Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, October 21, 1948, Image 2

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    Page 2, Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore., Thurs., Oct. 21, 1948
Dewey Says US
Learned Lesson
NEW YORK (JP) Gov. Thorn
as E. Dewey says the United
States has learned "once and lor
all that there can be no isolation
for America."
This has been taught to the
American people, the Republican
presidential candidate said Wed
nesday night, by the "bitter sacrl
iice of two world wars and the
anxieties of a peace that Is not
peace."
Gov. Dewey discussed the sub
ject of isolationism after hearing
a Democratic Party leader, speak
ing for President Truman, charge
that "a handful of Isolationists In
hich places" of the Republican-
controlled 80th Congress "came
dangerously close to sabotaging
the European recovery effort."
Sen, 3. Howard McGrath, Dem
ocratic national chairman, added
that "the continuing threat of
Isolationism is the greatest single
obstacle to be overcome."
He said "it hardly seems neces
sary to remind you where the
threat of isolationism lies," and
added that "the whole world
knows that a Congress dominated
by isolationists can sabotage the
whole peace machinery."
Gov. Dewey and McGrath ap
peared as speakers at the New
York Herald Tribune's 17th an
nual forum.
Dewey spoke after McGrath had
discussed the subject of "foreign
policy in the campaign."
Dewey described the United
States as the "decisive" world
power and said It would "act de
cisively" to make the free nations
of the world "more powerful than
the forces making for war."
"Today's despots are under no
illusions about the value which
free people place upon freedom,"
he said. "They know that given a
free choice no people anywhere
will UfillmDlv ciihinit fn lh lrv
tyranny of the total state."
Schoolboy
Risks Life
To Stop Truck
PEORIA, 111. W An 11-year-old
schoolboy who risked his
life to stop a runaway truck
headed toward a school yard was
acclaimed as a hero Thursday
The boy, Wayne Slsk, a sixth
grade pupil and a school safety
patrolman, had to climb over the
top of a pickup truck careening
down a hill in order to stop it.
"I was scared, but I knew the
truck had to be stopped, so I ran
fter it and lumped on," he said.
But after jumping on the run
ning board, he found the door
locked. So he climbed across the
top of the speeding truck's cab,
unlatched the door on the other
side, lowered himself into the cab,
and pulled the emergency brake,
The truck broke through a
barricade and headed toward the
school yard where school chil
dren were leaving' the school,
Wayne, who was directing traffic
at a corner, shouted a warning
and went into action.
The truck's owner, Frieda
Burns of Spring Valley, 111., faint
ed when she heard about It,
Wayne's mother didn't hear -about
It until Wednesday night she
said Wayne told her he forgot to
mention It at home,
.
Four Scout Leaders
Receive Certificates
Training certificates were a-
warded to Lester Sine, T. A
Glass, Cecil Weeks- and Max Dud
ley for completing the Scoutmas
ters' basic requirements Tuesday
evening. The Central Lane Dis
trlct Boy. Scout committee made
the awards at the River Road
School.
Scoutmasters Fred Deffenbach-
er, Lawrence . Flint and Leonard
Zlnicker were complimented for
showing progress in membership
gains in their troops. Special
events a rifle match, swimming
instruction and a training course
were planned for November.-
Dr. George Skeie
OPTOMETRIST ,
EYES EXAMINED . . . GLASSES FITTED
Offices at Skele's Jewelry 8 torn
Phone 1085 for Appointment
IWUiiajiiimi IJiani I"- -
COINCIDENC E - These mothers of Hie same name never had met until ;"J
rlvei In the same room after flvln birth to girls less than four hours apart at Mills Community
HosDHal TcVanda P.? Left i Mrs. Paul McNeal of Wesl Franklin. Pa., with Nancy Jean. Rlsh :
M. Paul mSSS of WyaS! , with Linda Plane. For year, they have lived only g mile, apart.
New Communication System
SendsMillion Words Per Minute
WASHINGTON tU-PJ A new
system of communication that
may open an era of International
tAicirieinn nnri radio mail sent at
rate of a million words a minute
was demonstrated for the first
time this week.
It is a combination , or radio,
television and p'hotography. It Is
known as Ultrafax.
Two Minutes,
Showing that it has reached the
state where plans for the public
can be made, the 1047-page novel
"Gone With the Wind" was trans
mitted word for word In its en
tirety in about two minutes. The
distance was about three miles
from a transmitter In a hotel to
the Library of Congress.
Ultrafax is a development of
the Radio Corporation of America
in cooperation with the Eastman
Kodak Co. and the National
Broadcasting Co. The new system,
combining the use of television
and radio, transmits with the
speed of light 186,000 miles a
second.
Many Possibilities
Brig. Gen. David Sarnoff, presi
dent of RCA, listed numerous
possibilities opened up by the
new system, including a new
radio-mall system with; pickup
and delivery services of the Post
Office Department.
The system, he pointed out, has
the potential of delivering the
equivalent of 40 tons of mail
coast-to-coast In a single day at
"relatively low cost." That would
be 12,800,000 letters of one ounce
each.
