(Cutty Nwb CBnQa(Po MRS BLAIR WALKING Mrs. Ieslie Blair of Milwaukie, who received a back fracture in an auto collision two weeks ago, has been allowed up - every day since Thursday, attendants at Sa fes General Hospital report. Mr. Blair was returning home with her husband from a visit with her son-in-law and daughter. Dr. and Mrs. Roscoe C. Wilson, in Salem, at the time of jthe accident near Gervais. Have dinner at the Trinity Fair. . 5-S p.mi Four Corners. Bazaar 10 a.m. Lunch 11:30. . adv.) Charles ,W, Creighton Jr. Att'y.. at Law. Moved from 417 Oregon Bldg. to New Location 218 N. Liberty, Ph. 2-3923. f adv.) COUNTY FUND SHOWN A total fund balance of $3,414. sbown in the Oct. 31 accounts re 278.48 for Marion County was ported to the Marion County Court by County Treasurer S. J. Butler. Largest! sum was in the general road fund which showed a balance Of $1,266,572.76. V Rotana i Cluh benefit ham, turkey dinner YWCA, Nov. 8. 6 to 7:30 $1.50, children 75c. (adv.) Thelma Baker-Wherley at Candal aria Beauty Shop. Ph. 3-5151. Rapid Check Count Arrest Big ise A Michigan, man expressed sur prise, at the promptness ot Saiem police When he was apprenenoea on a check charge Saturday morn ing as he was packing to leave a Salem hotel. Police said two $25 checks which had been cashed Friday at the hotel were rejected when taken to the bank by police after the hotel manager had ascertained by phone that the man identified as William Martin Demion, 29, Grosse Point, Mich., had no account there. Police also checked on the man's record before going to his room. They said he is now on probation from Coos County for a check charge.: Bail was fixed at $1,000, r to Mark Section County Surveyor A. D. Graham has been ordered by. the Marion County Court to make a survey to establish a permanent section cor ner in the upper reaches of the Little North Fork of the North San tiam. River, where lumbering operations- will remove witness trees. The order followed receipt of a letter from the district ranger for the U. S. Forestry Department at Detroit noting that salvage timber operations in the Whitewater Creek area would remove trees . which mark the common corner of four sections in that area.'. , The Whitewater Creek salvage .timber sale was , completed by the forest service in September. Jersey Directors To Meet Tuesday The board of directors of the Oregon ! Jersey Cattle Club will meet Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the - Senator Hotel, reports Mr Tibbies Keizer, state president . This will be the final meeting before -the annual meeting of the state club membership which is scheduled for Salem, Dec. 3. Plans for this will be completed, includ ing j the place at Salem and the , time. Reports will also be made Tuesday on the annual Heifer In vestment sale. SAVE Surer ... j. aurveyc AS WELL AS MONEY Open a savings account with us where savings deposits can be made conveniently. In person when you park on our large lot i From your car at our drive-In window ; -1 - - - . , - By mail from your nearest mailbox All savings accounts opened during the months of Novem ber and December with an initial deposit of $200.00 or more will receive the nse of a safe deposit box for one year whhoat cost. Attend off flnonciof CHAMBER OFFICER VISITS Salem Chamber of Commerce at its membership luncheon Monday noon in the Marion Ho tel will hear a talk on the im portance of Business-Education Day, to be given by the new Port land district manager for U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Robert G. McCreery. Salem's B-E Day will be Nov. 14, with over 500 teachers spending the day at 82 business places of the city. Johns-Manville. asohalt shinzles .applied right over your old roof. No down payment. 