h c e e I fc I S c I 1 1 1. X ( I I . - lfl I nntfnl Tmirtinl Suloni flronrnn TVlnnrfnv Aiimici 9Q 1kA tmtt'm&mw' aMrT , , , . -ft"", .7 e, - - ygr: ! i- 7 J$k,rx "' I Two-Car Crash I Injures Five A two-car crash in the 3500 block on South Commercial Sunday night slowed traffic for nearly half an hour and sent five people to the hospital for 'examination! Released from the hospital were Lee Richardson and Shir ley Moore, both of 225 Che meketa; Leona Kowitz, 1120 Rural, and Mr. and Mrs. How ard L. Goudy, Albany. The cars were headed south and driven by Goudy and Rich ardson with the Goudy machine flipped into a ditched and over turned. H. E. Reeves, proprie tor of the Tip Top motel, wit nessed the accident and direct ed traffic until the arrival of itatc police. Crash of the machines, with several cases of fruit jars in the Goudy car adding to the clatter, was heard by Guy Flagg, 685 N. Ewald, about three blocks from the scene. Beauties Seek to Become Queen of Fair From among these 23 (count 'em) cuties, a' committee of judges is going to select one to reign as queen of the Los Angeles County Fair ht Pomona, Calif., Sept. 16 to Oct. 2. The remainder will com prise a court of farmerette princesses. The queen will be chos en for excellence in milking, churning, pitching hay (not woo), and pulchritude. (AP Wirephoto) 13 YEARS IN IRON LUNG Three-Cent Stamp Honors GAR Meet ', A three cent U.S. commemo rative stamp, honoring the final encampment of the Grand Ar- imy of the Republic was placed 'on sale at Indianapolis, Ind., iMonday. While Postmaster Al bert C. Gragg said he did not know when the new stamp would be available here he pre sumed the latest issue would be received within a short time. The central design of the 6tamp depicts a GAR veteran. In the background is the same man as he looked when a youthful soldier. In the upper left corner is an hour glass with most of the sand in the bottom portion. The letters "GAR'1 appear across the face of the hour glass. The stamp is arranged horizontally with a single outline frame. WallgrenStilfHas Eye on U. S. Post Seattle, Aug. 29 W) Ex-Governor Mon C. Wallgren told a King county democratic picnic gathering yesterday he plans to return to Washington, D.C., within a month "possibly to take a federal position." . He did not elaborate, but friends said he may yet head the national security resources board. They said Wallgren bc 1 i v e i President Truman may be able to appoint him without enate confirmation under the new reorganization act recently approved by congress. In Ailzia, Libia, the thermo meter registered 136.4 degrees Sept. 13, 1922. Fred Snire Gives Advice On His Fight With Polio (Editor's Note Frederick B. Snite, Jr., 38, famed for his fight against polio, has been in an iron lung for 13 years and five months. His family says he Is in excellent condition. Since he was stricken he has married his college sweetheart and now has three daughters. He prepared the following dispatch as a message of en couragement to all victims of the present polio outbreak.) By FREDERICK B. SNITE, Jr. (Written for United Presa) Brainered, Minn.. Aug. 29 (U.R) For those nersnns vmina anH old, who are suffering from infantile paralysis, I have this advice: "Trust in God and all will be well I have followed this advice myself for more than 13 years, and u nas never lanea me yet. When I was stricken in China in 1936, I was taken to the Peking Union Medical college which provided an iron lung. It was the only iron lung in all Asia at that time. It could only have been divine providence that cared for my needs in that re gion so remote from my own country. Now I have progressed to the point where I can leave my iron lung for as long as four hours by using a home-made portable respirator. The portable lung is especially helpful when 1 play in bridge tournament such as the one in which I am now partici pating at a resort near Brainerd To those persons who have not contracted infantile paralysis, but who are afraid they or their loved ones will do so, I would offer the same message: "Place your faith in God. Know that he is with you in whatever you are doing." There are many good, com mon sense rules that can be fol lowed to minimize the possibil ity of contracting infantile pa ralysis. Everyone especially children