20 CapltalJounial Salemtq;'jrhiirsdwrt' XotjlVi? j : ; roYER pIDN'T KNQW WHAT. HAPPENED Sandwirhman's Takeoff An old sandwichboard carrier gets a little help from some friends in costume at the start of the annual race in the Place Du Tertre, Paris. LADY GOAT COMES TO RESCUE Mayer and Assistants Learn Much About Ways of Animals By VIRGINIA MACPIIERSON (United Preu Hollywood CorrMpondent) Hollywood, Cal., Nov. 3 U.R Louis B. Mayer, who gets $1,000, 000 a year for preventing things like this, wound up today with a pregnant Llama on his hands. And therein lies a long, sad tale of frustration that has more than one assistant to the head man at MGM brushing up on his animal husban- kid until spring-time. The studio said it couldn't wait Panama and Frank called up George Emerson, an animal trainer, and poured out their woes. He dug up a "black mar ket kid" in nearby Ontario, the product of some lady goat who had an off-season rendezvous All this took time too much. as far as the boys who watch the budget are concerned. But production costs on the "Llama-vs-Goat" episode were peanuts compared to what hap pened to Mr. Mayer on "The Yearling." For that, they used a baby deer and finished the pic ture right on schedule. Then they discovered they needed re-takes. By now their yearling was full grown. And, they also discovered, it was months before any more deer were to be born in souinern California So the whole picture was held up at a price-tag of thousands and thousands of dollars while nature took its course All this, is almost enough to turn L. B. "anti-animal." Lassie excluded, of course. Seasons mean nothing to him and at last count he had fathered over 159 offsprings. dry. It all started when Mayer okayed a com edy with one sequence built around a Llama who happened to be in a fam ily way. It looked funny on paper. ,. But nobody on the Mayer payroll's laughing very loud now. Norman Panama and Malvin Frank, who wrote the seript about a zookeepcr's daughter, pepped it up with a scene fea turing the birth of a Llama. June Allyson was supposed to hand it to Dick Powell when it was minutes old. So far, so good. When Panama and Frank started investigating Llamas and such they discovered a new born Llama is about the size of a small horse. That threw 'em into a full sized tizzy. Powell holding a horse, they told each other, wouldn't be half so funny as Powell holding a tiny critter. So they quick-like re-wrote the script and switched to a goat. Seems late fall isn't the time when goats become mamas. Every expert in town told the tudio they couldn't furnish a IVJV e w vf ur, ',: if; , IV 71 :' h v Tax on All-Fur Coats Deferred Until Mar. 1 Washington, Nov. 3 UP) The internal revenue bureau today postponed until March 1 the ef fective date of a ruling clamp ing the 20 percent sales tax on all-fur coats without exception The postponement was in re sponse to protests from manu- facturers and merchants. They claimed they would suffer loss unfairly unless given time to dispose of stocks acquired be fore the ruling. The original ruling, made known yesterday and intended to be immediately effective. was designed to plug a loophole in the law under which some all fur coats had gone tax free along with fur-trimmed cloth coats. Arms Aid Head James Bruce (above), former am bassador to Argentina, was nominated by President Tru man to head the $1,314,010. 000 foreign military assist ance program. New Union Vote Asked Portland, Nov. 3 tfli The AFL Building Service Employes un ion, defeated 20 to 3 in a repre senlution election at Lipman Wolfe & Co. department store Friday, wants a new vote. It charges intimidation. The union's complaint, filed yesterday with the national la uor relations board, says em ployes were warned they would lose company insurance, vaca tions and other benefits if they voted for the union. Harold Wendell, store mana ger, denied the charge. Airport Traffic Goes on; Tragedy, Death Lurks Near By HARM AN W. NICHOLS (United Prwi auff Corrupondenti Washington. Nov. 3 U.R) It was "operations normal" most of the time yesterday at the National airport. People came through the lobby ana aid tne usual wings, iney weighed their luggage at the airlines counters. They cocked an ear to the loud speakers to catch the call of their flights. They walked through i"" the git, boarded their ships and took off. t As if nothing had happened. Ai a matter of fact, something awful had hap-1 pened. A mile from the air port,, a speedy P-37, steered by a Bolivian flier, had clipped an Eastern Airlines DC-4 in half. rib lurntftn W. Mchol More than SO persons, many of them bashed beyond resem blance to humans, were dead. Their bodies were spread over land and in the waters of an inlet which is part of the Poto mac river. The aft half of the luxury air liner, which had set out from