To Around World the 30-loot homemade sailboat will shortly leave Paris on a' Sail r ''Tide of Toys' Sweeps Pier; Europe's Children to Benefit Philadelphia, Jan. 3 VP) A Delaware river pier is groaning today under a steadily mounting pile of picture books, dolls, blocks and cowboy suits bound for the Children of Europe. The flood of playthings is the nation's response to the Amer ican Legion's "Junior Marshall provide toys for European chil-- dren born during or atter World War Two and (2) by so doing combat communist propaganda. Officially designated the "Tide of Toys," the project got under way the day after Christmas and was originally scheduled to end Jan. 7, 1950. The response has been so great, however, that Legion of ficials announced the final date for shipment of toys to Philadel phia has been extended to Jan. 15. All the nation's children have been asked to participate by sending new toys or cash contri butions. Each toy should have a letter attached from the young donor. While the primary appeal was to children, toys and money have been flowing in from churches, youth groups and civic organizations. Local American Legion posts are aiding in the collection while distribution of the gifts aboard will be handled by the CARE organization. Gifts may be shipped direct to me simei nan ucgiun, x iti South, Philadelphia. Toys which are fragile or difficult to pack should be avoided, the legion said. Electrical playthings also are of little value because they can not be used in many sections of Europe. And above all else, Legion officials warned, do not send any war toys such as toy guns, tanks, planes or metal oldlers. Edward P. McGinnis, Legion director of public relations, said one million toys are on their way to Philadelphia from Cali fornia alone. Several states, including. Ar kansas, Connecticut and Virgin "Tide of Toys Days," while Pennsylvania's Governor James H. Duff endorsed the campaign In a recent statement. "Response to the Legion's ap peal has been literally over whelming," said McGinnis. Ev erywhere in the nation we are seeing demonstrations of enthu siasm. Our Tide of Toys for Eu rope's children may well be come a floodtide." Speaking of communist at tempts to discredit the Marshall plan in Western Europe, McGin nis said: "A shipload of toys from our children to youngsters in Eu rope will help offset this line of propaganda. The time to mold the minds of people is rwhen they are young enough to be without prejudice." The toys will be distributed Milk Re-dislribulor Bob, a retriever, of Fort Atkinson. Wis., is caught with the evidence after neighbors found bottles of milk missing Irom the stoops of their homes. -Marcel Bardiaux works aboard Four Winds with which he cruise around the world. Plan" a drive designed (1) to in Great Britain, France, Italy, Belgium, Holland, Norway, Ger many, Austria, Greece, Czecho slovakia, Finland, Poland, and Yugoslavia. As far as possible, McGinnis said, the toys will be given to children born during or after World War Two because they have never known a Christmas "such as we enjoy." Toys for distribution to Euro pean childden will be shipped by all three Salem American Le gion posts. John C. Kerrick commonder of Capital post No 9, announces that contributions are being received at the Le gion club house at present. Ken neth Potts, commander of Sa lem post No. 136, has called special meeting of the executive committee for Tuesday night to plan details for the campaign. with Bert Walker, second vice Women of Pacific Give Vet Idea to Create 'Charm Guild' By JAMES W. HART (United Prejw Staff Corrupondent) Pittsburgh, Jan. 3 U.B) Alan Michel, a 28-year-old veteran of the Pacific war, had a five-year dream fulfilled the day he sat down for the first time at his impressive desk in the offices of Charm Guild, Inc. "I'm putting beauty on a production line," he said. "I've been thinking about it for years. Ever since the first time I saw a native woman in the South Pacific." Charm Guild is a combination beauty salon, modeling school, fashion center and portrait photographer's. A woman can buy the latest fashion clothes there or get any beauty treatment she wants. She can attend Michel's modeling school or have her picture made And she can do all at the same time. One of the unique things about Michel's business is that a wo man, bedraggled after a day's shopping, can go in for a portrait and still look like a movie star when she gets in front of the camera. She can have her hair done and her eyebrows plucked, get a facial and the proper make up and be dresse din the latest fash ion clothes. A trained teacher of models will help her pose for the picture. After the portrait is made, she can change back into her own clothes and go home. All for no extra charge. Michel got the Idea for his business in 1944 when he went l j, if h ' i -'!" 