Free Movies Save Lives j By JOHN BARROW v , International News Service I Staff Correspondent i I CHICAGO (INS) Free movies have been a literal lifesaver for thousands of youngsters who live near a deep quarry on Chicago's southwest side. It came about, through a father who was determined to keep his two sons and their buddies from playing around the danger ous hole. Although a ten-foot fence encloses the quarry, adven turous boys, have a way of infil trating most barriers. i So Tony Schillaci had an idea. Reward instead of punishment seemed the logical approach and he explains:. . ! "I had this movie projector and I told the kids they'd have a free movie every Friday night as long as they stayed away from the big hole." - . The plan worked and after sev en years Tony's ? weekly , movie audience has swelled to hun dreds. Scores of grownups, many wheeling baby buggies, also take in the free entertainment Tony, 41-year-old operator of an auto fender and body shop, was joined four years ago by the firm which operates the quarry. Ma terial Service Corp. now pays Tony to cover expenses .of the films. 5 The supervisor of nearby White Park also stepped in. Patrick Mc Carthy provides Tony with space around the public playground fieldhouse to accommodate the ex panding audience. In the last four years, not a single child has been found inside the quarry without permission. Are the youngsters still curious Yank Finds j Tiny People J CAPETOWN. South Africa (INS) An American explorer. Colonel William J. Morden, has found in South West Africa what are believed to be the four last "Strandlopers ? in the world survivors of a mysterious African people as tiny as Bushmen. ; j Colonel Morden, leader of . the Africa expedition of the Amer ican Natural History Museum, said - in Windhoek, capital of South West Africa, that in the desert they found three old men and an even older women who are believed to be the only pure "Strandlopers . (people who run on the sands") alive today. j The Strandlopers are believed to have come up the coast from the Cape. These four "lost .peo ple" have intermarried and have no descendants. ; ?: j Asked how old she was, the woman told Colonel Morden she was vthe oldest person alive." j The amazing thing about them," said Colonel Morden, "is that their hearts can distinctly be seen beating." TheTeason given by the expedition's doctor is that the bone structure on their chests is very thin. j "All four are emaciated," said Colonel Morden. "The Strandlop ers, who have become a legend in South Africa history, are short people with coloring similar to Bushmen. But they have finer features." ,-- 1 about the "mysteries" of the big hole? . " ,.- Naturally. But a joint enter prise with the park supervisor and the quarry company takes care of that They, conduct the children on guided tours of the quarry. - n Electronic Control For Traffic Light DALLAS, Tex. (INS) Have you ever wished a traffic light could see you coming and not turn red before you made it to the corner? , , Yep, they've thought up one tnat does that, and then. some. Traffic - lights with mechanical brains are now in operation at a few-Dallas intersections. The light an electronic device. operates in favor of the street with the greatest amount of traf fic If there is an equal amount of traffic on both streets at the intersection, the lights gives each an equal amount of time. Frayed Ropes Help Britain LONDON (JPi A thriving trade in old rope has been going on be tween Britain and the U. S. since 1770. Recently it has been step ped up to the point where it has earned nearly $250,000 for dollar- short Britain in the last three years. The frayed or worn manila rop es are collected largely from ships at Bristol channel ports. They are dried, sorted, graded, nacked in to huge 450-cwt coil bales, and shipped out to New York and Boston. In the United States they are distributed to paper mills and turned into pulp. They make ex ceptionally strong tough wrapping paper. Helium gas, once valued . at $2,500 a cubic foot now is pro duced for less than one cent a cubic foot - . Beivare if Sky Appears Thus 1 3 ' o. ::.. - . i 1 " WASHINGTON, D. C MACKEREL SKY According to old time weather prophets a sky like this can mean only one thing: A storm is on the way. (AP Wirephoto to The Statesman.) Stone Better Than Gun Against Fox HADDAM, Conn. Gaston Schreiber, a World War I army captain with a reputation for marksmanship, took three shots recently at a fox raiding his chicken farm here. He missed each time. ' The fox was less fortunate when it returned- to Schreiber's farm two days later. Mrs. Schreiber hit it squarely between the eyes with a stone, knocking it cold, and kill ed it with a club. i A Continental Army manual written by Baron von Steuben cautioned soldiers against "vexing the inhabitants" near their camps. wallop Packed By Soda Pop OSHKOSH, Neb. UB Straw berry pop can pack '". a terrific wallop. Witness the case of C M. Miller, Oshkosh attorney. A bottle of pop dropped from Miller's arm-load of groceries, shattered on the pavement and. under the pressure of the carbon- ation, sent particles of glass fly ing. . :..