-4 CUy Mews HBFaeffs WAR I VETS MEET Final reading of by-laws and constitution o the Veterans of World War I, Salem Barracks, and discussion about their adop tion Will take place at an import ant meeting tonight of the Ear racks at Veterans of Foreign Wars Hafl in North Salem at 8 o'clock. The meeting is open to all veterans of World War I. Altrusa Club rummage sale over Greenbaums Fri. & Sat., March 11 and 12. Adv. i CLOTHES LINE LOSSES Three women of or near 1326 N. Winter St Tuesday reported to police the theft of some $23 in clothes from the mutually-used clothesline. The women are Mrs. Leona Murrain, Mrs. Daisy Wicks and Mrs. Helen Reams. Most items were baby: clothes, diapers and crib blankets. CHARTER NIGHT SET Salem Junior Optimist Club ill be chartered Friday night, at ceremonies at the Armory. The chartering service will follow the club's regular Friday night shoot, and speaker will be E. G. Husted who will discuss the history and use of firearms. , Rummage sale & gift table Thurs., March 10 over Greenbaums. Gold Star Mothers. Adv. i ROAD FORMS RECEIVED j ' Option forms for right of way for , the Turner-Aumsville section of federal aid secondary highway 590 were received taken under advise ment Tuesday by the Marion Coun ty Court. The forms were sent to the court by the State Highway Commission. .. Modernize your bath with Dura tile. Metal Wall Tile. 1249 S Commercial. Ph. 4-5292. Adv, GIRL BREAKS LEG . Angelica Snell. 9. 1600 Jeffer Bon St. broke her leg in a bicycle fall about 3:30 p.m. Tuesday at 13th and K Streets, city first aid men reported. She is at Salem General Hospital. DROPS PHONE Donald Crenshaw, telephone repairman, Tuesday reported to police that he lost his portable testing telephone downtown when the door of liis Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. truck opened. STORY HOUR WEDNESDAY Folk tales will be among stories read to Salem youngsters at the Public Library's Story Hour Wed nesday at 4 p.m. Story Hours are held in the Library Fireplace Room. PICTURE PLANNED Hollywood Lions Club will view a picture produced by a national baking company at their meeting today at the Lions Den, Cottage and Fairgrounds Rd. Ed Randle is in charge of the program. MORROW JUDGE VISITS Barratt was a visitor Tuesday at Morrow County Judge Garnat Barratt was a visitor Tuesday at the Marion County Court meeting. Judge Barratt is here during the egislative session. TENDER, AGED PRIME RIB STEAKS, 55c lb. Chipped Dried Beef, full pound 95c. Midget Mar ket ; (adv) HUB CAP GONE Darwin A. Biwer, 2177 S. Cot tage St, Tuesday reported to po lice that one of his hub caps was taken while his car was parked in front of McKinley School. SMOKED PORK LINKS 49c lb. Polish Rings 35c lb. Sliced Mince Ham 35c lb. Midget Markets. (adv) HEALTH MEET SET The Salem Health Council will hear a discussion of legislative matters at its Friday noon meet' ing in the Coral Room of the Marion HoteL 50 LBS. BONELESS STEAKS & ROASTS, all Meat No waste. Foil wrapped for your Freezer, $28.40. Midget Markets. (adv) TOURNEY KICK-OFF Salem Exchange Club will meet Thursday noon this week at the Marion Hotel for a special kick- off luncheon for the B Basket ball Tournament j FOR better appearance call Stan dard Cleaners, 362 N. Coral. Pick up & Del. S & H Green Stamps. 38779. GIRL'S BIKE FOUND Police are holding a 20-inch girl's-type bike found abandoned late Monday at 480 S. 14th St It is maroon with white trim. Sprague Back From Chicago Rail Hearing Charles A. Sprague, publisher of The Oregon Statesman, returned Monday night from Chicago where he and other members of a rail road labor dispute emergency board have been holding hearings. The hearings lasted 26 days. Mrs. Sprague, who has been in Richmond, Calif., during Sprague's absence, returned to Salem Satur day. . , The Order of Railway Conductors and Brakemen are demanding a wage rate Jased