The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, February 25, 1945, Page 3, Image 3

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The OrXGON STATESMAN, Golem. Orogon. Sunday Morning. February 25 134S
PAGE THSES
Lyons Social
Successful
Pie Sale Nets Society
. $27; Program Is
Presented
.' LYONS The pie social spon
sored by the Women' Society of
Christian Service was held at the
community club house Thursday
and netted the society nearly $27.
,A short program including songs,
readings and a short skit proceed
ed the selling of the pies. -
Members of Faith Rebekah lodge
held an all-day meeting at the hall
Wednesday to finish the quilt and
. clean the hall. " .
Mrs. Perry Clipfell of Portland
visited last week with her-husband's
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
George Clipfell.
Mr. and Mrs. George Hufman
and daughters Janice, Janet, and
Jeanettes spent the weekend at the
home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
George Hubbard, at Oakridge; al
io her sister, Mrs. Clarence Deck
er and family, at Eugene.
v r Mrs. Daisy Johnston went to Sa
lem Wednesday to spend a week
with her sister, Mrs. Bertha Wood
worth and other relatives.
. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Allen at
tended the Rural Carriers Tri
county convention at Monmouth,
Thursday. Feb. 22. He is secre
tary lor the carriers and Mrs. Al
Jen, secretary tor - the women s
auxiliary. Enroute home they vis
ited at the George Allen home in
Corvallis, an uncle of Mr. Allen
Mrs. Louis Langenberg of Coos
' 1 !
Midi --Wffiam
From The Statesman Co
'5 iU
1
Correspondents
Bay is visiting her sister,
Ivan Day and family.
Scouts First Aid Class j
Starting in Silvcrtort
SILVERTON Mrs. Flora (Olson
will begin her Junior Red Jcross
First Aid course Tuesday at the
Methodist church at 7:30 p.nt The
class will include Boy and Girl
Scouts -who wish to earn first aid
merit badges. Any scout over 12
years of age may take the course.
Valley Obituaries
Mrs.
Marion-Polk
Science Meet
Is Scheduled :
A science teachers conference
sponsored jointly by the state
department of education and the
State. System of Higher Educa
tion and j designed especiall for
high school and junior high school
science teachers of Marion and
Polk counties, will be held at Sa
lem, Monday, February 26.
The session open at 9 a. m. in
the Salem senior high school build
ing and will feature reports by
teachers on their problems in
teaching science, objectives in sci
ence teaching, the science program
in the elemtentary and junior high
school, and the teaching of bio
logical and physical sciences in the
senior high scool.
The night session is open to any
one interested in science educa
tion and will be held in the con
ference room of the old Salem high
school building. It will be devot
ed to a discussion of frontiers in
the field, of biological and phy
sical science. - !
Speakers ta the conference in
clude Dr. Elmo Stevenson and Dr.
W. M. Atwood, Oregon State col
lege; Dr. Charles H. Secoy, Uni
versity of Oregon; and D. A. Em
erson, state department of educa
tion.
.JOHN ZINK
r SCIO Funeral services for
John Zink, 69, who died Thursday
at the family home near Scio, will
be held Monday afternoon. --
He was born and reared in the
Immediate vicinity of Scio and fol
lowed farming all his life. Sur
vivors are his ; brothers, Ephraim
and Edward, and his sister, Mrs.
Anna Carter, all of Scio.
Burial will be in Lone Oak cem
etery near Stayton, where final
rites will be held under direction
of the Hiowe Funeral home of
Lebanon.
THOMAS M. TEAGUE
FALLS CITY Mrs. E. S. Dix
on, teacher of local school, re
ceived word her father, Thomas
M. Teague, 82, of Dayton, died
Wednesday. He has been in poor
health all winter. Survivors are
the widow, Anna M- Teague; one
son, John M. of McMinnviUe, two
daughters, Mrs. Clair Richstein of
Dayton; Mrs. E. S. Dixon of Mon
mouth; two sisters, Mrs. Kate
Williams of Springfield and Mrs.
Harlejr Roberts of Goldendale,
Wash., and nine grandchildren.
' The funeral was held Saturday
at 2 p. m. at the Whitfield funeral
home.
Eola Women Work
On R. Gross Books
.EOLA Mrs. B. I. Ferguson,
entertained the women of Eola,
February 20, for the Red Cross
work meeting. All sewing and
knitting was finished, so the aft
ernoon was spent working on af-
ghansjand scrapbooks.
Sixteen women attended. Mrs,
Jack Gibson has invited the wom
en to meet next time at her home,
March 6. It is expected there will
be sewing, and all women of the
community are asked to attend.
