AUTOMOBILES I AUTOMOBILES WILSON'S HOLIDAY PLUMS SEVEN EXCEPTIONAL CARS OF HIGH EST QUALITY MARKED WITH BAR GAIN P R I C E S TO REDUCE OUR IN VENTORY. EACH ONE CARRIES OUR RECOMMENDATION AND GUARAN TEE. 1946 Buick Super Sedan $1445 1946 Buick Special Sedan 1345 1947 Oldsmobile 78 Sedan 1445 1948 Kaiser Sedan 1285 1947 Buick Special Sedan 1495 1949 Buick Special Sedan 1795 1948 Buick Super Sedan 2045 CARE FOR THE AGED WE WILL ACCEPT ANY REASONABLE OFFER 1934 DODGE SEDAN 1938 CHRYSLER SEDAN 1940 HUDSON SEDAN 1938 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR 1937 FORD 2 DOOR OTTO J. WILSON CO. Commercial at Center NO DOWN PAYMENT N," NECESSARY on these aound, serviceable, low priced units easy monthly Payment: 1940 DeSoto Coupe , $495 1930 Studebaker Champion Sedan 1375 1937 Chevrolet Muter Sedan -. $350 1037 Chrysler Royal Sedan 1350 1938 Ford Sedan J J 00 1934 Chevrolet 2-door , 1135 For these and other bargains, call at T.nrlfvr Rros. Phone 3-4119. qSOl' DIRECTORY DIRECTORY Bre:Miaupt'f foi flowers Dial 1-8178 o" FURNACE A CIRCULATOR SERVICE Vacuumed St repaired. Dvorak. Ph. 34963 HOME PRODUCTS RAWLEIGH PRODUCTS. 2-8578.0318 HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS J. R Watklna Oo product Pree de Ivery 1717 Center Ph 3-fl39a. 0 IMULATION Johns-Manvllle. Phone 3-378, JANITOR SERVICE Window Cleaning Janitor Service Floor Waxing Buildings - Factories Homes Estimates Without Obligation AMERICAN BLDO. MA INT CO. Ph. Salem 3-0133 LANDSCAPf NURSERY 2 K Doerfler St Soon. Ornamentals 150 N Lancaster Dr at 4 Cor Ph a-1323 o DELUX SERVE SELF Laundry 845 Jef ferson St Phone 33453. 0 IAWNMOWERS Sharpened, guaranteed service. New power and hand mowers. Call Harry W. Scott, 147 S. Com'l. St. o311 MATTRESSES Capital Bedding Phone 1-4088 MUSIC LESSONS Spanish St Hawaiian Guitar, Mandolin, Banjo, etc. 1533 Court St. Ph. 3-7569. OFFICE FURNITURE A SUPPLIES Desk chairs, files and filing supplies, safes, duplicators and supplies, desk lamps, typewriter stands, brief c :, Plerc Wire Recorders. Roen, 450 Court o' OIL BURNER SERVICE We guarantee our work. Ph. 2-8863. Eve. 4-3424. oS TAINTING- to do your gfatrom1 are equipped painting Phone 3-2483 PAINTING a PAPERHANOING Papering painting. Est. fret. Ph. Fainting and paperhanglnc. Free esti mate, rn. s -sb is. m pjiippma. fAPERRANGING Expert Paperhanginr and painting. H. J. Woodsworth. Ph. 1-9807. Free est. 0305" Paperhanflng to your satisfaction, 1 Ftara tip. Also painting. Ph. MW. cSOS" FRUNTNO AND SPRAYING Philip W. Belike. Ph. 1-1308. FICTTTBE FRAMTNO Pleture framing Bntchoao Paint Start. frOAD OBADINQ Lane Small Jobs. New grader. Joy etrlckfaden, phont 1-6410. oS JgWTNQ MACHINES ' Bought, sold, rented, repaired. TZ ttnns. au makes, w. Davenport, rn. t 037 AND ORATRL Oarden SolL eruihed rock, Shovel aid dragline excavating. Walling Sand St Qravil Co., Phone t-M48. Q IAWS Salem Saw Wrks. Ph. 3-7003. 13S3 N. 8th EPTIO TANKS Mike's Septio Service, Tank cleaned. Roto Rooter service on Sewers, 1078 Km St., W. Salem. Ph. t-HS. 3-5337. K. P. Hamel. SepUe tanks, sawcr and drain line cleaned. Guaranteed work il43-8th St.. West Salem. Ph. 1-7404 O301' Vacuum Pumping, no mileage charge Call us collect. Todd's Septic Tank Service, 550 Larsan. Phont 8-0734. o IeWERS AND SEVTtr TANKS Electrla Roto-Raoter. Exclusive Patent. Bator Sharp Cutting Blades Clean Sewers, Drains. Tanks. Ph. 3-8337. o SEWING MACHINES All maka repaired. Tret estimates Sinter Sewing Machine Ca ISO No Commercial Ph 1-3511 ! TRANSFEP STORAGK oeal St Distance Transfer, storava Burner oils, eoal it orlqueta Trucks ic Portland dally Agent for Bekins House hold goods moved to anywhere in UB or Canada Lanntr Transfer 4k Storage Ph 3-3131 8' TRUCK A TRANSFER TYPEWRITERS