14 Capital Journal, Salem. Ort.. Wednwday, Oct. 26. 1949 ALONG FABLED YUKON RIVER Rumors of New Gold Finds Sweep Through 'Rush' Camp By JACK DAUM (nirbinki N.w.-Mln.r euHir) FUhwheel, Alaska, Oct. 28 UP) Rumori that more nuggets had been found along the banki of the fabled Yukon river awept periodically through thia booming gold rush camp today. But attempta to trace the flndi met with a cagey ailence. Prospector! eyed one another auspiciously, unwilling to talk about their luck In panning tne- tram until they have tiled thir claims. Although the temperature it IS below and still falling, many of the early arrivals have begun panning for the precious yellow atuff all men aream aoouv. from their results we may know soon whether thia gold rush la destined to be remem bered along with the other fa mous ones of Alaska history. That is the opinion held by vet eran gold seekers who impa tientlv await each dawn to re new their hunt for the yellow metal amid the Yukon sands, Feverish activity up and down the river from last week's dis covery site 20 miles southeast nf Fort Yukon heightened its temoo as a report trickled through Flshwheel'a mushroom ing tent city. The word waa that a three- eighth inch nugget had been found. The nugget waa aald to have been accidentally pulled up in a miner's bucket from the bot torn of a water hole on the south bank of the river one-quarter of a mile from the original strike. Earl Hurst, veteran Alaska prospector, admitted he aaw the nugget, which he described as "good coarse gold. A trapper from Eagle, Charlie Biederman, also said he examin ed nuggets panned half a mile upstream from Discovery Island, on which Clifton Carroll first found pea-size nuggeta aa he dis mantled his water - propelled fishwheel. In neither case waa It pos sible to learn accurately who made the later discoveries. With aircraft atreamlng in from Fairbanka and Fort Yu kon, scorea of new prospectors arrived daily lured to the rim of the Arctic by the age-old hunt for gold. A second landing field was es tablished about five milea up stream from Discovery Island. Bush Pilot Jim Magoffin paced It off and dubbed it "Yukon Ice" airport, The Influx of gold seekers has doubled thia mining camp'a population from laat Saturday night's 75 More than 60 plane trips Into the area from Fair banks werf logged Monday, com pared to SO Sunday and 20 Sat urday, Even heavier aerial traffic Is expected witl two landing strips available. Heretofore, small aircraft bearing bearded pros pectors had only a Discovery Island sandbar on which to put down. It ia easy to separate the pro fessional from the amateurs. Oldtlmers veterans of strikes at Chandalar, Pedro, Fairbanks and Firth River go methodical. ly about the business of setting up camp, storing grub and kin dling their stoves. Then they find "color" In the river mud with a few swishes of their battered pans. Finally they begin staking out their claims. Color consists of min ute gold flakea without com mercial value. Newcomers usually are over equipped and are garbed In Arctic clothing with the unmis takable look of recent acquaint ance with atore shelves. They Invariably dash toward the first group of men they sight, ask directions and then plunge off across the Ice toward the tall enda of Fishwheel town either up or downstream In a ceaseless search for unclaimed ground which may contain gold. Monday night I saw men tome with sleeping bags too short for them, some with par kas, some with overcoats, some with pitifully inadequate cloth ng sleeping in tents and in the open as the temperatures drop ed to IS below zero. Things are easier for the vet erans who brought stoves and proper bedding. Many others are seeking more permanent shelter at Fort Yuk on, to which the "taxi" fee by air from the strike scene is $10 per trip. Youths Fail in Crime Atiempl Chicago, Oct. 26 Ml Four knife-wielding high school girls tried their hands at kidnaping and car theft yesterday but end ed up in the Juvenile home. They told Capt. Walter Healy that they were playing hookey from school and wanted an auto mobile ride because "it was such a nice day. Mrs. Dorothy Hurley, 41, wife of a packing company execu tive, told Healey the girls forced their way into her car in front of her southside home. She said one of the girls pressed "something sharp