2 (Soc 1) StatMi&axu SHera. Orsw WexL. Aug. 28. 1S53 i- ' i ; s : r Salem DistrictlSchool Bus Routes Set Salem District school bu iroutei for the coming year were tet up by the school board ifesday nighty last year well as all senior and jonior hljh SuDerintendent Walter Snider Cortines ToDerficate Falcon Data jj By MARVIN L. ARRO WSMITIt DENVER UB President EisI hower and President Adolpho Re& Cortines of Mexico will meet on C Rio Grande border near Lax4, ttxj Oct. - 1JL to 'dedicate FafcKfc Dam. 2 Te Make Speech liU P make Eisenhower probably a major speech there, the summer White House said Tuesday in 14 Douncing that the President tip will:. . ii - II L Attend the Future FarmersfSjf America convention in Kansas City.; Mo, Oct IS, wttl$ mafr address in prospect there, too.$ 2. .Visit New Orleans Oct, 17 lir the sesquisentential celebration Iff the Louisiana Territory j purchase. 3. Be host in Wasbiigton, fr three days, starting Sept 28,o President Jose Antonio Remen C$- tera of Panama,, and Mrs. Keja on. Plans Te Attend Rally Plans for Eisenhower' t a Republican rally inf Hersbfy, Pa., on Oct 13, the eve tof his eiisd birthday, already have! been - nounced. - The President also hap accep Invitations to attend the Eastern Stsfte Exposition at Springfield Mass., on Sept 21. and a GDP rally in Boston that evening. Eisenhower's - meetingf with ffee president ef Mexico will take ple on the Rio Grande abt 75 ms downstream from Laredo, Tex. Te Serve Valley j sf Falcon Dam, which the; two chiBs of state will dedicate, fwlH seee the lower Rio Grande vjalley. It was constructed jointly by 0e United' States and Mexico une&r supervision of the InlernatioKal Boundary and Water Commissisf . The dam is 28.294 feet long aid rises 150 feet above' the river bfi. The installation will create a res ervoir with a maximum, turfite area of 113,000 acres. 2- 53 Russian-Born;! Scientist , : - ; t -j - Given LONDON, Wednesday:, Aug 21 The government disclosed Togjy that a top Russian-brn atoegic scientist has been- granted a iJne year leave of absence from his b at the highly secret Htrwell Nc lear Fission Laboratory; l British newspaper said the de cision to remove him from hiatp secret government post was taken because free Soviet agents might try to blackmail him by threatfo- ing action against his mother imd .k. r : i; t-i lauici ui nuwa. g A government spokesman said without elaboration that Dr. Befis Davison, 42, will spend the year at Birmingham University! ;! Davison has been prominent 1 in British atomic research! since lSta. He was an early associate of 5r. Klaus Fuchs and took over migny of Fuchs jobs after the latter tfcas sentenced to 14 years bi prison as a Communist spy. f if Davison's father Is British. Sut lives in the Soviet Union with - Iris Russian wife. I m TRACK PONY RIDES! For Kids 6 to 15 Minutes . . 30 Minutes 1 Hour . . , 1 4 Yr i 3 . 1-501 2 r 1.50 3376 Silverton ttoad Vi Mil East wf Falrgrounls DOWNTOWN TICKET SALE NOW! - Oregon's ! Biggest jj ' STATE Fim Assure yourself! choice seai for an the big eveata. ' U Star-Studded i - Stage Shaw:- L; vIRCRCjwtrid t Champion R.Wdeo Morse Racirtg 1 MORE to see in 'SS at the biggest SUte Fair lb hlstorj! Eight big days and? lghts4- Starting Saturday, Sebt 5. B tickets I' Ill State and liberty - ' - ' - y i t-; i 10 to 6 Daily excepf Sunday f orif jComing Year II1-. o were" oum routes ior Aoseaaie, and TJacoIn-Zena-Spring Valley areas, as school routes. said the school offices already were receiving : mur - queries about the bus routes. He advise'd parents with questions to call W. J. Buck, bus chief, at 2-4435. ? These are the approved routes with changes over last yean , Abbot School The 5th and 6th grade children from Auburn school will be transported to the Hoover schooL The bus will be gin its pick-up at Auburn school of all 5th and; 6th grade children at 8:25 a.m. The route to the Hoover school will be west on Auburn