might have been connected with a silk- stocking holdup in Willson Park earlier Wednesday night or with a man who broke into three Port Portland land homes earlier this week and assaulted three women.xtm talesman POUNDED 1651 noth YEAR 5 SECTIONS—28 PAGES The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Thursday, August 11, 1960 William Paulus Badly Wounded by Burglar William H. Paulus, long-time Salem cannery official, was shot by a burglar and critically wounded Wednesday night at his Salem home, 1025 14th St. NE. He was rushed to Salem Gen General eral Hospital for emergency treatment of gunshot wounds in the back and face. Police said Paulus, 60, who has been living in San Jose, Calif., for the last few years, was putting away clothes in an up upstairs stairs bedroom of the home, now occupied by his son, William G. Paulus, and wife, Norma, when he apparently surprised a burglar hiding in a closet about 10:35 p.m. The burglar fired three shots, hitting Paulus twice, then es escaped caped downstairs and out of the house. Police launched an inten intensive sive manhunt. Mrs. Paulus, also visiting from San Jose, witnessed the shooting. Her screams attracted a neighbor, Mrs. Melvin Propp, 995 14th St. NE, and she called police. The gunman was described by Mrs. Paulus as about 25 years of William H. Paulus age, six feet tall, 190 pounds, and wearing-light colored slacks. He left behind a gun holster, a flashlight and some .22 caliber bullets. One bullet hit Paulus in the cheek and lodged in his head. Police said the carpeting was soaked with blood. (Additional details Page 2.) Paulus Shot by Burglar After Arriving for Visit ll I or ran into the closet (Stpry also on page ') when he 98 „ ! heard" Mr." and Mrs. Paulus ar- William H. Paulus. 60, critically , ^ wounded by a burglar Wednesday After ~ the shots , Paulus slumped night, had just arrived with his tQ (he stainvay a nd fell. The shots wife’in Salem from San Jose Calif., for a visit. ■ They were putting away the r clothes in their Salem home, 102o 14th'St. NE, occupied by their son, Willidm G. Paulus. when the elder Paulus opened the 10 Hie . i barely missed Mrs. Paulus as she screamed. ..... , Police said they didnt know whether two men who escaped from prison at Jesup, Ga., recent recently ly and were the object of a State J .. i r> _ 1 nnllna COOTOn the elder Paulus opened the J and Salem poUce search [ olcset and I surprised the b “ r S‘ ar - £ arlier in the day, had any tie-in Mrs'. Melvin Propp, a neighbor, ■ (h( , Wcdnes d ay night shoot ing. was getting ready to retire for the night when she heard the screams and shooting. She im immediately mediately called police and first aid about 10:35 p.m., then rushed to the house. Cars Heard in Area The gUhman had fled when she arrived. -I. L. Sparks, who lives across the street, also heard the (three shots. He said he also } beard cars in the area at thP time. i Robert L. French, 1340 Nebrns-, ka St. Nth said he heard someone . running up the alley from Paulus I home immediately after the shoot shooting.- ing.- ■ I Police immediately began checking U\e grounds and the house and were following up addi additional tional leads this morning. Mrs. i Paulus said the burglar wore a silk stocking over bis head and face. Paulus and his wife have been living since 1956 in San Jose where he is a vice president of Dole Ha Hawaiian waiian Pineapple Co. Paulus formerly was vice president of Paulus Brothers Cannery in Sa Salem, lem, now- a part of the Dole firm. Help Found Cannery A native of the Willamette Val" ley, Paulus was one of the found founders ers of the Salem cannery in 1926. It became a subsidary of Dole in 1955. Police believed the burglar was either looking for clothes to wear The prison warden at Jesup, J E. Thompson, informed law en enforcement forcement officers Wednesday that the escaped pair, Ernest \V. Schick, 28, and John L. Crabbe, 26, may be in the Salem area. The warden said they are considered dangerous and probably armed. 1 At least one had a relative in Sa Salem, lem, itWas believed.i tmrnal Home On,nod and PuUlUUod in the Inters of the Oregon Country urul 1C, People , PORTLAND, ORE., THURSDAY, AUG. 11,1960 VOL. 59-Jfo. 129 Paulus Sr. Surprises Prowler SALEM (API—A prominent San Jose, Calif., business man was shot twice by a burglar here Wednesday night shortly after the man had arrived for a visit at his son’s home. Police said William H. Paulus was shot once in the face and once in the back by the burglar he surprised in ah upstairs bedroom. The burglar, police said, then ran out of the house past Paulus’ wife who got his des description. cription. They said the .burglar left behind a holster, a flashlight and cartridges. Mrs. Paulus told officers the man fired three times at her husband before fleeing. One of the bullets went wild. Paulus was in emergency surgery at a Salem hospital. There was no immediate re report port on his conditon, but one bullet lodged in his head. Paulus, vice president of the Paulus Brothers Cannery of San Jose, had come to visit his son. Paulus Sr. Salem Native The son, William G. Paulus, is a Salem attorney. The sen senior ior Paulus was born in the Salem area. Paulus w< s among founders of the canr _>ry company and remained with it when it was taken over in 1956 by the Dole Pineapple Co. Mrs. Paulus described the man who shot her husband as about 6 feet tall, around 190 pounds and about 25 years old. Salem Police Lt. Robert Mason said the assailant wore a stocking cap over his face and had the same general de description scription of a man who earlier this week attacked three wom women en while attempting to burg burglarize larize their homes in Portland. Two of the women were hurt and third fled from the man. Neither of the two who were hurt suffered serious injury. Portland Attacker SLAEM, Ore. (AP) — A San 1 Jose, Calif., businessman shot! twice by a burglar he caught in the act of ransacking his son's home here, lay critically wound- ed in Salem General Hospital to today. day. Police said William H. Paulus, 60, was hit once in the head and once in the back by the bullets. One bullet lodged in Paulus’ head. A third fired by the gunman went wild. Mrs. Paulus, also near 60, told police that she and her husband had just arrived by car late Wednesday night at the home of 1 their son, William, a Salem at attorney. torney. Officers said Mrs. Paulus, who was hospitalized for treatment of severe shock, gave this acount: Paulus went to an upstairs bed bedroom room where the burglar apparent apparently ly was hiding in a closet. The 1 man leaped out and fired three times, hitting Paulus twice. Paulus fell back onto the car-, peted stairway of the home. The > burglar raced down the stairs and out the door past Mrs. Paulus. Mrs. Paulus told police the as assailant sailant was .about 25, wore a silk stocking mask over his face, weighed about 190 pounds and was about 6 feet tall. Lt. Robert Mason of the Salem police said the man's general de description scription matched that of a man who earlier this week broke into three Portland homes and at attacked tacked three women, one in each. Two of the women were hurt, neither seriously. Paulus’ son was at his office working when his parents arrived and the son’s wife was attending a civic theater production. The home actually is owned by the older Paulus, who was born in the Salem area. It-is a large two- story building. Paulus, a vice president of Paulus Brothers Cannery Co., San Jose, was one of the founders of the firm. He remained with it after Dole Pineapple Co. took it over in 19556. \;gon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Friday, August 12, I960 Gunman Fleei Polk© Searc Paulus dailies JfSS# 33S. SS ering from critical bullet wounds suffered when he was shot by a burglar Wednesday night, oificials said. Meanwhile Salem police continued to chec ‘ < | thlt | l l ^ C ' S in an all-out effort to nab the stocking-masked gunman, in dii dii uui. several suspects were questioned Paulus' Assailant Linked To Other Attacks in Area (Story also on Page 1.) Police investigated the possibil possibility ity Thursday that the gunman who shot and wounded cannery execu executive tive William H. Paulus here Wed Wednesday nesday night might have been in involved volved in one or more of several other crimes reported in the past two days. These included: Possible link between the shoot shooting ing and attacks on three women in Portland Tuesday. The chance that the gunman *★*★★★★★★★★ Paulus Had Brush With Death in Pacific Ocean (Story also on Page 1.) When William H. Paulus was critically wounded by a burglar Wednesday night, it wasn't the first brush with death for the prominent cannery official, friends recalled. Paulus, then vice president of the old Paulus Brothers Cannery here, was the only survivor of a Pacific Ocean tragedy in August of 1952 which claimed the lives of two well-known Salem Attorneys, The victims—Donald A. Young and Edward K. Piasecki—and Paulus were swept from Young's 26-foot cabin cruiser by a giant wall of water as they headed out of Yaquina Bay at Newport on a fishing expedition. Paulus, who grabbed a seat cushion, managed to work his way to safety. was one of two dangerous Georgia prison escapees for whom police were told to be on the alert And possibility that the man was the same one involved in a holdup in the 900 block of State Street about an hour before the shoot shooting. ing. Masked Couple The latter robbery was reported by Richard Emil Bernards, 26, of 330 14th St. SE. He told officers that while he was -walking in the 900 block a young couple wear wearing ing silk stackings over their faces relieved him of his wallet and $7. The boy, described as about 17, was quoted as saying, “Stop, mister . . . hand me your bill billfold.” fold.” He indicated he had a pis pistol tol under his shirt, police were told. The girl companion, about 16, took the wallet and Bernards was ordered to walk away with without out turning back. Victim Improving Paulus, reported improving Thursday night from critical bul- I let wounds in the chest and base of the brain, was shot Wednesday j night by a burglar hiding in an upstairs bedroom closet of the Paulus home at 1025 14th St. NE. A foriper Salem cannery official, Paulus now is an executive with Dole Pineapple at San Jose, Calif. ! The home now is occupied by a son, William G. Paulus, and (wife, who were not home when the elder Paulus and wife arriv' ed for a visit just prior to the ' shooting. Gunman Yelled but later released. His physician said Paulus, “showing general improvement,' was no'longer considered on the critical list Thursday night at "Sa "Salem lem General Hospital, where he was taken after' the 10:30 pm. shooting Wednesday. Surgery Delayed However the 60-year-old Paulus was reportedly still too week to undergo surgery for removal of .22 calibre bullets lodged in his upper spinal column and chest. Paulus was shot in the face and chest a few minutes after he and his wife arrived at a son’s home for a visit from San Jose, Calif. where he is a vice president of Dole Hawaiian Pineapple Co. . ©unman in Closet «5The son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. William G. Paulus, were .pot at home when the attack oc- ; curred. The home is at 1025 14th St. NE. 1 Salem detectives, who question questioned ed Paulus Thursday morning, said the gunman was hiding apparent apparently ly in an upstairs closet when Paulus entered the room to hang up' some clothing. Paulus told officers that as he opened the closet door the man let out a yell and came out firing. (Add. details on page 11.) Paulus related from his hospital , bed Thursday how the gunman, ' “about 25 and 190 pounds," burst 1 from the closet with a yell and 1 firing a pistol. As Paulus fell to the floor, the assailant fled past . Mrs. Paulus who said he wore a silk stocking over his face. Neighbors reported hearing J three shots and police found a ! stray bullet lodged in clothing in | a garment bag. The weapon was identified as a .22 calibre revol-4—(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Fri., Aug. 12, '60 / % Jrtatemu ■ALIM NKNMa MK OREQOM /\o FdVOt SlVQtJS Us; A/0 F CUT Shall AlVC* —From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor & Publijher WENDELL WEBB. Managing Editor Maybe Help Needed One is at a loss to explain the gradual but sure increase in major crime in the Sa:em area unless it comprises an over overflow flow of the difficulties Portland has ex experienced perienced in recent years. Salem has grown, yes, but with no so- calied boom, even in the mushrooming suburbs. No new institution has been es established tablished which would bring an influx of potential trouble. Certainly the correc correctional tional school would not be in that cate category. gory. There is no lessening of police vig vigilance—although ilance—although it. could well be true that additional assistance is warranted in that department, in the light of cir- cams.ances. If so, let’^ have it. From the occasionalVash of compara comparatively tively minor crimes in past,years, our troubles have grown into more major proportions and they can’t be shrugged off as “growing pains.” Some of the recent violence has com comprised prised “family fights,” but by no means ad. Liquor has figured heavily in several cases. As of this writing, the’latest trag- edy-of-crime leaves ’William H. Paulus brutally shot down without warning by the blazing gun of an intruder. Law en enforcing forcing agencies throughout the North Northwest west are turning every effort at appre apprehension. hension. It can hardly be said yet that Salem streets aren’t comparatively- safe at night, with the possible exception of the Willson Park area, but beatings, slug- gings, burglaries and holdups in recent months have been no respecters of dis districts. tricts. There seems to be a growing ele element ment of crime and criminals which will take vigilance, diligence and stern court action to combat. Salem can’t afford to become known as one of the nation’s “little Chicagos.” It is little solace that Salem isn’t alone j in its adversity. Crime statistics-gener- ’ i silly are alarming. , Paulus Still 6 Improving William H. Paulus Sr., 60, San Jose cannery official, was re reported ported improving at Salem Gen General eral Hospital today from gunshot • wounds suffered last Wednesday night when he flushed a burglar j from his son’s home here. Paulus, wounded in the head, hand and chest, had been in criti critical cal condition several days. ( Police meantime continued lecking out new leads in their investigation of the incident but reported no more clues to iden identity tity of the silk stocking bandit who shot Paulus. lO, I x Paulus Still Critical, But Holding Own | Cannery official William H. Paulus Sr. continued to hold his jown in his struggle for life today while police pressed a continuing search for the silk stocking bur burglar glar who shot and critically wounded him Wednesday night. Attendants at Salem General Hospital said the 60-year-old San Jose, Calif., man remained in critical condition. Surgery to re remove move bullets lodged at the base of his skull and in his back was . delayed until his general condi condition tion improves. ^ Paulus, an official of Hawaiian Pineapple Co. Ltd., and a former Salem cannery operator, was shot three times Wednesday night when he surprised a burglar hid hiding ing in the closet of the home of his son, William Paulus Jr., at 1045 14th St. NE. Both Paulus and his wife de described scribed the gupman as about 25 ; years old, six feet tall and weigh- ' ing about 180 pounds. Paulus told Salem detectives Thursday afternoon that he went j to the upstairs bedroom to put I away two traveling bags. He said j he opened the closet door and the burglar, who was hiding in inside. side. shot "within a second or so." Police said the Pauluses origin originally ally had planned to arrive on Thursday, but decided at^ the last ^minute to drive directly through io Salem. 54/0 PC i $_-LA-C. / U J I i
-.vo!U"old parolee think luck has caught' up with ,T„ R ° n . Statc Hos P itaI ' ug " . James Byrd Borden, went to sec his girl friend. Wilma Maxine Spratt, 38, told him she had changed her mind. She did not wish to marry him. Bordon, possessed by a mania maniacal cal rage, strangled her with his hands then finished off the job || with his belt. j Later he walked into the Mari- on County sheriff's office and told 1 | deputies where he left the body gree irion mes trial cuit but later recovered. Hunk Robbery: Leo Eldon Harris, 19, and his 33-year-old sidekick, Charles Lo- rainc, met in Walla Walla, Wash. They hod common interests. Lo- rainc was just out of San Quen Quentin. tin. Harris had barely missed a prison sentence on a rape charge in Eastern Oregon and was on five years probation. They also were interested in easy money. The duo headed south from Portland and decided to hold up a bank. They thought first of the State Bank of Shedd. But they couldn't find it. So they headed on to Halsey, where Manager A< Ray Martini and his staff were doing a boom booming, ing, harvest season business at a branch of the Bank of Lebanon. Harris walked in, flashed his gun and started to truss up the patrons while Loraine waited nearby in the car. But Harris forgot to lock the door. It ended up with more than a dozen per persons sons tied up on the floor. 3 he bandit bolted, but a patron followed and Harris threw away his .<17,000 loot. He eventually was tracked down in a nearby cemetery. The two pleaded guilty to armed robbery. Both got 25 years. Young Harris' comment: "I've never seen so many peo people ple in a bank in my life." Assault: Mitchel Redd is a wanderer. A> man who is going everywhere—* but no where at all. s Redd was spooning his suppei fh6ar-iatal shooting of Wil- i San Jose, Calif., cannery ilem resident. He was shot a closet door in the 14th St. _ulus was critically injured, to visit their son, William! Assuu Salem attorney ! n all started with a gallon jug Pauluses had planned to of Tokay wine. That and a chal challenge. lenge. Allan Scott Reed charged that the night of Tuesday, Aug. 9, on the road. But they decided rogress • *> in , ’A/: foldoutocrFile35a foldoutFile35a Capital Journal, Wed., Aug. 17, ’60, Sec. 1, Pg. 9 Killings, Robberies, Violence Mount in Crime Rush JAMES BORDEN Trial Sept. 7 By SCOTT McARTHUR Capital Journal Writer A series of killings, -robberies and bloody assaults has left Sa Salem lem area police agencies reeling under the heaviest rash of crime to hit this area in recent years. None of the incidents were be believed lieved related, and no apparent explanation for the booming busi business ness in crime has been offered. “Call it weather if you. want to," sighed one weary cop. “I think luck has caught up with P. 2fSec. 2, Capital Jou Politi Keep JESSIE LOU PATZER Awaits Grand Jury The six-week box score for the Salem area: Three murders; One bank jobbery; Three robberies; Three armed assaults; Fast police action—and luck — has left only three cases un unsolved. solved. Here’s a run-down on the bloody violence that has rocked the Sa Salem lem area: Murder: On July 8, a 35-year-old parolee from the Oaegon State Hospital, James Byrd Borden, went to his girl friend. : Wilma Maxine Spratt, 38, told him she had changed her mind. She did not wish to marry him. Bordon, possessed by a mania maniacal cal rage, strangled her with his hands then finished off the job with his belt. Later he walked into the Mari Marion on County sheriff’s office and told deputies where he left the body. Indicted on a first degree murder charge by' the Marion County Grand Jury, James Byrd Borden will go on trial Wednesday, Sept. 7, in Circuit Court. Borden presently is confined at the state hospital. His attor attorney ney is expected to enter a plea of not guilty by reason of in- Murder: In the early morning of July 19, Salem police received a phone call. They went to the house of Mrs. Carrol Irene Hankel, 47. Sobbing; she told them of an afternoon of drinking that ended in the stran strangulation gulation and shooting of 43-year- old Mrs. Helen Sarah Ped. The dispute resulted from conflict over the affections of a man. Mrs. Hankel took state police and sheriff’s deputies to the Wheatland Ferry area where she pointed out the spot where she dumped Mrs. Ped’s body. An intensive search of the still has failed to unearth the murder weapon, a .22 caliber pis pistol. tol. Mrs. Hankel was indicted by Marion County Grand ‘Jury last week on a first degree murder charge. Date for trial is expect expected ed to be set soon. Murder: Love was something that long since had left the home of Bob and Jessie Patzer. Their battles went on and on, especially when drink was in involved. volved. Then the night of August 5, Jessie Lou Patzer came to a neighbor’s house and said, “Call the cops, will you? I just stabbed ~ob.” Mrs. Patzer since has denied she killed her husband. But Sa Salem lem police found his body on the floor of the living room of their house. He had been stabbed in the chest. The knife was on a sew sewing ing machine nearby. The case of Jessie Lou Pat Patzer, zer, partially deaf and barely literate, will be presented to next week's session of the Ma- CARROL HANKEL Awaits Trial Date rion County Grand Jury. In the meantime, she, like Mrs. Hankel, is confined to the county jail on a first degree murder charge. They are in separate cells. Bank Robbery: Leo Eldon Harris, 19, and his 33-year-old sidekick, Charles Lo- raine, met in Walla Walla, Wash.. They had common interests. Lo- rainc was just out of San Quen Quentin. tin. Harris, had barely missed a prison sentence on a rape charge in Eastern Oregon and was five years probation. They also were interested easy money. The duo headed south from Portland and decided to hold up a bank. They thought first of the State Bank of Shedd. But they couldn’t find it. So they headed on to Halsey, where Manager A-. Ray Martin and his staff were doing a boom booming, ing, harvest season business at a branch of the Bank of Lebanon. Harris walked in, flashed his gun and started to truss up the patrons while Loraine waited nearby in the car. But Harris forgot to lock the door. It ended up with more than a dozen per persons sons tied up on the floor. The bandit bolted, but a patron followed and Harris threw away his $17,000 loot. He eventually was tracked down in a nearby cemetery. The two pleaded guilty to armed robbery. Both got 25 years. Young Harris' comment: 'I've never seen so many peo people ple in a bank in my life." Assault: Mitchel Redd is a wanderer. A> man who is going everywhere—* but no where at all. s Redd was spooning his supper TTESFIatal shooting'of Wil- a San Jose, Calif., cannery ilem resident. He was shot a closet door in the 14th St. ulus was critically injured, out of a can the night of August 9. He was sitting, alone in the dusk, in a patch of woods off Salem’s Water street. Four teenage boys came up. One slugged him on the head with a rock. Then they meticu meticulously lously kicked him over the edge of a 50-foot bluff. Mitchel Redd says he lay