8 Sec. 2) Statesman, Salem. Ore., Tues.. Feb. 16, 1954 Valley Nejws Statesman News Service World Peace Said to Rest On Individual Statesman Newt Service HUBBARD The peace of to morrow depends on what individ uals do today, said Mrs. Marion T. Weatherford of Arlington, presi dent of the Federated Women's Clubs of Oregon, when she spoke before a well-filled hall during the annual benefit tea sponsored b;' the Hubbard Woman's Club Friday afternoon. She pointed out in her talk that the nation is a direct reflec tion of its citizens. Announced by Mrs. Weatherford were the third district convention in For est Grove, April 8; the state con vention in Portland, April 21, 22, and 23, and the National conven tion in Denver May 20 through June 4. The program included a piano solo by Miss Suzanne De- Armond, two numbers by the North Marion Union Hi?h School saxophone quartet and a vocal solo by Mrs. Darrell Schei accom panied by i Mrs. Lester Keller. Mrs. E. T. Roe, Mrs. Harry Schei and Mrs. Keller were in charge of the program. Guests were pres ent from Hubbard and Wood-burn. galley Uriels Statesman News Service i Oakdale A patchwork quilt, to be used in: time of emergency, was tied at the recent meeting of the Friendly Neighbors Club. Re freshments ,were served by the hostess, Mrs. William Jeffery. i Jefferson j-f Angeny HEC will meet Thursday with Mrs. J. O. Farr on Liberty Road for 1:30 p. m. dessert luncheon. Mrs. Fayi VanCleave will be co-hostess. A pink and blue shower is planned for Mrs. Lee Gilmour. A special Parties Held I At Oakdale j Statesman Hews Service 3 i - - 4 OAKDALE Valeutine parties were held last week by the pri mary grades and upper-grade room aCOakdale School Valentines if were exchanged. Primarj teacher, Mrs. Bernice Barkerland upper-grade teacher; Kenneth Willis, were both pre sented gifts from their pupils. Games were played and Tel freshments served by Mrs. Max Fairchild. i I ,be a handkerchief feature wil exchange. - Lincoln -P Dr. A. W. Niemala, director of 'special education for Salem Public. Schools, will ad dress Lincoln-Zena Parent-Teach- Point 4 Worker Speaks to Group j Statesman News Service ! JEFFERSON Jack Wells of Independence,! was guest speaker at the dinner meeting of the Jef ferson Woman's Club in the city hall last week. He spent five months working on farms in Bolivia, sent there by the government on the Point Four program. His talk was il lustrated with colored slides. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Irvine Wright, Mrs. Trefcthen, and the Misses Josephine Getchell, Nori Lee Craven, Ruth Hart, Virginia Mrs. Tate. 95, Dies; Services Wednesday Statesman News Service SUBLIMITY-t-Mrs. Mary Tate, long-time resident of this area, died Monday in Portland at the age of 95. She had resjded in Portland for the past eight years. She was born in Louisiana and resided in the j Waldo Hills area near Sublimity for 68 years. Her husband, the late William Tatei died in 1938. ! Funeral services will take pace at St Paul Episcopal Church in Salem Wednesday at 2 p.m. with the Rev. George Swift offi ciating. Private vault entomb ment will take place at Mt Crest Abbey. . Survivors include . sons, Ed ward, Leland and Elbert, all of Portland, Frank and Richard of Culver and Thomas and Win nie of Sublimity; daughters, Mrs. John H. Rankin and Mrs. George B. Evans cf Portland, Mrs. Oth mer J. Berg of Lebanon and Mrs. E. Max Page of Salem; 18 grand children, and 14 great-grandchildren. r rri i rerry layi er Association at 2:30 p.m. Thurs- j Mason and Edith Libby. Toastmasters to Vie February 20 Statesman News Service SILVERTON The Silverton Toastmasters Club will be host to the district speech contest at Toneys on Feb. 20. William Iron is winner of the local tryoffs and will represent Silverton in the district contest. He was runner-up in the district a year ago. Speakers from Salem, Corvallis, Woodburn, Lebanon, and Silver ton clubs will compete. John Wright, high school sen ior, will sneak at the club's Feb. 24 meeting, tellins about thej Boy Scouts Jamboree. A dessert luncheon will be served at 2 p.m. preceding the meeting. Host esses will be Mrs. W. F. Gulvirii Mr. Les Shields and Mrs. Clay? ton Wills. ! I day in Lincoln School Oakdale -I- Former residents of Oakdale, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ped erson and (sen, Stanley, visited here last week from Santa Mon ica, Calif., at the Walter Evans home. , j i " I ? Silverton s I Miss Sylvia Haere, severely barfted Jan. 4 at her ; f- 1 home, is reported as showing con- j Hobbv, Antique Show l HIV In I V 1 y 1 S r ruiay at imisii ireeK i Statesman News Service 1 SILVERTON A hobby and antique show has been planned for Friday night by the Brush Creek Booster Club lat Brush Creek School,' f Mrs. Ocar Strand will preside and will assist Mrs. Dan Hillmah in arranging the exhibit Any one interested is invited to bring hobbies or antiques and to give a brief discussion on what they bring. 