1 s : A. , t c . ; j: S r ?- r ; 'I:-: .1 i ? .V I- i , a I Sr ' V" i ll a. , t Si 'J i 1 . i page nairr f Oregon Trail' Launching Due On Saturdiay Parades and pageantry will fea - ture the launching of the SS Ore- - mn TraiL thirtr-fourth in the aeries of T2 tankers being con- rstructed arthe Swattlsland yard of the Kaiser company m Port land, on Saturday. The Oregon Trail Centennial commission will present a contrast of. transportation, in the days o the Oreeon Trail with the modern methods of shipbuilding and - the : implements used in the construc tion of tankers. Oxen pulling cov ered wagons, horse-drawn surreys and stage coaches, Indians in their tribal regalia, as well as groups attired in the costumes of the Ore gon Trail period, will mingle with the eiant 4Whirler cranes,' tre mendous trucks and . trailers, the big Hysters, caterpillar tractors, and the shipyard worker and his steel, hat and modern working clothes, to ; present a picture of - Oreron's - Drosress through one hundred years. 1 "Z -' " A long list of personages instru- mental in perpetrating the Oregon Trail and what it stands for. will be honored guests of the Kaiser company at the Saturday launch-. tag. It is expected that Gov. Earl Snell will head the guest list and . others who will be present include Mai. -Gen. John E. Dahlquist, com under 6f the 70th division. Camp Adair; Phil Parrish, chairman ; of the Oregon Trail Centennial com mission; Walter Meacham, histor ian and executive secretary of the commission; and a host of other notables from the Pacific north , west and Oregon. A. - launching luncheon' will be served for the guests'- immediately following the launchicgT'ceremony in the Swan Island Barracks mess nan. : The tankers being constructed at Swan Island . are the largest ships built in the Pacific north west and are 523 feet in length with a deadweight of 16,460 tons. The SS Oregon Trail is the second in a list of .tankers to be named for important paints - in Oregon. The first was the SS Champoeg launched last week. Other, ships . in the order of their - launching will be named Corvallis, Gervais, . Umatilla. Klamath Falls, Yamhill, Owyhee,' Table Rock, Wallowa, Grand Ronde, Coquille, Jackson ville, , Meacham, Nehalem,' Tilla mook and Pendleton. . '-' f Coomlers Attend Rile' ! . - . - - UNIGNVALE Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Coomler attended the funeral services held Thursday afternoon at Silvertca for Mrs. 1. Mount, a pioneer resident '--of taat r place. Their son. Howard, is the husband of Mrs. Mounts foster daughter. ITNt . -i ; ' - - J i ' r ". - ",2. T ' f : ' . . -'5 ii - i: ,' - ' ' r Boyce Observes When John Boyee was born, October It, IMS, the first intercity tele j graph line had been in existence only two years and radio was not even a scientist's dream. Hero the Salem man Is shown enjoriag life j at ago 97, with the aid of this modem invention. Still active, ho was i host to friends at a birthday dinner. 97, Watches World Events 1 Occurrences In this fast-moving world are still matters of absorb ing interest to John Boyce, who has been watching them for three years less than a century. Sunday, October 10, on his S7th birthday. he entertained friends at dinner. His home Is at 1019 Mul street, where he has lived for about 40 years. - , Born in. Wedmore, Somerset shire, England, - on October 10. 1846, Boyce came to America ; in 1866 near the close of the Civil war, living first in Dubuque county, Iowa, moving farther west three years later. He arrived in Turner, Ore., on December 22, 1869, and has lived in the Willa mette' valley ; throughout .; the 74 years since, except for brief, pe- riods spent in the Puget Sound country and near Yakima, and a trip, : begun on his birthday 36 years ago, back to England for a visit.: ; .'..- " . Bis first worV here was n con struction of the Southern Pacific railway lino through the valley J . ... : : V r Ecids era ca bssresca pc!:qf en - &m th cf ycrr Frscdca Csy tb:a , today csd tYcry day ; Isscrt Y!ct:ry crd ysrr cm fcfcr J' J' . r-, ' r-i r-i t-irnsTt J'JiJy.Ji.J I ;. -1 ''.., , (A : ' i ( Tho 97 th Birthday Later he was employed by the pioneer 'Pringle r family, cutting wood for, 75 cents a cord and, his board. In the '80s he acquired a farm of his own in' the Jordan valley of Linn county, operating it for 20 years.