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SIX MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Sunday, November 13, 1955
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TURNING TABLES ON GROUP, Mrs. Frances Gilbert (right) points out Rose Lee Lewis
as one of women she says tried to swindle her of S1.500 in classic version of "Pigeon Drop"
confidence game. Mrs. Gilbert wrote "call police" on check she presented for collection at
Chicago bank as Mrs. Lewis waited to take charge of money. ( International Soundphoto)
Reds Said Arming Submarines With Atomic Torpedoes
Battle Creek, Mich. U.R)
Adm. Arleigh A. Burke, chief
of Naval operations, warned
Saturday that Russia may be
arming her vast submarine
fleet with guided missiles and
atomic torpedoes.
Burke said that missiles
launched from Russian submar
ines "could constitute a serious
threat to our ports and to our
coastal cities." .
TheU . S. Navy is "not the
only navy interested in submarine-launched
guided mis
siles," Burke commented. - He
rioted that Soviet Adm. L. Vlad
imirskiy, strongly implied re
cently that Soviet submarines
cither have or will be equipped
with guided missiles and atomic
torpedoes.
The Russian admiral, Burke
added, "laid great stress on the
ability of submarines to attac.t
enemy bases and coastal tar
gets" with missiles.
Main Weapon
Burke noted that the Russian
admiral also observed that the
submarines main weapon, the
torpedo, can be provided with
atomic explosives which in
crease "the striking power of
the submarine to an extraord
inarily high degree."
The Russian adminal was
quoted by Burke as saying that
while it would take 8 to 10
normal torpedoes to sink a bat
tleship, such a ship "can be sunk
or made useless by only one
atomic torpedo, and it is not
necessary for the torpedo to hit
the ship."
Burke noted that the Russian
admiral also mentioned the of
fensive and defensive potential
ities of mines, which are "very
difficult" to combat.
"This Soviet admiral was not
speaking idly, and- unfortunate
ly, he is correct in the case,"
Burke said. "It is true that submarine-launched
missiles and
submarine - launched mines
could constitute a serious threat
to our ports and to our coastal
cities."
Planning Officials
Turn Up Problems
Chicago 4U.R) Planned
communities can run into
strange problems. A survey be
ing made by the. American Soci
ety of Planning officials turned
up these examples:
Some of the post-war "com
pany towns" in Canada gra
ciously laid out are surrounded
by a ring of slums. Since the sale
of liquor is prohibited in the
towns, taverns and poor housing
cluster around the border.
The British National Govern
ment planned and approved the
development of Stevenage, Eng
land, for a 10-fold increase in
population, from 6,000 to 60.000.
But the residents weren't given
any say in making the plans and
it took a long court fight before
the project went through.
In the United States, new plan
ned communities such as Levit
town, Pa., and Park Forest. 111.,
discovered that most of the Resi
dents were about the same age.
As a result, most of their chil
dren were in the same grades,
and the lack of school facilities
for those bulging classes will re
main a problem through high
school.
The society said that it is con
ducting the survey to find out
and built after World War II are
how the communities planned
making out.
MORE N.Y. IRRIGATION
Ithaca, N.Y. OJ.P.) Cornell
University has just completed a
study of farm irrigation areas be
tween Rochester and Lockport
and found that more than twice
as many farmers are now using
irrigation in that area which in
cludes portions of Monroe. Or
leans and Niagara counties.
THIS IS THE LIFE Three ex-turncoat GIs freed from an
Army guardhouse enjoy the comforts of a hotel room in
San Francisco. The former soldiers who elected to remain
with the Communist Chinese after the Korean war won
freedom because of Supreme Court decision that said the
Army could not try a civilian for crimes committed while
in the service.
DRIVING T.O siihurhnn Voi-;n,. t -n- -r.
An j- I , v. otitic;, Livm .rans, .tsarDara Hut-
ton 49, dime store hetress and Baron Gottfried von Cramm
Srh r marnedy dPuty ma3. It was sixth marriage for"
Barbara, second for former German tennis star. (International)
New Rish-Button Driving. ..New 255 H.P.
Pilots Association
Suspended by AFL
Chicago (U.R) The Air Line
Pilots association has been sus
pended from the American Fed
eration of Labor because its
members are flying United Air
Lines despite another union's
strike, it was revealed Saturday.
