6 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Saturday, Dee. 17, 1949 ..;...... .. ... What to Do When Lost Told In Pamphlet for Boy Scouts By FRED E. ZIMMERMAN V Not everybody can be a Boy Scout, but whoever desires can learn a great deal of how to behave if lost in the deep woods or rough mountain terrain by reading a little pamphlet issued by the Boy Scouts of America. Information similar to that in the booklet given Girl Scouts no "Tdoubt saved the life of Ruth Aberle, 16 year old Kelso girl. Aptly entitled "Lost, the booklet gives information as la procedure to be taken when one comes to the realization that he no longer knows his way back to camp or has become in volved in a losing struggle with the ridges and canyons of the mountains. In addition the pam phlets give instructions concern ing the formation and operations of searching parties. "Perplexed, bewildered, till he scarce doth know His right forefinger from his left big toe." This bit of jingle can be ap preciated by the person who has had the experience of being lost. The Scout pamphlet has sound advice in such instances. The first thing a person would do when he comes to the conclusion that he is temporar ily 'lost,' is to sit down quietly, relax and think it over for 10 minutes or more. This gives time to figure out a few things. Every woodsman and all authoritative books agree that sitting down for a spell is the first and best thing to do. As soon as the sur prise and panic abates, a little looking around and figuring may solve the difficulty." Then follows instructions for the search for a trail in the im mediate vicinity by blazing a tree on four sides and then circ ling this central point at a dis tance of 75 or 100 feet. Failing to locate anything fa miliar, the lost person should go back to the tree and make his decision as to the direction the way out lies. If darkness is ap proaching it is best to remain where you are until morning. Otherwise start at once on a giv en course after first picking a landmark. If the proper tool is available trees should be blazed on both sides. Otherwise branch es or bushes can be broken down as one proceeds. With the first landmark reached, a second which lines up with the starting point should be picked out and the process repeated. This will overcome the tendency to travel j in a circle. The advice, issued sometimes by experienced woodsmen to always follow a stream to ha bitation," is not always good. It is pointed out that streams fre quently flow into swamps or or drop Into box canyons where travel, If not impossible, often is extremely difficult. Realization that the night must bo spent in the open ne cessitates the selection of the best spot available and then col lecting fuel for a fire. Naturally this means dry matches. Exper ienced hikers usually carry a water-proof match safe. 'Go to sleep and don't worry about freezing, even if it is quite cold," Is the advice of the book let. "If uncomfortable you will wake up." Little dependence can be plac ed on the moss on bark, lean of tree tops and growth of vegeta tion in the process of determin ing directions. Moss doesn't al ways grow on the north side of the tree but will probably be thickest on the side which is most exposed. Search parties should be or ganized by experienced persons with state or federal forest rang ers or game wardens as the logi cal leaders. Unless they have been trained to follow human scent picked up from shoes or clothing, dogs are of doubtful value. If used, they should be kept leashed and handled by their owners. Experience has shown that youngsters come through a lost ' experience in better shape than grown persons. This is particularly true in instances where the individual being sought has had coaching In how to care for himself. In this con nection it is pointed out that-lost persons have been known to hide in fright from their rescu ers or to run away at their ap proach. Tho pamphlet "Lost" which is used as a class book in Scout camps is a highly informative booklet one that should be read by all persons who expect to stray off the beaten path or who may have an opportunity to search for some one. Daren Pierce, Lebanon art ist, who wins national recog nition in field of style and design. Daren Pierce Wins Acclaim Lebanon, Dec. 17 Daren Pierce, Lebanon high school art major graduate, is winning na tional recognition in the field of style and design. From his work in Dorothy Liebe's New York studio comes a recent design, featured in ma ny newspapers