'Aunt Jemima' of Radio Fame Dies New York, Jan. S W) Miss Tess Gardella, 52, "Aunt Je mima" of the stage and radio, died early today in an ambu lance en route to a hospital. Miss Gardella, a huge woman who weighed more than 400 pounds, lapsed into a diabetic coma at her home last night. Miss Gardella won widespread fame as a black-face ''Aunt Je mima" on the radio and in vau deville. In 1936 she won a verdict of $115,000 in Brooklyn federal court against the National Broadcasting company, General Foods, Inc., and Log Cabin Products Co. She charged other entertainers using her profes sional name were hired in her place by NBC. Montana in 'Deep Freeze' Helena, Mont., Jan. 3 (U.RI Montana was in a deep freeze again today. The arctic ice box poured cold air over the state, sending tem peratures to a seasonal low far below zero. Thermometers recorded these lows early today: Cut Bank -42, Havre -36, Great Falls -33, Lewiston -21, Billings -19, Livingston -18, Kal ispell -13, and Missoula -9. The federal weather bureau saw little hope for above-zero temperatures in Montana today and predicted another nose dive tonight. Temperatures are expected to begin rising tomor row. Jap Mine Detonated Moclips, Wash., Jan. 3 tm A Fort Lewis demolition squad detonated a horn-type Japanese mine on the beach a mile north of here yesterday. Coast guards men from the Grays Harbor life boat station stood guard over the explosive for 21 'A hours be fore it was destroyed. commander of the post, in active charge, assisted by Peery Buren. Miss Susan Faharty, commander of Pioneer Post no 149, says her group will cooperate but that nothing has been done because of her absence from the city, re turning home only Monday. overseas as a lieutenant in the navy air corps. "Our PBM's operated from seaplane tenders," he said, "but we hit a lot of islands, too. We'd just set down at a likely-looking spot. "Sometimes, we'd find an is land that was inhabited. You've heard the gags about native wo men looking better every day that you spend in the islands don't believe a word of it. They look worse every day." A lot of the time Michel spent in the Pacific was given to anti submarine warfare and air sub port for invasions. But during the long, lonely hours that fight ing men spent just sitting and waiting, he thought of a sub jeef'that has always been dear to my heart. Beautiful women." "You have no idea how hor rible some of those natives could make themselves look," he re called. "Especially on Borneo. They sprinkled ugly powders in their wrinkled unkempt hair. They dyed their bodies and scar red themselves. They did the darndest things to themselves. After looking at native women for a few months, Michel reached a decision. 'I promised myself that when I got home, I was going to do everything I could to make A merican women ever more beau tiful than they already were. "You might say I felt like i crusader. I wanted to dedicate myself to beauty in women." When he was discharged from the navy at the end of the war, Michel studied business adminis tration at the University of Pitts burgh. In June, 1949, he was graduated and started looking around for business prospects. He consulted a beauty parlor operator who had been well known in Pittsburgh for 18 years. Together they developed his plans. "The thing began to snowball,' Michel said. "Every day we talk ed about it, it seemed to get a little bigger." Beauty to Michel is more than just having the proper clothes and hair-do. He thinks women should have poise and "an air of regality about them." Hence the modeling school. The photo grapher was just an added ser vice. But Michel is more than just a crusader. He Ihinks he's got a pretty good idea for making money, too. Oldtimers Get Together Reginald Denny, Claire Windsor (left) and Mae Murray join movie stars of yesteryear who met in Hollywood to celebrate the anniversary of "The Squaw Man," the movie capital's first feature picture which Cecil B. DeMille said he started in 1913. How About Hollywood Scandal Story That's Strictly a Dream By BOB Jan. 3 () Let Hollywood dream. The mind doctors say that dreams relate to actual experience. I can believe that. Because I think this dream is the result of questions that I am often asked by actors. Such Questions as:: 'Why is the press always concerned with!six Miners Killed Hollywood scandal? Why don't columnists print more nice things about Hollywood? Why are film critics so critical? " Anywhere, here is my dream: Once upon a Christmas, every correspondent in Hollywood was gifted with a gaily wrapped white box. Inside the box was a bottle of champagne and a card which said, "For a Happy New Year's eve S. Genesius." Who is S. Genesius?" one cor respondent asked another. "I think he s an independent producer isn't it Sam Genes ius?" "Yeah, I think so." So on New Year's eve, every correspondent in Hollywood poured the champagne and toast ed big-hearted Sam Genesius, the independent producer. Now it so happened that the gift giver was not an independent producer, but was actually St. Genesius, the patron saint of ac tors. And the champagne was not pure. It contained a magic po tion of good will. And when the correspondents wrote their columns on New Year's day for columnists must work on holidays, too they could write nothing bad about Hollywood and its people. Their copy was nothing but sweetness and light, bristling with the good deeds done by stars. And all the pictures they reviewed were beautifully-acted