A recommendation of expul
sion from the AFL has also been
prepared and will be submitted
to the federation's next conven
tion. The double action by the
AFL's National Executive Coun
cil was revealed in a letter to
Chicago union leaders from
Dave Beck, president of the AFL
Teamsters Union.
AFL President George Meany
had already accused the pilot's
union of acting in collusion with
United Air Lines and refusing
to observe picket lines set up by
striking AFL Flight Engineers.
About 500 engineers went on
strike across the country last
Oct. 23 in protest against a
United ruling that all engineers
hired in the future must be qual
ified pilots.
United has been able to keep
its flights in the air be'cause
pilots have crossed the picket
lines and filled in' for the strik
ers. Leaders of the pilot's union
were called before an AFL sub
committee, and Beck said they
conceded "that they were in co
operation with the company both
before and after the strike date
in order to see to it that mem
bers of ALPA replaced the
strikers."
Chewing Gum Helps
To Diagnose Tumors
Ann Arbor. Mich. (U.R)
Chewing gum helps doctors diag
nose tumors, according to an arti
cle in a University of Michigan
Medical Bulletin.
The bulletin said the gum is
used in a technique called sialo
graphy, which is a means of X-
raying the salivary glands.
As a diagnostic tool, sialo
graphy not only reveals tumors
of the salivary glands but helps
doctors plan surgical approaches
and, in some cases, uncovers elu
sive cancers, the bulletin said.
A sialogram is a picture show
ing an opaque substance which
has been injected into the glands.
What the barium milkshake is
for the stomach ulcer, the
opaque material is for the sali
vary gland tumor.
The doctor anesthetizes the in
jection site and injects the sub
stance, called pantopaque, into
the glands, and takes the "pic
ture." Then the patient chews a stick
of gum for about one minute and
another "picture' 'is taken.
A normal gland, the bulletin
said, should empty itself of the
opaque material within five min
utes because the chewing gum
acts as a "reflex chemical stim
ulator."
Second Year of Life
For Child Important
Los Angeles (U.R) Dr. Henry
Work, a child psychiatrist, says
the second year of a child's life
may be the most important one
from the standpoint of mental
health.
"It is the year of socializa
tion," explained Work, of the
University of California at Los
Angeles and nationally known
psychiatrist.
"During the second year the
child generally learns most of
the basic social patterns. He
learns to feed himself and is
toilet-trained. He learns to walk
and thus is removed from his
'sit-down world.' He also begins
to learn how to get along with
other people."
Work pointed out that "men
tal hygiene should be part of
normal child care," and urged
that doctors and parents be "con
cerned with how early mother
child relationships are establish
ed." "Many psychiatric problems
in childhood can be prevented
with a better understanding of
this relationship," Work added.
CLEANUP TIME
Kenesaw, Neb. (U.R) Streets
here got an unexpected cleaning
because six youths decided to
celebrate the Fourth of July sev
eral months early. Arrested for
shooting firecrackers, they were
given the alternative of paying
a S20 fine each or scrubbing the
streets. All six decided on the
cleaning detail.
NOT THIS TIME
Kendallville, Ind. (U.R) John
P. Sabo, 56, Evanston, 111., escap
ed injury but his car suffered
$600 damage when it collided
with a truck loaded with tombstones.
PICTURE TUBES
REJUVENATED
Is yeur picture tubt dull and weak?
Most picture tubes can be restored
to original brightness at only a
fraction of the cost of replacement.
For further information CALL
Electronic Service
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GEMINI
I i5J JUNE 22
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APR. 21
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CANCat
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STAR GAZERO
Bjr CLAY R. POIXAN'
JK Your Daily Activity Guide L
According fo the Stars.
To develop message for Monday,
read words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth sign.