on the weight on the drivers of locomotives crawing their trains. Engineers, and fire men are paid on mat basis now. Sprague said be and other em ergency board members will go to Washington, D. C, toward the end of this month to file the resulting report with President Eisenhower, Public Records City Resident Dies: Service i I Set Friday Edward McNeil, brother of Miss Clara McNeil, 110 Chemeketa St. died at a Salem hospital early Tuesday. Until recently a resident of Garden Home, McNeil had made his home with his sister for the past few months. Born in Decatur, 111., McNeil came to Oregon some 30 years ago and for about 20 years with the B. J. Johns Furniture Co. in Port land. Besides his sister Clara, he leaves three others sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth M. Barr, Portland, Mrs. Laura Odell, j Garden , Home, and Mrs. Florence! M. Richards, Salem, and a brother, Fred H. McNeil, Portland. I j Services will be 3 p. m. Friday at the Lincoln Memorial Chapel, Portland. Burial will be at Lincoln Memorial Park. The Clough-Bar-rick funeral home is in charge of arrangements. , i Death Claims - Lee Hodges; Rites Friday Lee Hodges, 58, a carpenter un til illness forced his retirement, died Monday night at his Salem Route 5 home. I Hodges came here 12 years ago from Hutchinson, Kan., and before that lived in Rockford, 111., where he married the former Irene Brown, who survives him. He was born March 27, 1896 at Everson- vule, Mo. I Besides his widow he leaves four daughters and six sons and step sons, a brother Tom Hodges, Nunn, Colo.,, and 21 grandchildren. The children are Mrs. Phyllis Harris and Mrs. Shirley Fisher, Salem: Mrs. Twila Roper, LaGrande, Ore.; Mrs. Anna Mae Sletten, Frost, Minn.; Leo Hodges and Henry and David Moon, Salem; 'Jim Hodges and John Moon, Tacpma; Lester Moon, Hutchinson, Kan. Services will be 10:30 ajn. Fri day at the Virgil T. Golden Fun eral Home. Burial wiQ be 'at Rest Lawn Memory Garden. Rev. Robert Luther will officiate. Cliff Robinson On National Scliool Panel Cliff Robinson, director of sec ondary education. State Depart ment of Education, was elected to a three-year term on the executive committee of the National Associa tion of Secondary School Princi pals, a department of the National Education Association, at the 39th annual convention of the associa tion held in Atlantic City, February 19-23. Rex ; Putnam, superintendent of Public! Instruction announced here Tuesday. . ...... KODinson nas served as a mem ber of the executive committee during the past year. Members of the executive, committee generally progress to the national presi dency. There are approximately 15.000 members of the association. Robinson ; has been: a member of the national association and the Oregon association of secondary principals f or 14-years. He has served as secretary-treasurer of the state association for the past eight years and as executive sec retary for one year, i State Education f Board to Meet Members of the State Board of Education will hold their regular quarterly meeting March 10 in the State Library, here, Rux Putnam, superintendent of Public Instruc tion and executive officer of the board, announced Tuesday, The agenda for the meeting per tains to general education, voca tional education, and vocational rehabilitation. Board members are George C. Huggins, Coos Bay,- chairman; Mrs. Paul L. Patterson, Salem; Ronald E. Jones, Brooks; Mrs. Victor E. OINeill, Klamath Falls; S. E.! Brogoitti, Helix: Francis L Smith, Portland and May Darling, Portland. Bids Sought for Four Corners Postal Station Bids for operating the Four Corners Contract station of the Salem postal service have ' been called for by Postmaster Albert C. Gragg. Bids will! be received until 4 p.m., March 16. The station has been operated by Frank W. Borden whose con tract with the department ; will expire April 2. Information on