Where Tot Was Hanged Fifteen-year-old Robert Munday (left) points to ceiling of basement home in Chicago, as he re-enacted for police his version of the hanging of Tommy Laux, 3, whose body was found stuffed in a barracks bag. Robert told authorities that Tommy was hanged accidentally while testing a noose for a boys' club initiation. With the boy are State's Attorney John S. Boyle (center) and Assistant State's Attorney Edward Breen. (AP Wirephoto) FALLS ARE GREATEST HAZARD Farm About as Dangerous A Spot as There Is By ROBERT E. GEIGER Washington VP) A farm is just about the most dangerous place a family can live and work. Safety experts have known this for a long time, and President Truman is trying to make farms safer. He has proclaimed the week of July 24 as national farm safety week. About 18,000 farm people are killed each year in work and home accidents and in automo bile mishaps on farm roads. Thousandi of others are injur ed. Mr. Truman has set up a farm safety committee. It is attempt ing to eliminate 30,000,000 farm hazards that range from mean bulls to unsafe tractors. Meanwhile, the bureau of labor statistics has reported there continue to be more fatal ities in agricultural activities than in any other major indus try. And the bureau of agricul tural economics (BAE) has just completed its first major survey of farm accident costs. Its con clusion: Non-fatal farm accidents caused farm people to lose 17, 000,000 working days in 1948. The cost for medical care, but not including the lost time,, was $36,000,000. These, remember, are only the accidents that didn't cause death. ATTEMPTED SUICIDE PATIENTS New Surgical Technique to Cure Certain Types Mental Disorders Steilacoom, Wash. U.R) A new surgical technique for curing certain types of mental disorders was described here by Dr. Walter Freeman. Dr. Freeman, a professor of neurology at George Washington university in Washington, D. C, termed the new operation as "transorbital lobotomy." Transorbital lobotomy is similar to prefrontal lobotomy. Both are used as a method of curing mental patients whose outstanding symptoms are "emo tional tension, worry, anxiety and fear." In a mass demonstration, Dr. Freeman operated on eight'wo men and one man here, averag ing seven minutes per operation. The patients included persons who have attempted murder or suicide. The new technique differs from prefrontal lobotomy in , that the operation is done through the eye socket. The upper eyelid is lifted and a " sharp instrument is inserted about two inches. A nerve is severed and the operation is completed. Prefrontal lobotom ies are done through the top of the head. The knife cuts a nerve that connects imagination with emo tions in the brain. Twenty minutes after operat ing on one patient, she was sit ting up and talking with the doctor. Nebraska does not require its state health director to be either a licensed physician or trained in public health. The BAE found the most cost ly kind of an accident is an auto accident. The average cost for medical care for these non-fatal accidents is $64. But falls cause more farm in juries than any other accidents. In the sample survey of 2,000 accidents, 487 involved falling from such things as haystacks and stepladders. The average cost of each of these accidents was $45 in medical care. Farm ers lost an average of 24 days from each accident. Machines are the next great est hazard. They caused 248 of the 2,000 "simple" accidents and they cost $61 an accident. Aver age time lost was 20 days. In third place among the haz ards of farm life come farm ani mals mostly mean ones. Kick ing horses, charging bulls, bit ing pigs and similar animals with unpleasant "dispositions caused injuries to 233 farmers. These accidents cost on the average $36 for medical care. The farmers lost an average of 19 days from work. Two Weeks Vacation Bible School Opens Zena A two weeks Bible school is being sponsored by Ze na Sunday school,' as announc ed by the Superintendent, Jack Quiring, last Sunday. Rev. P. J. Becker, of the Am erican Sunday School union, will direct studies under teach ers, Joan Collett and Geraldine Palke, at Lincoln school house from July 11 to July 22. Hours will be 9 a. m. to 12 a. m. Zena Sunday school donated $10 toward the Youth Center and plans to assist with a fund later. Birthday songs were