36 mo. to pay. Call Mathis Bros. .4-6831. (adv.) Florence Nicholson announces ope ning Monday, Lancaster Beauty Salon, in her home at 627 S. Lan caster near ,4 Corners. Ph. 2-0576. , H I (adv.). MAKING PROGRESS , Vincent E. Hagen of Salem, who received multiple fractures in a head-on collision two weeks ago at Amity, is making "good pro gress , according to his wife, bhe said he will remain in McMinnville Hospital for several weeks, how ever, because of , a broken neck and recent surgery on a crushed leg- . v. ' See outstanding wall, papers with matching fabric and glamorizing Treasure Tone paints at Clarke's, 220 N. Com'L , adv.) Dr. H. M. "dinger now located at 525 S. Liberty St. Ph. 4-7502. . . K (adv.) 4 MINORS CHARGED i ' Four Salem minors, two 16 and two 15 years old 'were charged early- Saturday with illegal posses sion of liquor. They were released to their parents for appearance Wednesday in juvenile court. Dental plates repaired while you wait at Painless Parker Dentist, ;125 N. Liberty, Salem. Locker Beef Eastern Oregon Grain fed 19c, Roasts 25c. Steak 30c. Salem-Meat Co. (adv.) WOODHULL IMPROVED Robert Woodhull, 24, Dallas, seriously injured a week ago in an auto accident on Fairgrounds road in Salem, was reported "im proving" Saturday at Salem Gen eral HospitaL . The knit shop will be closed all day Saturday on account of death in family. - From now on open , every day at 9:30 till 6, except j Thursday, open Noon till 9 p.m. I 120 N, 25. Ruth Nyberg. Ph. 4-6095. (Adv.) Spring Lamb & fc wrapped for Locker Pork your " Locker cut 34c Salem Meat Co. (adv.) Court Okelis Two Petitions Two petitions for keeping build ings on portions of unused county roads have, been approved by the Marion County Court for Brooks and Monitor property owners. - Urshel y. Hadley and "Marie Hacfley of'Brooks. and W. Guy and Ivan L. Shipp of Monitor had ask ed for the permission which would continue in effect for the next ten years. In both cases buildings ex tend into dedicated streets which have never been opened to use. Kiwanis Club to Hear City Report A report on the city of Salem will be heard by members of the Salem Kiwanis Club at their Tues day noon meeting at the Senator Hotel.v ' , Reports will be given by Mayor Robert White, Chief of Police Clyde Warren an(J City Attorney Chris Kowitz, all members of the club. ! TIME matters under crle roof OF SALEM CHURCH and CHEMEWTA STREETS Former Head Of Willamette Dies in Ohio (Story and picture on Page 1) Dr. Carl Gregg Doney, long-time ; president of Willamette Univer j sity who died at Cohutbus. O.,) Saturday, wavered between a law j career and the ministry in his ' formative years. , ; It was not until he was gradu ated from Harvard and had practiced law briefly in Columbus that he charted his future course. Dr. Doney attended preparatory school and college at Ohio State University. He first won BS and law degrees from that institution, then spent a year at Harvard. Honorary degrees came later,, in cluding a PhD from Harvard and a doctorate in divinity at Willam ette. He also held an MA from Ohio Wesleyan. He entered the Methodist minis try in 1893, shortly after marrying his childhood sweetheart. Jennie Evans, 'and held pastorates at Bainbridge, Granville, Delaware and Columbus, Ohio, and in Wash ington, D.C. He became president of West Virginia Wesleyan College in 1907. holding that post eight years until .called to Willamette. In 1918, he was sent to France to talk to American soldiers for several months. A serious illness led to his resignation from Willam ette in 1924 but the resignation was refused, a year's leave of absence was granted, and Dr. Doney re turned to be Willamette's president another decade until he reached the age of retirement. . Dr. Dony, a witty and enter taining speaker, was a life long and outspoken foe of liquor, and opposed the introduction of dancing i into Willamette's social life during his entire tenure in Salem. He encouraged the university's sports program btit resisted efforts to make it a dominant factor in the university curriculum. He was a Mason, a Rotarian and the author of several books. Willamette's new dormitory is named for him and his wife. ; The Doneys had two children Paul, a professor of English at Dickinson College, Carlyle, " Pa., who died in 1941. and Hugh, who is an executive of Quaker Oats in Chicago. Cash, Rings Lost to Thief A burglary in which an estimat ed $40 and. three rings valued at $23 were taken from a purse at her home, 1042 Seventh St., was re ported to Salem police Saturday by Mrs. Henry Loewen. She said the purse had been left on a bedroom dresser while nobody was home for a short time Friday evening but the loss was not dis covered until Saturday morning. A billfold and coin purse con taining the money also were tak en. A back door was found to be