- Valley ; ; Obituaries Georre Mlnshall Knox ALBANY Funeral services for : George Minshall Knox, 90, who died at the i family home April 3, yvi)l be held from the Fortijnller Frederickseh Chapel at 2 : p.m., Wednesday, April 5. The Rev. Or ville Mich, pastor of the ! First Christian church of which I Knox was a member, will ofriate. Bur lal will be in Knoxf Itte ceme tery. Knox txQ twim nt box Butte, Aug. 6. 1859. the son lames and Merinda Parrish , Knox, Oregon Sioneers, and had lived his entire fe In Linn county. ; For many years he was in the transfer busi ness with the late George Hughes. Knox had been an active member In Woodmen of the World. Mr. Knox married Mollie H. Gear hart in 1886 In Salem. She survi ves along with three children, Mrs. W. J. Tohl of Albany, Cecile Knox of Salem, and John D. Knox of Ashland; and one brother Alex ander Knox of Greenville, Calif. Mrs. Bettie Barber, ALBANY Funeral services for Mrs. Bettie Barber, 29, who died at her home In Coos Bay March SI after a short illness will be held from the Fortmiller-Fredericksen chapel in Albany at 2 p.m., Tues day, April 4. The Rev. Orville Mick will officiate. Burial will be In Willamette Memorial park. Bettie Abraham was born in Albany March 6, 1921. Se attended .Albany schools and was graduat ed from Oregon State college in 1941. She was a member of Delta Theta sorority and was named a member of the professional jour nalism society, Theta, Sigma 'Phi. She was also a member of the ' Christian church, t On July 4, 1941, in Albany, she was married to Donald C. Bar ber. He survives along with i three children. Franklin, j Monte Jean and Bruce Cameron: Barber. Also surviving are her parents, Mr. and : Mrs. Herman Abraham, and one brother, Thomas, all of Albany. ' and one sister, Charlotte Abraham Richland, Wash. '.p. ' Albert Raymond Forster 1 ALBANY Albert Raymond I Forster, 54, died at his farm home on route 1, Tangent, Monday. Fun- eral services will be held from the ' Fisher Funeral home at 11a.m. Thursday, April 11. The Rev. Mar ion smitn oi foraana win oinc- ; late. Burial will be in Willamette .Memroial park. Forster was born at Tangent : Dec 3, 1895, a son of Martin L. and ; Georgiana Settlemier, He was a farmer and Jersey dairyman, and i was past president of the Linn- : Benton Jersey club. 1 He .was also i member of Western Star grange, ' of the Shedd Masonic lodge, A.F. & A.M., and of the Tangent Meth !; edist church. M He married Ira B. Maas In Al bany Dec. 13, 1917. She survives : as do four children, Mrs. Irene ! i O. Cooler. Arlington, Vav Waldo Forster, Corvallis, and "Lloyd and j Leonard both of Tangent Also i surviving are two brothers, Fred jH. Forster, Albany, and Everett i Forster. Portland: two sisters. Mrs. i urace v. weoer, ibaiem, and Mrs. ; Zella G. Moody, Merser Island, ! Wash.; and four grandchildren. : i Lyndell Patrick . r ! ALBANY Funeral services for ix-year old Lyndell Patrick who died near Klamath Falls, March 31. will be held from Fisher Fun era home at 1:30 p.m Thursday, ! April 8.' Lyndell was born in Den ver Colo., May 7. 1943. He had .lived in Jefferson the past two ! years, surviving are his mother. Mrs. Lola Patrick of Jefferson, his j father Lyndell Patrick of Denver, ; Colo, and his grandparents, Mr. . and Mrs. George Hayworth of Jef : ferson. i - : Alphens J. Tucker ' ALBANY Alpheus J. Tucker, 84, a resident of Oakridge for the past year, died Monday morning i after an extended illness. Funeral j services will be held from Fisher funeral home at 2:30 p.m Wed nesday, April 5. The Rev. James W. Neeley, pastor of the Albany : Baptist church, assisted by the Rev. Leland Wilkeson of Oak- ridge, will officiate. Burial will be In Willamette Memorial park. : Born Dec. 28, 1865, in Spring field, 111., Tucker moved to Iowa when he was five years old. In . 