sung for Ruth Shepard Wright and Alice Crawford Haldeman during the regular services. Announced was an outing for Sunday school at the R. C. Shep ard farm at Zena .on July 17. Use Schilling furl Vinilla for delicate, enticing flavof never hanb strong. Its fragrant good nest will not bake or freeze out. Bus Passenger Ads Strangely Sunderland, Eng., July 11 P) Susan Ellison, pretty bus con ductress, complained in court today about the strange antics of one of her passengers. "He threw a sandwich at me, whistled on a bird warbler and then kicked me on the thigh," she said, and claimed she had a bruise to prove it. "About this bruise on the young lady's thigh," said defend and Henry Dinney, 47, "I would very much like to see it." "I'm sure you would," drily commented Judge J. P. Wilson. He sentenced Dinney to a month in jail for assult and a month for beig drunk and dis orderly. Two Boys Ignore Warning; 1 Drowns EveYett W) Jimmy McCann, 8, and Robert Stanteford 8 ran away from home Friday night to go swimming in a prohibited area on Everett's bayside. Jim my didn't come home. His body was recovered this weekend at Pigeon Creek Junc tion after a long night search. Terror-stricken when his com panion stepped into a hole and disappeared, Robert ran for help. After he had traveled al most two and a half miles across the city, he stopped at a filling station, too tired to go on, and told his story to attendants. Confused, the boy said his friend had drowned in the Sno homish river. It took police- officers three hours to quiet the boy sufficien tly in order to get the location. Coroner Ken Baker said a third boy known only as Malcolm had been present, but he had also headed for home. Jimmy was the son of Mrs, J. D. Pettit. More Farm Hands Than Jobs Available There are more farm hands than jobs in Oregon agriculture for the first time in eight years. The state unemployment com pensation commission said a slump in lumbering and influx of students into the job hunting population of the state had boosted unemployment to 42,- 000 early in July. The total compared with 39,- 600 listed by the employment office rolls the month previous and 30,500 a year ago. Paul Jackson Viall, Jr., who has joined the staff of the Telephone Answering Service, newly established at 155 South Liberty street. Mr. Viall, a student at Vanderbilt univer city, Nashville, Tennessee is staying with Mr. and Mrs. J. Gordon Thornton while in Sa lem. r..z. trough July with a big grlnl Heat do.in I hurl you half at much whan youVl fading chippir in a frtihly drycl.aned tuit or dressl W. taka willed garments, citan and prtll 'im, rtturn 'n inaptly, jaunty, cool at a mountain pooll Creates and pltals stand pol-you look ntol d.ipil. the htall Coma in lodoyl tOOIC COoi, AjtL COOLTTT" WTH UNCrf PgyCltANINQ i jUnwlm M : il.l-i- i . i ji .iiii.jj iiiii j ill I 'in aiii 'Rarin' to Go "Miss Frosty Fresh," also known as Sue Thorwall, is all set to serve fresh orange juice from this mammoth 30-gallon plastic punch bowl to members of the Institute of Food Technologists at their convention in San Francisco. Although the orange juice in the punch bowl is now a liquid, it was fresh frozen the citrus industry's newest way of presenting the beverage. (AP Telephoto) KEY TO UNTOLD WEALTH? Veteran May Have Plan To Beat Gambling Wheel By LEO GUILD (Author ol the "Wizard ot Odds") How would you like to wake up some morning and find a piece of paper that would assure in lifp?. $ a f aiuuuau giavuducu vet eran of World War I, who has been lying on his back in a bed at Wadsworth General hospital for two years, thinks he has that piece of paper and as a matter of fact, I think so, too! right now! Francis McGowan, that vet eran, a former bank president, ex-gambling house dealer, and man of colorful character,, has figured out a roulette system which on a $200 investment guarantees a steady $23 an hour win on an American wheel! Of 17,000 systems I've seen, this one alone looks good. Only two other systems in the past few years were temporary winners. One, based on the principle that every wheel has a fault, was played by two col lege men who watched the wheel long enough to find out what number came up more often than any other, and then played that number. And three math students won on a system for a while it en tailed watching the wheel for 100 