The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 06, 1953, Page 15, Image 15

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    iDm't Co oil
j but . . . all .the unhappy little children
around town who have been bought new
school clothes and have suffered, over not
getting everything else in the stores that they
could see. will have another fearful week at
the lair. There, too, they will be seen bawl
ing their little heads off because Papa's.poc
ketbook has a bottom to it Sometimes if
seems that the happier children are the more
they suffer. '
, Then there Is . . . the respectable married
Salem couple who had the most guilty feel
ing of the year when they suddenly decided
to stay in Portland overnight and registered
IDD(23i)S
By CARL HALL
It is time now. Close to the
ninth hour the earth is dilating,
breathing heavy before it ejects
cummer out. Like a tree done
with its growing, time for the
falling fruit, and the afterbirth
of leaf, free of its green tied
.ear.
On a summer day heat radia
tion gives idiosyncrasy to air,
movement to distance that has
nothing to do with wind or
breeze. The earth is breathing
heavy in its great discipline, in
its obedience to a great compul
sion that had been born of cos
mic dust and gas in the youth of
its earth days. The exodus of
nothing is visible to the eyes, in
radiant quivers vertical to tne
day, it decamps from .earths
security in time.
Vacant spaces fill with the
moving mirage of the heat stilts.
Unsteady, with no guide but the
magnetism of the sun. In the son
Its destiny is made visible, seek
ing the sky through the dust
particles of a desert in suspen
sion.
Before the divestment of au
tumn, the earth has a watching
hour, or is it minutes, when in
its deep breathing the loam
mantle is drunk with the peas:
of its heat In an air submerged
hour under the umbrella of sum
mer' a crinkle is given to the
earth's invisible face, staring up
to the blue place where a tem
porary sea awaits, invisible to
everything but dust.
Turns Face
Earth and sun brew a broth
In the day that takes to simmer
ing in the pleasure of the night
where the trees are spun to surf
with silver flicks of moon spind
rift. The night becomes a deep
saturation; the earth face turns
its crinkled brow to sound. Pun
gent sounds on damp eels of
moisture slip in and out between
blade and leaf, trunk and house.
With a pagan velocity riding
herd to space, outriders search
out heat pockets to rout to sky.
Always in the cooling sieve of
night, earth surrenders to the
dark. Her heat crinkle gives in
to the gravity call heavy with
cricket voice and hint of geese.
Always, in the invisible turmoil
where gravity churns the mois
ture surface of air, the compost
pricks the drafts of night with
redolent poetry.
In the constellation of X-rays
under a moon guide, the spinal
columns of hills and the ribs of
ridges are silver, shorn of day's
sun heated texture. Through the
deeply dug fingers of the foot
hills, from the fields of moon
parchment, .earth .musk, rises
from other births that too had
sought day on a heat verticle.
A drift is on the night free
from the strain of a summer's
labor, slow and easy to the grass,
the heat is past.
Cloverdale The Joe Prim fam
ily have had as guests during the
past week Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Whaley, and son Fred, of Detroit,
Michigan. Mrs. Prinz and Mrs.
Whaley are sisters. This is the
first time the Whaleys have visit
ed in Oregon.
At the J. C Mayer home were
Mr. and Mrs. Frank McConnell of
Bend, Mrs. Lester McConnell of
Albany and Earl Robinson of
Beaverton. Mrs. Ethel Prock of
Lubbock, Tex., is a guest of her
son Lee Prock.
A special meeting of the East
Salem Lions Auxiliary will be
held Wednesday, Sept 16, in
stead of the regular meeting day.'
The meeting will be at the home
of Mrs. Virgil Pade, president,
1425 Jefferson St at 8 p. m.
For Fine Food
Chinese & American Dishes
Chinese Tea Garden
1626 N. Commercial St
Between State and Court
162tt N- Commercial
Ton walking up
over paint store.
11: vuew
JOW
in advance,
of ' the hotel
could be sure
them, it must
Tsk, tsk, what
!
i
Is a city?
i
PREPARING FOR BABY...
