Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, September 20, 1949, Page 8, Image 8

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    8 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, Sep). 20, 1949
Solitaire in Bed
Enaineer's Gadaei Makes It Easier
K I
FUN IN BED wu (he objective of Engineer Meyer fiat
when he invented this board to help him play solitaire.
Santa Barbara. Calif. Bedridden and bored, a card-loving engi
neer invented a gadget which will enable people to play lolitaire
in bed, a wheelchair, or even a moving car.
The device, a square board with slot which hold standard
playing cards, rests on the player's lap. Thus the necessity of
having a flat playing surface is eliminated.
Meyer Katz, the inventor, said he has applied for patents and
will put the board into production soon. He calls it the "Boochie
board," named for his wife, Ruth, whose nickname is Boochie.
He plans to test the boards on patients in veterans hospitals
before putting them on the market.
Katz, proprietor of an electric motor firm here, got the Idea
while confined to his bed with a heart ailment.
"The long hours dragged," Katz recalled, "and reading got tire
some. I love cards, but couldn't play them. Then I conceived the
Boochieboard. '
Katz first designed a small board on which miniature cards were
used. But he now has a larger model for regular-sized cards. The
board has a series of horizontal cardboard slots running across it,
in which cards may be inserted in any arrangement. The cards are
held firmly in place regardless of the board's position.
AP Newsfeatures
Wheat Quota
Meetings Slated
"Meetings to discuss the 1950
wheat allotment will be held
September 22, 23 and 28," an
nounces W. M. Tate, chairman of
the Marion County Agricultural
Conservation committee.
These meetings, which will be
open to all who are interested
are scheduled for Stayton on
September 22, 8 p.m., at the City
hall; Silverton on September 23,
8 p.m., at the Washington-Irving
building; Woodburn on Sep
tember 26. 8 p.m. at the high
school auditorium.
These meetings will be spon
sored by the county committee
of the Marion County Agricul
tural Conservation association.
The main purpose will be to ex
plain the aims, background and
requirements of wheat allot
ments. In addition, the price
support program will be ex
plained and the soil conserva
tion program will be discussed.
Mt. Tate urges all who are
concerned with these matters to
attend.
Ohling Quits Polk Post;
Kansan Named Successor
Dallas. SeDt. 20 Robert M. (Bob) Ohling, Polk county exten
sion agent, under whose supervision 4-H club work has made
great gains during the past two years, has resigned his position
to accept another Dost as seed marketing specialist at Oregon
State college with the extension service, according to N, John
Hansen, agent in charge of the
Polk county office.
Stanley B. Fansher, graduate
of Kansas State college and vet
eran in 4-H work, will succeed
Ohling here. With Mrs. Fan
sher, he has already moved to
Dallas to begin his work.
Ohling came to Polk county
in December, 1947 Here his
principal duty has been shar
ing with the home demonstra
tion agent in the direction of 4-H
activities. During his time here,
completions of 4-H livestock
projects have increased 55 per
cent, from 137 in 1947 to 213 in
1948, Hansen states. Comple
tions in dairy projects have trip
led, and a 10 percent gain was
shown in the total number of
boys and girls enrolled in all
clubs. At the present time
about 700 are in 4-H clubs with
a total of 850 projects. Overall
total of completions in projects
has jumped from 67 percent of
those started in 1947 to 87 per
cent of those started in 1948.
Growth of interest in the
work is aso shown in county fair
exhibits, Hansen pointed out. In
1948 the fair had 96 4-H ex
moil and in 1948 there were
168.
Fansher was a dairy major a
Kansas State college. He was
born and raised on a dairy farm,
his brother is herd manager at
Biltmore Jersey Farm, Biltmore,
North Carolina, and an uncle
manager of Hallmark Farms
Kansas City. He was a 4-H club
member for seven yers and has
maintained a keen Interest in
the work.
During his college career, he
was a member of the dairy judg
ing team.
As an extra-curricular activ
ity, Fansher was a member of
the Kansas State college wtes
tling team two years and dur
ing his final year, served as cap
tain. He was Big Seven confer
ence champion in his weight
class, 145 pounds, and was high
point winner on his team both
years.
Fansher was married just re
cently and the couple has rented
the LaMoine Klauss home on the
Dallas-Salem highway.
Ohling will remain in the
local office until October 10
assisting Fansher with hi
Elizabeth Taylor
Breaks Engagement
Hollywood, Sept. 20 U Too
much distance resulted today in
movie star Elizabeth Taylor and
William D. Pauley, Jr., 28, break
ing their engagement.