Smith Corona. Remington Royal. Under wood portables AH makes used machines Repair and rent Roen aa court. VENETIAN- BUNDS 'ialem Venetian Blinds made to order ot rtlinlshed Relnholdt LewU 1-139 Elmer The BUndman. Ph- 37328. WE ATHE RSTRrPPIN O r WELL DRTLLTNO Journal Want Ads Pay WINDOW CLEANING Acme Vlndow Cleaners Windows, walk St woodwork cleaned Floors cleaned waxed and polished Ph 1-1337 34' Court Lencdoa Culbertson and Uatbei WINDOW SHADES Washable. Roller Made to order 1 Dav Del Relnholdt Si Lewis Ph 33838 WOOD SAWDUST west Salmi Fuel Co Ph 1-4031 STOCKS 'By the Atioc l ten Pr at isriean Can i Pow & LI Am Tel St Tel tneeenda Rendli Aviation ... Beth Steel .... iloalna Alrnlant ... Calif Packing canaaian facuio Caie J 1 Caterpillar , Chryiler Comwlth St Bon .i. Cons Vultee .... Continental Can ... ;rown Zellerbacb . Curliis Wright ... uougiai Aircran ... Dupont de Nem ... Oeneral Electrle ... General Food leneral Motors .. iJoodjear Tire .... int Harvester Int Paper Kennecott Libby McN ft L ... Long Bell 'A" Montgomery Ward Nash Kelvinator ... Mat Dairy Central .,... Northern Paetfla .. Pac Am Fish Pa Oas ft Eleo .... Pa Tel ft Tel Penney J C Radio Corp Rayonler Rayonler Pld Reynolds Metal ... Richfield Safeway Stores .... Sean Roebuck Southern Paclflo . standard Oil Co. ., Studebaker Corp ,. flumhlne Mining Traniamertca .... Union Oil Cal .... union paciiio United Airliner ... U S Steel Warner Bros PI .. fVnolworth .100 . left .146 . 38H . 364 . 31 H . 33 14S !! 35 k . 83H . 18'i .. 3S'S, .. 39H ,. 7U . IMi , 38 'i 10 H , 20 H , 3911 , 31 , 43 . 49 . 65 ft , 2i , 13 , 16 . 47 MARKET tppwim iiiini'ipiwii.ii..i I "")." 'u'. 'i uig ' .I-" ' ...i'. If life -A i a". I , .1 J --ftt-Ji W IMHI.IIUIHUIIll ' MMk.-.4tM-, Completed from reports of Salem dealers lor int gaiaaaee ot i;pi jduthm Readet-s. ttuvisea aawyj. Retail Feed Prleasi Err Maih 14.80. Rabbit Pellet 14,30. Dairy Feed (3.65. Poultry) Bur'ng prices -Grade A color ed hens, 30c; grade A Leghorn hens and up, 15c; grade A old roosters, 14c; Grade A colored fryers three lbs, 26c, Effs Buylnr Prices barge aa, ate; large A, 34-37c; medium AA, 31c; medium A, 39c; pullets, 25-27C. Wholesale Prices Egg wholesale prices ft-7o above then prices: above grade A generally quoted at 43c, medium 34c. Butterfat Premium 86c; No. 1. 84oi No 1, 68-60C (buylni prices). Butter Wholesale trade A. 88c; it tall 73a. 188 Drivers Lose Ltecnses Drunken driving cost 188 Ore gon drivers their licenses last month, the secretary of state's office reported today, Sixty four more motorists lost their driver's licenses for other offenses. Two More Asteroids of Trojan Group Discovered By J. HUGH PItlTETT (Astronomer, Extension Division, Oregon Higher Education System) From Harvard Announcement Card No. 1042 we learn that quite recently two more ot the little planets (asteroids) belonging to the so-called Trojan group have been discovered by Dr. K. Rein- muth at the observatory in Heidelberg, Germany. sun at about the same distance as Jupiter, and are named for the heroes whose valor in the siege of Troy in Asia Minor was extolled in the writings of Ho mer, the ancient Grecian poet. Almost 200 years ago, the great French mathematician La grange calculated that if three bodies were given a certain ar rangement in the heavens, their positions in relation to each oth er would be fairly stable. One must be quite massive; another, not over 126 that of the larger body; the third, so small that it could be considered Infinitesi mal in comparison wtih the oth ers. A further condition was that the three bodies be so placed the would be close to the cor ners of an imaginary three-sided figure (triangle) all sides of which were equal (equilateral). Lagrange said