The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 02, 1955, Page 13, Image 13

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    Valley News
Statesman News Service
Former Dallas
Resident Dies
In Portland -
Statesman Newt Serric
DALLAS Services for John
, Peters, 89, Da'la resident for
many year and late resident of
Portland, will be held Thursday at
11 a.m. at He Bollman Funeral
Chapel in Dallas. I
Interment will follow at Dallas
Cemetery. Peters died at a Port
land nursing home: Sunday.
He was -born Oct 8, 1863, in
South Russia, and jwas married in
1887 in Manitoba, Canada, to Eliza
beth Dygh, who died in 1946. He
was a member of the Apostolic
Faith Church and lived in Canada
prior to 1914, when he moved to
Dallas. .--.-....
He moved to Portland in 1951.
Surviving are a son, John of Sea
side; daughters, Mrs. Mary Jones
of Seaside,Mrs. Susie Penner, Mrs.
Katherine Ricketts and Mrs. Anne
Moore, all of Portland: two bro
thers and two sisters in Canada. 29
grandchildren and 34 great-grandchildren.
1
Missing
Boys Receive
Scholarships
Statesman wj Serriet
ELLIOTT PRAIRIE-Paul Burt
rt and Stanley Schwabauer .Elliott
Prairie seniors of j the Canby High
school received special awards 'at
their graduation exercises Friday
evening. i -
Paul received a medal in agricul
ture and one in j service. Stanley
received' a $120 scholarship to the
Linfield College afrMcMinnville, or
one-fourth year's tuition.
Stanley Schwabauer and his cou
sin, Ronald Berg of Canby were
the honor guests at a part at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Schwabauer after the commence
ment exercises Friday evening.
Ronald was the valedictorian of
his class at the Canby Union High
school and received a $300 scholar
ship from the Con solidation
Freightways.
. .. y - 4
i r -j, v
EV tjrl
, - '
Scholarships,
Awards Given
At Exercises
Itattsnai Newt Serrk
SILVERTON t- Scholarshios and
awards were given out Wednesday
niirM ac 7ft cdninrc nprtirinatfvl in
fUnion High School graduation
exercises at the high school.
Twila Gillis was valedictorian
and Marjorie Wilson, salutatorian.
Main speaker was. Dr. Harry L.
Dillin, president of Linfield Col
lege. .
The American Legion plaque to
the student showing greatest im
Drovement in high school went to
Marjorie Beasley. Senior boy and
"irl making the greatest contribu
tion in citizenship and character
were Ravmond Kaser and Ila May
Moore. Garnering the most athle
tic points in his senior year, was
Bob Robbins."
Other scholarships included Busi
ness and Professional Woman $23
scholarship, Miss Gillis; Howard
W. George Memorial, $75, Sharon
Wells; music. Bob Harris; .Grace
Hudson Memorial, $100, Betty Hitt;
Willamette University scholarship,
Sharon Wells; Pacific Lutheran,
; $100. Ronald Jorgenson and $400,
Twila Ann Gillis; Oregon State
College, Ray Kaser; beauty col
lege tuition scholarships . to Nola
Ross. Peggy Monson,. Norma
Pflaun. Barbara Skaife and Cary
lon Hage.
INDEPENDENCE Rep rted
missing since early Sunday is
Jay Edwards Seeley, 69, shown
: have. He had been in ill health
recently and. police fear he may
hate taken his life. Anyone
. who has seen Seeley s'uee last
Saturday- are asked to contact
police.
W. J. Samples
Today
Statesman Xrwi Service
STAYTON Funeral services
for William Joseph Samples, 69,
who died May 30 at his Stayton
farm heme, will be held Friday
at 2 p.m. at Weddle Funeral
Home. .
Burial will be at Lone Oak
cemetery, with the Rev. Clyde
Freeman officiating.
Samples was born in Chero
kee County, Kan., Aug. 15, 1885.
He had been a farmer in the
Stayton area for 17 years.
Survivors are: the wife, Olive
Samples. Stayton; three sons,
Fred and Willard Samples, Port
land; and David Samples, Stay
ton; two daughters, Madge Boe
digheimer. Turner; and Mrs.
Keith Hernes, Mehama; two
brothers, R. S. Drenner. Culp
Creek, Ore.; and J. E. Tedstrom,
Parsons, Kan.
Polk County
Inducts Five
i
1 1 .