1900 they moved to Nebraska, and In 1928 he came to Albany where i he lived until a year ago. He was "x a retired farmer and was a mem ber of the Methodist church, j At Council Bluffs, Iowa, March 31; '1897, Tucker married Rose Wright, who survives. Also survi ving are rive children, Lloyd and i Lester Tucker, Albany, and How ; ard and William Tucker and Mrs. : M. A. Hopkins, all of Oakridge: a ; brother Frank Tucker of Hardin, j Mont, and 11 grandchildren. i j: ;- 11 ' " HEALTH SURVEY K ! SPRINGFIELD. 111. -(INS)- A i survey teanf of the United States public health service has recom ' mended that the state department of public health consolidate its 14 divisions into five bureaus. The f recommendation was made at a i meeting called to signal the com pletion of the preliminary sum ' mary report of a management sur vey of the Illinois department of e puDuc neaiin. i illcusebrii j Easy Without !aggingDac!(ccIi8 Am w rt aUcr. trw k4 atrmia. mmrOmm. iitiK Mwn mU MHtiMi W kMhwy m tkm. Tfcia mf iA folk M aw . pkmim mt unf harkaca. loas af aa4 ; mmunrt, aiatora aa4 4iiiaaav. bttia awau ar f raauaat aiay nml from ilair alaaair Imotwa 4m to anU. I ar awtary imiiimi. aUurvtM. U4 iMnaliiUr ar tillinai fc ar M Waila thin araiataaai mar fin aiaarviaa ' aaautae aaw Dar aaw uaw ana mmpwv rmtmt a tka It mOm af kUy taaw tJtefa Thcyll Do It Every Ihere Aint no justce!twose BiRPS XOU FfcP SO LOVINcjUY i HKOUuH THB LON6C0LP WINTER MONTHS ' Y "-"" N for, ..-, m:;u KTlit tYMPirnTl, t-o. QlB lcim urstimi n Wv! Nineteen Hours One New Law By Arthur Edsn WASHINGTON, April 4 -JP At the current rate of exchange, it takes 19 hours of congressional talk to equal one law. This statistic crept out of the "Congressional Record" today, in Its monthly report 'card on con gress. The report ihowed that during the past three months the senate has been in session 940 hours and three minutes, the house 247 hours and 25 minutes. The result: A total of 587 hours In the legislative mines, 31 bills actually passed into law, and enough oratory ot spill over 4,634 pages of the "Record." . Some of these 31 laws .are na tionally, even internationally, im portant i But you may not be aware that you also are living under such new laws of the land as: An authorization for a monu ment in honor of Henry Milton Brainard, at Cape ; Arago light house station in Coos county, Of Talk Equal ' - ; ' v. w'Hitiiiiiiimm ' r i 1 1 ii i ' ii iii r-7T""' i ii i ii in i i ,rrnTTHTTniiwipnrnrTrni'nirTiriiimiw n juu.,j ' ' " - ' - ' K ' i t - s j ' ' "" ' ' ' Fords ih fatcsrttvrto ncthm t, CmvAn frtwUft fashion AcoJtmy mdd in TWO COnSWCUJTrW jwGTS All the work! of Fashion looks jo New York's famed Fashion Academy as an authority on style. So it's no onder Ford is proud to re-1 ccive their medal as "Fashion Car of the Year for the second urmight year. Never before was a car bono red by two Fashion Academy Awards in a row! Here's proof that .Ford has succeeded in bringing style to the low-price cki-uyl e vca far costlier cars cant match. VALLEY 375 Center Stmt Time Are the WHO TORAy GRASS SEEP Oregon. A transfer to the attorney gen eral of portions of an ordnance plant near Terre Haute, Ind., for use by the U. S. penitentiary there. An authorization for the re moval oof sludge in the District of. Columbia. Statistics, of course, rarely go far enoughli The "Congressional Records" reports only on time spent