2 (Sec 1) Statesman, Salem. Ore Friday, Sept 11. 1953 Plans Formed for Treatment Of Paralysis Victims at Home Plani for training laymen volunteeri in the care of polio pa ients were formed Thursday n'ht at a meeting of the Marion lounty Chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis n the Senator HcteL A training program for 25 volunteers is expected to get under ray after the return to Salem of two medical representatives who Phone 4-4215 GATES OPEN 8:45 SHOW AT 7;15 NOW THRU SAT.I 2 Top Color, Hits! (First Returm Showing ... Regular Prices!) mui wt Technicolor stanwj to:jy jujet curms-iEicii Also Rory Calhoun Corinne Calvet in - "Powder River" and TONIGHT (FRIDAY) OUR ALL COLOR CARTOON CARNIVAL Ph. 2-7829 UHSM 6AIXNS. HIMWAT ttfg Gates Open 6:45 Show at 7:15 NOW - THRU SAT.I 3 UNIT SHOW (Regular Prices Plus 5c for 3-D Viewers) "Bud Abbott & Lou Costello Go to Mars" Also Lloyd Bridges Marie Windsor - in "The Tall Texan and' 3rd Dimension You've heard about it -. . . now see It in "A DAY IN THE COUNTRY" Tonight (Friday) Our Big, All Color Cartoon Carnival a STARTS TODAY! THE BEAUTY AND THE OUTLAW) TrMtlMAAl ALSO THAT WONDERFUL STAR OF "ROMAN HOLIDAY" AUDREY HEPBURN in "SECRET PEOPLE" 3555 S. Commercial Street On 99-E South of Salem NEW HOURS SUNDAYS 2 PJL to 11 PJH. SATURDAYS 4:31 ML to t AM. WEEKDAYS 4:30 PJML to 2 AM. SPECIALIZING IN Chinese and American Foods LARGE PARKING AREA Orders To Go-Phone 2-21 17 i are Demg sem oy ine coumy chapter to the Los Angeles Coun ty Hospital polio center. Vote to Send Two It was voted to send Dr. Robert Anderson, Salem physician, and Mrs. Fae Lefor, superintendent of nurses at Salem Memorial Hospital, to the Los Angeles clinic, Oct 26-J9 to learn the latet methods of caring for polio patients. Mrs. Albert Gragg, secretary of the Marion County Chapter, said Dr. Anderson and Mrs. Lefor would lead a training program upon their return to teach the newest techniques in polio care to volunteers. Work In Homes These volunteers would do much of their work in polio patients' homes, she said. Mrs. Ted Jenny is in charge of recruit ing the workers. On-the-job training would also be given staffers at local hospi tals. It was announced at the meet ing that the county chapter owes $8,628.68 in outstanding bills through Sept. 1. Since there are no funds in the local treasury, ap plication has been made to the national foundation for financial assistance. No More Aid Mrs. Gragg said the national is expected to pay the current bills, but that no more aid could be ex pected from the parent organi zation until after the 1954 fund campaign in January. She pointed out that this has been the worst polio year in the history of the national founda tion. (Applications of two new polio patients were accepted.) The National Geographic Soc iety says the first storm windows in America are believed to be those at Monticello, Thomas Jef ferson's home. v 3 ntoHi s-soso -J Plus ISc for Viewers 3 DIMENSION "Charge at Feather River" Also 'White Goddess'' PWOMK 50c Till 5:00 Donald O'Connor "FRANCIS COVERS THE BIG TOWN". and Don Taylor "GIRLS OF PLEASURE ISLAND" Color by Technicolor v. ...... -s,W.UW for hit od MM T7. i 1 M ILUimUULUK mini k PWXAJ LULUK AHTHDMY QUitlli - KURT KASZMAR IIIAAA ArM At THE NEW m ciw Fifes' Coaches (Fell Lions of Team Spirit I There's more team spirit and Uttle or no "gang .feeling" to Salem High1 School's football squad this yeir, the Vikings' coaches told Salem Lions Club in a pre-season football program Thursday noon at the Marion Hotel. I Salem High opens its football schedule with a game with Cleveland at Portland tonight i Head Coach Lee Gustafson said the team has fine spirit and good training habits this fall and should put up a real fight in district and league competition. He and. assistant coaches Hank Juran and Al Gray described the team to the service club. Newly named team captain. Quarterback Herb Triplett, was introduced, r Coach Gustafson said an un usual mark of the present squad Of some 40 boys is their overall scholarship average of over 3.0 (B). Gov. Patterson AAA Meeting l LOS ANGELES (Jl Gov. Paul L. Patterson of Oregon said Thurs day that