-'" ;vV pr";; '.M- He had married while In Iowa, his wife dying here in 1931. His only child is Clyde . Boyce who is associated with the Ira Jor genson shops. He also has two grandchildren. i 'la 1923 upon joining the Chris tian church Mr. Boyce ' gave up smoking andjehewing tobacco and avers it was " no hardship though he had used tobacco for over 50 years. Still active, this past sum mer he cultivated a Victory gar den. .. DUBUQUE, Ia.-(!P)-When the Stoltz brothers - get together . it's strictly; unorthodox. . - Ray Stoltz,i car 1 accidentally brushed a pedestrian to the pave ment. The pedestrian was his brother, Frank. ; His ankle was broken. -tX r'' Ui' :-r ' Police . were notified.' The offi cer "who -arrived to make the ac cident report was Captain George Stoltz-fanother brother. - x ' 3 a A1 V OniGCN CTATECMAir. Cslem, Rotary Learns Y7ork Done by rvlenPast40 Goethe completed Faust" ' at age 82; Washington Irv lug's best work was done at age 75; David Starr Jordan won the Nobel peace prize at 75; James Bryce delivered oner of his greatest addresses at 84 and John Wesley was of compar able age when he preached his best sermons; Henry Ford was past 40. before 'fortune really be gan to smile upon him; and Julius Caesar never saw an army camp until age 49. - : - These were only a few specific answers given: by Maj. Lloyd V. Harmon, post chaplain, at Camp Adair, to the question "After For ty, Then What? which was the topic of his address at the Salem Rotary club luncheon Wednesday. Even in war-making, old expex ienced heads make the major de cisions, Chaplain Harmon said; and in the difficult post-war world men ' with the wealth of exper- j ienco - and -' reflection,' espocialry i preachersMeditors, ' educators and public officials, will be needed more than ever, he concluded. Chaplain Harmon was introduced by. Rev, W. Irvin Williams, . Wave Learns How to Buck Clioitf Line There are all kinds of lines. Yeoman ' Dorothy Duncan, j Wave recruiter, has discovered.' There's the line that's -the shortest dis tance between two points. And chow line And "charge the line' in football. All three are combin ed at Willamette U. Yeoman Duncan, on a week's recruiting assignment in Salem, was invttea oy lA. ueorgo Bliss to Join the sailors In train ing at Willamette at "chow! in the USS Lausanne. On her first day, she stood in -the doorway re viewing, the' hundred or more boys lined up f or drul by Chief Petty Officer Harry "Duke" Trot ter. As the luncheon hour ap proached, Yeoman Duncan smiled enthusiastically while Trotter dis missed the young men who were to escort her to lunch. ? :f: She was still smiling when the mob charged but by the time she had reached the crest ol the wave, the expression was dazed. After the first day, she's figured out the only way to get chow at Lausanne is to plant herself firmly behind "Duke.. Trotter "and let the. huge former UCLA tackle run interfer ence-for her. : ' Marion Red Crocs Employs Full-Time Nursing Supervisor - Announcement is made throush Judge George Rossman, chair man of the Marion chapter of employment of Mrs. Louise Ameson as a full time nursing super visor of the health programs of the chapter. This decision was made early this week in the regular executive committee meeting. The action was the. result of numerous con ferences within recent weeks con cerning, the serious need for in creased training 1 o lay-people In thecare of the sick, who prior to wartimefound adequate caro in hospitals undejv competent -.nurses and physkdans. - " ; f-Judge" Rossman in making the news release stated "The chapter's executive committee had employed Mrs.' 'Arneson upon' full-time basis In order to augment the en listment of nurses for the armed forces, and to provide this vicinity with a larger number' of . persons capable - of supplementing the skilled work of a nurse. Unbe known to many, there exists today in mis. county and state a woeful shortage of nurses, he declared. "Neither the county nor the state is supplying to the armed forces the number of nurses expected of us. If an epidemif should visit us our nurses are so few in number that they could not cope with the situation v:"tV',: .V v.i.v It is common knowledge that following in the wake of all great wars are epidemics that take the lives of vast numbers. The one seems to be the cause of the oth er. AH of us recall the virulent epidemic of influenza that came in upon the heels of the last world war and that took; the lives of hundreds of thousands. Realizing that we face a repetition of that horror if we do not prepare our selves so that we can avert it; the Red Cross is everywhere