Valley
Briefs
I 1 I
Statesman News Serric
Central Howell Mrs. Martha
DeSart is in Silverton hospital,
where she wis taken Sunday
with a heart condition. She was
. being given oxygen earlier this
eek.
Lyons Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Craigmyle and family who have
been living in the Russell Wilson
bouse across from the Sporting
Goods store, move Monday to he
Robert TJraper-j house west bl
town. - j . .i
Monmouth Monmouth unit of
the W.C.T.U. met last week to
hear a talk by i State Rep. Joe
Rogers about bills pertaining to
liquor and how they were acted
upon by the House in the recent
legislative session. Assisting Mrs.
Hugh Rogers, the hostess, at the
te hour were Mrs. Alice Taylor
and Mrs. Blanche Kosenstock.
. . i
Pedee Mrs. W. Lee Snowden
entertained after school Friday
for the birthday of her daughter
her tenth birthday were 21 small
guests.
Lyons A reception was held
-Sunday morning following the
morning services at the Lyons
Methodist Church, honoring the
Rev. and Mrs.; David Bennett,
who are being transferred to
Turner. The Bennetts 'have lived
in Lyons for the past year while
serving the Lyons church.
Pedee Members and friends
of the Community church eave
a house warming party for the
Joe O'Neal family last week.
Their - new home replaces the
one aestroyea ny - lire a year
ago. A steam iron was presented
to them by the group.
Marqnam Leaving last Friday
for British Columbia, Canada,
were Paul Uhrig and Arnold Sipe
to look after i property interest
there... . . j ; .
TJnionvale Bruce Church was
honored, on his sixth birthday
with a party in his honor at his
home Friday ; afternoon. Jamie
Ediger was honored Sunday on
his birthday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. FredStockhoff. -
Labish Center Forty-one de
scendents of Barney Aker met
Sunday at the Oak Lawn Grange
Hall near Monitor for a family
reunion and picnic. Present were
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hammond, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Brock and family,
Mr. and Mrs. IMarlin Hammond
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
Seely and family, all of Wood
burn, j
Unionvale The last Extension
Unit meeting j of the year was
held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Stockhoff recently.
Miss Betty Weiman gave the les
son on kitchen storage. Mrs. Car
oline McGanty of Yamhill who is
a county committee member, was
a special guest
i
"Labish Center Mrs. G. C. Zen
fer has been receiving treatment
T ir a heart I condition at the
" Woodburn Hospital for about
two weeks. Her condition is re
ported to be about the same. .
Faar Corners A fire, appar
ently starting: from a floor fur
nace, damaged the L. Edlund
home at 3150 Sunnyview Ave.
Wednesdav nnnhii Fnir fnr.
.ners volunteer firemen ans-
-.. uk xi.mi a.m. caii tome
borne and controlled the blaze
after it had charred floor joists
in the vicinity 0f the furnace.
. Some smoke damage wai report-
Statesman Newt Serrie
DALLAS The Polk County
Selective Service Board has is
sued notices for five men to re
port for induction at 3:30 p.m.
Thursday, according to Mrs. No
na Ford, clerk.
The inductees, who are to re
port at the Dallas armory, are
Duane LeRoy Wiens and Eugene
Elbert Viliwock. both Dallas; Or-
val Norman Aebi, Sheridan; Mi
chael John Drazdoff, Independ
ence, and Wayne Alva McKibben,
Cascadia.
After reporting to the board
office in the Dallas armory, the
men will go to Portland where
they will be examined and sworn
into the armed forces on Friday.
1 1 . ... i i iii
Reception Fetes
Retiring Teacher
.i i
Statcsmaa Newi Senrte !
SILVERTON - Expected to be
one of the biggest community
events of the season is the recep
tion planned for Thursday night to
honor Miss Olga Johnson, retiring
grade school teacher. Miss John
son, who has taught for 35 years
in the Silverton city schools, will
be honored at an event at the Eu
gene Field auditorium at S p.m.
and everyone is invited.
Committees working on the af
fair include:' Decorations, Mrs.
James Nelson, Mrs. Albert Ras
mussen, Mrs. Larry Ernst; re
freshments, Mrs. Robert Epeneter,
Mrs. Arnold Nelson, Mrs. Denny
Legard, Mrs. Gordon Henjum; cof
fee, Mrs. Clifford Almquist, .Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Goschie'; punch,
Mrs. John Bronson; table setting.