should keep as well-rested as possible. They should avoid fa tigue, because fatigue cuts down the resistance of even the most healthy person. There is no need for hysteria when the world polio is men tioned. Doctors tell me it is a fairly rare disease that it af fects no more than one person in six thousand. And of those who do contract It, three out of four recover completely. These then, should be the rules for all to follow, whether or not they are sufferers from infantile paralysis: Be sensible. Keep calm. Trust completely In God. I cannot emphasize too strong ly the power of prayer. Those of us who have called on God for help to carry on, know that he supplies it abundantly. Village Will Spend $1 Million Bequest Perryopolis, Pa., Aug. 29 VP) The citizens of Perryopolis fin ally have decided how to spend the $1,320,000 left the town a year ago by Mrs. Mary Fuller Frazier, a former resident. At a meeting last night, 200 townspeople voted unanimously to adopt a plan worked out by the Per r y o p o 1 i s Community Planning association. The plan calls for the circula tion of petitions to incorporate the town of 1500 as a borough and the eventual expenditure of $660,000 for improvements. Mrs. Frazier stipulated that half the money be used for pub lic improvements and the re mainder for maintenance of the public works agreed upon. High mountains seem to come in families in Oregon. In the Cascade range near Bend are such high peaks as Three Sis ters, Wife, Husband, Little Brother, Big Brother, Maiden, Twins and Bachelor Butte. To top it all off, House Rock nearby. These peaks are fairly closely grouped together in the central Oregon vacationland. Increase Your Income Orsrcomo Fear, -Develop Courage, Learn to Speak Effectively to a group or In conversation. Mike TiluMt (rinuU. Joii fioip l woau (Hariri ! 10) ( k. k.M I. caeAeSii iUi city it the Dale Carnegie COURSE in IffccHv SptaklM, prMlity & velopmeet, Winning Frltahls m4 lift. cifl (iIIUt) PtopJ. Offered tieluitnly In this ere by Dr. Chai. F. Walker, (21 PreJd.nl, Northweitern School of Commerce, Port land, Oregon, and Sponsor (I years) lor Dal Carnegie Court. i For booklet giving full Information, i ! lend name ana addren to Chat. F, ! ; Walker, 70 S. W, Salmon St., Port- ! land S, Oregon, ! Nam: ! I Addreui VTTFRAKI aarelltaf 4rr O.I. BUI ibmM vrile u at etKo, otberwlto fm will have to Mr nlle aJUa far ptral of oeeeurf tapon. Open Fridays 'til 7 P. M. TEACH THEM THE IMPORTANCE OF SAVING Diildrcn-and adultj-with the savings habit are always welcome here at this friendly bank. Our savings accounts are ideal for small or large savers. Open an account now; WILLAMETTE VALLEY BANK Salem's Independent Bank 1990 Fairgroundi Rd. . Phone 3-9281 ADVICE TO SURF BATHERS: Watch Those Riptides! Never Mind Undertow By ALTON .L. BLAKESLEE Associated Press Science Reporter New York, Aug. 29 W) When you swim in surf, don't worry about the undertow. Undertow, blamed for countless drownings. Drobablv doesn't even exist, says Dr. Francis P.'Shepard, professor of submarine geology at the University of California's Scripps institution of oceanography. - The thing to watch for is rip currents, that come in puffs or pulses. They can carry you out through the breakers, and probably cause many drownings. Dr. Shepard says you usually can tell where they are, and of fers advice on how to avoid them or to escape from them. Contrary to popular belief, there may be no such thing as undertow," he writes in Physics Today magazine of the Ameri can institute of physics. Undertow is supposed to be a strong current under the sur face tnat sweeps bathers off their feet and drags them out to sea. It's supposed to come from water thrown shoreward by the breakers. At the edge of a beach, you do feel returning water under mining the sand at your feet. The idea has been that this water continues as a strong subsur face current out through the breakers. But no measurements have ever shown any dangerous sub surface currents of this kind, Dr. Shepard reports. Rip currents, also called rip tides or sea pulses, are a dif ferent and dangerous matter. They are currents that move in narrow bands out through the breakers, spreading out fan wise beyond. They extend from the surface all the way to the sea bottom, both inside the breakers