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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1955)
AMS yn MA 22 rT l-ZM7-6l! UV69-700-84 TMKUS APR 21 I MAY iy MAY 22 JUNES 60.77-81-881 JUNE 23 JULY 23 6447-74 uo JULY 24 AUG 23 10-12-31-Wl 57-o6-79-8S VMO MX. U 1 3- 5- -l4 '22-28-39 STAR By CLAY H POLLAN M Vow Doily Adivifv Guide JK : According to Mia Ston. To develop messoge for Monday, reod words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth siga sot. a 1 Your 2 You 3 You 4 Sam 5 Coo O Protects 7 fcslka You RoJm 10 h 11 Best 12 Action 13 To 14 Some 15 A 16 AJter 17 See 18 Will 19 You 20 Best 21 Pqr 22 Of 23 Spirit'! 24 If itc resting 25 Special 26 Benefit 27 Move 28 Your 29 For 30 Through , 31 And 32 FonranJ 33 Fin. ' 34 Don't 35 Attention 36 Ways 37 Grader 38 To 39 Ambit w 40 Short 41 Plow 42 Bemg - 43 Mm 44 Realm 45 Trips 46 Mode 61 Ordinary 62 Of 63 Now 1 64 Visit 65 Secretive 66 Disturb 67 And ' 8 To 49 Affair 70 Moy 71 Sensitive 72 And 73 Your 74 Dotes 75 Pennonetil 76 Mora 47 Adventuraui77 For 48 Day 49 Temper 50 Today 51 To 52 And 53 Will 54 Be 55 Some 56 An 57 Could 78 Fnendty rt Your 80 Nor 9 1 AAokmg 82 Heorft 83 Desires 84 Appeol 85 Popularity BO Bring e sna i 58 Unexpected 88 Moves 59 As 89 Resourceful 60 Evening : 90 Satisfaction 61355 Neutral scotfva OCT 24 NOV. 22 JL1Q T7 TV- SAttTTAMJS NOV. 23 DEC 22 11-13.16-53ri W-73-76 M :4 DEC JAN. ho JAN. 21 FEB.' 19 b1-2545-51ri 56-58-68 HJ men FEB. 20 MAIL 21 4- 7- 8-43TH Valley News Statesman News Service FudJnjectionSmuU Wlieets Under Study by Car Makers ; By DAVID J. WH.KIE AP AatometlYe Editor DETROIT HI Fuel injectors will replace carburetors, push but tons will do away with gear se lector lerers and 13-inch wheels will outmode the present 15-inch rims. : . ; ; These are not just elements of some of the auto industry's "dream" cars; they are under test in the industry's laboratories now; they are scheduled for introduction on some 1957 model cars. Because they are farther ad vanced than numerous other ex perimental projects; they answer the oft-heard question as to what will be the next major engineer ing development in automobile construction. j New Brakes Other projects under test include new braking methods, a master hydraulic system to supply energy for alj the power-actuated devices on the modern motor vehicle, and means of reducing the hump in the floor of the car. Fuel injectors, of course, are not new. They have been used on ffiesel-type engines, injecting a fine spray into -the combustion cham bers. Right now there is differ ence of opinion as to the advan tage of constant injection of fuel or timed-injection that would John Yeater Rites Slated For Tuesday Statesmaa News Service . DALLAS Final rites for John U. Yeater, 87, lifelong resi dent of Polk County, will be at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday at the B oil man Funeral Chapel in Dallas. The Rev. Fremont Faul will offi ciate and interment will follow at the Smith cemetery at Mon mouth. A retired farmer, Yeater died Friday at a rest home in Dallas. He was a descendant of a pioneer Polk County family, living on the home farm from his birth on May 10, 1888, until World War II when the property was taken over for the Camp Adair canton ment Remainder of bis life was spent in the Falls City and Dal las area. He was married at Independ ence on, Dec. 20, 1899, to Ra chel Sherwood, who died in 1931. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Wilma Harris, Hoquiam, Wash., and Mrs. Margaret Ma- comber, Teledo, and several nie ces and nephews. 5 School Board ianuiuaics rue, June20 Voting Statesmaa News Serriee JEFFERSON The regular school election will be held in the high school library. Monday, June 10, from 2 to 8 p.m. Three board members for dis trict 14CJ are to be elected. One for three years, one for four and one fori five-year term. Five petitions for these places on the school board have been filed by candidates with the derk of this district. Frank W. Gilmour and Robert W. Harris have filed for the three-year term of office. Darwin L. Cook of Connor is a f aiwiuiat mr tne tour-vear term. and John W. Finlay of Sidney and Leland W. Wells, for the five-year term. Three other petitions are circulating and may be filed before closing date. nail J xjm vnicuuui, icuiuit chairman of district 14CJ school board, is a candidate for a posi tion as director for three years on the Marion County Rural School district board in zone three. This zone comprises the school districts Jefferson, Riverside, Turner, Sunnystde, Marion, North Santiam '-and Cloverdale. Teachers Hired For Jeff erson Statesmaa Newt Service JEFFERSON Orval Lee of Albany has been hired to succeed Ted Johnson as varsity basketball and baseball coach in the Jeffer son High School. Johnson will coach in the Newport school. Mrs. Everett Stuckmeier of Scio will head the commercial depart ment in the high school. 