t Sc 1) Statesman. Seism, On. Mobu April S 1954 Poor Vision, Slick Streets Bring Mishaps Poor visibility and slick streets were listed -i possible contrib uting factors in four traffic acci dents in Salem early Sunday morning, city police reported. Shortly after midnight a car operated by Mrs. Katherine Warner Arnold, 3220 Duncan ave., collided with a parked dump truck in the 3200 block on Dun can Avenue. Police quoted Mrs. Arnold as saying she went through a stop sign at Duncan Avenue and Sil verton Road after her foot slipped off the brake and acci dentally hit the accelerator ped al. Police said her car sideswiped two trees and tore up a wire fence and 10 rose bushes before striking the truck, owned by Leonard Richard Hagner, 291S Silverton Rd. The car sustained considerable damage, police re ported. About 4 a.m. two cars were damaged in a collision in the 1100 block on Madison Street. Police said a car operated by Richard S. Swift of Kreitzberg Aviation, collided with a parked car owned by John Farmer, 1140 Madison St. A collision at the intersection of McNary avenue and Ruge street resulted in damage to two cars operated by Gene Gaylord Biddle, 130 McNary Ave., and Charles Sparano of Portland. The fourth accident occurred about 10 a.m. at 17th and Ferry Streets. Police said vehicles driv en by LaVonne I. Greene. 2370 Adams St., and George EL Warne king, 1485 Marshall Dr., received minor damage in the collision. 50,000 View Pope's Public Appearance VATICAN CITY UP Pope Pius XII appeared in public Sunday night for the second time since he became ill more than two months ago. A crowd of 50,(00 who had just concluded prayers for Roman Catholics behind the Iron Curtain received him with joyful shouts of " viva il papa." The 78-year-old pontiff appeared at the window of his Vatican Pal ace apartment just as night was falling and as the great crowd was leaving St. Peter's Bas :a. As the worshippers ied from the Basilica into St. Peter's Square shouting for the Pope, he appeared at his window and stood for nearly four minutes lifting his arms wide ly in the blessing gesture he has given at countless audiences. Big Russian Kiddies9 Store Due to Open MOSCOW W Work is under way here on what 'will b ethe big gest children's store in the Soviet Union. To be known as the "Kid dies' World," the department store will be the first in the Soviet Un ion to have escalators. The children's store will occupy an entire block in the center of Moscow. A building used mostly for offices in recent years is being reconstructed for the new project. Kiddies' World is expected to be open for business by the end of this year in time for the Grand father Frost (Soviet Santa CLaus hopping season. Whole Story On H-Bomb Asked Told SAN FRANCISCO ( The American people should be given all possible information about the hydrogen bomb because "their lives are involved, Val Peterson, federal civil defense administrator, said Sunday. Peterson, here for conferences with local civil defense officials, declared "this thing is the people's business I believe utterly in the ability of the American people to make the right decisions when they have adequate information." Peterson described the H-bomb as a "tremendously devastating weapon." He said vast changes have resulted in civil defense plan ning as a result of H-bomb experi ments. "With the atom bomb we pursued a duck-and-cover protection theme. Now we have to have a more real istic approach because our cities will be absolutely gutted. We've got to evacuate people if we get enough warning." "We can rebuild cities." he add ed, "but we cannot rebuild the lives of people.' Peterson declared he has been attempting to get more informa tion on the H-bomb released but "we're dealing with a very diffi cult situation." "No American wants to assist the enemy any more than we have to by giving him informations he might not have. So prudence re quires that we be very careful." Governor's Alaska View Draws Rebuke WASHINGTON UP Gov. B. Frank Heintzlemaa's proposal that only the populated and developed pqrtions of Alaska be admitted into the union drew opposition Sunday from Delegate Bartlett iD-Alaska) and from the chairman of the Alas ka Statehood