Ballroom Hula Swings in from Hawaii Archduke Otto Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Monday, Octoher 3, 1919 15 Invited to Salem CI Archduke Otto of Austria, heir to the Hapsburg throne, liv- ng in America since 1940, has been invited by the Salem Knife and Fork club to be its guest speaker during its dinner nieet- ng to be held the evening of October 13. Otto who speaks excellent English, has appeared before nu merous clubs of this country. Born in 1912, the son of Charles, emperor and king of Hungary, his early childhood was spent at the imperial castles in Vienna and Budapest. He left with his family for other parts of Europe after the revolution of 1919. The archduke returned to Eu rope in 1946, 1947 and in 1948 49, visiting Germany, France, England, Spain, Italy. Portugal and Greece and northern Africa. r i rai n1: v ?n The Hula Vamp: A step, close, step facing partner. The Hukllau simulates pull ing in of a fish net. Master the Ami, swinging the hips, and you're well into the new dance. AP Newsfeatures Do an Ami and you're on your way to dancing the ball room hula. An ami symbolizes "around the island," and is one of the basic steps in the dance originated by Don Wallace at the Royal Hawaiian hotel in Honolulu. Here Mrs. Gladys Bowen of San Diego and bandleader Jack McLean demon strate some of the gryations, danced to any 44 foxtrot. Throw a Kiss and swing in rhythm and you are doing the hula with hands joined. TRIED IN TREATING ARTHRITIS Driver Trapped In Truck Crash Albany, Oct. 3 W A truck driver was trapped inside his vehicle for an hour today after he crashed into a divider on the Pacific highway overpass here. Robert Richardson, of Port land, was pinned inside the truck cab so tightly that rescuers had so far doesn't add up to enough Wonder Drug Plant Is Being Grown in Hawaii By ROY ESSOYAN Honolulu A rare plant that has brought hope to 7,000,000 arthritic patients in the United States has been cultivated In Hawaii for the last 17 years. A species of African vine called strophanthus, this plant con tains ingredients for relief of arthritis and rheumatic fever. But total production ui the islands to cut the cab's top off with cut ting torches before he could be removed. Richardson was still conscious though suffering a broken leg and other undetermined injuries when rescuers reached him and took him to a hospital. His asphalt - laden Northern Lines truck and trailer smashed Into the steel post and high cur bing of the divider. The impact demolished the cab. Suspect Held for Alaska Rape-Slaying Anchorage, Alaska, Oct. 3 IU.R) John Chebetnoy, 33, was held under heavy guard today while authorities investi gated the rape-slaying of Alice Peterson, who died Saturday night a few hours after she was found with her throat cut. Chebetnoy was captured in the brush north of Girdwood yesterday by Alaska railroad section hands who were alerted to be on the lookout for him. Residents said they saw him hiking out of town along the railroad tracks, shortly after Miss Peterson's body was found. After he was captured, Che betnoy was brought to Anchor age. Authorities said he was re leased recently from jail in Sew ard. Lumberman Dies Portland. Oct. 3 MV-Archie Hawley. 54, Eugene lumberman died in the veterans hospital yesterday soon a'tei he was ad mitted for treatment. to help one patient one day. It's still in the experimental stage," says Dr. H. L. Lyon, di rector emeritus of the experi ment station, Hawaii Sugar Planters Association. Researchers have reported that a chemical obtained from seeds of the strophanthus is identical with one of the inter mediate chemicals now involv ed in the laborious process of producing cortisone. 