the federal government should either get out of the gasol line tax business or use these taxes for highway construction. I The governor, addressing the American Automobile Association convention, said the federal gov ernment collects abou two billion dollars annually in automotive ex cise taxes, about half of it in the form of gas taxes. But. he said, the government spends only about 200 million dollars of this on the nation's roads. I "The funds from this tax go into the general fund and are in no way connected with or contingent upon the amount of money expend ed by the Federal Bureau of Roads." he explaied. However, the governor added: S "We of the Western states, where the federal government holds near ly half of our area, know it is im possible for the government to get out of the road building business in this part of the country." He said he favors enlargement of jthe federal government's respon sibility for highway construction but feels that "the final duty for the construction of suitable roads for the people of the country lies in the hands of the individual states." Bomb Tosser Strikes Again In Kansas City KANSAS CITY (Py-A mysteri ous bomb thrower renewed his work Thursday night, tossing a bomb that damaged two business buildings on the east side. The bombing was the sixth of business houses in the last three weeks here. Damage in the latest incident was minor. The officers said the bomb apparently was thrown from a moving car and landed about 15 feet from the front door of the Keystone Trailer and Equipment Co. factory. The glass was broken in the w factory doors and 10 windows were nroken in a continental Can Co. plant across the street. Air -Conditioned Now Showing Open 6:45 THE DESERT SONG" Technicolor -Kathryn Grayson, Gordon MacRae Technicolor Co-Hit THE VANQUISHED" John Payne, Jan Sterling Addresses Table Models Combinations Some Play Some Don'i raws choice. mum jack' IRlFc FFA Contests Set for Fair' On Saturday An influx of between three and four hundred additional Future Farmers will hit the fair grounds to take in the fair Saturday and participate in the FFA dairy live stock, and poultry judging finals. The winning tesms in each divi sion will get a trip to the national contest in Kansas City, Mo., and Waterloo, Iowa. The Junction City chaoter beef herd Thursday won first place among FFA beef exhibitors and received the new rotating plaque donated by the First Na tional Bank of Portland. Senior and grand champion in the Anws division was shown by Jim Cof field of Estacada. Eldon Powell, Junction City, showed the junior chamoion Angus. Glen Wagner, MeMinnvHle, showed the senior and er?nd champion Hereford in the FFA division. Ralph Wilcox, Albany, had the junior champion Hereford. Jim Coffield ws cam pion FFA showman with Glen Warner runner-up. David Warren, Shedd, showing a Southdown, was chosen Future Farmer champion sheep show man. Jack Long, Scio was top showman in the Suffolk-Hampshire class while John Clark of Central High School, Independence-Monmouth led the way in long wool showmanslhp. Newberg's chapter sheeo flock, a smooth group of Suffolks, won the new Future Farmer Sheep plaque put up by the Ladd and Bush Branch, U. S. National Bank. McMinnville's flock was runner-up. Honors were pretty evenly di vided in other classes. Jack Humphrey, Corvallis sheep raiser, took his 4th straight champion ship in the FFA single fat lamb division. Ninety 'Woodsmen exhibited 4-H forestry projects at the state fair this year with the top awards going to Gerald Martin, St Paul, forestry 1, and Betty Jones, Salem, forestry II. Summer school scholarships go with the two highest awards. Alternate winners are Dennis Vanderwile, St Paul, and Pat Miller, Salem. Sightseeing Tot'Upsets Neighborhood They all thought two-year-old Brent Burrell had drowned in Mill Creek but he was only sightseeing. Brent is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Burrell of 790 N. Winter St . He was romping with a play mate Thursday morning on the bank of Mill Creek near the Bur rell's home when suddenly he dropped out of sight "He went in there," said the playmate, pointing to a five-foot hole in the