Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, May 21, 1949, Page 2, Image 2

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    I Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Saturday, May 21, 1949
r i?
Dan Dalley and Celeste Holm are starred in the Twentieth
Century-Fox film version of "Chicken Every Sunday," Rose
mary Taylor's best-selling novel. As the tiffing parents in the
comedy, "Dan has a penchant for "easy street" schemes
which work out so well that Celeste has to take in boarders
to keep things going. Colleen Townsend and Alan Young head
the featured cast of the film which .opens Sunday at the Capi
tol theater.
! Andresen Invited to
Attend Inventors Show
5 Invention and designing of
tools are a hobby rather than a business with Earl Andresen, who
Jtook top honors in the Rotary hobby show held recently.
But in New York they are interested enough in one of the
"Salemite's inventions that they
Brooklyn Hermit
Sent to Asylum
? New York, May 21 (U.B Mrs.
(Anna Makushak, 58, and her 32-nyear-old
son, Paul, "the Brook
lyn hermit," have been commit
ted to a state Institution for the
nentally ill, It was reported to-day.
J Supreme Court Judge Charles
E. Murphy revealed he signed
papers committing the pair last
meek, after they had undergone
psychiatric examinations at
Kings county hospital.
5 Police found Paul last month
-lelf-lmprlsoned in a rubble-filled
room in his mother's Grene
point apartment. He had been
"in the tiny cubicle for 10 years.
I His mother fed him by lowering
food through a hole In the room.
Alabama normally raises
about one-tenth of the nation's
cotton.
4-
L H,.. ifl. . !t.i Miiic.i 1-s t.
Aaa Atchoo Fourteen-year-old
Michael Hlppislry of
London explodes into a sneeze
in the London apartment of an
Indianapolis educated chiro
practor whom he visited In
hope of obtaining relief from
the spasms. Hlpplsley had
been snreiing for nine days at
a rate of 20 snceies a minute
when he went to the chiro-r-rctor,
Leslie W. D. Jelfs.
Michael's parents said that
previously a doctor, hypnotist,
faith healer and various sug
gestions from well - meaning
persons had failed to bring the
boy relief. Jelfs would not es
timate how long treatment of
the boy's spine might take.
(AP -Wlrephoto)
O&UtTaCC
1 heat re
Bllvertoa
Orafoa
Sun. - Mon. Tues.
WawisaBao:
mops
RfrWOfl A INnFD STATES (CIKS fflQD
0
small steam engines and other
have extended him an Invitation
to attend the international In
ventors Exposition In New York
City with all expenses paid.
Andresen this week received
the telegram from New York
asking him to exhibit and dem
onstrate his newly patented cone
grinding abrasive used In pat
tern maklpg to smooth castings,
at the exposition to be held at
Grand Central Palace June 4 to
11.
Asked to exhibit and demon
strate their inventions at the ex
position are only those Inventors
whose patents have been tested
and show high merit. Andre-
sen's cone grinding abrasive
saves considerable time In
smoothing casting surfaces and
has a marked advantage over
the old hand smoothing process.
The exposition attracts not
only inventors but leading man
ufacturrs who are looking for
new ideas and time saving de
vices to use in their manufac
turing and to place on the mar
ket. Andresen, who at the Salem
Rotary Hobby show exhibited
five miniature steam engines, all
hand-made, is sales manager and
a member of the Andresen
Creamery. During the first
World War he served at sea as
a ship's machinist. His work
now is done in a fully equipped
machine shop In the basement of
his home, where he spends his
spare time experimenting and
trying out new Ideas.
Turner Unit Guest
Of Salem Member
Turner Mrs. Ted Whitehead
was hostess at her Salem home
for the Turner home extension
club, with Mrs. A. E. Kunke
and Mrs. Fred Schifferer assist
ant hostesses. Mrs. John Pow
ell, retiring president, presided
and Mrs. Carl Burkland was
elected the new treasurer. This
was the last club meeting until
fall.
In the group were Mrs. John
McKinney, Mrs. Nettie Morris,
Mrs. Lloyd Jarmnn, Mrs. M. E.
Pearson, Mrs. Karl Wipper,
Mrs. E. E. Ball. Mrs. Frank
Schampier, Mrs. Henry Weish
aar, Mrs. John Powell, Mrs. Earl
Prather, Mrs. J. E. Norris, Mrs.
John Schifferer, Mrs. V. E. Saw
yer and children. Mrs. S. E.
Drager, Mrs. J. Pierce and chil
dren, the hostesses. Mrs. White
head, Mrs. Kunke and Mrs.
