Cnfy New DySeffd FIRE DAMAGE MINOR A fin at the residence of Joseph DiFilippi, M 8. 19th St.', cauted minor imoke damage and scorch ed paint about 4 p.m. Stmday, the hast Salem fire station reported, The blare started from hot cook' ing fat, firemen said. Dr. Harmon T. Harvey, M.D., an nounces the removal of his officer from MS S. Winter to 610 S. Win ter in the Oak Park Medical Cen ter. , Pd. Notice) CHOOSE YOUR WORKERS through Classified ads! Sales or secretarial, manual or mechanical. dial 4-6811 for an ad-writer. Castle permanent Wavers, MS Uvesly Bldg. Ph. 163. Perma nent j ts up. Ruth Ford,, manager. Installing your own plumbing? Call on Jodson'i for planning help and advice. 279 N. Com 1. Ph 3-4U1. Military Roundup Area Men Help Army To Celebrate FATHER DIES ' Connie Veer, IX N. 30th St., op erator of the Best Way Rug and Furniture Cleaners, will leave Sa lem Tuesday to attend the funeral of his father, John Veer, who died recently in. North Dakota. Veer will be accompanied by his broth er, John Veer Jr., and Mrs. John Veer. Replace downspouts 4 gutters. Check our low Installed prices. Judson's, Ph. S-4M1. (adv.) THE TRUTH MA'AM! Want ads find domestic help and people to do those odd jobs around the house. Call 4-6811 for an ad writer, (adv.) Summer day camp for retarded children. Registration now. Staff of 4. Ph. 2-3352, or 4-3717. Haven School for the Retarded, Inc., Rt. 4, Box 84. (adv.) NOTICE ' For a roof that never needs re placing or for revolutionary new asphalt shingles see Mathis Bros., 2061 State. Ph. 4-6831. (adv.) Street or road dusting? Call Tweedie Oil Co.. Ph. 2-4151 for finest in road oiling. (adv.) Dental plates repaired while you wait at Painless Parker Dentist. 125 N. Liberty, Salem. (Adv.) Cut peonies, 964 S. Liberty. Ph. Two Awarded Honorary Degrees at Wl) l ,.4, , :.' 4 ... - ' Ft. Learenwarth, Kaa. Two Wil lamette Valley men recently par ticipated with Iho 1st Infantry Di vision in the 7.1th anniversary cele bration o( the Army's command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth: They are Specialists Third Class Kenneth F. Littleton, whose wife, Sarah, lives, on Route 1, Mon mouth, Ore., aiid" John P. Peter son, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C Peterson, 2425 Alemeda St., Salem, Ore. a Littleton, a truck driver in the Third Battalion"! headquarters company of the 16th Regiment, is regularly stationed at Ft. Riley, Kan. He entered the Army in No vember, 1953. Peterson, a mechanic in medical company of the J6th Regiment, is also stationed at Ft. Riley. He entered the service in May, lfej. Ft. Hood, Tes.-Pvt. Harold A. Davenport, son of Mr. and Mrs. ; Karl Gegory, Route 1, Sweet j Home, Ore., is receiving advanced ' artillery training with the 4th ! Armored Division at Ft. Hood i Davenport entered the Army in February, 1956, and was last sta tioned at Ft. Ord, Calif. Kaa Diego, Calif. Two Valley men are reported to have com pleted recruit training at the Ma rine Corps Recruit Depot. San Diego. They are Harold A. Toepfer, son of Mr.' and Mrs. Ben Toepfer of Sublimity, Ore., and Bruce A. Dalke, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. E Dalke, Route 2, Box 676, Salem, Ore. Toepfer was scheduled to be graduated May 21: Dalke, May 25 The two men will be assigned to a .Marines Corps school or given further infantry training. 3-7124 (adv.) Li-Jw AiLQ jQn V ": V ' - ft ' " ' JSV ' - ' jf .