creek. The alarm was spread and two city first aidmen arrived plus four police officers. A score of neighbors started searching. A couple of men waded into the creek, while first aidmen prepar ed to start grappling. The playmate kept insisting: "He went in there." A thoughtful police officer started cruising around the neigh borhood and found Brent sight seeing near Summer and D Streets. Brent was handed over to his tearful but much relieved mother. Remarked a first aidman: "That was one run with a happy end ing" Enrollment Above 60,000 at Portland PORTLAND W Enrollment In public schools here passed the 60, 000 mark Thursday, the third day of the new school year. Grade schools had 45,402 stu dents and high schools 14,943. o oYo Corner Church Listen to Sniffing Jack's Football Forecast Every Friday Might at 7:30 P. M. on KOCO - Starting Sept. 18 Race Killer9 Could Cripple Food Supply in Wide Area TUCSON, Ariz. U) A University of Arizona soils biochemist Thurs day disclosed secret research on a simple, almost fantastic new weapon that might wipe out life of an entire nation. The element is strontium, and Dr. Wallace H. Fuller said a dust bomb produced from it could some day cripple the food supply of a wide area. Its implications, he said,' could even equal that of the recently pub licized "race killer," the cobalt bomb. The Arizona professor has quiet ly conducted research on the ele ment for the past 2 Vt years. He is on special assignment from the Atomic Energy Commission. He made the formal announce ment of his work at a special press conference. Radioactive strontium introduced into the human or animal body would concentrate itself in the bones and teeth. It has a half -life of 25 years. There, if allowed to build up in sufficient amount, it could cause radiation sickness or death. As Fuller explained it in an in terview with newsmen, "strontium is potentially the most biologically hazardous of the fission products." It could be dropped from the air to contaminate crops, lands and water supplies. "It is similar to calcium, which is an essential plant nutrient" be said. "So far as plants are con cerned, strontium and calcium may readily inter-change. "Both elements are absorbed equally well by plants through leaves or from the soil via their roots. "Both , elements - concentrate In the same tissues. Plants will build Three-Party Coalition to Rule Germany BONN, Germany WVChancel lor Konrad Adenauer's Christian Democratic Party decided Thurs day night to form a three-party coalition government with the same partners who governed West Germany for the past four years. A communique issued after a six-hour meeting of the party committee said the Christian Democrats were ready to revive the old coalition with the Free Democrats (FDP) and German Party (DP). The Christian Democrats won 244 seats in the Sept 6 election, giving them a majority of one in the 487-member Bundestag (low er house). With the 48 and 15 seats of the Free Democrats and German Party, respectively, Adenauer can dominate the Bundestag easily. For Fine Food Chines & American Dishes Chinese Tea Garden 162 N. Commercial St Between State and Court Oh. My Aching Back! Get Schaefer's Liniment For the relief oi muscular aches and pains due to ex ercise or exposure. 50c, 1.00 & 1.75 Schaefer's Drug Store Open Daily 7:30 A.M. to 8 PJL Sundays 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. 135 N. Commercial O and Ccnler up strontium in their tissues up to five to 50 times as high a concen tration as is present in a soil. "Radioactive strontium could be introduced into the human or ani mal body by many means, by contaminated water directly con taminated food . crtps, or by food crops grown in contaminated soil. "If animals should eat forage, such as grasses or alfalfa, that con tain radio - strontium, the radio activity would concentrate in their bones. "If large enough concentrations were available, blood - forming cells would be eliminated or in jured.) Radiation sickness or death would result. "In cows or goats, the radio-strontium would concentrate in the milk that is used for human con sumption. In this way the lethal radiation might be