2 (Sec 1) Statesman. Satan, Or Sun-. Jan. 31. 1954 GOP's RaUy, Demo : : i i Speeches to Mark Election Warm Up By D. HAROLD OLIVER WASHINGTON un The major political parties announced j plans Saturday for I simultaneous! con gressional , election warm-ups, starting next Week with a big GOP rally here and on Intensive, Demo cratic speaking campaign in key Western states. The j Republicans mapped a three-day rallyj beginning Feb. 4, Bricker Plan Compromise ! ill Franzen Turns on Wlllson Par In II it Hands I By JACK BELL WASHINGTON Wf A new com promise on the Bricker constitu tional ; amendment on treaty mak ing was in President Eisenhower's hands! Saturday with the strong possibility he may signal for an end to the strife that has split the republican party. Sen.) Bricker R Ohio. whose original proposal was vigorously assailed by Eisenhower ; as ham stringing presidential powers to deal with other nations,' was re liably! reported conditionally promise. Bricker was ed. however. o to have agreed accept the corn- when the national committee and its finance, women's and Young Republican adjuncts will hold ses sions on the campaign to increase the 5QP margin of control in Con gress next November. The jhigh spot of the Republican doings' will come Friday night when President and Mrs. Eisen hower Vice President and Mrs. Nixon and members of the Cabi net and their wives, with Senate and House chieftains, attend the annual Lincoln Day box supper at a sports arena. Movie Atmosphere There will be the usual Holly wood atmosphere and lots of party whoopkle-do. The President will speak j briefly. He already has re leased a recorded film for simi lai dihners being held on various dates.) In this talk he makes a strong pea for party unity. The! Republican National Fi nance! Committee meets Thursday to set a 1954 budget for the na tional! and Senate and House cam paign; committees. The national comrriittee itself will start its first meeting of the year Friday and continue over into Saturday. 1o Start Tour Thei Democratic committee an nounced that Chairman Stephen A. Mitchell ' will start Tuesday on a two-weeks nine-state tour of the West where there are a score or more! of impending close Senate and House races. This is one of the areas where the Democrats hope Ho make gains to give them control of the Senate. Two of-the states Mitchell will r 1 k Lights I ' '--l ' I V Dimes Drive !To Get Aid of (Firemen Today n Tjie March of Dimes polio cans- , paign will get an assist today ' from the Salem tire deDartmeht when firemen from central ita-j ' tion operate a downtown erri(e ! station. ; ; L I The Walter H. Zosel station n j Jligh and Chemeketa StreeU will , 'be manned from 7 a.m. to 6 p.n- j . by men from the department a ad j ' all profits from sales and servient i will go to the polio fund. ) j 1 An added attraction ;to enter tain patrons of the sen-ice station today will be the display of two old-time fire engines used in Sa lem before the turn of the cen tury. One is a hand-drawn hand ; pumper used here from 1865 to City Manager J. L. Franzen (right) is shown above throwing the switch which turned on 33 new lights ! JJJJv uj Thi BJ?'J IE1! in Willson Park for the first time Friday evening. Looking on are Charles Barclay, acting Prki ; w"a"t i n' ;hjV !l! administrator, and Henry Bern, city electrical inspector. The new lights were constructed from dis- j ?' Z1mTft 9nT Tl carded street lamp standards, and contain a 200 watt bulb each. After Friday night, the lights will JLJ ;Jg SJiIt VrV nSfi be turned on and off automatically by a mechanical time dock. (Statesman Photo.) (Picture also ; in thV5t Sclera station ? j on page one.) j : ( , uve Entertainment I ! A committee has also lined up a live entertainment show fpr ; customers at the station and sev eral guts donated by Salem mer chants will be given away. : 1 The polio campaign's "Block of Dimes" competition which ended Saturday collected a total jof S2.381, Hillary Etiel, competitibn chairman, reported Saturday I night ; ! In downtown competition Sat urday the Kiwanis Club defeated Moslems to Match Weight Of Aga Khan With Platinum KARACHI. Pakistan - The Ismaili Moslems are weighing