DEEDS OF KINDNESS Playmates Club Organized By Juveniles at Stayton By FLORENCE CARLETON Stayton Oid you ever wish that bov or sir! of yours had an Interest to keep them occupied during the hours after school is out ior me day and during summer vacation? A group of Stayton youngsters have found the answer and have provided themselves many hours of pleasure and at the same time helped those less fortunate than"81 themselves. Known as Play Mates club the group was organized about a year ago and patterned after a suggested club of the Play Mate magazine for children, with Mrs. Tomina Shower as supervisor. Each membership card bears a promise which the members agree to follow: "I promise to do my best at all times to help those who are lonely, needy, ill or shut-in. A little girl from the Chil dren's Farm Home near Corval lis was chosen as the playmate to help this year. She has been remembered with useful gifts as well as toys at Christmas, at Easter time and on her birthday. A short program was presented at the Eva Rebekah Christmas party by the club. They were joined at that time by their adopted playmate, Darlene Run- yan. Christmas carols were sung to the shut-ins by the group at Christmas time, A May Day program, with a aueen crowning and a pro gram of acts was presented in the yard of the C. P. Burmester home, for which the costumes were designed and made by Harry Burmester, 12. Yvonna Myers was queen; Harry Bur mester, king; Ralph Shower, master of ceremonies; and the acts were presented with the program presented by other members, including Shirley Freeman, Karen Petersen, Gary and Erol Boyle, and Harriett Burmester. Bob Carleton was ticket taker. The acts consisted of songs, tumbling acts and a puppet show. Betty Caskey was away at the time of the show, and Bobby Weddle and Doris Stevens have joined the club since school closed. Only a couple of pennies was the cost of the tickets for the May Day program but a group of parents and interested friends witnessed the show and pur chased the refreshments which consisted of cake, ice cream, punch, coffee and cookies. By this means nearly $4 was added to the club fund. The club is quite proud that its entry in the Children's pa rade of the Santiam Bean festi val which was held in Stay ton recently, won the grand sweepstake, and of the purple ribbon given it. Using the old four - wheeled fire department trailer which has been stand ing in the yard of the former fire chief, the youngsters built a large brown boot of crepe paper to form a house for the "Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe." Now everyone knows who has ever prepared a very modest float that it is really work, but the boys and girls really did an excellent job on their float. The shutters in the windows of the boot house were covered in sweetpeas and the name of the club was outlined in the same flowers. Club members were the children with Yvonna Myers as the Old Woman. The club wishes to thank Chris Neitling for the use of the trailer, and those who were so kind in giving flowers for the float. The club is planning an other program some time in the future to defray the cost of crepe paper and other items pur chased for the float. Regular meeting place of the club has been the attic of the Burmester home which young Harry has decorated in red paint to make the club rooms mor attractive. Last weeks hot weather caused them to abandon their attic meeting place for a small house in the yard at the Weddle home. Gallery by the Sea Will Show Quigley An exhibition of the paintings of E. B. Quigley will open Au gust 14 at The Gallery by the Sea, the Lincoln county art cen ter at Delake. In the show will be 22 paint ings in oil of the eastern Oregon country, including horses and cattle, in which Quigley specializes. The gallery will be open ev ery day except Monday, from 1:30 to 5 p.m. On the opening day the gallery hours will be 1:30 to 8 p.m. The exhibition will hold un til September 11, and will be followed immediately by another. The Gutenburg Bible first book printed with movable type, was given the appearance of a hand-copied manuscript by the printers so that their invention would not be . discovered. -3- 7psTr ' w 4?