( f- Number of Crimes in ; Salem Below Average NEW YORK-Salem was able to turn in a better crime record for the past v year than moat other cities la the United States. Fewer offenses were recorded In Salem In' the period, in proportion to population, than In most com m unities. The figures, gathered by the Federal Bureau of Investigation from police department. through out the country, are presented in the FBI's annual Uniform Crime Reports. Salem police were called upon in the year to act on 715 crimes. This volume represented a rate of 1.590 offense per 100,004 people. It was considerably., better than the record for the other cities over 25.000 in the United States, for which a rate of 1,911 crimes per 100,000 is reported. Atxvt Average The local situation was better. also, than that reported for all the cities, large and small. They aver- City Problems Talk Set for Salem C of C An unusual program on city problems is scheduled for Salem Chamber of Commerce at their luncheon meeting Monday in the Marion Hotel. It will be presented by nation ally recognized Frederick J. Ba shaw, real estate consultant and lecturer from Boston, who is here (or the Sauries and Loan Associa tions convention. . Bashaw will show color films on urban development, using a his torical approach in explaining how some of the present city conges tion and planning problems have developed. In another feature of the cham ber program, a Medford civic leader will be honored by Coronet Magazine He is George Milligan, Medford flier who sparked an am bulance airplane project there. Rites Tuesday For Johnson Memorial services for Phillip Johnson, 2880 Mountain View Dr , who was drowned in a boating ac cident on the Rogue River Weones dav, will be held at Mt. Crest Abbey at 3 p.m. Tuesday. Johnson was owner and operator of the Fireside A k W Drive-in. lin N. 12th St. He was a banker in Alaska for many years prior to moving to Salem less than a year ago ( The body will be transferred here from Cooper's Mortuary, Gold Beach, Tuesday. WINDOWS BROKEN Three windows were broken by roc ks at the River Bend Sand and Gravel Company, 645 Seventh St., sometime Friday evening or early Saturday morning, Salem police reported Sunday. For today's weather on the coast dial Salem 2-4191. (adv.) Are you contemplating re-styling your furs? Consult Ben Wittner at Lachelle's, 1348 Ferry, (adv.) Fur storage at Lachelle's assures your furs the quality care they need in refrige.ated vaults. 1348 Ferry. Ph. 3-6814. (adv.) i Stop at the Flower Box for Mem-; morial Day. Flowers 75c & up. , Open this Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Flower Box, 1210 S. Com I. (adv.) Court Apts. 'Court li Cottage) of fer down town quiet apts., from $42.50 to $56. Ph. 3-7440. (adv.)j Unsightly facial hair removed ! safely, permanently. P r i c e's Beauty Salon. Ph. 3-58)9. (Adv.) i Make this a date Salem Saddle : Club Horse Show, State Fair Grounds, Sat. k Sun., May 26 & 27. Children free if accompanied by parents. (adv) It is cool as a cucumber at Nohl gren's Restaurant. Air conditioned for your comfort. 'adv.) a - it si Winning honorary degrees at Willamette 1'iilverslty Baccalaarrate services Suaday were Dr. Herbert A. Templeton (above left) of Portland and Dr. Eugene L. Smith (center). New Ysrk. Dr. G. Herbert Smith, Willamette president, Is at right. Beltw faralty and graduates are showa leaving Fine Arts Auditorium alter baeealaareate pragram. (Story page 1.) o i .1 saiem loutn Wins Awardv EUGENE - William J. Cook, Salem, received a top award at the recent graduation review of University of Oregon Army and Air Force ROTC cadets. Cook was given the Air Science Achievement Award as sophomore