and for some distance out. A drowning person, sub merged, can be carried out by these deep currents. The rips are caused by the unevenness of the ocean floor, Dr. Shepard explains. Ridges or canyons slow or speed up dif ferent parts of the breaker as it comes in, thus piling up water at one point and thinning it at another. This surplus water flows along the shore until it meets water coming from an-, other point. The two currents merge and turn out to sea as a single current, Rip currents are easy to spot from the air, and with practice can be detected from the beach, too, Dr. Shepard says. They can be detected by tur bulent brownish or greenish masses of water moving out from the breaker zone. They have somewhat the shape of a cauliflower cloud, and the edge of each rip is likely to be out lined by foam carried out from the surf. The flow of each rip comes in pulses, with one mass following another "somewhat like puffs from a smoke engine." From the beach, the rips can be spotted by the turbulence of the water due to greater depth, flow, or a change in color of the water due to greater depht. The incoming wave often does not break in the rip current lane. If it does break, the water is likely to have the typical brownish color. Dr. Shepard advises poor FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP AUTO TRUCK FIRE Our policies ore written with on ini tial sales costs. After then the poli cies are renewed not rewritten. You re the one that saves the sales costs thereafter. Savings up to 30. BILL OSKO Phone 3-5661 466 Court St. 1 BILL OSKO Dist. Mgr. Jones Clan in Annual Reunion A group of Oregonians with a common interest in the name of Jones as it pertains to the central Willamette valley got together Sunday at Champoeg pioneer park to observe the 96th anniversary of the coming of swimmers to stay in shallow waters when breakers are high, and to avoid bottom irregu lafities. If you are carried out, don't try to fight back in the same direction. Swim at right angles to the current, and you'll gel out of the rip channel, some times with just a few strokes. Then you may be able to touch bottom and rest, or at least be able to swim back in without having to fight the current. the S. W. R. Jones' family to Oregon. The gathering of the clan found 60 descendants present for the 25th annual reunion of thp familv. Descendants of six different branches of the origi nal familv which entered the state by covered wagon on Au gust 27, 1853, were represented. Robert Massey of Dallas act ed as chairman. Clay Jones of Portland was elected the new nresident. Adelaide Toombs of Salem was chosen vice presi dent; Julia Belle Kellak, Wood burn, secretary; Reece Jones, Salem, current events; and Jack E. Jones, Seattle, historian. Next year's gathering will be in Woodburn. Last member of the original S. W. R. Jones family had died in June. She was Sarah Clark of Portland. The surface temperature of the sun is estimated at 11,000 degrees. Your Money Will Go FARTHER You'll Get There FASTER . . Call us today and ask about money saving AIRLINE Family Plan Fares and Special Tourist Rates . . . . GLOBE TRAVEL SERVICE Complete reservation and ticketing service for all major airline and steamship companies NO CHARGE FOR SERVICES Senator Hotel Lobby Phone 27052 ii . TKtsa. v:r.,v. .Kiy:, ,ras,;'i!iit.'WVif-v.-:-::i--s.-. . kilt I f ... immim: ' ' ' At the new location you'll these PGE staff members: ' , -jr. J iff JT-J k V;- . '' l I J. rRFD STARRFTT LoillSF Al LEN JANICS HEAD - MARGUERITE STONE tfc 15'2ESH if I .4! Mill " Division Manager Cashier Assistant Cashier Assistant Cashier - Hjl U l . h I III, mrji mn . friendly service moves to 136 mmn mm Growing with the Salem area, the Willamette Valley Division office of Portland General Electric Company moves to new and larger quarters that are more conveniently located for customers. At 136 South High Street, one door from the Elsinore Theatre, you'll receive capable, courteous service in new offices arranged to facilitate quick and efficient handling of your business. You're cordially invited to drop in and take a look around at PGE's new surroundings. Ouy Albin Harvey Nickel William Phelps Customer Service Representatives Paul Evrrr WILLAMETTE VALLEY DIVISION SALEM, OREGON PORTLAND GENERAL ELECTRIC CO At