i try If! MCA i Elliilltelll Triplets Born to Polio Vivtim t : year-old mother recovering from polio, are held by Nurse $ Elizabeth Nelson and Dr. Edward Surowiec at Monmouth :5":'i? Memorial hospital in Long Branch, N. J. The mother, Mrs. ., : Fred Warnke, wife of a dentist and mother of two other. ; children, said she was "thrilled to death" at the births. iheridan Home Appreciated i By Arrivals From Latvia Sheridan New arrivals in Sheridan from Ravna, near Cesis, J in northern Latvia, are the Janis Grislis family, who are a dis 2 ' placed persons family brought to America under the sponsor ( ship of the Dallas Trinity Lutheran church. -i Those in the family are the father, Janis; the mother, Marta; i flnn AmliA4ti 1R t urn Hniigh- iiior. 'nasrmarra. la': and Rita. I t A; 14. They are making their home J Jat the W. H. Brandt home west I .'of Sheridan, where a home was j begun for them last summer ?when plans for their coming . j here were first made. I I Grislis is an experienced car- Renter, and is now completing ; the house. They were able to Jbring a few treasured posses i i 'Bions with them, which they J '.. were able to save from the Rus j Asians. They arrived in the Unlt-jt-ed States after eight years of ! j hardship and suffering. On June 6, 1941 the Russians Mcame into the homes of the peo i ,,ple of Latvia, and, according to yGrislis, took away more than 35,000 residents. With none spared, even the children were shipped in boxcars with their parents to Siberia to work in the mines. The Grislis were fortunate enough to evade the Russians and left their farm, taking to the woods where they hid until the iji nazis came. J.ney, aiung wuu K their fellow countrymen, were W iVian hIiibh tV.n!t nhniia nf tnffoA i labor or death. Choosing the la 'j bor, the family went to Essling er, Germany in the fa J of 1944, A where they worked in factor '1 les. 3 When the war ended, Mr. ' f Grislis was put to work helping j to build the barracks at Inter 3 national camp where people of Laugh at Yourself, Advises e Comedian for Fun Recipe By JOHN ROSENBURG New York, Feb. 14 (U.R) Myron ("the Magnificent") Cohen lived five years ago in obscurity as a silk salesman. Now he earns $2, 500 a week as a comedian because he has learned that people would rather laugh at themselves than anyone. Take the story he tells about the newly-rich business man who, with his wife, Is invited to a so-1? cial dinner. The dinner table discussion turns to classical mu sic. Someone mentions Mozart. "Oh, yes, Mozart," says the wife proudly. "Such a handsome man. I saw him on the five o'clock bus that goes to the beach." On the' way home; the angry, embarrassed husband, scolds his wife: "You and your big mouthl What a dumbell! Every body knows the five o'clock bus doesn't go to the beach!" "There," Cohen said, "is an example of human- nature someone pretending, to make a social impression, that he P.nows more than he really does. The 'name-dropper' is another good example." Cohen-said "everyone is guil ty of private pretension." "There's nothing malicious about it," he siad, "it's just a game. And when you kid people about these pretensions, they love it." Cohen's entire repertoire Is based "on the human frailities." Cohen was a silk salesman for 30 years. He used a joke, rather than a sample, as his "pitch." 01 IN ONE TRIP! Phone the YES MANigtr live a few necetury facta then come in. It's "Y" to 4 out of S promptly. Loans 525 to (300 on Salary, Furniture up to 1500 on Car 0J-ti tomrtmrfftntt unit to tr rir t&l60Jtal FINANCE CO. 51 Stat Girl triplets, born to a 30- nations were represented a m o n g the nazl forced labor groups. Separation from his family came when the local DP camp was finished and he was sent to Frankfurt to help with other U. S. buildings. In June, 1949 came the anni versary of the Russian occupa tion, which in 1949 brought good news, as the family had re ceived news that they were to be sent to America. They left Esslinger on Sept. 14, after three months of processing, and stayed two months at staging centers, and then embarked from Bremerhaven for Amer ica. They came from New York to Portland by train, and then to Salem, where they spent some time with former Latvian neigh bors. In Latvia the Grislis fam ily had their own farm of about 35 hectors, (100 acres). They raised mostly wheat, had a dairy herd of 20 cows and .owned horses, sheep, pigs, turkeys and chickens. The Russians took all this. The family has lived on a farm near Perrydale since late October and the youngsters at tended school there. Dagmarra has her high school diploma and through the interest of one of her teachers, has a scholarship to Oregon College of Educa tion. To the Grislis family, Amer ica is a wonderful place to live. "When I realized that the quickest way to a buyer's heart was with a story about some of his personal weaknesses, I worked hard to perfect my ap proach," he said. "I guess I finally became more of a comic than a silk salesman. Everyone urged me to go into show business. I thought they were kidding me." Five years ago, at a company dinner at Leon and Eddie's a Swing Street cafe, his friends urged him to take the micro phone, he said. "The way I was received made me decide to give it a whirl professionally," he