that such an ideal condition would exist should there be very small body, A, traveling along the or bit' of Jupiter and about as far ahead of or behind this huge planet as the planet is from the sun. This would make equal the following distances: sun to Jup iter, sun to A, and Jupiter to A; an immense celestial triangle nearly half a billion miles on each of its equal sides. Lagrange announced this re sult in 1772, but since none of the nearly 1600 asteriods now known was discovered until 1801, he had nothing concrete to which to tie his theorem. As one after another of these lit tle bodies was located, not one fitted the Lagrangian conditions. But finally in 1906, 83 years af ter the noted Frenchman s death, Max Wolf at Heidelberg discovered Just such a planet. It was named Achilles. Up to 1949, 12 Trojan aster oids, bunched in two groups, had been found. Seven of these travel ahead of Jupiter and five 'Difficulties' Delay Marriage Film star Ingrid Bergman and Italian film director Roberto Rossellini, shown relaxing on the Island of Stromboli, told Rome correspondent of the New York Times that "some difficulties" had prevented her getting a divorce from Dr. Peter Lindstrom. Miss Berg man said she planned to marry Rossellini as soon as she is free. She also plans to give up her acting career. This pic ture, made in September, was just released in Rome where Miss Bergeman's latest picture, directed by Rossellini, is being processed. ((P) Wirephoto.) BUSY DOLL REPAIRMAN SALEM MARKETS QUOTATIONS Salem Llveatouk Harkc. IBs v.llej backing Company Wooled lambs 119.00 to !20.00 Feeder lamba S13.00 to $17 00 cutter cows sa.oo to $10.00 Dairy Heifers 13.00 to 114.00 Fat da ry cows S10.00 to 111.00 Dulls 113.00 to $17.00 Oa ves. Rood 1300-450 bs.) 118.00 to 30 u Veal (150-300 lbs.) top .. $20.00 to $33.00 behind. This gives two equila teral triangles instead of one, and groups of little planets in stead of one or two. Informa tion is not at hand as to the group affiliation of numbers 13 and 14. Students of classical mytho logy will readily recognize some of the heroic names applied to the Trojan planets: Hector, Ajax, Priamus, Odysseus and Agamemnon. The Harvard announcement cards mentioned above are one cent postal cards on which are printed and sent out all new as tronomical discoveries or impor tant events. Harvard observa tory, the receiving and distribu ting center in the Americas for such information, sends it out as soon as obtained. Anyone can subscribe to this service at a very reasonable cost. Pleasantdale Club Names New Officers Pleasantdale The Country Flower club December meeting and annual Christmas luncheon was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Benedict in the Webfoot district with 15 mem bers present. Mrs. Vernon Fos ter became a new member. Annual election of officers were as follows: Mrs. J. M. Mur phy, president; Mrs. O. C. Good rich, vice president; secretary- treasurer, Mrs. John Heffley. Mrs. Murphy appointed Mrs Clair Reichstein as chairman for planning the spring flower show and her four assistants, Mrs. James Penland, Mrs. Gerald Hadley, Mrs. Stephen Benedict and Mrs. Vernon Foster. The next meeting will be a family dinner at the Pleasant dale community hall Wednes day, January 11. Year-Round Santa Claus Keeps 4,000 Little Girls Most Happy By STEWART McNEIlX (United Press stall Correspondent) f Vancouver. B. C. Dec. 17 (u.R) Making 4,000 little girls happy has made Charlie Coe a year-round Sant'a Claus. That's a lot of happiness for anyone to spread around in a year. But Charlie has spread joy with a pair of dextrous hands, a few tools and a lot of imagination and ingenuity. Coe, 30-year-old army veter-f an, is Santa's big helper in his little