Boston, destination New Or leans, showed its tail piece gro tesquely out of the water. The folks who were coming and going at the airport were unaware of the tragedy for a while. You can't see around a corner. And the scene of the crash was around the corner from the observation platform. The outgoing planes winged over the scene. Passengers com ing into the capital also passed it, but most did not know of the misery below. Some of those waiting to leave didn't know of the disaster un til the papers reached the 'port, a couple of hours after the col lision. They flew anyhow Those who like to fly, fly no matter what, it seems. The air port averages 500 flights in and out a day yesterday was average. But it was a little different out on Mount Vernon Memorial Boulevard. Only a railing and 15 yards separate the scene of horror from the busy highway. Capt. George H. Maincs, Ameri can Legion official, was on a bue headed for Washington when the crash occurred. He tugged the cord, bounced out and was one of the first on the scene. The moans of the injured were very faint, he said. The captain had seen terrible things before. But nothing like this. Bloody pillows, which a few seconds before had rested happv but weary heads. Lunch eon plates with half-eaten meal atop floated In the water, the muddy river bank was a mess 4-H Winners Announced Here Portland, Nov. 3 W Eleven 4-H club members of Oregon are planning to leave here Thanksgiving day to attend the national club congress in Chi cago. Five others were listed by L. J. Allen, state club leader, as having a chance in regional competition to make the trip. Making the trip will be: Margaret Schafer, 15, Milwau- kie, canning; Mary Lee Rust, 17, Azalea, clothing; Bob Yungen, 16. Hillsboro, farm safety; Ken neth Hill, 16, Cove, field crops; Roseanne Jefferson, 15, Shedd, food preparation; Mary Ann Kie- sow, 16, Bend, garden; Patricia Horning, 18, Sherwood, record keeping; Don Phillips, 16, Grants Pass, poultry; Roberta Harris, 15, Summer Lake, home im provement; . Joe Ann Roberts, 17, Shedd, style revue; Patricia Seidler, 16, Portland, better methods. Others who have a chance in regional competition to win a trip to Chicago include; Theresa Ann Zillig, 17, Canby, girls' achievement; Charles Colegrove 17, Junction City, boys' achieve ment; Lee Don Campbell, 14, Grants Pass, dairy production; Larry Morris, 13, Grants Pass, home ground beautification Margaret Colegrove, 17, Junc tion City, girl's leadership. for many yards around. It wasn't long before the sirens were screaming and the cops and the military were on hand to take charge and brush away the curious, always bent on picking up a souvenir, no matter how gruesome. One souvenir was left un touched. It was a child victim's copy of "Alice in Wonderland." Open to page 191. One para graph on that page ended . . . and the shrill voice of the queen ordering off her unfor tunate guests to execution." Bunions Oct thii quick relief. Lifta ion, protcta the permit iv pot. Ak for the bunion mm. f V. S. Jockey Abroad Johnny Longden (left) chats with Irish jockey Morny Wing at Curragh racetrack, Ireland, where Longden won on Pink Larkspur, his first mount abroad. Rep. Allen Dies in The Dalles Hospital The Dalles, Nov. 3 m State Rep. Einar C. Allen, 42, Port land, died yesterday at the Tu berculosis hospital here. He had been a patient, w "ngjufm since Mav 21. fa'a A native Port-jc lander and grad uate of the Uni versity of Ore gon, he was first elected to the 1 e g i s lature in 1936. He was then 29 years old. He won re election in alter nating elections of 1940, 1944 and 1948 a democrat. His mother, two brothers and two sisters survive. The funeral will be held in Portland Friday. Einar C. Allen He was Four out of five toothbrushes in use in U.S. homes are in un satisfactory condition, according to the Britannica Book of the Year. Hay-Fever-Producing Ragwood Discovered Portland, Nov. 3 () There is a small patch of hay-fever-pro ducing ragweed in Oregon. The state medical society warned yesterday that a field of the weed was found east of Estacada in the Cascade moun tains of Clackamas county. An expert who studied sam ples reported the specimens looks as though they do not enjoy Oregon soil or air." That was a hopeful note for suffer ers of hay fever. The society proposed spraying the patch next spring to kill the plants. They are now dormant. S. P. Promises More Box-cars Roseburg, Nov. 3 W) A Southern Pacific Railway vice president promised yesterday that the shortage of freight cars in western Oregon would ease shortly. W. W. Hale, San Francisco, was here to confer with Rep. Harris Ellsworth. The congress man recently had asked the in terstate commerce commission to investigate the boxcar short age in Oregon. He said it appear ed the railroad was discriminat ing against shippers in this