i 1 8 - i ) h h c'. e t( e r b V 3V c I IV JV A 1( T. C 1 S Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Tuesday, August SO, 1949 v: r ' aniM 'Mir -'"I Finh Lure Perfected Here is Martin Neustel, Lebanon xhlbiting a new fish lure that he has pattented and will place on the market as soon as necessary arrangements can be com pleted, ' Fishing Lure Invented by Martin Neustel, Lebanon Fishermen will be interested in a new lure which Martin L. Neustel, 1270 Grove, Lebanon, expects to put on the market as soon as patent office drawings compiled By J. I. Anaerson, t-ori-land coordinator of patents, are approved. The new lure is especially adapted to fishing through the ice or from docks or boats wherein" movement is absent over the wa ter surface. By simply raising and lowering the fishline, the lure will travel in a spiral circle and in its operations it is either diving or climbing but always following a circle. Action Is caused by the de sign of the outwardly extend ing fins from the lure together with a properly located weight within the body of the lure as well as a specially curved tail. When the line is raised the nose end of the lure will nose up wardly and forward and at the same time the tail causes it to circle. The new lure will be shown at the State Fair in the moving picture "What's New on Re view" at the agricultural build lng under the sponsorship of the fair and the direction of And erson. This show has many other other inventions to be shown on the screen and on exhibit. These range from household gadgets toys, apparel for women up to huge lumber machinery. Ander son handled the patents for the hop picking machines now in use in the valley. Peaches for Schools Washington, Aug. 30 W The agriculture department an nounced today it has brought 937,210 cases of canned peaches for school lunch program. rr imii lli.ll a Edgar Recalls Some Thrills Of Early Polk County Days By BEN MAXWELL J. W. Edgar, who has lived in Polk county 82 years, remembers when there was no West Salem. But his keen memory goes back even further, and he recalls years in the 1870s when a manually operated drift ferry crossed the Willamette from Salem's Ferry street to a landing a little north of the present bridge. Mr. Edgar, now a resident on Route 1, was born 12 miles south of Portland in December, '1866. His family had just arrived by covered wagon from Missouri and paused near Oregon City long enough to refresh them selves and welcome birth of the child. Then the journey was resum ed until the father found a suitable location northeast of Dallas. J. W. Edgar was then six weeks old and he ha lived in Polk county almost continu ously during the past 82 years. From the 1890's until recently he was a resident in the Pop corn district. 'Certainly I remember 70 and more years ago when there was a ferry across the Willamette between the Salem and the Polk county county side," Mr. Edgar said. "That was before Matheny started his steam ferry and about 10 years before the first bridge was built. It was a manpower ferry that was coaxed across the river aided by current and the operator's muscles. As a ferry it wasn't much. Two loads of cordwood or four teams was about its limit. Fuel was Cheap' "Later a steam ferry was started by Matheny, and Tom Holman succeeded him. That ferry also left Ferry street and landed a little north of the pres ent bridge. In the early 1880s, just before the bridge was built, crossing schedules were main tained at half hour intervals.. I hauled scrub oak cordwood to Salem and crossed the ferry to make deliveries. In those days oak wood was $2.50 a cord.' Mr. Edgar recalls that there was then not enough West Salem to give it a name. The Matheny house stood near the end of the present bridge (it was dis mantled about two years ago). Then or a few years later came me unurcnui, tergusoa and Skinner homes. Sixty-five years ago i-n ram bmnner owned most of what is now West Salem and a big share to today's Kingwood Heights. Even then, however. the first schoolhouse in the com munity (now occupied by Mrs, Sally Damrell) appeared to Mr, Edgar as an old building. Mr. Edgar recalls the first in ter-county .bridge as a filmsy af fair cheaply constructed to meet a pressing need for better trans portation. When the structure opened for traffic in early De cember of 1886 is appeared as a light steel and wooden structure scarcely wide enough to allow two loaded wagons to pass. On February 3, 1890, it became known around Salem that the surging and flooded Willamette would reach 37 feet and know ing persons declared the bridge could not long resist the torrent. Ahead of Flood When the news reached Mr Edgar, then in Salem, he TP. solved to start for home and at once. The west anDroach was J. W. Edgar already deeply flooded and he paid 50 cents for skiff fare to get ashore. In less than an hour, at 1:40 p.m., to be exact, there was a snapping of timbers and a resounding crash at the structure folded into the seeth ing flood. Today a narrow road leading northward through Holman park steeply ascends the Eola hills to follow a route that was once used to reach Doak's ferry, later Lincoln, Even today the remnants form no part of a good road and in winter it is impassi ble, Sixty years ago it had that characteristic even in summ When a boy, Mr. Edgar drove four straining horses hitched