OCR Text |
Show Tuesday, November 9, 1948 DAILY HERALD Side Glcrnces. Teachers Invite Parents to Visit the Schools This Week ; Editor'! Note: This It American Educa- ' -.tlon Week.; One very good way to observe the week ia to visit the schools and observe ob-serve the class room In action. ac-tion. A teacher at the Dixon junior high school, D L. Mc-Conkle Mc-Conkle has written an invitation invi-tation to parents that represents repre-sents the teachers' viewpoint. "It is sincerely hoped by all American educators that each home will send at least one parent par-ent representative to school during dur-ing this week. Incidentally, why la . It seemingly . so difficult to get parents out to visit regular classes in our schools? Advertise regular visiting day for all parents, with the children staying at home, and what happens? Well, today can i ion Gains Revealed in Treatment Of Cancer Cases By PAUL F. ELLIS United Press Science Writer NEW YORK, Nov. 9 (U.R) -Significant gains in the treat ment of cancer of the. lung through surgery were disclosed in a report to the Ameri can Cancer society. le report came from Dr. Al Ochsner of Tulane universi ty and the Ochsner clinic in New Orleans, who said Jthat 7.7 per cent of all cases, early and late, operable and inoperable, willing and unwilling to undergo surgery, sur-gery, survive for at least five years. If a patient lives for five years after cancer surgery he usually Is considered cured. Ochsner recalled that until 1939 lung cancer was conceded to be almost 100 per cent fatal. To the society at its annual meeting here, he reported on 390 cases seen by him and his associates. Of the number, 256 were considered con-sidered inoperable or were un willing to undergo surgery, Ochs ner said. The remaining 334, he reported, were operated upon, and of those it was possible to resect (remove) cancerous growths out of the lungs. Another physician, Dr. Peter A. Herbut of the Jefferson Medi eal college, Philadelphia, report ed that diagnosis of. lung cancer ran now-be done accurately in 5 per cent of cases through microscopic study of bronchial accretions. He said that of 1,200 secretions studied over a period of almost four years, 213 or 89 per cent of the 237 which eventually proV' ed to be cancerous showed can eer cells under the microscope. Diagnostic accuracy now had risen to 95 per cent, he said. Uranium Strike On Lake Superior VAULT ST. MARIE, Ont, Now (U.R) Reports of an important uranium strike along the northeastern north-eastern shore of Lake Superior started a rush of prospectors into the area today. Test assays showed the radio active deposits to be 59.1 per cent uranium ore. Local mines described de-scribed the find as having "sensational "sen-sational possibilities." So far 225 claims have been staked, with new claims being registered at the rate of nearly 60 a day. the results seem to point out that if the children are to stay nome, th Barents know exactly what they are going to do and so they march off to school. "There may be many reasons why you are clad to leave them at home while you go to school. Some of those reasons should make you much more sympathetic sympathet-ic with our humble servant, the teacher. Possibly he would also like the opportunity, at times, to be where they, are not. But no, he must face, not only the one or two that you send in, but twenty, thirty, forty or fifty others, and some of them are bound to be about like your own. Did you ever stop to think Just how cheerful cheer-ful you would be at the end of a day after you had contacted from one to three hundred. Put yourself your-self in the .teacher's boots and see if you declare you are going to compete for his position, No. And why not may I ask? "Thank goodness most, of the; young people you send us are the ! kind that give indication of first-class first-class home training. They are polite, ' considerate, reasonable and deserving. Yes, and then there are the few for whom there should be two Sundays per week so they could keep up with their repenting. "Believe it or not I have had about twenty very splendid parents, par-ents, including two fathers, visit my classes this year, so far, that I did not send a special invitation. In each case they spent the entire period there and seemed to en joy it. I personally received a thrill from watching students participate, in the presence "of their parents. It really is a great thrill to parents. How about trying try-ing it out and see for yourself? That school room dooF, on the other side of which I am working work-ing with the most valuable materials mater-ials in the world, is always open to you. Never wait for an