8 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Saturday, Dec. 3, 1949 WENDELL COREY FAN Teen-Ager Says Girls Today Go for Rugged, Homely Men By VIRGINIA MacPHERSON Hollywood, Dec. 3 W-R) Shirley Haskin, blue-eyed, blond, and vice president of a Wendell Corey fan club, said today the girls the knows are getting tired of handsome movie heroes. It't the homely actors that keep 'em i wake nights. Gents who look like they might even sock a dame if they felt like it. ' ' Men that are men!" breathed Shirley reverently. "Strong men. Virile men. Men like Wendell, natch." Shirley is 18 and starry-eyed about the love-making possibil ities of Corey. So, she said, are all the other 'teen-agers in her set. And they don't think Pro ducer Hal Wallis is making the most of his talents. Sitz of Harney Heads Sheriffs Eldon Sitz, sheriff of Harney county, will head the Oregon State Sheriffs association during the coming year, being elected president during the closing of the convention Friday afternoon. Sheriff Denver Young, Mar lon county, was named vice-president; Sheriff R. L. Gillmouthe, Hood River, secretary-treasurer, and members of the executive committee are Terry Schrunk, Multnomah, Jack Franey, Kla math, and Lloyd Lewis, Jose phine. The convention went on rec ord as favoring legislation which would place blame on delinquent adults as a step toward curbing juvenile delinquency and also showed opposition to Oregon chest funds being turned over to the Oregon Prison association. The latter is an organization of the state government, the sher iffs contend and should be sup ported by the state. The convention created a fact finding committee to ascertain data on sheriffs' budgets, arrests and services to in particular furnish a breakdown of costs so the public may be advised. On this committee are Sheriffs Wil liams Jones, Yamhill; Allen E. Birch, Tillamook, and Denver Young, Marion. A feature of the closing day of the convention was a talk by James T. Brand, justice of the supreme court, who reviewed his experiences as a judge on the allied war crime tribunal in Ger many and also discussed various phases of the proper handling of evidence in court and courtroom demeanor of officers called on to testify. A banquet for sheriffs and members of their families held at American Legion hall closed the two day session. Whooping Cough Yields to New Drug Chicago, Dec. 3 VP) Whoop ing cough is another in a grow ing list of diseases that has yielded to aureomycin, two Minneapolis doctors reported to day. Aureomycin Is a golden-color-ad antibiotic drug that checks a variety of Infectious diseases which are immune to penicillin and streptomycin, Drs. Wesley W. Spink and El lard M. Yow of the University of Minnesota medical school said the effectiveness of aureo mycin against whooping cough was Indicated in recent experi mental and clinical studies. However, the antibiotic has not shown promise against chicken pox and mumps, they added. They said aureomycin has been effective against numerous bacterial infections and those of rickettsial and virus origin. Heavy Equipment Pittsburgh VP Little Gil May er, goaltendcr for the Pittsburgh team of the American Hockey league has a natural weight of 128 pounds. However, when he dons all his equipment for a game he tips the scales at 166. The 38 pounds of steel, wood, leather and wool costs $300 and requires 30 minutes for dressing and removal. "He looks like the type who'd order his woman around," she sighed. "That's what we girls want. Not these hand-kissing pretty boys. Personally, Tyrone Power leaves me cold." But so far, she said, Holly wood's left Corey standing a- round with egg on his face while the other boys make with the love stuff. "He has one good sexy scene with Barbara Stanwyck in Thel ma Jordan'," Shirley said, "and he's simply terrific. We girls got so excited we wrote Mr. Wallis a letter and told him to give us more of that." Mr. Wallis said he would. It's girls like Shirley who keep the Dox-ottice cash registers tink nng Ana he is the last man too ignore a customer's demands. Corey will pitch all kinds of torrid woo in "The Furies." he promised. Shirley said he's bet ter. Or Mr. Wallis will be heir ing from "Her Girls" again. "I sit through all of Wendell's pictures over and over and ov er, she said dreamily, "so