Since the 17-year-old film
actress will be tied up here and
In Italy for some months on
picture work and Pauley is In
the east, they have ended the
engagement that was announced
In June in Miami, Fla.
Pauley, son of the former U.
S. ambassador to Brazil, said in
Virginia that he hoped the en
gagement cancellation would be
"only temporary."
Miss Taylor had no comment
other than to confirm wedding
plans were off. She is now mak
ing "The Big Hangover" for
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and has
a picture to make for Paramount
before going to Italy in the
pring for shooting of "Quo
Vadis."
Filbert Referendum
Deadline Sept. 23
A reminder to filbert grow
ers in the states of Oregon and
Washington that midnight, Sep
tember 23, 1949. is the deadline
for mailing ballots in a refer
ndum on a proposed federal
marketing agreement and order
program was issued this week
by W. M. Tate, chairman of the
Marion county agricultural con
tervation committee.
Any of the independent grow
ers who failed to receive a bal
lot by mall may obtain one, to
gether with a copy of the pro
posed marketing agreement and
instructions for voting, at the
county agricultural conserva
tion office, located at 440 N
Church street, Salem, or from
office of the county agent of the
Agricultural Extension Service,
203 Post Office building. Salem
9-Year Old Boy
Drowns in Pond
Hubbard, Sept. 20 Ralph Ed
gar Sherman, 9-year-old son of
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Sherman,
was drowned in a pond south
west of here shortly before 6
o'clock Monday afternoon.
The boy was with three com
panions when he slipped from a
raft upon which they were play
ing and fell into the water. The
other boys gave the alarm and
the body was recovered from the
water about 10 minutes later by
Clarence Friend, Hubbard fire
chief. Efforts to revive him were
fruitless.
Ralph was at the home of his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clar
ence Sherman, also of Hubbard,
while his parents are on a trip
to California. The body was
taken to the Ringo funeral home
in Woodburn.
- W ay
'Wi'
Tp-A- If i " lit fc.-.
TCJjiOregon Democrats Push
UYAaruoasrivieer in a. r.
San Francisco, Sept. 20 (U.I!) National democratic party lead
ers today predicted at their western states conference here that
the next Oregon delegation to Congress would include demo
cratic representatives for the first time in eight years.
National Committeeman Monroe Sweetland of Newport, Ore.,
'said that after conferences with
This Won't Hurt The prospect of an early trip to Guam to
see their father fails to convince Kenneth Kalbfleish, 3, or his
sister, Bonny, 14 months, of Fresno, Calif., that the shot to be
administered by Chief Hospital Corpsman P. L. Carpenter will
not hurt. Their mother, Mrs. Kenneth Kalbfleish, will accom
pany them to Guam where the father is a civilian employe.
(AP Wirephoto)
Teen-Age Gang Is
Taken Into Custody
Seattle, Sept. 20 U.R A teen
age gang that had committed
nearly 23 burglaries, eight auto
thefts and numerous car prowls
was taken into custody today
with the arrest of 10 boys and
one girl.
Officials said second degree
burglary charges would be ask
ed for the boys. The girl will
face a grand larceny charge of
cashing a $103 payroll check
allegedly forged by one of the
gang, officers said.
An investigation was started
Sept. 6 after one of the youths
was shot as he tried to escape
police after a burglary.
The gang members, all 17 and
18 years old, met regularly in
a downtown restaurant to plot
their moves, officers said.
Salem Academy Has
Enrollment of 232
Salem Academy, a West Sa
lem privately operated school,
enrolled 232 pupils Monday, the
first day for enrolling for the
fall term. Officials expected reg
istration to reach the 250 mark
later in the week.
The enrollment included 200
for high school work with the
balance , registering for junior
high classes.
Due to insufficient registra
tion, the plan to operate the
Christian grade school has been
bandoned for at least another
year.
duties and helping him to be
come acquainted here. Ohling
plans to sell his home at 911 Ash
street before he moves his fam-
new ilv to Cnrvallis.
Hermitage
Kentucky Wliiskeg -A Blend
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Vast Hydro-Electric Program
Outlined at Demo Meeting
San Francisco, Sept. 20 W) A vigorous program of hydro-elec
tric resource development in the west was outlined by department
of the interior spokesmen today at the western states democratic
conference.
Undersecretary of Interior Oscar L. Chapman defined the prob
lem as aimed at development of
land and industry; the use of
power to make up the rainfall
deficiency through pumping and
to make up deficiencies in ore
grades through mechanization
and electro processing.
"Wherever there is a gap be
tween the pants and the vest in
this resource development pro
gram, we must be prepared to
supply adequate power to bring
our activity up to our needs and
potentialities, Chapman said.