the operation can be secured at the Post Office. . Beardsley jWins , Promotion to Major Orville Beardsley, former resi dent of Salem, has recently been promoted to. the grade of major in the armed forces in Europe. Beardsley, who attended Salem High School and Willamette Uni versity,, is based near London on air transport duty operating be tween London and Rome. Beardsley is -the son-in-law of Mrs. Samantha Foster, 1586 Ruge St Interruptions Continue on , . State Roads Traffic interruptions continue in various parts of the state due to highway construction and mainten ance. State Highway Engineer R. H. Baldock reported here Tuesday. Baldock'j road summary: Central Oregon Highway Con struction on Burns-Sage Hen Hill. Eight miles gravel surface. Columbia River Highway Con struction from Big Eddy, 4 miles east of The Dalles, to Rufus. Minor delays. , The Dalles-California Highway- Construction . on Sherman-Willow- dale section. Oiled detours. Pacific Highway Construction between Roseburg and Myrtle Creek. Minor delays four miles north of Myrtle Creek. Bridge con struction 2.4 miles south of Rose burg. Minor delays. Coast Highway Five miles gravel surface north, of Gardiner, Construction two to 14 miles south of Port Orford. Gravel surface be tween Depoe Bay and Whale Cove. Umpqua Highway Construc tion from Reedsport east. Minor delays. Medical Springs Highway Reduced load limit from Union to Medical Springs. SUtetmm, Salem, Orison, Wed., March 9, 195S-(Stc. 1)-3 Permits fori Homes Is CIRCUIT COURT Malic A. Carpenter vs Gary C. Man Fined for Driving One Day Too Soon A Salem man who started .driv ing one day too soon was fined $3 Sheriff Plans Talk to Parents Marion County Sheriff Denver Young will speak to parents of teen-agers Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Livingston School gymnasium, 1913 Broadway. Young's topic is "What Will the Harvest Be?" i It concerns the need for cooperation among par ents, churches and law officers in guiding youth activities. The lecture is sponsored by the Salem Seventh-Day Adventist Church, and is open to the public. . Permits for the erection of two houses were among building per-! mits issued Tuesday by the Salem building inspector. They, were to Donald Gettis. for a $14400 house and garage at 1290 Vaaey View Ave., and to Donald Largent for a $12,000 house and garage at 750 Wildwind Dr. - Other permits were issued . to sued Willis E. Vincent to wreck a one story house at 360 W. Superior St; Foster k Kleiser Co. to put up poster panels at 1185 Mission St. and 2498 Mission St; Inez Mingle to perform $1,000 in alterations oa a one-story bouse at 1511 N. Win-, ter St.; Anne Hysler to put a $300 roof on her bouse at 1863 S. 12th St. Beneath a Magnolia On Outer Mongolia, Or in the land Of Samarkand, there Is Ho SLOPPY JOE ; (Aren't you glad you're here?) V THE SAN SHOP Portland Road at North City Limits I Fop Orders to Go Phone 2-6798 1 i ' Jf Sp:cil Flavor i So Sm-o-o-o-th.lso delicious. .. With tiat true butter-rich candy flavor. And because It's FLAVOR-FRESH, you can be'surejf s the finest you can buy! Be sure to try it toeay Ai off Ardn Dealers kmMK Mir !AfM fromtlie worlds most-loved toothpaste . !' ' t mm mm memm gmdol . . j- I nig vuc uoj fcw jvuu naa . carpenter: riainuH ""f Tuesday by District Judge E. O. meni; asus property seiueiiinu and restoration of maiden name. Millie A. Smith. Married July 24, 193 in Reno, Nev. Lois Johns vs. John Johns: Plain tiff seeks divorce alleging cruel end inhuman treatment; asks custody of one minor child. Married July 28. 