oV-'-'r:J:ii!-N, , ! 1 C54y Hews HBpSeffs TREASURER REPORTS The . final financial report of 1949 issued for Marion county by Treasurer S. J. Butler showed . assets totaling $5,198,856. Totals . ; . Included $839,64 1 in the court house construction fund, $371,538 -; in the general road fund and $317, '.. 843 in the general fund. - - Adam Hats exclusive aeenL United Shirt Shop, '331 State St Air-Steamship tickets anywhere. VTi.rr.ol t 1KQA -KI T7! rrV. C TOASTMASTERS MEET TODAY The Capitol Toastmasters club of Salem will hold its first meet ing of the year at 6:15 this eve- , ning in the Golden Arrow restaur ant Speakers will include Elmer ' Am undson, Wayne Smith, Robert tBatdorf, Donald Gardner and Ro bert Forkner. We still have fresh-killed turkeys, 39c lb. Buy Sc. freeze. Cheapest - meat you can buy. Orwig's Mar ket 4375 Silverton Rd. Ph. 28128. ' HEALTH REPORT ISSUED j Six 'cases of tuberculosis were reported In Marion, county last ' week to Dr. W. J. Stone, county ' health! officer, Five of the cases were; outside Salem. Three in stances of whooping cough topped diseases reported ' io.Salem. :; ' V NOTICE!! Hearing Aid Users. Our! new" office hours are from 9 a.m. t until 5 pjn. including the noon hour, every day except Saturday, when we close at 3 p.m. Come in and let's get acquainted. Batteries for all kinds of hearing aids. James N. Taf t it Associates, 228 Oregon Building; Salem. Elec. pipe thawer. Moody Plumb ing. Immed. serv. Ph. 2-4426. FIRE BURNS TvAtt . . A hot stovepipe started a fire which burned- a small hole in a wall of the H. F. Stroh residence, 1838 S. 38th st, about 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, firemen reported. The blaze filled the house with smoke. . Firemen listed the owner of the property as Perry Pratt ; ' ! " i : "' '"I X A tk. Va.I TlnnVm' fha Unfile Shelf, rental library. 370 State, half-way upstairs. j, . SnAFER YMCA SPEAKER ' Frank Shafer,' leather goods ; merchant will speak at the YMCA .1 Ranger roundup at 11:15 a.m. Sat- urday. He will tell about expert I ences of pioneers In, crossing the prairies to Oregon. :, , . : ' , ' v .. J,i h i: Electric pipe thawer Moody Plumbing. Immediate service. Phone 2-4426. : , ,,:,'. : ';:. f DEPUTY CONSTABLE NAMED) , Shirley Dagenhardt, 556 Union at, has been appointed deputy , 'constable -by Marion county con stable Earl Adams. She replaced Gloria Robinson who resigned to .. .be married. ':';-'' f vr :,.. H. : i: We have closed The Flower Bas ket, 1O20 Market Watch for Grand Opening soon at 690 N. Capitol. fl i ; m FIND SNOWMAN ON PORCH Willamette- university co-eds who reside at 765 Court st found .a snowman at their front door -v Wednesday morning. ...C a m p u a cranksters were credited with the . act ' ' v. ;1 : f ' ' i; Karakul Karpet It's new. It's re versible, it's 100 virgin wool and woven through and through, only $4.95 sq. yd. Ph. 3-7648 or -3364, MINOR BLAZE PUT OUT . Firemen from the south station j - . i . . iv. tit :n i j Gillings grocery, 1605 S. High st, at 6 pjn. Wednesday when grease flared on a stove in living quar ; ten at the rear of the store. It was .put out quickly. Johns-Manville shingles applied by Ma this Bros., 164 S. Com'l. Free estimates. Ph. 34642. . . V FIRE SPRINKLER BURSTS . . . Firemen were called to the plant of Moore Business . Forms, Inc., . 1895 S. 16th st, early Wednesday when a sprinkler head froze and burst setting off the fire alarm ' tystem. No damage was reported. mORA E.VDER3 INJURED " Flora Enders, receptionist for Balem Chamber of Commerce, Is In S&lem General .hospital recov ering from injuries she incurred this week in a fall on an icy Salem street .. .