against her side and in structed her to drive west. About five miles away, she said, the girls showed her a knife with a three-inch blade and or dered her out of the car. Mrs. Hurley snatched the keys from the car and ran, screaming for help. Ihe girls also ran into an al ley but were seized by police. Police withheld names of the girls because of their ages, but they said one is 16 years old, the others IS. .w--'ar,'',rg!r "'."V-' If 1 i ""A o Sheridan Youngsters Will Parade Monday Sheridan A parade and treats for children at the Amer ican Legion hall will be offer ed aa a Halloween party October 31. The affair is under the joint sponsorship of the American Le gion auxiliary and the park rec reation committee. The parade, weather permitted, will start at 7:30 o'clock and refreshments will follow. The parade will have four sections with cash prizes for the winners of each. The first sec tion will be for pre school chil dren, second for the primary pupils of the first three grades, the third for intermediates in the fourth to sixth grades and the fourth for the upper grade pupils. Pleasantdale Mrs. Milton Murphy entertained eleven mem bers of the Aloha Needle club at the Pleasantdale community hall. Their own fancywork was pastime diversion. Refreshments were served. The next meeting will be at the same place with Mrs. Clarence Launer as hostess. I f ' a rw 7 m vu Bus-Truck Crash A doctor, nurse and rescue workers give first aid to a victim wedged in the wreckage of a Greyhound bus near Paoli, Pa., after the bus and a truck loaded with 33,000 pounds of sheet steel collided on the Lincoln highway. A sailor was killed and 31 others were injured, including sev eral sailors returning to their base in Philadelphia. State po lice said the bus crashed into the rear of the truck-trailer. (AP Wirephoto) Aurora Missionary Offering Is Lifted Aurora The Ladies Mission ary society of Christ Lutheran church, Aurora, met in the church parlors for its annual thankoffering service. Twenty three members and two visitors attended. The scripture lesson and devotions were led by Mrs. John Schwabauer, with "Giving Is Living" as the topic. Plans were made to collect clothing and various other supplies at the next meeting, to be sent to the Martin Luther Home at Sterling, Nebr., as a Christmas gift. Chairmen of the different de partments were urged to attend fall rally at Peace Lutheran church in Portland, October 28, a letter from Mrs. E. Rosin, read by the secretary. The thankoffering part of the meet ing was conducted by Mrs. L. J. Schwabauer, acting in the ab sence of Mrs. H. Mau, thankof fering chairman for the year. The program Included hymns by the members, songs and playlet. Thankoffering boxes were collected, followed by re freshments. Serving were Mrs. Ben Ingalls and Mrs. Norman Hurst. Stewart Family Has Reunion Gates Home Gates A family retunion was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Stewart, the first time the family had all been together for seven years. Those present were the hosts, Mr. and Mrs. El mer Stewart and three children, Mr. and Mrs. William Athey and family, all of Gates; Mr. and Mrs. Walter McKean and three daughters of O'Neal, Calif., Mrs. Loretta Fancher of Renton Wash, and Hugh Fancher and two sons of Issaquah, Wash, Mrs. McKean and daughters, Mrs. Fancher and Mrs. Athey, accompanied Fancher to Wash ington for a visit. Kiwanis Guests Grounded by Fog The Salem Kiwanis club pre sented its yearly "ladies night" dinner party at the Marion Tues day night with a score or more guests from Olympia, Wash., in attendance. Victoria, B.C., Ki- wanians did not appear as sche duled, the party having been fog bound. Governor Arthur B. Langley of Washington, a member of the Olympia Kiwanis club, was rep resented by Harold Van Eaton. The special guest list included a number of top Kiwanis officials of the state and presidents of other Salem service clubs. T. Harold Tomlinson, of Sa lem, lieutenant governor for dis trict No. 14 presided as toast-master. Entertainment was provided by a group of Willamette uni versity students. This Woman Paid to Gain Weight-Then to Lose It New York VP) Gaining weight with many women is a matter of self-indulgence and losing it is a matter of self-torture. But with Fay Suskind, putting on pounds ana men laKing them off