the Aga Khan again here this week this time against about 1300.000 worth of platinum, actual or sim ulated. The Aga Khan, portly spiritual leader of the sect, flew to Karachi Candidate said to have insist that he would go along with the compromise only if Eisenhower either approved the new nronosal ! worked out in a bipartisan conference or agrees I visit nold Senate elections in not to oppose! it publicly, I'rseTGo-Ahead' j Some of th president's closest friends were known to be urging him to give a go - ahead signal for introduction of the ; compro mise Monday,! reserving the right to suggest changes in language if Senate debate brings Out some flaws not now apparent. As it was delivered to the Presi dent by Sen. Knowland of Califor nia, te GOP floor leader, the compromise i as said I by those who have seen it to include por tions jof previous proposals made by Bricker, Knowland George (D Ga). Knowland Suggests The! compromise would amend article six of the constitution to provide that treaties j "in pur suance" of the constitution should become the . supreme law of the land. Knowland suggested this ap proach rather than the Bricker plan pf adding a new amendment to the constitution. Thei compromise would include the first section of Bricker's pro posal! that "a provision of a treaty which conflict with this constitu tion shall not be of any force or effect." I George's Section Drafters agreed to pick up a November for seats now held by Republicans Cordon in Oregon and pworshak in Idaho. Mitchell will speak at a series of Jefferson-Jackson fund raising dinners and statewide meetings during his Western tour. Among Human Heart Beats for Same Reason as Neon Sign Flickers By GORDON G. MACNAB i The heart's leaky condenser PORTLAND Your heart in the sinus region into which the ' beats for the same reason a neon ! veins drain. The blood pressure sign may tucker: &iecmc cur- measurement can dc correciea rents short-circuiting through a readily. Delegates to the annual leaky condenser. - j meeting of the Western Society for Blood pressure of people who Clinical Research were told these Baby-Sitter jFatally Shoots Younger Boy are extremely tat may register dangerously high more because of tradition than because of actual pressure. Italy Ousts Third Regime In 6 Months them land are Seattle, reb. 9; Fort Feb. 10; Baker. Ore., Feb. 11, and Pocatello, Idaho, and Hel ena, iAiont., reb. 12. Mrs. Durant I and Sen. j I I nitric I ihol i By Roosevelt . i i V'.: t DES MOINES A 14-year SUte Kep. Mark Hatfield, who has aanounced he will be a candidate for Republics no mination to the state senate. (Story on page One.) Bovs 6 and 4 HONOLULU on - Mrs. Richard Durant. socially prominent wife of a Honolulu doctor, said in a tele phone interview Saturday she has wired James Roosevelt, demand ing an immediate public retrac things Saturday among a score of topics presented at the final day of meetings at the University of Oregon Medical SchooL About U)0 physicians and others from West ern states attended. Current Leaks Through Dr. Hans H. Hecht of Salt Lake City told of work he and Dr. Allan J. Brady had done in pinpointing the area of the heart which trig gers the beat. Working with the already established knowledge that there is a difference in electrical charge between the inside and the outside of cells, they discovered an area in the heart where cur rent leaks through. As a rule, tissue membrane is I a pretty good insulator. Dr. Hecht told of getting read ings from turtle hearts by use of microscopically small electrodes and of discovery of the leakage at the one point whenever current begins to build up. This one point is in a part of the heart which develops last in human formation and discovery of it adds another piece of information on why the heart works: Current leaks through and sets off the heart's muscular reaction. Then it builds up, leaks through, again, and again the heart beats. Locates Break-through This has been known but Dr eld boy who "didn't want;to work I the downtown Lions Club $503'(to; Slt HnilKP Afire t baby-sitting" told officers Sat-jS382 to retain the silver pitcher OCl 11UU l" Saturday night for the pcbLc weigh-in