He said Boulder, Bonneville,
Coulee, Shasta, Parker and a
host of other existing projects
are no longer looked upon as
white elephants, even by our
most vociferous opposition."
"Hungry Horse, McNary, Da
vis, the American river projects
and a lot of other dams are un
der construction now without
ever having suffered from such
epithets," he noted.
We have proved one thing
these last 18 years: that our abil
ity to absorb kilowatt hours in
the growth and development of
this part of the country is un
limited.
We have shown that real de
velopment proceeds from mak
ing available amounts of elec
tric power of such greater de
gree as to constitute almost a
difference of kind from the en
ergy requirements that private
utilities heretofore assumed was
enough to satisfy western de
mands."
Another interior department
spokesman, Assistant Secretary
C. Girard Davidson, said "We
have not set up some theoretical
pattern to be followed willy nil
ly in every river basin. We have
frankly experimented with dif
ferent solutions that would fit
the different situations in dif
ferent watersheds."
Discussing western water de
velopment, Assistant Interior
Secretary William E. Warne
said 21,000,000 acres are under
irrigation and that feasible proj
ects make it possible to irrigate
approximately 20,000,000 more
acres. This would include wa
tersheds of the Missouri, the Co
lumbia, the Central valley of
California, the Colorado and the
Rio Grande. I
'Big Top' Late;
Circus Cancelled
Redding, Cal., Sept. 20 Ring
ling Bros. Barnum and Bailey
circus disappointed the kids for
the first time in 10 years Sun
day night when the scheduled
show failed to open here.
The "Big Top" tent itself fail
ed to arrive by rail from Ore
gon and circus officials were
forced to refund money to thou
sands of children and grown
ups from all over northern Cali
fornia. Animals, concessions and per
formers were all set to go when
officials announced cancellation
of the night's show. It was the
first time in 10 years, with the
exception of the disastrous
Hartford, Conn., fire, that the
show failed to "go on."
Cut in 'Merchantable'
Walnuts Proposed
Washington, Sept. 20 U.B
The agriculture department to
day proposed that 30 per cent of
this year's crop of "merchanta
ble" walnuts grown in Califor
nia, Oregon and Washington be
withheld from the market.
Merchantable walnuts are
those which meet certain grade
regulations set up under a fed
eral marketing agreement. Wal
nuts, as well as some other nuts,
presently are in surplus. The
marketing orders and accompa
nying regulations have been set
up to maintain better prices to
growers.
Under today's proposal, 70
percent of the merchantable
nuts will be sold into regular
commercial channels. The other
30 per cent can be diverted to
the non-competitive channels
which include sale of shelled
nuts, walnut oil or the export
trade.
Interested groups may submit
their views on the proposed di
vision of the crop to the depart
ment between now and Oct. 3
of 1.-,
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national and western leaders of
the democratic party, there was
no doubt "but that a resurgent
democratic party in Oregon will
wrest state control from the
republicans."
The Oregon delegation, pic
turesquely garbed in red log
gers' hats with wide bands read
ing "Oregon for CVA," attend
ed a special breakfast session
today on the subject of the
Columbia river valley adminis
tration. Assistant Secretary of
the Interior C. Girard Davidson
of Washington, D. C, and Port
land presided and officials from
Montana, Nevada, Idaho, Ore
gon and Washington also at
tended. Natl o n a 1 Committeewoman
Mrs. Nancy Honeyman Robin
son of Portland has been elected
as the new vice chairman of the
Western States Democratic Con
ference, a permanent organiza
tion. Mrs. Robinson was also
chosen to be the official hostess
for Vice-president Alben W
Barkley on his bay area tour
today.
The Oregon delegation,, sec
ond only to California in size,
numbered more than 60 persons. I
, It included State Treasurer
Walter J. Pearson; State Sena
tors Richard L. Neuberger, Aus
tin F. Flegel, Jack Bain, T. R.
Mahoney, and State Representa
tives Howard Morgan and Grace
Peck.
Officials of the Slate Grange,
CIO, AFL and Farmers' Union
were present.
Committeeman Sweetland said
that "the delegation has not
mentioned or discussed the ques
tion oi ine removal oi jvutte
linrt frnm thp nftir nf chiri(tW
of Multnomah county." 'tW.4v
Armed Forces Total l,07,40O
Washington, Sept. 20 U-
The armed force! had a com
bined numerical strength of 1,-
607,400 persons on Aug.
decrease of 9,900 from July :
the defense department announc
ed today.
Army strength was 655.500;
navy 444.200; air force 422,
000, and marine corps 85,700.
In 1948. more than 85 pounds
of steel wire were produced in
the United Statei for each per
son in the country.
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