Brctker will take -well
itrt in tk cowine bmby
H ymm ieclutfe kin la -is-eessiens
end plans.
West Europe
Tour Leader
Tells of Jaunt
"Food was adequate, hotel serv
ice moderately good and people
were friendly and very eager to
assist us in every way," was the
comment of Dr. Daniel H. Schul-
ze, professor of German at Wil
lamette University, on his return
from a three-months tour of Wes
tern Europe.
He was leader of a party of 26
U.S. students who made the tour,
under the sponsorship of the Stu
dent International : Travel Asso
ciation, designed to broaden Am
erican students' concept of Eu
ropean social, geographic and
economic conditions.
His party left New York on the
Queeb Elizabeth and travelled
through England, Holland, Bel
gium, France, Switzerland, Ger
many and Italy.
The Willamette professor ex
press amazement at the amount
of rebuilding which has been
done in those countries since the
end of World War II.
"Really a great deal has been
done in those countries," he de
clared, "and perhaps Germany
has achieved a greater degree of
rehabilitation than have the oth
ers.
His party visited the principal
cities of Western Europe and
three of the major universities,
Oxford, Bonn and Heidelberg.
'Pretty' Jail Hotel
Think Travelers
EAST POINT, Ga. OB The
new $200,000 city jail in this At
lanta suburb is so inviting in ap
pearance that tourists sometimes
stop and seek accommodations,
thinking it is a hotel.
Police Chief William H. Taylor
helped design the posh cala
boose and is mighty proud of it
but he wants to scotch one report
that's gotten around. It's not air-
conditioned.
"I wish it was," add Taylor,
whose offices are in the jaiL
Cherry Court, Order of the
Amaranth will hold its first sta
ted meeting of the fall season
Wednesday night at the Scottish
Rite Temple at 8 p. m. The com
mittee includes Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Shafer, Mr. and Mrs. Clar
ence Wilson, Mrs. Helen Brown
and Mrs. Dennis Tolle.
St Cecilia's Guild of St Paul's
Episcopal Church will meet Tues
day night at the home of Mrs.
Lewis Scott 1988 Childs Aveat
8 o'clock. Mrs. J. W. Poindexter
will be the assisting hostess. Mrs. J
H. B. Collins is president of the
guild.
Many people are now 'arriving
for State Fair of Oregon. These
people have exhibits at Fair and
they bring them from distances
for you to see. These peoples
are very fine and sacrifice much
to bring pleasure to you. You
will do them big favor if you
tell to them the fact we have
best Chinese food and also
American food in the world. I
guess' I am not make myself
clear, we have best Chinese
food in world but too many
American food chefs challenge
statement so I am not taking
in so much territory on Ameri
can foods. People who come to
Salem to enjoy fair will also
enjoy my place of eating. Come
n and make yourself at home,
have rest room, top. ...
m sumo
i that's my
CUT)
Ptctur not of
this ta my
mak.
at a hotel. Without luggage, they had io pay
and stand the suspicious looks
clerk. Anyway the husband
that whatever was, said about
have concluded with "well
anyway, he picked a good looker."
We sometUnes wonder V. . how a com
munity without a state fair knows when sum
mer is over. , ' . ; .. . , ,
7 We wish to announce . . . that Scrturday
we took three green lights without stopping.
will the tourists think, that this
Marine Buren
A-Scientists
Locate New
Atom Particle
By LEIF ERICKSON
ALBUQUERQUE UB A" team
of Los-Alamos scientists reported
Thursday they believe they have
observed the free neutrino a nev
er before detected particle of the
nucleus of an atom.
If substantiated, their work will
pin down what has been called the
poltergeist noisy, never - seen
ghost of nuclear science.
The team leaders. Dr. Frederick
Reines, formerly of New York Uni
versity, and Dr. Clyde L. Cowan
Jr., formerly of Washington Uni
versity of St Louis, described
their 18-month hunt to the Ameri
can Physical Society.