Road to Lancaster Drive, where the bus will turn south to .Monroe Avenue and proceed west on Monroe, to Osborn. The bus will proceed north on Osborn to Center Street, then on Center to Park, and the Hoover schooL Any 5th and 6th grade children en route from the Auburn school to Hoover will be picked yp at stops which will- be designated after the first day. At the close of school each dav. the return trip to Auburn scftbol will be made over the same - route in reverse, leaving the Hoover school at 3:35 p.m. Bosh School For those chil dren living in the 'East Vista area, the bus will make its first pick-up of Bush school pupils at 22nd and McGilchrist Streets. It will proceed south on 22nd to Vista, and then turn west to 19th Street, after which it will turn north to McGilchrist, then west to Pringle Road, then north to Hoyt and proceed west on Hoyt to 12th, picking up only those children ..living on the south side of Hoyt Street and on both sides of the other roads traversed. The first pick-up of children at 22nd and McGilchrist Streets will be , made at 8:25 a.m. The return trip will be made, in two runs: the first and second grade children will be picked up at Bush school at 2:15 and children in grades three. four, five, and six will be picked up for the retunMrip at 3:30 p.m. Bush School and Fairtnount Hill District The bus will leave Leslie school at 8:35 a.m. Only those McKinley children who rode the bus to Bush school last year will continue to ride, this year. All of those first and sec ond grade children from Baker school last year who were trans ported to Bush school, . will con tinue at Bush this year. They wilL be picked - up on Liberty Street at Myers Street, or at Owens Street All new pupils at Baker , school, either beginning first graders or those who have moved into the community, will report to Baker school on the first day and adjustments will be made depending on the capacity of Baker school to ac commodate them., The bus leaves Bush school at 2:15 p.m. fir first and second graders to be returned to the Baker and Mc Kinley areas. Liberty School The bus route for Liberty school will cover the same roads as last year with the starting pick-up to be made at the intersection of South River Road and Schurman Road. The pick-up will be made at 7:40 a.m. Note: Children living on Lans ford Drive and Albert Drive, at Dickson's Store, may ride the bus to Liberty schooL Children living on Schurman Road may walk down to the South River Road at the bus turn-around and ride to Liberty schooL Return trips from the school will be made at 2:13 for children in grades 1 and 2, and 3:30 for children of the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th grades. Halls Ferry School All 7th and 8th grade children in the Halls Ferry, district will take the high school bus and attend the Leslie junior high schooL Mt View School All 7th and 8th grade children in the Mt View District will take the high school bus and attend the West Salem junior high schooL In Ancient Egypt, rocks were split by drilling holes in a line and inserting wooden pegs which split the rock after being soaked in water to make them swell, says the National Geographic Society. 'A DAIICE TONIGHT Crystal Gardens Modern & Old Time Music by Pop Edwards J GDAUD OPENING-KETCH All AGEIIEI1T SATURDAY, AUG. 29 Dining and i SPECIAL FLOOR SHOW FEATURING JERRY OWEN & REX STORY MUSIC BY THE TUMBLE INN TRIO . COCKTAILS OF YOUR CHOICE ' , Open 5:00 P. M. Til ZJt A. M, Floor Shows lt:J P. M. and 12:39 A. M. For Reservations Call 913 1 2 Miles N. of Albany old Salem Hi way 99-E ' ' i j m Jim V 1 1 . . 1 - 1 1 11 io 1 1 in 1 " " r y ' , : , s ' ' '- . i : , j V v. 1. I , " 'U j , : . . '. . .' I ' s I -. . ' s il L . j b j . -, . r-V y ' ' ' 1 ? .