there for four days and five nights. Last Sunday morning he crawled a block to a stairway and made his way to the top. He was hospitalized and is re recovering. covering. His assailants have not been found. Assault: William H. Paulus Sr. was back in Salem, his old home town. Now an official of a canning company, he lives in California. He and his wife were headed to Salem on one of their periodic trips to visit their son, William Jr., a Salem attorney. The Pauluses had planned to spend the night of Tuesday, Aug. j 9, on the road. But they decided! to drive straight through to Sa Salem. lem. When they got to their son’: home, both he and his wife were out. So the elder Pauluses let them themselves selves in, and Paulus went up upstairs stairs to put away his bags. He opened a closet door and a youngish burglar leaped out, fir firing ing three bullets into the startled man from a .22 caliber revolver. Police theorized that the bandit, whose features were disguised by silk stocking, was surprised dur during ing a burglary attempt at the house. Paulus, wounded in the hand, head and chest, lay in critical condition for three days. He's recovering new. But police, who have conduct conducted ed an intensive investigation, have reported no luck in locat locating ing his assailant. Assault: It all started with a gallon jug of Tokay wine. That and a chal challenge. lenge. Allan Scott Reed charged that his bean-picking buddy, Timothy i ton too much to her suggestion Mike Morris, was a coward. No that they join the Army, guts, he said. Maybe they really don’t like Then Morris proved him wrong, guns. The ground at thr Sunshine | Authorities were searching the bean farm near Roberts was soaked with blood and Reed was hospitalized with a bullet wound in his jaw. The shooting took place last Monday night. Reed is recovering now at a Salem hospital. But sheriff's deputies still are searching for Morris. Robbery: Mrs. Mary Neitling was sittting n her hardware store at Stayton Tuesday night when two masked gunmen walked in. They flashed a gun at her, took some $50 from the till and then tied her up in a back room. Mrs. Neitling says the two were j quite polite. But they didn’t cot-1 alarm. Stayton area for them today. Robbery: Eugene W. Thompson was working late in his Monmouth service station the night of Aug August ust 10. It was getting past 11 p.m. when two men parked their in the back and then prised him as he came from the lube room into the office. They taped him up, dumped him in a supply closet, then took $125 from the till and cooly filled their auto’s tank with gas. Then thej left. Thompson worked his way free and a Polk County sheriff’s dep deputy uty who had noticed the car leave the station sounded an Leland Everett Little, 31, and Richard Edward Swafford, 20, both of Marysville, Calif., were stopped at a Junction City road roadblock. block. They are in jail at Dallas now, charged with armed rob robbery. bery. Robbery: It was nearly the end of the graveyard shift and the boys at Salem’s police station were hop hoping ing it would stay as quiet as it had been that morning of Aug. 13. Then the phone rang. Robert Armont, manager of Erickson’s supermarket on Port Portland land road, had been held at gun gunpoint point by two robbers who forced him to give them over $3,000 in cash and checks from the store safe. Police were on the scene mo ments after the robbers left. They report no arrests. No suspects as yet. Things have been lively—if you want to call it that. Maybe it’s the heat. Maybe it’s just society. And maybe it isn’t over yet. > regress in foldoutocrFile35b foldoutFile35b P. 2fSec. 2, Capital Journal, Thurs., Dec. 29, ’60 Crime, Violence Reaches Peak 2. Three murdered in month. Three Salem resi residents dents were murdered during a period of less than one month last summer, making 1960 probably the worst year in local history for violent crimes. James Bird Borden, 35-year-old ex-mental pa patient, tient, was convicted of manslaughter after he admit admitted ted the strangling July 9 of his sweetheart, Wilma Spratt, 38, after she threatened to leave him. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison. Ten days later a Salem woman, Helen Sarah Ped, 43, was shot to death by Mrs. Carrol Irene Hankel, 47, after a drive through the country north of Salem. Mrs. Hankel pleaded guilty to man manslaughter slaughter and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. The Aug. 5 stabbing death of Robert H. Patzer, 50, Salem, was charged to his wife, Jessie Lou, 35, following a fight in their home. She was ruled men mentally tally incompetent to stand trial for murder and is confined to Oregon State Hospital. Still unsolved is the near-fatal shooting of Wil William liam H. Paulus Sr., 60, a San Jose, Calif., cannery executive and former Salem resident. He was shot in the face as he opened a closet door in the 14th St. NE home of his son. Paulus was critically injured, but later recovered. in ’60owner More than * taxpayers stormed office in the coun 5 'bus transportation I school children is > 1 Generating Heat In the forefront I to reorganization 10 inn degrees) since big issue. 180 aeg water I its head r 1 Thanksgiving u y 0 r opposition storm. .y'/i •s a newly And remember 1% (Serve Our rounding SUte D^V P man Robert Slr ; * j t would seem,Gov. Mark H. anization may mended sier^\/ hotter news V s /J 8—(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Wed., Dec. 28, 6t ^ Election, Reappraisal Dominate , . . . + *★★★ + ****’ friend, Mrs. Helen Ped, ‘ By CONRAD PRANGE K 0 f Salem. Mit Staff Writer, The Statesman From counting votes to counting noses, from schools to crime, from tragedy to triumph and from death to taxes. Thus ran the spread of news interest in the Mid- Willamette Valley area during 1950. Many high-interest news stories were covered by Statesman reporters during the past 12 months. Following tradi tradition. tion. Statesman editors have com compiled piled a list of the 10 stories they believe have generally provided the biggest impact, affected the mest readers mil rmtililfifl ifftr m " p in r a i®eT^ cent. ^ results began to come ^ , es t Session ed her with the murder of her j ers? Hatfiek friend Mrs. Helen Ped, 47, also Valley ar of Salem. i treated to Mrs Ped's body, with two bullet ™y al g[> Uer wounds in the chest, was found in king and qu. roadside brush near Wheatland • co “ nt ^ of Ferry north of Salem. Authorities and Dallas said the shooting occurred over a mutual male friend of the two women. Knife Wound in Chest Tsalem didn’t win a \ ^ *“" 8h “Ks“. m “ i **“ session in history. . -A, On a warm Friday night, Aug. 5, Salem police rushed to a modest three-room apartment on North Commercial street. There they found Robert Patzer. 50. lying on his back on the floor, with a __ ■ nnrously '"voiced opposition^middle Y a^S?'.‘«Xen? y « n - croachmeni areas .homicides, k ^ (l J\ ,„ nns 3in uo | Ibeen the heat or the Limes or coincidence .but Jin one four-week penod in rrTJTilv and early August three persons'died violently at the hands ° E ln the S same period a P™j" l ^Jllpa 3l '1 5° "“ 0 'uuqm former Salem businessman nar 3c puB suap«0 • ^ Sescaped a "n*«*,5gU punO-QACin 11 | se apis innos aql u0 , ® I « jo uo.iiPPB J \«*r was aau/oT iCwtPW jMa 1 0 'aou uoisiMpqos a»** 8 sUlar lo^ap'^i am 4° *\sfcte •jeid 1001} S ^-J\ kmo; . 1 u u-u i pcl doors of Oregon State ■«5SS-=-" foldoutocrFile36a foldoutFile36a fiectionTReaPPraisP 1 Dominate Mid-Valley's News friend, Mrs. Helen Ped 47, also 1 in I960 By CONRAD PRANGE Staff Writer, The Statesman From counting votes to counting noses schools to crime from triumph and tragedy to from death to taxes. Thus I an the sp cad 01 lie,vs inteiest in the Miih Willamette Valiev a i e a during 1330 , Many high-inteiest news Stones iveie covered by Statesman iepoltcis du in- t past 12 months Following tiadi tion Statesman cditois lnve tom piled a list of the 10 stones tlpy believe have geneidh piovid-d the biggest lmoa:.l most readers and coit;.:ned the no; s rifi.aite t tne om Many leaders will disagree m poi 1 with the list. Tais is to be expected Not even the editors votes were unanimous on each event But the top 10 stories ol I960 is list'd rere prov.de a sigmftcan* tess sc.t on o' tin huri n pri-ssiens' po'it c l and social happenings of a l- sy v . ’ . • Ap&ts their (-ft view of at the official state dinner in their timer 3 .pA ?*>** "ft, recreation field the Salem wounds in^hc chest, Sis fonnd'S [kingand ‘fcifenSal'eml area added' ™; a g b ' [ ,Sg‘ah Mrs. Ped s body, with two bullet loy roadside brush neai Wheatland (count Fern north of Salem Authorities scid tii. hooting occurred over a mutual m ale fi lend of the two I women. leys, rr.ay the yea: lion dollar SIcolcticn new. rJSZZ*** eluding ’< downtown Salem Arntory-An^ Sal " Fairgrounds and Mj Labor and In*** 'ound I Building on t * shaping |« State Mall , Knife Wound in Chest eathered 1960's General Election storms Series of Stories Headin’ the list is ret a spot T TaVe U rath S o^ P ftm a lhey n a , re a 's e ecTe h tar7oi^'»»»• H °7" App "" 9 <,aC,n9 3t IjTamount of ini isst in the and state Treasurer Howard Belton. (Statesmanphoto). Ji v-ai and add up to one - i r iU Acln P crnmental Cooperation Many more adjustments This fust veil of the l9G0s was, , by t | ie assessor s office. ... -1--.:— , Na- ... i presidential clcc'ion year, t.oiisl state and local candidates The completed five yeai praisal piogiam was designed and issues were among the mo>t pioles t 0 rs were told to upda' 1 I nH J .no cod offtlll g of! 1 * J o. .lim discussed and cussed affau the \ear and hi ought out a recoid tuinout of vallev voters Helping to keep the political plots boiling in this aioa vcie several mid-v^' sv candidate.-, f'.i/ s Canby, veteran legislator, ran a tight race for election to the of office fice of state treasurer, to which he had been appointed in early January. propelty valuations and to eluni nate inequiUes Some property owners weie faced with ci ease othcis got a i eduction Assessed valuation figure: I: i:?:l ZS for CC i USUlg a I new state-recommended ratio Other mid-valley counties suf fered less from reappraisal pains In Polk County the assessor put off for this year changing the ratio figure which must be raised soon to meet the state law The entire valley was shocked •ere I away on a South American stale tour, acting goveinoi W iltci I Peaison commuted the life sen sentence tence of Oregon slate prison inmate Chester L. Fitzvater of Lebanon . The move was accom panied by ship criticicm fiom Slate Parole Beard and [ere j brought so™ meats from other quarters It I | e C P V 1 1 s S e r^"m r !»l.en four men were Utad Oct dopculmg ™ politlca, fa„K »g- ££ Big Stories of 1960 the' rugged contests involving in cumbent Robert V Thornton of Salem and Sen Carl Francis of Dayton for the office of attoiney general and Secretary of State Howell Appling Jr., of Salem, and Sen. Monroe Sweetland of Mil- waokie for Appling's office. Politics in Polk County blazed when Democrats charged incum incumbent bent County Judge Cal Bamhardt with helping a former county commissioner to gain an illegal tax exemption on a car purchase Bamhardt's supporters labeled the attack a political smear and the judge was re-elected One day last April thousands of Marion County property owners received mailed messages from "jthe county assessor's of- Ifice. The notes, which s ■ Field airpoit Two Salem businessmen lost their lives when their single-engine plane faltered on take-off and crashed in flames They were Ray Smith and George Also killed were pilot Wilbur E. Church of Port Portland land and Robert E. Wlcen of Mil Milwaukee, waukee, Wis One headline maker in which every man, woman child and bathroom was involved in I960 was the federal population and home census After considerable ] recruitment and training prelimi-1 wasnt the fust time 1. General Election. 2. Property Reao- praisal. 3. Plane Crash Kills 4. 4. Federal Census. 5. Fitzwater Freed. 6. Salem Bids for Award. 7. School Reorganiza Reorganization. tion. 8. Three Homicides in One Month. 9. B u s h's Pasture- School Hassle. 10. Paulus Shooting. On i warm Friday night \ug Salem police rushed to a modest, three-room apartment on North! Commeicial street There they' found Robert Patzer >0 lying on his back on the 'floor, with a 1 single knife wound in the middle' of his cht' He was dead Pcliec took a lagg • thin-bladed knife and Mrs. Patzc.i 35 into istody. She said she and h»i husband of a yeai had'been dunk ing. They had quarreled She de denied nied the knifing Mis. Hankel and Boiden were both indicted on first degree murder charges \ circuit court jury convicted Boiden of man mans'au; s'au ; liter Ha was sentenced to 15 years in prison and is now at the State Hospital At the request of the Marion Countv district at attorney torney Mrs. Hankel s charge was reduced to m inslaughter, to which she pleaded guilty She was sentenced to 10 years prison. Mrs. Patzei was indicted by the grand jury on a charge of man- r nlin _ji slaughter Following a court v m 1 hearing she was 5 ’ ent ,0 0rc & on 1 State Hospital without trial was presented The ICC, Marion County Judge P.ex Hart lev as chaiiman comp i cs the ; Surprised Burglar ncads of Marion and Polk coun Two davs aftei Mrs Patzed was tics Salem School District, State ! inf j ic tcd William H Paulus, of Oregon and Salem city gov j suipnsc d a youthful, tall burglar nmenls, working together implement some of the 81 recom recommendations mendations made by citizens study comtn tfees. Salem was selected as a finalist in the All America City award because of its focal standing in the massive cooperation program Award winners are to be an nounced in January The symbol of the little red schoolhouse became the storm center of many a red hot con controversy troversy in 1960 as the program to reorganize school dis districts tricts into larger admin itrative districts moved ahead in the valley 10 uoversy in iyp Oregon naries, the actual count got under I acting governor, including Peai- wav \piil 1 here and over the j son had exercised lus i ight of nation ' clemency The calls for public cooperation) Fitzwater was saving a life:™ m the clos o ' 6f hir i-son's saitnwlom land was shot in th| I Iface and chest Pt us longtime Salem cannery ficial but moie recently of Sj Jase, Calif, was in Salem foi visit. The crime, apparently witJ motive jolted the eommi Police ran down countless and que aoned many suf Is. But while the manhunt A ilod, Paulis, despite h i m^r' ital wounds, improved Within a morth he was bacl^t his office desk on a part time basis in San Jose The schools usually considered pations of peace, were respon responsible sible for yet another headline con- Itroversy in 1960. Early in September Salem public school district proposed Ithat a portion of Bush's Pasture be used as a playgiound for a proposed new junior high school to he built adjacent to the pa;k Opposition Heard This suggestion of joint school- public use of several acres of “central park” sible for y I l ,ri 9 b I Jit Districts Oppose Most opposition came fiom residents in districts with his historically torically dear sehoolhouses They hated to see their long-estabbshed school boards dissolved and multi multidistricts districts combined boards formed In some cases the opposition cen tered on school finance Those who saw the small school as edu educationally cationally superior to bigger uni unified fied schools also were vocal Marion County's plan to .re .reshuffle shuffle its 50 some districts into nine admimsti alive districts met i Salem s 100 aci with success in North Marion generated considerable opposition ca But it lost in loui Salem from the very beginning by census leadeis befo.e and dur- term on a second degree murdc. 1 . BUl 10 1 ,n A w j'T, \ Cry TT! 8 a in? the census were more than'r^.o ihf ^ j suburban districts and stmed up Bcfoie the school board with sent blood pressures soar- in * the census * ere more than'chaige involving the slaying a,su ( ,tls ana , ,, P L B , lhe , " 7 S P th?t Ze |—i matched by the cr.es lor I h,s t.fe AcUng (.os Parson! ™” 8h , ln ? al % D .^ Jing, said that private property had been reappraised and that the assessed valuation was raised, on some homes by | several hundred p r cent I Longest Session 0 by consideration by com community munity chambers of com commerce merce and officials of Fes when the population results began to come in. Under district supervisee Ron ?lore than 3.000 piopeity owner)aid Blundell the nearly 500 enu ta A payers stormed the . - office in the county cot raid he hafSdered th" I *“ dcla> v0 "" 8 at lea5t i ber bKaa “ »' lack of foi a yeai F it/watei went free Oct 23 after serving about seven years public support, the ] and gioups, including The Oie- ‘oveit many peisons Reoigam/ation has draw same inteiest both pio and con. I gon Statesman's editorial page in LlnD. PoIil and \ amhill coun- had vigoiously voiced opposition H Salem dian . win a population ties Po ik County after months to what they consideied ''en- d m 1960 the cit represent 0 f effort revamped its rtoigani 1 croachment” on the city s badly- 1 V* cmv.i ", nuuui IU-, lEUIcaill I troacilllli III an ’ ' aU ™ P la “. bKause »' P 1 elect needed reereaUonal «,«« county Board of 'Willamette vallev counties found | Salem had gamed 6 002 over it: C 11950 count of 43 140 and Marion o ; County had picked up 19 487 ova j the 101 401 of 10 years ago At IF 1 While Gov Mark Hatfield was \tiz ir * * other big storie P c ovei pioposcd snapping of suv-| There ation progiam was chos eldl high schools Hie program! in i960 Weatherwise the mid ; tn a finalist in the race for a i are All \mcrica City award e ‘finals’ in Phoenix, fai fiom complete .valley area last March dug In l inn County a battle is still of its heaviest (10 inches) s i aging ovti school plans in the storm in a decade, sweated Scio and Jtffcison aieas whore a 57-day summer drought, swdt- bus tianspoitation foi Catholic eied through its hottest Oct 16 1 school chiidicn is a big issue (80 degrees) since 1900. and kfptl its head above water in violent! Thanksgiving Day floods and Generating Heat In the foi efi ont of opposition | storm lo tom gam/at ion is a newly. And lcmcmbcr the hassle 5UI - foimcd SOS gioup (Serve Our | 0 undmg Stale Democratic Chai State) I man Robert Straub's change JI \t vcai s end it would seem ] Gov. Mark Hatfield had that school leoiganizatioi become an even hottei story in 1961 Salem may 1 mended sterilizing unwee news , ★ ★ Tragedy came to aiea in many ways in 1960 Part of it came in the foim of three f (homicides It may have Q (been the heat or the I O Itimes or coincidence; hut 1 tin one four-week period in late July and eaily August tluee pei-ons died violently at the hands of others In the same penod a piominent foimer Salem businessman nar narrowly rowly escaped a similar fate when he was shot by a young burglar.) 'the buiglar has never been ap apprehended prehended and of the surviving participants in the thiec killings two aie in (he Oiegon State Hos Hospital pital and one is in piuon i Big Trouble Eaily in the morning of July 9 huskv James Byid Borden, 35,, wandeied into the Marion County Sheriffs office and said he was ■big tiouble" He was Only „„ hour or so befoie he had stiangled the woman he intended to many, Mis Wilma Maxine Spialt 35 mother of five On directions fiom Boiden de deputies puties found the body of the Uiu m eaily f rk "“ I m bunhe. on Soulh Libc.ly non, on tins southern oitsllrts: « Solon, Borden, on pa,ole trom' lhe Orcuon scale Hospital. «aid a 1 l yp . ll ee...k,n ! . ; —yj“?; •lei. Acting Oev w i * c ° n ' rnu 'ation touched off one of I960', biggest confi ■ • alt6r Pearson commuted sentence. (Statesman photo) SC carol Irene llanW „ lalen, Based partially «- Sirs. Hankel told Ihem they chargStatesman, Salem, Ore., Tues., March 28, '61 Paulus Has Heart Attack SEASIDE — William H. Paulus, 60, former Salem cannery official suffered a mild heart attack and j , was taken to Seaside Hospital : here, relatives reported Monday. ; A hospital spokesman said early 1 Tuesday that Paulus was pro- f gressing satisfactory from the ,■ attack. He is expected to be hos- ; pitalized for an extended period, i The hospital said he had a "good ; day" Monday and was "resting comfortably” early Tuesday. Paulus, vice president of Dole ; Pineapple Co. at San Jose, Calif., 1 was shot and seriously wounded - last summer when he surprised - a burglar while visiting his son 2 at the Salem home. His wife died < | several months ago in Salem. Monday, March 27, 1961 A?* It / QC.1 trni. raulus Sr. Ill at Seaside SEASIDE (Special) _ William Paulus Sr., was resting in a Sea Seaside side hospital today after an ap apparently parently mild heart attack suf suffered fered Friday. Paulus, former cannery execu executive tive of Salem and now living in San Jose, Calif., was attending a Northwest Canners and Freezers Assn, meeting in Gearhart when he was stricken. He will probably stay in the hos hospital pital for “quite a while” rela-! jives reported. Paulus was shot I last summer by a burglar while 1 visiting his family in Salem. Paulus Convalescing At Home of His Son William H. Paulus, 60, former Salem resident, is convalescing at the home of a son here following a heart attack suffered 3% weeks ago while attending a meeting in Gearhart. Released from Seaside Hospital over the weekend, Paulus expects to remain at the William G. Paul- I us residence, 1025 14th St. NE, for ! , about 10 days before returning to [ San Jose. Calif where he is a vice president of the Dole Corpor- j ation. Salem, Oregon, Saturday, April 29, 1961 Dole Merger Plan Okayed merger of big bus business iness enterprises of Hawaii and Oregon, that would total assets of $117 million, is of special in interest terest in Salem, home of an affil affiliated iated concern. ! | At San J°se, Calif., today, offi officials cials of Dole Corp., reported that' stockholders, meeting in Hono Honolulu lulu Friday, voted 1,991,229 shares to 7,787 in favor of merger with. Castle & Cooke, Inc., of Hawaii. | Paulu£ Bros. Packing Co., Salem, is an affiliate of the Dole Corp. Those voting in favor were 93 : pei cent of all stockholders and those against only .4 of one per cent. Lawrence H. Hogg, Salem, pres president ident of Paulus Bros., said the merger would not affect organi organization zation or policy of the Paulus Bros, division. Also involved in the merger is Columbia River Packers Associa Association. tion. Castle & Cooke stockholders 1 will vote May 1 on the proposed 1 merger into that firm of both Dole and Columbia River Pack Packers. ers. Columbia River stockholders will vote May 8 at Astoria. ! If approved the mergers will be become come effective May 31. The Col Colombia ombia River firm will become Bumble Bee Foods, Inc., as a subsidiary of Castle & Cooke. Dole announced today that Wil- Jliam H. Paulus, Salem, is retir retiring ing from Dole Corp. at his own j request, after a career of 30 years J in the food industry with Dole, and Paulus Bros. Paulus, sever several al months ago, was shot and ser seriously iously wounded by a burglar while! visiting in Salem, and more re recently cently suffered a slight heart at attack. tack. ' Paulus will retire officially May 31, but will continue on special assignment for the Dole Market Marketing ing Division until Oct. 31, operat operating ing out of Salem. Paulus began his career in the canning industry in 1930 when he joined Paulus Bros., organized in 1926 by his brothers, Robert C. and George Paulus. Robert C. Paulus is a member of the Dole board of directors. William Paulus was vice presi president dent of Paulus Bros, when Dole acquired the company in 1955. He has been sales consultant to Dole since then. Paulus plans to live in Salem. Th® Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Sunday, April 30, 1961 W. H. Paulus to Retire, Live Here ★ ★★★★★ To Step Down William H. Paulus, former Salem cannery executive who will soon retire ns an official with Dole Corpo Corporation ration at San Jose, Calif. He plans to return here to live. William H. Paulus, prominent in the cannery industry more than 30 years, will retire May 31 as sales consultant to the Dole Corporation and will return to Salem to reside, it was announced Saturday. Paulus, former vice president of Paulus Bros, (now Dole) in Salem, has lived at San Jose, ! Calif., Dole headquarters, the last! several years. He is now at the home of his son, William G. I Paulus, 1131 14th St. NE, in Sa-! lem, recovering from a heart at-1 tack. He plans to retire to San [ Jose for a few weeks during May. His wife, also formerly prominent in Salem, died some months ago. For the first five months after he returns here, Paulus is to on special retirement assignment to [ the Dole marketing division. He has announced no plans after that. Robert C. Paulus, a brother, remains on the Dole board of di-| rectors. Robert and another I brother, George Paulus of Salem, formed Paulus Bros. Cannery in 1926. William H. Paulus joined the firm in 1930. Paulus had several close brushes with death 'even prior to his recent heart attack, from which he is reported recovering satisfactorily. He was the only survivor among a trio of Salem men whose boat was wrecked on the coast a decade ago, and last year was critically wounded by a prowler whom he surprised hid hiding ing in the Salem home now oc occupied cupied by his son.