1 taking the place of Nora Lee Craven, who has resigned to accept a teaching position in the HUlsboro High School. No one has been hired to take Raymond Howie's place as foot ball, track and freshman basket ball coach. Valley Briefs N. Pedersen, Polk County Resident, Dies - Statesmaa News Service RICKREALL Funeral serv ices for Niels Pederson, 69, re tired farmer who died late Satur day in Salem, will be at 2 pjn. Wednesday at the Virgil T. Golden chapel in Salem. Burial will be at Restlawn. Memory Gardens. Pederson, who lived in the Rick reall area for 17 years and in Sil- verton for two years before, was born March 1, 1886, in Denmark and was naturalized in the United States in 1913. , ; ' - He belonged te- the PiumValley Lodge of. the IOOF at McCoy, the Danish Brotherhood at McMinn ville, the Modern Woodmen . of America at Silverton, the Oak Grove Grange and the Perrydale Farmers Union. He leaves the widow, Mrs. Vel- eska Pederson, Rkkreall, two daughters, Elnora Pederson, Sa lem, and Mrs. Seymour Nelson, Lebanon; son- El win Pederson. RkkreaU; three sisters in Den mark; two granddaughters. Statesmaa Newt Service Z Jefferson Donald Miller, who lege last week, will leave Sunday for Fort Sill, Okla., to report fer militar service. He will be a sec ond lieutenant in the artillery. Brash College Mothers of pri mary room students gave a sur prise birthday party, with gifts, for teacher Mrs. Mary Lou Nich- . olson at the ; school last week. Twenty-four mothers attended the no-hos lunch affair. 1 Jeflersra Pfc D. A. Winslow, on of Arthur W. Winslow of Jef ferson, recently spent a week's leave in Tokyo from his unit in Korea. Winslow, who attended Albany high school, is a member of the Eighth Army's Honor Guard headquarters. He entered the Army in November" 1953 and ar . rived in the Far East In May, 1954.- ' ' . Brash College Mrs. F. Sing ; er was hospitalized Thursday with r a heart condition. - r Orchard Heights A. A. Withers is in Salem Memorial Hospital ;. where he is recuperating from sur- -jery Thursday. , , , t Red Cross to Elect Officers SUtesmaa Newt Service DALLAS Officers to head the Polk County Red Cross chapter will be elected at the regular monthly meeting of the board of directors at S p.m. Monday in the Chamber of Commerce room at Dallas city ban. The meeting is the last until fall announces Norman Guedon, chair man. The chapter's 1955 budget i has been prepared and will be pre- I sen ted. Mrs. L. L. Linn, executive sec retary, said that the chapter had fallen far short on its fund drive quota with an additional $1,500 needed to continue the present Red Cross program in the county. A Red Cross home nursing course is now being conducted on Tuesday and Thursday evenings in cooperation with the auxiliary to Carl B. Fenton post, American Legion. Although the class is filled, information on future classes may be obtained from the Red Cross office in city hall Death Claims Mary Bewley, Valley Native : Statesm&m Newt Service McMINNVHXE Mary E. Bewley of McMinnville died in Sa lem Sunday, i i She was born in Yamhill County and spent most of her life in the Willamette Valley. She was a mem ber of the Artisan's Lodge of Salem. She is the mother of B.R. Bewley of McMinnville and of . Alta Gar rett of Rigby, Idaho, and Georgia Sullivan of Port Angeles, Wash. Funeral services will take place Tuesday at 11 a.m. at Macy & Son Funeral Chapel 'in McMinnville. Interment will take place at Bell- crest Memorial Park in Salem. Andrew Cureton Succumbs After Lengthy Illness tatesmaa News Service STAYTON Andrew Lambert Cureton. 69, West Stayton, died at his home Saturday. He had lived there about seven years. He was born July 17, 1885 in Howard County, Ark. In 1910 he was injured in a coal mine and had been an invalid all his life. Cureton leaves one sister, Vel eria Stinnett, West Stayton, and several nieces and nephews. j Services will be 2 p.m. Monday: at the Baptist Church in Stay- ton, Burial will be at Lone Oak Cemetery. The Weddle Funeral home is in charge of" arrangements. spray the fuel into each chamber separately as the upward stroke of the piston begins. Why fuel injection in place of conventional carburetion? Advo cates of the injection systems say these devices can improve aO around performance of the engine or provide greater fuel mileage. They do not claim both of these advantages can be made immedi