WATER FOR WEST COAST 'Oceans of Food' Await Man to Find Them Cheaply By pail r. elms New York U. The world today has "oceani of food" that hive never been tapped. Furthermore, according to Dr. Werner Bergmann, Yale Uni versity chemist, the oceani and seas in the not too distant future may be a lource of new "wonder drugs," medicine that may even exceed the poweri of peni- - cillin and the sulfas. I i Bergmann believes salts and minerals should be removed from the sea water so that new sup plies of fresh water will be a vailable for Industrial and farm use, especially n 7"" Eugene in 1946. Last year's re and some sections of the West ,H u,-.j,, ,., .."... Coast. Three past presidents of the af fair and a member-at-large, as yet unnamed, make up the gov erning board for the Timber Carnival association. Scharpf came to Albany from cord breaking event attracted more than 150,000 to the Wav- 3 and ., , j erly lake site on July 2, Bermann recently reported . ' becoming acute on the West ,) Danfhter Finds Father Mel DeCovey, cafe owner of San ose, Calif., and his daughter, Mrs. George R. Schwoob, Butte, Mont., art re-united after 31 years. They were separated in the flu epidemic of 1918 and believed each other dead. Grand pa now has two grand-daughters, Marjorie 14, (in rear) and Lorna, 6, on his lap. (AP Wirephoto) AMERICAN DOLLAR SETS THE PACE , That Green, Folding Stuff Is Mighty Popular These Days By CLARK BEACH Washington Those rectangular green pieces of paper you tarry in your pocketbook are just as popular as any commodity In the world today. When proud old nations knuckled under and devalued their currencies to make them worth less in terms of the American dollar, the young American greenback really came into its own. Once upon a time it "wasn't worth a continental." That was when the Continental congress turned out 210,000,000 on print ing presses during the American revolution. In terms of gold and other nations' money, the con tinental dollars were worth only a fraction of their face value. The dollar got on its feet when congress, after the consti tution had been adopted, estab lished the present monetary sys tem in 1792. Congress began coining dollars at the Philadel phia mint in 1793. They were all metal coins gold eagles (worth $10) and fractions of eagles, silver dollars and fractions of dollars and cop per cents and half cents. The federal government did n't turn out any paper money until the Civil war, when "greenbacks" were first issued. Banks operating under federal or state charters issued notes as currency and much of the pa per eventually became badly de Dreciated in value. There was great hullabaloo when the government made greenbacks legal tender, requir ing that they be accepted in pay ment of debts. People are in clined to be distrustful of paper money, and even today folks don' like to handle it in some towns in our western states. But the dollar managed to hold its own in relation to gold and the mighty British pound Through most of our history the pound has been worth about $4.86. After the first World war it began to slip. In 1920 the pound was worth only $3.66. It was back to its normal $4.86 by 1930. But in 1932 it dropped to its lowest point up to that time, to $3.50 in U.S. money, Then it fluctuated wildly. In 1934 it reached the highest va lue of which the federal reserve system has a record, $5.03. In 1941 it sold for $4.'03, and that was its official rate until the recent devaluation sent it down to $2.80. The reason for the rise of the dollar in relation to the pound is primarily America s new po sition as a creditor nation. For more than century we bought more from the rest of the world than the world bought from us. But in about 1926 we became the world's investment banker. Now we have so many things that the world wants to buy that our dollars are in un precedented demand, throwing other currencies off balance. The word dollar was in gen eral use before our government adopted it. One or another form of the word designated many kinds of European currency. It came from the Greek word tha ler. In Dutch it was the Daalder. In German it was the taler. Spanish "pieces of eight" were called dollars. The dollar sign also was In use before the Revolution. It is be lieved to have designated the Mexican peso. It was first writ ten "Pi." Later manuscripts show the "P" superimposed on the "S" which seems to be how we got the dollar sign. Today there are about S3 bil lion dollars in the world. About 28 billion of them are in circula tion. Most of the rest are held in the U. S. treasury. There they are in the custody of Mrs. Georgia Neese Clark, treasurer of the United States, whose signature also appears on all paper money now being pro duced. Another woman, Mrs. Nellie Tayloe Ross, for 16 years has been in charge of the manufac ture of all U.S. coins. As direc tor of the mint, she has in that time turned out about $1,028, 000,000 worth of metal money. There's another interesting fact about women and American Dwarf Cattle Sold in Billings Billings, Mont., Oct. 20 A Montana state brand Inspector said a herd of dwarf cattle the owner claims he discovered in a lost canyon" actually were pur chased in Billings. Brand Inspector H. H. Harmon said a bill of sale for two cows and three bulls Gene Holter of Jamestown, N. D.. said he took from a "lost canyon" by helicop ter, is on file at the brands' in spection