hits. After two weeks of this, edi tors began peppering the cor respondents with demands to "get on the ball! Cut out this sob-sister stuff!" Then the public became arous ed. Crowds marched on the newspaper offices and hurled rocks through the windows. The harried editors finally fired all the good-will correspondents and hired new ones. And so the new correspond ents began writing the kind of copy that people wanted and everybody was happy again. Everybody, that is, except the actors and St. Genesius. Charlie Meyers Fails to Make Fuss Over His 11 0th Birthday Tomahawk, Wis., Jan. 3 (U.PJ Few people ever get a chance to learn what being 110 years old is like, but Charles Meyers says it "feels Just like always." Meyers celebrated his 110th anniversary. He announced he was still in the peak of condition the time." The aged Wisconsinite, who still likes to get up early for a little fishing, took time out on his birthday to comment on how the world looked from the vantage-point of a century and a de cade. On modern war "one of these days those scientist guys will blow up the whole shebang with their atom bomb." On work "a lot of hard work shouldn't keep a guy from enjoying life and living a long time." On modern inventions "auto mobiles are nothing but a nuis ance and I don't have any use for airplanes, either." On Wisconsin "it ain't no better than any other state, but it ain't no worse, either." rfiastji Chew Steak, IttETHj) Corn Appes! Ar you unluppr becaufct your ftlM Mtta lUp? Then trr BTAZX, rsmorkobla new orMm kn hand tuba. BTAZ anablas thouatndi to ixln blu JOToutly Into Julnjr itesk or n t enrn nn , .... lipping. sTAzs noidn pii tiihwr. i eu i food I pMtieioi. ot inaauai IM THOMAS me tell you about my holiday Vienna, Jan. 3 (A1) The Aus trian press agency reported to aay mat at least six miners were killed and eight others in jurect oy a gas explosion in a coal mine in the British occupa tion zone of Austria. Other re ports, which could not be imme diately confirmed, said an esti mated 40 persons were trapped in the mine behind fallen tim bers and coal. The explosion re portedly occurred at Fohnsdorf, in Styria. 'Any Girl Can Says Betty Who By PATRICIA CLARY Hollywood, Jan. 3 (U.R) Any Grable contends. The movie glamour queen says a girl who started as Dracula's daughter could end up rating whistles if she took the time and trouble. "The only question," she said "is whether it's worth it." Miss Grable, who needs take no time or trouble to be glamor ous herself, explains that lots of glamour can be manufactured artificially on the assembly-line factory in operation at movie studios. "But this is an ordeal that very few women would put up with, especially as a daily' rou tine, unless they had to," she said, A movie queen spends hour with a hairdresser, an hour with a cosmetician and a long, long time getting fitted for clothes. "No wonder she comes out looking shipshape," Miss Grablei said. "Who wouldn't?" Miss Grable goes through the: routine herself every day for her movie, "My Blue Heaven," j at 20th Century-Fox. But off the screen she bothers with nothing more than a slap of lipstick, a two-minute hairdo and casual ) sports clothes. ! The lucky Miss Grable still; looks glamorous. Most females "but I sometimes lnse track of Meyers lives on his 51-year-old daughter's farm near here. He still helps around the farm and spends his spare time read ing western and detective thrill ers. Germany's U-21 was the first submarine to sink an enemy ship on the high seas. NAN ttfllff For Stuffiness, Coughs of Colds you know like millions of others how wonderfully effective Vicks VapoRub is when you rub it on. Now. ..here's amazing, special relief when there's much coughing or stuffiness, that 'choked-iip" feeling. It's VapoRub In Steam . . . and it brings relief almoit instantly! Put 1 or 2 spoonfuls of VnnoHnh In a vaporizer or bowl of boiling water. Then breathe in the soothing, medicated vapors. Every breath eases coughing spasms, makes breathing easier. And to prolong relief rub VapoRub on throat, chest and back, UiO it In it eam . . . Rub ' Rape of Child Starts Man Hunt Lynn, Mass., Jan. 3 The raping of an eight-year-old girl under circumstances which had some fciiTiilarity to a fatal sex at tack on a Lynn beauty eight years ago, touched off an inten sive manhunt today. Lt. Edward Rny said the child, whose name was withheld, was raped in woods in which Frances Cochran, 19, was slain in July. 1941. After the attack yesterday on the child, she was driven back to a spot near the former home of the Cochran girl. Ray quoted the youngster as saying a man in a new car" of fered her a ride to the home of a playmate but took her instead to woods near the Salem-Lynn line. The child furnished police with a description of the man who left her out of his car a mile and a half from her home, Ray said. She was treated at Lynn hos pital by physicians who said she had been raped. Be Glamorous Ought to Know girl can be glamorous, Betty wouldn't. "I think infinite attention to every detail will make any wo man more glamorous, she said. "A woman who is perfectly groomed, who has a neat and be coming hair-do, a clear