do the other girls. We can't get en- ougn of mm." Shirley just graduated from high school and she said she spends most of her time think ing about becoming an actress and gazing at Corev's nlcturni The boys in Shirley's crowd are getting pretty fed up with hearing how wonderful this Corey guy is. But Shirley said she doesn't care They're all too immature anyhow. Wendell's the kind of man we girls want to marrv." sin- sighed. "The older type. We want to be dominated." Keizer School Notes By DARLENE AUSTIN On Wednesday. Nnvmh,. a Mr. Bowman spoke for the Cur tis Publishine comnnnv Th, children are spllinir maca-vinoc Each room goal is $100 and the school's goal is $1,000; Mrs. Young's and Mrs. Weddle's rooms have reached their goal. Mrs. weaaie s room has an additional $15. Any one who had $15 by the first day received all the ice cream they could eat. Those re ceiving ice cream were Howard McClannahan, George Baker. Jim Robertson, Larry Cummings uhu o an oniaier. top salesman is Jim Robertson, second How ard McClannahan. Thp Tnnm selling the most will receive a party. The PTA is tlllttine mm flnnd lights and new curtains for the stage in the auditorium. Mr. Palmateer, of the Stan dard Oil company, showed pic tures to our school this week. lhe photographs of the chil dren were received. -a-jsf- inn I" ll - . V",J) Flight of the Future This drawing of a rocket airplane is based on a sketch by Dr. Hsue-Shen Tsien of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif., a yet-to-be-built rocket plane which Dr. Tsien has described to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. It would fly from New York to San Francisco in less than an hour, attaining a speed of almost 10,000 miles per hour. VP) Artist John Carlton drew this conception of the plane in flight with plane purposely enlarged to retain details of Dr. Tsien's own sketch of the 80-foot-long pencil shaped creation. (.Pi Wire-photo.) 'Super Bomb' Is Old Stuff At Least Theoretically By JOSEPH L. MYLER (Untied Press Still Correspondent) Washington, Dec. 2 u.R The "super bomb" which keeps explod ing into headlines from time to time is old stuff on paper. As a Dhvsicist here said today; "Ever since man found out he could make a bomb by splitting the nuclei of atoms, he has been fooling around with the idea of making one by combining atom- ic nuclei." Sen. Edwin Colo., created Johnson, D., sensation by telling a television audience last month that progress is being made toward production of an A-bomb 1,000 times more pow erful than the first ones made. Johnson is a member of the congressional atomic energy committee, which regularly gets official fill-ins on bombs devel opment progress. But he said he was talking only on the basis of what he had read in the newspapers. As a matter of fact, the "super bomb" has been viewed as a the oretical possibility much in the same sense that rockets to Mars are a theoretical possibil ity ever since science discov ered that the tremendous forces locked in atomic nuclei could be turned loose. Recently there had been indi cations that the A-bomb people believe a super bomb is inevit able if man really wants to blow himself up. Hiroshima proved that atom- splitting, or nuclear fission, is one way of unlocking some of the vast stores of violence in the heart of matter. When an atom of a heavy me tal like uranium or Plutonium is split, the fragments don't quite add up to the original weight. One-tenth of one per cent of the original mass has been trans formed into energy. This is a small amount of mass but it makes a whale of a lot of energy. Tex is a small, evergreen bush and blooms with beautiful cream white and rose tinted flowers. Women's Secrets Revealed for 'Bribe' Tacoma, Wash., Dec. 3 u.fi A man who DriDes women into telling him their most intimate secrets by promising to give them free undergarments was sought by the Better Business bureau today. The man has telephoned doz ens of local women and told them he was a doctor helping Dr. A. C. Kinsey write a sequel to his best-selling book on "Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. Officials said he querries the women regarding their sex lives as part of a "survey" to gather information for the second book regarding the behavair of the female sex. The women won't tell us what