in session. j Most, if jnot all, congressmen spend far more .time in commit tee work than they do in the house or senate chamber. It is the committee which hears the witnesses say why they are for or why they are agin the bill. It is the committee which actual ly drafts the bill's wording. It is the committee which shepherds the legislation once it reaches the floor fordebate. Just thought you might like to know that, contrary ot .some im pressions, a congressman's life isn't ail a whoop and a headline. DYNAMIC SKIS TOKYO(INS)-A new design for skis, embodying the principles of the law of dynamics, has been developed by two Japanese engi neers. Prof. Ichiro Tani of Tokyo university and Ken Omori, an aeronautical engineer, have built a pair of hickory skies eight feet in length and moved the bindings nrgiUaMf-i wbaN yKifL v r MOTOR COMPANY Hatlo same little so-and-so's ARE EATINS UPALtj. VOUR AT $ 3.00 A ROUKP Owner Draws Ffne for Allowing Dog to Run A recent city police warning that dogs will not be allowed to run at large this sprihg in Salem was enforced Tuesday with the levying of a $10 fine.! Everett Zink, 1132 Ruge st., paid the fine in Salem municipal court on a charge of permitting his dog to run at large withiii the city. ,Many spring gardeners have asked the. police department in recent days to enforce the ; city ordinance which bans canine wandering. jl Young Linn Dairymen Top Cow Palacephow SAN FRANCISCO, !April -JP) Youthful dairymen of Petaluma, Calif, high school's Ftfture Farm ers of America club today domi nated every entry id the dairy stock judging at the Current Cow Palace exposition. Four Oregoon entires among winners represented Lounty , 4-H clubs. . . - Among them: South Down senior lambs: Ver non Holmes, Linn county; Robin McKinley, Linn county. 14 inches , forward of their con ventional position. They claim this By Jimmy should make skiing easier and fster. , ! ! Katmdlfxssfuon Car o Hit Yoor9 tocond yar in a. row And handsome is as handsome does. A "Test Drive" will ihow'you the quality that makes the '50 Ford the one fmi car in its field. Youll feel the smooth, quiet getaway power of Ford's new V-t engine (or advanced "$ix" if you prefer). VouTl feel the 35 easier acting King Size Brakes. Youll feel the "Mid Ship"!comfort ot guard" Body . . .1 now here quality youll ttt, Driva" the '30 Ford- IPimMie llecoirds CIRCUIT COURT, Harry R. Jones vs- Luanna Jones: Complaint or divorce al leging cruel and inhuman treat ment. Married Jan. 7, 1950, at, Salem. David and Martha Korb. vs James Dutton and others: Order overrules demurrer of defendants Dutton and Lavon O'Brien. Gene Lebold and others, by Ralph E. Moody, guardian ad li tem, vs school district 24: order denies plaintiffs' application for continuation of temporary re straining order and dismisses com plaint, denying rebel sought; plaintiffs file notice of appeal to state supreme court and under taking on appeal. , PROBATE COURT James A. Wallace estate: Hear ing On final account set for May 10. Elizabeth Ann Roan guardian ship: Order vacates order of con firmation of sale. Edna White estate: Order de crees inheritance tax redetermined to be $1,749.59; on stipulation by parties. Ludvik Adolph Ask . estate: or ders set aside exempt homestead and personal property to widow, correct inventory and grants wid ow's allowance of $3,000. Irl S. McSherry estate: Order j admits will to probate, appoints J Ellyn McSherry as executrix and j S. Johnson as appraiser. , MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS Ralph Propeck, 31, truck driver, , 3810 Cherry ave., and Alta Lowry, 