War Fund Head
i
VI
PolkCkninty War Fund Drive
Opens Thursday; Oliver Head
DALLAS, Feb.: 24 All. things fare ready for the lied Cross war
fund drive which ooens Thursday. March 1. A. V. Oliver, of Rick
reall, is county 5hairman.f; Chairmen have appointed and the
Quotas assigned to the various disbricts. " While a few districts have
had the Quota lowered and a few raised, most of the Quotas remain the
Same as last year. The quota for Polk county is $1100 less than last
year pr $20,000. : 1
The Dallas drive will again be
lead by the Lion's club, which has
appointed R. R. Turner, local
chairman. Turner was successful
in putting last year's drive - for
$6000 far over the fop. This year
the Quota is he same. The Inde
pendence drive will also be in the
handsof the Lion's club, with W.
A. Barnum las chairman. I . The
quota is $2000. Dr. Dv R.' Dewey
is the chairman for the Monmouth
and Airlie districts with a com
bined quota I of $1200. -Lb '
$ Other district chairmen and quo
tas Include: East Polk county
Mrs. Ella Givson, Frank Crawford,
$2,000; North Polk county An
drew . Campbell; Valsetz, Bert
Thomas, $1.7p0; South Willamina
and Fern district Mrs. Nina H ei
der $300; j Valley Junction Mrs.
Elmo Kink, $350;' Grand , Ronde,
Mrs. Gertrude Howard, Mrs. Er
nestine Cowan, $750; Salt Creek
D. T. BartelL $300; Gold Creek,
Zelma Boyer, , $200; -Pedee, Mrs.
Richard Var Den Bosch, $300;
Hoskins,--Keiineth- :Brooks, f- $150;
Falls City, Mrs. Jessie f Moy er,
$500; Bowersville, Mrs. . George
Kurre, $250; Oak Grove,! Mrs.
Davit Allen, $300; Rickreall, Mrs.
Clara Wait, l $350; Guthrie and
Cooper -Hollow, Mrs. Sylvester
Tilgner, $100; Oakdale, Mrs. L. M.
Dennis, $50;. Bridgeport, Mrs, Pearl
Embree, $75; Pioneer and Ellen
dale,; Forest Martin, $150; Crow
ley, Mrs. Jennie Letteken. $150;
Smitjifield, Mrs. Sol N. ; Ediger,
$100
1
Dallas Home Nursing
Class Starts March 5
DALLAS March 5 is the date
set for the first meeting of the
class in home nursing sponsored
by Polk county chapter of the Red
ross,Mrs. Merfitt Hart, chair
man, has announced. The course
will offer training in care of sick
persons in the home and care of
aged persons and invalids. It will
extend over 12 weeks, with one
meeting of two hours each week.
Mrs. G. R. Scott and Mrs. Wil
liam A. Himes will be the instruc
tors. The meeting will be held at
the Red Cross center.
ROSE E. SMITH -
Monmouth Rosa E. Smith,
longtime local resident, died Feb.
15 at her home in Portland. She
was born in Monmouth August 30,
1878, daughter of the late Rufus
and Irene Wren Smith. After her
granduation from Oregon Nor
mal school, she taught in various
schools before entering the Port
land system, where she taught con
tinuously for 1 24 years, retiring
about 12 years ago. She lived here
in summers, and for several years
after retiring, but returned to Port
land after the? death of a brother,
Roy Smith in 1938.
. Survivors are a sister, Mrs. Ida
M.- Goodriigit of Vancouver,
Wash.; and iMrs. Myra Noble,
Heppner; and! a brother, Edwin
Smith, Corvallis. ' Funeral serv
ices were held in Portland at the
Colonial Mortuary, Rev. Dr. T. L.
Shannon officiating. Final serv
ices and burial were at Fir Crest
cemetery here. ,'
otfono
Home
.. Enonlatlon .
. Ut TO 13
I.I.FWL COSTS j
ltd 2.C3 37 te. K
Pftll ESTIMATE
- STORES v t
Phone $144
Cor. liberty 4b Center EL
Camp Adair Service
By Buses Is Extended
I ALBANY J- Service to Camp
Adair was extended Wednesday
of this- week; by the Valley; Motor
stages, with ? good Jpatronage re
ported, and expected to be in
creased. J j . - I ; j-
; Kenneth Bloow, Owner and op
erator of the.Valley Stage system,
will! be the local agent for the
pacific Greyhound lines replacing
John Ratzlaff who has been the
Greyhound aent for Albany since
1941, and now transferred to
Klamath Falls. i
I Bloom also runs a taxi system
in the city, with offices on Ferry
street. These he states will con
tinue in the same location and will
hot Interfere; with either the Val
ley Stages nor , the - Greyhound
buses, the terminal for which is
located on West Second street.