1 Main obstacle to production oi cortistone from the plant is the ;ame as that presently hamper- One Injured, Another Jailed in Shooting Corvallis. Oct. 3 un A rail road bunkhouse shooting sent one man to a hospital and an other to jail here yesterday. State Police Said Cedric K Ellison, 40, was wounded twice the chest and once in the head, by .22 caliber bullets. Held in the jail for Lincoln county authorities is Cecil P Young. SO Young was reported as saying the shooting stemmed from argument and fight over money owed him. The affair occurred along the Southern Pacific tracks west of here at Nashville. ing its production from ox bile you need a mountain of seeds for a few ounces of cortistone To be exact, one ton of seeds to relieve one patient one year, 'AP NPWsfamrMi 'Wizard of Odds' Has Feature by Tommy Schultz The main feature in the Capital Journal's "Wizard of Odds" cartoon on the editorial page today is furnished by Tommy Schultz of Salem. The subject is safe travel ing, and the cartoon informs readers that one in every 200,000 train passengers is killed annually. A picture of a streamliner accompanies the feature. "Wizard of Odds" by the cartoonist Hal Mason is syn dicated by the New York Post. " Survey Notes in Road Survey Lost County Engineer H e d d a Swart told the county court Monday he has had no success so far locating the notes on survey made in 1913 on the south side of the little north fork of the Santiam from about Horse creek to Lumker's bridge Lumbermen along the river and others want a new road along that side of the river and had asked for a copy of the old sur vey so they could make arrange ments for securing the right of way. The county engineer Monday brought to the county court ses sion his old diary which told the story of the survey being made in the midsummer of 1913, and Swart also said he has a distinct personal recollection of it. Swart thinks that the survey notes were turned over to the then County Judge W. M. Bush ey and never returned. The engineer says that Bushey was opposed to having the road run along the south side of the river. As a result another sur vey was made later along the north side and the road ordered built there where it now runs. Apparently a new survey will have to be made if the new piece of road is to be built. Growing Drug Dr. H. L. Lyon examines the strophanthus. i ''jS&'ta,'11 f ?1 i - Aw, ' ? ' ' Willamette Trustees Accept Bequest The executive committee of Willamette university board of trustees heard a report on en rollment, reviewed campus im provements and later attended the football. game Saturday aft ernoon. The group inspected the recently installed pipe organ in the college of music and the stacks added to the library, The committee authorized ac ceptance of a $1000 bequest made by the late C. Gertrude French of The Dalles. Income from the bequest, to be known as the Esther B. French me morial fund, is to be turned into the general operations fund. C. Gertrude French reee'ved an I M.D. degree from Willamette 1BH5. 17 Die When Fast Train Crashes Airforce Bus Ontario, Calif., Oct. 3 (U.R) The GI driver of an airforce bus apoarently reacted automatically when someone shouted, 'turn left,' and drove in front af a highballing passenger train roaring at 73 miles an hour, a survivor of the resulting crash said today. Seventeen persons died, including five girls and the chaperone who went along on a beach party with enlisted men from March airforce base. Five others were Fifty Years Old Associate Justice Tom Clark of the U. S. Supreme Court, former Attor ney General, poses in his robe is he celebrates his fiftieth birthday, Sept. 23rd. irns Go Fast! tat quick rlif rwvnnrf lli' 'rrm corn. tm. Ret Dr. iV-r-"Ua mo-paHa. In- aianuy atop painful mm w hn friction, lift mri I - I prmurt Uuirklv 7 af I I remove corns. Cow but triOt. Got boa today. At dru. ho. ept atnraa. injured. Airforce officials said apparently only 22 persons were aboard the bus, which had a ca pacity of 32. At least one of the wounded was in serious condition. One of the less seriously in jured was Sgt Peter A. Grisolia, 21, Brooklyn, N. Y., who said the bus driver, a GI, was unsure of the way and that passengerr had been shouting directions a: he drove toward Ontario to re turn the girls and the chaperone to their homes. "People would yell out, 'turn left ' or 'turn ri?ht.' " Grisolia $25,000 Law Suit Up Tuesday Tuesday the $25,000 damage action of Beulah Carpenter against Journal Garage compa ny will come up for trial before a jury in circuit court here, one of a long series of actions grow ing out of a truck-bus accident November 5, 1947, south of Sa lem on the Pacific highway when two persons lost their lives and several were injured This is the second trial with Beulah Carpenter as plaintiff The first directed at the Pacific Greyhound lines resulted in a verdict for the defendant and now the legal guns are trained