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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1955)
2-Sc 1)-Saeman, Salem, Oregon, Friday, Jan. 21, ,1935 Nicaragua, Costa Rica Agree to Neutral Zone Between 2 Countries .i- By RICHARD G. MASSOCK SAM JOSE. Ccsta Rica Ufi Cos ta Rica and Nicaragua agreed Thursday on a plan to bottle up hostilities in Ccsta Rica -with a Solon Thinks China Holding Over 800 GI's (Story also on page : one CHICAGO (A Sen. Knowland (R Calif) said Thursday night there is strong reason to believe WantedbyFBVTw Hit, Run Cases Reported officers in the buffer zone to keep watch over the area. Fourteen of ficers were dispatched to the N-j Red .china holds "something over caraguan side of the zone and nine other GIs m prison besides to the Costa Rkan side. jthe 11 American airmen held on neutral buffer zone astride their ! By its action the commission wasigpy charges. i - mmiron horiler northwest of the not trying to impose a truce or! Knowland said the men did not present battle area. The agreement j ceasefire, but sought to neutralize show up in either the little or big Was announced DV Uie urbanization ; uie Durucr J ta n rw swiicn prisoner exenwigo iuiiow- of American Stctes j (OA1) peace ' avoid a wide open incident be- 'm the Korean truce in 1933. He commis-um. , . twezn the two countries. , said the names of the imprisoned The O.'S said it had stationed 23 The announcemc-t came as a American soldiers were learned - Costa Rican ceneral staff commu- from Red Propaganda broadcasts. nique s?id the government's U S.- other released POWs and Penta supplied F31 i Mustang fighter gon reports. ' places strcTed La Cruz. main rebel "We have strong reason to De base on, the northwest, sector Ueve they hold more than the 15 Thursday end blasted a rebel con-', they acknowledge holding." the voy on the Inter-American high-1 Senate minority leader said in an way, damaging the convoy heavily. J address at the annual dinner of Equipmeat Shnrt (the Cicero Manufacturers Assn., All four of the fighters just 1 Earlier, he told newsmen that bought torn the United States this nation's failure to take a stand fie-.?, but only two can go into in the Pacific if the Reds take ration rt tE2 same tune oecause over all of Asia could mean mov OLY"?! v?-. b".t:-jy rf ctfor- tas pUoU have only tv.o helmets of in our line of defense back to yys r -vr1 sue 1 ..f'llly T,v -st ay tin type r-:co"sary for fighting. Oregon. -, , " ( - v ' t A Qvhxs Love ; Has Value, Scions C?aim nej that a rr;nt srrid be aDle to The strff a'so said a group com-i Eleven U. S. airmen were sen- put a value on the love and ailec- manded by Col. Frank Marshall tenced by the Chinese Reds to 4 tion of a child. I reported earning out operations to 10 year terms on spy charges. The arguments preceded passage ! "according to plans previously laid j Knowland said the Reds also hold in the Senate by a 34-10 vote of a and doing very well." This group bill perm'tting parents , to seek I presumably is a guerrilla force damages for such losses, in cases" sent around Cerro Del Hacha of accidental deaths. t ! northeast of Santa Rosa to hit La Under present law. damages are Cruz from toe rear. four additional "fighter airmen. He said 32 civilians, including clergymen, businessmen and stu dents, also are illegally impris oned. Earlier, a broadcast by the reb- Knowland also said the United WASHINGTON The FBI has an nonnced that Clarence Dye, 44, (above) wanted la Ohio In re gard to an armed robbery, Is a the "10 most wanted bub" list. He has scars over eye brows, "CD." tattoo . ob right forearm, is 5 foot, II Inches U1L weighs 149 ponnds "and Is probably armed and dangerous. 2 Men Face Check Counts Two men were in jail Thursday charged with having passed bogus checks recently in Salem. Confined in the Marion County jail to await a preliminary hear- 2 A J t A A . ing toaay was cert Ace rainier, services until it becomes of age, secret radio, heard in Sanx, Nations has an obligation to tell Salvador EI Salvador, claimed the 'the world what it is prepared to in,. i njtaj Mustangs ir.4 s'rafed th civil pop- do if the men are not released.! who gave his address as general The Emended law was pasea ... , . . . Ala. u ..j k. it v cknM m-.t. ci o.s.t.. .... -ftor ,'flnnr Hphatf in whlf It ! ... -.w , w . . 