10 OtpttaJ Jonrnal, Salem, Or.. Wednesday, Sept. 14, 1949Qf PQSITS ROSE DESPITE SLUMP ?j m s raw i ri,r 'a What's Average American in Earning, Owing, Spending? Br SAM DAWSON New York, Sept. I () You are always being told what you "the average American citizen" own, owe, make, ipend and ave. And, aomehow, it never seems to fit your own case very well. For Instance, there are federal reserve board figures to show that Americana as a whole owr. more "liquid assets" than ever before some $132 billion worth compared with $45 billion be fore the war. But at the same time you are told that ' the average spend ing unit", a family, had only $300 put away in liquid assets in 1048, whereas the year be fore It had $350, and in 1946 had $400. Liquid assets are savings you can turn Into cash easily when you need it, such as demand and time deposits In banks, savings and loan shares and United States government securities. Grocery Heir Weds Actress Huntington Hartford, ill, 38, grocery fortune heir, and his bride, Marjorie Steele, IB, actress and former nightclub cigarette girl, are shown in their Holly wood, Calif., home after he disclosed they were married . at Gardnerville, Nev. (AP Wirephoto) aREENSTREET, STONE TO JOIN GROUP 'Life Begins at 70' Club To Get Two More Stars Hollywood W.F9 Hollywood's "Life Begins at 70" club will ad nit two new members late this year. Sydney Greenstreet and Lewis Stone will celebrate their fOth birthdays during the fall. Then they join the three charter Tiembers of the club Lionel Barrymore, 70, Edmund Gwenn, rl. and Charles Coburn. 72. The quintet of veteran actors eere coincldentally all at Metro joldwyn-Mayer at the same ime, where they gave the young iters a lesson In trouping. Greenstreet and Barrymore corked together in "Malaya" with Spencer Tracy and Jimmy Stewart. Coburn acted with 31enn Ford and Janet Leigh In The Doctor and the Girl." jwenn worked with Lassie in Challenge to Lassie." And Stone pompleted "Stars in My Crown" ust In time to join Clark Gable nd Loretta Young in "Key to the City." The 280-pound Greenstreet Is the apprentice of the group. He played his first role only eight years ago. Tra still lust learning the business," he admitted. But be-' i 'Salesman' Capt. Leroy Simpler of navy public rela tions section tcllsnavy inquiry court probllng B-38 memo in Washington, that it was his Job to "sell" naval avaition to con gressmen. He said he and Ced ric Worth, the B-38 memo au thor, agreed "no airplane could be" as good as the air force claimed its B-36 to be. Sim pler said he arranged a meet ing between Worth and Rep. Charles B. Deane (D., N.C.) (AP Wirephoto) MM? ..is a hound's hot hi -that's PRES-T0-L0GS THI CLEAN, ECONOMICAL CONVENIENT FUEL fore he came to movies he ap peared on the stage for 41 years. Greenstreet performed with Sir Herbert Tree, Margaret An glin, Julia Marlowe, Viola Allen and the Lunts. He appeared in every Shakspearean play in the production repertory of recent years. He toured every major city in America, his native Brit ish Isles, and Canada, India, Ita ly, France, Malta and Africa. Only once, since he began act ing at the age of 21, has Green street given it up. "I decided to become a tea planter in Ceylon," he said. "But I found tea plants boring. I sold out and went back to the stage." And life really began, he add ed, at 62. That's when he came to Hollywood. "I find it full of exhilarating discoveries that make me feel younger every day," he said. The growth in total liquid as sets and drop in average hold ings becomes the more confus ing when you are told that last year three million families used up their savings, but the same rear as many more started nest eggs for the first time. It all adds up to the suspicion that maybe there isn't any aver age American. If you are one of the three million to have spent your liquid savings, you may have used them up when the cost of living was rising. But you may have put them into a home or other real estate or Into starting a business. That scarcely makes you a spendthrift. It does make you below average when it comes to compiling statistics. V Before you get too worried about the average holdings of liquid assets being lower now than in 1946, look at some other figures. There are S30 mutual savings banks in the United States. Their total deposits are just un der $19 billion, up from 10'A billion just ten years ago. There are more than 19 million de positors now, a gain of 3 mil lion in 10 years. During the first seven months of this year, while every one was talking about the slump, de posits rose $588 million. The number of depositors increased by 339,000 this year. At midyear Americans had $3V billion in postal savings and $56 billion in government saving bonds, more than ever before. Or look at life insurance, not counted as a "liquid asset". In the first seven months of this year Americans bought policies with face value of $13 billion (although the premiums they paid in did not total that much, of course). This was $172 mil lion