Committee. Bartlett, in a statement, char acterized the part staLe-part terri tory suggestion made Saturday by Alaska's governor in a letter to Speaker Joe Martin (R-Mass' as "a nicely calculated effort to hurt the statehood cause." Robert B. Atwood. Alaska State hood Committee chairman and ed itor-publisher of the Anchorage Times, said the proposal has been considered many times and re jected as in accord neither with the national interest nor the inter est of Alaska." Chairman Miller iR-Neb) of the House Interior Committee recalled that he made the same proposal some six years ago and it was turned down. Miller said he thought it "was good then and now" but that he didn't think it would be accepted. Atwood and Bartlett said that Heintzleman. an ex-officio member of the Statehood Committee, an of ficial agency of the territorial gov ernment, did not consult with them before making his proposal. Hein tzleman has been here several weeks. FOAM RUBBER Pillows 275 up Mattresses ...4390 up Remnants 30 1 P Shredded 69 1 lb. SLEEP-AIRE 2002 Fairgrounds Rd. TODAYS SPECIAL MEAT LOAF Peas Scalloped Potatoes Lettuce Wedge All for 75C SALE HOME BAKERY 1380 N. Church 'Reckless Driving In Building' Laid Against Cyclist WAUKEGAN. HI., UP Walter Puckett won a bet and got him self arrested Sunday for riding his motorcycle around an oval bar in a Waukegan tavern. Puckett's ride on top of the bar ended abruptly, police said, when his machine struck and injured Mrs. Olean Roberts of Waukegan as she stepped out of a washroom. She was treated at a hospital and released. Puckett. 22, won the bet he had made with a friend. But police charged him with "reckless driving inside a building" and released him on bond pending a hearing. Salem Cyclists Win First in Field Trials The Salem Motorcycle Club walked off with top honors Sun day in observed field trials con ducted at the club's headquar ters on Macleay Road. A total of 24 contestants from northwest Oregon were in competition. Trials consisted of. eight ob served sections around five laps with a possible high score of 1,000. Sweepstakes winne- was Al bert Braun of Salem, who tallied 958 points. First place in the light weight division went to George Herschbach of Salem, with 953 points, and Robert Wat son, also of Salem, won second with a score of 946. In the medium division John ! Taylor, president of the Salem club, was first with 925 points; Chuck Taylor, Salem, second with 909; Robert Barta, Cottage Grove, third with 894; and Paul Bishop, Portland, fourth with 892. In a special women's event, Mrs. Jean Purcell of Salem, was first with 962 points. St ore rodueos the worlds thinnest lightest electriC'Shaver for vtm worid'm flrstt floartlno clot the now CUSTOM SCHICK rr rtOATS ist roust hanoi VOPUTS THINNEST! No on inch of wse!ss feutk? WORLO-S UGHTESTI Not on ounce of useless weigh IMEW SPEED! New reol roory motor pocks more powef tbon motors twice ife size! T FLOATS OVIR YOUR PACSM NEW jSUPEK-HONED HEADS I Mokes : possfoie close shaves with but e feather touch! lrlGO . Use the new Custom Schick at home for 1 0 days. 30r.llZYov must be completer delighted -or return ?15AI ttKnrer to ond get back very cent! IK N. Hfch Comer Court and High Plume 1-8792 Uaited Trading Stamps IVY Waterfront Busy Again NEW YORK OP Longshore ac tivities resumed peacefully Sunday along New York's vast waterfront. And the big port made ready to start moving mountains of cargo piled on piers during the 29-day strike.. The city's longest dock walkout ended Saturday as some 6.000 wage - hungry longshoremen swarmed back to work. Prospects were bright that all 20,000 pier workers would be employed full time Monday. Sunday normally is a dull day along the docks. The shipping industry has esti mated the walkout cost the port a half billion dollars, plus more than eight million dollars in wages, and some observers expressed fear that business diverted to other ports never would return. Morse Urges Support for Neuberger PORTLAND UP Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon, passing through Portland Sunday night, said he would urge Oregon voters to sup port Democrat Richard L. Neu berger over Republican Sen. Guy Cordon. Morse, who made speeches at Medford and