7.i..uu ,nj a mos, kaung or wounding many was termed tenalisUc and a d children measure ocemne the way to suits. .... . by "unscrupulous persons, II was vigorously defended by four attorney members of the Sen ate. The bill was introduced by Sen. William GisSberg. Marysville Democrat, and Sen. Neil Hoff, Ta- coma Republican said the rebels were preparing a showdown battle for Liberia, a town about 30 miles southeast of La Cruz where government ad vance headquarters are located. Buffer Zone Mexico's Luis Quintanilla, com mission chairman, told newsmen of the OAS plan 'for an 18-mile-long oen. own ii. wj. ""itufler zone along the common insurance man, charged that pass-, frontier between the Pacific Ocean -age of the bill "would be a great and jtg Nicaragua. Friction be- nusiane, uuowmg ure uw K,, i tween the two countries, aggravat suits Dy unscrupulous pwiic. "You cannot plac a value on the love and affection a parent has for his child " Happy said. s Similar feelings were expressed by Sen. Tom Hall, Skamokowa farmer, who said: "I cannot understand a parent who would attempt to place a valu ation on love and affection. It , smacks of materialism. Such things cannot be. paid for." Defending the bill. Dale McMul the declaration within : what he called "a short time." j - "I do not intend to remain silent while a single American rots in a prison cell," Knowland said. "I'm amazed at some of our al lies in the U. N. who would give in to appeasement of the Commu nists," he said. The California Republican told a news conference earlier that the "spread of Communism in Asia is a chalk tge to the United States." He said he thinks x x x 4th araf ed by the 10-day-old Costa Rican 32 rebellion, . reached .white heat Thursday after Nicaragua formal ly charged that two of Costa Rica's four fighter planes had violated Nicaraguan territory Wednesday after they attacked the area around rebel headquarters near La Cruz. ' Acceptance of the OAS plan I meant it became effective imme-J dirtely. - ' Costa Rican President Jose Fig' len. : Vancouver attorney, cited a ueres asked about the OAS plan Ike Starling Third Year As President WASHINGTON ( Dwight D. Eisenhower got off to a pleasant rested by Salem detectives Wed nesday on a charge of having passed a $30 check in a downtown tavern. v City police said Painter had ad mitted passing 16 checks in Salem during the past month and a half, all signed with his own name. Total value of the checks was estimated at $500 by police - The other, accused man, Robert Litis caudle. Albany, was lodged in the city jail Thursday night after city detectives picked him up in Albany where he had been arrested on a Marion County Dis trict Court warrant Caudle's arrest followed a com plaint by Harold Post, proprietor of the Temple Tavern, 211 N. Commercial St., who said he had cashed a worthless $10 check drawn on the Salem branch of the First National Bank, t State police were searching for two hit-run drivers early Friday after receiving reports of two Marion County accidents in which motorists failed to stop. Mrs. Bernardina Roeco, 'Butte ville, reported at 9:35, p.m.' that a fast-moving vehicle had struck her car while it was Sparked in front of her home. Police said the accident apparently caused heavy damage to both vehicles but that the moving car left the scene immediately after the crash. i .- ' A collision on the Pacific High way south of Salem about 10:15 Ivan Orval Gartner, 5325 S. Pa- InrllQn Sfh " I rifir t4iphwv RiHnn- (aid th Xll 11.10X1. KjllJJL other car , swerved in front of , him. The other driver failed to stop after the accident, he re ported, i Gartner's two-year-old daugh ter received a bump on the head in the accident Police said the injury was apparently not ser ious. " The car had to be towed away after the crash J which oc curred about a quarter-mile north of the 12th Street Junction. At The Theaters Todav' ':. j V.; ELSIXORE " V " - CARME JONtS. with Dor-, ethy Dandridie, Barry Bel, ionie ' - - " r -SECURITY ' RISK. Joha Ire land and Dorothy Malonc ' 'j ' ; .';-CAFITOt. ' .... ' TWIST Or , rATE," with Clnter Roccr . "KHYBtB RITLES with Rich ard () and Dawn Addams '.X'i . j GKAXb V "LIVING i IT VP." with Dean Martin and ' Jerry Lewis . "'THREE vHOURS TO KILL." with Donna Reed and Diane foe- ter .- .. . .