Schifferer.
ENDB TODAY!
BODY AND SOUL"
"t'NEXPECTtD Gl'EST"
Starts Tomorrow Cotit. 1:45
eiGGCSTJUUflCUf
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. .-or-
9 PtfiRYCOMO
if JUWCARIAVD
I rmv n?irv
W1U IILIL1I1
A. AflCKEVROCW
' ANN SOT ESN
tuam mnm mi hmk nu tuw
FLUS
OaaM Mike rwtwa News
Economy Cut
Killed in Senate
Washington. May 21 W) Sen
ate democratic leader Lucas said
today there will have to be eith
er a tax increase or a cut in fed
eral spending preferably the
latter.
But he made it clear he (till
is against the republican-led
drive so far unsuccessful to
trim each appropriation bill by
at least five per cent.
That economy move was
blocked for the fourth straight
time late yesterday when the
senate, by voice vote, passed and
shipped back to the house a bill
carrying $751,000,000 nearly
all of it for flood control and
river harbor projects.
The senate total is $158,000,-
000 more than the house voted
and $21,000,000 less than Pres
ident Truman wanted.
The senate batted down a pro
posed five per cent cut in its
figure by a vote of 44 to 33. It
killed a 10 per cent reduction
amendment, 48 to 29. And it
swamped, 59 to 15, a proposal
by Democratic Senator Douglas
(D.-Ill.) to slash the fund 40
per cent by $300,000,000.
Douglas stirred up the most
commotion at yesterday's ses
sipn with his proposal to trim
the flood control-rivers and
harbors bill by 40 per cent. Even
some of his economy colleagues
deserted him on that one, and
some of them bitterly assailed
his plan.
Senator Morse (R.-Ore.) re
called that Mr. Truman accused
the GOP-controlled 80th con
gress of crippling the flood con
trol and reclamation program.
The Oregon senator shouted that
Douglas was trying to scuttle the
program altogether.
Aumsville Seniors
Waiting Diplomas
Aumsville Commencement
exercises for the senior class
were held Thursday night at 8
o'clock with Dr. R. M. Hooker
of Pacific university, speaking
on "Good Neighbor Policy.'
Margaret Speer is valedictorian
and Betty Combs salutatorian.
Awards and a program will fea
ture annual class night Tuesday.
Members of the graduating
class are Merle Beach, Lela Col
lins, Betty Combs, Don Erick
son, Emma Fry, Elena Gillespie,
fcvelyn Glesdal, Darrel Hayes.
Delma Herrmann, Maroe John
son, David King. Wilbur King.
Alvin Lee, Frank Schultz, Mar
garet Speer and Paul Vettrus.
Rev. Ernest Lee, father of Al
vin Lee, will give the baccalau
reate address at the school au
ditorium Sunday night.
Mill City Minister
Speaker at Woodburn
Wnorfhnrn Tir .Tnhn Vara,
SOn Of Mill CitV m PrMhvUrlan
minister of world experience
ana religious activity, formerly
connected with fhr. TTM will u
the speaker at the graduation
exercises at Woodburn high
school June 2. The program will
be held in the gymnasium at 8
p.m. Miss Jean Hove will be val
edictorian ana Don Scarborough
Will be snltltnlnrinn
Baccalaureate services will be
held Sunday, May 29 at 8 p.m.
in me nign school auditorium
With the Rev Ravmnnrl W
Hood of the Church of God giv
ing the sermon. Other local pas
tors will assist in the service
" hi llunit.i
ri-ijviDintu
CONTRACTING
Featuring Crone and
Standard Fixtures
Call 3-8555 jj
Salem Heating &
Sheet Metal Co. J
108S Broadway J
FREE ESTIMATES ?
.,,
Where the Bif Pictures Flay!
RIGHT NOWI
Bh. ST -Sat '
- X
?-i If
OH I l"V '
oil IT GAKKtll
Bap Bunny Waraer Newt
AND MAJOR HIT
ann-njiEwiE'
. - '
aSl
Howard, above, who will par
ticipate in the Knights of Co
lumbus state sessions and din
ner here Sunday, and, below,
Dan Hay of Portland, who will
speak at the Sunday night
banquet. Hay is chairman of
the 87th national convention
to be held in Portland in Au
gust. Presbyterians to
Plan Synod Changes
Buffalo, N. Y., May 21 UI.B-
Sweeping changes in the synod
structure of the Presbyterian
church in the United States were
under consideration by the de
nomination's 161st general - as
sembly today.