| Capital Journal, Mon., May 1, ’61, j William H. Paulas PUimU> M^JomejnSdemS^ William H. Paulus, sales con-1 make his home in Salem soon snltant to the Dole Corporation j Paulus, with his brothers Robert and a resident of San .lose, Calif,! C. and George Paulus, were own- f or the last several years, will ers of Paulus Biotheis Canneiy, prior to its sale to the Dole cor corporation. poration. Robert Paulus will con continue tinue as a member of the board of the Dole Corporation. William Paulus has been stay staying ing with his son and daughter-in- law. William G. Paulus, 1131 14th St. NE. Dole CORPORATION PRIVATE LABEL DIVISION p. o. BOX 245 SAN JOSE 8, CALIFORNIA April 2, 1961 Seaside Hospital Seaside, Oregon 20 miles South of Astoria and Bumble Bee Salmon TO OUR BROKERS AND BUYERS Gentlemen: Re: Recent information about W. H. Paulus Were I not feeling so miserable, I data for the book you have so many Its title would be "THE BED REPORT YET LUCKIEST MAN ALIVE"„ believe I would start compiling times suggested that I write, OF PROBABLY THE MOST UNLUCKY, You all know of the previous episodes of "This is My Life", Those were all accidents; this one I guess I brought on all by myself. Mrs. Paulus and I drove to Salem for the Christmas and New Year's holidays. I returned to San Jose on December 26 and had planned to drive her back immediately after the 1961 Annual Canners and Freezers Conference in Portland January 11-14. Upon my arrival in Portland that Sunday, I talked to her by phone and she indicated that she would pick me up at the Portland Hotel on the following Wednesday morning. Instead of that she ended up in a Salem hospital with a rapidly spreading cancer condition. She passed away two weeks after an operation, on January 29. After the funeral in Salem January 31, I returned to San Jose and tried to resume normal responsibilities. Outwardly I looked fine, inwardly I was building up a stress that only those who have ex experienced perienced it could understand; it cannot be described with words. The result of the inward emotional stress and loneliness inspired me to once again journey North and join my canning fraternity friends in the annual business session of the Northwest Canners and Freezers Association at Gearhart, Oregon March 24-25. On Friday morning, March 24, I arose feeling fine, twenty minutes later I was en route via ambulance to this small, but excellent hos hospital, pital, suffering the most severe pain I have ever experienced. The total elapsed time being less than one hour from shower to oxygen tent and sedation. That is the lucky part, another lucky break was that the doctor summoned to the hotel, Dr. Wells Bretherton, turned out to be an eminent heart specialist and a swell guy.The situation as of now is that for at least another week scar tissue must continue to form over the injured area. I am still technically in a serious condition and would probably catch h from Dr. Brether- ton if he knew I was sitting up writing this. If during the next week there is no recurrence of the original at attack, tack, I will then be required to stay quiet in bed for another two weeks while the heart readjusts itself to the patched up condition. That is the story as of now, Easter Day. Please do not telegraph flowers - donations, if you desire, to the National Heart Fund, Cancer Fund, or others, yes - I am not sleeping in the presidential suite and need the small space I have for personal effects. With warmest regards, I am Wm. H. PaulusCORPORATION PRIVATE LABEL DIVISION P. O. BOX 245 SAN JOSE 8. CALIFORNIA April 14, 1961 TO OUR BUYERS AND BROKERS Gentlemen: This month is the writer's thirtieth Anniversary in the Canning Business. It has been a most interesting experience, with never an idle moment and few vacations. In September, 1956, about one year after the acquisition by Dole of the Pa ulus Bros. Packing Company and the F. M. Ball Company it was deemed advisable to consolidate the sales and order sections of the company's three mainland plants into one office in San Jose. C. Reg Claytor was chosen as Sales Manager for all non-advertised mainland products. He has done an excellent job in this capacity. On November 1, 1956 the writer came to San Jose as a Consultant to assist in the co-ordinating, changes of marketing and integration of Salem-packed items with those of San Jose and Oakland. The education of others in con connection nection with the hundreds of individual Salem items has taken patience, careful planning and time. I am now pleased to report that full integration has been accomplished and very capable men have complete knowledge of the numerous items. With this knowledge, the diversified line, superb personal service and excellent shipping conveniences, it is a foregone conclusion that the progress of ex expanding panding packs and sales will continue as they have been doing since the consolidation. With my assignment having been successfully concluded I have decided that, nothwithstanding the sorrow attached to breaking off of hundreds of beautiful friendships both here and throughout the nation, I shall relinquish my po position sition and return to my home in Salem, Oregon at the close of the present fiscal year, May 31. Nothwithstanding the high esteem in which I hold the Dole Corporation, of which one of my brothers is a Director, my determination is decisive, not only on account of my work having been completed, but due to the fact that in addition to a permanent injury sustained at the hands of a burglar, I am now undergoing a period of extreme loneliness, occasioned by the sudden death of Mrs. Paulus during our last trip to Salem in January. foldoutocrFile40a foldoutFile40a Management Bulletin April 14, 1961 It is with real regret that we announce that our friend and associate, William H. Paulus, is retiring from active service after a career of 30 years with Dole and the Paulus Bros. Packing Company. Bill will retire officially on May 31, but will continue on special assignment for the Marketing Division until October 31, operating out of Salem. Bill began his career in the canning industry in 1930 when he joined the Paulus Bros. Packing Company in Salem, which had been organized only four years before by his brothers Robert and George. In the following years, Bill made a significant contribution to the marketing growth of Paulus Bros, and was a Vice President of the company when it was acquired by Dole in 1955. In 1956, the customer label sales functions of our Pacific Coast plants were consolidated at San Jose, and Bill moved to San Jose as a Consultant for the sales of Paulus Bros, products. In this capacity he performed invaluable service in helping to build additional business for the products of the Salem plant and in integrating the Salem sales functions with those of the other plants. There are few, if any, men in the canning industry more affectionately regarded than Bill. He is respected for his ability and loved for his delightful sense of humor. His letters to brokers, as an example, are famous both for their humor and their effectiveness in getting additional business. As you all know, Bill is presently recovering from a heart attack and will shortly be released from the hospital to return to his home in Salem, where he will continue to live. Bill ends his career at Dole with our thanks for his outstanding service, and our sincere wish for many years of good health and happiness in the future. C. Harry Bleich Vice President and Director of Marketing foldoutocrFile40b foldoutFile40b TO OUR BUYERS AND BROKERS April. 14, 1961 Page 2 So that I may, without complications, ease through the period of read readjustment justment ahead, the corporation, through its President, Mr. Cornuelle, has arranged that I continue on until October 31 on a special assignment from my home in Salem, under the direction of Dole's new and very capable Director of Marketing and long time acquaintance, C. Harry Bleich, This is certainly a nice gesture upon the part of the Company and its officers, and bespeaks the interest it shows in those who are connected with it. I wish to thank each of you for the excellent co-operation over the many years. It has been a pleasure knowing and working with you. Aloha and sincerely yours, Wm. H. Paulus^6—(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Tues., Sept. 12, Two Popular Couples Tell Betrothals, Plans Today 40 Years Ago Two popular couples are adding their names to the engagement list today. Mr. and Mrs. Tyler J. Brown are announcing the betrothal of their only daughter, Mary Kay, to John Daniel Callaghan. The wedding date has been set for Oct, 7. Miss Brown attended Salem public schools and the University of i Miami. She has been living in Los Angeles the past three years, cm- ‘ ployed by Western Airlines as a stewardess. Her fiance attended Ore Oregon gon State College and is a graduate of Willamette University Law School. He is presently practicing law in partnership with Paulus and Callaghan law firm. Nov. v>, mi George Paulus of Salem, for former mer deputy sheriff, was in the 'westbound train that was in the head-on collision on the O.W.R. & N railroad near Celilo, when 10 persons were killed. He was on his way home from The Dal- i les. Miss Brown telephoned from Lcs Angeles to tell her parents the news on Saturday, their 05th wedding anniversary. She is expected to arrive in Salem in about 10 days to make arrangements for die wed wedding. ding. — Geo. Paulus New Director Of Oceanic PAULUS—To Mr. and Mrs. Wil William liam G. Paulus, 1025 14th St. NE, a daughter, Wednesday, June 7, at Salem General Hospital. 16 (Sec. ID Statesman, Salem, Ore., Fri., June 9,1961 ! it's a girl ... for Mr. and Mrs. William G. Paulus (Norma Peterson) ... she arrived on Wednesday, June 7 at the Salem General Hospital and tipped the j scales at six pounds, seven ounces I. . . She has been named Eliia-1 beth Gray for her two great- j grandmothers . . . The baby's ! grandparents are William H. Pau- ! |us of Salem and Mrs. Paul Pe- I terson of Burns . . . and her ; great-grandmother is Mrs. Lola |M. Gray of Salem . . . Statesman's HOME panorama I Women... Music... Fashions... Features 6—(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Tues., May 16, 61 Around Town... By JERYME ENGLISH SOCIAL JOTTINGS .. . • ^ William G. Paulus will be the guest of honor at a coffee and shower on Saturday morning when Mrs. Alfred J. Laue and Mrs. Steven G. Sanders entertain . the affair will be held at the country home of Mrs. Laue s par parents, ents, Col. and Mrs. William C. Ryan, on Battle Creek Road . . . Thirty-five guests have been in invited vited to call at 11 o’clock . . . greeting guests at the door will be Gretchen and G .elen Laue, daughters of the hostess . . . Pre Presiding siding at the coffee urns will be Mrs. Richard Embick and Mrs. Evelyn Scott and assisting will be Mrs. Richard Sabin and Mrs. Fred Schatz Bute s' 1 * Cm 1 *3 Name Date of Birth- Time of Birth Weight Doctor Length- George Paulus of Salem is a new director of Oceanic Proper Properties, ties, Inc., a new company form formed ed to manage and develop lands owned by Castle & Cooke, Inc., 1 Honolulu, and its subsidiaries. ' Formation of the new company indirectly resulted from the merg merger er of Dole Corp. and Bumble Bee Seafoods, Inc. into Castle & ■Sooke. All other board members of Jceanic live in Honolulu. Paulus is a member of the firm >f Paulus Bros., Salem, subsidi subsidiary ary of Dole Corp. ■ Frederick Simpich Jr. of Hono,- dulu will resign as vice president of Castle & Cooke to become presi president dent of Oceanic. In addition to a recently ac- quired^option of 125,000 acres of land in Peru the company will evaluate opportunities for acquir acquiring ing other properties in the Paci Pacific fic area. Castle & Cooke and Dole own about 156,000 acres in Hawaii, including the entire island of La Lanai, nai, extensive acreage in Oahu, and substantial areas on the isl island and of Hawaii. Castle & Cooke also own the 6,500-acre Blackhawk Ranch in California. COURTESY CARNATION CO <\L1 A BEAUTIFULLY . . . arranged reception followed the wedding of Sharon Brown and Will Carleton Hawes Jr. a week ago . . .| The couple was married at ; a quiet cere mony at the home of the bride’s parents, the K e i t h Browns . . . and - later re receiving ceiving addi additional tional guests (mostly longtime family friends and a group of the young con contingent) tingent) in the Green Room of; the Marion Motor Hotel ... The room beautifully decorated with all white bouquets of stock, carna carnations tions and chrysanthemums . . . The newlyweds, members of the bridal party and the mothers of the duo receiving informally . . . later Sharon and Will chatting with their guests and enjoying wedding cake . . . A pretty color scheme ... for the bride and her attendants . . . Sharon choosing champagne chif chiffon fon ... her sister-in-law, Mrs. Frank A. Brown, in a deeper shade ... and the bride’s nieces, Pamela and Robin Brown, ador adorable able in camellia pink frocks with gloves and halo hats to match) and carrying little ruffled para parasols sols adorned with carnations, also the color of their dresses . . , Even the mothers’ dresses carry carrying ing out the same shades . . .Mrs. Brown in a two-toned pink chif chiffon fon and Mrs. Hawes, who came up from Walnut Creek, Calif, for the rites, choosing greige over pink . . . Unique . . . was the bride’s ta table ble .. . not one, but three round tables grouped together resem-j bling a three-leaf clover ... and in the center a white pedastal) topped with the bride's cake ... I each table covered with a floor) length white moire cloth and link-) ed together with garlands of smi- lax caught at intervals with clus clusters ters of roses and lily-of-the-valley . . . The bride’s father and best man, Robert Hawes of Park Ridge, 111., brother of the groom, proposing toasts to the newlyweds . . . Almost stealing the show and | topic of conversation at the re reception ception was the Browns’ Dober-; man, Amber, who even had a champagne ribbon adorned with jewels around her neck just for the wedding . . . she was a fa favorite vorite with the youngsters who continuously gave her wedding cake . . . Noteworthy ... the many fam family ily groups attending . . . The Asel Eoffs up from California for the I summer and joining his son and wife, the Joseph Eoffs . . . Mrs. Asel Eoff smart in a violet print silk sheath dress . . . The Brey- man Boises and their son and his wife, the Evan Boises . . . Dr. and Mrs. Wolcott E. Buren, son, Dick, and his fiancee, Inez Loewen, who will be married next Saturday in Calgary, Canada . . . The Wallace Carsons, Wallace Jr, end his spouse, Gloria . Among othsr* ... The John Johnsons coming in late as Joy had just arrived home from New York City and sporting a glam glamorous orous new hair style . . . William G. Paulus, the proud father of a little girl born the day before, visiting his wife, Norma, at the hospital before coming on to the reception ... A group of the young contingent chatting ... So Sonia nia Hamilton, Carolyn Parker, Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Martin, the James Knapps and Lynn Lockenour . . . iFriday January 26, 1962 A CAPITAL PRESS FASHION FIRST Best-Dressed Women in Oregon Capital City Named i lei]e CONVERSATION PIE pOy Marguerite W. VVrigtiiPL (Capital • '.OPomcn's ' The best-dressed woman in Salem is a lovely blonde with a star starshaped shaped house, a lawyer husband, a little girl named Darby, and a charmin’ Southern belle way about her. She is MRS. BRUCE WILLIAMS and she heads the Capital Press women's page list of the Mid-Willamette Valley's leading ladies of fashion. The list, unprecedented in this area, was compiled after interviews with many women who are closely associated with the clothing busi business ness or active in many social affairs. Genelta Williams is not only first on the list, by consensus of those polled, but she is typical of the many other best-dressed women of the Salem area in that they are an ornament to Oregon’s capital city in which the whole state can take pride. Texans brag about their long-legged Dallas damsels. San Francis Francisco’s co’s sophisticated sirens are as well-known as New York’s social lion lionesses. esses. A dozen Southern cities proclaim their Dixie belles. Oregonians, as remote as this state may be from the garment-trade capitals of the world and as small as their country seat of culture, bon ton, and enlightenment may be (with under 50,000 pop.), should re gard with serenity and confidence the beauty and good taste and fashion leadership of the gentlewomen of Salem and environs. The List After Mrs. Williams, about whose savoir faire, polish and finesse there seemed to be general agreement, the making of the list, arbi arbitrarily trarily limited as it must be, became extremently difficult. My sourc sources es of information were so analytical about fine details and elegant niceties that I very nearly gave up the whole project. Instead, I am presenting to you a representative, not a definitive, list of some of the best-dressed women in the Salem area. (Women in the fashion business were left out in fairness to the others.) It should come as no surprise to anyone who was watched the bet better-off ter-off beangrowers’ wives come to town that many of the women who live in the smaller communities surrounding the capital are just as well-dressed as the city dwellers. for instance, lovely ladies in fabulous cashmeres and tweeds are said to thrive in the Stayton area. MRS. WALTER SMITH is only one example of that town’s distinguished-looking women. Other representatives of the fashion-conscious and well-turned-out women in the Outback would be: MRS. ROY A. LIEUALLEN, wife of the new chancellor of the Oregon State System of Higher Education and long a luminous resident of Monmouth; MRS. RONALD JONES of Brooks, wife of a member of the State Board of Education: MRS. LOREN FLOMER of Woodburn, wife of a businessman; MRS. EDDlt: AHRENS of Turner, wife of a sheep farmer and state senator. The following 15 are typical of the quite numerous group of wives of Salem business and professional men who help make up the city’s I carriage trade. These women have a thoroughbred presentability, a flair, a distinction, a sense of propriety about their clothes, a virtu virtuosity, osity, if you will, in such matters as hats, gloves, shoes and not hav- '■ mg a slip showing. First Fifteen They are listed here in alphabetical order because, while it may take some reckless courage boldly to nominate*Salem's No. 1 Best- Dressed Woman, only a fool would want to take a chance on naming 1 the No. 2 or Second-Fiddle position. i Here, then, are the First Fifteen: MRS. REYNOLDS ALLEN, MRS. LOGAN C. BERRY MRS ES- ERICKSON R MRs' ° AV,D C - DUNIWAY - MRS. ARTHUR M. MRS CK rnmi 0 w R . S ' J ' FRY ' MRS ' R0BERT w - GORMSEN, MRS - L ’ GRA EE NHO R ST, MRS. HOLLIS W. HUNTINGTON, ^ Rs ; RONALD G. LYMAN, MRS. WILLIAM G. PAULUS MRS SCHLESINGPR P L° D N c MRS ’ RUSSELL PRATT, MRS. SIDNEY W. SCHLESINGER, MRS. RICHARD R. TAGGESELL. ♦ Ik 6 ” 1 a11 ' They are more than decorative. They are an inspi inspiration ration to the rest of us to get busy with the curry comb And they are BeingTbestH 1 ‘° ? e entire Mid-Willamette Valley community cost levfrai i 6 ? r men ean ’ but does not necessarly have to, hits sh^ , ? U i; San l d0llarS a year when you add U P the P r i« of $50 ew'f e i d n 1 han bagS ' $2 *°° SUitS and 5300 coats ’ not t0 mention a aid sllem topping trips to San Francisco as well as Portland Whore to Find Them in t T h 1 e ir mUnity ’ S fa est-Jressed women are one thing you won’t find e u » i„ W tS: 8 »°! the , Ph0ne b00k - you d0 fi » d them memmned irequenUjr in the society columns of the local dailies to that grou P of wome " who, not forced neverthelesfwoAhf? COnstantly tied down to housework, worthv d and wiUmgl, - as unpaid volunteers for many wortny causes and civic service projects y reaX'nZTanS Zl a]1 „ thei , r °“ e lounging “ d the house n . ov ® ls and munching chocolate bon bons! Thev exercise a -oggA ZiX^jsts^jsss s&srs time and ener gy t Cf a ^ ” h ° committed cha'irman^^even IHhumbl" ^ ° f direCt ° rS 0r as able philanthropies the “ mbl ? r P° sltlons - for all the fashion- vation Army Xted Funl vwr; “ stitutions ’ Bed Cross, Sal- ed tund ’ YWCA, and the various disease drives— In cancer, tuberculosis, or what have you. / Their support helps make possible the increasing variety and en enrichment richment of the area’s cultural climate. So you will find them attend attending ing the symphony concerts, here and in Portland; the San Francisco Opera, in Portland and in San Francisco, the Junior Symphony here, as well as their own children’s piano and ballet recitals. You will find them working hard on the Salem Art Associat.on’s fund fundraising raising projects at the Bush House to benefit young artists, and then sipping a glass of champagne held in a long-white-kid-gloved hand at the Christmas Reception. Or getting begrimed at that glorified rum rummage mage sale (called the Flea- Market) for the benefit of the Memorial Hospital, and getting beglamorized for Salem’s annual mid-winter formal fling (called Mardi Gras) for the benefit of the General Hospital. They Have Fun, Too And you will find them, also, vacationing in Palm Springs. San Francisco, Las Vegas, Hawaii, Mexico, Victoria, B.C., New York ’ Lon London, don, Paris, and parts East and West. This year, they’ll go to Seattle for the Century 21 Fair. Some of them go camping in the Oregon mountains with their kids or maintain a beach house on the coast. Either way, whatever thev do’ you know they know how to have fun. • ’ You see them them every year in their boxes at the State Fair You see them at the Marion Hotel or the Senator Hotel or Meier & f/ anks for luncheon. You see them listed among “those who were there — at teas, receptions for dignitaries, dinners for First Citizens, Definitely, you will find them playing bridge, as a bridge club member; dancing, as a dance club member. Maybe thev also swim at the Y, play golf at the Illahe Hills Country Club, or bowl In addition you will find them at their church’s bazaar or antioue show or other fund-raising and charitable doings. Of course thev sud port the PTA, their college sorority or their school’s Mother’s Club ? , y°, u Might find them shopping for a new Thunderbird or new - Cb r S for , skllll . g at Bachelor Butte or Hoodoo, or, right now for a little linen dress to wear South w ’ ette'vaUeT *** ar6 ’ y °“ they ’ U be 3 C1 ’ edit to the Mid-Will^i- r* - TNAnd lo, Abu Ben Paulus' name Led the reat On the prestige list Of the ten best-dressed. * * * * The tumult and shouting Heard outside the door Marked Paulus & Callaghan Swelled to a roar. It was widows and orphans Wrathful and fussed That they had perhaps mislaid their trust In the cream of the intellects, Skill and charm, Who considered the advent Of bodily harm. "Why me?" groaned Bill, "My dollars are few!" But crafty old Dan Knew just what to do. * * * * When Norma surveyed Her wardrobe with care, Sheshrieked with chagrin To find it laid bare. She’s stunning, of course, Such lovely blonde hair- - But speaks the literal truth, " I HAVE NOTHING TC WEAR !" Anon. circa 1962v HALL S. LUSK OREGON ^Cnricb £>ictU& Senate WASHINGTON. D C. £ /: O-eas^ <£-* <^eLj t _cJZJL' ^04, £ JUjL • • . . 