state. Hale said empties were begin ning to move northward out of California. He denied that Ore gon had been discriminated against. The railroad freight executive said a shift in the lumber in dustry's car type orders was partly to blame for the situation of recent months. Hale said Ore gon mills normally used open- type can to ship rough green lumber. About two months ago, he said, the mills began pouring in orders for closed cars for shipping kiln dried lumber. Hale said the shift caught the railroad with "thousands" of open type cars on order or new ly purchased. Nobel Literature Award Shelved Stockholm, Nov. 3 W The Swedish academy decided today to shelve this year's Nobel prize for literature because it was hopelessly deadlocked over four top candidates, Including Win ston Churchill and the Italian Philosopher Benedetto Croce. Th tuff-nf.war on the crize decision was reported to have been greater than any lime aur ing the half century in which, the 18-member academy has been making the award. Lira w G&W SEVEN y STAR 360i: Sen. Morse to Speak Portland, Ore., Nov. 3 u- Sen. Wayne Morse, (R., Ore.), will address a general session of the 54th annual convention of the Oregon Wool Growers' as sociation Tuesday The conven tion opens Sunday afternoon when standing committees meet to develop reports on issues to be taken up by delegates. The meeting ends Tuesday. New Glasses Aid Job Security Harry Svmlar Success on the job comes more easily to those men and women whose efficiency and earninp; power are not ham pered by eye strain, h e a d aches and fa tijrue. Modern s c ientifically- fitted glasses have proved to be of great value in many cases, by pre venting costly mistakes due to faulty vision, headaches and tiredness due to eyestrain. In addition, the new Un breakable Lenses shield the eyes against flying particles, and reduce injury from indus trial accidents. In the Salem area, TJr breakable Lenses are now fea tured at the Semler Optical! Offices, and Hurry Semler, I president and founder, reports they are also in great demand among sportsmen, because these glasses will not break when accidentally dropped. Unbreakable Lenses are precision - ground at Semler's to the prescription of Regis tered Optometrists, and they are ready in one day (more time required for Bi-focals, Tri-focals and tinted lenses.) Bring your optometrical pre scription to the Semler Opti cal Offices Waters-Adolph Bldg., State and Commercial. Phone 3-3311 to obtain Un breakable glasses. No addi tional eye examination needed if you already wear glasses just bring your optometrist's prescribtion or instructions. It is NOT necessary to pay cash for glasses at Semler's. Small weekly or monthly pay ments are easily and quickly arranged, absolutely without any extra charge. Terms as low as 10c a day are available, and payments can be spread over any reasonable length of time. "The important thing is to get the glasses you need, and to get them without delay," says Harry Semler. "Payment comes later on easy terms to fit your burget when you use Semler's Liberal Credit Plan." Adv. RAIN AND WIND PROTECTION ESOTERICA Cosmetic Science's Newest Advance Mildly medicated in vanishing form to treat weathar-roughened, discolored, darkened or spotted skin. When used as directed will fade blemishes, re store softness . . create new skin beauty. Watch your skin grow young with the Esoterica Skin Magnifier . . free with each jar of ESOTERICA. $2.00 rwi ouisfNSfr cotNtsf FwAAAsffi-LuCit-tjA jitDicAi cfNrf .NCH-i7)Mi7 operatt ss em pi AN IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT unin MITDTC ruuu umniu Vol . CHUCK OuaranUod Fail Color Permanent Nam Ouarantood Fait, Multl-Color Hand Scrooned Print Full Combed Yarn, Crow-Neck Tapod Shirt A grand volue of only, Thy wash perfectly. Ut aarfoct'v Ribborf crow jiotfc. In WHITE or MMZt Here it is, Mother, the exciting polo shirt your youngstet will be wild about . . . with his vera om m. nr , J W. be it Ezckuh or Butch, right on it for all his friends to see., MAIN FLOOR Complete II SALEM, OREGON tinsel on the branches it's a suggestion of Christmas for sure, the tinsel from lost year to help cover the biggest tree yet. that means Christmas, friendly greetings from one friend to another, that, too, means Christmas, and the Christmas card carries that traditional greeting in style, but, will your Christmas greetings arrive on time? look to cooke right now for personalized Christmas cards . , . the f inest stock to be seen, look to cooke for name imprinting , . , It's the extra personal touch, will your Christmas cards arrive on time? A Wee Bit of Mischief It's the GOiLDN Telling 8.95 it turns rip or down in back and buckles stylv over the top it's gray and suede it answers to GOBLIN . . . and it fits to a T, and that's The Smarter You Wear a GOBLIN Shoe i