workshop at the rear of a downtown store. This year, he has repaired 4,000 dolls . . . and the Christmas rush has kept him working feverishly so that no child will be unhappy Christmas day. An expert electrician, coe took over the business his father had built up and he says he hasn't regretted it one bit since. Coe says his doll hospital is the busiest in all Canada, and points to the 500 dolls he has repaired in the last month. In his workshop, Coe brings back to life dolls for little girls living as far away as Winnipeg, Dawson and Whitehorse in the Yukon, and south of the border in Seattle. The doll hospital workshop looks like a Buckenwald torture chamber. Piled around Coe's workbench are boxes of doll's eyes, legs, arms, heads, wigs and battered bodies.' From this maze of parts, Coe rejuvenates a shat tered doll to delight some youngster. "Believe it or not," he says, t's not the arms and legs that get most damaged but the eyes." Kids seem to delight in pok ing out the eyes or damag ing them in some way," he add ed. Obtaining parts is one' of Coe's biggest headaches. There are dozens of different varieties of dolls whose parts are not interchangeable. He gets wigs from England; the arms and legs from a Mont real firm; the eyes and bodies, he salvages. One of Coe's most difficult re pair jobs in recent months was a 35-year-old German doll which "had been handed down a dozen times in one family." He likes to recall the time when a terrified little girl saw him touching up a doll with red paint. "She ran to the nearest po liceman screaming 'there's a man killing a baby in the win dow and there's blood all over." "Santa" Charlie is still single at the age of 30. "I should get married and raise kids when I've been poppa and Santa to four thousand little girls this year?" Four Corners Welcomes Broadcast of Xmas Carols Four Corners, Dec. 17 An innovation in Four Corners this week is the sound of Christmas carols being broadcast by loud speaker atop a Four Corners business house as a reminder that the spirit of Christmas is ageless. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Talbot and son John of Chula Vista, Calif., are visiting Mrs. Talbots par-- ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. La Branche through the holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Wiilik Shipman and children Dyann and Billy and her parents Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Simpson are spending sev eral weeks through the holidays in Kearney and" Burwell, Neb., with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. LeBarron Force and children Barbara Dick and Barry are leaving the 21st of this month for two weeks' stay in Denver, Colo. Mrs. Force operates the Four Corners Beau ty Salon. Mr. and Mrs C. R. Osborn will leave Dec. 18 for Los An geles for three weeks to visit their sons Lee and Fay Osborn. Miss Jamie Ruth Deckard and Miss Ginny Shufelt left Mon day of this week for Chicago. They have been visiting Miss Deckard's parents, the P. T. Deckards for three months. Miss Deckard plays professional bas ketball and Softball in Chicago. Mrs. M. W. Tucker, East State street, was hostess at a dessert pinochle. Guests were Mrs. C. R. Osborn, Mrs. Stan Braden, Mrs Earl Kasson, Mrs. Mar garet Willis, Mrs. Elizabeth Pugh, Mrs. Everett Lukkus and Mrs. Phillip Bouffleur. Dayton Eastern Star Names New Officers Dayton Electa Chapter No, 29, OES held its stated communi cation at the Masonic hall with 7 o'clock dinner served. A guest of the evening was the Grand Conductress of Oregon, Alice Robinson of Independence. Officers were elected as fol lows: Margaret Mock, Worthy Matron; Kenneth Pomeroy, Worthy Patron; Henrietta Foster, Associate Matron; Les