Messages, letters and documents
could be beamed through the air,
received and reproduced as exact
duplicates of the originals. .
Pickup, Delivery
"We would, of course, have to
add hands and feet to this winged I
messenger," Sarnoff said, "in order
to provide a pickup and delivery
service that corresponds to our
present mail system."
Ultrafax used the micro-radio
rolav avfttoivi In wh'r-h relav sta
tions are located about 30 miles!
apart. They receive television
broadcasts and "bounce" them
along to the next station.
Such a system already is in
operation between New York and
"If H Comet from Sfceie's It Mutt Be Good"
CORNELIA
17 feuiplt
$4500
v.V. i,
1- II . I I i
if it's n l u ' r vnii
. t
I
irrv 1111 jmvniv;
WAMT
liliSllIll
YOU'LL BUY.
llllili
IH1P
OPEN
FRIDAY
NIGHT.
TILL
9 P.M.
- - .... - rwlw uiim aimiiv i
Inert BUIOVA Is America Greatest Wafch Valua-proreJ
further by the fact thai mora Americans bay Bulova them any
oftW vwitcb in Iht worldl Choose from many handsom styles qpa OA (UCOUafi
Dnetnn anrl ntllUr nfltwnrlcs fire
being installed. As to getting tele
vision across tha ocean. Sarnoff
said that airplanes now flying
constantly over the route could
carry portable relay stations,
Other Services
Sarnoff also saw the possibility
of Ultrafax bringing various types
of publications into the home:
system of world-wide military
communications, scrambled to the
needs of secrecy; establishment of
great newspapers as national in
stitutions by instantaneous. trans
mission and reception of complete
editions into, every home equipped
with a television set; transmission
of full-length motion picture from
a single negative in the produc
tion studio simultaneously to the
screens of thousands of motion
picture theaters.
Among documents transmitted
over the system were the novel,
historical documents such as i
copy of Lincoln's Gettysburg Ad
dress, the Declaration of Indepen
dence, the Japanese surrender and
a page from the Gutenberg Bible,
County Garbage
Dumps Needed
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
unbearable within 100 yards of
the dump because of the decay
ing carcasses of animals. The
dump Is on the right side of
road and refuse Is strewn down
a 150 ft. embankment directly
Into the river.
The dump has evidently been
there for a number of years be
cause it covers an area from the
road ' down to the river about 50
yards wide.
Another pile of garbage and
debris is three miles south of the
McKenzie Highway on Jasper
Road.
Here the rubbish is dumped
along the roadside and spills over
the bank into a slough covered
with a scum and effluent from
the garbage.
The effluent from the decay
.Ing refuse is a murky bluish
white color.
At Whitbeck Road southwest of
tugene and less than 100 yards
from the Stella Magladry grade
school is another refuse dump
which the youngsters pass on the
way to school each day The
aump, spread along the road
about 40 yards, was littered with
tin cans, decaying food, whiskey
ana Deer ootties, old car parts,
A person building a house across
the road said the dump had been
there for some time. He said the
county sent a- crew out to cover it
aooui a year ago but it appeared
again.
Talking about garbage is not
nearly as bad as seeing it strewn
along roadsides and falling into
aueiuc streams.
HUNTER FINED
Joseph Carl Martin, Noti, was
fined $25 ($15 suspended) in dis
trict court Wednesday for illegal
hunting. State police ticketed
Martin for using a rifle to kill up-
uuu!,. ne was iound with a
blue grouse he had killed with a
ou-ou rme.
SOMEONE YOU KNOW HAS
SWITCHED TO CALVERT
11
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f.'reen Stamps
0 Coiit'eitienf.
Term
1027 Willamette
Folks evervwfora nil
- 1 1 Alt
tell you they switched
because Calvert Reserve
is smoother always!
CAT.VTPT Dcm, .
hiJL??S!mi5 ln Nutr" Spirit
, I Oalvert Distillers Corp., Nw York ciS
Open Till 9:00 Fridayju
i
NO MONEY DOWN
FULL YEAR TO PAY 0l''A$y
dfaaJd Shaped PIERCED
Petite bejaweled hearts for your car tips ex- m
quisitely faihioned of diamond whit and
jewel colored rhlneitonti. old filled poiti, 30
At W.l,fl,,', , . ,
ADD TO YOUR WEISFIELD ACCOUNT!
EI
NEW SHIPMENT ARRIVED
HUSH PURSES
Th tiny leatherette purte
with multitude of com
partments. Special only
Just Charge It!
'fog
CORO'S MMHtS
LOCKETS
Antique mgrivid fob-
loenettorfsihiondsA
your lipiL Sold or
ver finish,
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ICstneiiti&Cfumj- ''Ki
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PRESS FLaSI
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W(rftliMslldiiliM
luy on Wriifitld'i Hiy N
No Monty Down". Kk U
iWii(i m
liftillH""
fnn Fink, M
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l.,g. IHI
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1101
Weisfield's Party Splendor At a Tiny hi
8-P1ECE CRYSTAL S
(A
Mokes for Happy guests
and for a proud hottest
Yti tfcii parly-going tat dill H yaur rtqulr.
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mm1
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