Vr2neday before mar than 50.000 of his miHioo fol lowers. His weight has become a sym bolic guide to chanty and better ment plans of the Ismailians. At last reports three weeks ago. he tipped the beam at X pounds. Platinum currently Is quoted on the New York market at $91 aa ounce. Celebrating his 70th year as bead of the Ismaili Moslems, he w2I ease into the golden throne of a special scales set p at the renter of a stadium the sue of a football field whole his jubilant followers pile blocks of the precious metal or a substitute if he so decides on the counter balancing platform. His followers already have roa tributed more than two million dot Lars for the platinum jubilee. The Aga Khan's jubilee commit tee has made arrangements with Swiss banks to borrow 20S pounds of platinum plus a small resent just in case their leader has gained weight. The plan was to fly the metal to Pakistan secretly and return it the same way to avoid loss in buying and then selling such a large quantity. The practice of weighing the Aga Khan against precious metal and jewels began when his followers .observed tne golden anniversary of his leadership. Each time the Aga Khan returns to the members of his sect their donations for the use of charity or improvement. This year's gifts will be used to form a "Platinum Jubi lee Finance Corporation" to furn ish business loans for the Ismaili sect for the second .year in a row. Cadets from Salem's Civil i Air Patrol collected $95 Saturday at the Capitol Shopping "Center, fct 7el reported. Near 1953 Figure Final figures for the Mothers ROME UFi Crisis - ridden Italy dumped her third government in six months Saturday. Premier Amintore Fanfani's 11-day old Christian Democrat cabinet fell when the Chamber of Deputies voted 303-260 against him on the confidence motion needed to keep him in office. Parties of the Right and Left joined in the opposition. The out come was no surprise: It had been forecast since Fanfani presented his pro-West, anti-Communist pro gram of social reform to parlia ment four days ago. . (U.S. State Department officials in Washington were openly con cerned over Fanfani's fall. They feared it foreshadowed continued political instability in Italy which j Hecht's report was a first on just : v-'nen ne Pmted the gun at Bobby, urday he fatally shot another lad in a fit of anger when the young ster wouldn't stay in bed. Deputy Sheriff Tod Lyons said Garry Browning, son of a thrice married mother, said in a signed statement he shot Robert Dale Short, 8. Friday night with a 20 gauge shotgun. Garry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Phil Ryan, said he deliberately loaded the shotgun after Bobby said "I won i go 10 Dea nu im reaay. ; estimaUd tha. ahmi. S1S0 u The youth is being held at the I to come in which would top juvenile home here pending fur-1 year's figure of S7.007. ther questioning by authorities An cstima,cd 400 prMns Monda- tended a benefit dance for arry s statement declared "I nolio fund at the Eacles Lodre was not in good humor. . .because Saturdav night. Two orchestras I was always being interrupted by (provided music from 9 p.m. uhtil coDoy wnen i inea 10 siecp. midnicht lor dancinc rn "Mrs. Hopp made Bobby go to ; floors of the lodge at 371 N. High bed. then about a half-hour later ; St when I was asleep on the couch. ' Bobby came and woke me up. He came back two or three times. I said, 'Bobby, I'm giving, you this Last chance; either you go to bed or else.'" 'Garry said he got the shotgun from a bedroom and found a shell iw a .desk drawer. Lyons quoted the boy as saying I tL La 1 J a I r i mougni i naa me saictv on PORTLAND tH Two boys. 4 and 6 years old. apparently set a fire that did from 15.000 to $10,000 damage at the home of Dr. M. J. Otis here Saturday. The boys apparently lit matches in a tool shed attached to the back March for the polio campaign 1 of the house. The flames spread Thursday night show a totarl of . om there. Tommy Otis. . es $6,942 collected in Marion Cobn-1 ped injury but Charles' Rowland, ti- Arffc..