-, ; v ! BOLLYWOOD '"SEVEN BRIDES. FOB SEVEN BROTHERS," with ane PoweU and Howard Xeet" ' . fTHE SEA AROUND US- Vows Ndito-?. Try Again : l McALESTER, Okla. un three- time murderer Julius Bohannon. weary and discouraged from : 12 days, of dodging pursuit, was re turned to the Oklahoma state pen itentiary Thursday vowing never again to try to flee from the walls from which he has escaped three times. ..... ... ' 1 The unarmed fugitive surren dered docilely to couple of nervy state highway patrolmen who found him shortly after daybreak sleeping in a deserted - shack in eastern Oklahoma's Cookson Hills, about 90 miles northeast of here. j The capture scene was 17 miles southwest of Tahlequah, where the Baby Shows f Symptoms of Habit Drug Group Installs New Officers Officers were installed at a meeting Thursday night of local 241, Chemawa Indian School, a federal employes' group. installed were Edward Bartlett, president; Arthur Hackett, vice president; Vincent Matt, secre tary, and Freda Hardy, treasurer. The four were seated by out going president James A. Mac Donald. The meeting was held at the Employes' Club at the sehooL The group discussed bills pend ing in Congress relating to feder al health and life insurance plans for federal employes. Other federal agencies in the Salem area were asked to con sider joining with the Chemawa local to form a single unit of such agencies. The Chemawa group is compos ed of teachers and other staff members of the school. Next meetingis due Feb. 17. VANCOUVER. B. C. m A baby girl, reported to have shown symptoms of drug addiction at birth Jan. 2, was discharged (ram a hospital here Thursday. The Vancouver Sun, which re ported the case earlier in the day, said both the mother and father were known narcotics (users. The baby showed painful with drawal symptoms immediately aft er birth similar to those her moth er saia sne suffered herself many ; c g C times before, the newspaper ac-'iUet Upera Signs count said. - 4 - Quoting a top-rankin medical l Ollllg Conductor authority on the hospital staff, the! v 0 -newspaper said that while such NEW YORK ( The Metro cases' of infant withdrawal are poIitan Opera announced Thursday rare, there have been reports re-! the signing of a 24-year-old musi- cenuy 01 a icw cases p meaicai cai, conductor, youngest American ever. 10 appear on its roster, lie will, conduct next season. He is Thomas Schippers, origin ally of Kalamazoo, Mich., a rec ognized conductor at the New York City Center Opera since he was 20. . Schippers' now is on leave from the Broadway musical drama, The Saint of Bleecker Street." to sym journals. Dug withdrawal symptoms of the infant, according to the Sun, were typical of drug addicts. Senate Leader 7 Faces Operation JL The legal charge against both I. a t I Z.t ::JrnL?Z "V31 e WASHINGTON -Un aide to conduct the Portland. Ore ' " .o o . . ... , j : T j Tnhnnv. . otiiuic iiuiuiiij iiraucri Lyiiuun d. ; Car Damaged by Switch Engine A collision with southern Pa cific switch engine Thursday night resulted in minor damage to a car driven by Glen Larkins, 1739 Park Ave. The accident occurred abont 10:50 p.m. near the ' ' of 12th and Ferry streets. Thera were no injuries. Union Asks ; For Power To Fight Reds VANCOUVER. B. C. ( Th Vancouver Sun says officers of the desperado was the object of arri International .Woodworkers of .Am unsuccessful 24-hour - search earl- erica CIO-TLC) want, sweeoin? ier in the week. "This is my home," he told a newsman on his arrival at the prison. "I will never try to leave again. ' -"T " -' . . "" 1 "It is getting harder and tougher each time you escape.. Judge Doubts Liquor Board Obeying Law? j PORTLAND LP A city judge said Thursday he believes the State Liquor .Control Commission is not observing state law, since the commission requires a person to be 21 before he can buy an alcoholic drink. i Nevertheless Judge John J, Murchison found Mrs. Joyce Whitmore. 18. guilty of falsifying her age in buying drinks here. He did not impose any penalty, say ing: i "It is a techncial violation, but brought on to some extent by the liquor commission's' refusing to recognize the law. v i Under state law a person is deemed to have reached his or her majority upon being married, the judge said. i . powers to prevent .infiltration of suspected Communists into the ranks of British Columbia's largest union. ... . ... The newspaper said Thursday TWA officers, are drafting a reso lution which will be presented to ' the 32,000 member union's con vention in - mid-February. The move followi an incident in Van couver , Local 1-217, largest single loca' m the IWA. The, Sun says it learned of the resolution following the expulsion