is a matter of business. She is paid to do it Miss Suskind, a pretty, dark-eyed girl with fine background and a splendid foreground, has one of the oddest Jobs in an odd , uu gtomach and get lota of civilization. She Is a human guinea pig for the mechanical massage industry. It is my job to test the re ducing equipment," she said as we sat in the anteroom of one of the MacLevy slenderizing salons where she acta also as gymn supervisor. Three or four times a year I put on as much weight as I can, and then take It -off with massage rollers. We have machines for every place you want to reduce calves, hips, arms, back, waist or thighs. I test each machine by taking weight off myself." She keeps an elaborate chart during the whole process showing the changes in her own measurements as she builds her weight up. then takes it off, We went into the gymn, which was full of strange instruments and resembled a medieval tor ture chamber. There were two fat lady customers present. One was bent over a machine that kept thumping her in the stom ach mildly with a series of wooden rollers. The second fat lady was har nessed in a gadget that kept rolling several tightly-clamped elastic wire springs up and down her thighs. "Does it tickle?" I asked. "No, no, indeed," she said "It feels rather good." I took her word for it. Both plump ladies looked with a sigh of envy at shapely Miss Suskind, whose weight is now in the downward cycle. She explained that the most she had ever got her weight up to was 126 pounds, bu that now she was down to 108 and still los ing. "I can put on as much as 12 pounds in four weeks by eating candy and starchy things like spaghetti, noodles and mashed potatoes," sh- said. "When I'm gaining I always go to bed with sleep." This system Is harder on her husband than it Is on her. "He really doesn't like me to gain he wants me to stay slim," she smiled. "But he knows it's my Job." "And he doesn t suffer from it. He's underweight himself. He gets everything fattening to eat and has beer at every meal and still he doesn't put on an ounce." One aspect of Fay's Job might make it attractive to many wo men. She finds it necessary to maintain two complete ward robesone for the upsurge, one for the downbeat. "The advantage of mechanical massage," she said, "is that it enables women to remove fat from any part of the body they desire. 'It gives them control over their physical contours. The trouble with having to test different reducing ma chines, however, la that some times Fay may be required to slim her calves to Betty Grable size while leaving her hips In a Venus De Milo proportion. "But this is only temporary," she said. "Aa soon as I have completed the test, they let me get back into shape all over." All the patrons of slenderiz ing salons today aren't merely anxious to melt away blubber. "In case it interests you, she said, "we can build up the bust, too. Many women now are in terested in that." N. Y. Milk Strike Averted New York, Oct. 26 UP) Stoo page of milk deliveries to 11, 000,000 consumers in the metro politan area was averted early today by tentative settlement of a threatened strike of 15,000 milk drivers and handlers. The set tlement reached after 60 hours of almost continuous negotia tions and mediation requires ratification uy five locals of the AFL International Brotherhood of Teamsters. Rat-Proof Buildings Sought in Portland Portland. Oct. 21 UPl A new ordinance was being drafted here today to rid the city of rats. City Commissioner Fred L, Peterson estimated half a mil lion of the creatures could be de nied food and shelter if buildings were rat-proofed. The presump tion is the rodents would starve or go elsewhere. The code would cover moat of the warehouses, docks, food stores and commercial buildings. Major alterations would be re quired in some instances. Because of his early efforts with KDKA, Pittsburgh, the late Dr. Frank Conrad still ia rated as the "father of broadcasting." m ...as wm4't -thsfs PilES-NHCSS THI CONVINWNT, CHAM, EmaiNT fu& CAPITOL LUMBER CO. N. Cherry Are. Fbane 111(2 or I44S1 Lebanon Delegates Named for Conference Lebanon Three Lebanon de legates will attend the annual labor-management safety con ference In North Bend Oct. 27 28 for the pulp and paper in dustries. 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