K.
V:"-:if-iV'iiil,-lri
K. Turner, ehalmuui of the
Lions club committee, to direct
Red Cross War Fund work far
Dallas,' Polk- county.
Plan Supjier Qub
At Eola School ! r-
New Creamery
Has Opening I
DALLAS Saturday morning
and afternoon Mr. and Mrs. G.
Brandli held open house at 'their
new creamery.-;
The structure which, is nearly
completed, : was built by Ervin
Batterman, general contractor, ac
cording to specifications suggested
by the state department of agrj
culture, that, adheres to strict reg
ulations of sanitation and health.
From ' the weighing vat in the
receiving room, the raw milk runs
through stainless! steel pipes to
the pasteurizer, cooler and boiler.
The 1200-pound i capacity churn
will accommodate the increased
business expected following the
close of the war. Some months the
butter production has reached 10,
000 pounds. The refrigeration sys
tern and cold box have also been
resigned to care for the Increased
Ice cream business expected .and
which is limited to war quotas at
Dresent The salesroom ; at the
front of the building, - equipped
with booths and counters, and
limited to the sale of ice cream
and milkshakes, will in postwar
era offer a complete fountain serv
ice,; The furnace room, where
steam is produced for heating as
well as general use and a large
store room complete the building.
Landscaping
Is Promoted
!
Liberty Farmers Union
Sponsors Contest to :
Beautify Homes - I
Liberty Fanner Union met at
the .hall Tuesday, for the regular
business session. New members
accepted into : the local were , Mr.
and Mrs. A. W. Bennett and Rol
and 'AT Larson. v " "I :
Mrs. Roy Ferrand announced the
Junior State Convention to be held
Wednesday at the state office
building on North Commercial
street in Salem.
John Dasch aDDointed the com
mittees lorhe following year as
follows: agriculture committee, W.
R. Berndt,, Roy Ferrand, poultry;
E. G, Clark, dairy; Reuben Nickot,
crops; Henry" Paulson, fruit and
berries, v 1 - ! , :'.
The committee -on co-operation
are Ralph Dent,' Floyd Blackmore
and Sam Merey. Commjttee to
plan the co-op machine shop and
garage, Reuben NickoL Frank
Judd and William Schotthoefer.
The landscape committee ap
pointed at the last meeting have
met and drawn up rules for the
home beautifying contest and an
nounced the rules. Chief among
Shedd Rites .
To Be Monday
lX)LA-i-The Community clul)
voted to serve a chicken supper,
Friday night, March 2, at the
Eola school. -The proceeds will be
used for community work. Mrs.
E. L. HerreQ is chairman, and her
assistants - are Mrs.' H. Korter
myer, Mrs. Jack Gibson, Mrs. J.
Leach, Mrs. Clara Gehrkie, Mrs.
Ernest Brunk, Mrs. Don Kimp
ble and Mrs. M. J. DeLapp.
The supper will be served from
6 p. m.. to 8 p. m.; and a program
in the school auditorium will fol
low at the regular Community
club meeting. Mrs. Bones ' and
Mrs. Rowe are in! charge.
l
Second Nursing Class
Started in Silverton
SILVERTON The
leacner association will sponsor
an afternoon: Hed Cross home
nursing class starting "Wednesday
at 2 p.m, Two hour weekly ses
sions will be held at the Eugene
Field school. Mrs. Louise Arne
son will be instructor.
The night class got started this
week with 27 enrolled. Mrs. L. A.
Meyer is instructor.
ALBANY Mrs. Anna Shedd,
83, widow of the late C J. Shedd,
died at her home in Shedd Thurs
day, Funeral services in charge of
the Fisher Funeral Home will be
at 2 p. nu, Monday, February. 26,
from the Methodist church in
Shedd. Burial will be In Sand
Ridge cemetery. ' . ' ' " '
Born in Wataga, 111., on August
26, 1861, Anna Bo ts ford moved
from Wataga to Missouri when she
was four years of age, and came
to Oregon in 1892, where she had
lived for 52 "years.: She was mar
ried to C. . J. Shedd; in Salem in
1893. He had come to Oregon in
1864 from his native state of II
linois where he was born June
22, 1857, took his bride at once to
his home in! Shedd, the little vil
lage which bore the name of his
father. Capt. Frank ; Shedd. Here
Mr. and Mis. Shedd spent their
Parent-4 entire mar4ed life, and it was
here that Mr. Shedd died on Jap
uary 12, of this year, j 1
! Two sgns and a daughter sur
vive. They are Harold Shedd and
Miss Lucille, Shedd of Shedd, and
Raymond Shedd of Palo Alto,
Calif. Surviving also aye a grand'
daughter, Elizabeth Jean Shedd
of Palo AltO, and a lister, Mrs.