from 1-217 of Gordon Elder, Van couver millworker who ran on the Labor - Progressive (Communist Party ticket in the last federal election. Stock Show Names , Ail-Around Cowboy DENVER Lf Buck Rutherford of Lenapah, Okla., was officially named all-around cowboy of thr 195s rodeo circuit at the 49th Na tional Western Stock Show Thurs day night. The lanky cowboy Rained the distinction by winning $40,404 prize money last year. Rutherford and others of rode" . fame shared in $7,600 cash an $4,000 worth of saddles, orname'' al buckles and other trophic a special .cerer"r". (Pd. at. . -v, ','r , raised the question: "Who's going to keep them (the rebels) from sneaking - in supplies by night?" The answer to this question was not given immediately by the com mission. . The zone Is only six miles wide, slightly pinched in at either end. case in which a Vancouver couple ; n -WR -nnfprpnre earlier harf i start Th n-sdav on his third vear whose cnuo was xuiea in an auio mishap received damages of only $262. "If you think that's fair, go ahead and lick this bill." McMul len said. Hoff said the objections of ma terialism' were no better founded than they would be in case of a husband bringing suit for the acci dental death of his wife. "This bill is not being furthered by "unscrupulous people,) but by those making an honest attempt to take care of a loophole in our present laws Joining with Sen. Hoff in its sup port was Sen. William Goodloe, who termed the bill "a boon to in surance companies." Earlier, the Senate heard intro duction of . six bills designed to ' tighten highway safety. The meas ures would require : minor drivers . to show, proof ofxfinancial respon sibility and to carry insurance; restrict erection oi signs near rail road grade crossings, and make jail terms mandatory for drunken drivers. , i Articles of Incorporation Filed by Firm A $300,000 broadcasting firm filed articles incorporation Thursday with' the Marion Coun ty Clerk's office. ;. Lawyers handling the filing said that they were not at liberty at this time to disclose any plans or name any members of the cor poration, which is called the Ore gon Broadcasting Co. It is authorized to issue 50,000 shares of stock with a par value of $10 each. Stated purpose of .the corporation is to "carry on the business of owning, leasing or otherwise acquiring, managing, operating and controlling radio and television stations.' Filing the articles were Salem lawyers, Thomas B. Gabriel Nor man K. "W'inslow and Roy Har lan d. Initial office of the concern - is given at 406 Masonic Building. A-Blasts Help Good Weather 9 Say Experts WASHINGTON Wl Atomic ex plosions, rather than making the weather bad, may be able to take some of the punch out of thunder storms by "decreasing the amount of lightning," two government weathermen suggested Thursday. This theoretical possibility was voiced by two Weather Bureau me teorologists in describing results of the most comprehensive study yet made to determine whether atom ic test blasts can influence the weather. Weathermen L. Machta and D. L. Harris, reporting in the journal "Science." said radioactivity from a blast could increase the "elec tric conductivity they added as President encouraged ; to paint and play golf whenever-he can. At a surprise White House cere mony. Vice President Nixon pre sented him with an anniversary gift from the Cabinet.' It was a beautifully bound eight volume set entitled "The Great Centuries of Painting." "Wonderful!" said the President. "I certainly am grateful and I might say astonished."; The President's personal physi cian, Maj. Gen. Howard M. Sny der, reported the 64-year-old Eisen hower as "in excellent health for a man of his age." Dr. Snyder's only complaint was that the President hasn't had near ly enough exercise since his golf- almost-every-day vacation in Colo rado last October. 