- The glass cut tendons in Mil ler's left leg. An operation was necessary - to join the severed tendons, and Miller was commit ted to a cast on his leg for six weeks. ..- -...! Statesman. Salem. Ort Friday. Oct X 1S53 (Sec 2) 11 Weather Bards Thought Better Prophets Than Poejry Writers WASHINGTON Authors of old weather rhymes may not have been the best of poets, but sci ence now is ready to admit they were pretty good . as weather prophets. . .. Farmers, sailors, shepherds and the like frequently compress a wealth of weather lore into dog gerel verse. Many of these are backed by sound metorologkal fact . .'; Take this one: "Fog on the hill brings water to the mill; ? , . , "Fog in the hollow, fair weath er will follow." . That's pretty simple. The fog on the mil is a moisture-laden cloud from which rain very likely will be condensed. Fog in the hol low is just that a -.ground haze which may be expected to burn off soon. There's another saying, -"Mountains in the morning, "Fountains in the evening." The "mountains" - in this case refer to piled-up cumulus clouds typical of many summer days; II they grow in size and depth by mid-morning, and the air is calm, better postpone that picnic. The overturning of air within the bil lowy masses soon reaches a point where the cloud can't sustain the water vapor. It rains. One of the most familiar of the weather adages goes: "Rainbow in the morning, sailor take warning. "Rainbow at Highlit, sailor's de light" . ' In most latitudes of North Am erica major wind currents and the weather move from west to east In the morning any rainbow you see will be in the west, mean ing that the rain that forms the bow; is approaching. . When there's a 'rainbow "at night" (poetic license for, late afternoon or evening) it means the storm has passed on to; the east ; ' " ''..- A terse old saw asserts: "Mackerel sky, "Storm very nigh." - Here the clouds fleck the sky in a J pattern which looks like the scales on a fish's back. A mack erel sky usually precedes a .warm front which, when it collides with cooler air, can be - expected to bring.precipitation. Time-tested as such sayings are, it is well to remember the Span iards' proverb: f "When God wills, it can, rain with1 any wind."? Further, it's possible the Atom ic Age may develop new atmos pheric bromides. Such as: ' "Mushroom cloud on Yucca Flat "Hit the dirt and grab your hat" i Dog Scores , Hole in One LINCOLN,5 Neb . tfl Roger Hitz dog, Bu,tch. suddenly, stop' ped eating.", ' v Pretty soon Butch. was down from his normal 60 pounds to where Roger said "you could al most see through him," - As a last resort, the puzzled veterinarian operated on Butch. - He found a golf ball core "in Butch's digestive tract Last report from- Roger was that "Butch eats a lot" Youths Scare Driver Just Once Too Often LAWRENCE, Mass III Four youths, tossing a staffed dummy into a roadway t frighten the wits out of motorists, flung it -once too often. . . ; It landed in front of a police cruising car. The boys, brought into court on delinquency ' charges, were given a stern lec ture and placed on probation. EXCLUSIVE HATS - SUITS - COATS - DRESSES i Wilson & McCulIah Apparel Shop 466 Court St. 4V SALEM, ORE. Phon 3-8714: am tj od Qoaal oooo u a i a.a III! M IO II I I a n I w " Uiv -II IDflQ " I I " i mm S'l Jo o ' mil ! , poo oo 5 ; SS oao Hfl" ea . a u 'Uf u u u u o u u U" i kn n Mra It -sTy J ,i ; I " i --.' SPECIAL 100 Virgin Flannel The Seasons Most Popular Fabric $1 195 CHOICE OF COLORS LIGHT GREY ' DARK GREY OATMEAL : i JONES 121 NORTH HIGH ST. BUFFET SPECIAL - Friday and Saturday Served 1 1A.M. to 8 P. M. 1953 Hodel Television Sels Weslinghonse -Packard-Bell v Al Special Bednced Prices! Free Anlenna Free Inslallaiion Free SO-Day Service : 1 Year Warranly on Piclnre TnBe ieaier Appliance Go. 3?S ChemekeU Phone 34311 I Open Wednesday and Friday Kites Til P. BL With 30 Salads on Ice Coffee af Your Table by the Silex Full Choice of Desserts - RESTAURANT ; Downtown on State Street Park Free at Car Park Ferry and High AT EDWARD VILLIAMS Our Christmas Personal Lines are now complete.. We have 3,000 designs to choose from. See our Special Values in Christmas Box Assortments and cellophane pack ages. . -k Our Brownie. 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