transferred to man. "Man also could get it by con suming leafy vegetables as well as other edible parts of plants. "So far as we know here no tests have been conducted on animals or humans to determine the effects of eating foods or drinking liquids on human or animal bodies. "The AEC reports that all as pects of the biological utilization of radioactive strontium and other fission products are being stud ied in their research program from the production of fissionable products to their absorption by plants and utilization by animals to their final effects on animals. "This research will permit sci entists to determine the levels of radiostrontium that are of health hazard proportions. u Iru . Come to the FAIR! And see some of Hollywood's latest Dance Creations performed by outstanding students oi the PAUL ARM STRONG STUDIOS OF DANCING entertaining at the Freeway Show 2 Performances Daily. if Jr. and Sr. High School Students enrolling this week will make a soring of $17.00 on a complete ballroom course. PAUL 'ARMSTRONG SCHOOL OF DANCING 155 3. Liberty Come In Mornings or Ph. 2-7523 Zjlianh Wo Which All Went To Make Our GRAND OPENING A SUCCESS . CHINA CITY 35S5 SOUTH COMMERCIAL' Weary Fliers Rescued After Desert Jumn LUKE AIR FORCE BASE, Ariz. (jp) a, long and trying adventure in the Arizona desert is all over for nine tired but happy airmen. The flyers were rescued early Thursday from the sandy, barren wflderness near- the ghost town of Sundad, Ariz., where they had parachuted from a. crippled KC07 tanker 20 hours earlier. Aside from minor injuries they were in good condition. "Boy, were we happy to see that plane,' said A.2.C. Daniel C. Cam eron, 21, of Washington, D. C He was referring to the pet fighter1 that spotted them at dusk Wednesday night after an aerial search by 33 planes. ""We didn't have any water, and that desert was really hot A plane came back later and dropp ed us food and water, and then we just waited until morning." The airmen were catapulted into their dramatic experience by an aerial collision between the tanker and a B47 Stratojet during a refueling operation. The bomber, with a crew of four, flew safely back to its sta tion at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base near Tucson. The four motored tanker, its two right en gines knocked out and a wing damaged, veered off at a sharp angle. The pilot, Capt. F. F. Jenkinson of Mineola, L. I., ordered the crew to bail out; and then landed the plane safely at Luke Air Force Base. ; CLASSES Are Now Forming for Ballet -( Toe - Character Acrobatic Tap & Ballroom FREE Enrollment With the greatest Fall offer ever made We Wish To Say To All The rkers uests And Contributors GIFTS AND FLOWERS Judges Prefer Blondes in Test Prelude ATLANTIC CITY OB Two 1 year-old blondes Miss South Da kota and Miss Wyoming won preliminary honors in the Mist America contest Thursday night' Miss South Dakota, Delores Jerri's of Spearfish. got the nod from the judges for a piano rendition oi "Rhapsodien in C Major" by Dohn anyi. , Miss Wyoming. Elaine Lois Hoi kenbrink of Torrington. was vic torious in the bathing suit division. Both - of the girls get coveted points toward the title of Miss America of 1954 and its $50,000 in prize money. . Thursday night was the second night of preliminaries in the week long pageant which ends Saturday, when the coptest winner will be picked from among the 52 contes tants, representing most of the states, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. , ,; Oregon PW Among 32 Enroute Home TOKYO Cfi Thirty-two Ameri cans released from Communist prison camps departed from Tokyo for the United States Thursday night aboard a hospital plane. Four of the 32 former POWs are litter patients. Among those aboard: Sgt. 1. C. Robert E. McGrath, Portland, Ore. nnn LEARN 1 5 Donees; for ONLY $9.00 Fox Trot Waltz Tango Rumba Samba Combination Private and Class It's Easy - It's Fun CLASSES FOX ADULTS TEEN ACERS CHILDREN i Special low September rates for Children's instruction In tap, ballet, acrobatics, toe. Studio Open It A. M. te It P. M. JON MAR Dance Studios 474 F.rty rh.n.4-4M2 ncranoannp ou Of PH. 2-3 J 17 1 J i i 1 ' l l