20, cylinder clerk, 4235 Filbert St., both of Salem. Robert F. DeSantis, 30, farmer, Silverton star rote, box 50, and . Neltje . Anne Saucy, 19, student, Salem route 7, box 205. James P. Moisan, 25, box com pany, employe, 2295 Maple ave., and Lucille C. Hoffert, 21, state employe, 1065 Jefferson st, both of Salem. D. Richard McMullen, 20, clerk, j 795 N. Capitol St., and Dorothy i Gardner, 20, student, 4160 Gardner j rd., both of Salem. Ray A. Bovee, 26, construction worker, Portland, and Mary H. Bekebrede, 19, secretary. Wood burn. i Gerald E. Bull, 25, of 1950 Maple ; ave., and Beverley Mae Kenney, I 21, secretary, 1295 Market st, both ! of Salem. ! MUNICIPAL COURT Gerald D. Bullock 330 Mission st., pleaded guilty of reckless driv ing charge, fined $25, $10 suspend ed. Robert C. Kennen, Beaverton, pleaded guilty to charge of driving Ford's l-way stronger Life "tound-coodittoncd. Yes, hear and feel when you I en "nsrcsas'ifc dt i . ! Phone 3-3147 while intoxicated, fined $250, re ceived suspended 30-day jail sen tence, driver's license revoked for one year. John Brennan, 1823 Broadway st., fined $25 on disorderly conduct charge. Everett Zink, 1132 Ruge st, fined $10 on charge of permitting dogs to run loose and be at large. "DISTRICT COURT Edward Maynaraharlow, Oak land, Calif, charged with posses sion o stolen property, hearing set April 8, held in lieu of $1,500 bait Frank W. Hickman, Salem route 4, charged with obtaining money by false pretense?, hearing post poned to April 5, held in lieu of $1,000 bail. Edwin Deutscher, 535 N. Win ter st, charged with larceny, con tinued for plea to April 5, held in lieu of $2,000 ball. George Hiram Brownell of Elk horn, Wisconsin, is the country's leading expert on the bibliography of Marks Twain. Mr. Brownell di rects the Mark Twain Research Foundation and publishes The Tainian from Elkhorn. no other detail does so much for a suit as . v rss . I N h 111 ULllUUll " : oc ) f)lp to gain an "edge" in the competition for admiration! And hand-needled edges is but one of many reasons why you'll fall m love j with the superbly tailored gloriously colored and expressively styled Vajty-Town Suits we're featuring for Spring. 50.00 and more TTDn THf 41 State SrrMt Tha Skrtman, Salem. Oregon. Zoners to Hear Controversy On Change Bid The pro and con of a proposed zone change permitting a $1 300, 000 apartment house at South High and Kearney streets will be heard by the Salem planning and zoning commission tonight Public hearing has been set for 7:30 p.m. at city hall on the re quested change from residential to apartment zoning. ' Cont r o v e r s y among nearby Senate Recess Forced F or Lack of Speeches WASHINGTON, April 4 - (JPt The senate ran out of i speeches today and had to recess about two hours before its usual! quitting time. Vice President . Barkley told senators "It ought to be regarded as a notable historical event that the; senate has run out of some thing to say." The senate was debating a dis placed persons bill, on which mem bers have agreed to vote tomor row. STORE OF STYLE. QUAUTV & MOXLEY 1 HUNTINGTON J ' 'ii iff I) Wednesday. April 5. 19507 property owners is anticipated. Owners of more than half the affected property area have agreed to the change in petitions to the commission, but some p -tition signers have since asked to withdraw their names. The zone change is asked by William E. -Healy and Paul F. Murphy, sponsors of the pro j t which would inc lude 122 apar -mcnts. The site is across Hi'-1 street from Euh'e pasture, a block south of Jlij.io.. street VALUE" Salem, Or9n DnDp , M waaa a rua aaaari