The proposal for the synod
changes and another endorsing
revisions in the assembly's gen
eral council were recommended
to the assembly by a special
committee yesterday. The com
mittee, headed by Dr. Robert
B. Whyte of Cleveland, sum
marized a two-year study of
the church structure in a 89-
page report containing 61 pro
posed actions and five constitu
tional changes. -
The synod reorganization, the
most drastic of the recommended
changes, would divide the Unit
ed States into regional synods
of approximately equal church
populations, numbering about
200,000 members each.
Most of the world's
lute iS Prnwn In fnHin. kn
Ganges-Brahmaputra River del-
w, ana is woven into burlap and
Sacking Cloth in thp nenrhv mllle
of Calcutta.
Ends Today! . Frank Bucks' "Bring 'Em Back Alive"
(Sat.) and 'Tapper Returns"
Ph. 3 3721 Cont. From 1 P.M.
TOMORROW! TWO NEW,
THRILLING ADVENTURES!
(FIRST TIME SHOWN IN SALEM)
SULLIVAN REYNOLDS
mm euMM -we sot- wiuam .iosjumo ommova
CO FEATURE!
Lara sTjratti
MOW HUM
CARTOON -
L
To Determine
Sex ere Birth
San Diego. Calif., May 21 W
A method of determining sex
before birth as simple as blue
for boys and pink for girls
was reported here today.
The method, a microscopic
stain test of material from the
mother, was described by the
Daily Journal as "promising to
become Infallible."
It said in its copyrighted ar
ticle that the method had prov
ed accurate in 86.6 percent of
cases tested at the Linda Vista
medical center here. Refine
ments it added were eScpected to
improve the percentage.
A young technician, George
Robert Talbott was credited
with developing the method
while making cancer tests. He
found, the article said that if a
smear from the mother' cervix
turned blue a boy was probable;
if pink, a girl.
Three months of pregnancy
appeared to be the best time for
the test.
The article said the stain col
or was determined by the
amount of estrogen and proges
terone (products of the ovary).
George Chaplin, the Journal s
managing editor said the paper
was convinced "this is not just
another unconfirmed experi
ment." He said that Albert Q.
Maisel, special writer on medi
cal subjects had investigated
the method and was reporting
its success in a magazine article.
Governor McKay
Back From Capital
Gov. Douglas McKay return
ed to Salem today, after a trip
to Washington, D.C., where he
testified yesterday concerning
the corps of engineers' plans for
development of the Columbia
river basin, plans entailing some
$1,600,000,000. McKay said vir
tually all testimony at the hear
ing was favorable to the propos
als of the engineers. The gover
nor flew in from the national
capital, and went directly to his
home. He was resting up pre
paratory to his trip to Medford
Sunday, when he will dedicate
a new YMCA building.
During McKay's absence Sen
ate President WiUiam E. Walsh
of Coos Bay was acting gover
nor, conducting affairs of the
chief executive here, and for
the last day from his law offices
in Coos Bay.
BASEBALL
SUNDAY
6:30 P.M.
DOUBLEHEADER
SALEM SENATORS
vs.
WENATCHEE
Waters Park
25th and Mission
Journal Want Ads Pay
CRAWFORD
lOMIT RUTM
LATE NEWS
ji i i
Till .
gi.1.1.. T..i, .knun niftnn
be tied in 20th Century-Fox' "Mr. Belverdere Goes to Col
lege," now- at the Grand.
Boys Confess
Series of Blasts
Boston, May 21 (U.B A series
of mysterious explosions, which
rocked the Quincy and Milton
area in recent weeks, was solved
today with the arrest of five
teen-aged boys and the seizure
of enough dynamite to level a
city block.
The boys, four Dorchester
youngsters and one from North
Quincy, were released in the cus
tody of their parents pending a
juvenile court hearing in Quin
cy Tuesday.
Acting on a tip last night,
Boston and Quincy authorities
found 40 sticks of dynamite in
the cellar of one Dorchester
dwelling and 17 more in the
basement of another.
The boys all admitted that
they were involved in the four
explosions in the past three
weeks, police said. They al
legedly had broken into a pow
der shed at Swingle's quarry to
steal the dynamite.
Jordan Garden Club
Names New Officers
Jordan The Jordan Garden
club met at the home of Mrs.
Crystal Limbeck, with two
guests, Mrs. Hash and Mrs.
