Tuesday, April 21, 1953 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Balem, Oregon mm II II I I I I I I Tele-Views' V Radio-Television By DAVE BLACKMES On Television KPTV (Channel 27) lOnlr vrmrimi lehMolM la riiiiM Election of officers for the next six months was the main order of business at the Television Association of Salem meeting Monday night. Lew Mitchell was elected president for the second time. Jim Warnock was installed as vice-president, while David Blackmer was elected secretary. Mrs. Glenna Baker was voted in as treasurer. The new set of Board of Directors will consist of Ferd Mattie, Pat Ryan and Paul Brandon. Earl Heider was appointed to serve as program director of the next meeting. . TELE-BITS.... The rumors that an acceptable method of color TV will "soon be marketed" are nothing more than so much scuttlebutt. Some of the big manufacturers have perfected com patible color TV equipment and systems which meet all ihe requirements of the parties concerned. But the truth of the matter is simply this: no color TV will be launched tfor serveral years to come while the demand for black and white TV is so great that the demand cannot be sup plied, upening of new unr and VHF stations in the objective of TV set and TV cast equipment manufacturers, hen later on, when a reasonable desree of saturation Is attained throught will be given to the introduction of Color TV . . . Logical Eh I - (Reprinted from the Radio-Television Service Dealer March 1953-Editorial by Cowan SYOURS FOR THE TELE-VIEWING Vacationland America 5:45. John Cameron and his STamily start a tour of the United States bringing the wiewing audience with them. Texaco Star Theater 8:00. Berle is host to Cesar Ro- rero, .Lorraine Day and Kathryn (Mrs. Arthur) Murray. Fireside Theater Q'.OO. 'Misairm tn Algiers" utarrinc Bill Bishop. Story of a 4ough New York detective sent Jo Algiers to bring back an embezzler. He meets and falls an love with embezzler's daughter on board, ship. When fhey arrive he must decide whether to give up the girl fcr her father, a decision which he finds almost im possible to make. I Circle Theater 9:30. "A Slight Case of April," with Jrlildy Parks and Robert Bernard. Comedy about a young lecretary who discovers spring and day-dreaming can land pretty gal in strange places and unexpected Romance. v $ Alan Young Show 10:00. Young awaits the arrival of "Uncle Douglas" whose visits have always presaged an jvil omen. 4 Scott Music Hall 10:80. Ezio Pinza will be Patti Page's guest. I My Little Margie 11:00. Margie has bad time on her two-week vacation with a dyspeptic client in "They Also Serve. ' Nite Owl Theater 11:80 "Tunisian Victory." North vest Africa Campaign. YOUR FOR THE TELE-VIEWING WEDNESDAY -Kate Smith Show 1:00 Pianist Marian McPartland and her trio; fashion show by Dorothy Daye; Tommy Wonder and Margaret Banks, comedy dancers. v i Matinee Theater 8:00 "The Purple V," John Archer, Mary McLeon and Rex Williams. Liberace 8:00. Premiere showinir selections include "Dizzy Fingers," "Minuet in G," "It's All In the Game," "Cement Mixer" and others. I Married Joan 9 :00. Pitted in a soup-making contest against a woman she dislikes Joan discovers her husband s favorite soup is served at Alfonse's restaurant. Unable to extract the recipe from the chef, Joan takes a job" working in the kitchen. This Is Your Life 9:30. Virginia "Duchess" Marmaduke news reporter for the Chicago Sun-Times honored by Raton Edwards. - -Blue Ribbon Bouts 7:00 Joey Brown of New Orleans, vs. Orlando Zulueta, of Havana, Cuba, in 10-round light weight bout from Baltimore Colhseum. Kraft Theater 10:00 "Next of Kin" stars James Daly and Frederick Tozere. The effect of "missing in action" telegrams from the Korean front on three different, families. ' Crusade In the Pacific 11 :00 "America joins in the war In the Pacific." sNite Owl Theater 11:30. "Remedy for Riches." Jean Hersholt, Dorothy Lovett. MARR RADIO and TELEVISION INC Salem's Moit Complete Television Center 2140 S. Com'l Phone Diy or Nirht . 2-1611 or 2-4728 Motorola TV TUESDAY 1:00 p.m. Ifftitntt rbittir 4:is p.m. trch ! Tomorrow 4:30 p.m. Lor of Uf f:00 p,m. Howdf Doodr -0:30 p.m. VtcttlODUnd. 