Even the neutrino hunters can't
define what a neutrino is much
better than it is something that
has to be if Dr. Fermi's theory of
disintegration of the nucleus by
electronic emission is correct
Dr. Reines said neutrinos have
been called the "ashes of the- uni
verse." It has been believed that
when they happen they go on for
ever.
What Reines and Cowan did,
however, was to build a complex
and intricate detector to try to
prove a basic science credo. If a
reaction formula is true, then its
reverse reaction also must be true
and possible.
The detector first was operated,
behind lead and paraffin shields,
near a reactor pile at the Atomic
Energy Commissions Hani or d.
Wash., plant Then it was moved
to the AECs Los Alamos labora
tory.
Dr. Reines explained the reac
tion producing neutrinos was as
sumed to be this: Decaying neu
trons yield protons plus negative
electrons plus neutrinos.
The reverse reaction they sought
to prove was that protons plus
neutrinos yield neutrons plus posi
tive electrons.
Dr. Cowan, describing the de
tector apparatus operation and its
"counting" results, concluded:
"We think we probably have
seen the effects of the free neu
trino." He said a new and bigger detec
tor would be buut to pursue furth
er proof of what they believe they
have found.
The neutrino hunt Reines said,
has been a work of pure research.
But it has been supported by the
AEC even though there has been
no inkling of any possible weapons
application.
Reines said, however, useful ap
plication by-products of the work
already have been achieved in
manifold uses of the detector de
signed and built for the neutrino
hunt
Radiation detection well below
presently established levels is pos
sible, he said.
Hearing Set
On Treatment
Of Indians
WASHINGTON Ul Chairman
Miller (R-Neb) of the House In
terior Committee announced Fri
day that a special subcommittee
will hold a hearing in Eugene,
Ore., Sept. 24 on business involv
ing Indian trust lads.
Miller said that the primary
aim of the hearing is to determine
whether the Bureau of Indian Af
fairs has satisfactorily fulfilled its
obligation in guardianship of In
dian property.
Among those requested to ap
pear as witnesses are Morgan
Pryse. area director. Bureau of
Indian Affairs, Portland: Edward
B. Twining, former assistant U.S.
attorney, Portland; S. O. New
house, timber and real estate
broker, Wedderburn; A. Harvey
Wright state director of Indian
education, Salem; and T. Leland
Brown, lawyer. The Dalles.
Besides Miller other members
of the subcommittee are Reps.
D'Ewart (R-MonU. Saylor (R-Pa),
;c!z2F-!i7
OPEN LABOR DAY
V
3555 S. Commercial Strt
On 99-i South of Salem
NEW HOURS
SUNDAYS
2 TM. to 11 FJtf.
SATURDAYS
4:3 FJtf. to S AJtf.
J
WEEKDAYS
4:3S PJtf. to 2 AM.
SPECIALIZING IN
Chinese and American Foods
LARGE PARKING AREA
Orders To Go Phono 2-21 17 '
-- - I 9 1 V
lJ uuu
V s -
1
7
V f
V -
i -
... ' ?
Kfr rmH Mrs. Trrmes
wedding "was an event of Aug. 29 at the First Congre
gational Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bert J. Carr and the' groom's parents are Mr. and
Mrs. J. S. Murray. (McEwan Studio).
Tito Schedules Vital
Talk on Trieste Today
By ALLAN JACKS
TRIESTE CB Yugoslavs in the
thousands, by flag-bedecked buses
and trains, were pouring into the
tiny village of Okrajaglica Satur
day night to hear President Tito
make his much-heralded declara-
tinn nn th flaminc? Trieste issue.
The Yugoslav president speaks
Sunday on the dispute with Italy
over the future of this free terri
tory which both nations claim. His
foreign ministry has peppered
Rome all week with diplomatic
protests against armed demonstra
tions along the frontier, and has
threatened reprisals.
In contrast to the sizzling notes
there was an outward display of
order Saturday nient on DOW Sides
of the frontier, which splits thourgh
th town of fiorizia five miles west
of Okrajaglica and 25 miles north
of Trieste itself. Here Tito had set
the scene for his oration.