spins, then on the next 100 spins playing the numbers that come up least often Neither of these systems had any basis of fact or mathemati cal truth, and won only because of luck. McGowan's system, on the other hand, has been checked bv me. a mathematics profes sor and a group of motion pic ture studio accountants, all of whom have been unable to find the flaw. It's an ingenious sys tem of progression on a 2 to 1 payoff column, which forces the house to give greater odds than it should. The implications of this sys tem are vast, because this math ematical technique could, if successful, be used in most gam bling games. It could either, in its extremity, end gambling because certainly the house isn't going to operate losing games, or cause some radical changes Condensed Statement of Condition of WILLAMETTE VALLEY BANK Salem, Oregon At of June 30, 1949 ASSETS Loans and Discounts $ 798,381.64 U. S. Government Securities 411,820.70 Other Securities 165,633.17 Cash, Cash Items and Balances ' with Other Banks 298,556.64 Other Assets 35,970.79 Total Assets $1,710,362.94 LIABILITIES Demand Deposits $1 ,033, 1 1 6.-44 Time Deposits 582,768.81 Other Liabilities 10,435.79 Total Liabilities $1,626,321.04 Capital Accounts 84,041.90 Total Liabilities and Capital $1,710,362.94 Comparative Figures on Total Depositi June 30, 1948 $ 888,054.63 June 30, 1949 $1,615,885.25 WILLAMETTE VALLEY BANK SJnvlnir. 11 you of all the money you want ln nouse rules to eliminate tne advantages of this type of bet ting. Though we failed to read any where lately of a casino owner applying for county relief be cause of a winning system, this one looks like the answer to McGowan's future, and right now he's a man without a dime. I'm taking McGowan right from the hospital to the Flam ingo hotel in Las Vegas, to prove or disaprove his theory. The hotel, in the interest of scien tific advancement (and publici ty; is giving the old timer a luxurious free suite, as much ex cellent food as he can eat, and eight hours a day play on the roulette wheel. I figure that a week's play, wnicn win De two complete cv cles of his system, will tell the story. The vet is sure that this system will in a month make him enough money to go to Reno and then to Europe, where the wheels take only 3 instead of the 5-plus- here. He's certain that the riches of the world are his. Even though I've never seen a system that has actually work ed without luck, and am still a bit skeptical, I'd put the odds in his favor, because I've tried this tneory on a home roulette wheel long enough to make it look possible, although not long enougn to make it look certain Some years ago, when Ein stein first came to this country, he was deluged with questions from devotees of gambling sys tems. He gave this answer to all of them:"In the Thirteenth Cen tury, a monk named Roulette devised a game which was named after him, and which gave the owner of a wheel a 5 519 advantage. This is a perfect mathematical formula. With a limit on the game, it is impossible for any system to overcome that percentage." So this now looms as a battle between McGowan and Einstein! Only two people in the world Telescope's Possibilities Overwhelm the Imagination By J. HUGH PRUETT Astronomer, Extension Division, Oregon Hither Education System Astronomer, Extension Division, Oregon Higher Education System It seems quite probable that nothing in the history of astronomi cal science has ever caught and continuously held the public interest as has the planning, construction and operation of the huge 200-inch reflecting telescope. A grade teacher writes that her pupils never tire of hearing of this great instrument. Familiar history now is the beginning in 1928 of the plans for a gigantic telescope; Dr. George E. Hale's persuasion of a Rockefeller board to provide $6,000,000 for the project; the pouring of molten glass in 1934; the cross-country trip of the 20 ton glass disk in 1935 to Pasa dena; the grinding, the delay of work during the war and its resumption afterwards; the jour ney of the completed mirror and its arrival on Mt. Palomar No vember 19, 1947; and finally the grand opening ceremonies at the observatory June 3, 1948. Although the great Hale tele scope has been put into limited operation and some photographs taken, it is not yet completed. Complicated tests have vealed that in some