7 U. ^ ^ ^ v / ^zZ6lj ^ ^ -^-a~J. >/ Clct>c>^ S?U] O-O^SL^ -AT , ~^-*ZJLs v_^C-/' < JC^C^ d-^r Jf, s s ^ V * fixl* ^ S'L‘-1--/3-/t>+ -^Lc-2+l,.-- J? ' 'T ^ 20—fSec. f») Statesman, Salem, Ora., Frf., Aug. 4, '61 Around Town... By JERYME ENGLISH A christening ... for two- months old Elizabeth Gray Paul- us, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William G. Paulus, will be held on Sunday afternoon at St. Vin cent dePaul Catholic Church at one o'clock ... the little girl's godparents will be Judge Hall Lusk and Mrs. Alfred J. Laue . . . A reception for members of the two families and the godparents will follow at the Paulus home on North 14th Street . . . grand grandparents parents who will be present for the event are the baby's paternal grandfather, William H. Paulus. and her great-grandmother, Mrs. Lola Gray . . .19^1 PanJLu* £A»°U*1 'Xoo^Al HAftch 2C J ,r iC'^ Housewife Top Law Student A Salem housewife, fitting her class schedule around her duties as a homemaker, has been ranked j tops among Willamette University second-year law students. But she has had help at home, for her husband is William G. Paulus, Salem attorney. They and their child live at 1025 14th St. NE. Mrs. Paulus, determined to win her law degree, attended classes part-time until this year, when she managed to fit in a full schedule. She also had been legal secretary to Supreme Court Chief Justice William M. McAllister. The top three second-year stu students dents automatically become mem members bers of the university law school’s successful moot court team. But Mrs. Paulus will graduate in June and won’t be a member, for the team’s competition will start next fall. Mrs. Paulus said she won’t practice law actively. Two other students were named to the moot court team. They are Ronald E. Bailey, 11R!) Spruce St. NE, and Brian Welch, 1133 Che- mcketa St. NE.BURNS TIMES-HERALD, BURNS OREGON, THURS., APRIL 12, 1962 Norma Paulus Is Top Law Student Goal to be Reached After 12 Year Study Mrs. Norma Paulus, the form former er Norma Petersen of Burns, was notified recently that she ranked first in the annual com competition petition among second-year stu students dents at Willamette University's College of Law. Mrs. Paulus, a Salem house housewife wife and mother of a baby girl, was a part-time student at the university for five years, and at the same time served as a legal secretary for Ore Oregon’s gon’s Chief Justice office. This is the first year that Norma has been able to devote full fulltime time to her legal studies. By ranking first she would have been an automatic mem member ber of this year’s Moot Court team, which has distinguished itself nationally in past years. However, she will graduate in June, prior to the team’s first competition in November, and won’t be able to serve as a member of the team. In selecting the winner each year, the second year students have to write a brief just as they would if they had a case before the Oregon Supreme Court, and the students receive a grade on this brief. Also each student must argue and present his case before three judges, just like one would if he were an attorney presenting a case before the Supreme Court. Mrs. Paulus went on to say that by a process of elimination, thru arguments before judges, four finalists are picked and Regional and National com competition. petition. The National com competition petition is held each year in those four argue before three official judges which select two to represent Willamette in the New York. It is unusual to designate which of the two winners is Mother Top , Law Student •» uuiuo, a ociicin i housewife and mother of one child, was ranked first in the annual competition among sec- ond-year students of Willamette 1 University’s College of Law. Mrs. Paulus was a part-time student at the university for five j years, and at the same time served as a legal secretary for Oregon’s Chief Justice office. This year was the first time ij Mrs. Paulus was able to devote | “full-time" to her legal studies. By ranking first she would j have been an automatic mem member ber of this year’s Moot Court team, which has distinguished it itself self nationally in past years. However, she will graduate in June, prior to the team’s first) competition in November, and Won’t serve as a member. The next ranking members of the class, Ronald E. Bailey and Brian Welch will be two mem members bers of the team and a third will be appointed by Professor Alister McAlister within two weeks. Mrs. Paulus resides at 1025 14th St. NE. Her husband, Wil William liam G. Paulus is a Salem attor attorney. ney. She said she wouldn't ac actively tively practice law. Bailey, married with two chil children, dren, resides at 1169 Spruce St. NE. He is the son of Tillamook’s Mayor and Mrs. Thomas Bailey. Welch, married, resides at 1133 Chemeketa St. NE. He completed his undergraduate work in Cali California. fornia. The moot court team’s first competition, the regional finals, is at Seattle, Wash. Nov. 2 and 3. The national finals are in New York. ■ chosen as number on&y-bul .in. m’ls particular instance the judges felt Mrs. Paulus was so outstanding in presenting her case that it was only fair she be given number 1 rank. Norma is the daughter of Mrs. Ella Petersen of Bums and the late Paul Petersen, who' passed away several years ago. After graduating from the Bums Union high school at the age of 18 she was hired as secretary by the local Harney County District Attorney who' also had his own private law practice, enabling Mrs. Paulus to build a background on all phases of law, which started her on her 12 year goal. She has held several jobs in the field of law, but during the time she was secretary for Oregon’s chief justice, Earl C. Latourette, he encouraged her to attend Willamette’s law school. With no college ex experience perience she was admitted to j the school as a “special stu student”, dent”, one whom officials deem deemed ed qualified for entrance be because cause of experience and other factors. | She studied on a part-time basis for five years. Her hus husband, band, who was also a law stu student dent at this time, came into the picture and they were mar- 1 ried in 1958. Little Lizabeth; Gray came along last June, just shortly after final exam time at the college. Mrs. Paulus plans to try and qualify for the State Bar after graduation and hopes to do research afterwards. A career in law is out because she plans to devote her at attentions tentions on her family, but considers her studies as a very fine “insurance policy”, and does not regret not continuing in a law career. Statesman, Safem, Ore., Mon., Mar. 26, '62P. 8, Sec. 1, Capital Journal, Tues., Mar. 27, (12 Housewife Nears Law Goal Or By RAY INOUYE Capital Journal Writer Norma Paulus stands scant steps away from a goal she forged 12 years ago. She can reach it this June, when she is scheduled to receive her degree from the Willamette University College of Law. It’s been a long time coming, though, and a pair of detours— in the form of marriage and motherhood — have crossed hei route. She's got new goals now. It was in 19.10 that Mrs. Paulus, now the wife of William G. Paulus. Salem attorney first set her sights toward the law pro profession fession As an 18-year-old fresh out of Burns High School. Mrs. Paulus was hired as secretary by the Harney County district attorney. In the sagebrush section of Eastern Oregon, the district at attorney torney augments his income with a private practice. There have been less humble beginnings for law-school graduates, but Mrs. Paulus considers herself lucky. BACKGROUND BROADENS “I was able to build a back background ground on all phases of law’, she recounts. Since then, she has gravitated to other jobs in the field, includ including ing one as legal secretary for Oregon's chief justice. She had served in this position for a year, when Earl C. La-i tourette, then the chief justice,: encouraged her ambitions to at- j tend Willamette's law school. Mrs. Paulus, who had no col college lege experience, was admitted to the school as a "special student,” one whom officials deemed qual-1 ified for entrance because of ex experience perience and other factors. She studied on a part-time: basis for five years. Her hus husband, band, who was also a law stu - dent, popped into the scene about this time. They were married in 1958. ' = W • SpW* (i ; - e - COUNSELOR ALSO COOKS — Mrs. Norma Paulson combines duties as a Willamette University College of Law student and an attractive mother of one, as shown in her choice of reading matter. Here, she puts aside a collec tion of state statutes to plan the eve evening’s ning’s dinner. Mrs. Paulus, named re recently cently as the law college’s top second- year student, is the wife of William G. Paulus, Salem attorney. (Capital Jour Journal nal Photo) This past year marked her first! full-time stint as a law-school student. FIVE YEARS PASS “It was interesting,” Mrs.! Paulus said, "and a Little diffi- j cult. It’s been five years since I j ran through some of the basics.” i •»8oi8Aus uo HieiajsoH »M“°lft Ue INfcr) Bst •6581-8 wyip- qomqo 58Z ‘aouemsui je -sanb Aue axeq noA }i (fed -ard 3uiA«d 10} a3aeqte uajaad noA Jt sqjuoui % osopua Aeui n0 A • 310 noA isiese ol qaH 0 ®'* u0 ‘axiaow U.noA. am ^ •«ai T® l au,!d V* am jajua ‘pawsap 8 ® 3 ®' ■•uoeuiot •Jnltl jo 'Aiiuioj in4| 18 in Salem Pass Bar Eiehteen Salem residents - 161 pared with Willamette's 75 per men and two women-were among (cent and Northwestern College of the 103 persons who wiU become Law s 60 per cent. Of attorneys as a result of Oregon gon college graduates, 55.6 per State Bar examinations held ear- cent were approved, lier this summer. In all 66.7 per cent of those tak- Results of the examinations were announced today by the Ore- | gon Supreme Court. ! In addition to the students who j passed the test, two attorneys I who are members of the bar in (other states passed their Oregon; j examinations. 1 Of the Willamette University College of Law graduates exactly! three-quarters passed the exam- 1 ination. Willamette fell behind the Uni University versity of Oregon School of Law in the percentage of successful examinations. Oregon had an 84.6 per cent rate of passage com-j -««»>«> »*»«— ’““'VS to become attorneys. aW Pau j Reiling, Gervais; Kiel Salem residents who successful- ^ Thomas Kropp. Albany, <> r ly passed include: Wallace Pres- Michae l Foster McClain. Corvaiu ton Carson Jr., Charles Henry I Shaffer Howe, David Charles Lan Landis, dis, William Middleton McAllister, Conrad Lee Moore, Emil Otto Muhs Jr., James Frederick Nevin, | '«1 Jerome Lee Noble, Thomas Dai 'old O’Dell, Norma Jean Paulus ,Taisto Aatos Pesola, Evelyn N 1 Scott, John William Sallmon, Her- j man Wendell Winter, James Ed Edward ward Yacos, Donald Dexter Yo- com and Charles Edward Leierer.. uniavn aiiiw foldoutocrFile47a foldoutFile47a P. 8, Sec. 1, Capital Journal, Tues., Mar. 27, '62 f Housewife Nears Law Goal By RAY INOUYE Capital Journal Writer i Norma Paulus stands scant, steps away from a goal she forged 12 years ago. She can reach it this June, when she is | scheduled to receivo her degree: from the Willamette University j College of Law. It’s been a long time coming, though, and a pair of detours— in the form of marriage and motherhood — have crossed her route. She's got new goals now. It was in 1950 that Mrs. Paulus, now the wife of William G. Paulus, Salem attorney first set her sights toward the law pro profession. fession. As an 18-ycar-old fresh out of Burns High School. Mrs. Paulus was hired as secretary by the Harney County district attorney. I In the sagebrush section of Eastern Oregon, the district at attorney torney augments his income with a private practice. There have been less humble beginnings for law-school graduates, but Mrs. j Paulus considers herself lucky. BACKGROUND BROADENS “I was able to build a back background ground on ail phases of law,” she recounts. Since then, she has gravitated to other jobs in the field, includ including ing one as legal secretary for Oregon’s chief justice. She had served in this position for a year, when Earl C. La- tourette, then the chief justice, encouraged her ambitions to at attend tend Willamette's law school. Mrs. Paulus, who had no col college lege experience, was admitted to the school as a ‘‘special student,” one whom officials deemed qual qualified ified for entrance because of ex experience perience and other factors. She studied on a part-time basis for five years. Her hus husband, band, who was also a law stu student, dent, popped into the scene about this time. They were married in 1958. This past year marked her first full-time stint as a law-school student. FIVE YEARS PASS “It was interesting,” Mrs. Paulus said, “and a little diffi difficult. cult. It’s been five years since I i ran through some of the basics.” I She turned in a highly respec- j table performance, regardless. This week, Mrs. Paulus was ranked first in annual competi competition tion among second-year students at~ "the - •college no— mean task j when you consider she’s been doubling as a mother for the past nine months. Lizabeth Gray (the second title the surname of a grandmother) joined the Paulus household last June. She arrived just after ex examination amination time at the college, and her pending arrival visited consternation on at least one member of the college’s first-year student force. STUDENT WORRIED “I was heading toward the exams,” Mrs. Paulus said. “With the baby due at any time. “One of the students came up to me and asked ‘where are you taking the exams?’ “L told him where, and asked why? “I’ve got enough on my mind without wondering when the baby’s coming. If I was in the same room with you, I’d flunk COUNSELOR ALSO COOKS — Mrs. Norma Paulson combines duties as a Willamette University College of Law student and an attractive mother of one, as shown in her choice of reading matter. Here, she puts aside a collec tion of state statutes to plan the eve evening’s ning’s dinner. Mrs. Paulus, named re recently cently as the law college’s top second- year student, is the wife of William G. Paulus, Salem attorney. (Capital Jour Journal nal Photo) alem, Oregon, Monday, Sepf. 10, 1962 18 in Salem P Eighteen Salem residents — 16 men and two women—were among the 103 persons who will become attorneys as a result of Oregon State Bar examinations held ear earlier lier this summer. Results of the examinations were announced today by the Ore- I gon Supreme Court. ! In addition to the students who passed the test, two attorneys who are members of the bar in other states passed their Oregon examinations. Of the Willamette University College of Law graduates exactly three-quarters passed the exam examination. ination. Willamette fell behind the Uni University versity of Oregon School of Law in the percentage of successful examinations. Oregon had an 84.6 per cent rate of passage com pared with Willamette s 75 per cent and Northwestern College of Law’s 60 per cent. Of out-of-Ore- gon college graduates, 55.6 per cent were approved. In all 66.7 per cent of those tak ing the test were found to become attorneys. Salem residents who : ly passed include: Wal ton Carson Jr., Chari Shaffer Howe, David Cl dis, William Middleton : Conrad Lee Moore, I Muhs Jr., James Frede: Jerome Lee Noble, Th old O’Dell, Norma Je iTaisto Aatos Pesola, ! Scott, John William Sa! | man Wendell Winter, ward Yacos, Donald com and Charles Edwt for sure.’ ” Things turned out fine, though, Mrs. Paulus will attest. Both the students and Lizabeth are in fine fettle. It’s Lizabeth, in fact, who has helped take the thunder away from Mrs. Paulus’ early goal. “I plan to try and qualify for the State Bar after graduation,” she said. “And I hope to be able to find time for research and other things afterward. “My family’s my main con concern, cern, though. They deserve a lot of attention. A career in law is out.” Mrs. Paulus, who considers her studies as an “insurance policy” of sorts, hasn’t many regrets about not further pursuing her career. Time helped alter her 12-year goal. A husband-daughter combi combination nation is making the change stick.Tuesday, September 11, 1962 Budding Lady Lawyen i buds were appropriate for at least two of Hi iliful passage of the state bar examination wa It) Mrs. William G. (Norma Jean) Paulus, and iitesman Photo) (Story on Page 5) Hhtt. Jtl. *11 r Alluiti't'. (£I|irf Jiuatirr (®reg- e>. , .T f (f~~" o "»•" LI aim Agai Independer Judge Afih The Oregon Supreme Court affii a $7,500 false arrest judgment aga municipal judge in Independence. George S. Utley who won the Judge Hardy on grounds that the arrested improperly for failure to ] lessment. Circuit Judge E. H. Howell, who In Polk County, found that Judge H without jurisdiction, and the Supreme cuun agreed with him. The high court, in a decision by Justice A. T. Goodwin, said a municipal judge is immune from personal liability only when performing his author authorized ized judicial business. It said that because the judge issued the arrest warrant without having a sworn complaint, he had no jurisdiction and therefore no immunity. Justice Arno Denecke, saying that immunity ahould be granted when a judge acts in good faith, even though he was mistaken. ^lillk c. Top-ranking Willamette University law students in second-year moot court com competition petition go over procedures in the school library. They are (left to right) Ronald E. Bailey, third place; Brian Welch, second place, and Mrs. Norma Paulus, first place, (Statesman Photo) foldoutocrFile48a foldoutFile48a i Tuesday, September 11, 1962 PRICE 5e No. 168 Budding Lady Lawyers Pass Exams Rose buds were appropriate for at least two of the 104 budding lawyers whose suc successful cessful passage of the state bar examination was announced Monday. They are (left) Mrs. William G. (Norma Jean) Paulus, and Mrs. Evelyn Scott, both of Salem. (Statesman Photo) (Story on Page 5) foldoutocrFile48b foldoutFile48b Team Studies Procedures Top-ranking Willamette University law students in second-year moot court com competition petition go over procedures in the school library. They are (left to right) Ronald E. Bailey, third place; Brian Welch, second place, and Mrs. Norma Paulus, first place, (Statesman Photo) r 'Salem, Oregon Wednesday, January 8, 1964 K- Li p 05-62 m .M 1 £ : ssuj xoj m soajo^ 1( -punojB ||B aiueg^t! pa[|B3 niBjgaM iv ipBoo joqd i8K' ?b dn PUB J0£- JB on ‘X|)sapoiu joqs siusaj aqx 'qasa 9t qjiA\ dfl pai |[9M0d XDUIO PUB J3U)(|Bd sjujod n s.uosuqop 01 asop auxB.i auo ou jnq ‘sajnSq aiqnop ui uauj aajqj jnd uiBaj qosg joj Aipnjuag jo qj[eaMuoimnog aq) qjiM Aepuojy jaejjuoa b pauSis Aa|U|j pauiuuajap aqx sja -iJMo qnp jaqjo uiojj uoijisoddo Puoaqs ajidsap ‘ajaq asiqouBjj s,y aqj Suiaoiu joj ajsdajd 0] Aspoj jajuag uoquaAUOQ ui doqs dn jas Aajuig 0 sapsq;} jauMo sai)3|qjv Ajq sbsubaj - dan) ‘aniAsmcn SdOJ. n S.NOSNHOf uia\ aqj joj jaqaod siq paqaid pus ubui siq paspid 'sspna aqj pasea aqqMUBam ‘jupd jeqj oj jpq jsb[ aqj ui ssapjoas 'uojsog uoissas ■sod pajjo|d pus amij pa|| B a ‘pa -punoqaj uo8ajo ■ jjaj spuoaas oe qj|A\ joqs aqj M3[q jnq ‘sSuiuuap ll!H japuajap Siqqnf Aq uiu aqj iuojj jaaj qj j|asiuiq paajj iL Pase 11 * ■ ■ ■ -uqop unf pue (gg) ueujBa unp ‘(0S> liaA\oj Aouiq are sraXB[d jaqjo 'Xeid jo sjuaurour jbuij aqj ui ‘8S-J9 ‘sjpna jsbi pjnc-sog j.ustadl k——* I wouldn't like to have it happen every day.” A help helpful ful city policeman called a beekeeper who cleaned most of the bees from the car. A bug-bomb took care of the rest. (Capital Journal Photo) INVADERS—Salem attorney William Paulus ran into a new parking hazard Thursday. He parked downtown and his car filled with a swarm of honey bees. ‘‘It was really fascinating,” Paulus said, "but foldoutocrFile49a foldoutFile49a Salem, Oregon Wednesday, January 8, 1964 Page 11 A FOOTBALL FIELD in miniature helps tell the story of the progress of a $150,000 fund-raising cam campaign paign being conducted by the Salem General Hospi Hospital. tal. Among driver leaders are, from left, Jim John son, general gifts chairman; Mrs. Richard Barger, co-chairman of a campaign dinner held last night, and William Paulus, co-chairman of the fund drive with Richard Rawlinson. (Capital Journal Photo) Fete Opens Hospital Drive About 90 volunteers attended i a dinner Tuesday night to open Salem General Hospital’s $150,- 000 fund-raising campaign. The volunteers will canvass about 800 prospects in the drive, which ends Jan. 28. A report meeting is scheduled for Jan. 14. The hospital has already raised $50,000 from doctors and other sources. James L. Johnson, general gifts chairman, spoke at the dinner held in the hospital audi torium. Municipal Judge Doug Douglas las Hay, the scheduled speaker, was unable to attend because of illness in his family. The money will go toward re retiring tiring some of the debt incur incurred red in construction and remod remodeling eling at the hospital. The board has set Jan. 12, from 2 to 4 p.m., for an open house. Tours of the newly com completed pleted facilities and remodeled floors will be conducted. The open house is sponsored by the Board of Control and the hos hospital pital auxiliary.900—Automotive Display 900 Automotive Display la Convert. Red V8, automatic 9 automatic, clean will accept best or hardtop, ex- n. 581-3293. after ments of $23.00 8 Pontiac h'top. all power. 