-. Landscaping and designing. No job too large or too small. F. A. Doer fler -; and Sons Nursery, 150 N. Lancaster Dr at 4 Corners. P. . J-1322. . .. Births ' HART To Mr. and MrsJ F. X. Hart-1 HO S. 16th st, a daugh ter, eo yaaj, January. , at Ealem General hospital. KEUSCHER To Mr. and Mr. Carl - Keuscher, 2110 University at, a son, Wednesday, January 4, at Salem General hospital BRANDYOLD To Mr. and Mrs. Howard ; Brandvold,' f 35(1 Tryon ave., a son, Wednesday, January 4, at Salem General hos pital. . . , BALES To Mr. and Mrs. William Bales, 4150 Beck tU a son, Tuesday, January 3, at Sa lem General hospital. ' , ( ; Salem's Complpto : 1 Glass Service! - - O Window Panes O Auto Glass O Mirrors :!:ni -Gbss Scrvito NAMED TO MAYOR'S GROUP David" Cameron, state unem ployment L compensation commis sion employe, was added to the mayor's committee on bus trans portation Wednesday by Mayor R. L. Elfstrom. The mayor said (he picked Cameron as a sixth mem ber to bring in a state employes viewpoint ' j - I Insured savings earn more than two per cent at Salem Federal Savings Association, 560 State st MITCHELL RETIRES NAMES Notices of retirement from as sumed business names as both Mitchell it Marchand, a land clearing firm, and M & M Lumber company were filed with the Mar ion county clerk Wednesday by L. C. Mitchell, 1565 Norway st v Rummage sale Frt, Sat 6th & 7th over Greenbaums. Alpha Chi' Omega Mother's Club. I , UONS TO HEAR MEDFORD ' T.r M. Medford, Salem district manager for Safeway Stores, Inc., will address Salem Lions club this noon In the Marion hotel on "In a Land of Plenty, Where are We Drifting?" Value of Bees To Crops Told By Professor. - Growing of fruits, legumes and many vegetable crops In the Wil lamette valley is greatly depend ent on bees for pollination, Prof. Herman A. Scullem, Oregon State college entomologist said here Wednesday. Speaking at the noon luncheon meeting of the Salem Rotary club. Prof. Scullem estimated that at least $100,000,000 worth of crops in Oregon are dependent on the lowly honey bee. . , Bee culture increased greatly during the war when sugar was scarce but . has declined steadily since, then, said Scullem. He esti mates the 50,000 bee colonies in this state produce yearly 2,000,000 pounds of honey valued at about $200,000 plus about $12,000 worth of beewax. j ! Scullem estimated ! that about 60,000 carloads of fruit in the Pa cific northwest, are produced year ly through efforts of the busy in sects. Such items as clover, cucum bers, melons and even holly de pend on both honey and wild bees for pollination. , , Agriculturists are realizing more than ever before the need of bro ducing bees,-said Scullem. Some even import bee colonies for the purpose of insuring proper pollin ation of; their crops, v I tic.:.'- Modern research into the private lives of the little stingers, he said, are producing bees which are more disease - resistant, are of a more gentle disposition and have longer tongues to get more nectar. Shuslerwitz Appointed To Farm Union Position ; ill- '.- : ; '. ' " ; , Max Shusterwitz, native of Sa lem and former Willamette uni versity student, has been appoint ed' supervisor of hard wars and farm ' implements at the Oregon Farmers Union cooperative store here, r " ' " : I V"" Shusterwitz, former employe at the Capital Hardware and Furni ture company, was appointed by Manager John Bollinger of the farm store.' He is married and has one daughter,, and served 3 i years in the navy air corps dur ing World War II. ADDQDD(DK Hew Departnenis Added to Oar Established Ocoiing Business Hamely i Paint and Wall Paper Home nodernizaiion and Alterations . ' Mr. C Arthur Pickering, our Home Modernization Department Manager, has- had ytart of xperisns along this lins and is familiar with ths latest designs and methods of applying the newer materlalsT He wiH be glad to assist 700 with any alteration, re modeling, or add-ons, b they kxrge or small. ' , Mr. C N. Grares, Manager of our Painting Department Is well qualified to help you wiih all decorating problems Including the new deep color harmony to personalize your home. - ' As for our Hoofing Department Manager, weft, you all know Cy NadonI We Will Also Stock A Complete Line of Paints . - Now Is The Time To Do These Inside Jobs . U ' IT:' I' .1 0r"Y: ; CollUs Today Tor Y:' 1 .... 