Festival Air
On the Yugoslav side there was
almost festival air as the tide
of travelers poured through Gorizia
railway junction from north and
south enroute to hear Tito speak.
The flow of special trains and bus
es is expected to continue au nigm.
On thA Ttalian side there
appeared to be little excitement and
no great evidence of popular con
cern desnite a week of diplomatic
bickering between the two coun
tries.
Yugoslavia has charged that Italy
rushed three divisions to the border
area last weekend as a show of
force under a pretense of fear that
Yugoslavia intended to annex her
occupation zone of Trieste.
. Zone B is occupied by 5,000
Yugoslav trooDS under the 1947 Ital
ian Peace Treaty. Zone A is oc
cupied by British and American
forces.
Ne Soldiers Seen
Garabinieri and police along the
Italian side of Gorizia seemed to
have been reinforced to assure
order but there were no soldiers in
evidence.
Yugoslavia, in her fourth diplo
matic note in three davs Friday.
threatened to march trooDS to the
frontier unless Italy withdrew her
forces from border areas.
Belgrade Radio charged Saturday
that Italy was rushing in more
troop reinforcements. It said an
Italian armored division bad been
sent to border stations and that
assault bombers have been flown
to Udine.
Italian military headquarters at
Udine. controlling the frontier zone,
denied reneatedlv that any Italian
soldiers have crossed the frontier,
as Belgrade has charged.
Wharton (R-NY). Westland (R-
Wash). Engle (D-Calif), Aspinall
(D-Colo), Haley (D-Fla) and Shu
ford (D-NC) and Pfost (D-Idaho).
A CDTV
OPEN
SEVEN
DAYS
A
WEEK1
f 1 V. ' i
' L2r
Harvev ODelores Carr) whose
Rome has said in diplomatic notes
in reply to Yugoslav charges that
Italian forces had taken only "pre
cautionary and protective meas
ures." Forest Fires
Under 1952
A total of 506 forest fires
scorched 803 acres of woodlands
under jurisdiction of the state
forestry department during ,the
period May 5 to Aug. 31, Jim
Walker, assistant state forester in
charge of protection, reported
Friday.
During the same period last
year 599 fires burned over 5,
379 acres.
Lightning strikes were res
ponsible for 259 fires on more
than half of the total. Smokers
accounted for 69 fires, logging
caused 41 and incendiarists 5.
Smouldering and unguarded
campfires caused 23 blazes.
Walker said the favorable fire
record so far this year was due
largely to cloudy and rainy wea
ther and' the absence of east
winds.
Starts Today Cont. 1:45
sr s - . .
i a. . . .
Street
2&
CO-FEATURE
xxsl
lit
DALLAS
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
GATES OPEN V00
SHOW AT DUSK
Phone 3841
STARTS TODAY!
TONY SOLDIER"
Also -
"LET'S DANCE"
2? H
Featuring the Finest-in
CHINESE and AMERICAN FOOD
Lunch Dinners Late Snacks
Prepared Orders to Take Out, Phono 2-6596
NEW ENLARGED DINING ROOM
Facilities Available
For Banquets and
Parties
XtSS Faii-Toads Ed.
SP to Prepare
ger State
acity
SAN FRANCISCO Southern
Pacific will spend $3,803,000 to
increase its Oregon rail freight
capacity beyond all forseeable
demands; D. J. Russell, presi
dent of the railroad, announced.
The railroad ' has authorized
that sum for 95 miles of central
ized traffic control between
Crescent Lake and Eugene,
Ore., he said. Construction will
begin in early October.
Centralized . Traffic Control,
(CTC) is s means of dispatching
trains by remote control. It was
explained. Many more trains can
be handled and their running
timse substantially reduced by
means of the facility.
Southern Pacific's main line to
Oregon is already equipped with
CTC between .Redding and
Black Butte, California. Work on
a 99-mile CTC system between
Klamath Falls and Crescent
Lake is near completion at a cost
of $2,461,000. Thus, with the ad
dition of the Crescent Lake, Eu
gene segment, 273 miles of the
Company's Cascade line will be
under CTC. This represents an
investment in Oregon of $6,264,-
000. .