1951, in North Bonneville, Wash. State vs James Edward Parson and Edward Morris Thompson: De fendants entered pleas of guilty to disorderly conduct; sentenced to 33 days in Marion county jail and The man, Duane Robert Morris, 1575 Mill St., was cited by state police for driving while his license was suspended on Jan. 31. The suspension period was to end Feb. 1 Births CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our sincere appreciation to our many friends and neighbors for the expressions of sympathy and condolence. For the beautiful floral pieces and the many acts of kindness shown us during the long illness and recent death of our beloved hus band, father and brother. We also wish to express our appre ciation to the lady soloist, the pallbearers, and to those who participated in the wonderful Masonic ceremony. Mrs. Mabel W. Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Keith D. Moore and son, Mr. and Mrs. "Rodney Moore and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Ingle O, Johnson and son. A RICHARDSON Mr. and Mrs. given credit for days jailed while Arthur Richardson, 435 Bliler Ave., awaiting trial; releases issued. U i March 8 in Salem General George Lyerly vs. John Sidre: Hospital. TWpnHant'n nral . motion for order I nf mistrial - METER Mr. and Mrs. John pinino r: Msnh v t?iip11 r. I Meier. 2445 Wooddale A;., a McLaughlin and M. Grace Mc- daughter, March 8 in Salem Gen Laughlin: 'Plaintiff filed notice of era! Hospital, appeal to Supreme Court. Lester M. Ingraham vs E. Ingraham: Divorce granted Vivian Petite vs. Raymond Petite: Plaintiff seeks divorce al leging iyrrfel'and inhuman vtreat rnenrraisks custody of four minor children and $120 monthly sup port Married Oct. 10, 1942 in Van couver, Wash. PROBATE COURT EUa F. Borneman estate: Order ed closed. Madeline R. Nash estate: Will admitted to probate and John W. Nash appointed executor. ' Virsie M. Bradley estate: Final . account approved. DISTRICT COURT Duane Robert Morris, 23, 1575 . Mill St, . found guilty of driving while license suspended. Fined $5. a ru-ri c vr- fin. aZVA don Ackers, 3375 Hadley St., a son decree ir , . ci. if.,.-:.i un. iVldlUl O ill tXUCllt iUdliUllCU iivo- pital. NEVER BEFORE At Such a LOW, LOW PRICE Tilt Brand Nw , 1955 NORGE CLOTHES DRYER Sfr 14995 Al LAUE "SSP- 2350 State St. Ph. 3-5443 216 Oak St., Silverton Ab SAVE! AS WE MOVE Drastic Reduction on 1000 &1 Useful Items Buy Yodr Garden Tools or Real Savings Wallpaper at Give-Away Prices! Finest Gifts in tho Volley... at CostI HOCKER Hardware 830 S, Commercial Opea Every Day Uatu a Pm. BUFFET DINNER Yon select your twi food from our geo eroos "Chuck-A-Bord . . . you will find, three kinds of vegetable salad, meat and dessert. '. Served Wed. and Sun. Only San. 12:00 to 9:00; Wed. 5:30 to 2:30 $2.00 Other N'rtes of the Week Enjoy Our Specialties of . . Steak and Lobster Opea Daily 5:30 to 2:39 Son. 12:00 to 9:00 RANDALL'S III I j' (Colgate's 1 soktiy Safe... Eyci for' inlfcs ! No matter how young your children aro, they can use Colgate Dental Cream safely without restrictions or limitations of any kind. And Colgate's gives the surest 4 J ' protection against tooth decay aver ofterod by any toothpastet Your dentist will tell you bow often your children should brush their teeth. And waember! Colgate Dental Cream is safe for chfldre of all ages no matter how young they are or how often they vm it! Besides, Colgate's gives your children the surest protection all day long! Yes, brushing for brushing; the surest protection ever offered by any toothpaste! Because only Colgate'sof all leading toothpastes . contains Colgate's safe new decay-fighting ingredient GardoL That's why Colgate Destal Cream with Gardol fights tooth decay 12 hours or morel SURGST-j-AND SAFEST PROTECTION GardoL ColaaU's wonderful new decay fighter, form aa invisible shield around your teeth. You can't feel it, tasto it, or see 1 but Gardol's protection won't rinoa off or wear off all day. That's why afe.' euro Colgate's with Gardol fiahts 'tooth decay 12 hours or mora. t Y NO OTHER TOOTHPASTE CAN GIVE YOUR CHILDREN SAFER OR SURER PROTECTION AGAINST TOOTH DECAY THAN COLGATE DENTAL CREAM CHUCK-WAGON 3170 S. Commercial ' Ph. 4-7575