Mrs. Sion Wentwork and Mrs. Earl
Chalfan.
Dallas High
To Graduate
86 Seniors
i Statesman Newt Servlf t
TtAT.T.AS Commencement ex
ercises for 86 graduating seniors
will be- held Thursday. June z,
at 8 n.m. in the Dallas High
School gymnasium. i
Dr. William C. Jones, uean ot
Aaminuirxuuu i iuc v;uusr
ty of Oregon will be guest speak
er, according to Carl Morrison,
principaL j
Leading the 1935 graduating
class scholastically are Ruth
Parleson. valedictorian with a
3.8 grade point average and Lar
ry Simpson, salutatorian witn a
1 7
Scheduled to receive diolomas I
are: Mary-Vera Allen. Delores :
Allister, 11a Bartel, Jim Bese.
Walter Bier. Gerry Reiru;mer
Ralev. Willie Jane Birchell.
j Ralph Blanchard, Cheryl Boss,'
Connie Bowden, Alvin Branat, ;
Jack Braziel, Ruth carleson, jo
Ann Carr. Elaine Classen. Lorene
Classen, Ralph Cook, Gary Cool
ey, Don Costa.
Loren Cox. Richard Davis, Vel
da Day, Janie DeWitt, Ray Dom
axchofskv. Rex DomaschofskVi
fiene Diierksea. Carol Farris.
Dorothy Fast,.-Leah Fast, Joyce
Fausset, uoya isner, xxuns
Flowerdew. Wallace Frey. Alton
Friesen. Janice Goebel. Leon
Goebel, Paul Gohrke, Bob Grant,
Alvin Gnppin, Alvin Hanson.
Barbara Harland.' Robert Helmet
Connie Heppner, Donna Hevner.
Frank Hoekstre. Shirley Holt
Roberta Howe, Shirley Huntley,
Ray Jester, Sherry Jones, Mar
garet Krier, Barbara Lute,. Holt
McCoy. Rex Martin, William Mar
tin, Lois Meeker, Dorothy Mitch
ell, Phyllis Mueller, Virginia
Myers. Eugene Neal. Clifford
Kenfeld. Chris Nielsen. Kathv
Niggli, Lois Pankratz. Darlene
Parke, Jack Pitzer, Laura Porter.
. Donald Read. Junior Rockford.
I Jovd Rockford. Shirley Rogers
Coonrod. Morris Roosa, Wayne
Rose, Effie Rupp, Ronald Schul
son, Marion Sharer. Peggy Sim
ons, : Larry Simpson, Dorathy
Smith, Zada Straley. Alvina Sul
livan, Helen Sundstrom, Donald
Toevs, Ernest Voth, Janet wen
ger and Lenora Yost
Portland Warehouse
Damaged by Blaze
PORTLAND 'Uh Fire, which
started from a short circuit near
a candling machine, destroyed a
thousand cases of eggs in a Fred
Meyer grocery warehouse Tuesday
night. ,
A company spokesman estimated
the loss in eggs at $13,000. Saved
were some $10,000 worth of avo-
cadoes and tropical fruit owned by
Calavo, Inc.
Youth Admits5
Burglaries at
High School
The recent neat-and-tidy break-
ins ot North Salem High School i
were cleared up Wednesday'
when a 14-year-old boy admitted
prowling the place two or three
times in addition to the four
prowls police were aware of.
V..V .... . V ...w w j , ,
Snow i in the I hands of Marion;
county juvenile aumonues, ;
signed a statement admitting at j
least six entries each time 1
through the same cafe window j
from , which he'd remove; the
pane and putty it in agairi. In
following that procedure' hisv
mode of entry remained a secret
The boy also admitted the
burglary of the Capitol Cutlery
Co. of 14 jackknives last week
end, police said. i
Much of the high school loot
was recovered at the boy's home,
said police. t amounted to of
fice supplies, cheap jewelry, post
age stamps and change.. It was
estimated that $22 worth of odds
and ends were missing after last
Saturday s break-in. j
The boy told police that he
used a knife to cut away the put-j
ty on his first prowl, that there-
after he was armed with a
H-inch wood chisel. To gain, en
try of the various classrooms and
offices, the prowler would break
out some door windows near the
Battery Plant
Worker Hurt
A O-vl 1 W ' .! ft J 1
suffered a possible hip fracture
Wednesday when a push-truck load i
of 70 storage batteries rained down
on him after the flat sheet between
the loading dock and the boxcar he
was loading slipped off the dock.