throughout the nation early in December. It is an after skiing costume of black jersey slacks with plunge neck line top and apron of pink yarn and metallics. It created a sen sation at the time of its first showing in New York. Clare Potter is putting out a modified version of the garment in a new line to be featured at Bullocks on the west coast and at Bonwitt-Tcller in New York. Fierce also designed the ski stole featured currently in the Dorothy Liebe collection in the New Yorker, being currently available at Meier & Frank in Portland. The young designer is the son of Mrs. Frances Slater, 413 Main street, Lebanon. Champ Junior Grower To Try Truck Farming Washington, Dec. 17 (U.R) The nation's No. 1 Junior vegetable grower, who made $10 an hour on his prize-winning potato patch, is going to make a career of truck farming. But 20-year-old Russell L. Sears, Jr., Cummington, Mass., says he's not going to marry a farmer's daughter. The "city girl" of his dreams is from Long Island, but he refused to give her name. A junior at the University of Massachusetts, Scars won a $500 scholarship first prize over BOO other youths from 46 states in the national junior vegetable growers association s $6,000 con test. Three other top winners in the contest also plan agriculture careers. J. M. Rodgers, Arvada, Colo., a 17-year-old freshman at Color ado A. and M., was winner in the west. He cleared a $202 pro fit on 15,600 square feet of his father's 1,365-acre Jefferson county farm and ranch. Astoria Teachers On Protest Strike Astoria, Dec. 17 IP) The ma jority of teachers at a grade school went on strike here yes terday in defense of their prin cipal. Eleven of the thirteen teach ers at Lewis and Clark grade school walked out. They signed a statement asking a hearing "to present our protest of the physi cal attack upon our principal Mr. Van, by Mr. Arthur John son, a member of the school board." Afton Zundoll, husband of a teacher, said he saw Johnson and Van outside the school Tuesday night in dispute over Van s re cording of the school board min utes. East Salem Groups Arrange Program With Xmas Flavor Fast Salem. Dec. 17 The annual Christmas parties are high lighting the social calendar in all East Salem communities thi? week, with garden cluDs ana extension unus ieaiuring aemon strations which brought to the members lessons learned by those who attended general demonstration by Eleanor Trindle last weeK. For the Christmas meeting orv ; i ' J ( ' ;T w1 ' '. F U ;& i I . J stf &r If Burned by Soup Rosclla Tomasello, 20-months, (left), was critically burned and her sister. Donna Lee, 3 , died when boiling soup was thrown on them in their home at San Jose, Calif. Their grandmother, Mrs. Rose Nicoletti, be lieved to have thrown the soup, was taken to Agnews State hospital for observation. The parents, Mr. and Mrs. Salva dore Tomasello, were prostrated with grief. ((P) Wirephoto.) the Lansing Neighbors Garden club held at the home of Mrs. Irvin Sion on Evergreen avenue three large door swags made by Mrs. Ben Rathjen, Mrs. Rex Peffer and Mrs. Merle Hann were displayed. A short busi ness meeting was conducted by the president, Mrs. H. W. Cole. Members voted to start tne club's library and Mrs. Robert Ballard was appointed as li brarian. Books will be kept at her home and the regular card system for use of the books be used. The secretary, Mrs. Ir vin Sion will sell markers for the members' gardens. The pro gram chairman, Mrs. William Marsh, supervised recreational games, and carols were sung with Mrs. Roy Lively at the pi ano. Marlls Hann, who came in after school, sang two carols. Attending were Mrs. Carl Set tler, Mrs. Marcia Aplet, Mrs. George Wilcox, Mrs. Rathjen, Mrs. Hann, Mrs. Phillip Bilkey, Mrs. Peffer, Mrs. Joe Zajic, Mrs. Marsh, Mrs. Cole, Mrs. Lively, Mrs. R. O. Anderson, Mrs. Rob ert Ballard, Mrs. H. L. Kemper, Mrs. V. P. Kremer, Mrs. William Hartley and the hostess. ... The Edina Lane home exten sion unit held a special party meeting Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Otis Bradbury. For the program a reading. "No Vacancy" was given by Mrs. F. D. Thompson; carols sang with Mrs. GeorEe Seymour leading and Mrs. Thompson at the pi ano. Winning the prizes for games were Mrs. Vernon Gil more, Mrs. Wallace Guthrie, and Mrs. Ray Condor. Corsages made by Mrs. A. J. Shea, Mrs. Drew Michaels, Mrs. H. O. Biski and Mrs. R. S. Heard were given each one present. At a late hour refreshments were served by the hostess to 25, with two special guests, Mrs. Conder