maintaining highest standards in classroom wark and on the drill field during the academic year. aged 1,832 crimes per 100,000 resi dents. The FBI finds that there was only a minute drop In major crimes in the United States' in 1955. Small as it was. it was 'me first year in eight to show no overall increase. Actually, notes J. Kdgar Hoover, the credit goes to the cities over 250,000, which brought the average down with a 4 3 per cent reduction. The smaller cities were up 2 per cent. , In Salem, according to a break down of local crime statistics into the six standard categories, lar cenies led in number, with 543 re ported. The other figures were: burglaries, 133. auto thefts. 21. assaults, six, robberies, five, and murders, none. Juvenile Hole Juveniles continue to play an important role in the crime picture.- Arrests of people under H rose more than eleven per cent last year. Much of it was for thefts of property, especially auto mobiles. A look backward, to 195Q. shows the fight against crime to be losing ground. Compared with a popula tion rise of nine per cent in the five years, we have had a crime rate rise of 26 per rent, nearly three times greater. Statesman, Salrm, Ore., Mon., May 28, '58 (Sec I)-5' A RARE GARDEN BARGAIN! Horn "Mincli Mum" fUnWtjy rwiipiii wtwi sw PLANT THROUGH JUNI Hwdri .1 M Ik fell hm tint PIsMiM. 4rw f ti Hifli . , . Thm ltt Atwi. ID JO- X tD'l i . V-Ti CHOOM MOM POUI lOIIOUt CO10U 8IOJI PINI IIIUIAMT III IIP TIUOW O PUIHT WMITI FREE 12 GLADIOLUS PULIS WITH EYEXY 1 1 ORDER ORDER NOW PLANT NOW hi Im M las tmm UNfST IM1 CUNT P10W(IIN6 IUIIS IACH A DIMERENT COIOK AND VAtlETT PUNTII NOW Wilt PIO0UCI MAtNIPICtNT ROOM! THIf SUMMIR PirZI WINMIN4) uitmu CHICI ITIM$ ON Al sad MAIl wM Ck. CkMk w M. . HOW s Lloyd's Gardens, Route 2, Box 129F GLADSTONi. OIECON CARD OF THANKS Our recent loss leaves us with grateful hearts toward neighbors 'and friends. Their comforting expressions of sympathy and Ithoughtfullness will always be -re-I membered. Mrs. Ralph, Sisters A Brothers. 14 From Area To Exhibit In Horse Show Purrblood Arabian horses owned by 14 Salem area residents will be exhibited June 23-24 when hun dreds of the country's top Arab ian horse breeders and exhibitors stage Oregon's 10th annual All Arabian Horse show at the state fair grounds. The show is sponsored jointly by Oregon's Arabian Horse Breeders Association and Salem Shrine Club. Some 33 events, in cluding almost every familiar type of show horse competition, will be undertaken. One feature will be a versatil ity display of Arabians as all-purpose mounts. Spectators will also witness utility demonstrations of the Arabian during cutting horse competition and special dressage exhibition. En,try deadline for breeders and exhibitors was' announced as June 10. Funds from the two-day event Smoke Damages Fruit la iul Home StatMiruTi Nfwi SrrvU FRl'lTLAND - The B. H. Mc Kenney home here received inter ior smoke damage after fire broke out about noon Sunday following a furnace backfire. Four Corners' fire department answered the call but the blaze was put out by neighbors prior to the department's arrival. j will go to the Shrincr's Crippled Children s Hospital in Portland. Already entered in the show are horses owned by: Olin Cross, 2370 Fairgrounds Road; F. P. Epping. 3470 Silverton Road; Miss Carol Garrison, 5310 Swegle Road; Mrs. Barbara Earle. 985 Fir St.; Clay ton E. Steinke. 