questions he asks," said Walter West, head of the Better Business bureau, "but some women say he even 'out-Kinseys Kinsey,'. In most cases, West said, the man promises to send the wo men free unmentionables for their cooperation in giving him information. West said that most women who complain to his office are indignant about not receiving the underwear, rather than over the intimate questions the man asked them. Bataan March Survivor Gets Cheated of Chance to Aid Vets Albuoueraue. N. M.. Dec. 3 u.R) A 32-year-old survivor of the Bataan death march went to his grave Friday, cheated by fate of one more chance to help his fellow veterans. Joseph S. Smith of Albuquerque, who lived through four years of imprisonment by the Japanese, had worked constantly since the war for increased government-- aid to Bataan veterans. His work ended abruptly last Tuesday when he died with 27 others in the crash of an air liner at Dallas, Tex. Hoover Blasts 'Cheap Polities' New York, Dec. 3 (U.PJ For mer President Herbert Hoover, speaking in behalf of his com mission s report on reorganiza tion of the government, used on ly a few words Thursday night, but he managed to blast "cheap politicians," bureaucrats, free loaders and citizens with corns. Said Hoover: "1. There are some bureaus and departments which are re solved that reorganization is a good thing for everybody ex cept themselves. 2. There are citizens who have the same idea when their corns are stepped upon by gov ernment reorganization. "3. There are cheap politi cians who passionately demand economy and at the same time make cowardly attacks upon public officials and members of congress who practice it on the orators' constituents. "4. And above all dangers to the republic are the groups of citizens between the ages of 21 and 65 who demand to be fed by the taxpayer instead of having the courage to produce a living for themselves." Hoover spoke at the inaugural dinner of the greater New York Citizens committee for the Hoover report, which seeks en actment into law of all the rec ommendations of the commis sion report. In a note left to his family, Smith asked that an autopsy be performed on his body, includ ing a thorough diagnosis of his stomach. He wanted the report to be sent to the veterans affairs committee of congress. "I request this," Smith wrote, because I want this committee to know the condition of hun dreds of other veterans who starved for three years as pris oners of war under the Japanese." Smith, whose wife gave birth to child a few days before the fatal crash, was an employee of the new war claims commission, which, among other things, is delegated to pay reparations for human losses in World War II. Several months ago, Smith an peared with other Bataan vet erans at a congressional hearing on veterans affairs. They testi fied that four years of mistreat ment in Japanese prison camps had left them and their com rades with ailments not always apparent to a doctor. An autopsy, Smith told the congressmen, would be the only method to really find out how the men were affected. Several former Japanese pris oners have died since their lib eration. In some cases their deaths were attributed to a gen eral physical decline brought about by starvation and poor care during imprisonment. Smith asked his family in his note to use his body to obtain the information he thought was so vital to the veterans program. Before his funeral at Carls bad, N. M., his family said it would be impossible to fill the final request. Smith's body was burned so severely in the Dallas crash that any attempt at an autopsy would be useless. December Is Cheese Month Cheese has been a popular food for thousands of years going far back into history to the time of Homer and beyond, the Oregon cheese industry points out for Oregon's Holiday Cheese month, December 1 to 31. "Serve Cheese Send Cheese" they now suggest. Cheese graced the banquet tables of Ceasar and even served as part of the rations of his con quering Roman armies. Accord ing to legend, cheese actually was "discovered" several thous and years before Christ by an Arab herdsman. In spite of its widespread use, cheese was not prepared com mercially until about 100 years ago. Prior to that time, cheese making had been practiced only on farms and in the home and it was a task