0:00 p.m. Nftmw tb 6mo 0:30 p.m. Douf Sdwtrdi 0:45 p.m. Tim for Bianr 1:00 p.m. Two for thi Montr 1:30 p.m. -Dinah Short 1:49 p.m. Newt Cirvu T' 8:00 p.m. Teiteo Hour 0:00 p.m. Piresldt Tbttttr 0:30 p.m. Circ.tTbetw 10. vu p.uiv Jiima jouni 10:30 p.m. Acott Muile HiH 11:00 p.m. Mr UUU KUril 11:30 p.m. Nitt owl Tbttttr ; ? Can bt ttod H flH roar ltcattt It fcj I bad. Call EiH : wt'll it ar tut h m !fj e I WEDNESDAY 11:45 a.m. Garry Moort 13:00 p.m. Tbt Bit Payoff 13:30 p.m. Welcomt Traveltr 1:00 p.m. Katt Smith 2:00 p.m. Do u bit or Nothlni 3:30 p.m. Strike It Rich S:00 p.m. Matlntt Tneattr 4:15 p.m. fletrcta for Tomorrow 4:30 p.m. Loft of Lift 6:00 p.m. Howdy Doody 1:30 p.m. Toot sit Uippodromi 0:00 p.m. etnxo it Rich 0:30 p.m. Douc Edwarda 0:40 p.m. Time for Btanr 7:00 p.m. Flthts 7:45 p.m. Newt CaraTan a.oo p.m. Liberace . 8:30 p.m. Arthur Oodfrty 0:00 p.m. X Married Joan 0:30 p.m. ThU la Tour Lift 10:00 p.m. Kraft The a tar 11:00 p.m. Pacific Criuadt 11:10 p.m. HtU owt Thtattr Pruift Dies of Strange Malady 4 Lebanon A rare disease ilagnosed as Infectious neuri 11s claimed the life Sunday evening of Henry Prultt, 38, proprietor of the Fir Grove dance hall. He died in Provi de n c e hospital, Portland. Stricken March 26 and taken to Portland, he had been con fined continually in an iron lung. Until five hours before his death, physicians believed bis chance lor recovery was food. He was born September 9 1814, at Antelope, Ore., and moved to Lebanon In 1927. Survivors include his wife, Lillian; an infant son, Blair Lester, and another son, Rob ert William. There are three brothers, Lee, Archie and Ralph Pruitt, all of Lebanon. 1 Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. from the Jost-McHenry chapel. Blame Pranksters for Portland Night Scare Portland. W) Hundreds of startled Portland residents swamped police and newspaper switchboards Monday night with calls asking about flaming object that drifted across the sky above the city at about 7:40 p.m. Eoy M. Watson, who sighted the object while he was driving in the southeast section of the city, decided to follow it. He saw the object fall to the ground and when he went to investigate found it was lighted flare attached to gas filled balloon. Police blamed pranksters. HUBBARD LADIES AID Hubbard Meeting place of the Hubbard Ladies Aid Wed nesday afternoon has been changed to the Rebekah hall from the home of Mrs. Sam King, April 22 at 1:30 p.m. CALL 4-2271 HEIDER'S 428 COURT 1 120 CENTER Four Corners Four Corners Pvt. Wll Ham Kergil, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kergil is home on a thirty day convalescent leave from Fort Campbell, Ky. He Is recovering from meningitis which he contracted while there. 1 Summer visitors In the Ern est Walker home are his brother and sister-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Klyce Walker of Pea Ridge, Ark. They wiU visit Indefinitely. Week-end house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Braden were his mother, Mrs. Rose Miller and his brother Luke Braden pad his sister's family Mr. and Mrs. George W. Black, Ronnei and Janice all of Cald well, Idaho. At a family din ner on Saturday evening the birthday anniversaries of Ron nie and his father were cele brated. Mr. Black a birth date was Sunday, April 19 and Ron nie was three on Monday, April 20. John Braden of Sa lem was also a dinner guest. Felicitations go to Mr. and Mrs. Tillman Kreft (Alma Yantis) upon the birth of a son born April IS at the Salem Memorial hospital. The little lad weighed in at seven pounds and two ounces and has a sister Susan Marie and the grand parents are Mrs. James C. Yan tis and Albert Kreft both of Salem. Mr. and Mrs. Noel Schaberg and family have moved from 4010 State St. to 4396' Market st. They have purchased the new residence. Complimenting Mrs. Lee Mc- Intire with a miscellaneous shower in her home were Mrs. Oliver Rickman, Mrs. E. F. Hausfeld, Mrs. Cecil Snook, Mrs. E. A. Snook, Mrs. Victor Loucks, Mrs. George Van Leeu- Lebanon Man Victim of Gas Lebanon The body of Mer rit Cox. about 63, was found Monday morning in the gas filled upstairs apartment he occupied at 38S Second street. Coroner Glenn Huston, who investigated along with State Police Officer Harry Hansen, said he believed the death was accidental. Huston