more than purchased in the same period last year. Their total holdings at the start of this year were 70 per cent above that they held in 1940. Individuals time deposits in banks totalled $52 billion at the start of this year, compared with $24 billion ten years ago, the federal reserve board reports. Demand deposits topped $29 billion, against a little more than $7 billion ten years ago. The department of commerce puts total personal income last year at $206 billion. That is the total paid out in wages, salaries, net Income of unincor porated business, dividends, in terests, rents, and benefits from social insurance and veterans' pensions. The latest figures, for July, show personal income at an an nual rate of Just under $210 bil lion, a drop of $4.8 billion from July, 1948. The department averages the 1948 total out at $1,410 a person, a gain of 7 per cent over the previous year. gr' SECRET OF GOOD ACTING: 'Watch People Around You And Reaction to Daily Life' By PATRICIA CLARY Hollywood u.R) The secret of good acting, a famed drama coach says, is to observe life as well as see it. An actor must make a habit of watching the people around him and their reactions to daily life, Mrs. Batami Schneider says. Otherwise he cannot interpret them on the screen. And as well as knowing oth-- ers, he must know himself. "If people would stop WANTTO WINTES AIR CONDITION Tout home? Let us show tou the I T-t , MCW JUW'jUIllCU iJCl - 1 1 C, Oil- burning Conditionair compactly designed for installation in either basements or utility rooms where :e is limited I SALEM HEATING & SHEET METAL CO. 1085 BROADWAY Avthorhred RepresenfnfrV 0 'Roll Your Own' That's the latest craze at Palm Springs, and southern California heat has a lot to do with the idea. But it's bathing suits, not cig aretes, they're rolling. All you need is a silk scarf and a few deft twists here and there and presto! Caren Babbcock (above) shows the r esult. (Acme Telephoto) Chances are there were few persons who made exactly $1,410. But if you are one of these rare Individuals, that makes you the average Amer ican. How did you manage on that? j and think about the underlying rea sons for their actions," she said "there would be far less dissen sion in this life." Mrs. Schneider, who started her theatrical career with the Habama Players of Moscow and Palestine, and was with Stanis lavsky, has been working for the last 11 years helping stars of the theater in their dramatic inter pretations. Samuel Goldwyn brought her to Hollywood to coach Joan Ev ans for her movie debut in "Roseanna McCoy" and kept her to help another find, Phyllis Kirk, with her first screen role in "Beloved Over All." "I don't try to give specific instructions for any one role," she said. "I work more on per sonality and imagination and cultivating inner poise. I want to develop a confidence so that when an actor eventually stands in front of a director he will be able to do what is required of him." Her rules for developing per sonality and poise, she added, apply not only to stars but to any person. They are: 1. Know yourself. Find the reasons for your actions. They will give you poise. 2. Observe life. Watch others and their reactions. 3. Develop your imagination. It is food to nourish your per sonality. 4. Be eager to learn new things. They will broaden your life. 5. Be warm and friendly to others. That will give you a per sonal magnetism which will help you reach any goal. Fall Info Wafer Pool In Yellowsfone Fafal Yellowstone National Park, Wyo., Sept. 14 UP Burns re ceived when she fell into a Yel lowstone park hot water pool were fatal yesterday to four-year-old Karen Anderson of Grand Coulee Dam, Wash. Park officials said she tum bled into the pool after breaking away from her mother, Mrs. Theodore Anderson. Karen was taken to a hospital at Livingston, Mont., where she died of second and third-degree burns. Her father is a reclamation bureau employe. Pupil Plans Changed Woodburn Pupils of the sev enth and eighth grades will be transported to the Washington building and not the Belle Passi school a.1 previously announced. Sixth grade pupils will be tak en to the Belle Passi school. Oleo Tax Repeal Delayed Washington, Sept 14 W Sen ate Democratic leaders today shelved until January the ques tion of repealing oleomarga rine taxes. Senator Lucas (D.,-I11.) an nounced after a party policy committee meeting that there was unanimous agreement that the issue should not be brought j up in the senate until the next session of congress. I Salem Nursing Home Newly Decorated 24 hour nurse service Dignified Courteous Service to all types of patients. Call at 3595 "D" Street, Salem Hare's all you have to do to be eligible to win In WHITE MAGIC SOAP'S TELEPHONE QUIZ Just answer 2 easy questions If the White Magic Soap Quiz Man calls you on the phono. an ADDITIONAL a qvtstlon which will pertain te some perils el the printed matter en e pack age ef White Magic Seep. Q QUESTION OF THI WEEK. 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