and Mrs. H. F. St. John. Mrs. Albert Fabry was hostess for the Christmas party of the Merry Minglers club at her home in Salem. A dessert luncheon was served to Mrs. LeRoy Bar ker and Michael; Mrs. Earl Malm and Jan Louise; Mrs. Carl Sny der, Mrs. John Ackerman, Mrs Cleo Keppinger, Gay Lee and Tony; Mrs. Robert Pickerel Leogh and Sue Joe; Mrs. Ernest Barker, Mrs. Vicar Wagers, Mrs. Orlcn Kring, Mrs. Wade Carter, Mrs. Robert Fromm, Mrs. Henry Sprink, Mrs. Leonard Malm, Mrs. J. Irvin Wagers, Mrs. Clyde Colwell, the hostess and a guest, Mrs. Lynn Barker and Deborah. Gifts were distributed for se cret pals and names that were drawn. The women who have been members of the club in the past and the husbands of those who have died will be remem bered with Christmas greetings. The door prize was given Mrs. Henry Sprick. Middle Grove The annual Christmas program of the Sun day school will be presented Sunday morning at the school house. College Chorus of Over 50 Will Sing Oregon College of Education, Monmouth A chorus of over 50 voices will sing the tradition al Christmas songs at OCE's an nual Christmas vesper service Sunday, Dec. 18. The concert will begin at 4 p.m. in Campbell hall auditorium. The impressive entering march, lighted only by candles. and ' with the members of the choir in brand-new robes, will open the concert hour. Music for the processional will be "A Day of Joyful Singing" by Jackson. The choir is under the direc tion of Mrs. Florence W. Hutch inson, head of the department of music at OCE. Mrs. Denise Mur ray, music department instruc tor, will be the organist. George Harding, of the speech staff at OCE will be the reader for the responsive readings. The concert will be the first event at which OCE's new Bald win electronic organ will be used. HOT WORDS EXPECTED Will New Steel Prices Start Inflation on Its Fourth Round? By SAM DAWSON New York, Dec. 17 l) Steel prices went up. Will that mean that the price of autos, bed springs, refrigerators and baby's safety pins are going up, too? Has inflation started on its fourth round? There are going to be a lot of hot words exchanged over the hike in the price of this basic' commodity. Steel executives say higher prices of steel are simply tne price of security. The fourth round wage-price spiral this year concentrated on pensions. At the end of the steel strike the unions won company financed pensions. Steel companies say the cost of these funds must be added to the price of steel. Union officials contend steel company profits are so high that Chrysler to Put Out New Lines Detroit, Dec. 17 Wi Four lines of completely redesigned 1950 model automobiles will be introduced by Chrysler Corp. early next month. This was disclosed at a press preview of new Chrysler, De- Soto, Dodge and Plymouth mod els yesterday. They represent a Chrysler Corp. investment of $'23,000,000 in retooling and oth er production costs. Chrysler spent $90,000,000 in bringing out its first redesigned postwar cars. K. T. Keller, Chrysler presi dent, told newsmen that 50,000 of the new model cars will be completed before the year end. "Chrysler dealers throughout the country will have cars waiting for them," he said. Chrysler has built more than 1,200,000 cars and trucks so far in 1949. With increased produc tion capacity, Keller said, a high er rate of output has been made possible in all Chrysler divisions. They should count on reaching a daily output in excess of 7,100 cars early in the new year, he said. Of the various new models, Keller said all were new "from bumper to bumper." New grills, new front fender mountings, longer rear fenders and a new grouping of tail lights and stop lights are among new styling teatures. Elliott Roosevelt Gets Speeding Ticket Poughkeepsie, N.Y., Dec. 17 m Elliott Roosevelt got a speeding summons last night while driving through this com munity on his way home to Hyde Park, N.Y., from New York City. The summons is returnable to day before a justice of the peace. A Poughkeepsie radio car pa trolman said Roosevelt, second son of the late president, was driving 55 miles an hour in a 35-mile per hour zone. It is the second speeding ticket Roosevelt has been given here. He paid'a $10 fine July 27, 1948, for driving 50 miles an hour through a 35-mile zone. He pleaded guilty. the cost of the pensions could be absorbed by the companies with out hurting them. And they cite the president's fact-finding board's report on the steel labor controversy, which they inter pret as backing them up in this. Earnings of 