Crenshaw, from Sweet Home,
present. They gave a demon
stration of making feather cor
sages. DAVID
PAN PAILEY
If ACADEMY AWARD i
: to ;( ii'lK'wiNNER'l
Aur l (y'-'-T
1 1 w t r II
ii atah ilrtnnr
"II V Hi UK mwVX -fl .ir
3 -ilBIIAIllk
lliDWtBir - 2ND MAJOR H.TI
- COLLEEN TOWNSEND ALAN YOUNG
Extrol
BUGS BUNNY COLOR CARTOON Warner
"A Feother In His Hair" ' 9 News
rresh V, ty
Froseo! kwtt0
SEE
Dan Dsllfy
Celeste Holm
in
"CHICKEN
IVERY SUNDAY"
Capitol Theatre
Starts Today!
Northwest Poultry & Dairy Products
1303 No. Front St.
Wohh how a bow tie should
at h himinpM meeting, over
which President Lois Fitzger
ald presided, Crystal LimdecK
resigned as chairman of the
nnat committee for the Fat
Lamb show parade. It was de
cided not to have a cnairman
and all members will be ex-
luntarf in hAln
A brief article on "Preparing
the Yard for Vacation" was giv-
, hv .Tnvre Lambert, ine
"traveling basket" was passed
to Joyce LamDert Dy
t ura ripHHed tn entertain the
Scio Garden club at a 1 o'clock
luncheon at Wilson park in July
rnmmittees aDDOinted to arrange
th luncheon were: Daisy
Farmer, Addle Nichols ana Bess
Miller; program, PJina wesien
hnuse. Florence Johnson and
Sylvesta Limbeck.
Officers lor me ensuing yeai
piamaH Thev are: Syl
vesta Limbeck, president; Polly
Beagley, vice president; Nina
Westenhouse, secretary-treasurer.
The club will be guests of Mrs.
Anna Senz for the June meeting.
BASEBALL
TONIGHT
8:15 P.M.
WATERS PARK
Z5th & Mission
SALEM SENATORS
vs.
WENATCHEE
NEW TODAY!
SHE WOWS
THEM AGAIN!
Jin won
7t CITATIONS
for twr rolt In
Johnny Belinda
and now th
dotsHwrth
iwgnsi
COfSTEHOLM
a W. OHE
CHICKEN EVERY SUNDAY!
For thai old-fashioned Sunday dinner, with tti
festive spirit and tantalising goodness there'!
nothing so appropriate and satisfying. It's eco
nomical too, at today'i reduced prices!
Northwest's own chicken, either cut-up and
packaged, or dressed for stuffing and roasting
or slewing, is Incomparably good. Willamette
Valley grown tor extra tenderness!
At Your Grater's or Butcher's
Wholesale at
Company
Phone 1 24
Columbia River
Ta DirA Anain
iu Hymn
Portland, May 21 WU-The
Columbia river is going to rise
again.
A climb in the Snake today
brought a forecast from the
weather bureau that by Wedei.
day the Columbia at Vancouv
er and Portland will be back to
within two tenths of a foot of the
crest reached two days ago. The
forecast does not go beyond
Wednesday. The river stage for
late next week depends on snow
melt and rain between now and
then.
Today's rise in the Snake was
attributed to rain in the Snake
basin. It offset a fall in some
upper Columbia tributaries and
slower rate of rise in others.
The lower Columbia reached
its first spring crest at 22.5
feet at Vancouver Thursday.
That is 7.5 feet over flood stage
and the same amount under last
year's disastrous crest. The lev
el stood at 22.1 today.
All dikes were holding and
aside from flooding in lowlands
areas which annually are
threatened by the river's fresh
et, there was no damage.
New
PIX-tl
t Woodburn
O-SO-EAST SEAT8
ENDS SAT.
"Feudin' Fussin', Fightin' "
"EyesofTxo"
SUN. 4 MON.
Olivia da Havilland
! in
X "THE SNAKE PIT" 1
HELD OYER!
Complete Owl
Show After
10:50 P.M.
Mat Daily From 1 P.M.
NOW SHOWING! -
Ends Today! Cont. Show
Johnny Welssmuller
TARZAN & MERMAIDS"
Fibber McGee Molly
HEAVENLY DAYS"
TOMORROW!
Merle Oberon
In Technicolor
"A NIGHT IN PARADISE
George Raft
"JOHNNY ANGEL"
Salem, Oregefl
lljLwtTtaeefonlta f'
r Starts at Dusk -
1 1 Alan Ladd
1 1 Brenda Marshall I
1 1 "WHISPERING
II SMITH" f
r I Hoosier Hotshots fl
HI "ARKANSAS
11 SWING" II
ill Color Cartoon If
III Late News If
Co-restore
1