J The Statesman, Salem, Orew Sunday; February 8. 'Sleep Paralysis -Centers in Brain . By ALTON L. BLAKESLES 1 A-A OKKWCV NEW YORK m Imagine wak ening rrom sleep 10 una yourseu completely paralyzed. You can hear and see, but you U.N. Infantry Throws Back Red Attacks , Rt FYIRREST EDWARDS SEOUL. UH U. N. infantrymen threw back five Red probing at tacks Saturday night on the East ern siwi rntrl Korea war fronts. Sharp patrol actions, in "notice able increase," cracKieu aiong me near-zero Eastern and Western Fronts, the U. S. Eighth Army said- . ail- irnrr TU2 lffeht bombers nA Marin Tlffer Cats dumDed tons of high explosives on Com munist front line positions on the Fronts. The Air Force said results of the fmn cf-rik mprp unobserved hut that 90 Communist supply trucks were reported destroyed. Seventeen B-29 SuDerforts rained 170 tons of bombs on two Commu nist supply and barracks targets four miles southeast or .Pyongyang, th Rpd North Korean capital. Th Air Force said crewmen re ported "fires and a chain of reac- tion of secondary explosions dot ted the two sites after the raids. (Vis tartrit area contained seven single-story buildings and four two- story structures wiuun a zv-acre , area. The other held 280 single story buildings ana several oar racks for Red troops. Three of the five. Red probes Saturday night were against main line positions at the crest and west of the crest of Heartbreak! Ridge on the Eastern Front. The other two were against allied advance positions south of Jane Russell Hill on the Central Front. They were hurled back in fights that lasted from five to 30 min utes. (Earlier story on page 7.) Three 2-Car Wrecks Bring One Injury Three two-car crashes in sepa rate Darts of Salem Saturday art- emoon and night resulted in one injured person and a damaged police car, - - - Injured was Raymond F. Schnell. 1055 Pine St, who re ceived cuts of the arm and pos sible fractured ribs when his car turned completely over and ended - up in the opposite direction. The accident occurred about 1:40 pan. at Broadway and Pine Streets when his car was in col lision with another vehicle driven by- Owen K. Lemmon, Route 1, Box 153, Independence, police said. Schnell's car was badly wrecked and was towed from the scene. Patrolman William Marker re ported his squad car was in col lision with a car driven by Albert J. - Christie, ' Route 2, Amity at Broadway . and Belmont Streets about 6:45 p.m The patrol car's left side was damaged and Christie was charged with running a stop sign and driv ing without an operator's license. Shortly after 5, cars driven by Clair Potter, 1043 7th -St, and Sylvan Mauer, 2011 Maple St .collided at Church and Norway Streets. Both cars were damaged and Mauer suffered bruised knees. Two Convicts Hospitalized as RuItofFigHt Two convicts were hospitaliz edone with a knife wound in his abdomen after a knife and lead pipe tight between three prisoners Friday afternoon in the vegetable room of the State Prison. Warden Virgil O'Malley said the roost' seriously wounded con vict was Omar Fromme, up from Klamath- County on a five-year sentence for - larceny. He was Hoyt K. Kesterson received from -Klamath County for three years xor onrgiary in a oweuing was truck on the : head with a lead pipe. The third man was not iden- The three are due for the segre gation ward, the warden said, DMTKB"'AJtKESTlEDT" : Irvin D. Boje, 2025 , 12th St. . was arrested by city police Satur day night on a charge of reckless driving. He was cited to appear la municipal court Monday morn ing. :.Kjr:: 4. :-::r- '. - ? can't move a muscle. Time ticks on for minutes while you lie im mobile in the san-e position, try ing vainly to move. Suddenly you manage to wiggle a toe, and all your muscular con trol returns instantly. The attack Is over. ' - This Is "sleep paralysis." a rare malady connected apparently with the mysterious mechanism ,of sleep, One such 'patient, treated successfully with insulin, is de scribed in the A. M. A. Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry by Dr. Herbert A. Weitzner of Oak land. Calif. He tells of a Negro who had suf fered sleep paralysis attacks sometimes four a night for 10 years.. Rare was the night when he didn't have at least one at tack. Struggles to Mot He would waken gradually. sometime after falling asleep, but couldn't stir. He felt a generalized sense of tingling. Fear of paraly sis made him struggle to move. Each time he-would wonder whe ther this time he would recover. Ability finally to move one mus cle, or being touched by someone else, broke the attack. Then he could roll over, sit up, stretch, and go back to sleep if it still were night. - The attacks, the man said,- nev er lasted less than three minutes, nor more than 10. The attacks of sleep paralysis were quite dis tinct from dreams. Causes Unknown The cause of sleep paralysis is not known. Dr. Weitzner writes. but appears to be physical and cor rectable. What part of the brain is af fected to bring on sleep paralysis is a mystery. One guess is that it is the hypothalamus, a region be lieved to be involved in the mech anism of normal sleep. Insulin treatments, which pro duced a temporary lowering of blood sugar, banished the man s attacks, and he has been free for 14 months or more. The insulin presumably had some effect upon the hypothalamus, re storing control over sleep to that region of the brain. Dr. Weitzner suggests. The man's memory abil ity also was improved. Solution of the puzzle of sleep paralysis probably depends upon discovery first of answers to the mystery of normal human sleep and awakening. 1 Ear Infection CHICAGO (A Allergy is often to blame for some chronic ear in fections that don't improve with regular treatments. Dr. Eugene L. Derlacki of Northwestern Uni versity writers in the annals of otolaryngology, rhinology and laryngology. Discovery and avoidance of an offending food or cosmetic or oth er material, or building up im munity to it, often brings good re sults. -BALTIMORE UF X-rays used to remove hair, as in treatment of ringworm of the scalp, can bring premature graying of new hair in children with a family history of Premature Graying So reports Dr. Israel Zeligman of Baltimore in the A. M. A. Ar chives of Dermatology and Syph ilology. He reports three such chil dren, each of whom had one par ent who showed premature gray ing of the hair. Stimulate Glands BLOOMINGTON, Ind. II) An tibotics can stimulate endocrine glands, making them produce more hormones. Prof. W. R. Breneman, Indiana University zoologist, finds. In chickens,, the disease - killing wonder drugs not only speed growth of the glands, but step up their output. . The work is part of studies to learn how much hor mones various glands normally se crete,- and how glands mutually affect one another. IOWA Cmf, Iowa IB Young diabetic patients offer clues to why and how we grow old. Those diabetics whose disease Is not under good control age much more rapidly than is normal, their body : tissues degenerate more quickly. Good control of diabetes, through insulin and diet," delays or prevents premature aging. Here at the University of Iowa College of -Medicine, a long-term study is under way seeking rea sons for this difference, what -the changes are that bring premature aging with poorly controlled dia betes. The study is under overall direction of Dr. Robert I Jack son, a pediatrician. Sheriff 1 Deputies Arrest 2 Men Marion "County sheriff Satur day was holding a Salem and a Woodburn man for other sheriff's departments one on a charge of obtaining money under false pre tenses and the other on a charge of contributing to th delinquency of a minor. . Jack ' Burden of Hubbard was being held for Tillamook County sheriffs on: a charge of obtaining money under false pretenses. -. . Being held for JLinn County on v J: . A to- U ui szi o :: Then' Call 1 U : LESTER DoLAPP FOR THE USST III LIOVUIG 1113 N. CommercUUl. Fhone 2-17S0, 3-?5 OthelEeLee Succumbs to Tuberculosis Othel E. Lee, 53,. Salem Insur ance man until his retirement in 1949, died at 9:45 p.m. Saturday in the Veteran's Hospital, Walla Wal la, Wash.- - : ' He had suffered from tuber culosis for some time. - - ; . 1 n " Lee was district manager - in Salem of the Northern Life In surance Co. for 14 years, before illness forced his retirement. . He was forced tojreterans hos pital in Vancouver, Wash and Livermore, Calif., before going to Walla Walla where he has been a patient less than a year. . Born in Feniel, 0 Jan. 29 1900, Lee was an aviator in World War I. An airplane crash was respon sible for -his Illness. ... Mr. and Mrs. Lee made their home at 740 E. McGilchrist St, Salem. k Before coming to Salem, Lee lived in Medford and Eugene and was with the West Coast Life In surance Co. A hunter and fisherman, Lee was a member of the Salem Gun Club; also a member of the Elks Lodge, 336; American Legion, Post 9; and the Episcopal church. Surviving are his widow, Gladys of Salem; one daughter, Othelene Lee, a freshman at the University