LIBRA
SEPT. 23
OCT. 23
22-25-27-52,
54-62-65
1 Inspiration
2 Things
3 Avoid
Host
5 Rely
6 A
7 Mokes
31 Slowly
32 Don't
-33 More
34 To
35 Visit
36 Found
37 Congenial
61 Partner
62 Mean
63 Unexpected
64 For
65 Profit
66 All
67 Counsel
SCORPIO
OCT. 2t&j
NOV. 22
5-33-39-584S
161-64-67
8 Temptotten 38 Unfounded 68 Your
9 May
10 Waste
11 Your
12 F.ne
13 For
14 Worries
15 People
16 Moy
17 Or
18 Prove
19 Be
20 Perhaps
21 Your
22 Get
23 Events
2 Personal
25 Busy
26 At
27 On
28 Move
29 Fires
30 Activities
(5) Good
39 On
40 Through
41 People
42 Make
43 A
44 Of
45 Lose
46 Brag
47 Life
48 News
49 Distance
50 Plons
51 Evening
69 Loved
70 Eggs
71 Joy
72 Need
73 Relighting
74 Now
75 Or
76 In
77 Through
78 Ones
79 New
80 Acquaintonc
81 Or
52 Propositions 82 Visits
53 Heart BJ Bring
54 That 84 Joy
55 Confidently 85 One
56 Could
57 Don't
58 A
59 Put
60 Bring
?h Adverse
86 Basket
87 Favor
88 You
89 Oversell
90 Yourself
11755
Neutral
SAGITTARIUS
NOV. 23
DEC 22
120-21-29-44
R7-72-73 1
CAPRICORN
DEC 23 yk-
JAN. 20
15-17-23-260
m-49.H7-nOASJ
es
AQUARIUS
JAN. 21 .
FEB 19
11-1 4-18-38,
142-50-55
PISCES
FEB. 20
MAR. 21
1-16-19-36
140-48-81-82
Navy Hopes To Set Speed
Record With New Fighter
Washington U.P.) The
Navy hopes soon to wrest the
world's speed record from the
Air Force with a new superson
ic carrier fighter.
The plane on which the Navy
is pinning its hopes is the F8TJ
Crusader a sleek, swept-back
wing fighter built by Chance
Vought Aircraft, Inc., Dallas,
Tex.
The Crusader already has ex-
No Time for Fine
Bedside Manners
In Atomic Attack
Chicago (U.R) Federal
Civil Defense Administrator Val
Peterson warned Saturday that
doctors will have no time for
a kindly bedside manner if an
atomic bomb strikes.
Residents of a city under
atomic bombardment will have
only two choices, "stay and die
or move out and survive," he
said.
"No ambulance may ever , ar
rive, wounds which do not im
mediately endanger the patient's
life will get only summary first
aid treatment, and dying pa
tients may get no care at all
other than sedation," he said.
Peterson, speaking before a
Civil Defense conference of
County Medical Society repre
sentatives, said the potential
load on medical personnel is al
ready too great.
Make Best Use
"No matter how well we lay
our plans to prevent casualties,"
he said, "nuclear attack would
result in more casualties than
we could properly handle. The
best we will ever be able to do
is to make the most efficient use
of the facilities and personnel
we have available.".
Peterson told the physicians at
the sixth annual conference,
sponsored by the American Med
ical Association, that everyone's
attitude toward casualty care
must be revised.
"We are not psychologocally
equipped to accept the produc
tion line' type of medical care
that means little individual at
tention to patients," he said.
ceeded the speed of sound in
level flight and the Navy has
hopes', it was learned Saturday
that it will zoom along around
1,000 miles per hour or Vz
times the speed of sound in
the speed run.
The current speed record is
822.13 miles per hour, set in
August by the Air Force's Sup
ersaber, a fighter now in opera
tional use.
The glory of having the fast
est plane has become a matter
of pride between the Navy and
Air Force. In recent years the
record has alternated between
the two services, with the Air
Force coming up with a faster
plane every time the Navy won
top honors.
Even if the Navy should win
back the speed record now, it is
likely to be snatched back in
quick order by the Air Force
The Air Force has under test a
new day. fighter the F-104
which is believed capable of
speeds of 1,200 miles per hour
or twice the speed of sound,
The Crusader and the F-104
now are undergoing flight tests
at the flight center at Edwards
Air Force base in California
The Navy hope is to put the
Crusader through speed trials
there some time in the next six
weeks.