- a a fhaHnn i,Mu i 4, a neighbor s son, suffered bums ; on hand uiiu vuwii iuuii oaav uoiuiuaj, iv - yet ast COUGHS UP BULLET COLUMBIA CITY. Ind. Former Sheriff Danny Hayses, who was shot in the face during a bank robbery here almost 2S years ago, coughed up the bullet Saturday. ' and was injured. face. No one else at-, The sensation of color cin be produced by pressure on the eyeball. POOR BOY SANDWICH i AT NORTH'S 1170 Center V f f might benefit the nation's power- r .nc- j.. . , ... V.:- 4 tion tof "the false, libelous state-1 lut J ""- i v. .'ssv west oi me iron v-uriain, in en la ment" linking her name with his in af letter publicized Friday. A Kirs. Richard Durant was one of nine women listed by Roose velt.! who said he had committed adultery with them. Mrs. Durant said she is demand- section proposed by George, which ing an immediate explanation, read originally: "An international ! ?'ln flabbergasted, I'm hyster agreement other than a treaty teal, ( I'm doubled up with laugh shall j become! effective as internal ter. I'm also a little annoyed," law n the United States only by ! she tdeclared. I've seen Roosevelt twice in my llife; once with my husband at dinner in San Francisco, and another time at dinner with an other friend." an act of Congress. Tht drafters then adopted from Knowland's previous proposal a clause requiring roll call votes of the senate or the ratification of treaties. i Jhe chief j result of this patch work! was eliminate the so -called "which" clause to which Eisenhower objected. That clause of the Bricker amendment read: "A treaty shall become effective as internal j law in the United States only; through legislation w hich would be . valid, in the ab- cal months ahead.) Fanfani hastened to President Luigi Einaude to submit his resig nation. Departing, he refused to answer reporters' questions. The presidential secretary an nounced Einaudi had asked Fan fani to maintain a caretaker cabi net powerless to act on any im portant legislation while the president seeks a new premier. I sencp of a treaty." TV Comedian Injures Foot During Show NEW YORK UFi Comedian out MBce there are some fields in Jackie Gleason suffered a severe -which only ;the states can legis- injury to his foot and ankle Satur ate, this would mean that somej dayj night when he slipped on a wet treaties could become operative ; spot' on the stage during his na as domestic j law only if the states i tionally televised show. passeu legislation 10 Carry them I After h 9rriH.nt th artnr in 1 grct pain and with his leg swell ing! rapidly, was taken, trom me studio to a doctor's office. iXrays were taken, and a medi cal ! report showed he had a dislo cation of the right foot, and all ligajments in the ankle were torn. AJ cast was placed on his leg, and! he was later taken to Doctor's Hospital. ; A CBS spokesman said Gleason slipped because the stage floor was well from melted dry ice, which had been used to create steam for art 'earlier episode in the show. Jaycees Win Dallas Contest Statesman N'ewi Service DALLAS The Dallas Javcees raised $235 in a Block of Dimes i contest here Saturday, nosing out Dallas j Lions Club members Who raised: $200. . The Jaycees went far afield for their dimes, sending squads as far j as Falls City and Rickreall in the drive for polio funds. The contest gave this area a 48-hour total of $772, in polio contributions. Marching mothers collected $337 Thursday night A Saturday night dance was ex pected to swell the total. Pair Suffer Knife Wounds A Salem man and an 11-year-old girl were treated for knife wounds Saturday night by city first aidmen, city police report ed. Injured were Glenn Albert and his step-daughter. Donna J. Flanery, both of 1430 S. 12th SL Albert was treated for deep lacerations on his right arm and was later taken to Salem Me morial Hospital where "seven or eight" stitches were required to close his wounds, hospital au thorities said. He was released following treatment Miss Flan ery sustained minor lacerations on the left arm, investigating of ficers reported. No complaints were filed Sat urday night, police said. where the break-through occurs. On measurement of blood pres sure. Dr. David A. Rytand of San i Francisco pointed out that the tradition of taking the measure ment either above the cldow or j on the thigh, established some 50 ; years ago, leads to error in people j who are excessively fat. He said j he had found "gross error" in peo- j pie weighing 270 to 350 pounds j and error existed at lesser' weights, too. j His solution: Take the reading near the wrist or ankle. This apparently simple answer had been overlooked, he said, both because the measurement "always had been taken elsewhere and because at the wrist and ankle the artery whose pressure is to be measure lies between two bones, apparently protected.