'y ' ' i ;-' ' " HOOFING PADfTINa WALLPAPER INSULATION HOME MODERNIZATION ALTERATIONS AH These Contracts Arallable On Monthly Payments i I ' - I" .-, ' r, . -.f I : ' i' J ... , V - - ij" ' . !..'", j " i unjuriij vallsy nooF co., mc. h S3 Lana ATenue " Phone ' Shislil Clearing Folloics Sriow r z II Western Oregon snow and ice Wednesday turned to dirty slosh on downtown streets. Here three Salem street department workers, L. A. Peterson. Fred Rlffe, and Omer Adams, left to risht are shown clear ing pedestrian lanes at the Intersection of Court and Liberty streets Wednesday morning. (Statesman ''photo.) - , ; f . Funeral Services. Set Friday for Mrs. Mary Miller Mrs. MaryArdena Miller, Sa lem residentsince 1935, died Tues day at her home at 2348 Lee st She was 78. : j - Mrs. Miller was born Sept. 17, 1881, in Iowa and later lived many years in Kansas before coming to Oregon. - She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Goldie Killinger, Salem; three grandchildren, ' Louis and John Killinger, both of Salem, and Geraldine . Schneider, Stay ton; a sister, Mrs. C. E. Kohler, Boulder, Colo.; and six grand children. . Funeral services will be held Friday at 3 pjn. in the W. T. Rig don chapel. Public I Records PROBATE COURT Herbert L. Stiff estate: Order extends time for filing inventory to Feb.;i5, 1950. ' Sarah ' Peterson guardianship estate: Order appoints John A. Susbauer guardian and Marjorie Kerber, Helen Devers. and Jose phine Bell appraisers. DISTRICT COURT ; Carl M. Worthington, Salem route 9, box 532, charged with driving while intoxicated; 30-day jail sentence suspended on pay ment of $250 fine, placed on pro bation for one year. CIRCUIT COURT Ernest J. Porter vs Clara Max ine Porter: Complaint for divorce alleging cruel and inhuman treat ment asks custody of four minor children and settlement of prop erty rights. Married May 21, 1938, at Stevenson, Wash. Lydia Donnell vs Frank Don sell: Complaint for divorce al leges desertion. Married Dec. 28, 1916. Delmas F. Zink vs George E. and Bernice K. ' Conant: Com plaint seeks judgment totaling $27,750 for injuries allegedly In curred In motor .vehicle accident ... j J! 1.1 Damage Suit Filed by Hurt Road Worker A former state highway depart ment worker who 'charges he was crushed between two snow plow trucks when an auto Smashed into one of the vehicles filed suit for $27,500 damages Wednesday. The complaint was filed by Del mas F. Zink in Marion county 1 circuit court against George E. and Bernice K. Conant The accident occurred Jan. 4, 1949, at 'Summer Lake in Lake county. Zink alleges he was ad justing equipment between the two trucks when an auto operated by Mrs. Conant skidded off to the wrong side of an icy road into the trucks. The complaint states . Zink in curred a broken leg whifh since has developed into a permanent injury. La Grande Boasts Of Debt Reduction La GRANDE, Jan. 4 -WV This city's indebtedness has been cut from $450,000 to $24,300 in the last 12 years, City Manager Ed H. Ford told the city commission last night That Ford said, is a better re cord than that of 90 per cent of Oregon's cities. New Trial Ordered in Automobile Sale Case The state supreme court Wed nesday reversed the opinion of Judge Victor Olliver of Linn county and ordered a new trial in the case of Brown Auto com pany against H. .C Gregory, the appellant The suit involves sale of an automobile. . ' aiMAmr mcasino ajb $75 COMPtlTt Morris Optical Co. 444 State St Ph. J-552S sr nr w in Downtown '- , - ft .s ?