At Salem General Hospital in
"good" condition is Charles L.
Taber, 30, 228 Patterson Ave. He
also suffered minor battery acid
burns on his skinned ' right leg.
Taber was brought to the hospital
by Willamette ambulance from the
Gould-National Battery Co.i plant
at 576 Patterson Ave. "r
Manager George H. Lewis, who
confirmed details of the early
morning accident, said the sheet!
steel between the boK car land
dock was poorly-placed. He and
others unloaded the 35-pound bat
teries from 160-pound Taber and,
to minimize acid burns, Lewis re
moved Taber's shoes. City first
aidmen cut away his acid-soaked
trousers. 1
Manager Lewis said the four
wheeled truck was being pulled
into the car by Taber, aided by a
man pushing at the rear and that
Taber was unaware that the flat
sheet had worked itself to the
dock's edge.
Rule on Red Ban
WASHINGTON W) The : Su
preme Court agreed Tuesday to
pass on constitutionality of the law
under which the Communist Party
has been ordered to register as a
tool of Moscow.
The party had asked the Supreme
Court to overturn a inline nf thm
u.J. court of Appeals here, which
held in a 2-1 decision that the 1950
Subversive Activities Control Act
is constitutional.
latches and tediously dismantle
others, piling the pieces neatly
to the side.
Statesman, salem, 'On., Own.) Junt 1, 1955-See.: 2)-3
Ex-NqvyMon
Visits Salem
On U.S. Tour
A retired Navy lieutenant, .who
thought his 30 years was such
a good deal that he is donating
a year's tour of the U.S.. to pro
mote the Navy as a career, was
a Salem visitor Wednesday.
Traveling in a customized panel
truck 'which serves as combined
home, transportation and adver
tising billboard is Lt. (j.g.) Wil
liam Z. Stomski, his wife Marge
of San Diego, -Calif., and their
mascot Goldie,
Goldie, a blade cocker, stands
all the dog watches, Stomski ex
plains. Retired three years ago after
a Navy career which he began at
the age 'of 15, Stomski says he is
out .on his own now to help re
cruiters around the country pro
mote the Navy as a career.
He and his wife hope to visit
all 48 states ia the next nine
months in the ambitious cruise
begun last month at their home
in San Diego.
So far along the way he has
made TV appearances at Los An
geles and San Francisco and is
scheduled -for others at Portland
and Seattle. In between he has
been paying calls on Navy re
cruiters in smaller towns in his
volunteer promotion program.
FREE ESTIMATES
Ob 'Floor Coverings
NORRIS-WALKER
PAINT COMPANY
1710 Front Phone 4-2279
NEVER BEFORE
At Such a
LOW, LOW PRICE
. I ' A Complete t
Watch Overhaul
(Guaranteed 1 Year)
Only $5.53
Weisfield's
305 No. Liberty
Salem, Oregon
Word of Girl's Birth
Reaches Paulson Home
SUtesmaa Newt Scrric
ELLIOTT PRAIRIE -Word has
been received here by Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Paulson of the birth
of a daughter to their son-in-law
and daughter. Airman 1st Class
and Mrs. John Van Liew of An
chorage, Alaska on May 27.
The little girl weighed seven
pounds and five ounces.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Paulson" of Elliott Prai
rie, and Mr. and Mrs. James Van
Lieu of Hubbard. Great grand
parents are Mr. and Mrs. R. Peter
son of Elliott Praine, Mr. and
Mrs. Olaf Paulson of Silverton and
Mrs. Elsie Laughman of Portland.
Births
At Valley Hospitals
; Statesman News Serric
DALLAS To Mr, and Mrs.
James White. Kings Valley, a
daughter May 30 at Bartell hospi-
taL 1
To Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Smith,
Jefferson Route 1. a daughter May
28 at Dallas hospital.
Clear Lake Receiving awards
at Cub Scout Pack 41 meeting re
cently were Delmar George, wolf
award; John Watson and James
McCandlish, two-year pins, and
Henry George and Dale Eichel
berger, both lion. The den will plan
outings this summer.
Smnlwr glvtt yw me Crtdit
yov if 4 mnd rtmamber,
v Don't How T w
txtrq Penny for the privilege!
- - i
QUICK Wivirsi
Clmsec Mod f !
PCwKHpH f y(vr
ttfirtd Optomtfrist.
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