unlocked Saturday morning. Child Evangelism Week Proclaimed . National Child Evangelism Week will be marked in Salem Nov. 6 to 13 with special attention in many Salem' churches today. The fourth annual week is be ing proclaimed by the Child Evan gelism Fellowship which has a Sa lem chapter at 1066 N. 13th St. Ob jective of the week "is to awaken the American people to the need of bringing to their children a vital spiritual message as found in the word of God, the Bible." DELICI A BY ARDEN Vanilla, Strawberry, Chocolate Reg. 39c qr. TODAY AT OWL REG. $28.75 AT SUNDAYS 9 1 U I I II II New Equipment AidsGarbage Collectors K v b i! &sj Sir : No climbing or boosting for these garbage collectors, shown above with one of Sanitary . Service Com pany's newest trucks. Collector Hank Gugel, 3110 Jensen Ave., is shown dumping a load of refuse into the rear maw. From there an automatic scoop pulls the garbage into the truck's interior. Workman at right is Herman Haffner, 5075 Che h lis Ave. (Statesman photo) v Modern Trucks to Speed Garbage Pick-up in Salem i Something new in the way of less, hold more garbage and op neater and more efficient gar- erate more efficiently than do his bage pick-up trucks has come to other nine trucks. Salem. .. " . j xhe new trucks have an en- Two. new trucks were pur-; dosed bed. Handlers dumn car- cnasea recently ana are. now in operation,' William Schlitt, oper ator, of the Sanitary Service Co., says "they are practically odor- Ownership of Drive-in Cafe Shifts Hands Change, of ownership for White's Lunch and Drive In at 1138 S. Com mercial St. was indicated here last week in the retirement of an as sumed business name for the es tablishment by R. S. .White and Charles K. White. R. S. White and M. Carole White will continue operation of the firm under the same name, records of th Marion County clerk's office show. O'.her ' firms filing business names With the county were Ba deau's Abates and Antiques by E. W. and Helen Badeau of 3205 Port land Rd., and Mill Creek Ranch, by J. H. and Irene Burrell of Sa lem Route 5, box 9. , Births FOSTER To Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Foster, Independence, a son, Saturday. Nov. 5, at Salem General HofpitaL P RANGE To Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Prange, 3315 Fairhaven Ave., a son, Saturday. Nov. 5, at Salem General Hospital. WEBER To Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Weber, 693 Catterlin Ave., a son, Saturday, Nov..5, at Salem General Hospital. WICKERT To Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wickert, 3155 Hansen Ave., a son. Saturday .Nov. 5, at Salem General Hospital. WINN To Mr. and Mrs. Walt er Winn, Salem Route 1, Box 668, a son, Saturday, Nov. 5, at Salem General Hospital. ! M1 Quarts $ for a o. Makes 4 Waffles Toasts 4 Sandwiches 95 OWL B&CXLiK IP E M A.M. to 6 P.M. V oir GJD 80033 bage into a sort of bin in the rear. Then as the bin fills up, a power operated scoop packs the refuse back into the main bed. "This way. says Schlitt, "the men do not have to crawl to the top of the truck to dump their loads, as they do with the open trucks. Garbage won't blow off and in the summertime the fly problem is practically elimina ted." He added the new trucks cover their house-to-house . routes fast er than the other trucks and the new. ones hold nearly one-half again as much garbage. To unload, the entire rear door is lifted up and the bed is tippe'd by the truck's own hoist' Schlitt says he plans to eventually re place all his firm's trucks with the new-type vehicles. Crash Victim Rites Pending Soil's Arrival lutnmu News Srrvic STAYTON Services for Peter Paris Threlkey. 