55 Buick Super, >2-5349. $79.00 LODER OLDS * cyl. std. trans ill bury Me Minn ask for Orvie Lyons. $395. me wgn il sharp. LIAMS CARS N. 362-0531 r Bel Air 4 dr. overdrive, $1595 Chevrolet. Stay- 8. Have Cars With a Future, Not a Past! BUY 0NE„F While they last SKYLINE FORD 2510 Commercial SE Division 5 nan- -tlv» Dltp tary of Salem Agency. Annual Jaycee Week The banquet Friday night will highlight the annual Junior Chamber of Commerce Week. Speaker will be Dr. Arthur S. Flemming, president of Univer- Bity of Oregon. Tickets for the public dinner can be purchased at the Salem Chamber of Commerce office. AYRES came to Salem in 1962 as finance director and as assistant sistant city manager. He appointed city manager .— January by the city council. He received his masters degree in public administration from Syra Syracuse cuse University. He is director in United Good Neighbors, a member of t w o Salem Area Chamber of Com Commerce merce committees, an officer in the local chapter of the Amer American ican Society of Public Adminis Administrators, trators, member of International City Managers Association, ex executive ecutive officer of an Air Force reserve unit, a licensed pilot, and active in Rotary and h i s church. He and his wife live at 540 Clarmount St. NW. REV. JOHN O. NAJARUPE V8 RD TRANS- e d con- r- u CUH- CROSSLER, of 3698 ShO^io h.»ter SE, received his masters — Graduate School of 1 and joined the Capital!—$'95 news staff in 1959 afte the Statesman-Joumalf—$195 nial edition in 1958. He Is an elder in Fi—$495 byterian Church, OreglYS man of Associated PrtfES CHECJ Our Location You will find us at 29( Market Street N. f with Salem's fine; used cars. '#« Riviera, 10,100 mile* 1391 *64 E I • o t r a h’top idn oowar St air condittonlni $37i 63 Buick Electra 4-di h top. all power St air cor dltlonlng ... |32f ’83 Wildcat epa „ $279 ’63 Wildcat Custom, 4 di h top, 26.00 miles $280 ’€4 Buick Special Del adn .... ..... $249 64 Chav. V I. Bel Air * dn - $229 ’64 Chev. Bel Air t-dr , V- $219! *62 Buick Skylark coupe Wl $199< ’82 Buick Special con vertible $209! ’62 Galaxle h'top epe $169! 62 Chev. Bel Air V-8 $169! '62 Volkswagen $119* 59 Electra h'top cpe. $llK ‘60 Chev. Bel Air V-8 sdn oower steering, and auto r, . 11095 60 Falcon sdn. (10.80C miles) $895 37 Buick Spl. H’top. •dn. $ 595 *58 Chev. V-8, 2 dr., «Ut0 $ 893 58 Rambler sdn. .. $ 495 '58 EdaeJ wgn $ 495 *57 Dodge h-top sdn. $ 295 Five r First Page 4, Sec. Five men have been nated for the Salem Junii Chamber of Commerce’s Dist guished Service Award — prize for the city’s Junior Fi Citizen of 1964. The winner will be announ. at the annual awards banq^ Friday at 8 p.m. in Chuck's Steak House. The nominees are City Man Manager ager Douglas Ayres, 34; Dar Darrell rell Crossler, 31, Judson Junior High School teacher; William Mainwaring, 30, editor and pub publisher lisher of the Capital Journal; the Rev. John O. Najarian, 31, pastor of Westminster United Presbyterian Church; and at attorney torney William G. Paulus, 33. Salem Urban Renewal Agency executive secretary. UNDER 35 Hen Mu Nev Rec The award honors the city’s outstanding citizen under 35 years of age. The speaker will be Univer University sity of Oregon President Ar Arthur thur S. Flemming. Ayres, 540 Clarmont St. NW, became city manager a year ago after having served two years as city finance director. He is a director of the United Good Neighbors and a member of two Salem Area Chamber of Commerce committees and the Salem Rotary Club. He is mar married. ried. This V A report by Elliott for 181 Oregon cont n a merce area ITTTpT^TneriV'Wfn-' mittee, a member of other chamber committees and chair chairman man of the Mayor’s Civic Cen Center ter Committee. He is a direc director tor of the United Good Neigh Neighbors bors and a member of the Cas Cascade cade Area Council of Boy Scouts executive board. He also is an elder in the First Presbyterian Church and a director of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association. He and his wife have one child Najarian, 3735 Liberty Road S., has been pastor of his church since 1959. He is president of the Salem Area Council of Churches and vice-moderator of the Oregon Synod of the Unit United ed Presbyterian Church. He has been a member of the Mayor’s Human Relations Commission, the YMCA Marriage Clinic, Ore gon Council of Churches exec executive utive board and the Cascade Area Council of Boy Scouts ex executive ecutive board. He and his wife have three children. EX-REPORTER Crossler, 3698 Short St. SE, teaches mathematics and sci science, ence, is a school counselor and is chairman of the committee for junior high science curric curriculum. ulum. He is a leader in the Mor- ningside Methodist Church and is past president of the South LEE LAST WINNER Paulus, 1025 14th St. NE, has been the executive of the UR Agency for two years. He is co-chairman of Salem General Hospital’s $150,000 building campaign, director of the Sal Salvation vation Army and a member of the YMCA Marriage Clinic, Pentacle Theatre and the Salem Art Association. He and his wife have two children. Paulus Heads lllahe Club William G. Paulus, Salem at attorney, torney, is new president of Illa- he Hills Country Club, succeed- ing Otto R. Skopil Jr. John Sell was elected vice president, Cecil Johnson, sec secretary, retary, and Ronald Kraus, treasurer. Club manager is William A. Hoffman. New members of the board of directors are Johnson, Rob Robert ert Rogers and Glenn Stevens. foldoutocrFile50a foldoutFile50a He is an elder in First Pres byterian Church, Oregon chair man of Associated Press, direc 20—(Sec. II) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Wed., Jan. 20, '65 Five Nominated for luuti F' rs t Citizen Award Five Salem men have been nominated as Salem Junior First Citizen for 1964. | The winner of the annual Jun Junior ior Chamber of Commerce award for outstanding commu community nity service will be announced Friday at the Jaycee’s Distin Distinguished guished Service Award Banquet at 8 p.m. at Chuck's Steak House. ! The five nominees are Doug Douglas las Ayres, 34, Salem city man manager; ager; Darrell Crossler, 31, teacher at Judson Junior High School; William Mainwaring, 30, editor and publisher of the Cap Capital ital Journal; Rev. John 0. Na- jarian, 31, pastor of Westmin Westminster ster United Presbyterian Church; and William G. Paulus, 33, attorney and executive secre secretary tary of Salem Urban Renewal Agency. - Annual Jaycee Week The banquet Friday night will highlight the annual Junior Chamber of Commerce Week. Speaker will be Dr. Arthur S. Flemming, president of Univer University sity of Oregon. Tickets for the public dinner can be purchased at the Salem Chamber of Commerce office. AYRES came to Salem in 1962 as finance director and as assistant sistant city manager. He was appointed city manager last January by the city council. He received his masters degree in public administration from Syra Syracuse cuse University. He is director in United Good Neighbors, a member of t w o Salem Area Chamber of Com Commerce merce committees, an officer in the local chapter of the Amer American ican Society of Public Adminis Administrators, trators, member of International City Managers Association, ex executive ecutive officer of an Air Force reserve unit, a licensed pilot, and active in Rotary and his church. . He and his wife live at 540 Clarmouht St NW. REV. JOHN O. NAJARIAN CROSSLER, of 3698 Short St. SG, received his masters degree in education from Willamette University, taught in an Army dependents school in Germany, and is a mathematics and sci science ence teacher at Judson Junior High School. He is school coun counselor, selor, chairman of the Salem committee for junior high school science curriculum, counselor for Methodist Youth Fellowship at Momingside Methodist Church, active in the Morning- side Men’s Club and past presi president dent of South Salem Kiwanis Club; ' H8 . . ' . ; flfi He is married and has three children. MAINWARING, of 855 Rum- sey Rd. NW, has been editor and publisher of the Capital Journal since 1962. He graduated from University of Oregon, at attended tended Stanford University Graduate School of Business, and joined the Capital Journal news staff In 1959 after editing the Statesman-Journal Centen Centennial nial edition in 1958. ecutive board of Cascade Area Boy Scout Souncil, vice modera moderator tor of the Synod of Oregon for United Presbyterian Church in 1963-64, and member of citizen committees for fluoridation and sewers. He is married and has three children. PAULUS, of 1025 14th St. NE, graduated from University of Oregon and Willamette Univer sity College of Law, has served el two years as executive secreL tary of the Salem Urban Re-'* newal Agency, is a member of the board of directors of Salem! General Hospital and co : chair| man of its $150,000 building cam paign, director of Salvatioi) Army, member of YMCA Mar riage Clinic, Pentacle Theater Salem Art Association a n < American Trial Lawyers AssoH ciation. HE DARRELL CROSSLER WILLIAM MAINWARING WILLIAM PAULUS DOUGLAS AYRES tor of Oregon Newspaper Pub Publishers lishers Association, chairmalfif the area improvement comp tee of Chamber of Commerce and member of several olker committees, and chairman of the. mayor’s civic center am- mittee. I He is married and has foe child. ■ THE REV. MR. NAJARUN, 3735 Liberty Rd. S, has been pastor of Westminster Presby-| terian Church since 1959. He re received ceived a degree in journalism from Fresno State College and is bachelor of divinity from San Francisco Theological Sem Seminary. inary. He is president of Salem Area Council of Churches, mem member ber of the YMCA Marriage Clinic, mayor’s Human Rights Commission, executive board of Oregon Council of Churches, ex- He is married and has two children. ' The Salem Junior First Citi Citizen zen will compete for the state statewide wide JayCee award. Last year’s I Junior First Citizen was Salem [attorney Richard D. Lee. I James O. Garrett is chairma/ I of the first citizen program. foldoutocrFile50b foldoutFile50b First Citizen Nod I Five men have been nomi- I nated for the Salem Junior I Chamber of Commerce’s Distin- I guished Service Award — the prize for the city’s Junior First ' Citizen of 1964. The winner will be announced at the annual awards banquet Friday at 8 p.m. in Chuck’s Steak House. The nominees are City Man Manager ager Douglas Ayres, 34; Dar Darrell rell Crossler, 31, Judson Junior High School teacher; William Mainwaring, 30, editor and pub publisher lisher of the Capital Journal; the Rev. John 0. Najarian, 31, pastor of Westminster United Presbyterian Church; and at attorney torney William G. Paulus, 33, , Salem Urban Renewal Agency 1 executive secretary. UNDER 35 The award honors the city’s outstanding citizen under 35 years of age. The speaker will be Univer University sity of Oregon President Ar Arthur thur S. Flemming. Ayres, 540 Clarmont St. NW, became city manager a year ago after having served two years as city finance director. He is a director of the United Good Neighbors and a member of two Salem Area Chamber of Commerce committees and the Salem Rotary Club. He is mar married. ried. EX-REPORTER Crossler, 3698 Short St. SE, teaches mathematics and sci science, ence, is a school counselor and is chairman of. the committee for junior high science curric curriculum. ulum. He is a leader in the Mor- ningside Methodist Church and is past president of the South Salem Kiwanis Club. He and his wife have three children. Mainwaring, 855 Rumsey Road NW, became editor and publisher of the Capital Jour Journal nal in 1962 after having work worked ed as a reporter. He is cliai* man of the Chamber of Com® merce area improvement com^ mittee, a member of other chamber committees and chair chairman man of the Mayor’s Civic Cen Center ter Committee. He is a direc director tor of the United Good Neigh Neighbors bors and a member of the Cas Cascade cade Area Council of Boy Scouts executive board. He also is an elder in the First Presbyterian Church and a director of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association. He and his wife have one child. Najarian, 3735 Liberty Road S., has been pastor of his church since 1959. He is president of the Salem Area Council of Churches and vice-moderator of the Oregon Synod of the Unit United ed Presbyterian Church. He has been a member of the Mayor’s Human Relations Commission, the YMCA Marriage Clinic, Ore Oregon gon Council of Churches exec executive utive board and the Cascade Area Council of Boy Scouts ex executive ecutive board. He and his wife have three children. LEE LAST WINNER Paulus, 1025 14th St. NE, has been the executive of the UR Agency for two years. He is co-chairman of Salem General Hospital’s $150,000 building campaign, director of the Sal Salvation vation Army and a member of the YMCA Marriage Clinic, Pentacle Theatre and the Salem Art Association. He and his wife have two children. Last year’s Junior First Citi Citizen zen was attorney Richard D. Lee. Tickets to the banquet are on sale at the Salem Area Cham Chamber ber of Commerce building.Urban Renewal Job 3 May Go to Panins Paulus Likely For Urban Renewal I Salem attorney William Paulus probably will get the job as exeeu- j tive secretary of the Salem Urban 'Renewal Agency. City Manager Kent Mathewson 1 said he would recommend to the Urban Renewal Agency-the City Council—that Paulus be appoint appointed. ed. Council approval is expected. The $8.000-a-year salary for the position would be paid from a $49,- 000 federal grant. The grant also will be used to finance a study of a proposed urban renewal plan for Willamette University. The executive secretary will work with a citizens’ committee in gathering cost data and other information about the project, which involves a seven-block area south of the Willamette campus. Reports and recommendations of the committee will be studied by the City Council, which is not yet committed on the project. In recommending Paulus, a na native tive of Salem, Mathewson said an important consideration was the selection of a local individual versed in local problems, Paulus will not give up private aw practice if bis appointment approved. City Gives Approval of Appointment The Salem City Council switched hats Monday and met in one of its rare moments as the Urban Renewal Agency to con consider sider a short, one-item agenda It formally approved the ap appointment pointment of William Paulus, Sa Salem lem attorney, as executive direc director tor of a citizens’ committee which will draft a series of recommen recommendations dations to the council on the ur urban ban renewal project taking in about 21 acres south of the Wil Willamette lamette University campus. The post of executive executivesecretary secretary of the Salem Ur Urban ban Renewal Agency will probably go to William Paulus, Salem attorney. Salem City Manager Kent Mathewson said Thursday he would nominate Paulus’ appoint appointment ment to the City Council, which also is the Urban Renewal Agen Agency. cy. Council members contacted Thursday voiced approval of Paulus, it was understood. Function oKthe $8,000-a-year full-time position is to work with ! citizen's committee, already ap- ! pointed, to gather data on costs and feasibility of a proposed ur urban ban renewal project for Willam Willamette ette University. Part of a recently announced $4n,nno federal grant will be used In pay Paulus’ salary and to fi finance nance the study. The City Council was approach approached ed recently by Willamette Uni University versity for an urban renewal proj project ect to expand the campus. The Council was divided on the pro program. gram. It appointed a citizens committee to make a study of the project and to make its re report-recommendation port-recommendation to the Coun- I cil. The Council at present is un uncommitted. committed. The study will take about a year. The area involved in the proposed redevelopment program lies south of the Willamette cam campus pus and comprises about 21 acres in a 7V4 block area. A native of Salem, Paulus has been practicing law here for the past three years. Agency Endorses New U-R Director An Urban Renewal Agency office will be set up in Salem early in September, it was reported at Salem City Council meeting Monday night. The council, acting in its dual capacity as the Salem Urban Renewal Agency, unanimously endorsed appoint appointment ment of William G. Paulus as executive director. Paulus will continue his law practice in cooperation with his law partner, John Daniel Callaghan, but will devote "all the time necessary” to the renewal agency. First chore will be establishing an office, for which federal funds are appropriated, hiring an assistant, sec secretary retary and appraisers. City Council Monday night also appointed Alderman Willard Marshall and David H. Cameron, chairman of the Salem Public Parks Advisory Committee, as the city’s representatives on the newly - formed regional parks board. (Other council nows on n»n« — ■y- w- ol ;s 3Ult-V.t.r V — ★ ★ ★ Hardiest golfer of the sea son must be Dick Long o Coos Bay. LONG, who played golf foj Lewis and Clark in 1961 ant 1962, missed his ride to thf dllllahe Hills Invitational las I weekend. Undaunted, Long left Coos Bay on his honda at 1:30 a.m. and arrived at the Salem club six hours later for his 8:22 a.m. tee off. “I shot an 84 after spending 10 minutes in the steam room trying to revive my circula circulation,” tion,” said Long, who had a C7 later in the tournament against Duane Roisen ) in match play. j Bill Paulus of Illahe hj't his II v_., h s.hnt to \S nn rhp High Court BacksTFalse Arrest Judgmer A $7,500 false arrest judgment I immune from personal liability j as judge issued the arrest war- »— ckc | Irdy resigned as judge at (keeper for the Statesma ' a£!a inst Don Hardy, a former only when perfoming his au- ran t without having a sworn en by Justice Arno u , ‘municipal judge in Independ- thorized judicial business. icomplaint, he had no jurisdic- hovjever. He said that immu _ y fence, was upheld by the Oregon Goodwin's opinion said that tion and, as a result, no im- Supr'eme Court in an opinion) because Hardy, while serving I munity as well, released Wednesday. I is employed now as a A| dissenting opinion was giv-i he as mistaken. 1 lrdy resigned Inoendence Feb. 1, 1963. HejnafCo. in Salem. she lid be granted when a judge ads in good faith, even though CMl JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon, Thursday, May 20, 1965, Sec. I, P A suit was brought by George S. Utley of Independence against Hardy on the grounds that while Hardy was judge he improper ly had Utley arrested for fail-' ure to pay a sewer assessment. Independence officials said a j warrant was issued in connec-1 tion with the sewer assessment in the summer of 1962. Circuit Judge E. H. Howell, who heard the case in Polk i County, found that Hardy had acted without jurisdiction. The j Supreme Court affirmed the de- sicion. Justice A. T. Goodwin, who wrote the high court’s decision, said that a municipal judge is Independence Bid To Pay Judgment Faces Challenge Statesman News Service INDEPENDENCE — Legality of an Independence City Council plan to pay off a $7,500 false arrest Judgment against a former official out of city funds will probably be challenged, It was Indicated here Wednesday. Last week the City Council and budget committee approved a 1965-66 budget including $8,000 for the Judgment and costs against Don G. Hardy, former city judge. The Circuit Court judgment was upheld ^ i 1.. L>, 1Ua /Anarmn Cimeoi a, t 40 AifW, MIH •“ > l°3 * * ^SJOiJOH J° • tno H s.ioJiej, 4op°Qu Austro foldoutocrFile51a foldoutFile51a Independence Bid To Pay Judgment Faces Challenge / Statesman News Service I INDEPENDENCE — Legality of an Independence City Council plan to pay off a $7,500 false arrest Judgment against a former official out of city funds will probably be challenged, It was indicated here Wednesday. Last week the City Council and budget committee approved a 1965-66 budget including $8,000 for the judgment and costs against Don G. Hardy, former city judge. The Circuit Court judgment was upheld recently by the Oregon Supreme Court. City Manager Jack McElravy said Wednesday that Hardy had not been bonded when he arrested ex-police chief George Utley on a charge he failed to pay a sewer assessment. So the City Council de decided cided to assume the judgment against Hardy by revising its budget. Final action on the budget is due at a public hear hearing ing before the City Council here July 7. At that time a citizens protest is expected against budgeting of public funds to pay off the suit. McElray said Wednesday that the Council had not received a formal opinion on the legality of the ac action. tion. ‘ m foldoutocrFile51b foldoutFile51b Undaunted, Long left Coos Bay on his honda at 1:30 a.m. and arrived at the Salem club Six hours later for his 8:22 a.m. tee off. “I shot an 84 after spending__ 30 minutes in the steam roorol ■ .trying to revive my circula circulation,” tion,” said Long, who had a jS7 later in the tournament against Duane Roisen 1 in Imatch play. / Bill Paulus of Illahe hrt his japproach shot to 15 ojb the roof of the rest station behind the green in his match with John Kitzmiller. PAULUS was given a free, drop but had to take it behind the structure which blocked him from the green — he took a double bogey after missing a 5-foot putt for what would have been a great bogey.ulus Huts OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR STATE CAPITOL SALEM 97310 Cong MARK O. HATFIELD Governor June 21, 1965 ack Dear Bill: Word of your father's passing was most distressing and Antoinette and X join in extending our sympathy to you. It is difficult to part with a loved one and we know your heart is heavy. Perhaps it will help somewhat to know that friends understand and long to be of help. Throughout your father's colorful business career, he made many friends and the interest he exhibited in the community and its residents endeared him to many. We pray that God will support and comfort you as your needs dictate, reassuring you always with His promise of Eternal Life. Sincerely, Mr. William G. Paulus 1025 14th