stimulat ing interest in various phases of the nursing service. It . plans , to teach millions of "people here in America how to detect the first signs of an approaching epidemic and how to care for the victims if victims there must be so that others will not be infected. "Mrs. Arneson will continue to in n the American Red Cross, of the teach nurses aide courses. She has made a ' marked success of this work. A nurses aide " course con sists of 80 hours of training. Ap plicants roust be between the ages of 18 and 50 years. At the close of the course they are capable of performing work in the hospitals and are required to give 150 hours of, such service' tor the hospitals. This course provides each member of the class with, a knowledge of the fundamentals of good health and of nursing. Wf are now or ganizing one of these classes.". 1 Mrs. Ameson will also super vise home nursing classes, Judge Rossman ' state, and - continued "these classes will be taught by graduate, competent nurse volun teers under Mrs. ; Arneson's . su pervision. It is our , plan to or ganize classes of this kind in ev ery community in Marion county. The standard home nursing course of Instruction calls for 24 hours or Instruction given in a period of weeks. Every one who desires toknow something of the primary principles of nursing Is eligible for enrollment Into one of these clas ses. At its dose no hospital work is required of those who took the training.! , Those who have taken the nur ses aide jnd home nursing courses have testified to their great merit, Judge Rossman points out. "Our chapter now offers this training without charge to everyone in Marion county the chapter chair man added, concluding,MAs - has already been IndicatedT all this work will be done by or supervised by Mrs. Arneson. The chapter f eelsi that it is fortunate that such a person of her demonstrated abil i a.'O-inr'in.'irjini- ' ir.?7 f,. ity, is available to perform this work." Rossman called attention to the fact that the graduates of the nur ses aide classes become entitled to w,ear a blue and white uniform which is authorized not only by the American Red Cross-but also by the United States office of ci vilian defense. Both the graduates of the "nurses aide classes and home nursing classes can properly feel that they have qualified them k1vm t enace In l work of a patriotic nature, professional me dics of the community aeciare. Funeral Friday For George Pro . Military honors under auspices of United States marines will be accorded T when funeral services for CpL George F. Pro, 23, are held Friday at 130 pjn. at the Rose Lawn chapel, it was an nounced Wednesday. Rev. S. Ray nor Smith will officiate and In-, terment will , be at HayesviHe cemetery. CpL Pro, son of Mr. and Mrs. George L. Pro, 1915 Maple ave nue, and husband of the former Ruth Arnold, was killed Monday in an airplane crash near Liver' more, Calif where he had been stationed at naval air base, ;: , t Rdlers Visit 1 ROBERTS Mrs. B. D. Fld- ler of Jefferson visited long-time friends here Saturday and Sun day. i-,.;-":--.-:V-. -r V Trr u of ChtMst rSt. AjbakIbc SUCCESS fr jn tm CHIK A. . K mM with wh&t ftUvcal VB ar ATtXICT. ED OlsarScrs; snasHls. heart. 1ob, Urer, kitajra. itNuek, kus, ftver. slUa, femi com plalats. CtsrlielCtan Chinese Cerk Ce, Ottiem Stoan Omlr Tut. - aoO i Sat- S Bern, mm Wo, J V a. ml.' U MM m. ov f 1 121 N. CoasX CL. alem. Ore. 2i L X It uiiliii-ifui; r r r O Valley rvIc:i to Go To DenvcrTJeei Intent upon furtherir the cause cf tho V.'il!2.r.ctt3 Valley project, a delration frcm the valley wUl attend the National Reclamation association's meeting October 27 to 23 in Denver, it wa3 made known at the Saleni chamber of commerce Wednesday. Representa tives of all the principal cities along that portion of the Willa mete river to be affected by the project's flood control," irrigation and navigation features are ex pected to attend. Already scheduled to attend from Oregon are Robert W. Saw yer of Bend, Oregon director of the. association; C. E. Stricklin ?f Salem, state engineer; Ansus Gib son of Junction City, a Lane coun ty legislator; Lewis A. McArthur and Kenneth Miller of Portland and Dr. A. -T. Oberg of Eugene. The chamber of commerce is seek ing to Interest ethers In attend ing. Li U-il - - - v 4 V cvraat Tnacl' apeil muiinr pt t ctM liw rvm th ntui wheat karaal nothim ia addd otliiHr is r . maart. Toaatinc brin( at htm rick Mat-4ik Ilavar. DaiUioaa ia " t- l 1 .: i i n Z 1 caokiaa,-BM -1