-- Leaning Over Backward this Fukul building was wrecked. SEVERE SHAKES Speed of Earth's Moves In 'Quakes Is Great By FRANK L. WHITE (AP Newsfe.turej) Tokyo The great Fukui earthquake of June 28, 1948,- "ranks among the most severe of all well-known earthquakes," with an earth movement that may have reached a speed of 20 feet a second, U.S. army engineers report. They have just concluded a year-long geological and engi neering study of the Fukui dis aster, which killed 5,236 persons and wrecked 35,437 buildings. While many earthquakes have taken more lives in va rious parts of the world, the one centering around Fukui, in west-central Honshu, is rat ed as one of the major trem ors of history because of its shock intensity. The army's study rates its highest intensity at .6 gravity. This is the highest recorded fig ure on any recognized scale. One 'G," for gravity, is 32 feet a second the speed of the pull that gravity exercises on a free body in the first second. Six-tenths of a "G" therefore would be about 20 feet a second, the speed at which the earth shook at the height of the quake. This movement could be ver tical or horizontal, or both. The first earthquake rated on this comparatively recent scale was that at Long Beach, Calif., in 1933, which was figured at .3 G-plus, or about 10 feet a second. Until Fukui, this was the highest recorded since the , be ginning the G measurement. The army report, compiled with the aid of Geologists John J, Collins and Helen L. Folster, notes that, "the num ber of casualties and the dam age resulting from the Fukui earthquake were exceptional ly large, considering the rela tively small area in which the shocks were severe 200 square miles." -less than COLEMAN HEATER Summer Event pet Your COLEMAN 'Tl JOW Heater From Us -And Let Us JV $jr ' i Give You This Genuine $15.95 Sr BlankeM Why Buy A Blanket Whtn You Can Get This Fine NORTH STAR As A Gift! It's a beauty just the kind of rich, deep-piled blanket you want! All wool, full size, choice of eight attractive colors. Ends bound with acetate rayon rib bon. And it's yours as a gift simply for buying your new (Coleman Oil Heater from us flrly Here's double warmth for youl Your guaranteed Cole man heater gives you clean, automatic-heat by day. Then turn your Coleman heater down at night to save fuel. 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If You Don't Know Your Nearest Coleman Dealer, Write or Phone Us Now for His Name and Address The most damaging quake in Japan's history remains that in the Tokyo-Yokohama area in 1923, which took 143,000 lives, but it spread over a far wider region. A check indicates the Fukui ground level moved up and down as much as 28 inches at points within a mile of each other. A horizontal shift of the earth GETTING TO WORK ON TIME When Deaf, Alarm Difficult To 'Hear' So as to Awaken By JAMES DUNNE Cleveland U.B It is often a problem for deaf people to awake so they can get to work on time. During the convention of the National Association for the Deaf, the delegates were asked how they managed the waking problem. The answers varied. A tall, middle-aged bachelor described to a reporter in sign language through an interpreter that he has a hammer connected with a spring and tripped by an alarm-clock that beats on the bed posts. The vibrations of the bed rather than the sounds awake him. as much as 5.5 feet was noted at points within two miles of each other. Fissures in the ground opened as wide as four feet but most of them returned to widths of a few inches. Seven witnesses are quoted as seeing a woman crushed to death in one of these opening and closing fissures. Another representative has members of his family who can hear, so he could not employ such a "loud" voice. Instead he wound a piece of string around the alarm handle on the back of the clock. He passed the cord through a hook in the ceiling and tied the loose end about a pillow. The pillow was placed above his head. When the alarm un wound, so did the cord, and the pillow fell on the sleeper's face. . A small, bald-headed dele gate wagged with his hands a tale of awakening calmly and easily. He hooked a switch on the alarm clock and connected Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Tuesday, August 9, 194915 the wires to several sealed beam lights mounted on his dresser and pointed towards his bed. The lights flashed on and off when the alarm was tripped. Usually the ringing of the telephone in a hotel room for a few seconds would wake up a hearing person. But for the deaf