said. He's back at Leon and Eddie's now, after appearing in every major city in the nation at an average salary of $2,500 a week For one appearance in London last summer, he received $5,000. And all he does is tell stories about "mamma, poppa and the kids." The ancient Egyptians made ice Dy lining shallow porous pans with water in the early eve ning and letting them freeze over night. upmJu. CASH YOU GET tT'r$nO$190 $260 15 Mm. 9.2I $15.9221.78 20Mot. 7.39 12,77 17.48 Aboto poymtnti eortr mvtythingl loons ol thw omounH, or lor othor potiodi, mm in proportion, loom up to 1300 on ovtot, (U) Ph. 2-2464 Professor to Be Yale President New Haven, Conn., Feb. 14 (IP) A 43-year-old Yale history professor will be the next presi dent of Yale university. Prof. Alfred Whitney Gris- wold, a Yale graduate and mem ber of the faculty since 1933, was selected by members of the Yale corporation Saturday to succeed President Charles Seymour as Yale's 16th president. President Seymour, who has reached the mandatory retirement age of 65, leaves Yale on June 30. Gris- wold will become president the following day. Griswold, who said his selec tion was a complete surprise to him, was absent from the city Saturday and announcement of his election was delayed until Sunday morning, when it was made at a news conference by President Seymour. The retir ing president also was a profes sor of history when he was elect ed president of Yale 13 years ago. Griswold was graduated from Yale in 1929. He taught English at Yale for one year after his graduation, and then did grad uate work in Germany and at Yale before rejoining the Yale faculty as a teacher of history in 1933. During his career as a Yale teacher, Griswold attained an in ternational reputation as a his torian, particularly through two of his books. Missionary Couple Needed by Okinawa Willamina A meeting of the advisory council of the Okinawa Christian Mission was held at the Multnomah hotel in Port land. Attending from here were Mrs. Eldon Fendall, financial secretary of the Mission, and Rev. and Mrs. Leo A. Woodruff of the local- Church of Christ. Woodruff is vice-chairman of the council. Included on the agenda at the meeting was a discussion of ways and means to advance the work of the Okinawa Christian mission. It was announced that the council hopes to recruit an other missionary couple to assist with the work of the mission. which at present is cared for by Rev. Harlan and Emeline Wood ruff. The advisory council includes besides Leo Woodruff, Franklin T. Gosser, chaplain, U. S. army; J. Frank Cunningham, minister, Newberg; Harry A. Baird, min ister, Walla Walla, Wash.; and Edwin P. Dewees, Portland Harlan and Emeline Woodruff are "Living Links" for the Chris tian church at Newberg and the West Seattle Christian church at Seattle. Radio Broadcasters Oppose Fast Time Eugene, Feb. 14 (IP) Opposi tion to daylight saving time was expressed in a resolution ap proved Saturday at the closing session of the Oregon State Broadcasters association. The daylight issue comes be fore the Oregon voters this sum mer in an Initiative measure. Lee W. Jacobs, Baker, Inland Radio Corporation executive, was elected president; Bud Chandler, Klamath Falls Radio Station KFLW, vice president, and Joseph Schertler, Portland Station KEX, secretary - treas urer. Ditcovorod How To JGAL7 AGAIN IN 20 SECONDS was In desDalr when I benn to lose my hearing. Then one day in lust 30 seconds I discovered how to hear again. Thanks to the new seicone Fnancomoia, tnere's no BUTTON IN MY EAR. Discover how you, too, can hear attain. Come in, phone or write for FREE booklet tnat teua all cne lacu James N. Taft AND ASSOCIATES tU Oregon Blif. Salem, Oregon OmJhM rWtaa AM Rescue Party Takes Two Days To Get 2 9 Miles to Survivors (Editor's Note: Lieut'. Melvin R. Brown, 28, of Tennessee, Kan., was the leader of the ground party which last week helped to rescue survivors of a Dakota search plane which crashed in a 7,300-foot mountain top near Whitehor.se, Yukon. The ground party was transported in winter-track vehicles known as weasels. Here he tells his story. By LIEUT. MELVIN BROWN, U. 8. Army 14th Retlmenta Combat Tram A Told to Oraham Trotter. Canadian Pre&a Staff Writer Whitehorse, Yukon, Feb. 1 (CP) "We started out from Pon lake, 15 miles from the mountain, at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday. It was 3 p.m. the next Saturday when we got back. 'One way It was za'i miles. 'nave Hume, our native guide, and I, figured we walked 20 of those miles on the way in,; walking ahead of the weasels to find paths through timber, and testing dangerously thin river ice. "I was never colder in my life. My nose was frostbitten and my feet may have got a nip too they don't feel so good now. They tell me it was 60 below ze ro when we finally reached the survivors on the mountain peak Friday afternoon. "I hardly slept a wink the whole time. "There were 15 of us with the four weasels at the start. We went 11 miles up the Aishihik road before setting up a base camp. "We roped all our equipment on the outside of the four weasel-: before striking out again at 8 p.m. The party was made up of Canadians and Americans. "The guide and I walked ahead with flashlights to find a way through. "We