Eugene Friday and Saturday, Is scheduled to speak at a Democratic rally in Aberdeen, S.D.; Monday night He said he is not supporting any Republican candidates in Oregon or throughout the nation in this year's campaign. GOP Leaders Confident of Tax Victory WASHINGTON UP Republican Senate leaders were reported in creasingly confident Sunday they can turn back a Democratic drive to raise income tax exemptions for all taxpayers and their dependents, thus cutting their tax bills. At the same time. Senate Demo cratic sources said they thought their chances of success now are no better than 50-50. A short while ago (they had Tiigh hopes of win ning. Senators on both sides of the issue were wary about comment ing publicly, largely' because they agree that a sharp change in eco nomic conditions in the next two months could upset all of their present calculations. Democrats still think they will win handily in the Senate if un employment continues to climb in to the summer months. The fight over the income tax reduction will come on a big tax revision bill, on which the Senate Finance Committee opens three weeks of public hearings Tuesday. HST 'Knows Too Much to Talk on Bomb' ST. LOUIS '.IP Former Presi dent Truman said Sunday night he "knows too much about the hydro gen bomb to talk about it." but hopes the bomb will be a contribu tion to peace. Truman made his remarks at a brief press conference after a testi monial dinner honoring Rabbi Sam uel Thurman of St. Louis, one of the chaplains at Truman's inaug uration in 1949. "We made every effort possible to get disarmament and the out lawing of lethal weapons for peace," he said. "The Russians al ways refused and we met over 250 times. "If the hydrogen bomb can bring about peace, it is one of the great est things in the world and worth all we've spent for it, Truman said. In his speech at the dinner the former President said organization of the "moral, God-fearing forces" was the only way to bring peace and freedom ft the world." Processing of Polio Vaccine Gives Trouble WASHINGTON UP The U. S. Public Health Service said Sunday night there had been some difficul ties in the commercial processing of a polio vaccine but it was con fident none that was unsafe had been released for use in the mass immunization program. Walter Wincheil in a Sunday night broadcast said a new polio vaccine "claimed to be a polio cure" instead "may be a killer." Wincheil said the Public Health Service tested 10 batches of the new vaccine. He said: "The government's Public Health Department, I am told, found that seven of the 10 contained live not dead polio virus. It killed several monkeys. The name of the vaccine is the Salk vaccine, named for Dr. Jonas Salk of the University of Pittsburgh." Find Positives The Public Health Service, fol lowing Wincheil ' broadcast, said in a statement: "We have found some positives in the lots of vaccine that we have tested, as have the other cooperat ing laboratories and if any vaccine is found positive, it would not be released for use in the mass im munization program.' "The minimum specifications for i this program require that any lot of vaccine that is to be used will pass the safety testing in all three laboratories, using tests that have been approved by the advisory vac cine committee of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. "The Public Health Service is confident the foundation would not release for use in this mass im munization program any vaccine which was not considered safe ac cording to the most exactina stand- ards that can be established for such preparation. t Defends Vaccine Dr. Salk, in an interview March 11 at New Orleans, defended his vaccine and said that from new studies, it looked better than ever as a really practical way of ending the scourge of polio. He said then he saw no reason to delay mass tests on children because of any doubts about its safety, supply, or potency. Nearly 5,000 Pittsburgh-area chil dren already have had the vaccine. Dr. Salk said not one had the slightest fever, or pain of swelling in the arm from the shots. Man Dies in Electric Chair After Birthday BELLEFONTE, Pa.'UrV-Williarri Patskin died in the electric chair early Monday, less than an hour after' he observed his 46th birth day. He was sentenced to death in October. 