Scoggins, Associate Patron; Pauline Belts, Secretary; Eva Westfall, Treas urer; Muriel Sweeney, Conduc tress; Edna Clow, Associate Conductress. A degree was given the Wor thy Matron, Velene Coburn; by the Past Matrons and a gift was presented her. Floyd Mock, P. P. presented a gift to the Worthy Patron, Earle Coburn, also from the Past Matrons. Alice Robin son, Grand Conductress, gave a talk on the meaning of the dif ferent stations in the Chapter. Joint installation with Jacob Mayer Lodge No. 108, AF&AM Portland P roe ace Bulterfnt Tentative, ureiect to imme dlate change Premium quality maximum to .35 to l percent aciauy uenvereo in Portland 67c lb.: S3 score. 65c lb.; 00 ncorc, 63c; 89 score, 65c, Valley routes and country oolnU 2c ifisR tnan tim Butter Whnlenala FOB bulk cube to wholesalers, iiraae 93 ivcore, bjc. S3 score 62c: D BO score. 60c lb.. 0 score, 67c. Above prlcej ar strlcMy nominal Cliceiie Selling price to Portland whole nalft Oreson singles 30-12c. Oregon J umall loaf. ii-iio; triplet 14 less than i riffles Ecta (to wholeaaleri) A trade large 40-42 lie: A medium, 36-37lic; (trade B large, 39-40c; small A rnic, 3&',iic. Portland Dairy Market Butter Price to retailers: Grade AA prints, 68c; AA cartons, 69c; A prints, 68c; A cartons 69c: B prints, 65c. Ekjci Price to retailers' Grade large, 47c doz.; certified A lame 40c; a larse qic; mcaium, tut, cer tified A medium, 39c; B medium, 35c; A small. 37c; cartons 2c additional. Cheese Price to retailers Portland Oregon singles 39-42c, Oregon loaf, 6- ID loais 44Va-4EC id.; inpieis, iva cenis icon than singles Premium brands, singles 51 lo Ib.t loat. 630. Poultry Live Chicken no. l quality run Plants, No 1 broilers under 2 lbs. 30 -a 4c iryers a-3 ids., a-i-aoc: a-i ids. t c rna.ter.i 4 ht and over 37-28c: fowl Leghorns, 4 lbs. and under, 15-lBc; over 4 6c; colored fowl, nil woiKnu, zu- ; 21c; roosters, all weights, 14-lflc. Turkey Net to growers, toras. 30li-3Ic hens, 44-45c. Kahlilts Averatte to growers, live wnues 4-5 lbs.. 17-180 lb.; 6-8 lbs.. 15-170 'b colored 2 cents lower old or heavy doe and bucks. 8-13c Fresh dressed idano fryers and retailers. 40c; local. 48-52c roiintry-Kllled Meat Veal Top quality, 33-34C lt.i otner grade according to we In lit and qualltv with lighter or heavier, as-aoc. Hons Light blockers, 24-24';; sows 18-20C. Lambs Top quality, springers, 36-38c: mutton, 10-llc. Beef Oood cows, 24-25c lb.; canners cutters. 20-22c. Krrh Dressed Meats (Wholesalers to retailers per cwt.1: Beef steers: Good 500-800 lbs., 39-41; commercial, (33-30; utility, (25-27. Cows Commercial 127-30; utility. J24 25; canners-c utters, 123-26. Ueel Cuts lOood Steers i Hind quarters (50-52; rounds, 144-46: full loins, trimmed $70-72; triangles, $32-34; square chuck (38-40: ribs, (55-58; forequnrters, (34-38 Veal and calf: Oood, (39-42; commercial, (34-37: utility, (28-30. Lambs: Good-choice spring lambs. $39 42: commercial. (35-38: utility, (33-34. Mutton Good, 70 lbs down, (18-20 Pork cuts: Loin No. 1, 8-12 lbs., $38-42; shoulders, 16 lb.' down (30-33; spare ribs, 141-44: carcasses, (24-25; mixed ft'eiinits 12 pet cwt lower Portland Miscellaneous Cascara Bark Dry 12'c lb., green 4c lb Wool Valley coarse and medium grades 45o lb. Mohair 2&o lb on 12-month growth nominally. Hides Calves, 27c lb., according to weight: pips. 22c lb.; beef, ll-12c lb.; bulls. 0-7o lb. Country buyers pay 2c leas. Nut Quotations Walnut) Franquettes, first quality jum oo, 34 7c, large, 32.7c: medium, 27 2c, second quality Jumbos, 30.2c; large. 28.2c. medium, 26.2c; baby. 33. 3e; soft shell, first quality large, !9.7c; medium, 26.2c; sec ond quality large. 27.2c: medium. 24 To: babv 22.2c. Fllberta Jumbo. 20e Ib.l large, IBc, medium. 16c; small. 