on the garage company whose truck was in collision with the Greyhound bus. The truck driv er was killed. Including these two trials there have been six in circuit court here and two in Multno mah county growing out of the same accident. Another brought by the driver of the bus is pending. One verdict has been returned for a plaintiff in Marion county, one in Multnomah county. Both were against the bus company. These have been paid off and also the bus company has set tled one death case out of court and paid off on another claim. A woman passenger died as re sult of injuries received in the accident. Fowl Fashion Model Mary Lou Prentice shows a costume, for a well-dressed duck in the fowl fashion show arranged by " the Poultry and Egg National Board at Libertyville, 111. North Mill Creek Is Still in Dry State North Mill creek, from which the water was diverted by the city engi n e e r i n g department while trench work is in progress at the North Church street bridge location, will remain dry a few more days, City Engineer J. H. Davis said Monday. The diversion was made at 19th street by diverting the wa ter from the Salem ditch into the south channel. The flow of water in the ditch was also de creased. The work at the North Church bridge site is for installation of pipes in the interceptor sewer project. It was necessary to work at that location, which normally wouldn't have been done until later, because of pending con struction of a new bridge. The sewer pipes have to be laid un der the bridge. Named Church Organist , Dayton Mrs. .T. C. Bantsari, local music teacher, was recent ly appointed organist in the Mc- Minnville Christian church. 1 (Advrrtieemenul Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH Do fat trrth drop, slip or wobble when rou talk, eat, laurh or snecae? Oon't bo annoyr-a and cmbarrtued by sucli handicaps. FASTEETH, an alkalln non-acid) powder to aprlnkla on your plates, kef pa false teeth more firmly 'set. Gives confident feelimt of security nhd added comfort. No Bummy. ttooey. pasty taste or feeltns. Oet FASTEETTH today at any drua store. Tillamook Official Dies Nehalem, Ore., Oct. 3 flJR) Alvin David Thompson, 63, Til lamook county commissioner, died Sunday night at his home. He had been serving his fifth year on the Tillamook county court. Thompson had been a res ident of Nehalem since he was 11 years old. said. "Just before we were hit, someone said, 'turn left and I closed my eyes because I was sleepy." Then he was thrown from the bus by the crash. The impact wound the bus around the front of the locomo tive so tightly that acetylene torches had to be used to cut loose the driver, tentatively iden tified as Gordon C. Crimin, who was pinned in the wreckage. It was nearly three hours be fore the train, the Union Paci fic's pony express, could resume its journey to the east. The seven girls on the trip, only two of who survived, were members of the March airforce base service club, a local group that helped out at parties and entertainments for air base troops. Bodies and parts of bodies were strewn along the railroad right-of-way for 500 feet. Res cuers found some of the mangled bodies impaled on the locomotive. It was estimated in 1889 that there were only 541 bison in the United States of an original 50,- 000,000. (Advertisement) Free Book on Arthri tis And Rheumatism Excelsior Springs, Mo., Oct. 3 So successful has a specialized system proven for treating rheu matism and arthrities that an amazing new book will be sent free to any read of this paper who will write for it. The book entitled, "Rheuma tism, fully explains why drugs and medicines give only tem porary relief and fail to remove the causes of the trouble; ex plains how you may obtain re lief from rheumatism and arthritis. You incur no obligation in sending for this instructive book It may be the means of saving you years of untold misery. For writing promptly, the (Jlinic will send their newly enlarged book entitled, "Rheumatism". Address your letter to The Ball Clinic. Dept. 2611. Excelsior Springs Missouri, but be sure to write today. ROOFING Now is the time to order that new roof before the busy summer season. Expert workmanship with the highest quality material. Free estimates without obligation. 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