1 or, , Macleay, Dies At Age of 93 Statesman News Service MACLEAY Perry Taylor, 93, a native of Kansas and a resi dent of this area for many years died Monday after a long ilbnes. He had been residing at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Mabel Chapman, Salem Route 4, Box 472. His wife preceded him in death 21 years ago. Taylor, who was born March 24, I860, at Onago, Kan., came west to Oregon in a covered wagon with his parents in 1875. He returned to Kansas in 1876 but came back to Salubria Falls, Idaho in 1883. In all he crossed the plains three times, each time driving a team of horses. He came to Oregon , again in 1931 and settled on a farm in the Waldo Hills. He is survived by the daughter, Mrs. Chapman, and by several nieces and nephews, including Mrs. Mabel Scnncr of Philomath. Funeral services will be held at the Virgil T. Golden Chapel Wednesday at 2 p.m. with the Rev. W. Harold Lyman officiat ing. Interment will follow at Pio neer Cemetery- Valley Births verton Hospital. She was able to sit up a little during the weekend, members oi her family stated. Sheridani iThe Rev. Father G. Sheffold of St. Michael's Church at Grand Rondc left recently by plane for Germany, where he was called by the serious illness of his mother. Hd Jvill be gone about two monthi I : 1 Middle Grove A film, "Social Development?' will be shown to Middle Grove Mothers Club at the school Tuesday night by Mrs. C. j A. Calkins' Silverton, represent- j ing the Marion county tubercu losis Association. Obituaries i 1 1 - , 1 1 Statesman News Service Emma Graffenberger ALBANY Mrs. Emma Graf fenberger, Jefferson Route 1, died Sunday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. M. J. Hansen, Al bany Route 2. She was born Feb.. 18, 1877, in Washington County, Minn. She resided in Minnesota until 1900. Then she lived in Toledo, WaslL, and from 1916 to 1947 in Central Oregon near Bend. She had lived in the Jefferson area for the past seven years and with Mrs. Han sen the past eight months. She was "married March 18, ' 1896, to C- H. Graffenberger at North Redwood, Minn. He died in 1946. Mrs. Graffenberger at tended the Talbot Community Church. Survivors include daughters, Mrs. Hansen and Mrs. Gertrude Holland of Bellevue, Wask; sons, Reuben of Jefferson, Raymond of Prineville, Arthur of Monmouth, and Ben and Stanley of Bend; sisters, Mrs. Hattie Warner of Minneapolis, Minn.; Mrs. Martha Tolzman of Pendleton, Mrs. Edith Steinkamp of Renville, Minn., and Mrs. Lynda Gellitt of St Paul, Minn.; brothers, Henry Smith of Spokane, Wash., Oscar Schmidt of Wichita, Kans., Eugene and Walter Schmidt of North Redwood, Alfred Schmidt of Milbank, S. D., and Waldamar Schmidt of Vancouver, Wrash.; six grandchildren and one great grandchild. Funeral services will take place Tuesday, Feb. 16, at 9:30 a.m. at the Fisher Funeral Home ' in Albany with the Rev. Wayne Carr officiating. Interment will take place af Greenwood Ceme tery at Bend at 4 p.m. Mrs. Mary Jarrard DALLAS Final rites for Mrs. Mary Ida Jarrard, who died in a Dallas hospital Sunday, will be held at Bowman Chapel at 2 p.m. Wednesday, with the Rev. Fremont Faul officiating. Inter ment will be at Dallas cemetery. Mrs. Jarrard, 34, late "resident of 101 Douglas, Dallas, was a native of this city (Dec. 28, 1919). She was married to Frank C. Jarrard at Wichita Falls, Tex., Aue. 25. i 1944: resided at .Law- ton, Okla., four years, at Linz, Austria, 2Vi years, and served In the WACs 16 months. Her husband Frank, is in the army stationed at Fort Lewis. Other survivors include a daughter, Mary Jane: three sons, Frank, Robert and William; her father, Emil Menger, and broth er, Joe Wenger, all of Dallas. Charles W. Shelley LABISH Funeral services will be held in Portland Wednes day for Charles W. Shelley, for mer