500, while Caudle's bail w?s set at $1,000. Actress Weds Manufacturer NON-SUPPORT CHARGED Calvin Laverne McCourry, 295 N. 24th St., was arrested by Mar ion County sheriff i deputies Thursday evening on a King County, Wash., warrant charging him with non-support. He was held in the county jau. Sail was at $3,000. Roofing & Siding FREE ESTIMATES Cascade Roofing Co. 711 Cross St Phone $4823 "No. observational evidence .or theoretical reasons have been found for believing that changes in the electric conductivity of the air will lead to any directly ob servable changes in the weather other than the possibility of de creasing the amount of lightning." They pointed out that their con clusion was limited to the. effects j CHICAGO ; UP) Ted Briskin, Chicago camera manufacturer, anc actress Colleen Miller, 23. for merly of Toppenish, Wash., were married Thursday. j It was the third marrLare for of the air. But 36-year-old Briskin. His first mar riage was to Betty Hutton, the Hollywood star by whom he had two children. The "ceremony was performed by Municipal Judge Joseph Druck er and the couple left later for a Miami Beach honeymoon. Briskin and his second wife, ac tress Joan j Dixon, were divored Jan. 18.-1 i Popcorn Hat Good Eating PARIS un -"I'll eat my hat" need hardly be a fanciful promise any more. S - For .a Paris hatter has brought out a new spring chapeau made of popcorn! Instead of seasoning with salt, he has sparkled it up with a dia mond clip. , ' Just to prove that Paris is as lightheaded as ever, if further proof be needed, the same hatter, Monsieur Achille, has created: A yo-yo hat, with wound-up string. A 'hat decorated with two re movable table tennis balls. A hat in the form of a child's spinning top (sorry, it doesn't real ly spin) gaily spiralled in red, green, beige and black straw. And a hat with a pocket with a handkerchief in it, - -, Johnson D-Tex , said Thursday niht that the senator twill be op erated upon Friday for removal of a kidney stone at ' Rochester, Minn. - - The Senate leader ' left here Tuesday for the Maya Brothers clinic. . i of atomic explosions conducted 80 i p- Willi far at orovine erounds in Nevada. -'i rCaCncr ,Vf llll One Lung Sent Pink Outlawed , Induction Notice pal By Princi At Shelton SHELTON, Wash. W High school principal George Hermes has drawn the color line here-but the South doesn't need to perk up its ears POST FALLS, Idahi UR James E. Jones, 23, received an induction notice from a San Francisco draft board Thursday but (the govern ment may i have some difficulty. The prospective inductee is Rev. Jones, ordained minister of the Open Bible Standard Church. Jones said his lejft leg is four inches shorter than his right due to a Knowland Visions Oregon as 'First Line of Defense' CHICAGO un Sen. Knowland (R-Calif) said Thursday this na tion's failure to take a stand in the Pacific if the Reds take over all of Asia could mean "moving our line of defense back to Oregon. Knowland, Senate minority lead er, has differed with President Eisenhower concerning Asian plans. He said "the time is not too far distant when we've got to make a decision on a line in the Pacific where we'll have to make a stand. "If not. and if the Reds take over all of Asia, it means moving our line of defense back to Ore gon. (Story also on page 2, sec. 1.) NOW PLAYING W iFrHUlijjLDR. JANET LQGHiSo'ii mFR0 CLARK 'SHEREE NORTH - 2ND BIG HIT - DANA . .!.. - -, .in. ' .nil .. "I fA fin II . w y m: 1 v ' i-i'fltgsa : HEY KIDS! j - Tomorrow at 1 f. M. "Lost Plana No. 14 . and ' 1 CARTOON CARNIVAL NOW PLAYING! (ism ksra- . I -' ' .lv a? - - - JTrXll-X X. 4 rl . il l - r- - - - i ' &'rs ;Av Jin , 7. , 1 , 7x t-1 ' , 111. t ' Uij.fc' y, , .. i :':"'. rr .-a -HI ii '''I!' COLOR CO-FEATURE 5S S. -5- 1 IICHAID IOAN DAWN ADDAMS ' . PATIIC KNOWltS: -j t, . i . i. -t. j i. childhood attack of polio and his He's banning the pinks, and has v..,..- t lutu uta lidliiwy ait, biuuciiw "it j u better "dye" for dear old Irene S Reed High School. Seems too many of the teenagers hereabouts in this lumber town with its stag shirt and calk boot heritage have gone pinko. Pink shirts. Pink trousers. Pink peddle-pushers. And, it's suspect ed, maybe even pink undies. Enough! cried Principal Hermes. He said the fad is attracting more attention than the three R's. From row on any garb is taboo "which detracts from school work." ' tuberculosis. Rev. Jones is scheduled to be inducted at San Francisco Feb. 3, but he plans trying to explain things to the Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, draft board in order to aave the long trip. ; Fisherman's Body Still Unrecovered TILLAMOOK W Efforts failed Thursday to recover the body of Dallas Smith, 51, Tillamook, who drowned in the Wilson River while fishing Wednesday. Smith's two companions said their ioat hit a log in the river, and threw them overboard. The two, James McMullen and Bill Brandow, both of Tillamook, were able to iwira ashore. Through These Portals Pass The Most Wonderful People In The World- OUR CUSTOMERS! For Orders To Go Phone 26798 THE SAN SHOP Portland Road ct North City Umitt SPECIAL NOTE! 63 MBft SHIS ; 1C3 Worsteds Our Regular Low Price $45 to $55 NOW CX wric ruivc OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY KAY WOOLEN MILL STORE 2St 8. 