1 tl
. --3f1JS&
SCAS- ,NfvlCT0RY TOAST Gen. Humberto Mariles
uety, captain of the Mexican Army team, pours champaign
SSP the Perpetual Challenge Trophy his team won asOhe
67th National Horse Show closes at New York's Madison
square Garden. Holding their individual permanent trophy
cups to dnnk a toast are team riders Eva Valdes and LL
Kobert Vmals. The three combined their superb riding
talents to win the big cup in a jump-off against the Irish
ICclIIla
PURRING MOTOR 1
Carmi. 111. (U.R) Mr anri
Mrs. Frank Kello thought' they
heard a cat meowing when they
drove tneir car downtown but
didn't pay any attention to the
sound. Kello thought he heard
the cat again when he parked
the car. Both heard the kitty
when thev returned to the ear.
Kello lifted the hood and found
a cat perched next to the bat
tery with its tail a couple of
inches from the fan. The cat got
up, stretched, jumped off its
perch and disappeared. .
NAME TROUBLE , ,
Grand Island, Neb. (U.R)
Lloyd H. Berry's family has been
having a little trouble since the
H. Lloyd Berry family moved
to town. Both men are called
Lloyd and both had fathers
named William. They are not
related.
R.
ROBERT
: OPTOMETRIST
309 EAST BTH ST. '
dial. tn
Years of specialized
study with practice
for preventative vis
ual troubles make
possible highly satis
factory results with
lenses and treatment.
Special attention to
children's eye problems.
c
117 S. CENTRAL
PHONE 2-6241
Paul G. Hoffman Says
He Is Not Candidate
South Bend, Ind. U.R) Paul
G. Hoffman, Chairman of the
Board of" the Studebaker-Pack-ard
Corp., sought Saturday to
stifle any move to make him a
candidate for the Presidential
nomination.
"I am definitely not a candi
date for President," Hoffman, a
Republican, said in a letter to a
South Bend newspaper pub
lisher. He said he wanted only
to see President Eisenhower re
main in office, and, if that is
not possible, to see another man
elected who will support Mr.
Eisenhower's policies whole
heartedly. .
"For such a candidate I will
work just as hard as I did in
1952 for the nomination and
election of President Eisenhow
er," Hoffman said.
HURRY! HURRY!
Close-Out Sale
DISCONTINUED COLORS
OF PABCO EXTERIOR HOUSE PAINTS
FLAT WALL PAINTS AND ENAMELS
Reg. price NOW
GALS. PABCO HOUSE PAINT $6.46 $3.23
QTS. PABCO HOUSE PAINT 1.91 .95
GALS. PABCO FLAT WALL PAINT . 4.66 2.33
QTS. PABCO FLAT WALL PAINT .. 1.35 .68
GALS. PABCO GLOSS ENAMEL 6.66 3.33
QTS. PABCO GLOSS ENAMEL ...... 1.91 -95
GALS. PABCO CINDEK ENAMEL .... 8.91 4.45
QTS. PABCO CINDEK ENAMEL .... 2.46 1.23
PTS. PABCO CINDEK ENAMEL .... 1.38 .69
i2 PTS- PABCO CINDEK ENAMEL 78 .39
14 PTS. PABCO CINDEK ENAMEL 51 -25
GALS. PABCO SATIN ENAMEL ........ 6.66 3.33
QTS. PABCO SATIN ENAMEL 1.88 .94
GALS- PABCO FLOOR ENAMEL . 6.11 3.05
QTS. PABCO. FLOOR ENAMEL 1.76 .88
NOTE: If your choice of colors are not found in the Close-
Outs, we will give you a 15 discount on current colors,
THIS MONTH ONLY!
EKERSON
PAINT & ROOF STORE
619 EAST JACKSON STREET PHONE 3-3631
S & H Green Stamps
Mr
The Gentleman
PREFERS WORSTED
39.95
Sunday afternoon ond what could be more natural
. a brisk November breeze . . .her man looking oh so
dashing in his new Brent Worsted. Little does she
know he paid only 39.95 at Wards. Shouldn't surprise
her though. She does her shopping there, too
knows all about our fine values. Other Brents include
metoHics, boucles, flannels, pebblegrains all mod
estly priced. Is that you heading for Wards?
BUY ON WARDS MONTHLY PAYMENT TERMS
South Riverside at 8th
18 N. GRAPE
PH. 3-1971