delegates, the telephone bells took a beating. Usually La Du would have to ring the bell for a solid five minutes before his roomers would awake. Sometimes the vibrations would not be great enough, and two bellhops accompanied by La Du would go to the various rooms and beat on the doors. Sometimes even these sounds were no. enough and La Du had to enter the rooms with a spe cial pass key. "The people who fell In the last category," La Du said, "seemed not to be worried at all if they ever got up." "In fact," he added, "one man said he has been late so many times that the act of not being punctual has become a habit just like eating and sleeping." La Du's problems started all over again when the delegates arrived at the coffee shop for a bite of, breakfast before the business sessions began. Hnurpvor his wnrrlpt wprs er ased when he was informed that E one of the waitresses had deaf parents and that she knew sign language. Immediately La Du employed her as a sort of "head waitress" and all the orders were taken without a second word or sign. Want More Efficient Heat? Let us show you the Delco-Heat Conversion Oil Burner with the exclusive "Rotopowcr" unit! Salem Heating Gr Sheet Metal Co. Dial 3-8555 1085 Broadway Authorized Rcpmentalivt mm e mm i mm WHILE FISHING THIS LAST WEEK-END . . . (caught only a few small fry) It occurred to me that the more desirable fish have likely become wise to us HUMANS. They appar ently realize that helpless worms, glittering spin ners, and other attractive nuisances often have concealed a VICIOUS HOOK WE HUMANS could take a lesson from the POOR fISH And realize if you are not adequately and properly INSURED . . . You, too, can get "THE HOOK" Scellars, Foley & Rising, Inc. INSURANCE COUNSELORS 143 South Liberty St. Phone 2-3143 l,.nB.n 'J'i ' (SHADY TRAILER PfttK .' ' Ui a , i x 9. I n i SUCCESS COMES MINT-FIAVORED Meet Mr. and Mrs. William Towery, Stayton mint growers, and their five huskj ions. From left Billy, Jimmy, Richard, Mrs. Towery, Mr. Towery, Maxey and Marion. The ambitious Towerys earned farming success in Oregon, after 14 disappointing years elsewhere. "We reached the North Santiam are almost broke in 1939," Towery said. "The First National Bank helped us buy our 52-acre 'home place' and, later, 80 acre near Jefferson." Today these Oregon building ranches yield 100 acres of quality mint annually for distillation into flavoring. They also produce many vegetable crops and steady jobs fof five non-family workers. IRIS BULBS REWARD HOBBYIST Twenty-five years ago, at the age of 57, Ben C. Offins (center) reared from lumbering to enjoy his hobby of raising Dutch irises. Soon his acre of land in Grants Pass was crowded with these white, yellow and blue flowers. Florists began buying the bulbs for force-blooming purposes. Now 82, Offins, with his sons, Harold W. (left) and Don A., directs modern iris culture on 30 acres of land growing approximately 8,000,000 quality bulbs annually. Their firm, B. C Offins & Sons, relies on the Grants Pass Branch of First National for helpful banking services, THE DILLARDS PROVIDE HOUSING W. H. Dillard began building a small home in 1938 on an acre plot on Prineville's outskirts. Dillard, then a sawmill worker newly arrived fromOklahoma.hardly had the fob started before he had rental inquiries. "If folks want places like these, let's build more," Dillard suggested to his wife, Violet. Today they own nine acres, 18 low-rental houses, a 27-place trailer park and room to build a modern tourist court. . "We really 'started on a shoestring'," Dillard says, "and we credit the First National of Prineville for much of nur success. We got both financial Selp and sound business advice." 0X33333 Oregoniansare energetic and resource ful. The enterprises pictured hert show typical examples. In each case individuals have bettered themselves by developing a business, farm or service. Many other people like these, all working together family by family, farm by farm and business by business help build Oregon jobs and oppor tunities for each of us. Banks in the First National Group help build Oregon by providing con venient and helpful banking services. Tell us how we can best help you. LET'S BUILD OREGON TOGETHER SALEM BRANCH F 0 037 NATIONAL BANK MARSHALL-WELLS CO. OF PORTLAND P. 0. Box 4200 BR-6421 Portland, Oregon INIUIANCI COfOATIOM MIMill FIOIIAl Diroin 1