found a trail down a 150 foot slope that would take us to the river bed. "When we did get onto the river bed, the guide fell through thin ice into four feet of freez ing water. "At 7 a.m. we took off. We took a zig-zagging course up the river which wound in and out. Going up a bank the radio equipped weasel lost a track. "It was 11 a.m. We were out of gasoline. All our equipment and supplies had been lost. Scraping branches tore it off the weasels as we brushed through trees. "Before leaving the radio wea sel with five men, we asked a plane to drop tents, stoves, gas oline and rations. "Now there were 11 men and all the equipment in one wea sel. e e "We started climbing the mountain at 7 a.m. Thursday. The trees were so thick and the trails so steep we decided to camp for the night. . "Starting out again at 6:45 a:m: Friday we reached an ap proach that was very steep and had lots of rocks and dead trees. There was no other way up. We spent two hours going through that last 50 feet of timber. We were about 5,500 feet up the mountain. "We got on snow that was crusted with ice. There was al- Buick Style N O question now on automobile Take a look at almost any blockful of new cars and you will see once more the sweep and dip of tapering fenders that Buick pioneered and that the whole country went for with a joyous whoop and holler. They're a little smoother now, of course, rounded a bit and are molded right into the body. And they flow sweetly into rear-fender forms that look for all the world like a jet plane's power plant. Pkm your BUICK ttaaiar 388 N. Commercial ways the danger of starting to slide which meant a 2,000-foot fall into a valley. e e A man sat on top of the wea sel, dangling his legs over the front windshield and moving them back and forth to direct the driver. 'We reached the survivors at 2:30 p.m. Friday. The helicopter naa lust made the first of its three flights to take off nine of them. We, and a group of six sup port weasels which followed our trail up the mountain came back with one of the survivors and five parachute men. Through the whole trip we never stopped to eat. We thawed out our rations on the weasel heater." Minister Gets Valentine Dunwoody, Ga., Feb. 14 (U.R) The Rev. James C. Morris had a Valentine from his con gregation today one that he can live in. More than 60 members of his Methodist parish turned out over the weekend with hammers, saws, nails, window-panes and tarpaper, and and built the minister a seven-room house. It took them only nine hours. The first ice-making machine in the United States was invent ed by Dr. John Gorrie of Apa lachicola, Fla., in 1850. FLAVOR makes the meal BEN-HUR makes the flavor Ben-Hur's pure pepper, the ufitversol spice, odds interest to oH foods, zest to your appetite. as to who has the ball styling! Ye es, a dmmoaitiaUou Bight Ntwl , Cast Ballots Idanha, Feb. 14 Election of five councilmen who will name a mayor is scheduled for a spec ial election here Wednesday with nine candidates filing for me live positions. Candidates for councilmen of the recently-incorporated city are Fred C. Anderson, merchant here since 1945 and formerly of willamina and Junction City; B. B. Cochran, longtime logger and millman of the Santiam canyon; U. S. Floyd, lumber grader at the Idanha Veneer plant; Ted Gillespie, grocer for eight years the last two here; Lloyd Girod, former Salem tea cher and now in the grocery business who also seeks a seat in the state legislature; Charles T. Haseman, contractor and for mer lumbermill employe who came here from Newport in 1900 though born at Detroit; Sam Palmerton, part owner of the Idanha Shingle mill and a graduate of Salem high school in 1924; Huber Ray, born in Willamina, logger and now in terested in the Idanha Lumber company and Noyes Whitton, who came from Washington in 1940 and now is a partner in the B at W Logging company. Mrs. Truman Spends Quiet 65th Birthday Washington, Feb. 14 (U.PJ Mrs. Bess Wallace Truman, wife of the President, quietly observed her 65th birthday Monday. Mrs. Truman was born in In What You Need Is Some Curly's Milk CURLY'S DAIRY Your friendly home-owned dairy Phone 3-8783 is Here Then look how wonderfully they are topped off in the upperstructure with wide, curving, one-piece windshields, and with smart, Buick-originated wrap-around back windows! iJuick style is here again. The sleek, swift-lined style that has put Buick right in the fashion fore front of postwar America. And you can have it in a choice of many sleek and roomy models, ranging in OTTO J. WILSON Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., dependence, Mo, The President who will be 66 on May 8, was born in Lamar, Mo. The White House said no spe cial plans had been made for OLD QUAKER DISTILLING COMPANY. Again! "A barrel J of quality 0 in every ' TmT bottle1' wat NOW ONLY AM 0 iliS price from just above the lowest brackets to the fine-car field. Come in to see your Buick dealer and start traveling in the smartest styling of the times. CO. Tuesday, February 14, 1950 8 her birthday. Their daughter, Margaret, who will be 26 years old Fri day, is out of town on a sing ing tour. LAWRENCEBURG, IND. 86 PROOF . (Gln Your Kay to Tina la HCNKYI. WLOK. ABC Nalwws, araiy Moaifoy avaalaf. Salem, Oregon