13c. Stocks Decline Irregularly New York, Dec. 17 (P) The stock market took a breathing spell today at the end of the fast est week of the year. Except in a few isolated cases, leading issues jogged along with only minor variations in price. Many refused to budge one way or another. The tempo of trading was well below any other session during the week. Turnover was at a rate of around 650,000 shares for the two-hour day. Alleghany Corp. preferred shot ahead of the market with a rise of more than 4 points at one time while the common im proved fractionally, both stocks establishing new highs for the year. The company today in vited holders of the preferred and prior to tender all or part of their holdings for other stocks in Alleghany's portfolio. Alle ghany is a holding company. In terest in motion picture issues picked up near the close. Other strong spots included Ex-Cell-O, Standard Gas & El ectric $4 preferred, and Trans-America. Neale Povey Quits Position at Dallas Dallas Neale Povey, for the past four years manager of the Dallas Lumber and supply com pany, has announced his resig nation of the position to take a place with a building concern in Salem. The resignation is effec tive January 1. Bill Affolter, who was em ployed by the local firm for a few months before taking the managership of the Willamette National retail yard at Foster, is expected to come here to take the leadership in the local company. The resigning manager came here about four years ago when he supervised the construction of the retail yard. The original frame structuie was destroyed in an $80,000 fire on June 29, 1948. Mr. Povey also supervised the erection of the new build ing a fireproof concrete struc ture. Both Mr. and Mrs. Povey have been active in civic work, com munity affairs, club and church work. He is finishing a year as president of the Dallas Chamber of Commerce and is a member of the Lions club. The couple is prominent in Presbyterian church work. They also started a folk dancing group here of which Mrs. Povey has served as president. Capital Journal; Salem,' Oriegdn, Saturday, Dec. 17, 1949 15 Grangers Plan 'Watch' Party Monmouth Officers from five of Polk county's seven granges were present for the joint installation held at the Monmouth I. O. O. F. hall. Mon mouth grange had a complete set of officers present, while Rickreall, West Salem and Brush College granges had near ly all of their officers. County Pomona officers were installed at the same time. Mrs. Mildred Norman, special state deputy, was installing of ficer and did a masterful job of handling the large group. Mrs. Hal Totten acted as mar shal, presenting the various groups for installation. Following the installation, a regular session of Monmouth grange was hold with the new officers officiating. The matter of presentation of the Pomona degree was brought up and it was voted unofficially to hold the degree work on the evening of the January Pomona meeting. This meeting, on January 28 is to be held in Monmouth and the degree work is slated for that evening in the local hall The local Home Economics club's Christmas party for grange families was announced for Friday evening, December 16, in the Monmouth hall. It was decided to hold "watch" party following the next regular meeting of Mon mouth grange on Saturday, De cember 31. age of t year and half. Survived by parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis M. Fearcy of Silver ton; brother, William Fearcy ol Sllverton; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Knight E. Pearcy and Mrs. Phllene Put. mim of Huntington, N. Y. Services will b held at the CloughBarrlclE chapel Mon day, December 19, at 1:30 p.m. Interment in Belcreat Memorial parlt. OBITUARY