NE Salem, Oregon Monday. Paulus and his wife were members of an American newspaper study mission toui of Asia and arrived in Hong Kong Saturday. The tom group is scheduled to leave Hong Kong for Ceylon Tues Tuesday. day. Mrs. Paulus said her hus husband band was alone in a taxi en route back to their hotel when he collapsed of an apparent heart attack. He died en route to a hospital. Paulus retired in 1961 when the Paulus Brothers cannery was sold to the Dole company. Mrs. Paulus is president of radio station KSLM in Salem. Mr. ana Mrs. rauius wuc v»» an Asian tour with other Ameri American can radio people. Paulus retired in 1961 when the cannery was sold to the Dole Company. Edgard Bayol, leader of the radio tour, said Paulus’ body would be cremated in Hong Kong and the ashes would be returned to Salem. He is w -- „ , _ ashes returned to Salem. r*=na«- ” d P 'vrSi“"«- 8—(Sec. I) Statesman, Salt -*r OBITU Salem and Mid-W ’aulus and George th of Salem, Rob- s, San Francisco, aulus, Grants Pas: ldchildren. William Paulus Dies in Orient William H. Paulus, 64, re retired tired Salem cannery executive, died of an apparent heart at attack tack Sunday night in Hong Kong on an Asian tour. He was returning to his hotel | in a taxi cab when he collapsed. With him at the time was his' wife, Mrs. Lou McCormick) Paulus. president of Salem ra radio dio station KSLM. He and his wife were mem members bers of an American news study j mission and had arrived in Hong Kong Saturday. Paulus was a partner in Sa Salem’s lem’s Paulus Bros, cannert when it was purchased by Dole Pineapple Corp. He became a vice president in that organiza organization tion and moved to San Jose, Calif. Following retirement in 1961, he returned to Salem. The residence is at 549 Kingwood | Drive NW. Paulus had several close! brushes with death. In 1952, two companions were lost when a wall of water sunk their boat as they were leaving Yaquina Bay in Newport. Paul Paulus us managed to save himself with a seat cushion, but Salem j attorneys Donald A. Young and j Edward K. Piasecki drowned. In August 1960 Paulus was shot and critically wounded by a youthful burglar at his Salem home. The assailant was never caught. His first wife, Olga M. Paul Paulus, us, died in 1961. Later that year, Paulus suffered a heart attack and retired from the Dole corporation. He,was a long-time resident of the Salem area and member of the Salem Elks Lodge. Surviving besides the widow are son William G., Salem; brothers Fred H. and George children. foldoutocrFile52a foldoutFile52a ' ' '' ; & ■ ■ liam Paulus Dies in Orient William H. Paulus, 64, re-: tired Salem cannery executive, 1 died of an apparent heart at-j tack Sunday night in Hong Kong on an Asian tour. He was returning to his hotel in a taxi cab when he collapsed. With him at the time was his wife, Mrs. Lou McCormick! Paulus, president of Salem ra radio dio station KSLM. He and his wife were mem members bers of an American news study mission and had arrived in Hong Kong Saturday. Paulus was a partner in Sa Salem’s lem’s Paulus Bros, cannerj when it was purchased by Dole Pineapple Corp. He became a vice president in that organiza organization tion and moved to San Jose, Calif. Following retirement in - i-ef-Ls : Salem Man Dies In Orient <3,u./ HONG KONG (AP) — Wil William. liam. H. Paulus, 64, retired Salem, Ore., cannery opera operator, tor, collapsed and died here: Monday. Paulus and his wife were members of an American | newspaper study mission tout | of Asia and arrived in Hong Kong Saturday. The tour group is scheduled to leave Hong Kong for Ceylon Tues Tuesday. day. Mrs. Paulus said her hus husband band was alone in a taxi en route back to their hotel when he collapsed of an apparent heart attack. He died en route to a hospital. Paulus retired in 1961 when the Paulus Brothers cannery’; was sold to the Dole company.. Mrs. Paulus is president of; radio station KSLM in Salem. ] William Paulus Succumbs on Tour of Asia William H. Paulus, 64, retired cannery executive and long-time Salem resident, died of an ap apparent parent heart attack in Hong [ Kong Sunday. (Obituary and picture on page 8.) He was on Asian tour with his wife, Mrs. Lou McCormick Paulus. They were in a taxi cab en route to their hotel when he was stricken. Paulus was a former partner in Paulus Brothers Cannery in Salem and became a vice pres president ident in Dole Pineapple Corp., when the Salem plant was sold to Dole. He retired in 1961. Paulus was once nearly drowned in a boating accident and was shot by a burglar at his Salem home in 1961. Besides his widow, he leaves a son and four brothers. Paulus Rites Held HONG KONG (AP) - Memo Memorial rial services were held today for William H. Paulus, whose widow is president of radio station KSLM in Salem, Ore. Paulus, retired operator o f Paulus Brothers Cannery, col collapsed lapsed Monday while riding in a taxi with Mrs. Paulus. He died on the way to a hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Paulus were on an Asian tour with other Ameri American can radio people. Paulus retired in 1961 when the cannery was sold to the Dole Company. Edgard Bayol, leader of the radio tour, said Paulus’ body would be cremated in Hong Kong and the ashes would be returned to Salem. William H n Paulus iy, / Dies in Hong Kong Of Heart Attack William H. Paulus, 64, former Oregon and California cannery executive, died last night in Hong Kong while on a world tour. Paulus was traveling with his wife, Mrs. Lou McCormick Paulus, owner of Salem radio station KSLM. Paulus and his wife were traveling with a group of other radio ini newspaper executives to Asian and Mediterranean countries. The group arrived in Hong Kong Saturday and was scheduled to Jeave for Ceylon Tuesday. COLLAPSES IN TAXI Mrs. Paulus said her husband was alone in a taxi en route to their, hotel when he collapsed of an apparent heart attack. He died as he was being taken to a hospital. She will return home as soon as arrangements can be made. No time for services for Paulus has been set. WORKED FOR DOLE For many years Paulus was associated with Paulus Bros. Cannery in Salem. After sale of the cannery to the Dole Corp. he worked for Dole in San Jose. 1 Calif. He retired in 1961. t He was a member of the Sa Salem lem Elks Lodge. His home was at 549 Kingwood Drive NW. Surviving are a son, William G Paulus, Salem; four broth ers, Fred H. Paulus and George B. Paulus, both of Salem, Rob Robert ert C. Paulus, San Francisco, and Ted R. Paulus, Grants Pass and two grandchildren. Memorial Rite Held for Paulus HONG KONG (AP) — There were memorial services for Wil William liam H. Paulus of Salem, Ore., Tuesday. The retired cannery operator died of a heart attack Monday. He is to he cremated and the ashes returned to Salem. Paulus was on an Asian tour with newspaper and radio exec executives. utives. He was accompanied by his wife, who is president of radio station KSLM. | Paulus retired in 1961. 8—(Sec. I) Statesman, Salt *OBITU 1 Salem and Mid-W WILLIAM H. PAULUS William Paulus! Dies in Orient William H. Paulus, 64, re retired tired Salem cannery executive, died of an apparent heart at attack tack Sunday night in Hong Kong on an Asian tour. He was returning to his hotel [ in a taxi cab when he collapsed.! With him at the time was his j wife, Mrs. Lou McCormick! Paulus, president of Salem ra- 1 dio station KSLM. He and his wife were mem members bers of an American news study mission and had arrived in Hong Kong Saturday. Paulus was a partner in Sa Salem’s lem’s Paulus Bros, cannerj when it was purchased by Dole Pineapple Corp. He became a vice president in that organiza organization tion and moved to San Jose, Calif. Following retirement in 1961, he returned to Salem. The residence is at 549 Kingwood Drive NW. Paulus had several close brushes with death. In 1952, two companions were lost when a wall of water sunk their boat as they were leaving Yaquina Bay in Newport. Paul-; us managed to save himself with a seat cushion, but Salem attorneys Donald A. Young and Edward K. Piasecki drowned. In August 1960 Paulus was shot and critically wounded by a youthful burglar at his Salem home. The assailant was never caught. His first wife, Olga M. Paul Paulus, us, died in 1961. Later that year, Paulus suffered a heart attack and retired from the Dole corporation. He,was a long-time resident of the Salem area and member of the Salem Elks Lodge. Surviving besides the widow are son William G., Salem: brothers Fred H. and George B., both Salem, Robert C., San Francisco, Calif., and Ted R., Grants Pass; and two grand grandchildren. children.priends . . . said farewell to Mrs. William H. Paulus this week, who left with Mr. I Paulus for San Jose, Calif., where they will make their new home. Mr. Paulus will be sales consultant for the Hawaiian Pineapple Co. in the southern city, having been transferred to the company's division office from Paulus Bros. Packing Co. Maxwell News Files of Past Record Local Color Central Oregon State Normal school at Drain advertised to say that the fall term would open Sept. 8, 1902. "Students are train trained ed to utilize environment and adapt it to the needs of schools” • Whatever that may mean). Room and board $2.25 a week. Capital Journal quoted the Eu Eugene gene Guard as saying: “Salem has been having her usual typhoid fever harvest. The well water u unfit for use. And the Willamette article is not much better, after flowing most of the length of the valley. Kf HLjv U oip3i as ]i This Week, 1852 Judge R. P. Boise, Salem's pioneer jurist, recalled Salem as it appeared to him in 1852. Then fir trees in /9t> 3 he 150 lie ry :e- id, 0,- of- nd >u- m- ,nd of c )re- dl- ipen the laxd tned hlte, staff ■ ar- .1 be 186 th irtll- regl- itates from de to •ough area, ln- ouse" Paulus Talks On Canning To Rotarians Tn the last analysis, foodstuffs may determine the winning nations In the present conflict, Robert C. Paulus. president of the National Canners’ association and of the Paulus Bros. Packing company, of Salem, told the Rotary club today noon. Officials of the canning In- dlls try are, he said, "In a goldfish bowl" and remarks are carefully checked. The prepared address he [presented was “censored” by na national tional headquarters. Paulus traced the history of the Industry from the time of Napoleon In 1809 when foods were first pre preserved. served. until the present. Early Ip the tin-plate days a good -work -workman man could only make 60 cans a day with this stepped up to 110 a minute by machinery about 35 years ago until today, when the present output of a single line Is over 300 cans per minute. Growth of the pea and bean pack packing ing In the northwest In the last five years has been phenomenal, Paulus said. Of the 29,000,000 cases of peas packed this yead, slightly over 3.000. 000 cases will be produced In Washington and eastern Oregon and 2.000. 000 cases, or over 20 per cent of the bean pack of 10,000,000 cases In the northwest. “Further growth of the bean busi business ness Is possible but seems to have been arrested this year by the In Inability ability of growers to secure harvest harvesting ing help," Paulus said. “Canne- are willing to extend their packing facilities but are afraid to take the chance of further expansion as bean machinery Is very expensive and Idle equipment costly.” ut In- 1 lo-i PAGE ELEVEN Canning Chief Tells Origin Of Industry About 132 years ago, at the tima j of Napoleon Bonaparte, the can canning ning industry had its inception as a result of war, and during the current struggle it will be of in incalculable calculable value in furnishing foods to both the armed forces and their heavy background of civil- 1 ians, Robert C. Paulus, president of the National Canners associ association ation and of Paulus Brothers, told members of the Salem Rotary 1 club Wednesday. Some idea of the Immense scope of the industry was given when Paulus pointed out that in approximate figures the an annual nual pack of fruits in the United States is 55,000,000 cases; sea- j* foods. 17,000,000; vegetables, 165,000,000, and meat and other products 12,000,000. Growth of the bean business Ilk j the northwest has been phenom- j enal, the speaker declared, and j further Increase is possible but seems to have been arrested this year by the Inability of grower* to secure harvest help. “Conner* are willing to extend their pack packing ing facilities but are afraid to take the chance of further expan expansion sion as bean machinery is very expensive and Idle equipment Is \ costly.” foldoutocrFile53a foldoutFile53a Ben Maxwell Q^jicu '/<* 3 ;/ p News Files of Past Record Local Color This Week, 1852 Judge R. P. Boise, Salem's pioneer jurist, recalled Salem as it appeared to him in 1852. Then fir trees in .,» Marion square were saplings, Indians camp camped ed along the banks of North and South Mill creeks and the o 1 d Mansion House was re regarded garded as the fashion able hotel in the Northwest. (Located on Boone’s' Ben Maxwell v Cal Scovell no longer drove the mail wagon from Salem post of office fice to meet incoming trains at the depot. Fred Schindler had taken his place and Cal was driv driving ing the stageHbetween Salem and Lewisville. (L. C. “Cal” Scovell drove the first Oregon & Califor California nia overland stage out of Portland in 1860. His death was announced Aug. 1, 1905). Rev. W. C. Kantner had told Salem Congregationalists that a first meeting of the local church was held in a school house that stood at the corner of Commercial and Mission streets. At that meet meeting ing on July 4, 1852 there were four charter members: Mrs. L. S. Williams, A. M. Fellows and Mr. *s{1 Mrs. L N. Gilbert Central Oregon State Normal school at Drain advertised to say that the fall term would open Sept. 8, 1902. “Students are train trained ed to utilize environment and adapt it to the needs of schools” (Whatever that may mean). Room and board $2.25 a week. Capital Journal quoted the Eu Eugene gene Guard as saying: “Salem has been having her usual typhoid fever harvest. The well water is unfit for use. And the Willamette article is not much better, after flowing most of the length of the valley.Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, March 5, 1057 Hogue Named to Post Will Become President of Paulus Bros. jL H. Hogue, Vice-president of ]aulus Bros. Packing company of Ulem, a subsidiary of Dole Ha- aiian Pineapple company, will icceed to the presidency of the rm on April 1 upon the retirc- lent of George B. Paulus, Henry White, Dole president, made the nnouncement today. Paulus. a co-founder of the com- any, will reach the retirement ge in March. He will continue as n adviser and consultant. Hogue has been associated with ie food industry for the past 12 ears. A graduate of the Stanford niversity school of business, he lined the Barron-Gray Packing ompany in San Jose and became L. H. HOGUE GEORGE B. PAULUS s comptroller. After its acquisition by Dole in 948, he became assistant secre- ary and assistant treasurer of the Dole company. He joined Paulus ros. as vice-president and direc- pr a year ago, and moved from •j an Jose to Salem with Mrs. Hogue nd their three children, j Paulus has been associated with he food industry for the past 37 ears. Born and raised in Jam, he served as supervisor of tax rolls and deputy sheriff of Marion county before entering the canning industry with the Oregon Growers cooperative in 1920. In 1924 he formed a partnership with his brother, Robert C. Paulus, and organized what became the Paulus Pros. Packing company, which grew to be the largest in independent dependent cannery in the Pacific Northwest before its acquisition by Dole in 1955. He was successively vice-president, general manager; and president. Long active in industry and civic affairs, Paulus has been president of the Northwest Canners associa association, tion, director and treasurer of the Salem Chamber of Commerce and president of the Salem Senators baseball club. i Hogue from statesman files 10 Years Ago Oct. 2, 1955 The Paulus Bros. Packing Company of Salem, largest in independently dependently - owned canning firm in the Northwest, is be being ing purchased by the Dole Ha Hawaiian waiian Pineapple Company of Honolulu and San Jose, Calif. 40 Years Ago May 30, 1925 j, Willamette University Col-• i lege of Law will graduate nine j 1 atudents. They are Floyd D. j f Moore, Clarence D. Phillips, • George R. Duncan, William j McKinney, William Coshow, j ] Benjamin Forbes, Otto K. Pau- • j lus, James Young and Allan i < Jones. j. •|j Paulus Gets Hole-in-One Monday The dream of every golfer ' to get a hole-in-one came t Monday afternoon at the 1 Grants Pass Golf Club course i for 64-year-old Ted Paulus 1 as he and his wife, Ruth, c were playing their customary f daily rounds of golf. Paulus got his ace of the i fourth green, using a 6-iron. However, the jubilant golf golfer er wasn't sure if his wife wasn't trying to get even on the second time around when they came to the same hole. Paulus was walking ahead when his wife hit a 30-foot j pitch shot that squirted off to the right and konked him on ! the head. to Take Over Paulus Firm tigi 4, Sec. 1, CAPITAL JOURNAL. Salem. Oregon, Tuesday, fib. I» Ben Maxicell News Files of Past Record Local Color This Week, 1926 Frank D. Bligh announced he would construct a two-story build building ing at the cor- southeast ner of State and High Streets, costing $20,000. The structure would house a theater with seating capaci capacity ty for 1,200. Bflfr Panins former manager for the Oregon Growers Coopera Cooperative tive Assn., said that nearly every canning district in the Northwest was the graveyard for some co cooperative operative project. In 1926 there were 35 canneries located within a radius of 50 miles of Salem. In 1926 there were 43 active can canneries neries in Oregon. Ben Maxwell The Salem Hotel, a brick structure built in 1864, would be razed to allow construction of the new Bligh building The Salem Hotel, long known as Cook's Ho Hotel, tel, was built by Joseph G. Miller who had been a si Ireme court clerk. At the time of construc construction tion he was living the Dalles. The Monmouth post office, with stamp sales amounting to $8,000 in 1925, rated a second-class stat status us and city mail delivery. Striped clothing, long abolished at the Oregon State Penitentiary, was again in vogue for incorrig incorrigible ible convicts. Warden J. W. Lillie put about a dozen men in stripes. Warden Lillie also noted that wages in the flax plant for con convict vict labor had been reduced from 50 to 25 cents a day. L. H. Hogue, vice president of Paulus Bros. Packing Co. of Sa Salem, lem, a subsidiary of Dole Ha Hawaiian waiian Pineapple Co., will suc succeed ceed to the presidency of the firm April 1 upon retirement of George B. Paulus, it was announced Mon Monday day by Henry A. White, Dole president. Paulus, a co-founder of the com company, pany, will reach retirement age in March. He will continue as an advisor and consultant to Paulus Bros. Hogue has been associated with i the food industry for the past 12 years. A graduate of the Stan- j j ford University School of Business, | he joined Barron-Gray Packing | Co. in San Jose and became its I comptroller. Assistant Secretary After its acquisition by Dole in 1948, he became assistant secre secretary tary and assistant treasurer of the Dole company. He joined Paulus Bros, as vice president and direc director tor a year ago, and moved from San Jose to Salem with Mrs. Hogue and their three children. Paulus has been associated with the food industry for the past 37 years. Born and raised in Salem, he served as supervisor of tax rolls and deputy sheriff of Marion County before entering the canning industry with the Oregon Growers Cooperative in 1920. Forms Partcrshlp In 1924 he formed a partnership with his brother, Robert C. Paulus, and organized what became the Paulus Bros. Packing Co., which grew to be the largest independent cannery in the Pacific Northwest before its acquisition by Dole in 1955. He was successively vice president, general manager and president. Long active in industry and civic affairs, Paulus has been president of the Northwest Canners Associa Association, tion, director and treasurer of the Salem Chamber of Commerce and ^resident of the Salem Senators laseball club. George Paulus, left, president of Paulus Bros. Packing Co. of Salem many years, will retire from office soon and L. H. Hogue; currently vice-president, will assume the presidency in April, it was announced Monday., Slpi ; 11B3 J H 3 W ,a -SJM ‘u»l B S }° piujrat) SS OT P UB t -sm ‘ U0 ^ Ba J0 JJW 3JB S3JBUI3UB aoi -m p ub uos •saw ‘ispiKflSO u9 ‘siuno Xn®0'* SI K >3IB ‘jo^sSubs s® j ‘.08131383 S B8J V a ssipi ‘4U8W s3jd i‘a3Hl lcU S 31PS SI ^ esjy ‘»p°A ltlE W 8d . P „.A„ UI31BS UT 3W0H IV •(uinqpoojVV -V '0 S p» •» » *«? T„“ - —»• •' uaptoH U3UV »»>a «« P UK Hr r y S u h m o u ui; ms daughter Mrs. Arlene Sinclair and fam ily of Portland, Mr. and Mrs Arthur W. Knox of Salem an | Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rehberg of Woodburn. The latter as sisted Mrs. Krueger with buffet luncheon for the wed ding party after the cere- ^mony. Mr. and Mrs. Morton will be at home after January 1 ai ||| 1312 Princeton Road. Golden Wedding Christmas day will mark ■the 50th wedding anniversary |of Mr. and Mrs. George A. ■Allen. They were married In ■Portland on December 25, 11916, Fun in Aiding peen tor n Needy Families Statesman News Service McMinnville - Fun is where you find it, and mem- (Story Also on Page 1.) . No immediate changes wer indicated Friday for nine Wii Iamette Valley area mills in volved in the creation of Colum bia Forest Products Inc. Involved in the merger ar iers of Delta Psi Delta fra Involved in the merger i terruoo puB uoipesuBii noon ~*|' lamette Valley Lumber C hav’Xou3g v ’ P 33 P 3l U las. which has extensi JJ Udas IPimoD her holdings in the Coast a uneAjp aqj. -iouagy „ “In* ralumSJ w.** 1 oiiv vuaoi ell Jcade ranges; Willamet tional, Foster, under tl ne ownership as WVL; Sai m Lumber Co., sawmill an wood mill at Sweet Homi Iging division at Sweet Homi C1 > 'll At Aq ' p 3SIB j s*: 8M3a,B f division a t Sweet Hoi Ecain jo W d o n? s Punj eathmg mills at Lebanon s UBqin siff Anq 0J IZ J BM3UW i rin g field - and at Ruston, L 11 q 0) p3sn ^ 3U0 Mi estern Veneer and PIvwo sful A a i _. ririaoc north nt T 8A MQ pun-j u , G riggs north of Lebanoi •sTO,.. Vood Fibreb °ard (Duraflake) Jrimo,, ^ BAUd g 3 ^ 0 P“ B ]lbany, Dallas Lumber ar I -WAiun sqj q 0I ™ ™ n 2 Misupply Co., yards at Dallas ar I seq uoisuedxVsndrBo S n “n? dependence; Western Kra II Ihun dn 'diipi ■^n'Gorp-, Albany. |-Jn jo ssn jsiij amTZ “u °™ S™ ° f tte new firm woul ffijhSBqoind aq, ™ Clark, chainnan emei [ 'Sims uorjEuuienuM 1 f „ ° d S® of the board > Colen Kr“ f ..pasBqDind sq 0 , 3Mm ,j ‘ H>r, J™ ^MmKumm 1 ^-W foldoutocrFile55a foldoutFile55a Pag# 12. See. 2, CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon, Friday, Sept. 9. 