office at Helena. Har mon said brands tattooed in the dwarf cattle's ears also were reg istered when the brands were inspected at Billings. The brand inspector said the five animals, ranging from 24 to 28 inches in height and weighing 160 to 220 pounds, were shipped trom Billings to Roundup, Mont, and then to Jamestown. The midgets were bred by Kendall Shaules of Ballantine, Mont. They were registered Herefords. Shaules said dwarfs are a com mon occurrence among Hereford and Angus cattle and definitely are on the increase." He ex plained the phenomenon as 'breeding accident." The breeder said the bull and five cows who produced the dwarfs had normal production records, otherwise. Coast and the use of ocean water is seriously being explored." Science already has accom plished the trick of taking salt from salt water, but on a small and expensive scale. The solution, according to Bermann, "would be to derive both minerals and the water from the oceans." Also the sea water contains small organisms known as plankton food that the fish, in cluding whales, eat. He said it was not too remote that man some day may be eating plank ton "burgers." Bergmann estimated that there are 300,000,000 cubic miles of water in all the oceans and that if "we could dry out one such cubic mile of water, we- could get a mountain of salt, contain ing 117,000,000 million tons of common salt." Besides the salt, Bergmann says the following could be taken from a cubic mile of sea water: Six million tons of magnesia, 4,000,000 tons of potash, 300,000 tons of bromine, 2,200 tons of iodine, 200,000 tons of borate, 900 tons of iron, 450 tons of cop per, 70 tons of uranium, 15 tons of silver, and a nice hunk of gold." For the time being, according to Bergmann, land resources of metals are holding out and no "ocean mining is necessary. However, some countries in the world may start tapping the ocean to avoid importing materi als. One day, he believes, coastal and near coastal stretches of desert may be converted into "productive lands" as a result of turning salt water into fresh Scharpf said his biggest aim for the 1950 show is to make it a community project, and that an attempt would be made to streamline and speed up lake events, capitalizing on the ex periences of this year, when a record number of contestants entered the world and regional championship contests. Scharpf succeeds Larry Roth, president of the 1949 affair. Canada Gas To Be Piped Ottawa, Oct. 20 (CP) The Canadian senate transportation committee gave quick approval today to a bill incorporating a new pipeline company to pipe natural gass from Alberta to the British Columbia coast. Expected heavy opposition to the application failed to materialize. The company Alberta Nat ural Gas company plans to route its line through southern British Columbia to Vancouver Though a petition opposing the incorporation had been filed earlier with the senate by West coast Transmission company, al ready incorporated for the same purpose, this opposition was not pushed actively at today's hear ing. Most likely route shorter and about $20,000,000 cheaper would be through the United States. It would serve Trail and other B.C. points before cross ing the border at Kingsgate, B.C., and would end at a point half way between Seattle, Wash., and Vancouver. It would serve Seattle and Tacoma, Capital Journal, Salem,Ore Thursday, Oct. 20, 194927 Wash., Portland, Ore., and vari ous Canadian points in the area. The committee now will hear from a third group which seeks to incorporate under the name of the Prairie Pipe Line com pany for the same purpose. A bill to incorporate the company passed second reading in the' A kV senate yesterday and wa refer red to the committee. The lowest temperature rec orded on earth was BO degree! below zero on Feb. 5 and 7, 1892, at Verkhoyansk, Siberia, U. S. Weather Bureau report show. BEST YOU'VE EVER TASTED, Economical Tool Scharpf to Direct I HOOD RIVER 1 wmm Hi 1 "are on the increase." He ex-.. . , - .. BRAND uomJ- I .. f plained the phenomenon as . ffeXT I MlDCr laMIVal I J "breeding accident." A DDI C It.,' ' : The breeder said the bull and c Alba,ny-B'U ScTharp'' of tne All LC J M ' ' ' I . . . t Scharpf Brothers Lumber com- , .,m i ' r I five cows who produced t h e pany wa, named president of -.-.- rtrrfrr777?f77Z' " , J dwarfs had normal production the 1950 Timber Carnival by I III E 19 tkT fTfl'ir?lM " " . ' J records, otherwise. the board of directors of the W I star Ell m ' rTM ' V ' ,, parent Albany Junior Chamber J l" '' money. The Institute of Life In- ' Commerc. Oscar Swenson, iliFi'VUTi!!?'-! -A surance ha. e.timat th.t in Jaycee PrMident, announced. APPU GROWERS ASSOCIATION 1 TWBSSISSnnE t ' 4 I surance has estimated that 70 Basil Ryals was elected vice- . mood n...ot won J- J J per cent of the nations private president; Ray Wells, secretary; V V ' r wealth is controlled by women, and Paul Brown, treasurer. .mm Measure-Pak V ( X frV !4 lb. prints kM A 'fSfe-T MAKES COLORING A BREEZE! XvIlCS1' tTHri!. i You don't have to break up aaolid block before you begin I I LASs5 twu NJL.':'v" I , .. it reachei the right mixing temperature faster and I iNLfn A D I M F I ' ' 1 IL -fe moreevenly ...and ifaeaaier to distribute the pure color fnii A R l AR I I X AwL r wafer evenly, right at the itart. Bowl-mix two pounds of '-r, CnMpQ...,.. 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