-. ... v . ... ..... :.,:!:-: I ' 1 - - S - , ' i fr r'y . WINDSORS IN T.H E beach wear are sported brDnke a storm-fereed visit la Rapallo, Frisco Cable Car Arrives In Portland PORTLAND j One of San Francisco's famous cable xars ar rived here by hip Tuesday.. Its owner, Damon Trout, presi dent of the Marine Electric Co. here, said he intends to install an electric motor and operate it on his ranch at North Plains. He already has acquired 400 feet of track and a caboose. He said be intends to name the railroad the W0D4DJTRR, "The William O. Douglas it Damon J. Trout Railroad." U. S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas is a friend of Trout Thurber Told Wif e'sS jght To Be Saved 1 NEW YORK un James Thur ber, who is almost blind himself, was reassured Tuesday that his wife won't be. The tall, slender, white-haired humorist said he had been told by doctors that his wife's conditions is not serious and she'd "be up and around again before you know it." The writer-cartoonist was inter viewed in a hospital room adjoining one in which Mrs. Helen Thurber i was awaiting an operation for a partial detachment of the retina. Thurber issued an urgent plea Monday through the press andrad io for help in locating his own eye doctor. Gordon Bruce, to attend Mrs. Thurber. The physician was found in a remote vacation spot in Colorado by The Associated Press. "It hasn't been decided yet who will operate on Helen." Thurber said, ""but we will be content with whatever surgeon the hospital se lects." Thurber, who is 59. discussed his own blindness in confident, cheer ful, almost folksy tones. When he was six. a brother shot out his, left eye with a toy arrow. Over the years, the right eye de teriorated until how the gentle satirist has only six or seven per cent vision. ' "But blindness," ho said, "is only a challenge, not a handicap. In fact, in many ways it's an ad vantage for a writer. There are less distractions. "I used to be able to say. 'I can't write in this room or that 1 room. But now every room u every otter room. You don t find your eyes wandering to watch a bird or a pretty girL" Thurber no longer draws. His last drawings were executed about two years ago with the help of especially strong glasses and lumi nous white crayon used on black paper. "Now my eyes are so bad, draw ing is too much of a strain," he said. "But I don't feel particularly frustrated. 1 consider myself a writer, not a cartoonist, anyway." Thurber does much of his writ ing in his head, working that away mornings and dictating the result, word for word, to a secretary who shows up in the afternoon. - "I can write as many, as 1500 words in my head and remember every ene," he said.. Bartholomeu Diss rounded the southern tip of Africa in 1488. Dancing ? S U N THelonc and ahrt 1st and Doehes of Windsor d nrlng on the snny Italian Kiviera. Diirkin Plans " - Reorganizing Department - Bt NORMAN VaLKER WASHINGTON tf) Secretary of Labor Durfcirt Tuesday an nounced .a reorganization of the Labor Department in which four assistant secretaries will be given wide new powers. Durkin said it was the first time that assistant secretaries would be given direct responsibility for de partment functions. He said he felt the reorganization will insure more efficient operation of the department and better en forcement of. labor laws. Durkin also predicted at a news conference that the Eisenhower ad ministration will soon make known its views on proposals to change the Taft-Hartley labor relations law. President Eisenhower promised to support changes in the law dur ing his campaign last fall but he never lias detailed them. A preliminary draft of a pro posed White House message to con gress was circulated among con gressional leaders earlier this month. The draft was considered . more favorable to labor unions than to employers. However, the White House never sent it formally to congress. Durkin said the administration's T-H proposals would be sfade known before congress reconvenes next January. Reds to Return Some in Jail, Claims Pilot FREEDOM VILLAGE. Korea Ufl An American jet pilot