Edna Colbert of Sheddt
the winners will be the one who
can make the greatest improve
ment with the least expenditure
of money. Seven teen entries were
made. At the March meeting any
one having a surplus of any shrubs;
or flowers, seeds and garden im
plements could bring them to be
donated to the local and they will
be sold to other members and the
money received wti be applied to
the prize money. -The grounds of
the entrants will he judged before
and "after the contest and lack of
Irrigation will not count against
one V , '
Dallas Couple Invite
Manila Woman to Visit
DALLAS Mr. and Mrs. John
Cerny have been notified that a
friend, Mrs. Phyllis Gibbons, was
among the civilians freed by the
American troops on Luzon. Mrs.
Gibbons, an English woman,' was
a tutor at the mill camp at Tan
doc, where Mr. and Mrs. Cerny
spent about three years, and lat
er, taught in the American school
at Baguio, summer capital of the
Philippines.' She has spent a num
ber of years in China previous to
the eight years she has spent in
the Philippines. Since she has no
living relatives, Mr. and Mrs. Cer
ny have cabled asking her to spend
some time with them in Dallas.
Portland Folk Visit , r
SWEGLE Guests this week at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. T.
Wicklander were her lister, Mrs.
J. L. Morrison and Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert Potts all of Portland.
f i
OiniSlCoycu
rcons
coeion
b-cmauTrcicic:
? ? ? t
Do functioBal periodla tflsturbanM
nuJea you t ol so mttoim, jittery, hlca
trunc. cnoxky, tired t sucb tbnmT
Tbaa dont 4eUr try thU grekt nweU
cln Lmua K. Plnkbam's Vestatale
Compound to relieve aucA aymptonM.
It belpa MATuaxl
PlnkbMB'a Compoond U famtnu bo
only to nnera ucn monthly pain but
Jao accompanying nervous, rwtl .
wtk feallng of this otur. Taken
nrurlv It belpa build up fsittmnea
Mmlnat such autri. A twry mN
thing totfol " - I r .i
Also a grand atomachla tonlot TGOoq
label directions. Bur today
; VtGITASU COMPOUND
WML - ill :-ii-- "r
100 Asphalt Coated
SfflEKKEILIES
Pure asphalt coating waterproofs your roof, pre
vents cracks, and holds the slate surface granules
firmly embedded against wind. Equal In import
ance to waterproofing is the Underwriter Labora
tories' label, Tire Resistant," ;which these asphalt-
and-slate shingles bear. Green, tile red, or blut
black. i
J-l?-.tt-.J.vi4;.!
. Vim i i on in ifc. rmlm iM , r 11 1,1
Elain Sforo-484 Slab Slrcsi i
Farm Sfore-173 Sonili Lilisrly
.! : u.Tclcpbono 9192
BLOOD PLASMA
GOES TO WAR
; . ( Brtm Bmelt
. LAvrt
:. 1 1. .. - . - . 1 i
"TO W "
i - .
DR.
HARRY
SEMLER
Credit
Dentist
(hit Tojua (DsudiAJt
. re. tkit ent Hte me try
tmm of Mm aewtyle ...
Come in and select the
Dental Plates you need .
RIGHT NOW and take
the whole of 1945 to pay
for them. You can make
your own reasonable
Credit Terms ot Dr. Sent
let's . ; . pay in Small
Weekly or Monthly
a mounts, whichever is
most convenient for you.
ENJOY VEARIMG
YOUR PLATES
YIIILE PAYII1G
I rv.
AecUumed for
Their Clo
Resemblance to
Nature's Own
Teeth end Gums
The exee'ptioaot Cgkt
vreight off the nevr Trons-
pareet Polete Dental
Plates gives Added Com
fort . . will not warp or
shrink. Styled and fitted
to your Individual
qui cements. : -
Ask Your
Dentist i '
TEETH
EXTRACTED
and PLATES
FITTED !
IN ONE DAY
Take odvantog f
"IMME
DIATE RESTORA
TION' aachnlqua.
A
rrsr
A rT A rt
II II U f 1 II
-1
JU II the new
3 1
- Km Ad vmmeym Appmimtmmmi 11
v J n ivt n
These new-style dentures
ore so "lifelike"; in detail,
they tend to enhance rath
er (han detract from your
personal features , . . will
help you overcome, plat e-
consciousncss and embar-
ressment. Trensparent Pel-
ate j Dental Plates afford
many advantages.
-'.rntnr?.h far?
uuaiiLJOuso
VATERS-ADOLPH BLDG.
i '. rt ' ' -; I - - -
Saturday ,8:3jMMJ J fJ eli)
'It: .
'Mi
3