resident of Salem Route 6. Box 259, who died at a Portland hospital Saturday. The Shelleys moved to Port land recently because of his ill ness. The family residence there Is tt 31 NW 22nd Pd. The funeral will be at 3 p.m. Wednesday at the chapel of Mt .Scott Funeral Home, SE 59th 'and Foster Rd., with burial to ; follow at Lincoln Memorial Park. Surviving are the widow, Min nie; son, Glenn Shelley; daugh ter, Mrs. Carmen S. Truman; brother, W. A. Shelley; sister, Mrs. Anna : Boughton; three grandchildren and two great frandcbildren. Silverton 5-4 James Burr Miller, Statesman reporter who won a radio "Big Story" award for dis- tinguisher reporting, will be guest speaker Tuesday noon at the luncheon of the Silverton Junior Chamber of Commerce Club. He will tell the Incidents that led to his writing the story which helped clear a defendant from a murder i 22. charge and won for him a $500 cash award film, "Shy Child," and will an swer questions for a discussion. Fifth grade room mothers, Mrs. Earl Givens and Mrs. Bruce Quar ry will be hostesses for the social hour. j Sheridan The past presidents of the American Legion Auxiliary and past commanders of the Le gion Post in Sheridan will be hon ored at an annual banquet Feb. Statesman News Service SILVERTON A son to Mr. and Mrs. Duane Bloch, Silverton, Feb. 9, at the Silverton Hospi tal. A daughter: to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bankston, Aumsville, Feb. 11, at the Silverton Hospital. A son to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hilton, Molalla, Feb. 11, at the Silverton Hospital. A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Myren, Silverton, Feb. 11, ' the Silverton Hospital. A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Richard Weigel, Molalla. Feb. 12, at the Silverton Hospital. A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Reeder, Hubbard, Feb. 12, at the Silverton Hospital. A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Keith Llewellyn, Woodburn, Feb. 12, at the Silverton Hospital. New Unit Meets At Gervais Home Statesman News Service GERVAIS A Home Extension Unit was recently organized here when three extension agents met with women of this, community, at the Gervaii Grade school build ing. Mrs. Harry Kessler acted as chairman with Mrs. William Up pendahl assisting. Mrs. Paul Reil ing acted as secretary-treasurer and Mrs. Donald Hood, program chairman. Mrs. W. M. Bartlett, county committeewoman was j present. j The third Tuesday of each t month was the meeting time set j and the first meeting will be j Tuesday, Feb. 16 at the home of Mrs. Lloyd Croft. ' ! V J 1 - i - - Committee Urges Delay In Forming United Fund The possibility of a United Fund campaign in Salem this year was decreased Monday as a result of a motion made by the Cham ber of Commerce committee appointed to study the problem of com munity solicitations. Chairman Russel Pratt said his committee would recommend to the Chamber of Commerce board of directors that ..'. in the com mittee's opinion the United Fund is the best method of raising mon ey for health and welfare organi zations but it is not feasible to adopt it in 1954." , A United Fund organization would raise public donations for present Chest-supported agencies plus several activities which now sponsor fund raising campaigns of their own. -Look Toward 1955 The committee will also recom mend that a group be; appointed to continue the study with the view in mind of adopting the Un ited Fund campaign in 1955, Pratt said. Otto J. Wilson, president of the Community Chest, said the com mittee's motion will disappoint many persons in the community because there is considerable sen timent here for the United Fund. He added that "Salem will never be ready for the United Fund un til someone or group takes the time and energy to spark plug it" Fact-Finders Pratt pointed out that his com mittee was merely a fact-finding group and had no authority con cerning the final decision of the. United Fund. S An additional motion was pass ed Monday, he said, to recom mend that city ordinances gov erning solicitations in Salem be in examined to check whether these ordinances can be strengthened to better regulate soliciting. Fishing, Gold Hunt Made by Miss Fannie Smith Dies While on Coast Visit Miss Fannie Smith, retired school teacher of Blaine, Ore., who had many friends in Salem, died of a