skin and shining eyes has glamour whe ther she's beautiful or not." Miss Grable contends it's the working girl or co-ed, and not! the professional charmer, who i deserves to be complimented on 1 her looks. , "Chances are she can spend only a few minutes on primn-, ing," the star said, "but she comes out looking as provoca-' tive as many a movie queen." Everyone Knowi Only Caterized Oil Leaves CARBON! NO SOOT! 35622 or 35606 SalPm. Riclmiv. C.l.rlied Oil De.l.r Howard J. Smalley Oil Co. 1405 Broadway lAdvcriwiir Druggists' Prescription For Relief of Itch When your skin is Irritalrcl with pimples, red blotches and other skin blemishes from ex tcrnal causes, you're crazy with itching torture, try Sanilone Ointment. Itching stops prompt ly. Smarting disappears imme diately. Sanilone Ointment is also wonderful for itching feet cracks between toes and Ath lete's foot. For Sal Willett's Capital Drug Store State at Liberty Phone 3-3118 it on. tool if VVapoRub Capita! Journal, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, Jan. 3, 1950 13- Befriended 22 Years Ago, Man Returns to Repay Birmingham, Ala.,' Jan. 3 u.m It was cold on a night In 1928 at the City Hall in suburban Hollywood. .-j Firemen and policemen were huddled around a pot-bellied. stove. They talked and joked and, at first, did not notice a boy slipping quietly in the door. The tall, thinly-clothed youths- walked slowly to where the men were seated, placed a bat tered suitcase on the floor and asked, "May I warm in here?" "Sure," they told him, "come on up to the stove." He stood with his back to the stove in silence. Someone asked, "Hungry?" "Yes," he said, "I'm hungry." "Got a place to sleep?" No sir," was his frank reply. "I'm tired out. I've been walk ing all day, and I don't see how I can keep going without any thing to eat or any sleep. Is there a place here I could sleep awhile?" They fed him and gave him a comfortable places to sleep. The officers furnished him a good hot breakfast the next morning. He thanked them for being so kind, picked up his battered old suitcase and walked down the road. The incident was forgotten during the next 22 years. But Sunday night a man. wear ing well-tailored clothes bright ened by a silk shirt and a belt buckle inlaid with gold, walked into the same city hall with a big smile on his face. He told a new batch of cops the story of the youth who was befriended 22 years ago. "I am that boy," he said "And now I want to prove that a good deed is remembered." He drew a $100 bill from his billfold, hesitated a moment, and asked: "Do you fellows have any special work anything that requires money that you'd like to put across. "Well, sir," Lt. Bob Nichols said, "We've been wanting to build a camp and boathouse for our city employes down on the Coosa river . , , but we don't ex pect ..." 'I know," the tall money in lerrupted, taking $500 from his wallet. "But I want to do this I've wanted to do it a long time." Li!l4-14sl 14 JiliM'IskH'Vl ilH BOTH ARE ASPIRIN AT ITS BEST Favorite of millions becaiuo Jt'i so fast so pure. It'i the world 'f largest teller at 10c. Ea ly to diva tiiy to USE Orqanic Fertilizer The Right Way to Rebuild Soil Free of Weed Seeds Odorless 6 sack, $5.00 BUV,on $10.00 2ion,.... 17.50 FREE Delivery Anywhere In Salem area Phone 3-8127 Dorothy Gray Special Dry-Skin Mixture There's no finer dry skin cream you conM bur none more fa. mous m all the world ! Spmnl Dry-Skin Mix ture magically softens, smooths . . . countcrmta fine lines, guards ap;aitt ngly skin dry ties. Stork up now at thme wnnderfnl ). ings-artiially less than halj price! Capital State & Liberty He placed the money In Nichols hands, walked out to th . street and left in a long, new -automobile. Lt. Nichols identified the man. an Jam A illl William nt Houston, Tex., owner of four big restaurants there. Gambling Headache To Illinois Governor Springfield, 111., Jan. 3 iFl Commercialized gambling, says Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson, has been his "biggest headache" dur ing his first year in office. Stevenson, In a radio talk last night summing up his first year as governor of Illinois. said: "Illinois is getting the reputa tion of a gambling state. The tri bute we pay to the slot machines runs into millions a year." The democratic governor, inr his first full scale report on the gambling situation, termed gam bling the most "stubborn prob-. lem." 'It's acainst the law In Till... nois, he said, and it can only exist where local officials toler ate it, either because they think the people don t care or becaust, it's politically expedient." Phricimn Ivv la n.nnnl m. represent xne mistress or. me house. You Sa Btjflqmg jVlainlinefti SaveTime and Money Fares are often Utt than Wi den, rail plui Pullman. And you lave hours in some cases, 001 of travel time. Northbound Mainlinart laave at 2:55 P.M. 17:50 P.M. PORTLAND ... 30 min. SEATTLE r.hri. Southbound Mainlinor. Loavo at 10:05 A. M. & 3:15 P. M. SAN FRANCISCO 4i hn. LOS ANGELES . . 7 hrs. fatl, luuvriout llightt lo "nil Iht fart" UNITED AIR LINES Airport Terminal. Coll 2-2455 Ol. til AH AUTHORIZIO TRAVIL AOINT Drug Store "On the Comer" t -'"low l2sI