Charles Thorn! Sweaney Wood burnChar lea Thorn aa Sweaney, 77, December 16, at hla home ftt route 2, Woodburn, where he had lived the pa 37 yeara, coming from Karuiai City, Mo., where he waa born October 24, 1873. Member of the Bethel Presbyterian church east of Woodburn. Surviving are the wife, maiia awoannv' twrt brother. JiniM, Sweaney and George Sweaney, both of Peculiar, Mo.; two alMera, Carrie Wiley of Alotha, Kans., and Olive aeon 01 uranji- tew, mo.; a numoer or niecee ino nou- ews; and two coualns, oeorge ana rrn Sweaney of Woodburn. services win om held at the Rlngo chapel Monday, Decem- 16 at 10 a.m.. with imermcn m Belle Passl cemetery. Altar Society Makes Plans for Christmas Gervais Mrs. Otto Berning was hostess to the St, Rita Altar society with 15 members in at tendance. During the business meeting, plans were made to assist the Mothers club in en larging the parish hall kitchen and making other improve ments. The annual food shower for the sisters of Sacred Heart par ish will be given at Christmas. Mrs. Joseph Kuhn will enter tain the club in January. At the refreshment hour the hostess was assisted by Mrs. Clyde Phil lips1 co-hostess. France Lela fiawver - Independence Funeral services ior Frances Lela Pettlt Sawver, 83, daugh ter of Thomas Pettlt, were held from the Walter 1. Smith funeral home at 10 o'clock Saturda, Ryv. O. O. Egge braaten officiating, and burial in the Hilltop cemetery. She was born In West Virginia June 35, 1888, and riiwH horn Thiirdsiv. Aha married Clay Taylor Sept. 30, 1807, with three children born to trie union, Kooeri, wiima n Marian. In 1038 she married Frank Saw- who survives with tne ronowina children, Robert Taylor, Portland; Mrs. Woodrow Frooin. Portland and Mrs. uei-. win Williams. Salem; sister, Mrs. Olive Zeh and brother, Ralph Pettlt, both of Salem, Louis Hilt Sllverton Louis HU1, 69, died Satuway morning at the home of a son-in-law, Jo seph Stanton, 344 Norway. He was norn in Minnesota and came here about five vmm nan Hnrvivlni urn his widow. Mrs. Mary Hill; son and three daughters, Clif ford Hill, Duiuth, Minn.; uorotny oian ton, Ada Wagner and Nina Bugge, all of SUvrrlon: 15 grandchildren and one KTeat-grajidrhlld. Announcement later from the Ekman funeral home. Ethan Fell urana winnn runcrai service wen hold at Sheridan funeral home Friday for Ethan Fell. 73, of the Amity-Bellevue rur al area, who died Tuesday. He resided in the Hopewell district here from 1833 to 1931, on the Oeone Nash farm. He wu born March 33, 177, at Ocola, Mo., and dime to Sweet Home, Ore., and later to the Bethel district, when ft young man. He was married about 3ft years ago nt Dallas. His widow and six children survive him. He served In the Spanish American war In the navy In 1898. Ht was a member of the Christian church. Survivors are his widow and one son, Ray Fell, both at home; five daughters, Mrs. Henry Taykr (Letha), Grand Isl and, Mrs. Otis Babcock (Nelta). Dallas, Mrs. Donald McClurg (Velna), Wlllamin, Mrs. Harold Williams (Christina), Sher idan, Mrs. Claude Booth (Viva), Wllla mina; Ifl grandchildren; one brother, Thad Fell, Sandy, Ore.; one sister, Mrs. Mary Miller, Dundee. Rev. S. J. Osborne officiat ed. Burial was at Dallas, Ore, DEATHS Dens Fete Parents Monmouth A potluck sup per was enjoyed by Cub Scouts and their parents. Each den en tertained with singing and skits. Tony Cutsforth was presented with a bear badge. Achieve ments of each den were on dis play. Den four captured the rib bon by having the most parents and friends present. Martha Hooper 1 Martha Hooper, late renldent of Aurora nt a. local hospital, December 16, at the ftue of 37 years. Surviving aro the widower, Wesley Hooper. Aurora; four daughters, Ellen, wiima, Norma