freed Wednesday reported the Commu nists will send back at least some of the Allied prisoners originally- sentenced to jail terms and no repatriation." Lt. Henry Nielsen of St. Joseph, Mich., said six or seven of the men sentenced in his camp. No. 2. Pyoktong, are now at Kaesong waiting to come back. 400 Arrive Nielsen said about 400 men from Camp 2, which held many Air Force pilots and airmen, have ar rived at Kaesong, only six miles from the Panmunjom exchange point. Since the start of Operation Big Switch 22 days ago Allied prisoners have reported men being sentenced in the last weeks of the war to terms of one to three, years. Serve Full Terms The Chinese told some returning POWs these men would have to serve out their full terms before being repatriated. Nielsen identified two of the men originally sentenced and now at Kaesong as a Colonel Zacherle and a Captain Fesnuts. No Other Details Nielsei. said he did not have other details. . . (The list of American prisoners which the Communists gave the United Nations .Command in De cember, 1931 showed a Lt. Col. Alarich L. -E. Zacherle 'of the 2nd division, whose wife,' Margaret, re sided at 7703 Bernese Rd., SW, Tacoma, Wash.) Hit iiryi V - -" 1 1 .wy hi j if 1 . 1 I 1 f American GI Sacrificed on Altar Says Senator Bricker ; By CORNELIUS F. HURLEY BOSTON Vfi U. S. SenJohn W. Bricker (R Ohio) said Tues day night "it will be difficult if nof impossible" to protect the fundamental rights of .American service men abroad under the NA TO status of forces treaty. The NATO treaty he said "sur renders to the local courts of NATO countries and Japan criminal juris diction over non-military offenses of American armed forces person neL civilian components and then dependents J' - We must do our best to protect them, he said, in a speech for a dinner meeting of the Judge Ad vocates Association held in con nection with the 7th annual meet ing of the American Bar Associa tion, GIs Sacrificed "To put it bluntly," Bricker said, "the American GI was sacrificed on the altar of international, co-operation." ' - ' He said "there were mitigating circumstances . . , the previous administration had made secre , il legal executive agreements under which 'American servicemen were already being turned over for trial in local foreign courts." Bricker said that the constitu tions and laws of many foreign countries failed to protect the basic rights of individuals as does the Constitution of the United States. Rights Not Guaranteed "Many rights recognized in the uniform code of military justice are ! not guaranteed by the treaty," he said. r ' "The treaty is silent on presump tion of innocence, privilege against self-incrimination and protection against cruel and unusual punish met and many other fundamental rights." Bricker said he exempted Great Britain and Canada where, he said, criminal procedure is similar to that in the United Slates. No Communist Lawyers Earlier the ABA's House of Dele gates adopted without debate a res olution asserting no Communist should be permitted to be a lawyer in the United States. The resolution, presented by a POWs Bound For Home on Four Ships . r SAN FRANCISCO W More ships were heading across the Pa cific from Korea Tuesday night carrying to San Francisco hund reds of Americans Just released from prisoner of war camps. On Saturday morning the trans port Gen. William F. Hase will dock here with close to 430 U. S. soldiers freed from Red camps. In addition, some 1,400 Army troops are coming home. on rota tion. , The hospital ship Haven is due here Sept. 4,- tfe Navy'said. with S71 patients, including 104 POWs: The rest were the regular war sick or wounded. The troopship Marine Adder should dock here Sept. 4 or 5 with 367 repatriated prisoners of war. In addition, she carries 1,473 ser vicemen returning on the rotation program. The Army transport General John Pope sailed Tuesday from Inchon. Seoul's port, with 458 more