1966 -INVESTING' YOUR MONEY ■ He Earns Extra Dollar for the State By PAUL W. HARVEY Jr. Associated Press Writer Gordon A. Barker is happy because he's able to keep mon money ey from lying around in the big state treasury vault. Barker, 60, is the investment manager for the state treasurer. He invests $350 million a year. Not only is he happy because he can keep the cash working. He’s also pleased that rising in interest terest rates have enabled him to make a lot more money for the state. His role is precarious. He in invests vests every cent of state funds that he can. But at the same time, he must keep enough mon ey on hand to pay the state bills. Money comes into the state treasury before state agencies need to spend it. So he invests it, buying short term securities that will mature when the mon money ey is needed. He also buys long term invest investments ments for the industrial acci accident dent and the common school funds. But most of the $350 mil million lion is in short-term securities, like time deposits in banks, and securities of the U.S. Treasury and federal agencies. Barker is in daily contact with the bond experts in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Portland. He recently sold $4 million of federal treasury bills to buy an equal amount of federal Home Loan paper. The result was an extra $63,000 profit for the state. In 1964, his investments yield yielded ed the state $3.4 in interest. This soared to $4.9 million in 1965, an all-time record. In the first half of this year, the interest totaled $2.8 million, indicating another record this year. Higher interest rates are a big factor in this increase. But an another other factor is that state agen agencies cies give him warning when they are about to deposit funds. That lets him invest the funds on the day they become avail available, able, eliminating a two- or three-day time lag. It giyes the state an extra two or three days’ interest. Interest rates on six months’ federal agency paper have jumped from 4.15 to 5.42 per cent in the past 12 months. They have increased on six months’ Treasury bills from 3.9 to 4.9 per cent. The interest rates are chang changing ing so quickly that Barker must check them daily. Consequently, he says, his job has become hectic in the past few months. About his job, he says: “I love it. But it sometimes bothers me at night when I won wonder der if I’ve invested so much that there won’t be enough money on hand to pay the bills the next day.” , Of course, Barker is subject to second guessing. It always is j easy to do better in the finan- (. cial world when acting from . hindsight rather than foresight. But Barker says that point . doesn’t bother him at all. . i Barker worked as an account accountant ant for a food processing firm in Salem for 10 years, and then | went to work as a teller in the State Treasury in 1922. He soon rose to auditor, and became assistant deputy state _ .treasurer in 1952. " He says he learned a lot from Fred Paulus, deputy treasurer for many years, who is consid considered ered one of the best financial brains Oregon ever produced. m I er I d- | U When Paulus retired, Barker succeeded him. State Treasurer Robert W. Straub, reorganizing the depart department ment last year, changed Bark Barker’s er’s title to investment manager. “That change,” Barker said, “was a wise one, as it meant I could spend all my time on in investments. vestments. I believe this change has enabled me to earn from $700,000 to $1 million more than otherwise would have been the case.” On the big decisions, he con consults sults with Straub and his 10- man investment advisory com committee. mittee. Paulus is on this com committee. mittee. Barker has made some changes. He has sold all of the municipal bonds, replacing them with other investments earning higher interest. On long-term investments, he is buying more mortgages. They pay higher interest, and give the state’s economy a shot in the arm. He also buys some corporate bonds. Barker thinks he should be al allowed lowed to buy common stock in corporations, but the legislature has been wary of this. He says common stocks are a hedge against inflation, and that they grow with the country. He cited a broker who said that over the long pull, common stocks yield 8 per cent. Barker keeps tab on Oregon’s bonded debt, which totals $452 million. Nearly all of that is self- liquidating. For instance, it in includes cludes $297 million of veterans farm and home loan bonds, and these are paid off by the vet veterans erans who buy farms and homes. Oregon’s credit rating is A A, which is almost the highest rat rating ing available. That means Ore Oregon gon can get good interest rates when it sells bonds. On the last veterans’ bond is issue, sue, the state had to pay only 3.47 per cent interest. foldoutocrFile55b foldoutFile55b \ '■vlMv 7,4 |9 Q sHJC' 4 -i*' jvr an renewal land. Up until “low, its campus expansion has, Mrs. Norman Bliss of Turner. Heyden, reen on land which the univer university sity bought privately from landowners. ■ In Fund Drive Money used to buy the urban renewal land is part of the funds being raised by W i 1- lamette’s $12.5 million expan expansion sion campaign. Dr. G. Herbert Smith, presi president dent of Willamette, gave the check to Vern Miller, chairman of the UR Agency. The city council serves as the Agency. The deed transaction and con-uiwmm'.-' , f - .- 1 „ .. r lj. This old house in Salem, its age guessed at about Renovation jOUQUi century, will be renovated^gft-Atf ' i ' ' ~7| for the property at 753 - ‘ J ~ JffilS Not Diphtheria d - l«k A stairway with a lot of open space was made inj mg Job 19th century home during the past week when an ers burglar made off with the 30-foot hardwood rail. Jhe ra'lmg, I facing and mantel from a fireplace were stolen from the vacant he Via r ion St. N.E. The items were valued at $500. (Statesman ricksen) Salem proposal will planning be held by Commission ^ | niS Old IIUU3C III JOism, ■ 1 - 1 century, will be renovated^ij^,At€ >ne for the property at 753 I j — owner of a clothing and fle h.1^1. IYir»n A8SJ0Q :U l B i dElt . 3 Wesley Slev Kvarsten, director of the mid-Willamette Valley Planning Council, said the zone rhanee application was re i ferred to the State Capital ^ jning Commission as the prop- I™* u within a few lots of the ao-v-p-mt » f uB ^ -J3MUQ eSezuoo jo am 10 aaquiauJ e si Jl°A\ J W 25 «>d S u. auioq jiaqi wibui m »l dno3 •aueiiods °1 jopmaH a « 3Wlu a ' HW juaSaJ-eaiA P u03as ‘ DJ ° H UBA dreg ' SJ IV ; 1 U38w ‘ 8 ° !A ,SJ!} luaqpeo.ig 'W H SJ W 3 P n l 3 u , papap sjaoijp JaqiO ■pagaj SuioSpo ,m si uiijoh 3 P3 SJ W ' JEa,( lumsua aqt Joj spiuopo ueoi -lauiy JO sJapSnea 'Jaideqo eiuoqBW J° ) ua3aJ P 3P ® la uaaq seq Aqdanw H 3 SJ W PORTLAND (API—All of the) laboratory tests have been com- £ Dieted to determine whether a, P ' e . J: _u.l,orio had dft'Abjn o speia pleted to aeieim. - - case of diphtheria had dSHOuf) at FlocT'—siw Isauepjoas ‘qqa.u Ab« pm* uas l l 10 s.i N IspuBJg aoiA ‘Ipwoa .qw sauiep pue smaq .loutpi ■sjw :spuea§ aiqou sb paiPP -UI 3J3AI pOJID 3 ! AE a pUE l p -A\0(PW sauiBf SJW •ssSpoj jam ,o spuBJg 8[qou ped se paisas ajaAA iqSiimS pa .uj-3 dub AarpBjg mips ‘ SJ w am IB paAlOTOJ foldoutocrFile56a foldoutFile56a Ronnvafrinn This house in Salem, its age guessed at about a ivenovaiion jougni cen t ur y # w j|| b« renovated and its architectural style preserved if a business zone for the property at 753 Marion St. NE is approved. John J. Dalrymple, early owner of a clothing and general dry goods store, was believed to be the original owner. (Statesman photo) Preservation of Old House Aim of Bid for Zone Change By ALLEN MORRISON Staff Writer, The Statesman An old house at 753 Marion St. NE is in a run down condi condition tion but once it was regarded as one of the nicest of Salem homes. Plans are being formu formulated lated by William G. Paulus, Daniel Callaghan, attorneys, and Phillip K. Settecase, archi architect, tect, to renovate the two-story structure in hopes of preserv preserving ing its historic architectural style. The trio will buy the house from Raymond and Ola L. Clark if a zone change from R-3 multiple family residential to C-l light business is approved. Considered for Offices Paulus and Callaghan, law partners, are considering using the house for an office building if the zone change is approved. A public bearing on the rezon rezoning ing proposal will be held by Salem Planning Commission Jan. 25. Wesley Kvarsten, director of the mid-Willamette Valley Planning Council, said the zone change application was re referred ferred to the State Capitol Plan Planning ning Commission as the prop property erty is within a few lots of the Capitol Mall boundaries. The house is believed to have been the home of John J. Dalrymple, early owner of a general store on Commercial Street. Co-owner of the house, Ray Raymond mond Clark, 4782 Lone Oak Road SE, said he believes the house is 100 to 120 years old. Ben Maxwell, local historian, said he thinks the house was built in the 1860s or early 1870s. Shows Old Location An 1871 city directory shows Dalrymple living at the corner of Marion and Winter Streets NE. That is where the house originally was situated, just south of the Lee Apartments. Its present site is just east of Garfield School. Clark said he could remem ber as a boy in the fifth grade (about 1914) when the Dalrym Dalrymple ple house was moved. He said they moved it in two sections j which refutes beliefs that the rear portion of the house is a newer part. Clark said a horse-drawn windlass was used to move the house. H. S. Gile owned the house for a short time before Clark’s parents, C. C. and LaMoine, purchased it during the World War I era. Mrs. LaMoine Clark, who died several years ago, taught at Highland, Lincoln and Mc McKinley Kinley and was the first prin principal cipal of Leslie Junior High School, built in 1927. The house has been vacant three years. Clark’s sister, Miss Ola L. Clark, 386 17th St. ; SE, was the last of the Clarks -to reside Not Diphtheria PORTLAND (AP)—All of the laboratory tests have been com completed pleted to determine whether a case of diphtheria had Ho*-’ at Florw'SALEM GENERAL HOSPITAL , „.. TTT ,c To Mr. and Mrs. Wil- lia P m AX ’pa lJ ulurTo 0 25 M H t h St. NE. a b °GERIG'- T0 Mr. and Mr, Rob^ er ? R Gertg. 7575 Larden Road, a Johnson - TO Mr. and Mrs E. Arde"Johnson. 3395 Duncan Ave. NE. a boy, Sept. 7. 1 k.inKLE - TO Mr. and Mrs If. a boy . . . for Mr. and Mri. William G. Paulus . . • the lad arrived on Sunday at the Salem General Hospital and t.pped he scales at eight pounds, ten ounces ... he has been named: William Frederick and joins a sister, Elizabeth Gray . . • grandparents are Mrs. Ella Pet-, ersen of Burns and Mr. and Mrsj William H. Paulus . . . the baby sj great-grandmother is Mrs. Lola, nf rimv of Salem ... Son Welcomed A son, who has been named William Frederick, was born Sunday, Sept. 8, at Salem Gen- 1 era! Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. . William G. Paulus. Also greeting ! the new arrival is a sister. Eliza-: beth. The grandfather is William 1 ! H. Paulus of Salem, and the maternal grandmother is Mrs j Ella M. Petersen of Bend. sHMening ...-Sunday oon for six-weeks-old Wil Frederick Paulus, son of. ,nd Mrs. William G. Paul-. '.Father John ReedY per-; ed the service at St. . dePaul Catholic Church be-. members of the two fam- ; and a few friends .... parents for the littl. boy;A round 1 own... By JERYME ENGLISH [Wedding This Afternoon, [Reception Is 5:30-7:30 PARTY TIME . . . Mrs. .John H. Hann and Mrs. Donel Lane have sent out invitations to an au revon party honoring Mrs. Wallace Hunter, who will be leaving later in the month for Cupertina, Calif., to reside ... Mr. Hunter will be in business in Palo Alto . . . The affair will be held on Thursday, Nov. 8 at the Hann home on Hoyt Street with a group of the honor guests’ friends bidden to call be tween 2 and 4 o’clock . The newly married , . . Mr. and Mrs. William H. Paulus were hon honored ored at a beautifully arranged re reception ception on Friday evening given by their respective son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. .William G. Paulus, and son-in- law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce S. Kerr ... The affair held Dl UW «*• .... at the home of the bride, who was Mrs. Glenn McCormick prior to her marriage on Frdiay afternoon ... Longtime friends of the couple were bidden to call from 5:30 o' o'clock clock on . . . later in the evening the immediate family gathered for dinner at Chuck's Steak House ... The hostesses . greeting guests informally in the entrance hall . . . Glenda Kerr wearing a pretty gold dress with matching shoes . . . and Norma Paulus in a red wool ... The newlyweds re receiving ceiving best wishes from their friends in the living room and the new Mrs. Paulus wearing a be becoming coming sheer white wool after afternoon noon dress to which she pinned a corsage of yellow roses . . . Lovely bouquets ... of chry chrysanthemums santhemums arranged about the rooms ... The buffet table eov- •red with a handwoven white | cloth with border of silver metallic with a centerpiece of chrysanthe chrysanthemums mums in the autumn tones . . . Guests admiring the handsome furnishings, screens and brass pieces which Mrs. Paulus has brought home from her travels to the Orient . .-. From out-of-town . . . came Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElwain of North Bend, longtime friends of the bride . . . Down from Portland were Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mc McCormick Cormick and Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Kerr ... the latter parents of Bruce Kerr . . . Mrs. Stuart Kerr among those assisting and wear ing a smart beige wool dress with — ' ' " 1 Wed at a simple ceremony, this ^ Glenn E. McCormick and ^ sidence of the bride with £ w p“ i“n pX P..10T »1 •"« Flr!t Pm6yWrl “ drcs! wi,h corsage, of yellow roses. bride , gnd CSSs- 1 [ satin trim . . . Robert Paulus up from San Francisco for the nup nuptials tials and to serve as best man for his brother . . . Two other broth brothers, ers, Fred and George Paulus, also on hand for the occasion . . . Among others . . . The William Lidbecks and Mrs. Howard Bar- low a threesome ... the latter looking forward to a visit th» fol following lowing day with her daughter, Jana, (Mrs. Samuel Statler), who came north from Danville, Calif., for a week's sojourn ... In an another other group chatting in the sun- room ... the George Flaggs, the Harold G. Maisons and the Lee Bowns . . . The Bowns telling us their son and his wife. Dr. and [Mrs. Walter Bown, are happy to be back in Salem again and the j young medico has now opened his own practice . . . they recently moved Into a new home on Chel Chelsea sea Avenue in Kingwood . . . The Kelly Owens, the Verden E. Hock- etts and the L. V. Bensons chat chatting ting while enjoying the delicious wedding cake together . . . The Schucking family, Mrs. Bernard Schucking, Bob and Helene . . . | the Lester Newmans and Mr. and I Mrs. Harris Lietx Mr. and Mrs. H-err . , he bri( jegroom, are paulus, son and daughter-in-la i^ fo( . the ne wly- entertaining this evening at a pt o{ ^ bride jXAw iSSSSd^S*— •=» o’clock. Assisting at the recepUon^m jMnuStaart Kerr of Portland. Mrs. Paul McElwain ox UQrlnnf Frank Prime Mrs. Elbs wffl be set wlth a Brock, Mrs. Linn C. Smith, in ece an arrange ment white and gold cloth,/Vonze a P nd green, flanked by XXXwXXX. . lrlP tc a ix sr-■£ ** at M# Kingwood Drive NW. _—__ A large group of friends attended the coffee fori Which Mrs. Bruce Kerr and Mrs. William G. Paulus entertained through the midday, Wednesday. . . Guests were invited to call at the William H. Paulus home on Kingwood Heights NW between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. The two hostesses wore leis sent from Haw 311 ^y Mr and Mrs. William H. Paulus who are in the Islands for'a stay It was a purple and gold party featuring L partial Oriental theme in keeping with the many Far Eastern art objects and furniture in the home. On the outside of the door was a fan arrangement in purple and gold. . . . Bouquets of purple stock and yel- U)w P acacia featured the living room decor . . Thej long coffee table was covered with a beige, gold bordered hand-woven cloth, the centerpiece an arrangement of purple anemones and yellow acacia with a purp candle at either side. . . Each guest was presented with a fortune cookie as she left the dining room. . . Among those greeted near noontime were Mrs. Evan Boife, Mrs. Harold Schick Jr Mrs. James R. Phillips, Mrs. Werner Brown, Mrs. Richard Embick, Mrs Evelyn Scott, Mrs. Linn C. Smith, Mrs. James B. Y ' Mrs. Joseph B. Felton, Mrs. Arnold Krueger, Mrs. Barney VanOnsenoord, Mrs. William Schlitt, Mrs. Alfred C. Laue, Mrs. Harris Lietz, Mrs Edward R. Viesko, Mrs. Elmer Worth, Mrs. William J. Braun, Mrs. Gus Moore, Mrs. Henry A. Simmons Mrs. V.rg.l Sexton, Mrs. Willard N. Thompson, Mrs. David J. Lau, Mrs^ A D Woodmansee, Mrs. William L. Lidbeck Mrs. Sam C. Skillern Jr„ Mrs. Richard D. Lee Mrs Steven Ben- son Mrs. L. V. Benson, Mrs. Paul N. Poling, Mrs. Rhodes Skillman, Mrs. Eugene Harrison, Mrs. Donald Reinke, Mrs. Howard Mader Mrs Harland G Brock, Mrs. Marie Ling, Mrs. Ethel Lau, Mrs. E. H. Kennedy, Mrs. Frank D. Ward. . . . CChe pleasure of your company is requested al a 6-Reception honoring Qfir. and QWrs. QjVdUn 9f. Cpaul on Sfriday. Ihe second of Qlovemler nineteen hundred sixly-two from five-thirty until seven-thirty o cloch 549 0{ingwood CDrive, Qlorlhwesl efal enx, (9 regon Mr. and Mrs. Bruce S. Kerr Mr. and Mrs. William G. Paulus daughter and son . ■Aii enjoyable gathering for a group of longtime i friends of the couple, Friday evening, was the informal f reception honoring Mr. and Mrs. William H. Paulus, who , | were married earlier in the afternoon at the home of the bride, the former Mrs. Glenn E. McCormick . . . Mr. and Mrs. Bruce S. Kerr, son-in-law and daughter of the bride, and Mr. Paulus’ son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. William G. Paulus, entertained for the party, given at the bride's home . . . Beautiful arrange- j ments of fall flowers marked the decor, including a | large, spreading bouquet of gold chrysanthemums in front of the living room picture window . . . The re reception ception was given between 5:30 and 7:30 o’clock . . . Among those greeted at the early hour, Mr. and Mrs. Harris Lietz, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Gerlinger, Mr. and Mrs. Lester F. Barr, Mr. and Mrs. Victor 0. Williams, Mrs. E. H. Kennedy, Mrs. Marie Ling, Mrs. Fred H. Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bown, Mr. and Mrs. George H. Flagg, Mr. and Mrs. James Walton Sr., Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Maison, Mr. and Mrs. William Schlitt, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Krueger, Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElwain, here from Coos Bay; Mr. and Mrs. Donald McCormick and Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Kerr, all of Portland; Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Von Eschen . . Later, a family dinner for the newlyweds was given at Chuck’s Steak House . . . V t Salem Woman on Mission to Moscow Back in Salem from a trip behind the Iron Curtain is Mrs. William H. Paulus. She was part of the Midwest News Study Mission to Russia and Eastern Europe, a group of representatives of communi communications cations media making a 21- day tour. In Stockholm, Mrs. Paulus found the experience of join joining ing a family at its evening meal in the kitchen a point of genuine interest. Finland, Russia, Romania, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Austria and East Berlin were also on the group’s itinerary. A day at the Kremlin, a visit to the offices and pub publishing lishing plant of Pravda, the great Russian daily newspa newspaper, per, the Bolshoi Theatre and Ballet were among the Mos Moscow cow highlights. Everywhere, newspapers, embassies, radio and television stations and personnel were hospitable to the visitors. Romania, Mrs. Paulus re recalls calls as having seemingly the happiest people, but she counts an evening at a Vien Viennese nese ball as both beautiful and gay. Around Town... By JERYME ENGLISH NUPTIAL NEWS ... of interest | to the couples’ many friends is j the marriage of Mrs. Glenn E. McCormick and William H. Paul- I us, which was quietly solemnized on Friday afternoon at the King- wood Heights home of the bride . . . Only members of the immed immediate iate family witnessed the three o'clock ceremony at which Dr. Paul Newton Poling, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, offici officiated ated . . . Attending the couple were the bride’s daughter, Mrs. Bruce Kerr, and Robert Paulus of San Francisco, brother of the bridegroom . . . A reception . . , honored the newlyweds later in the day when Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Kerr and Mr. and Mrs. William G. Paulus, the latter son and daughter-in-law of the bridegroom, entertained at the bride's home . . . Over a hundred longtime friends of the couple called between 5:30 and 7:30 o'clock . . . Presiding at the serving table were Mrs. Stuart Kerr of Portland, Mrs. Paul Mc McElwain Elwain of Coos Bay, Mrs. Linn C. Smith, Mrs. Ellis F. Von Es Eschen, chen, Mrs. Frank V. Prime and Mrs. Harland G. Brock . . . The couple will leave the first of the week on a wedding trip to Cali California fornia after which they will be at home at 540 Kingwood Drive NW . . . THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, APRIL 7, 1963 f — April And Song Of Spring The Grapevine By JESS SCOTT PROUD Portland grandparents of bouncing boy learn learned ed of his arrival in somewhat original way. Stuart B. Kerr’s wife Allie and their younger son Doug were dnv- ing home, late afternoon February 25, and Mrs. K. turned car radio to Station KSLM, Salem. Elder son Bruce work for KSLM and she figured that if he was broadcasting all was quiet in Salem home of Bruce and his wife, the for former mer Glenda McCormick. She was just in time to hear a pinch-hitting broad broadcaster caster announce that Bruce was father of fine son, Scott G01 Baby has sister Karen Elizabeth, 17 months. The Salem grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William Pauus. Already the junior Kerr foursome, plus French poodle named Bridget have had a weekend at senior Kerr home in Portland Heights. This was for Bruce s duty with Air National Guard" They’ll be back again, sometime soon while Kerr daughter Jean, who s primary teacher in San i« home for Easter vacation.I i h Around Town... By JERYME ENGLISH PARTY TIME . . . Several hundred women, beautif u 11 y dressed in colorful costumes and donning gorgeous cha chapeaux peaux (the most we have seen at a party in a long time) were shuttled by car up the hill to the magnificent view home of Mr. and Mrs. W i 1- liam G. Paulus on Tuesday... The occasion was the tea hon honoring oring Mrs. Clay Myers, .wife of Oregon’s Secretary of State ... and the hostesses were Mrs. Paulus and two former first ladies of Oregon, Mrs. Paul L. Patterson of Portland and Mrs. Douglas McKay . . . The quartet . . . received informally in the sunken living room before a beauti beautiful ful floor to ceiling window with the sun shining through and casting a glow through throughout out .. . for the party Mrs. Myers chose a beige dress to which she pinned cymbid- ium orchids ... at various intervals the hostesses and honor guest were able to relax by the window seat and enjoy a sandwich and cup of tea . . . the McCalls will be off to Honolulu for the Western Gov Governors’ ernors’ conference . . . Aud Audrey rey McCall looked chic in a red, white and blue check suit with matching chapeau . . . Mrs. Charles A. Sprague, also a former first lady of Oregon, poured one hour . . . Mrs. Keith Powell, who had plans to build next to the Paulus- es, is giving up the west view for an east view . . . They have purchased Mrs. Walter Kirk’s lovely Morning- side home and will be moving this summer . . . Ohs and ahs ... were heard everywhere by the guests as they admired the English Tudor style home on Pigeon Hollow Road ... there are high, beamed ceilings . . . balconies, a loft (where Nor Norma ma and Bill can hide away with their hobbies and enjoy the panoramic view of the val valley ley and Salem Golf Club fair fairways) ways) . . . gorgeous views from nearly every window ... also terraces and patios off the master bedroom, dining room and kitchen . . . Norma and Bill spent over two years plan planning, ning, designing and decorat decorating ing their home . . . A terra cetta . . . color theme is featured through throughout out the house and in the car carpeting peting , . . Printed Austrian (hades in terra cotta and green at the windows . . . handsome marble fireplaces in the living room and li library brary (the marble from the old Ladd and Bush bank) . . . Noteworthy ...the handsome chandelier in the dining room made entirely of wood and strings of wooden beads . . . The handcarved columns in the stairway bal- Probably the largest tea of the spring here was given Tuesday at the beautiful new home of Mr. and Mrs. William G. Paulus on Pigeon Hollow Road South Mrs. Paulus, Mrs. Douglas McKay and Mrs. Paul L. Patterson, the latter of Portland, gave the party to honor Mrs. Clay Myers. A large group of guests was invited to call between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. . . _ Many of the guests en enjoyed joyed a tour of the unusual and spacious Tudor style, house . . . Many striking arrangements of spring blooms decorated the rooms . . . The long dark-wood tea table was centered with while rhododendrons arranged in a tall bronzed figurine, and the covering was of avocado green run runners ners . . . Among callers at the opening hour were Mrs/ F. M. Sercombe, Mrs. Richard D. Slater, Mrs. Lee V. Oh- mart, Mrs. Raymond Busick, Mrs. William L. Phillips, Mrs. C. Lester Newman, Mrs. Carl Gerlinger, Mrs. A. C. Gerlinger, Mrs. Robert Sprague, Mrs. Robert T. Boals, Mrs. Norman W, Merrill, Mrs. Hugh L. Taylor, Mrs. Ronald Krebs, Mrs. Clark C. McCall, Mrs. Rich Richard ard Springer, Mrs. Claude A. Miller, Mrs. Roy Harland, Mrs. Wayne Loder, Mrs. H. G. Maison, Mrs. William R. Shinn, Mrs. Maurice Fitzsimons, Mrs. Maylon E. Scott, Mrs. Walter A. Barsch, Mrs. Jack Miller, Mrs. Ernest H. Miller, Mrs. Sidney B. Lewis, Mrs. James T. Brand, Mrs. Sidney Schlesinger. Pouring at that hour were Miss Mary Eyre and Mrs. Hall S. Lusk, and in the group assisting were Mrs. Wayne Hadley, Mrs. John Kitzmiller Jr„ Mrs. James Sexson, Mrs. Leon Perry, Mrs. Ronald Kraus, Mrs. Thomas Yandell .... By Marian Lowry Fischer Capital Journal Women’s Editor Antique gold . . . invita- Hons printed in calligraphy have been received to a tea for which Mrs. Douglas Mc McKay, Kay, Mrs. Paul L. Patter Patterson son of Portland, former first ladies of Oregon, and Mrs. William G. Paulus will be hostesses on Tuesday, April 30 in honor of Mrs. Clay Myers ... a large group of friends have been invited to call between 11 a.m. and S p.m. to greet Mrs. Myers, who moved to Salem from Portland when her husband was named Secretary of State . .:. The party will be held at the attractive new home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul- i us on Pigeon Hollow Read South . . . Hostesses ... on Friday i evening will be Mrs. Darwin / foldoutocrFile61a foldoutFile61a By JERYME PARTY TIME . . . Several hundred women, beautif u 11 y dressed in colorful costumes and donning gorgeous cha chapeaux peaux (the most we have seen at a party in a long time) were shuttled by car up the hill to the magnificent view home of Mr. and Mrs. W i 1- liam G. Paulus on Tuesday... The occasion was the tea hon honoring oring Mrs. Clay Myers, .wife of Oregon’s Secretary of State . . . and the hostesses were Mrs. Paulus and two former first ladies of Oregon, Mrs. Paul L. Patterson of Portland and Mrs. Douglas McKay . . . The quartet . . . received informally in the sunken living room before a beauti beautiful ful floor to ceiling window with the sun shining through and casting a glow through throughout out ... for the party Mrs. Myers chose a beige dress to which she pinned cymbid- [ ium orchids ... at various intervals the hostesses and honor guest were able to relax by the window seat and enjoy a sandwich and cup of tea . . . Ohs and ahs . . . were heard everywhere by the guests as they admired the English Tudor style home on Pigeon Hollow Road . . . there are high, beamed ceilings . . . balconies, a loft (where Nor Norma ma and Bill can hide away with their hobbies and enjoy the panoramic view of the val valley ley and Salem Golf Club fair fairways) ways) . . . gorgeous views from nearly every window . . . also terraces and patios off the master bedroom, dining room and kitchen . . . Norma and Bill spent over two years plan planning, ning, designing and decorat decorating ing their home . . . A terra cotta . . . color theme is featured through throughout out the house and in the car carpeting peting . . . Printed Austrian shades in terra cotta and green at the windows ... handsome marble fireplaces in the living room and li library brary (the marble from the old Ladd and Bush bank) . . . Noteworthy ...the handsome chandelier in the dining room made entirely of wood and strings of wooden beads . . . The handcarved columns in the stairway bal balustrade ustrade made of tulip wood . . . The kitchen so colorful with yellow, orange and green predominating with working counter and table in the center . . . The dining room . . . per perhaps haps our favorite ... a beau beautiful, tiful, long Elizabethan style table and chairs . . . sage green table runners with white tassels were used instead of a cloth and so effective . . . the centerpiece simply ele elegant gant ... a gorgeous Italian baroque statue topped with a mass of white rhododendrons and flanked by two single j white tapers in silver candle candlesticks sticks . . . At the front entry ... a Striped canopy (Tuesday was a showery day) ... A strik- i ing bouquet of yellow tulips in the living room ... on the fireplace hearth an ar arrangement rangement of dogwood, iris and other spring blooms . . . It was a fun party and won wonderful derful to see so many people at one time ... the first large tea in a long time . . . Oregon's first lady . . . Mrs. Tom McCall among those pouring . . . Audrey arrived home just a short while be before fore the tea from Pebble Beach, Calif., and next week _ Town... ENGLISH the McCalls will be off to Honolulu for the Western Gov Governors’ ernors’ conference . . . Aud Audrey rey McCall looked chic in a red, white and blue check suit with matching chapeau . . . Mrs. Charles A. Sprague, also a former first lady of Oregon, poured one hour . . . Mrs. Keith Powell, who had plans to build next to the Paulus- es, is giving up the west view for an east view . . . They have purchased Mrs. Walter Kirk’s lovely Morning- side home and will be moving this summer . . . Probably ; given Tuesday Mrs. William i . . . Mrs. Paul L. Patterson, 1 By Marian a Lowry | Fischer Capital Journal ^ Women’s I Editor ... The loi with while rhc figurine, and t ners . . . Among cal Sercombe, Mr: mart, Mrs. Ra Mrs. C. Lester C. Gerlinger, Boals, Mrs. Nc Mrs. Ronald K ard Springer, f Mrs. Wayne L R. Shinn, Mrs Scott, Mrs. Wj Ernest H. Millt Brand, Mrs. S Pouring al Mrs. Hall S. Mrs. Wayne f James Sexson, Mrs. Thomas ’ foldoutocrFile61b foldoutFile61b Around Town..} — By JERYME ENGLISH PARTY TIME . . . Several hundred women, beautif u 11 y dressed in colorful costumes and donning gorgeous cha chapeaux peaux (.the most we have seen at a party in a long time) were shuttled by car up the hill to the magnificent view home of Mr. and Mrs. W i 1- liam G. Paulus on Tuesday... The occasion was the tea hon honoring oring Mrs. Clay Myers, wife of Oregon’s Secretary of State ... and the hostesses were Mrs. Paulus and two former first ladies of Oregon, Mrs. Paul L. Patterson of Portland and Mrs. Douglas McKay . . . the McCalls will be off to Honolulu for the Western Gov Governors’ ernors’ conference . . . Aud Audrey rey McCall looked chic in a red, white and blue check suit with matching chapeau . . . Mrs. Charles A. Sprague, also a former first lady of Oregon, poured one hour . . • M rs - Keith Powell, who had plans to build next to the Paulus- es, is giving up the west view for an east view . . • They have purchased Mrs. Walter Kirk's lovely Morning- side home and will be moving this summer r ~l/lrs. "Doucjfas 'ZMxTaxf (Paul L. TacteKon TMnTWillCant Cj. TauCus KCjruesv xfie fwnor of ifour presence ~xo mee The quartet . . . received Informally in the sunken living room before a beauti beautiful ful floor to ceiling window with the sun shining through and casting a glow through throughout out .. . for the party Mrs. Myers chose a beige dress to which she pinned cymbid- ium orchids ... at various intervals the hostesses and honor guest were able to relax by the window seat and enjoy a sandwich and cup of tea . . . Ohs and ahs . . . were heard everywhere by the guests as they admired the English Tudor style home on Pigeon Hollow Road . . . there are high, beamed ceilings . . . balconies, a loft (where Nor Norma ma and Bill can hide away with their hobbies and enjoy the panoramic view of the val valley ley and Salem Golf Club fair fairways) ways) . . . gorgeous views from nearly every window . . . also terraces and patios off the master bedroom, dining room and kitchen . . . Norma and i- Bill spent over two years plan planning. ning. designing and decorat decorating ing their home . . . A terra cotta . . . color theme is featured through throughout out the house and in the car carpeting peting . . . Printed Austrian shades in terra cotta and green at the windows . . . handsome marble fireplaces in the living room and li library brary (the marble from the old Ladd and Bush bank) . . . Noteworthy ...the handsome chandelier in the dining room made entirely of wood and strings of wooden beads . . . The handcarved columns in the stairway bal- ustr M J - «f tubp wood witf rci 7 ... u „ gre< 61 007 S I, ' 3 68 sn '*" r /Q , P/OCJ-x ZZ'I °° i ^ /0 C(faj~ r JViiJer5 TTuxsdaif ApnC^o, Jg6& ax xtie (wme of TMrTWltfCam Cj.Taufus ]0CjO Tiqeon TrCotlow Toad 5ouxfi Probably the 1 given Tuesday at Mrs. William G. P . . . Mrs. Paulus, / L. Patterson, the 1 2 to ^ in xhe afemoon By Marian Lowry Fischer Capital Journal Women’* Editor and spacious Tudor style,' house . . . Many striking arrangements of spring blooms decorated the rooms . . . The long dark-wood tea table was centered with while rhododendrons arranged in a tall bronzed figurine, and the covering was of avocado green run runners ners . . . Among callers at the opening hour were Mrs> F. M. Sercombe, Mrs. Richard D. Slater, Mrs. Lee V. Oh- mart, Mrs. Raymond Busick, Mrs. William L. Phillips, Mrs. C. Lester Newman, Mrs. Carl Gerlinger, Mrs. A. C. Gerlinger, Mrs. Robert Sprague, Mrs. Robert T. Boals, Mrs. Norman W. Merrill, Mrs. Hugh L. Taylor, Mrs. Ronald Krebs, Mrs. Clark C. McCall, Mrs. Rich Richard ard Springer, Mrs. Claude A. Miller, Mrs. Roy Harland, Mrs. Wayne Loder, Mrs. H. G. Maison, Mrs. William R. Shinn, Mrs. Maurice Fitzsimons, Mrs. Maylon E. Scott, Mrs. Walter A. Barsch, Mrs. Jack Miller, Mrs. Ernest H. Miller, Mrs. Sidney B. Lewis, Mrs. James T. Brand, Mrs. Sidney Schlesinger. Pouring at that hour were Miss Mary Eyre and Mrs. Hall S. Lusk, and in the group assisting were Mrs. Wayne Hadley, Mrs. John Kitzmiller Jr., Mrs. James Sexson, Mrs. Leon Perry, Mrs. Ronald Kraus, Mrs. Thomas Yandell .... South . . . Hostesses ... on Friday \ evening will be Mrs. Darwin /»een and Heard... By JERYME ENGLISH Jeryme English THE HOLIDAY SEASON ... I is not only gay with numer numerous ous parties, open houses and ! dances, but I the many weddings ... we o f t e n | wonder i f the Christ- I mas and wedding gift p a c kages I ever g e t mixed up un under der the tree ... Our hats are off to the mothers who not only assist their daughters with wedding plans and the many last min minute ute details, but are able to Christmas shop, entertain at traditional family parties and still look radiantly happy and calm as the “mother of the bride” ... The holiday sea season son is becoming more popu popular lar than ever for weddings, especially this year with so many servicemen home on leave.... A STAND-OUT ... the huge 15-foot Noble Fir Christmas tree which is centered in the ceiling to floor window in the living room of the English Tu Tudor dor style home of Mr. and Mrs. William G. Paulus on Pigeon Hollow Road ... A large group of their friends were able to view the tree a week ago when they enter entertained tained preceding the Terrace Club Christmas dance ... There w r ere raves from every everyone one as they admired the tree It was quite a task ... decorating the top of the tree as their ladder was hardly tall enough ... Nor Norma ma and Bill garlanded the entire tree with extra wide gold tinsel ... huge orange paper flowers adorned all the branches harmonizing with the terra cotta decor throughout the home) and there were angels and spe special cial ornaments which had been given them by friends ... In the upstairs guest bedroom was a lighted tree, so guests viewed two trees as they walked up the steep driveway to the Paulus home.... Causing much comment ... were the felt banners repre representing senting the Twelve Days of Christmas which Norma Paul Paulus us had made and decorated they are suspended from the balconies and beamed ceil ceilings ings in the living and dining rooms and library ... The hostess matching the decor in her burnt orange crepe dress A number of out-of- town guests were spotted amidst tho throng ... With Dr. and Mrs. William Drips were longtime friends ... Dr. and Mrs. Edward Mur Murphy, phy, Dr. and Mrs. John MacKinnon and Dr. and Mrs. Robert Glass, all of Eugene ... Mrs. Glass was wearing an orchid lei with her wine velvet dress . . Former Salem residents, tho Clifford Thiedes, were down from Lake Oswego as guests of tho Ronald Lymans.... Also spotted ... Mrs. Sam Skillem, who wore a beautiful white dress printed in shades of orange and pink which she had purchased on her recent trip to Hawaii ... Mrs. James Houck accented her brunette beauty with a long, slim white faille gown, the high neck- lined jeweled in silver bead beading ing ... VFhite also the choice of Mrs. Robert Morrison with mink edging the neckline.... being madfa ' ,ames M - Burns be [ s .°J the bar were invited M,fi’ c ose fnends and mem- buffet luncheon. Mrs Burnc to Bums home for hostess by the tlmeeel d es? in ber dudes as Beth, and by the ti p daughters, Mary, Nancy and Paulus of Salm and MaXef M daU8h,Grs ' Mrs - Viliam of Mr. and Mrs. Edwfrd^ ^. ai \f ltzgibbo n, daughter (Norma), and her husband are °"' (Mrs - Paulus m fbe state capital.) both att °meys and practice greeted the firs! arrivals da ^ htcrs ’ Mo >Iy and Bobby, ‘heir own in the park Th! U Wen ‘ ° ff to a P icnic party by next-door neighbor done for < b e ahmit all of King Street has h Cabel1 ’ and J us ‘ Checking f or last-minute J hal ? d ' n the ce,eb ration. might cope for the Burnses was Mre' 6 ? W “ h Which she another Kings Court s , Mrs - James V. Brattain one of Portland’s nLed hosmss!!" 0 ^"' 3 "^ Mrs ’ Cabe11 full of August sunshine f ‘ e . sses > going to have jars real old-fashioned pickled peaches 6 ) PartieS ' making Coming 0 p , «lsco to show San Fran- •’«. I 7 I* 0 formor *'* on Nov. P° b »rt Paulo, ^ ^sident, den' Photograph*;. ’ ! “ a " or. trips to various part * rran 9 e * In order f 0 ° f world He has won k P'ctunas . pictures Pictures at various > ’,h Pn * e * °° hi * Ihe country ^ Present three I ' f* r ’ Pa ulus " ^e Gala entitle? sbow ‘ ®t Night ( a new Z™ Yor * be on series and oneon 's* Canb ' • ■ • Mr. Pau/us I, Sln 9apor» afternoon and pres enting the for his Salem V"'" 9 sh °*""9s Public Jte „ th. interested ,n Z YWCA he been w °rk of the Salem Starts Condemnation The first condemnation suit involving the proposed Salem civic center site was filed Mon Monday day in Marion County Circuit Court. The City of Salem suit is against John W. Kitzmiller Jr. and concerns a three- story home at Commercial and Les Leslie lie streets SE. The city has of offered fered $64,000 and the suit states the property’s value is $60,000. The City Council also has au authorized thorized a suit against Robert E. Coe Jr., who has rejected a $20,000 offer for a small apartment building at 353 Les Leslie lie St. in the civic center site That suit has not been filed, however. i, Salem, Ore,, M on .. Nov. 21, '66 talesman's HOME orama ■ ■ fashions... Features PAST PRESIDENTS 77. of the Salem Art Association were honored at a gala gsj-swc held in the Bush House Barn With guests first gathering ni the upstairs galleiy__— 1 Town... ENGLISH • Italian dinner (prepared by Mr. and Mrs. Pat Valentino) was served at tables covered with red and white check cloths and centered with can candle-dripped dle-dripped bottles . . . Covers . . . were placed for 56 guests with Dr. A. Kenneth Yost, president of the Art Association board, welcoming the past presi presidents dents . . . they included Mrs. Monroe Gilbert, the first president in 1919, who also cut the anniversary cake following the dinner - • . Rex Gibson, V. E. Kuhn, Miss Elizabeth Lord, Mrs. Vernon Douglas of Portland, Mrs. Walter Kirk, Willard Marshall, James Walton, Er- nest Miller, Dr. Owen Miller, David D u n i w a y, Robert Sprague, Claude Miller and Donald Dill . . . Another former . . . presi president, dent, Robert Paulus of San ’ Francisco, had expected to be here for the dinner, but at the last minute was unable to come north . . . instead, he sent a copy of one of his prize prizewinning winning paintings which was won by Wayne Anderson . . . Assisting Mr. Valentino with arrangements for the dinner were Mrs. Bruce Km- Mice. > between 7 and 8:30 p.m. Party hosts . . . «" Frl , day, Dec. 9 will be Mr. and Mrs. Asa LeweHing, 'who have invited a group of their friends to a “Holiday Kick Kickoff" off" a t Chuck's Steak House a buffet will be served during the evening and call- hours are from 7:30 to ing 10 p.m. foldoutocrFile62a foldoutFile62a i, Salem, Ore., Mon., Nov. 21, '66 (S tatesman's HOME orama ,. Fashions... Features l Town... \E ENGLISH V Italian dinner (prepared by Mr. and Mrs. Pat Valentino) was served at tables covered with red and white check cloths and centered with can candle-dripped dle-dripped bottles . . . Covers . . . were placed for 56 guests with Dr. A. Kenneth Yost, president of the Art Association board, welcoming the past presi presidents dents . . . they included Mrs. Monroe Gilbert, the first president in 1919, who also cut the anniversary cake following the dinner . . . Rex Gibson, V. E. Kuhn, Miss Elizabeth Lord, Mrs. Vernon Douglas of Portland, Mrs. Walter Kirk, Willard Marshall, James Walton, Er Ernest nest Miller, Dr. Owen Miller, David D u n i w a y, Robert Sprague, Claude Miller and Donald Dill .. . . Another former . . . presi president, dent, Robert Paulus of San Francisco, had expected to be here for the dinner, but at the last minute was unable to come north . . . instead, he sent a copy of one of his prize prizewinning winning paintings which was won by Wayne Anderson . . . Assisting Mr. Valentino with arrangements for the dinner were Mrs. Bruce Kerr, Miss Ruth Skinner, Mrs. Else Faust and Mrs. Albert Fuchs . . . Board members hope to make this an annual affair . . . Holiday invitations ... were received to several par parties ties in the weekend mail -1 . . . The Marien-Polk Coun County ty Medical Society will hold its annual Christmas open house for members and their wives on Friday, Dec. 2 ... locale for the party will be lllahe Hills Country Club between 7 and 8:30 p.m, . . . Party hosts ... on Fri Friday, day, Dec. 9 will be Mr. and Mrs. Asa Lewelling, who have invited a group of their friends to a "Holiday Kick Kickoff" off" at Chuck's Steak House ... a buffet will be served during the evening and call calling ing hours are from 7:30 to 10 p.m. PAST PRESIDENTS ... of the Salem Art Association were honored at a gala and festive event Friday night when members of the Associa Association’s tion’s board of directors en entertained tertained ... the affair was held in the Bush House Barn with guests first gathering in the upstairs gallery ... AnAssistance League of S i m ■ ff ' 1 H ■I * ** i m 4»msm 5 i i l *< ■ > ■ ' ~ ; '* ' , • "A SSS2SSB&** 'mSs&S ■ •» ;.; T -'-r:, Wip *-? 5S •'* * j* A' -• v> X T'ba I3p/5y,u QEj^Luty d 8: oo pm OCTOBER. 3Q±k ■ SILVER SPIKES > * AKD SPIRITS \. FM/teDf\\jL 1> ^AJRS.^~Ocuj*(dR equests for clothing, including shoes, have more than tripled this year according to Assistance League reports. Mrs. Gene Vandeneynde (left) and Mrs. William H. Paulus, shown in the photo at the right, select jackets for young boys to wear to school. The League sponsors two fund- raising events a year, the tea dance and Pops concert, to provide the nec necessary essary clothing. /Qe-o /, (9C, 3CLARK & MARSH ATTORNEYS AT LAW EDWARD L. CLARK, JR MALCOLM F. MARSH 410 CAPITOL TOWER State and Liberty Streets SALEM, OREGON 97301 TELEPHONE 581-1542 March 14, 1967 Mrs Norma J Paulus Attorney at Law 610 Capitol Tower Salem, Oregon 97301 Dear Norma: Enclosed find our check for $1, 000. Your recollection of our agreement is almost correct. My memory is that you were to tell us when you got to $1,000 and then we would talk about more compensation for more work. You never did this, but I do not regard the subject as closed. I know you worked hard on this and I believe you worked long at it as well. If this does not represent fair compensation for your good work and your time, let me know, because we can adjust upward Once again, let me tell you what I am sure you know and that is how pleased I was with your work, your attitude and the whole relation relationship ship on this job. I never left the Supreme Court with such a feeling of success as I did this time. It was, of course, your fine work on the brief and your calm, dispassionate, beautifully organized argument, which left me that way. Best regards. Very truly yours, CLARK & MARSH ELCrlr enc Edward L Clark, Jr