places the surface of the big mirror does not have exactly the proper know McGowan's system from start to finish he and I al though I anticipate that after a couple of days play the sharks will be watching McGowan's every move to figure what he's doing. But they'll have a tough time of it. I'll report further from Las Vegas on whether McGowan's dream is just a dream or a rich reality! (Copyright 1949) NO GREASE HAIR CONTROL HIS ''7 f oun because it's the same fine product theij C fir dads and big broth ers prefer. At any age . . an indispensable aid to good grooming. CAPITAL DRUG STORE State & Liberty "On the Corner" Fred Meyer MM ;JTNRULY HAIR U just has to be yy have when it WWmeets 'HIS No yy Grease Hair Control y . . but without look i ing "slick" oi oily. 1 THERMOS BOTTLE .m 89c MEN'S SHIRTS 3.49 APPAREL SECTION $1.75 SALT WATER TAFFY "l .CANDY SECTION 39c POP UP TOASTER ."T:.?:iS.rH$4.99 TUMBLERS ngoz variety section 5c VELVET TOBACCO 1 lb. tin DRUG SECTION 79c SOLITAIR "ABOUT T t CREAM MAKE-UP XlkiC" iiQTD I GO 29c 60c $1 T,ME 2t" $1.00 A complete all-in-one The New Home Facial by make-up that gives your ' J I CHENO skin a soft'iuminous, DCirDCirCI Combination velvet-smooth finish. Tablets lCIl t Lss cial that every woman can " """' CREAM u" ineXpen$ive,y' and 01 BERRY Im?ICE I sUl Tl home. r . , , , . Extract Tablets 25c43c59c Only $3.50 703Vi9r. $1.00 COLGATE tp 1 Tif Rapid-shave fred Meyer Powder KSM5 25c 148 N. Liberty Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Monday, July 11, 1949 11 curvature for the finest reflec tion of light to a focus. It has been decided that a little more glass must be ground from the outer 18 inches of the face of the mirror, but it will not be necessary to send the disk back to the optical shop in Pasadena The needed grinding machin ery will be moved to Palomar Mt., the mirror removed from the tube and the work done there. At no spot will more than a thickness of 20 millionths of an inch of glass be removed, and over most of the strip less than this. Perhaps six months time will be required. The first publication of the photographs taken with the new telescope appeared in Collier's magazine of May 7. These were principally of regions previous ly worked on by the 100-inch Mt. Wilson telescope. The new pictures show great improve ments over those taken with smaller instruments, and usual ly required far less exposure time. A recent news release from I 11 us now! I i& I 1 Ring us right now we'll demonstrate all the big I S. a I bonus features you get in a Nash Airflyte. J iJf ) I You owe it to yourself to know the difference of America's only car with wheel-enclosed stream- N . kJ I lining . . . wider, longer, roomier interiors ... I Vl I Twin Beds . . . Weather Eye Conditioned Air . . ; I Unitized Body-and-Frame ... 4-wheel coil spring to be- ri(e ' one-piece, curved windshield on afl I q it models, I No I J"1' name the Airflyte series you want demon- I Dntrol I strated the new Nash "600" or new Nash I look- Ambassador. oily. I For an Airflyte Trial, Just Dial ke it. I J Marion Motors ( 1 333 Center St. j Shoppers' the California Institute of Tech nology states that the "most exciting" pictures obtained with the 200-inch cannot be repro duced on the printed page. They are so insignificant in appearance and so dim that the only way anything can be made of them is to use a magnifying glass on the negatives. But they repre sent a great astronomical tri umph, a reaching out into the mysterious depths of the great universe and perceiving mighty star systems a billion light-years away; twice the distance ever covered before with optical in struments. Light speeds across an empty space 186,300 miles in one sec ond. The distance it goes in a year, known as a light-year, is then almost six trillion miles. Multiply this by a billion and try to visualize the immensity the result represents! Washington has more electric lights per capita than any other state. Palmistry Readings Will tell your past, present and future. Will advise on love, marriage and business Answers all questions. Are 'you women? Why be in doubt? Special Readings. v e open a a.m. nSlA, 1 P-m-Moved from 466 Ferry to 173 S. Commercial , Specials J I I '2 I Salem's Schilling interest ff Intipnpniionr Electric Cleaners 565 Highland Ave. Ph. 34821 1990 Fairgrounds RrJ. Phone 3-9281