repatriates. It was expected to dock in San Francisco Sept. t or 9. Gen. Bradley Wants Views Of Scientists WASHINGTON ( Gen. Omar Bradley advocated Tuesday that scientists be given, a greater voice in the Pentagon's strategic mili tary planning. , - The 60 year old retired soldier said the nation's protection lies in the wise application of Ameri ca's scientific and technical su periority over Soviet Russia. He added that the rapid develop ment of new atomic weapons and guided missiles already has shaken old concepts of strategy and ideas on the division of responsibilities between the three services. Bradley hinted strongly that he believes the Air Force will have to give the Navy at least a share of direct responsibility for strategic air warfare a view the Air Force long has opposed. The former chairman of the Joint Chief; of Staff gave his views in an article written for the current issue of the Saturday Evening Post. DANGEROUS PLANTS RALEIGH, N. C. More than fifty poisonous plants cause the death of many North Caro lina livestock each year. This is revealed in the new publication, "Some Stock Poisoning Plants,, which has just been published by the North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station. Air-Conditioned C ? .-t :45 ffliiiSW TEE Kara EA3 EYEITTH1HS , iiini 1 ri 'Tirrj 1 - ni 1 "T ii - , -and-i . ' , am wueu wenmt 'See a Show oa Oar New Wide Silver-Screen. It's DifferenU : committee headed by Herbert R. O'Conor, former Democratic sen ator . from Maryland, also recom mended the U.S. attorney general and proper authorities of the sev eral states be asked to act against lawyers, who-, are Reds, The convention also heard U.S. Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) at tack the hampering ot congression al investigating committees by "un necessary" claims for immunity under the Fifth Amendment and, at the same time, assert that some committee chairmen' and members "shamefully' use their positions. Palmer Hoyt, editor-and publish er of the Denver Post, urged the lawyers to "take the leadership in reorganizing the ' justice of the peace system which he labeled as "today's anachronism number one in American jurisprudence." . Shah Seeks Funds From Iran's Rich TEHRAN, Iran UB iThe Shah of Iran appealed to ; Tehran's wealthy bazaar magnates Tuesday to help him better the lot of the country's miserable poor in a new general campaign to counter-attack Communism. His new pro-Western government cracked down on pro-Mossadegh and pro-Communist for es in all directions. Stalin-type moustaches, a Red badge for years in Tehran, dis appeared as police undes Premier Fazollah Zahedi drove the Com munists underground. They, are be lived to have split into $man cells. Communist arsenals and propa ganda centers were raided. A loyalty board was; set up to check army and air force officers, and known Communists in govern ment jobs were reported being fired. Secret agents disguised as beg gars and merchants roamed the byways of Tehran searching for deposed Foreign Minister Hossein Fatemi who had a 100,000 rials ($1,230) price on his head. The Shah trying desperately to better his country's chaotic fi nancial position and to cut Com munist appeal for Iraa's poor summoned five leaders of the fabu lous Tehran bacaar to him. The 1 bazaar is a vast, arcaded shopping center covering many acres whose shops sell: everything from 1,000-year-old' art treasures te modern adding machines. , Its wealthy leaders are notori ously addicted to investing much of their goins outside of Iran. Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi told them ousted Premier Mossa degh had left the country's econ omy in a terrible shape and called for help to correct it. "You cannot even imagine how many banknotes Mossadegh's gov ernment printed," he declared. The . situation is terribly difficult, therefore, and you should help us make the poorer classes become a minority instead of the great ma jority they are now." The Shah told his visitors he had visited the Shrine of Karbela near Baghdad en route home from exile in Rome and added: "I am a Mos lem. I believe in Moslem' prin ciples. I think that with the help of God. who has not. failed us be fore in bad moments, we all should be able to succeed in emerging from the present situation." morn 4-4XIS Gates Open 6:45 SHOW AT 7:30 HELD OVER! ... At Regnlar Prices! All Technicolor Show o BE d ni SSZMf ; cairn GASQI-aON'MJIRCHAKD also Frankie Laine ii "RAINBOW ROUND MY SHOULDER" You're never seen a 1nrmr Rrf vhf sr rittm ( in a Drive-In . . . V i the 1 I ene on oar Giant , Screen! DMVE-IN THE ATI IE M-'m - '- r- ml UII3H SalSlNS, MICHWAT tf f Gates Open 6:45 j Show at 7:30 'Starts Tonite (Wed.) " AH New Procram "TITANIC" Clifton Webb Barbara Stanwyck la Technicolor , "1URE OF THE WILDERNESS- . 1 Jeffrey Hunter . Jean Peters , mm rr Air Line Gets Okek on Mail -Carry. Subsidy , WASHINGTON ) f Western Air Lines was given permission Tues day to claim a mail Icarricr sub sidy for a company Jt took over last year. jj - The'' Civil Aeronautics Board de cided Western , will jbe given a chance to claim morf pay for In land Air Lines' mail carrying oper ations for a six-monfJt period end ed April t.- 1952, wen the two firms merged. I Determination of rites to which Inland may be entitled will be made "in accordance; with the us ual mail rate procedures," the board said. v I Western's rates wre set at 53 cents per mail ton mifc. Western contended) at a CAB hearing the 53-cent rile was Insuf ficient for Inland aid thaV firm was entitled to about 1124,000 more than' was paid. City Police fisked For Help in pearch City - police were asked Tues day to assist in the search for Louella M. Berkeyj 3350 Neef Ave., and her fivelear-old son Debbie, missing sindfe July 23. Relatives told police that they had exhausted eveijy means of trying to locate the two. They described her as 43 years, 5 foot 4, slender build, park' brown hair and grey blutf eyes. They told police they were not sure what the two were wearing when they left The United States has about 10 per cent of the earth's forest area but produces about 50 per cent of the world's! lumber, 42 per cent of the wold pulp and 58 per cent of the ilywood. DALLAS DRIVE-IN TIliATRIS GATES OPElt 7:00 SHOW AT DUSK Phone 384 "Rogue III ver Als "Ivory Hunlers" STARTS TOMORROW! i Yon Haven't Seen Anything kLso WALT DISNEY Presents; ' The First In His Exciting-: Now Sorioa "People and Places" "1TL lJl Trl!i' The Alaskan Eskimo' In Technicolor ; The 1 ..r ' j Ti r v.. iai-n-i -rt.s-ft if ' h)gakMMR0(w nilMI KOUZM - 0C.M TAYLC8 I . ,. ; if J V.I'. " STAI1TS ODAY! . & psjosln m : f A WiU make you UooOlf and CHIEStl Y 1 " i u v iii; - x m k - j s esssa m m -f ' ALSO .' 3 Cars plidcHit; Damage Ncdijjiblc ! .. . P if ' . Three carp slid into each other Tuesday aftrnoonj!whfle driving across the' llarion Street Bridge, but "no one was injured and the vehicles sitained only minor damage. ( .. . f I ' "Hie cars fwere ' driven by Ken neth R. Urence, 145 E. Miller St-i VioleAlice Wilson, Rick reall Roufef IV and Benjamin P. Sheets, Tiirfeer. Police! described the ' weathef as - dark ( during a sudden dpwnpour.' No arrests were imadi - . L The feriie hornbiltlan Afri cai bird, hfcalls herself up with mud inside i hollow tree at nest ing time, i leaves a small hole through Ttfich'' her mate, feeds her ana in young. s . , STAE.TS TODAY! rlHSHP''Pifii Sfe aTff lfH fl ?sw Vfc AfdMt fteisf Mwsm of M OWI JEFF CHANDLER ftt DOMERGUE Prlcos Adults HJOO Children 35c if ' 1 f ; li Ends Today Richard Widmark a "Pickup On South Street" Dan Dailey -The Girl Nest Door . 1 1 1 1 -11 1 -J " ,1; m I roisterous, listerous sLory ! Priaoiirrs-of-Warl ' to M SSsVBSsli 1 4AM! H 5 ' TsmJJf ' 1 ; T jpND HIT i ; "N UO COtaT mmd I Xt tOWIRT tOTf ! in - n I. ' 13 an of GIL cilU r . ... r Ik res imniuiuM a. . . m