heart attack Saturday while visiting in Oceanlake. She was a sister-in-law of Mrs. George Smith, 675 j Spruce St, and a frequent Salem visitor. . Explorer Post A combination gold hunt and fishing trip was conducted over the weekend by five members of Explorer Post 16 into the area of Little North Fork about five miles west of Elkborn. . The boys were taken to the area via car by Louis Amort, the post's senior advisor. ' On hand for the trip were Don Marsh, Jerry Marsh, Caspar Snell and Robert Rohiand. Par ticipants, who left . Friday and returned Sunday evening, ex plained that the gold hunt proved rather slim, but fishing: was good. U3 L - IM A small adjustment may put your pen in perfect condition. Bring it in for expert service. Our men are' factory-trained in repairing Parker, Sheafler. Ever sharp and all other makes. NEEDHAM'S STATIONERY OFFICE SUPPLIES 465 State Street Storm Doors 2 - Storm Windows Made of Lifetime Aluminum Call your local dealer today for free estimates, j Willamette Aluminum Co. -3035 Portland Rd. Ph. 2-8058 r,lliIilUllI,,'llllllllIlllll',l Fly United to C MIC AGO 9A hri. NEW YORK and "All the East" UNITED AIR LINES COMMK THt MM ANO.rOU'll OO T AIR 5 Focds EVIeuif Ba!l-aJimrft Suepensioirsi gives yaw 4h LTD "Sin Swegle Robert H. Fowler from the Oregon- State Hospital will be guest speaker for the Tuesday night meetirig of Swegle P-TA at the schoolj He will also show a 1 . Stayton The sales volume at the Stayton ppstoff ice for the year of 1953 added up to $28,630, ac cording to a, release from Post master Grace Neibert, which Is an increase j over the previous year of approximately 11 per cent. rlrvrrii sun tiaauacy or ?w n33 fej' 520 K. High St. Phone 3 3815 NV Kit lc r.?-3 fi II The! peal of pleasure ON THE OLVAfPAy ( Tacoma Seattle Spokan Eutt Minneapolis-St. Paul Milwaukee Chicago II Other exclusive features of the Olympian Hiawatha include private-room cars with Skytop Lounge ... thrifty Touralux sleepers i I -i t i.: e cm j. . . . eitxtruiujiuuuiur poo muuuuua miles. Wide variety of accom modations. Low coach fares. . I ;i i I Atk about FAMILY FARES Perttand Office 521 IWi Yamhill St. - rhen Atwater 0204 Gee. V. Valley. District ,aV Agent L L White, General Agent 4r VIA I tffp t&lI'MW f r ' ' --!' ----- T7yfjWi timmvmH .. m ... " 4 - This revolutionary new Ford front suspension ooaks up road shock before it reaches youl Makes all riding and handling easierl Seals Otlt dirt. You can forget road splash because dirt and water can't get into the ball joints in Ford s new front suspension. Each of the four joints is effectively sealed by a unique rubber-and-metal shield. This means that con tact surfaces of each ball and socket remain clean wear is kept to a minimum. The "old roads won't seem the same with Ford's new Ball-Joint 5 Suspension "paving" the way for you. YouH enjoy a softer, more level rid because Ford's new system allows greater shock absorbing movement : of the front wheels. Handling is far better, too, not only on turns I ! but on the straightaways as well. That's because conventional kingpins have been replaced by simple, sealed ball joints that won't stick j or bind. No other car in Ford's field can equal this modern ride because no other has Ball-Joint Suspension. j ; Agile new performance, too, is yours in a '54 Ford. Whether you choose Ford's new 130-h.p. Y-block V-8 or 115-h.p. I-block Six J i you get the quick response and smooth, quiet operation of a modern ; overhead valve, low-friction deep-block engine. And no matter which, of Ford's 28 new models you choose you enjoy recognized I style leadership with clean, modern lines . . . sparkling new colori . . and harmonizing upholstery fabrics and trim. ! if f j Keeps that ntW-car feel. YouH-enjoy Ford's new-car feel much longer because ball joints are spring-loaded to compensate automatically for any wear. Front wheels hold alignment far longer than with conventional system. Ball joints can't stick or bind. Steering remains consistently easy. Eliminates 12 WMr points. Ford's Ball-Joint Front Suspension elimi nates 12 of 16 points of wear found in oonven'tional systems. Rubber-bushed supports at inner ends of suspension control arms not only reduce the number of wear points but also insulate chassis from road noises. i iv ccrtfdfy Invito 9 you toTomt Drlvm s 0 o .375 Center Street ' " " ' : i' i !;' (SO, Salem, Oregon 1