12 The Statesman, Salem. Oregon, Tuesday, March 17, 1953 The valley news columns From Th Oregon Statesman's Valley Correspondents Amity Citizens Donate Blood Heights Dinner Wets Club $145 SALEM HEIGHTS The annual dinner sponsored by the Salem Heights Mothers Club Friday -cvoiins at the school cafeteria vetted the club about $145. Mrs. Hale Mickey was chairman sad Mrs. L. A. Clinker co-cnair-Hum, Other leaders: Table decorations rfcsdrman.- Mrs. Carol Harris, bos pitality Mrs. John Ramage, and XSxm. Myron Butler, and upstairs Ixxtess, Mrs. Floyd McClellan. Tickets, Mrs. Francis Gaskins, and SSzs. Paul Harvey Jr. tTorking as waitresses were Mrs. Sitiiard Chambers, chairman, Mrs, Tw.1 RamsdelL Mrs. Virgil Allen, J3r. Kenneth Graves, Mrs. Louis JBartlett. Mrs. Irwin WedeL Mrs A. K. Epperly, Mrs. George Tandy, end Mrs. Oscar Berg. Pie commit tee was Mrs. Fred Cords, assisted br Mrs. John Clark, biscuit com mittee. Mrs. William Rector chairman, assisted by Mrs. Fran ck-Knapp. Mrs. Paul Harvey Jr smd Mrs. Myron Butler. Kitchen, Mrs. . Walter Noland, Mrs. Louis X-urth, Mrs. John Dreissler, Mrs. Walter Scheffe, Mrs. Vernon Warisworth, Mrs. L. A. Clinker and Mrs. Hale Mickey. Coffee commit tee. Mrs. Kenneth Zwicker, Mrs, Ed Lewis, and Mrs. John Lewis. Serving were Mrs. Charles Knvt yen. Mrs. John Dreissler, Mrs. Marion Miller. Mrs. Ron Miller, Mrs. Warren Clark, Mrs. E. A. Bamford. Salad, Mrs. Robert Hart man and Mrs. Charles Neilson; cleanup, Mrs. J. M. Ballard, chair man, assisted by Mrs. B. R. Knox, Mrs. Tom La Duke, and Mrs. Cecil Stevens. Mrs. Louis Kurth was publicity chairman. New Residents At Four Corners - Statesman News Service TOUR CORNERS New resi dents this month in Four Corners are Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Miner, Peggy and Jimmy. They moved from Salem to 3810 Mahrt Ave. Pvt. William Kergil, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kergil, Route 5, is taking basic training at Fort Campbell, Ky. He is with the 11th Airborne Division. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kergil and iamily attended the wedding on Saturday of Miss Helen I Minou and Dale Brethauer in Portland. Ernest Andres Heads Go-op Statesman News Service - GERVAIS New officers named by the board of directors of the Gervais Cooperative , Telephone Association recently were Ernest Andres, president; Gordon Jones, vice-president, and Mrs. Marion Henmng, secretary-treasurer. The directors are Albert PrantL Felix Steinkamp, who was re elected and Lyle McKinley, a new member. Satern Back Home After Army Duty SILVERTON Pfc Wallace Sat ern returned home Saturday aft er two years of army duty. He has been stationed at Broughton, near Pittsburgh, Pa at South Park Military Reservation. Mrs. Satern, the former Miss Vera JBaller, is employed at the First Silverton Bank. The couple has an apartment in the Tweed house where they live. Satern plans to return to operating his hop yard adjoining that of his father, Harold Satern In the Beth any district. Mrs. Strom Joins Husband at Camp Statesman News Service SILVERTON Mrs. James Strom has gone to San Luis Obispo, Calif, to join her husband who is in army training there. She has been making her home with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl McColly, North Second Street, since her husband was Inducted into the service on November. She was accompanied south by her aunt, Mrs. E. H. McColly, who will continue to Los Angeles where she will visit relatives. Yallev Births i Statesman Newt Service ; Silverton-A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Erwert, Molalla, March 13, at the Silverton Hos pital. A son to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Faulhaber, St. Paul, March 1$ at the , Silverton Hospital. A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Schultz, Molalla, March 16, at the Silverton Hospital. Sunnyside School Addition Proposed Statesman News Service SUNNYSIDE Citizens of Sun nyside School District 96-C will meet at 8 p.m. Monday; March 23 at the school to discuss a possible addition to the two-room school- house now serving about 50 pupils. Citizens are to discuss whether the district should be bonded to finance an addition of one class room an a recreation room. School leaders predict at least six more pupils next year. HARPER IS VEEP GERVAIS The board of direc tors of the Marion County Farm ers Union Oil Company at Mt Angel elected Robert M. Harper, vice-president at a recent meet ing. Harper has been a director for a number of years. AMITY Fifty-nine' Amity area citizens gave blood to the Red Cross when a mobile blood collec tion unit visited here Thursday. Three of the donors were stu dents at Amity High School where the blood unit operated, ahey were Vernon ' Bantsan, iiowara Wood and Helen Ojua. It was Amity's first blood day. Sponsor was the Lions Club. An Amity couple, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Versteg, returned home from a winter vacation In Arizona. 