of Oregon; his mother, Mrs. Anna B. Lee, Ohio; a brother and three sisters, Herbert A. Lee, Mrs. Ethel Slagle, Mrs. Nellie Blackford, and Mrs. Celie Smathers, all of Ohio; also two sons by a previous mar riage, Robert G. Lee and Leroy D. Lee, both of Ashland. Announcement of services to be held in Salem will be made later. Sparkman Asks About Plans for China Blockade WASHINGTON UP) Sen. Spark man (D Ala.) demanded Satur day that the administration tell Congress whether it plans a naval blockade of Red China as Sen. Knowland (R Calif.) renewed his support of such a move. Sparkman said in an interview he isn't necessarily opposed to a blockade but he wants to know (1) if it would be an act of war, (2) . if the United States should undertake it alone, and (3) what would be the consequences of such action. f Knowland, chairman of the Sen ate Republican Policy Committee, saKt ne believes in United Na tions should institute a blockade to halt shipments of war supplies to the Communists in Korea. He addded that the United States should do it alone if other U. N. nations balked. Rep. Dewey Short (R Mo.)," chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, argued in a separate interview that a blockade, "instead of widening and ' length ening the war, would shorten and confine it and save lives." Chairman H. Alexander Smith (R NL) has promised to call Sec retary of States Dulles before a Senate Foreign Relations Subcom mittee for questioning about ad ministration plans as soon as the secretary returns from Europe. "I think we are less apt to broaden the war if we don't per mit Red China to keep bunding up its supply dumps," Smith said. Rep. Short said he believes Ei senhower and the military leaders have considered several "measures short of all out shootina- war that would bring pressure on the Com munists to end the Korean stale mate. Among possible moves he listed increased rearmament of the Chi nese Nationalists and more use of other Asian troops, as well as a naval blockade. Short emphasized he has not dis cussed strategy with the President and could not speak officially for him. the other charge was Clarence Hawley 1305 N. Winter -St, Sa lem, ---i-.- - Night FighHng?TheinSpea brtty YouthsTrapped Vi . fun, jSdSS dnrr SEOUL Capt. Ben Flthlan, Kansas City; He fInts te star en side ef his Leckheed F-94-B all weather, night flying Jet denoting de struction of CoMmniittt plane. It was first kill for a Lockheed, one ef two types flying la Korea equipped with fantastle radar devices. ! The radar guides plane and fires runs automatically. Looking oa ' Is Lieut. Sam Lyons, Houston, Tex, his radar man. (AF Wlrephoto : via-radio from Tokyo to The Statesman). Tear Gas Halts Maryland State Hospital Riot - CRONSVnXE, Md. UFi Police used tear gas to choke off a riot of criminal-insane prisoners at Crownsville State Mental Hospital for Negroes here Saturday night, and captured one of an undeter mined number that escaped. The riot broke out in the maxi mum security ward housing about 65 patients who had been convicted of crimes ranging from larceny to murder. A knotted bed. sheet dangling from a third floor window was ap parently used as an escape ladder. Police said shortly before 2 a. m. (EST) Sunday that they had cap tured one escapee in a wooded area about a mile southeast of the hospital. They said they thought they had another cornered. The recaptured man was not immediately identi fied, and it was not known how many prisoners got away, but an attendant said he thought "six or seven." One of three guards cornered by the prisoners suffered cuts from flying glass. No other casualties were report ed although the other two guards locked up by the prisoners were removed from the ward dazed and shaken. The riot started abou 10:15 p.m. and a phalanx of state troopers, county policemen and firemen rushed into the milling detention ward after firing a dozen rounds of tear gas. They used an acetylene torch to cut their way through a heavy out side barrier which the prisoners had locked, and the single entry to the corridor of the third floor, the maximum security ward. Death Claims Robber Turned Bank Official ENTERPRISE, Ore. I David G. Tucker, who rose to the respect ability of vice president of the First Bank of Joseph which he had robbed in his younger days, died here -at the age of 82. Tucker drew an eight. year sen tence for the 1896 robbery but was released after four years. He turned then to sheep-herding and through work and thrift eventually