! Friday, April 17, 1953 GOING """""""""WV'iK?"'! , U. S. Armv doctor mnlrpa " -vv ju LUllllllUIUBl prisoner on Kojedo prior to moving him to the mainland lor the prisoner exchange next Monday. The Red, who has a broken leg, is one of several hundred sick and wounded prisoners who staged sitdown on reaching port. The Reds wouldn't budge until armed U. N. troops appeared on the scene. (UP Telephoto.) i nlnrrh'mn rt $30,000 on HST Letter Los Angeles (U.B A labor relations consultant consid ers a letter of commendation he received4 front former President Harry S. Truman worth $30,000. , Consultant George Cheney yesterday brought a $30,000 damage suit against two op erators of picture framing business whom he accused of losing a letter he received from Truman. ' , . ' Cheney charged i Al and Len Aaron with losing the letter after he had given' it to them for framing. The let ter, Cheney said, commended him for his work on several governmental labor boards. Jr. Rile Club At Sweet Home Sweet Home E. D. Keefe, 318 9th St., Sweet Home, Ore., ; has been selected as instructor for the newly organized Sweet ' Home high school Outdoor Jun- lor Rifle club, the National Rifle association announced to day. Membership in the newly , chartered club will be restrict ed to youngsters under 19 years of age. Officers, all of Sweet Home, are Jack Sommers, ' president; Norman Simpson, : 941 13th St., vice president; Larry Cook, 153 25th St., ex ecutive officer; Dennis Could, ' secretary; and Morris Sparrow, 904 14th St., treasurer. Aim of the new, club, like thousands of other clubs sim ilarly chartered by the Nation- r al Rifle association, is to teach youngsters the fundamentals of good markmanship and safe : firearms handling. ; Living Problems to Be Sermon Subject Silverton Rev. Douglas Harrell of the local Methodist pastorate, is announcing a ser ies oi sermons dealing wun me problems of contemporary liv ing. The first sermon .was given during the morning worship hour Sunday, April 12, the top ic, "The Serpent in the Hedge." Following through April and May the themes announced are s "The Secret of Security," Ap ril 19, at the 11 o'clock worship hour; for April 26, "The Time I Have"; May 3, "The Troubles I Have"; Mothers Day, May 10, "The Home I Live In"; May 17, "The Things I Can Do"; May 24, "The Things I Have"; and May 31, "The Crown We Shall Wear." Following Sunday, April 19, morning services, the complete ly restored contents of the old church cornerstone will be dis played for their final inspec tion before placing them in the seclusion of the new church edifice. Those Interested may view the contents in the church office. Pratum Pratum The Women's Soc iety of Christian Service met at the Methodist church basement fnr ihn Anril meeting, begin ning at 12:30 with a fellowship dinner. The president, Mrs. Glen Ol son, was in charge of the busi ness meeting and officers for the next year were elected, as follows: President, Mrs. Glen Olson; vice president, Mrs. Harold deVries; secretary, Mrs. John Olthoff; treasurer, Mrs. Raymond R. Lillcy. The president appointed Mn. Don Meyer as chairman for the fellowship dinner for the last quarterly conference, Friday night, May 8. HOME final "tiov r . Blend Old, New In Decorations It's fashionable to be eco nomical in home decoration these days. No all-out cast' ing away of present posses sions. No bringing in of all new furnishings of a particu lar style. Today's predomi nant decorative trend calls for a mixture of the old and the new. And the fascinating pos sibilities open to the home maker are unlimited. Start with the carpet, is the advice of most decorators. For carpet sets the background covers the largest single sur face of the room. Today that advice assumes greater signif icance fine carpet can set off the old and the new with defl nitiveness, while giving that look of luxury, that feel of comfort. And today's carpets, availa ble in colorful new patterns and texturs, afford one of the widest selections ever offered in Salem's stores. Everyone likes textured floor coverings. And the wide variety ot textures offers a carpet for every taste. There are high-and-low looped pile types in a variety of. designs, high cut pile against looped or twisted grounds, and self-em bossed pile types, all executed in a series of handsome de signs. The Shuttleworth group df carpets from the looms of Mo hawk offer a wide selection in color, texture and design de sired in. today's mode of liv ing. Among the favorites of this group are Purlpoint, a modern Moire pattern with ita exquisite handcrafted needle point effect, and Rembrandt, women with a patented high low texture, a three dimen sional depth to heighten the quiet charm of its distinctive leaf design. In Salem, the complete Shuttleworth group may be seen at Fronk'a House of Car pets. .. Cancer Drive Quota Met by Lebanon Lebanon This city and its surrounding area met its quota in the current cancer society drive Just now getting under way in Linn county with a check for $845 mailed to the society headquarters this week by Rod Donkin, chairman of the local United Fund board. The money was collected last fall during the United Fund drive, and freed local residents of any solicitation at present. GARBAGE DUMPER FINED Albany Charged with dumping garbage on a public road, Mrs. Joy Nadine Irish, 20, Scio, pleaded guilty in district court here following her arrest by deputy sheriffs. Mrs. Irish was accused of dumping garbage on a county road three miles east of Scio. She was fined $30 by District Judge Wendell Tompkins, who later suspended half of the fine. Sublimity Sublimity The Sublimity fire department is making1 preparations for the Fireman's Ball, which will be an event of Friday, May 8. A popular orchestra has been i secured. A special feature of the eve- i ning will be the awarding of aj 1953 model TV set, valued at $329, now on display at Por- tcr and Law. j - Congress voted 11.520 acres in what is now Louisiana and 23,029 acres in Florida to French General Lafayette for! his services In the Revolution. 2715 S. Commercial Phone 4-6313 Open Fridays 'Til 9 p.m. t Other Evenings by Appointment THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem. Oregon in Jit FRDNK'S mm Enjoy Distinctive our New luxuriously loemtd in distinctive designs and rich colon, theso carpets offtr lasting beauty and elegance. Their magnificent hand-crafted effects and thick, full textures eomplimtnt both .:. modem and traditional roomi. Featured hero is Rembrandt, a .... beautiful leaf motif In a high and low looped pile. All wool In beige, ginger tan, rose quartz, two shades of green and two hade: of grey. MIHSIOtWM lUbtlt-tOI turod luf motif with MH cut, ww wop put. in Blll, mt luorti, lnf tr ten, two hattai of rtM and two ttwltt of troy, $00.00 if. . . ' t tHtimtMMT - ICulpturod . tut with handcrafttd nto dltpoint otfoet In rent, olt, iroy, groin, flngot tan. Alio iconthui frond mo IH In gray, from tr bolio. 100.00 sq. yd. -C PURLPOINT - contemporary molri in gray, groin, btlit, ' gtngir tin. Alio clonic icroll Withhandcroftidnatdlt point oftict In trty, Cham ' point. oyttor whlto, and fftm. (oo.oo to.. y4, I 9 CUStlCPOMT- chumlni : Victorian floral with hand crafttd ntedlipoint otfict on trty, black or grtin ground. Avallablt In Aubui on dtiiin on Ivory and . Ctoriian Modallion on blui, oo.ooyd. CD T.' V, WWW S OF Beauty, Luxurious H395 $q. yd. t We' gladly bring samples to your : Jutfphont 4-6313 i, W3 .A UL 1 '(Suit ' v'.'i.' .I'll " ' CARPTS by Mohawk MM homo,, ' ; L ,1, ,V'..V isv-v- l I..v "'I '1 ..' ..I'.i..-.'; -4 1 'ti r i