543 Ferry St., and Mrs. Fred Ellis, 4165 Portland Road, all of Salem; Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Williams, Beavercreek; Mr. and Mrs. Harry V. Carson, Silver ton; Jo Ann Newland, Beaver creek; Mr. and Mrs. Omer C. Walker, Hubbard; Mr. and Mrs. Jess Jolley, Beavercreek; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Parodi, Molalla; Mrs. Charles M. Sanford. Canby, and Mrs. Gail Ellis. Mulino. YWCA SUMMER ACTIVITIES Classes for men and women, adults and children scheduled for your convenient a Golf Baglnnnr and Advanced Archery for Teens Tennla for Adults and Teona 4 The Joan Ross School of Charm and Fashion Modeling Ballet 0 Horseback Riding f) Outdoor Swimming for Mothors and Children 0 Loam to Drive Mother-Child Art Workshop g) Day Camp for Girls Grades 1-5 ' f) Use of Sports Equipment (Badminton etc.) and Place to Play 0 Bridge (Informal Instruction) v Activities will start the first week in June Call 3-9167 to reserve your place in class or come in to rrgtvfrr today Young Women's Christian' Association Member Salem United Fund ' There's No. Argument About . . . the quality Goi eppliences GAS HI AT OF SALEM can install in your home. Whether it's If Got or Natural, we can lupply yon with the appliances yon need an Easy Budget Termt. EXPERT INSTALLATION Remember America'i Heroe Memorial Day, May 10 Call Dick Dodd ' " I GAS HEAT OF SALEM Phana 3-344S 263 N. Commercial St. OPfN MONDAY AND FRIDAY 12:15 TO 9 P.M. OTHER DAYS 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. STORE-SIDE PARKING FOR OVER 1000 CARS UU f ii U litis viAblWnjiyjL wui !u j 7 I X ii " t V,iM I . c I r:vv fit- . , 4- Lite V mf'-t-?S 'MB? t L .v . .f t - v5 ' $ "'VV-'' " I I I ' k "f I j""1 , 1 1 1 . i 1 I . i . . 1 I I . 1,11 ill II '- II II 'li U I M ' ill ' " II v tt t 1 1 , 9 - ,'li' f' -rf" ii I Mir k T t-., . i . t . . . ' X I f -i .'.'n it U W tN"' i , i -I , -.-.V 2for$(0) rey. $389.50 loam rubber laavnaBVavnBBaBaBaBBBBBBBBBaiBaajsaBaBBMaBnMeMnaBBBMnni Dirths MADER - To. Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Mader, Salem Route i. Box 431A. a son. Sunday, May 27, at Salem General Hospital. MEYER To Mr. and Mrs. George M. Meyer, 3395 Willamette I)r . a daughter, Sunday, May 27, at Salem Genffal Hospital. 110RAN - To Mr. and Mrs Jim H. Doran. 4372 Garden Rd . a son. Sundav. May 27. at Salem General Hospital. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank all our relatives and friends fof their many kind nesses during our recent bereave ment. Mrs. Lee Dow A Family. 84-INCH SOFA $ 249.50 Wlirnevcr thrsr popular chairs arc availalw we buy a full carload . . . saving you $10 to $15 on each chair . . . rcn more if you buy them in pairs! Hand somely designed, sturdy construction, pleasing detail. Especially nice for the fireside, a corner grouping or a picture window. Choose any two, a matched pair, or one of each shle . . . and save! I. REG SSV.TS WOINCY STYLE . . . leung th bufon tufted bid fl T 2 for $79 95 (1 buy them separately $44.75 fiiirf $40.75 At Low Ai $5 A Month NO DOWN PAYMENT AS LOW AS $11 A MONTH NO DOWN PAYMENT One of the best sofs buys we've offered in a long time! Extra long and super comfortable . . . 100 reversible foam rubber cushions. Metallic tweed covers in choice of popular charcoal, lima and green. xpoi 1. SIO. SS.tJ CHANNIl SACK . . . occuiond chiir with ipnng it. mjliog O f i ny fintthtd grip irmi, intiqm ntit trim. Tot, trm. gold... mlw .F1m 1. EO. $S.J SIARE-IACK . . . ,'..d th,r , pt,ng wii "d thsnntl AA Mail nnil plume orders FURNITURE-SECOND FLOOR 2 (or $79 95 2 for $79 95 illli'ikVillililililMliK'IHi'lililhilJti J mm rius f"i,s t0 u,iUS ouUi(ie our rfR"'flr tmck delivrv T0Utct'