for which the wo men were responsible. The techniques employed varied geographically; consequently as time went on, the production of ' specific types of cheese became associated with different regions. Although there are some 400 cheeses recognized by name to day, the Oregon cheesemakers point out, they represent varia tions of only about 20 distinctly different types or kinds of cheese. All the basic types of cheese are made to a greater or lesser degree in the state of Oregon. Here are some of the state's lead ers: American or Cheddar, Blue, Brick, Cmembert, Cottage, Cream, Edam, Limburger, Swiss. The three greatest fishing grounds in the world are off the coast of Europe, northeastern North America and northeastern Asia. Everyone Knows Only Carerized Oil Leaves NO CARBON! S00T! Oregon CAP Has Birthday Portland, Dec. 3 VP) The Or egon wing of the Civil Air Pa trol observed its eighth birthday today. Sixteen unit commanders from throughout t h e state at tended an all-day business session. The oldest radio network is the National Broadcasting com pany, which opened in Novem ber, 1926. VAN LINES CO. LARMER TRANSFER and STORAGE 1 At Your Service! fOR YOUR . . . Storage Hauling Fuel . . . NEEDS DIAL 3 3131 OR SEE US AT . . . 889 N. Liberty "OUR REPUTATION IS YOUR SECURITY" Lions Auxiliary Called Silverton Members are re ceiving notices of the Monday supper and Christmas program meeting of the Lions club aux iliary. The affair is at the Dou ble J restaurant. Mrs. Howard Eggiman is auxiliary president. Sheridan Authorizes Contract for School Sheridan Contract ' for the construction of the new grade school building in southwest Sheridan was awarded this week to the Foothills Construction company of Estacada on its bid of $94,030. The same firm was low bidder two weeks ago when all bids were rejected. The original bid was $112,000 but as this exceeded the amount of money available, several al terations were made to reduce the cost of the structure, includ ing a change in the type of boiler and rejecting a plan for asphalt tile floors. CM LAC Beautiful Oversize r - J JUMBO Prints Roll Developed o F 8 Jumbo Prints JSC Extra prints and reprints 4c ea. Free Mailinr; Ban on Request JUMBO FILM CO. Paretic. Idsfae Salem Nursing Home 3S9S "D" Street EXPERIENCED NURSES 24-HOUR SERVICE Best Foods and Diets To Your Doctor's Orders WE ARE A STATE LICENSED NURSING HOME Your Protection for Better Service Miss Bernice Struckmeier For Appointment Phone 2-3853 3d uour li Bring Me the Most Difficult Hair Problems uour nair a oLouelul Our natures own undetect able shampoo tint will add so much gleaming highlight to your hair and best of all those tell-tale gray hairs will vanish. A new You will go hap pily about your daily chores. Free Consultation Our Salon is a complete Beauty Institution. Call for an appointment today. o f New or.k 251 X. Libert v Dial 3-3921 Salem HEAT fSl l?,'ST" - i It takes extra effort to bop out of bed on a cold morning unless you have a SPARK oil burning beater to keep your borne . warm and comfortable! Get a SPARK wow aod your home trill be warm, regard less of bow cold the weather! Your SPARK dealer is featuring the complete line of these famous beaters including new, low priced models for smaller homes! Come in for a demoumariool GZEB G23HB 35622 or 35606 Silem's EielailTe Caterited Oil Dealer Howard J. Smalley Oil Co. 1405 Broadway FOR Insured Savings SEE First OTSgp Federal fMmf First Current Dividend 214 st Federal Savings and Loan Ass'n. 142 South Liberty 1 NO MATTER WHAT ELSE YOU GIVE HER SHE'LL BE EXPECTING A BOTTLE OF PL UMB ING -HE A TING 279 N. COMMERCIA L PHONE 3-4141 t 4 li "Whether she's a collector of Moss Rom bottle and jan u Objets D'art or just love its exquisite fragrance she'll love both the sentiment . . and the gift. 2.2S i the bottle, plus tax. fat'aaaasVarfJaa'ini'rMa'i'i i 'irlJ'-' W-S The special charm about its gentle1 floral fragrance ... its parasol bottle . . . which makes Spring Rain a favorite season after season makes it just right for Christmas, too. 2.00 the bottle, plus tax. WhiteC By Clare Barnes, Jr. All America's Laughing at the Mischievous Picture' Book That's a Screaming Satire on All the Office Types You've Ever Known. In Daily Photo-Installments in The Capital Journal 4 Starting Monday, Dec. 5 ' : -1