and Kuoy Hooper, an of Aurora; and six sons, Robert, Charles, CarloB, Jesse, William and Paul Hooper, all of Aurorn. Announcement of srrvices later by the Howcll-Edwarda chapel. Kfiv. John James t-uens Tho Rev. John James Lucas, a retired Baptist minister, an tarda y morning ai his home In Portland nt 310S SE Taylor. Survived by his wife, Ellznbeth. two sons, Theodore of Portland and Ed of Salem; two daughters, Mrs. Dan L. Schlrman and Mrs. Elmer Baron, both of Portland; a sister, Mrs. Arnold Rocthlln of Salem, and Mrs. William Younttmnn and Mrs. Charles Frannel, sisters, of Portland and Willamette respectively, services win do held at the Etlwnrd Holman and Bona chnpel in Portland on Tuesday, Decrm- ber 20, with the Rev. Dr. w. t. MiiiiKan officiating. Interment will be at Bole rest cemetery In Salem at 1 p.m. Tuesday. Patricia Lee Pearey Patricia Lee Pearcy, late resident of 808 South Water street. Silverton, at a Portland hospital December 16, at the George Reuben Dlasmore Dayton George Reuben Dlssmore, 76, died in Portland December 15, after a long illness. He was born March 36, 1873, In Trempleau, county, Whitehall. Wiscon sin. He was married to Mary Dowd, May 37, 1897 in Wisconsin. His wife preced ed him In death in August 1948. They ob served their golden wedding anniversary In 1947. Survivors are a son, Harold of Portland: three granddaughters, Betty Becker and Phyllis Baits of Portland, and Barbara Morris of Lebanon; sisters, Mar tha Nogosak, Dayton, and Jesse Dowd, Weston. He was ft member of the Lynch Baptist church in Portland. The Diss mores lived in Dayton several years, but because of illness, sola nis property ft year ago. Funeral services were held Sat urday at the Macy Memorial home, Mo Mlnnvllle, at 3 o'clock. Interment at Ev ergreen Memorial park. Laura Belle ITall Lebanon Mrs. Laura Belle Hall, flft, died Dec. 15, at her home on route 3. She was born Aug, 30, 1881, at Lafayette, onio, coming to Lebanon three years ago front Texas. She was a member of the V.F.W. auxiliary. Services will be conducted ftt the Howo-Huston chapel at 3 p.m. Monday, with Rev. Carl Mason officiating. Burial will be in the Powell cemetery at Berlin, Survivors are the widower, Lafayette Halll son, Travis Hall of South Bend, Ind.l sit ter, Minerva Ollbert, Madison, WU.; half sister, Ruth Langston, Term It, Texas. Louise Uerlnger Slpprell Mrs. Louise Beringer Slpprell, former resident of Salem died at the Mason It home, Forest Grove, December 18, ftt tho age of 70 years. Survived by her hus band, William A. Slpprell, of Foreet Grove; two sons, William A., Jr., of Paw tucket, Rhode Island, Ralph B. of Sa lem; and six grandchildren. Member of Christian Science church. Ohrsltian Sci ence service to be held tn the Portland Crematorium chapel at Portland, Monday, December 10, at 10:30 a.m. ld SufnWrrf urw aoutir citrus fAmH ntutllf fornta oranf TeautlfuL ft on th vViL iin,v ptoi'tts. an (is ten to Ft " f occessui . . Polk County Chesl Campaign Resting Dallas Funds turned in to Secretary-Treasurer Bill Black ley of the Polk county Commu nity Chest following the official end of the fall drive brought the total to $6274, still nearly $6000 short of the $12,000 quota. The drive has been concluded until May, 1950, when it will be re sumed in an effort to make the Independence turned in $1000, just $750 short of its quota and Monmouth raised $750, or $150 below its goal. Meanwhile the Dallas total climbed to $3509.15 or $989.85 short of the needed $4500. irii55 f AU '4? - foci 17 V 0 ywzo, cqes where vour GOES... Your newspaper is fhe key to o better understanding of the world you live In. It li a free preu ... a staunch defender of the American heritage. The CapitalflJournal is YOUR Newspaper