12th St (The Street the Train Kens On) .r J. Wayne Green, eminent Trichologist, demonstrates causes of baldness and how it can be prevented. How To Have Hair For A Iifetim To Be Demonstrated Here By ; Famous Trichologist 1 - Offers Written Guarantee An exclusive interview by Steven Bright STARTS TODAY! OGCAK RAMMERSTOMA THE SMASH , BROADWAY, HIT NOW EVEN GREATER ON THE SCREEN! don't f j'VSSaW-l I OSCAR HAMMERSTEIITS ViSxn GirjEriASboPE - - - ' PLUS ' mm 7 WICHITA (Special) i. Wayne I Green, Director of Rogers, Inc., Hair and Scalp specialists, ex ploded the "myth of baldness? today in an exclusive interview. "Baldness is unnecessary, cost Iy, and a plague to' mankind, says tireen. no man n be bald. No man need suf fer the stigma of premature old age that is forced upon him be cause he is losing his hair. The Rogers method ot hair ana scaip treatment can prevent baldness- turn colorless , luzz into healthy, growing hair can make you look youthful again." Demonstration to Be Held ..... in Salem, Oregon This revolutionary metnoa . oi home treatment for the hair and scalp will be demonstrated in Sa lem, Oregon, Satnrday ONLY, January Z3, at senator nniei. Tricholorlst Kenneth Harris will paadnet the nrivate. individual interviews from 1Z noon untu 9:0S p.m. on Saturday ONLY. There is eost or obligation, and yan need no appointment. Season for Baldness There Is always a reason for baldness." continued this nation ally known authority, -Hair tan- not grow through a scaip uai ii . a . . m mt . infected witn aanoruu. excessive oiliness, or extreme dryness. A scaln that has never been exer cised cannot be expected to pro duce healthy hair." Men, and yes, women too, waiK ine streets to day, completely devoid of nature's greatest ornament hair. Simply because they were not taught the basic rules of hair and scalp hy giene while they were growing un. "The simple answer., empha sized this expert, "is that chil dren should be taught the same simple basic rules of hair and scalp hygiene that they are taught for the proper care ot tneir teetn. If this were the case, baldness would be a rarity today!" Heredity Not Involved Trichologist Green 'dodged no issues. He quickly took up the most widely spread theory of baidness-bereity. Manjnna s un realistic 'belief that baldness is pretation of the thory of genetics. ' Theory does not state that any person must be bald because. baldness exists in the family. What it does say, is that in some' families, a tendency exists to wards an undernourished scalp. The purpose of the Rogers Hair and Scalp Clinic is to teacn me methods of strengthening ; the weak scalp and nourishing it to a hoaHhv ' vi enroii condition. "A healthy scalp will grow hair if it is not already completely baldV assures Green.! ? .. Is There Hope for the Completely Bald In his travels throughout the United States and Canada, Green has collected hundreds of testi monials of-his ability to develop weak fuzz into healthy, mature hair. All of his clients have start- ed with a private examination. hair and scalo analysis, and a di- - agnosis of the disorder. Green is quick however, to ten a nopeiess case that he cannot be helped, "We strongly advise," says Green,- "that no person woo is completely regrowing hair. If there is any I f u zs at an, we can restore a; healthy scalp condition and. tne; hair will grow normally again as i : . 1 hertitary sttmj froa a Disiater way nature intended."' Offers a Guarantee Rogers. Inc. America's Fore most Hair and Scalp Specialists, offer a guarantee to any client who enrolls for treament M he or she is not completely delight ed with results at the end of days, the money invested will be graciously refunded," pledged Green. "We must have sausnea clients. We must grow hair. After all, it is our best advertisement" Is Tour Hair Healthy? ' If vou have a scalp disorder, or if you are worried about your hair, call Tncnoiogm .enneui Harris at the Senator Hotel in Salem, Oregon. Saturday ONLY, from 12 noon to 9:00 p.m. The public is invited. The examina tions are private and open to men and women. You do not need an appointment, and you will not be embarrassea or o&uxaua 1 any J