reported the gas In the oven of the stove was turned to 300 degrees, but the oven was not lighted. It is be lieved Cox awoke Sunday morning and attempted to light the stove and then started to dress. Apparently the oven failed to light and the man was overcome before he fin ished dressing. Cox was found by George Gearhart, owner of the rest' (ton??, who lives on the lower floor. Gearhart investigated when no sound had been heard on the upper floor since Sun day morning. - ' Attempts to locate relatives had not been successful late Monday. The body was taken to the Huston funeral home where services are pending. lORoseburg Officers Called Roseburg W) Ten of 14 po lice officers involved in the fa tal shooting of C. D. Burgoyne two months ago, appeared be fore a grand jury here Monday. Burgoyne was killed Febru ary 1 in a shooting affray in which police pumped more than 1,000 bullets into his cabin near Riddle. They said he had resis'ted arrest. Attorney General Robert Y. Thornton is conducting the in vestigation before the jury which is made up of four men and three women. . Subpoenas for about 50 per sons have been issued, many of them to residents in the Riddle area. Gov. Paul Patterson directed Thornton to make an investi gation of the shooting after group known as the Douglas County Committee for Justice had protested the slaying. The committee contended that the shooting wasn't necessary that tear gas could have been used to get Burgoyne out of his cabin. ABANDONED "I. ii 1 t " 4 s 'V.. .j 4 L6 A '-' ,.-4 i 1 1 'NT "v. Alter unouccioiful Uuiipt iu Uke Uie buruiug 7600 ton British freighter Menestheus In tow, the ship is left unmanned on the open sea, a "total loss." The crew of 80 was rescued and taken aboard American , freighter S.S. Navajo. Fire of undetermined origin swept the freighter 475 miles southeast of San Diego, Calif., while en route from Balboa, C.Z., to Los Angeles. (UP. Telephoto) 4 iMX 'n&'ZM-&i,m Progress Reported in Treatment of Cancer By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE - Los Angeles (IP) Sure-fire, 100 per cent cures in rats of the most deadly known form of cancer show 'the possibility of someday killing some human cancers with chemicals," a scientist said Tuesday. Until a few years ago, no drug had cured even single animal cancer. The drug Is one nicknamed TEM. As yet it has done very little against any human can' cers, which are different. The fact that It cures all of one form of cancer in the rats is important. Equally impor tant is that the scientist Is learning how it does this com plete curing, something never achieved before. This animal cure, plus a second one, was described to science writers on an American C-ncer Society tour- by re searchers of the University of California at Los Angeles medi cal school. Dr. Riojun Kinosita, a path ologist, finds that TEM always will cure a special form of can cer, known as yoshida rat as cites sarcoma. It is the fastest killing kind of cancer ever Union Official Held On Perjury Count SUver City, N.M., (U.R In ternational Represen tative Clinton P. Jencks of the Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers Un ion was held in jail here today before being taken to El Paso to answer grand jury charges that he lied when he swore he was not a communist. Jencks, central figure in the union violence-marked history in Southwestern New Mexico, was arrested by FBI agents at his home in nearby Bayard last nleht and held in lieu of $5,000 bond. A federal grand jury at El Paso, Tex., yesterday Indicted Jencks on charges that he made a false statement to the National Labor Relations Board April 28, 1950, when he said he was not a member of the communist party. GOOSE DOES IT San Francisco (UB Califor nia cotton growers have discov ered a new weed killer: a goose. They reported that a healthy goose will keep weeds eaten off approximately one acre of land while leaving cotton plants intact. found. Rats will die seven days after getting this cancer. In humans, TEM and some of its relatives have so far anly won temporary improvements in some forms of cancer, in cluding cancers of the blood or leukemia. Major Charters Goes To Parks Air Base Major Gilbert H. Charters, associate professor of air sci ence and tactics at Willamette university, left Tuesday after noon for Parks air force base, Oakland, Calif., where he will attend a special meeting for AFROTC test control officers. The ' three-day conference will delineate factors in in struction for administration of the new testing program- to candidates for advanced ROTC training. All colleges and universities on the west coast maintaining AFROTC units will be repre sented in the Parka air force base conference. 