- :: : .. .. ; . t " ? i ..." :' -wr ... George Hickock Rites Set Today Funeral services for George A. Hickock, father of Guy Hickock, manager of the Salem branch of the First National bank of Port land, will be held at 11 a.m. today in the Highland Baptist church at Portland. Vault entombment will be at the Masonic cemetery in McMinnville. Hickock died Tuesday-dn Portland where he had made his home. He also is survived by five other chil dren, 10 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. A classic 1- mrfi t Li Excitingly. .clr Here) It Is! Now en Dtsplcryt The beautiful 195Q Chrysler ... the beauty surpriae of the year! From smart new front to smart new rear, every sleek trim line was deliberately , styled to. give it a new long, low streamlined look! With stunning new interior selections, new nylon fabrics, new patterns . . . it's today's new style classic, inside and out! And again for 1950 Chrysler's beauty reflects the sound engineering and the solid comfort inside. Again there's BEAUTIFUL mo Salorn Automobile Co., Inc. o Bad Weather Ups list of Unempl oved Recent snows and : freezing weather, which hav shut Hmm nearly all logging operations in uus area ana nave halted work on the Detroit dam,, are keeping em ployment service officials busv. It was reported Wednesday. 11 weather permits, about 400 dam workers who have been Idle since Tuesdav will return tn work today. Work was halted tempor arily Tuesday and Wednesday to clear dam-site, roads of about 10 inches of packed snow. : Meanwhile the Salem employ ment service Wednesday was pro cessing unemployed customers, at the rate of three per minute, said Manager William H. Baillie. An all-time record was reached Tuesday when 1,382 persons were processed at theSalem office and another 44T. at Detroit and Mill City. Most of these, said Baillie, filed claims for unemployment benefits. Industries hit heaviest by the storm are logging operations in the Silverton, Detroit and Dallas areas and construction operations in both Marion and Polk counties. Rats are declared to cause an annual damage of around $2,000, 000,000 in this country, of which about half is the food supplies they eat FOR INSURED SAVINGS SK First ! Federal Savings First Current Dividend 2Va f st federal Savings and Lean Ass'tu lit So. libertr amalicallg. . . and : .'I ... of long, low The Statesman. Salem, Oregon. New Naturalization Class Series to Open A new series of nationalization classes will begin Saturday at 8 pjn. at the Salem YMCA, C. A. Kells class Instructor, announced Wednesday, i. 7:M v jt fj.. f ' Kells said aliens whn wUK 4n take next citizenship examina tions in both Polk and Marion counties are welcome to attend tne sessions which will be con ducted free of charge each Sat urday ight until late In May. Citizenship tests are: scheduled in about two months In 1 Polk county and in May In Salem, Kells said. " , SALEM'S New Modern BEAUTY :- ' : .: i WITHIN V. T. GOLDEN CO. 1 MORTUARY T. T. GOLDEN I j COS 8. Commercial ! TAX-PAYERS ATTENTION Tax rates are so high sad tax laws become so complex that even the simplest bastaesa more or personal action sets ap chain of tax consequences. Thus, tax Knowledge is needed to prepare year return at a minimum tax owed. , t ,;v.-;r .:-;!;, Fn:, j, .,,,! :,- . .-...j HARRY EWINC; TAX CONSULTANT Rear of 1997 j Hours: 9 A. ;'. !: .! - -t.: . ' ' i Tree Parking Soata of the Ulllamette Valley Bank" Phoae 2-8S4S or 2-3369 "Drop la and let's discuss year tax and accounting problems' and lovely styling headroom, Iegroom and shoulder-room to spare! Chair height seats! Surprising j visibility all-around in the easiest of all cars to get into and out of, plus all Chrysler's great exclusives including completely waterproof igni tion system. You've got tp see and drive it to really appre ciate it . to know the wonderful things that have been done to make it the smartest, most comfortable the safest, sweetest driving car today! (19 new body styles available.) 435 North' CommdrcidI 'St. Thursday. January S, 150 5 I A favorite dish In the French j province of Champagne. Is dande- . ; lion and bacon salad. , Are You Ccncernsd About Your Breck-even Point? 1 George S.Aay Gj.tiPAW 11 0f ry $lrtt SAN FKANCISCO 1. CAUFOtNIA i Established 1925 ..V Funeral Homo. REVERENCE YOUR MEANS BELLE NILES BKOWN Phone 42257 i Fairgrounds Road M. Until 9 P. M. ' 7" differently i ! - -U ! - I T Hi ); , I TODAYS NEW STYLE CLASSIC j. 43$ Center PK X-4404