The new installation Is the
first of its type on the railroad's
Portland division. A dispatcher
in an office at Eugene will regu
late traffic through a control
paneL By pushing buttons, he
will set electrically-controlled
devices that line up switches and
set signals to direct an engineer
whose tram may be miles away.
Also under remote control
will be heating devices that clear
switches of snow and ice during
winter.
Newsboy Returns Good
Deed for Good Deed
TOLEDO, Ohio UP)- Robert
Radkiewicz, 11-year-old newsboy,
is mowing Mrs. L. J. Richardson's
lawn for free these days.
Young Radkiewicz was collect
ing along his route the other
evening, eating a candy bar in
between collections. At the end
of his route, he found $20 miss
ing.
Mrs. Richardson found the
money crumpled inside an old
candy wrapper. She read of the
boy s loss in a newspaper and re
turned the money.
She refused to accept a reward.
so the newsboy is mowing her
lawn without charge.
2JS
Phono 4-4215
Gates Open 6:30
SHOW AT 7:15
STARTS TONITE1
Doris Day and
Gordon MacRae
In Technicolor
'By the Light of
the Silvery noon1
also
Cary Grant
Ginger Rogers
Marilyn Monroe in
"MONKEY
BUSINESS
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
IV lASTO -AtfitNS, HWMWAT ttf
Gates Open 6:30
t SHOW AT 7:15
STARTS TONITEI
All Technicolor Show!
ALAN LADD
Arlene Dahl
Richard Conte in '
DESERT LEGION"
-also-
Richard Wldmark
Don Taylor in
'DESTINATION
GOBI
Open Dafty
11 JLM. to 2 AML '
Set TO 3 AM.
At tfc Hollywood Ste Light!
Lar
Cap
. Statosmcm, Salem, Ore, Sunda?. Sept 6, IS 53 (Sec 2) S
Police Pay Raises Up
To Pubtic Relations
TAMPA. Fla. Un State Sena.
tor John Branch has tipped po
licemen on how to . set a pay
raise:' Just 'develop" individual
public relations.
Addressing the Florida Peace
Officers Association, he says the
public will back, pay raises only
if sold on the work of the police
men jt sees, adding:
"A raise in salary, hlfher pres-
tice in the fommnnlhr. ttt-
law enforcement, ail these start
with the attitude of the police
man.
GOBBLE GOBBLE
GALLUP. N. M un Th
Gallub InderendenL dallr new-.
paper, reported without elabor.
uon uus item: "We got a letter
addressed to the Gullun Inde.
pendent, Gullup, N. M. Gulp."
Fred Astaire
. . : vv. v .1 v
I V; " V f
Oscar levant- nanehe Fabray-JackBuchanan
J(ames Mitchell Betty ComdenT-TAdo-ph Green
2nd
Adventure & Romance Above the Clouds!
"CAGE OF GOLD"
Jean Simmons David Farrar ,
50c TILL 5:00
TWO COLORFUL FEATURES!
-V :
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CALHOUN -CALVET
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DM tlt rrol tt it?
fttf boy, M Out mate
"pef w:zom mr
-GEHE LOOHART
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SMAA ' HUnU .
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IHE m WARTS MIlNK -
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More Gars ( I
Farmers Ask
PORTLAND un The Southern
Pacific Railroad was i k e d
here by the Oregon Farm Bureau
Federation to provide more box
cars for Willamette Vailey grain
and seed crops, j ;
George Dewey, bureau execu
tive officer, said only 70 per cent
of August grain car orders were
filled. Because of the late cmmwi.
he said, a continued car shortage
would cause great economic loss"
to rrnvfiri with ' anlv -htiit mi.
third of the harvest completed, i
Dewev added that some ware
houses on Southern Pacific lines
are trucking grain to points on the
Oregon Electric line, where cars
seem to be available.
STARTS
TODAY
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Amerkoit In Paris!
11
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STARTS
TODAY
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THE 1 DO-
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HOFE EKOCC
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