ately available. ! - Push Button Push button tear shifting has been talked about in automotive circles for many years. Whether the first to be introduced will be hydraulic or electrically operated is yet to be determined. It is more than likely, however. that' along with the fuel injection systems they will be optional. extra-cost items. Production costs are among the problems yet to be overcome in both instances. Reducing the size of car wheels may sound like a simple project. But it involves numerous collateral changes, especially in brake de- sig u The smaller wheels will have the effect of lowering the over-all silhouette of the car. At the same time tires of smaller circumfer ence will be subject to greater wear. Smaller Wheels Some industry stylists are said to favor the smaller wheels, even if they will reduce road clearance. They say the lowered silhouette will permit other styling changes tnat will greatly increase the eye- appeal of the new model cars. The industry's engineers and re searchers are tight-lipped about the projects they have under test in the laboratories and on the prov ing grounds. - Their reticence is due to a de sire to perfect whatever devices they are working on before nouncing them. an- Blind Pianist Teaches Music LANCASTER, Ohio When 23-year-old Georgia Griffith grad uated last June from Capital University's School of Music, she planed to teach music to the blind because she herself is blind. ' But there were no positions for her in that field. So she began to instruct pupils who see. When beginners ask her how she can tell when their fingers are held incorrectly over; the piano keys, she replies: ( "It's very easy to tell ... the notes do not sound as they should; haven't you noticed?" Fool Plans to Open Wednesday; Statesmaa News Service SILVERTON The municipal swimming pool will be open Wed nesday if present plans are car ried out, R. E. Borland, city man ager reports. , A new boiler for the shower wa ter had been ordered some time ago but was held up because of the truck strike. This has now arrived and i will be installed at once. Also included among the spring's improvements to the free swimming quarters are new fenc ing, and repainting of bath houses. Care of the swimming pool this year will be a family affair with Mr. and Mrs. John Demas as cus todians and Nels Demas, their son, as lif guard. Births At Valley Hospitals jV the Men EMimnp ' won nut j 1, ; WONT RUN iilr ; Statesman Newt Service SILVERTON To Mr. and Mrs. Mike Klopfenstein, Stayton', June 9, a son at the Silverton Hospital To Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Ramsey, Molalla,.a daughter, June 10, at the Silverton Hospital. wan smttu wont snr Here's the proof. Try K on a rough, absorbent blotter or the slickest writing surface. Every letter, dot and line re mains clear, crisp, uniform, 195 V Polk County Court News Statesmaa Newt Service DALLAS The following com plaint is on file in Polk County Circuit Court: Howard Wallace Hickman vs. Loretta Minnie Hick man: Plaintiff alleges cruel and in human treatment, seeks divorce, Married April 15, 1954 at Van couver. Wash. . . ! . A license has been issued to William D. Harvey, 21, Corvallis and Claudine A. Fitzgerald, 18, Falls City, and to Frank R. Tes sandore, 29, U. S. Army, Coachel la, California and Margaret Ruth iBeattie, 26, housewife, Falls City. LOCKER BEEF! Eastern Oregon Grain-fed Reef 1 Lamb Cut and Wrapped Ho EeK.' fted W s 1 My-Te-Fine Photo Developing and Rnishing 'Iriaf la year raDs af film to ke sever poi at m ntm ckarfe. Kiaf-eiie triers re ateee fram yaw resaler aeteHva. , King Size hints Tak plenty of film en your trips to the btach er en your vacation; bring back unused film for refund. Statesman, Salem, CT3y EZXifff, TSXt nWTS-C,". Jr3 Is?: I a 1 r r Building must be by July 1. Everything Vacated Goes r mm : A I' J UP TO ) DAVENPORTS CHAIRS A PI AAPl eTatlIFlilMafl? f fLUUK lUULIHU iHROeVjEDINtllfcy c BEDROOM $m SUMMER FURNITURE OIL CIRCULATORS FOAM RUBBER MATTRESSES SPRING FILLED MATTRESSES (OIL BED 1 SPRINGS ELECTRIC (APPLIANCES Ranges, Refrigerators, Dishwashers, Freezers, Ironers Children's Play Gyms Chests of Drawers Dining Room Sets Wooden Kitchen Sets Book Cases End Tables Record Players i Smokers Storage Chests Occasional Chairs Night Stands Mirrors f Desks ; Sewing Cabinets 9x12 Rugs Table & Floor Lamps Tier Tables j Coffee Tables Vanities & Benches Beds & Chests a) I SALE AT WAREHOUSE IN ALLEY I BEHIND MAIN STORE OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS 'TIL '9 P. M. 9j 7X Spring ...a 40C 26c 1325 SOUTH 25th : 450 Court Street Grain-fed DeefW- SALEM MEAT CO I 1..V ,