60, of Marion, who died Friday after his car had plunged from a bridge into a creek near Marion, are pending word from a son in the Navy. Threlkel leaves his wife;':. !rs. Ha Threlkel, Marion; two daugh ters, Mrs. Leata Snow, Billings, Okla.; and Miss Deanna Threlkel, Marion; six sons, Donald Threlkel, McDaniel, Kan.; Lloyd and Del mer Threlkel. both of Salem; Charles and Harland Threlkel, both of Marion; and Peter P. Threlkel Jr. of the U. S. Navy; a brother, Marian Threlkel, Ogden, Utah; and five sisters, Mrs.! Lola Lawes, Granger, Wash.; Mrs Ber tha Prideaux, Atwood, Kan;; Mrs. Hazel Scott, Wilsonville. fieb.: Mrs. Gertie Richards. Salem; and Mrs. Bertie Bethel, Aumsville. He was born Dec. 18, 1894. Weddle's mortuary is in charge of arrangements. MEIER & FRANK Yon are invited to open a Full Name Home Address. me How Long Have You Lived There ?. Former Home Addrei Husband's Occupation , Business AAAmm Wife's Name and Occupation. Where Else Have You Where Do You Bank?. Commercial or Saving Account? Regular 30-Day Charge Account ' Please Sign Here , New Traffic Lights Soon To Operate Traffic lights will begin operat ing some time this week at three busy1 points in the city's residential district, according to police. The locations are High and Mis sion streets, 17th and State streets and at 17th and Center streets. In creased traffic volume reportedly has made installation of the lights necessary. The lights will.be the same type as those found at down town intersections, police said. : Meanwhile, motorists have ad justed themselves to lights which began operating last week at five new downtown points along Church Street. The lights were installed at Church Street's intersections with State. Court, Chemeketa, Center and Marion Streets. First Aid Class Starts Thursday A standard first aid course of in struction is scheduled to- begin next i Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Marion ! County Red Cross Chapter house, Mrs. Helen Bailey, Red Cross man ager, reported. Instructor for tne course will be Dr. 'A. F. Goffrier.. Registration may be made by calling the Red Cross office;. - " 1 . , ; WMM THE $00 ft 6Wr mm: 8 .We invite you to open your ' - - Charge Account NOW! CO;, SALEM, OREGON charge account by mail and receive : . Established Credit?. Just clip this Statesman, Salem, Ore., Sun., OSEA Meeting in Pendleton To Draw Many From Salem A large delegation of Oregon State Employees Association mem bers from the Salem area districts are scheduled to attend the general .council of the . association next Thursday, Friday and Saturday in Pendleton, . . More than a hundred resolutions affecting job security, retirement protection, salary adjustments and .increases, equalization of working hours, overtime and unemployment compensation, safety measures. 1 liberalized vacation and broader insurance benefits will be pro cessed at the seneral council. Among ways! and means resol utions are those recommending, a graduate school of social work to be established in Oregon and legis lation authorizing the Oregon State i Public Welfare Commission to re ceive and place children for adop tion in the state. Heads Delejfatioa . Heading the Salem delegation will be Virgil G. O'Neil, president of OSEA. E. A. Bamford. junior past president. Gertrude Chamber lin, secretary-treasurer, M. L. Horton, Liscoln Pfeiffer, P. M. Brandt, G. lW. Ross and Eugene F, Schmidt,; directors. Delegates from District 2 are Florence Baker. Wesley Zellner, DRAFTING MACHINES COMIERCIIL 141 North 'The Heating System At a Price You Can Afford j to Fay GLASS RADIANT ELECTRIC CRYSTAL HEAT CO. 1035 Broadway Ph. 2-8300 Also Class Htat Portables, INtMINHHHttlNt your own, personal Charga-Plate ' . .City .Employed by- . Employed by. B ranch ?. out and mail. perfecp II Nov. 6, '55 (See. I)-5 George Sirnio, Curtis Nesheim, . W. G. Hughes. Chester Liechty, Max Swink, Kenneth Peterson, Hal Lehman, Or. Kent Farley,. William Hamilton George Naderman, Zo Krueger, Robert Elgin. Cecil Head. Floyd Query, Hale Welch, Leonard Edgar, George Dow, Vincent Hauth. W. C. McLaughlin and Ken Conover. District . director is Carl Hob son; district director-elect is Edward Taggart. District 9 delegates are Lee Wolfe, Gordon T o m 1 i n. Don ' Barrett, Fred ChampagneMartha Lierly, E. C. Outlaw, George Gour- ley and Dorothy Sanders. K HEMORRHOIDS ) A DM MCTAl MOM KATSt WTMOUT MOSMTAl OfHATKMI iiWKN AM COLO S tOOKUT V. m Crf PHONf J.NM Jht REYNOLD CLINIC WhatV Newest Make it a point to call us '. . . first, when in need of a Draft ing - Machine or any drafting supplies or , equipment. Our firsthand, bfoad knowledge of every known type of equipment becomes your knowledge at once, when you call on us to help in your problems. BOOK STORE Commercial That Has Everything'1 110 Plug-in Mtstant (R). D7f7f?C? m Revolving Charge Account Statesman 11-6-55 'If ' 4 -ft ) t r'i If - . "(5 ?'? AH u 1 nt id t m r si -f J MM1 !