til aati ,hel aid ri oJ 4s Zirconium Plant At Albany Closes ALBANY. Ore. (UP) Closure of its Albany zirconium plant after more than a decade of operation has teen announced by the U. S. Bureau of Mines. a Closure of the -plant, situated at the bureau's electro-development laboratory here, had been expected for some time, since the Atomic Energy Commission intended to make zirconium only until it was available commercially. Most of the 63 employes had permanent civil service status and have been offered positions else where, Stephen M. Shelton, reeion al director of the bureau said. Plywood Firm To Increase Directorate PORTLAND (UP) Stock holders of Cascade Plywood com pany increased the number of di rectors from seven to nine, at an annual meeting here Wednesday. A. E. Anderson, a vice-president and Paul L. Boley, a Portland attorney, will fill the newly cre ated positions. Directors reelected all officer, ' --ed by president Charles W. Fox. ) Laboriies Lose In Scotland Vote LONDON (UP) jThe Labor Party lost ground in Wednesday's Scottish municipal elections but voter apathy prevented the contest from indicating a trend for the forthcoming national ejection, re sults showed Thursday.! ' The Laborites suffered a net loss of 13 seats in a slight awing to the right in voting in W Scottish cities and boroughs. . . -i . ' . -. Lessr than 40 per cent of the electorate turned out in most dis tricts and the vote did little! to affect the status of the parties in the various city and county coun cils. - , . - 1 Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Friday, May 6 1955 (See. 2-7 Tellow Alert9 Sounds in Pacific Coast Cities as U.S. Jets Fail to Get Prooer Radar Clearance in Canada COLORADO SPRINGS (UP) - The Continental Air Defense Com mand announced that its Western Division went on "yellow alert Thursday , because of a communi cations tieup relating to outbound friendly aircraft. - x 1 The command spokesman ' em phasized that the warning was a "srellow alert" and not a red alert. The red alert means "attack imminent," The text of the statement: ; "The Continental Air Defense Command announces that its West ern Division went on yellow alert between 10:40 and 10:47- a.m. PDT because of a communications tieup relating to outbound friendly aircraft. - "The initial warning came from a Canadian radar station. The aircraft were Strategic Air Com mand B47s, jet aircraft, and the Continental AC had previous noti fication of the particular flight from SAC. "However, because of a com munications delay within the air defense system Western Air De fense -units failed to receive the notification in time to avoid call ing the alert V "This"" unusual incident occurred during, a routine training exercise on the West Coast involving Con tinental ADC and SAC aircraft." SAN FRANCISCO (UP) A brief "attack imminent" alert was sounded along the Pacific Coast Thursday and a high Civil Defense source said the "yellow alert" was legitimate, stemming from a "scare in Canada." 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' elaboration on his statement would have to come from nearby Frnfl. ton Air Force Base, headquarters of the Western Air Defense .Com mand. . . ' Military officials at the defense command headquarters refused immediately to confirm or deny the report. They said, however, they wolild have "an official state, ment soon." ' Sirens Set Off "- The alert was sounded in nearby " Oakland at 10:42 ajn. PDT, when sirens actually were set off. Tbs "an clear" came four minutei later, the Alameda County sher iffs -office, alert center for th east , side of San Francisco Bay. said. ; 1 The alert1 also was sounded if, Los Angeles. A Los Angeles shen lffs spokesman said the alert meant "attack inxninent" Thi Los Angeles sheriff's office sound ed its alert at 10:48 a.m. PDl with the "all clear" sounded "about six minutes later." Conelrad la Effect . Norton Air Force Base, head quarters for the Air Defense Con mand in Southern California immet diatelz authorized Conelrad to g( in effect in the area's radio sta? tions. Conelrad is an emergencj communications setup for use is event of enemy attack. The alert was also sounded i the Capitol Building in Sacramen to, sending an estimated S00 worb the basement' The alert was received by fri city civil defense director, E. J, Plato, but he ordered it held fot a check. The cancellation cams before the city sirens were sound ed. :. 1 - Advise 'Know Your Proteins A tremendous value at an incredible price. Easy to care for nylon . . . fast drying ... no ironing needed. Full sweep slip in white and colors. Sizes S, M, L. i MAIN FLOOR By DELOS SMITH -United Press Science Editor NEW YORK (UP) Medical scientists devoted to the nutritional approach to . health would like every; American to know the na-i ture of proteins at least as well as he knows the colors of the new cars.: . ' - Some of them are frankly alarmed for the future because of proteins, but what can be done about it when Americans think one protein is as good as another? Because they don t know, Amer icans are kidding themselves when they think they're the best-fed people on earth, according to Dr. William Coda Martin, of the New York Medical College. ', He spoke out feelingly at a re cent meeting of the American Academy of Nutrition because th protein content of wheat and corn grown in America is steadily de clining even as the bushel-yield of grain per acre is increasing. Protein Structure Remade Animal bodies, human, bovine, or whatever, do not make protein they merely remake the protein structure which is first put to gether by"jplant life, he said. The plants take the chemical parts of proteins out of the soil add such elements as calcium In fair amounts, and add traces of such minerals as magnesium, man ganese, copper,: boron, zinc, and molybdenum. I A man eats these plants and his body breaks down the proteins into their many parts and puts the parts together into man-protein. Or the man eats the cow which had eaten the plants and ; whose body had remade them into cow-protein. And so the man's body remakes cow protein into man-protein. WTiich is' as it should be. What isn't as it should be Dr. Martin said, is that in the United States the vegetable protein, upon which animal protein depends, is becom ing of lower and lower quality. This is so because the soil of "two-thirds" of the country he excepted the Middle West is no longer able to supply plants with everything they need to make high quality protein. r Size, Appearance and Taste Unfortunately, i "there are few nutritional standards for our foods' he said. "The United States De partment of Agriculture bases its yearly statistics on the yield per acre and not on the nutritional value of - the food in human health. Size and appearance and taste seem to be the major require ments for our foods." Yet "protein produced on infer tile soil deficient in trace minerals is considered an incomplete pro tein or a protein of low biological factors as compared with high quality protein from fertile soil." He granted that science "still knows. very little" of the value of trace minerals in human nutrition. But. they are unquestionably es sential and, by way of example, he continued: "It is now known that many of these trace minerals Set as catalyst (starter - tipper) in body metabolism. One such con dition that is well known is the inability of the red cell to utilize iron without the catalytic action of copper." 1 Qtadel Cadet Seeks j Confederate Money i j ' CHARLESTON, S. C. tift- Who said Confederate money was no good? Anybody with Confederate cur rency, bonds, signatures, drafts, documents or other material deal ing with finances of the Confed erate States, of America can sell them, to Grover C. Criswell, a cadet at The CitadeL V Criswell has announced that he is prepared to pay a "fair price of any quantity of this material as it is my aim to form the most complete collection or the finances of the Confederacy ' ever collecty ed." . . . ;: ..... .