1941 for slaying his wife. Mary, on a lonely rural road in Lackawanna County. The powerfully-built farmer en tered the execution chamber smil ing.' He continued smiling until the mask was dropped over his head. Mormons Open Meeting SALT LAKE CITY I The 124th annual conference of the Latter-Day Saints (Mormon) Church opened in Salt Lake City Sunday with an estimated 20,000 Mormon faithful jamming into Temple Square to hear reports and speech es by high church officially The three-day conference, togeth er with its companion semi-annual conference held each year in the fall, are the most important events in the church year and regularly attract Mormons from all over the United States and from other con tries. At these conferences, mem bers hear reports of church pro gress and messages of doctrin al and religious inspiration- Strong Quake Shakes Island SAPPORO, Japan W The northern Japanese island of Hok kaido was shaken by a "rather strong" earthquake at 8:14 a.m. today (3:14 p.m.. PST., Sunday). Kyodo News Agency reported the center was placed about 50 miles off Urakawa, in the Pacific Ocean. No damage or casualties had been reported. The same area was shak en badly about two years ago by a stronger quake that caused a tidal wave. Hokheido is the northernmost of Japan's four major islands. Death Brushes Driver PORTLAND tfv- Kenneth Fran cis, 20, Portland, lost control of bis car as he was crossing the Burnside Bridge early Sunday. The car tore out a section of railing and hung over the side of the bridge. Police helped Francis out of the car, then booked him on a charge of reckless driving. H9 Now Showing Open 6:45 2 Technicolor Hits! "Back To God's Country Rock Hudson, Steve Cochran Co Hit Tlighf To Tangier Joan Fontaine, Jack Palance Salem 20-30 Club Presents ICAYE BROS. INDOOR CIRCUS AT SALEM ARMORY - Wednesday, April 7lh 4P.M.-8 P.M. ONE BIG DAY Dogs Peaks Bephasf Jugglers Wirt Walkers Acrsbsb Ctevu II FEATURED ACTS Children COc Adults l.ti . Tax LncL No Other Charges One Price No Reserved Seats Sees It All NOW PLAYING! soar... (fQ r 9 ruai iris ' . . . They called him WilXIlCOtOt tOAlMM PAGI Also (tarring JOHN i auoa suu towm DRIVE-IN THEATRE 5U2ieC- Ph. 2-782S UIISN SAIBINL Bifid WAY tf Mm Gates Open :45 Show at,7 1 3 Academy Awards! Best Picture of 1953 .Supporting Actress Supporting Actor FRANK SINATRA DONNA REED Lancaster-Clift-Kerr in "FROM HERB TO ETERNITY" Also In Te cbnicolor Gloria Graham in "PRISONERS OF THE CASBAH" nail nr i. Mac Laren School Escapees Caught Three youths who escaped from MacLaren School for Boys at Woodburn Saturday night were taken into custody Sunday evening and returned to the school, state police reported. They reportedly were picked up near Woodburn by MacLaren officials, police said. The three were identified as Robert Shank, 15, of Springfield, Howard Byron Campbell, 15. of Coos Bay Route 2, and Lee Roy Ness, 14, of Portland. moNt s-stos NOW PLAYING! Grlr v TECBlUGOIXm, 1 1 Vl 1 2nd Attraction Paramount PrnH PMOMC S'SOM NOW! Cent 1:00 PJf. At Regular Prices! SiM nun yyonne ft Carlo r ii mf 2nd Hit IIMMII MX (CRUEL ISA A? MOWABD HUOHIS JAKE RUSSELL FRENCH LINE ..TECHNICOLOR C&1UT KOUNO-ArmtW HUNNKUTT MAtT McCAITT t K Q -1 . STARTS WEDNESDAY AT REGULAR PRICESI Plus 15c for Viewers Not Koeommended For Children 3 Announcing, Bine Lino Cafe is now under New Management of Mr. and Mrs.' George A. Rosa. All eld custom ers and friends arc invited for FREE COFFEE' AND DONUTS on Monday, Aprly 5, any time between 2 and S p.m. Blue Line Cafe Open 4 an. to 7 pan- Ph. 2211 275 Chemeketa St, AVIN6 At the foot of the Bridge West Salem Mile l(or!h of the Underpay Salem Open Every Day . . . 8 a.m. to' 10 p.m. Prices Good Mon., Tues., Wed. WHITE (ROSS TOILET TISSUE limit Roll 4 Rolls 19c PURE Full u , Gal. 1 if nJJ LIMIT PLEASE DOG FOOD Each (5) GIANT ECONOMY SIZE mm LIMIT Radish Gr. Onions 3 10c SHOBOY Cello CARBOT! Reg. 19c (o)c Save 9c ftOCCOL! Reg. 27c a Bunch Save 12c SHOBOY mm Doz. nee) 3 LJ DELICIOUS LUttCH BOX SIZE GROUND CooVi BEEF 3fc Co)cy 29c lb. STEWING HENS Each r 3 LBS. or OVER Joivl Bacon Lb. -SEA FOODS-! OYSTERS - SMELT SNAPPER - GRABS SALMON !