become one of northeastern Ore gon's biggest stockmen. He was held in high esteem by his fellows, was elected to public office several times, then was named vice president of the bank which he had robbed many years before. Funeral services were held this week. Survivors include his widely known rancher son. Harley Tucker, whose stock often is used for rodeos; a daughter, ' Mrs. Norman McCain; a brother, Ben Tucker, at Klamath Falls: and two sisters, Mrs. Annie Hartley of Medford and Mrs. Etta Wilson of California. Everything for Your Window ELMER THE BLIND MAN Venetian Elinds, Drapes and Shidei Traversa Rods ' Bamboo Drapes and Shades i Columbla- Ma tic Screens Ootb and Aluminum Awnings ; Fireplace Screens and Accessories Chapman Home Freezers Verti r Vertical Blind! -.Folding Doors Transparent Plastic Store ; Shades. - - ..- . ;. . i- . ' We Wash, Paul -Slat and Ketape Veaetlaa BOnds -Free Estimates 19 Down ' Fay Monthly SS7I Center 81 (formerly. ITest Salem) - Phase -7Kl-i New ta progress . the tlrrtst shea sxla in Salem . . . ra coons brands ... all al exactly 2 far the price) Eay da first pdx ct & raulcx pxica gat &e second pcr Teen Agers Held For Stealing Car j State nolico Saturdav nlrhr ! re covered a stolen 1039 Ford owned by Harry King, 560 N. Lancaster w, ana . arrested two teen-age boys on the charge. j : A 16-year-old boy involved was jailed in Salem and his lS-vear- old companion turned .over to his parents. i Police said the car was stolen about 8 Djn. from tha 1000 block of N. Liberty St. . K By Avalanche, One Survives SEATTLE U) One of two 17 year old Seattle youths who were trapped' by a giant avalanche of snow and mud near the Snoqual mie Pass summit 60 miles east of here was found alive Ute tonight. - The state patrol at the summit, some two miles , southeast of the scene of the huge slide, said in a terse " message ; to headquarters here that Larry Schinke was un able to talk. The lad's condition was not known. ' , - The search for the other victim of the avalanche, Keith Jaeobsen, son of Bernie Jaeobsen. city editor of the Seattle Post Intelligencer, was being continued by four teams of trained mountain skiers. . - r News of the accident was carried to the , Washington State Alpine Lodge at Snoqualmie Pass by Ed Almquist. also 17. who was skiing with the two other youths and nar rowly missed being buried by the avalanche himself. ; - Almquist said the slide roared down the mountains near Source Lake without warning. He told offi cers at the lodge that the- ava lanche ripped the skies from his feet. ' He said he ran ' the two miles hack to the lodge from the scene to. tell of the accident. Almquist said on his arrival at the lodge that he had tried to dig through the mass of snow, mud and debris covering the two trapped youths but gave up when he could, find no sign of life. Ml fEOM 3e ; S Buy one) of tha Hems at tha regular price and you gat another hem ef equal value for 3c, PAJAMAS j SWEATERS SPORTS SHIRTS - LONG AND SHORT SLEEVE TEE SHIRTS ! DRESS SHIRTS LONG OR SHORT SLEEVES WITH OR i WITHOUT COLLARS 7vai 1QUS VEAIL Capitol Shopping Center Open Men. A FrL Till Free Parkinr Wreck Traps Mother, Son Temporarily A.. Lebanon mother, and son es caped serious - injury Saturday night when their car flipped over after hitting a stump on Kubler Lane about a mile frcm where it intersects Skyline Drive. The two : were trapped In " the turned over car for - about - five minutes before they were freed by nearby relatives whomthey were on their way to visit. -- Treated for shock by Salem first aidmen were Mrs. Viven Nofa ziger and her son Don, 18, of Route 1, Box 8 i-Ai Lebanon. 'The pair were taken to their relative s home. nrr, run wkeck ' A hit and run . accident was re ported to Salem police Saturday by Caroline C Torresdal, 1580 Center St, who said another ve hicle had smashed into her car during the night 'while it was parked In front other house. WOMAN DRIVER HELD ; A Salem woman. Hazel L. Mos ley, 1935 Center St was arrested by Salem police Saturday T after noon on a charge of driving while intoxicated. She was held by po lice last night on bail of $253. 3ecorate Bry Uall ConslrncUon VTIflt Norrla-Wcdkor WctHcocrt or Color Tex Hundreds of Colors From Which to Choose) ONE COAT DOES IT. NO SEALER NECESSARY Gel that Bratlful Plastered Wall Effect At A Fraction of It's Cost Ilorris-Ualhcr Painl Co. 1710 N. Front Ph. 4-2279 " - S" f - 1" if w h o it y o u no od . MM 7. 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