1 ' Voice Prods For Wm. (talis Washington W) The Com munists are getting some new prodlng from the "Voice of America" to free William N. Oatis and Cardinal Mlndszenty. Iron Curtain listeners were told in a broadcast by the State Department radio within the past few days that Moscow's freeing of nine accused Soviet doctors was only a "step in the right direction." : i i . ' "Another shameful example of the workings of so-called justice behind the Iron Curtain was the case of the American newspaper correspondent Wil liam Oatis," said the Voice. "He was arrested by the Czechoslo vakia secret police on April 23, 1915. Later he made a so-called confession in staged triaL Oatis was chief of bureau for The Associated Press in Prs gue. , v , ' Cops Come a Running, But 'Twos Onlv a Dog Albany, Calif., m Police man Glenn Thomson tiptoed to the home of Mrs. Harold For- ster in predawn darkness. Sure enough, as Mrs. For- ster had, telephoned, a fum bllng attempt to enter the house was in progress. A large Chesapeak retriever was trying to turn the door knob with his teeth. Thompson took' the dog to the pound. .' f. Parish Status Lebanon St. Martin's Epis copal church has completed its , organization in record time and was elevated from mission, status to that of' parish, last , ' week, along with four other - missions in t h a Diocese of Oregon. h '" The new status signified ox-' ficial acceptance of the con gregation to assume all finan cial obligations of their church. . Such independence was actual- ' lv achieved in May. 1951. but ' parish was purposely delayed' until the Corvallit convention. ; St. Martin's has in reality : broken all Diocesan records in that it has been self-supporting for all but the first one and : one-half years of its existence. ingresatlcn was hsld ia Oc tober. 1940. In November,' 1950, the parish hall was com- . pleted, and In July, 1951, the ' first resident vicar, the Rev., David W. Gordon, arrived to take charge of the new mis-. slon. In October of that year, , action was Begun to lormaiiy ; ' organize a parish. . n Th. V...T.U 1... Mnl J . under the direction of Fa- ther Gordon, youngest priest i' in the the Diocese of Oregon, t Of 350 local members, the fig- ure Includes those of St. Fran cis's mission in Sweet Home, which was opened by the Leb anon church last summer in order to better meet the need.' of the parish. Father Gordon - also ministers to that mission. ' He is a native Oregonlan, hav- .v.- -V.T.-T 1,1. II. It. - in 1951 from the Church Divin ity school of the Pacific, Epla- copal seminary in , Berkeley, , Calif., he ' came immediately ( to Lebanon with his bride. . ' GARDENING TOPIC if Lebanon Arthur G. Bristol - Boquet, until recently profes sor of vegetable crops at OSG, will address the Men' Garden ' club at 8 p.m. on April 32 on the subject of vegetable gar dening in the Willamette val-1 ley. The meeting will be held ' in the city hall auditorium: . wen, Mrs. S. H. Cable, Mrs. El don France. Hostesses were Mrs. Roy Thayer and Mrs. Don Jacobe. ASHAMED OF D WETTING? 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Moreover, they bring to American life economic benefits you probably never even thought of. Thousands of jobs, for ex ample, are created. Purchasing power is increased; New businesses are able to get started. It's true of any business in Americapeople work ' ing together make miracles happen. Consumers, , workers and investors have made it possible for tbt American Can Company to do great things in the : past, and to promise even greater ones for the future. American Can fcmpany CONTAINERS... to fiefp people five better Made in Canco'i Oregon Plant at Portland . HOCKtER HARDWARE I I Ij.lrl- O'l City ii a:o 990 S. Commercial Open Sundays DRIVE CAREFULLY th liU you wvo may bo your own