- Above the elbow it lies alongside a single bone where it is accessible to pressure. Do Not Shelter Artery But, he said, contrary to the belief of some, the two bones of tht forearm do not shelter the artery from the search for pres sure. Although his finding, reached in conjunction with Dr. Samuel H. Boyer'IV, was that grossly over weight people may not have dan gerously high blood pressure, they can take no comfort from that. for excessive fat is a killer. Over weight people may not need to reduce to get their blood pressure down but, he cautioned, they will have to reduce if they want to live. Rosenbi Defender Dies teres c. NEW YORK UTi Attorney Emanuel H. Bloch, who led the long, bitter and futile defense of atom spies Julius and Ethel Rosen berg, was found dead Saturday in his Manhattan apartment. A medical examiner said death ' was apparently due to natural causes, although a routine autop- i sy was ordered Sunday since the death was unattended. , A friend discovered the body after Bloch had spent the night alone. Disbarment proceedings were pending against the stocky, gray- ; ins 52-year-old lawyer. They had been brought by the State Bar ! A Cm fn- Ulm . , - t President Eisenhower and other government officials who refused to stay the executions of the Rosenbergs last June 19. Tonsillectom Victim Died o Hemorrhage A pulmonary (lung) hcrior-rh.-'e causrd the dvath ot Jiiv Bernell Flicker, 17-yeaiyld diughtcr of Mr. and Mrs. AJ H. Flicker. 1275 N. Capital St.. (the attending physician S3id Satur day night J She died in a Salem hopiUl Thursday night a few hours! af ter undergoing a tonsillectomy. The Rosary will be said at 8 o'clock tonight in the Howell Edwards Chapel and Reqiem Mass will be recited at 10 i m. Monday in St Joseph's Catholic Church. ! j r DINNER at NORTH'S Sunday Specials Roast Turkey SPECIAL ; DOLLAR DINNER AT COLES ! i MENU SOUP SALAD i U FRIED CHICKEN DESSERT t DRINK i Open Sunday 12 to 9 p.m.; Week Days 5 p.m. to 9 p.nt And Dressing Sour Creom Cole Slow Potatoes & Giblet Gravy Home Mode Hot Rolls and Butter Tea - Coffee - Milk Dessert Prime Bib Roast Of Beet Whipped Potctoes ond Brown Gravy Parjley Buttered Corrors Home Mode Hot Rolls end Butter Sour Creom Cole Slow Tea-Coffee -Milk Dessert 1.00 1.25 WE INVITE YOU TO VISIT SALEM'S MOST COMFORTABLE DINING ROOM HliiiiwacH-i STARTS TODAY! FIRE JUST REFLECTION , A reported garage fire early this morning between 5th and Church Streets on Jefferson Street turned out to be a small trafch fire reflected on the side of la garage, city firemen report ed j Trucks from central and north station answered the alarm. X Office Supplies and Equipment I To Fit Your Needs WOMAN DRIVER CITED Jeraldine May Howard, 1215 N. 15th St., was arrested by city police Saturday night . on a charge of reckless driving. She was cited to appear in municipal court Monday morning, police said. OFFICE FURNITURE From executives desk to stenographers' posture chair! YouH find them all here, planned to meet the needs of the most modern office. COMMERCIAL BOOK STORE 141 North Commercial STARTS TODAY - CONT. 1:45 RUlHR0!.!ANANTHO;fQti;: CO-FEATURE - ..illlilUV i im i I mOWSS-S47 STARTS TODAY! I Kill: ""BOB TONY HQEE-MARTIN ABJ2KZ ROSEMARY dahlClooney at 2ND BIG HIT! GREGORY PECK DOROTHY McGUIRE . iohn era in Laura ZHobson's i . f DARRYL f. 2ANUCIC fr a rTr w JIAKIJ I0DAY! v vi . n i r 151AR11 ll I0DAYI ! I HIV KJIIOT OT anyns , ( . j i ' h 71 V fianaerous womon i t r i - fOilTMIlE FAIWICE- (MET- DOUGLAS 2ND BIG HIT! TOTS IN MUSICALS FRED A ST AIRE - GINGER ROGERS o "TOP HAT" o Music by IRVING BERLIN K ...ot ftmoUt da for thtir man! 2ND KG HIT! v ' I "The 77 ;oyma M FRICAN fflFLES" wuirr r