21 leading steel companies in the third quarter of this year totalled more than $108.6 million, compared with $120 million in the same three months the year before. In the second quarter of this year earn ings were $123.4. Fourth quar ter earnings will be hit by the steel strike. But U. S. Steel corp. reports that its mills are now operating at 100 per cent of capacity, and its president, Ben jamin F. Fairless, thinks this pleasant state of affairs will probably last until the middle of next year, at least. The new price of steel was just announced. Manufacturers all over the country are inter ested perhaps even more this time than in any year since the end of the war. That's because this time they aren't so sure they can pass along to the customer, as they were able in the past, all -of the ad ditional cost to themselves of making their products. Competi tion is the factor they can't be sure about. The buyers' market has sent many of them scrambling to find ways to cut cut their prices, has sent all of them searching for ways to' cut their production costs. The rise in the price of steel will be a headache for every manufacturer using it. Automobile makers, using great deal of their product, will have to scan price lists for their new models again. The auto makers, still on the crest, are nevertheless nervous about how much longer it will be until com petition begins to nibble ser iously at the car price structure, too. The basing point problem will probably be given a new fillip also. Steel companies used to price their products with an eye of equalizing the costs to manufacurers whether they were near or far from the steel mills. The federal trade commission frowned on this practice, and the steel companies began pricing their products right at the mill and letting the distant customer pay the freight. The far-away customer didn't like it, naturally. A compromise on this dispute has been reported nearly work ed out. The west coast has long been eager to expand its growing iron and steel industry. New England has been agitating along the same line, with its eye on the iron de posits in Labrador. The higher steel prices go, the more interested steel custo mers will be saving whatever they can on freight charges. Freight rates have been going up, too. And that, along with pensions, is one of the reasons given for hiking steel prices again. If j Royalty on Skis This Shah of Iran, who is also a ski champ of Iran, discusses the sport with Sun Valley's ski ex pert Otto Lang (right). The young monarch, here on a good will tour, took time out to visit the winter resort and partake of his favorite sport. Sfafe Attorney's I Home Bombed Ppnria Tit.. TIpp 17 iJPi A bomb rocked the home of Mich ael A. Shore, Peoria county state's attorney, last night, shat tering windows and blowing a hole in one wall. Shore and a maid, the only persons in the house at the time, were not hurt. Shore said the blast mav have Deen "in retaliation for mv cracKdown on lawlessness in the county." The demnrrntir taf' oHnr- ney has attempted to clamp the iia on gambling since he took office a year ago. The explosive blaster! a hr.li. in Shore's garage, dining room ana Kitcnen. A window in neienDors nnusp aT.cn u,a broken. Detective Curt Hnoontt scribed the explosive as a black powder bomb. He refused to comment on whether he thought tne oomD was planted or thrown snore s wife. nr.lHv anj their two children FHu! ia and Barbara, 10, were attending la school Christmas program when the bomb exploded at tne rear of Shore's eight-room brick colonial style home on fashion able Crestwood drive. Willamina The Friendship club met at the home of Mrs. W. C. Tremblay. Exchange of Christmas presents was held dur ing the afternoon after a pot luck dinner. Attending were Mrs. O. K. Brock, Sr., Mrs. Clif- ' ford Rugg, Mrs. Karl Lentz, Mrs. Earl Richardson, Mrs. Roy Dur ham, Mrs. Frank Smelser and Mrs. Bessie Lamson and Mrs. Tremblay. FOR Insured Sayings I First Federal Current Dividend 2i 1st- Federal Savings and Loan Ass'n. 142 South Liberty SALEM TRAVEL AGENCY New Location, 153 N. High - Opposite Court House K. B. KUGEL Representing AH Air Lines - Steamships Special Mardl Gras New Orleans Rail Tour from S.F., Feb. 15th, 10 full days, Tucson, El Paso, Carlsbad Caverns, Biloxi, Natchez, Jurez. Everything except meals. Upper Standard $265. Round Trip Air from Portland to Honolulu $331.20. Full 9 day all expense tour, everything except meals only $371.20. 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