to a threshing engine headed up the hill. Several men rode on the hillside to keep the rig from tipping over. Two or 300 yards up the hill young Edgar glanced into the ravine and there saw the wreckage of another thresh ing rig that had tried for the top of the hill a few days be fore. That outfit had tipped over and crashed 200 feet be low. Finally Edgar and his rig counterbalanced as it was by heavy men, reached the top. No One was Hurt Crossroads Methodist church stood where this road intersect ed the Popcorn road about three miles from Salem. E. F. Hos- ford donated the site for the church and cemetery. Mr. Ed gar, who first attended services here in the early 1870s recalls that the church was in use un til about 40 years ago. The Good Templars occupied up stairs quarters. About 50 years ago Mr. Edgar and another were frantically trying to finish opening a grave in the churchyard before funer al services were concluded. A rock, too heavy for both to lift out, was the big obstacle. Mr. Edgar's assistant had a bright idea. He dashed to his nearby home for an explosive and when he returned he had plenty of powder and a short fuse. Mr. Edgar expressed ekepticism about so short a fuse but that did not lenghten it and the hearse was due to arrive at any moment. So the charge was placed and the fuse lighted. Edgar leaped out of the grave and started for protection. His assistant jumped too buj. he stumbled and fell back into the grave where the smoking fuse was hissing. This was no time for procrastination. Edgar re turned to the grave and Citrus Fruit Lost by Hurricane Mrs. James Granere of Vero Beach, Fla., is surrounded by Indian River grapefruit blown from trees by the Florida hurricane. Estimates of total citrus losses throughout the great grovelands of Florida range from $20,000,000 to $30,000,000. (AP Wirephoto) tended his hand to his assistant, now frantically scrambling for another footing. In an instant he was out and in another in stant, with the pair less than 10 feet from the excavation, the charge exploded. Both were showered by dust and pelted by rock fragments. None was in jured. Even now, after 50 odd years, Mr. Edgar grows tense as he ap proaches the climax of that grave digging adventure. It came so near being a grave for three Instead of one. Clay Urges U.S. Lead Fight on 'Aggressor' Philadelphia, Aug. 30 UP) Re tired Gen. Luscius D. Clay, for mer commander of U. S. military forces in Germany, spoke last night at the American Legion convention. He urged the U. S. to lead the fight against the "ag gressor," which he never named. Clay addressed 700 persons at a banquet honoring Perry Brown, Beaumont, Tex., nation al commander of the Legion. He Crippled Vet Beaten Frank W. Chase (right) appears pen sive after being taken into custody by police at Montesano, Wash-, in connection with torturing and beating of his step son, Henry Chum, 29 (left), a one-legged air force veteran. The scars on Chum's body are plainly visible. Police said Chase confessed the beatings over a period of 18 months, said the motive had something to do with an insurance policy. (Acme Telephoto) . said the "aggressors will ever beiit Is dangerous for the aggressor a threat until it is evident that I to move from his own territory." Everything Can Be CLEAN- and ...SHINING' When You Shop Keith Brown for Polish and Cleaner Specials Nationally Advertised Brands Furniture Polish, 32 full ounces Floor Cleaner, one pint Glass Cleaner, 24 ounces Auto Cleaner and Polisher, 8 oz. ANY OF THESE 19c Very nifty for the thrifty and all at that convenient location . . . "VHT II -SJI BRownI ElTH LUMBER If) YARD, Final GAR Encampment GAR National Commander Theo dore A. Penland (left), of Portland, Ore., and GAR Chief of Staff Albert Woolson of Duluth, Minn., sat together in church at Indianapolis, Ind., and clasped each other's hands as World War II Chaplin Dr. C. L. Smith preached a sermon on "Faith of Our Fathers." Penland, 100, and Woolson, 102, are in Indianapolis for the final encampment of the GAR. (Acme Telephoto) A Plan that PAYS up to $5,600.00 for freatment of rPOLDO-1 Hnfantllt Paralyili) 8 and other Dread Diseases ENCEPHALITIS IlL.pIng Slchn.nl SCARLET FEVER TETANUS LEUKEMIA RABIES DIPHTHERIA SMALL POX SPINAL or CEREBRAL MENINGITIS ggrtgato far toch ponon Pays... Doctor bllli, hoipltol bllli, ipaclal nurio, ambulant. X-ray, radium, and elhtr thorapy. Blood tranifutlont, drug i and modlclnoi. Iron lung. Bract), crutchti and tram portal I on. Plus... Accidental Death Bontflt and Specific lot! Bvntffti. $5 on child $10 two or mora children $12 ontlro family lnuod by UNITED BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE CO. OMAHA, NIBRASKA THE FIRST COMPANY TO WRITE POLIO INSURANCE Secure this Protection . . , Moll this coupon today I UNITED BENEFIT AGENCY G. J. BECKER, INS. AGENCY 630 Marlon St., Salem, Ore, Phone J-8482 HAJM ) ateoram?) era 0 9a3to re i5 rtlsenangi ata 0 cttaaflu C S.Tyfe GOLDEN SLEEP' U These Features siMVrs 3 K QSD555te and $59.50 MoHre,,.,. J ANOTHER BUY OF THE YEAR f -ff Seoly Miracle Meih Construe- from ,. BM7V'J9V9n -fc Patented Sea jf Extra high-gi -j- Tailored Han ing Jc Pre-built Sag-Proof Border it 8 Large Air-flow Ventilators -4r Expert Sealy Craftsmanship if Comfort Engineered for correct Sleeping posture FURNITURE COMPANY 275 NORTH LIBERTY i ADOSMl- CITY i