1st Aid Class Started By Halls Ferry Club Statesman New Service HALLS FERRY A Red Cross first aid class for all interested Halls ' Ferry community residents will begin Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. In the schoolhouse. Under spon sorship of the Community Club, it will continue for several Tues day nights. - Keizer Garden Club Invites Public Tuesday Statesman Newt Service KEIZER Keizer Garden Gub will meet in the recreation room of the Fire Hall Tuesday at 8 p.m Pres. C T. Danen invites any Kei zer resident to attend. A panel of members will endeavor to answer gardening questions. po- East Berlin Police Shoot At 4 People BERLIN OR Communist lice fired on four persons who inadvertently entered the Russian Zone Sunday during an afternoon walk in the wooded southern tip of the American sector. One of the four, a woman refu gee recently arrived - from tne East, was hit in the leg and col lapsed just inside the Soviet Zone. Her three . companions, ' including her husband, escaped unharmed into West Berlin but were unable to rescue the woman. Buchenwald Graves Found BERLIN W A mass grave containing almost 700 bodies has been found near the old concentra tion camp at Buchenwald, the West Sunday. The camp was founded by the Nazis end later used by the Com munists. Children playing in the area : accidentally discovered the grave, he paper said, , and Com munist police have cordoned off the . region. - . Teachers Said TooGannish PORTLAND Uft A former school teacher took Oregon teach ers to task Monday,' telling them they should stop talking only to other teachers. Esther L. Middlewood, director of education foi the Michigan De partment of Mental Health, spoke at the opening session of the 50th annual convention of the Oregon Education Association here. She said, ' "You have to meet. know and understand other people in your town to do a good, teach ing job." x ! Nearly 5.000 teachers attended the session. : The association also dedicated ts new headquarters here, building . which has . been In use since last fall. The convention continues Tues day. It is believed that a species of duck called Old Squaw dives deep er than any ; other duck, having been accidentally caught in fish nets 180 feet below the surface. Because the Gregorian calendar was not adopted by England and her colonies until 1753, the first four Presidents of the United States celebrated their birthdays on one date as children and on another date in maturity. Valley (OMtoairies 1 Marvin D. Reed . AURORA Marvin D. Reed, 75, Hubbard resident for five years, died Saturday morning at his home following a three weeks illness. Mr. Reed was born Oct. 23, 1877 at Tioga County, Penn., and when a young man moved to Potter County, N.D., where he lived until 1934. - He. had lived at Portland 12 years and at Springdale two years prior to coming to Hubbard. In 1801 he was married to Ida Pe terson who survives. Mr. Reed had engaged mostly in farming. Surviving besides the wife are a son Harry M. Reed of Hubbard; three daughters, Mrs. Verna Sel esky and Mrs. Pauline Scott of Portland, Mrs. Florence Neidert of SDringdale; two sisters in the East, several neices and nephews and 10 grandchildren. Funeral services will be Tues day, March 17, at 10 ajn. at the Everhart and Kent Canby Funeral Home with interment to follow at Riverside Cemetery. Robert A. . Landell Robert A. Landell, 78, resident of Aurora Route 2 for 27 years, died Friday night at an Oregon City Hospital following a short illness. Mr. Landell was born Jan uary 9, 1875 in Sweden and when 21 years of age moved to Winni peg, Canada, where he engaged in logging. He had never married and since living at Aurora had I armed. , Surviving is a niece, Frances E. Landell of Portland. Funeral services will be Tues day, March 17, at 1 pjn. at the iverhart and Kent funeral home, Aurora, with interment to follow In the Butteville Cemetery. Mrs. Elizabeth Selfridge - MONMOUTH Mrs. Elizabeth Kempsey Selfridge, 86, daughter of a pioneer Montana family, died Saturday afternoon at the home of her daughter, Mrs. L. E. Forbes, Monmouth. Mrs. Selfridge was born June 18, 1866, at Grass Valley. Calif, the daughter of James and Mary Kempsey. When she was a small girl her family moved to Butte, Mont- where she lived until 195 when she moved to Monmouth to live with her daughter. In 1889 she was married to Dean W. Selfridge with whom she celebrated her golden wedding an niversary in 1939. Her husband and her only son preceded her in death. Surviving are the daughter here and another daughter, Mrs. John Harvey, Butte, and five grand children. A family funeral service will be held at 10:30 ajn. Tuesday at Smith Mortuary, Independence, with the Rev. George H. Swift of Salem officiating. Interment will be at Butte, Mont. Sculpture Damaged by ; Jealous Artist LONDON tfl A 28-year-old Hungarian - born artist rushed through the Tate Art Gallery Sun day; seized a prize-winning piece of sculpture, bent it out of . shape and threw it to the ground. The damaged sculpture was the winning model submitted in the in- soner sculpture competitor. ' soner" sculpture competitio. - Police identified the arrested ar tist as Laszlo Szilvassy. They said he was formerly a Hungarian national but was now a stateless person. He was charged with malicious- ly . damaging . the wiring of the model. The model was a bit of intricate ly bent wire set in. a base of con crete. It was submitted by Brit ish sculptor, blacksmith and Leeds University fellow, Reg Butler. His prize, awarded by the British In stitute of Contemport Art, was 4, 500 pounds ($12,000). The entry was judged best of 3,- 500 submitted by sculptors in 53 countries. The wire represents an iron cage, and a gallows on a dis mal rock. - SiiLEirS FIIIEW PICTURE! Wccdry Furn. Co. 474 S. Commercial DO FALSE TEETH Rsck, Slid, or Slip? TASTEETH. an Improved powder to b. sprinkled on upper or lower plate. noicu false teeui more lirmiy in place. Do not slide, slip or rock. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. FAS TEETH is alkaline non-acid). Does not sour. Cbeoks "plate odor " (denture breath). Get FASTEETH at any drug store. r-vv" - ." . 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