appointment ap-pointment or special invitation. On such occasions I may have a special program prepared that might appear real flowery. How about just dropping in when no one but yourself, fcnows anything about it. I will not know, your Johnny will not know, .and you see everything in its real setting. How about it dear parent? Will you please accept the challenge to do it that way? Believe you me you are welcome to do it just that way, and remember I will be watching for you. "You and I thus work together for the greater improvement of those boys and girls who are to carry the load of good citizenship in our tomorrow. Is it worth the extra effort? Does it give them more confidence to face their problems? Remember, their prob-. lems are as great to them, as your problems are to you. I can do a better job if you will walk into my workshop and see first hand what is being done. Will I be seeing see-ing you in the very near future?" MpY iff m r 0 cont w sr mvt mmct. we. t. m. ma v. r. vrr. 11-9 'Oh. it Mrs. Smith your neighbor? We hear so much gossip about her she must bo vary popular!" Civil Caves And Traffic Charges Fill City Court To Probe Death Of Hollywood Writer Three arraignments charges dominated Provo city court Saturdav including one fraudulent check charge and two his AVALON. Cal.. Nov. 9 (U.R) On -Civil c-P Wr .Irnm Parfv 411 Beverly Hills, Cal., died aboard yacht Monday off Catalina Quizz Boy Slayer On Disappearance Of Another Boy, 10 " CHICAGO, Nov. 9 (U.R) Raiel (Rocky) Villasenor, 15, confessed slayer of a playmate, was questioned ques-tioned today about the disappearance disap-pearance of a 10-year-old boy last July. The youth, who confessed Saturday Sat-urday night that he strangled 13-year-old William Gervais and dumped- his body into an abandoned aban-doned electrical conduit ault, was questioned about the disappearance disap-pearance July 2 of John Navick-as. Navick-as. The Navickas boy was a resident resi-dent of the same squalid neighborhood neigh-borhood where young Villasenor lives. Authorities meanwhile prepared prepar-ed to seek a murder indictment against Villasenor. The indictment indict-ment would remove the youth from ttie jurisdiction of juvenile authorities who now hold him. The confession of the, Gervais slaying by Villasenor, a sullen, dark-haired youth, brought to light widespread delinquency and sex perversion among youngsters in the neighborhood. The body of the Gervais boy was found Friday in Fuller park, a two-block square recreation area where authorities learned that boys and girls held sex par ties, drank cheap wine and beer and occasionally smoked mari juana. Police said Villasenor arrested Saturday and questioned at length, finally broke down and confessed that he strangled Gervais Ger-vais with his belt after the youngster young-ster had threatened to tell his older brother that Villasenor had mistreated him sexually. War Grimes Tribunal Places Chief Guilt For War on Tojo United States religious missions In Southern Rhodesia are reported report-ed to now own and operate seven hospitals and nine dispensaries, those in Swaziland to have two hospitals, 11 dispensaries and two clinics. 1069 cases of failure to provide. R. E. Larsen requested a preliminary pre-liminary examination on a fraudulent fraud-ulent check charge in Provo city court Saturday and the court set the date for the hearing for Dec. 23. The charges allege that Larsen Lar-sen gave John Van Ness, American Amer-ican Fork, a bad $10 check. He was committed to the custody of the sheriff in lieu of payment of $1000 cash or $2000 property bond. Charles Delbert Dudley and Raynor E. Larsen were arraigned on charges of failure to provide in city court Saturday and both requested a" preliminary hearing. Dudley's hearing was set for Dec. 14 and he was released on a $100u cash bond. Larsen was committed to the custody of the county sher iff for payment of $1000 cash or $2000 property bond and his preliminary pre-liminary examination was set for Dec. 23. Jeanne L. Rigney, 23, 660 E. 3rd N., pleaded guilty in Provo city court Saturday to charges of unlawful turning and was fined $5. William H. Norton, 23, Wy Island, and an autopsy was ordered. Police said Cady, a prolific screen writer, had been under treatment for a heart ailment Sleeping pills were found in his pocket and on the sink in his cabin aboard the 34-foot yacht, "The Harp," officers reported. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Watson guests aboard the yatcht, found Cady just before midnight, apparently ap-parently in great pain. By short wave radio, Watson summoned Dr. George Poole who arrived aboard the yacht in Avalon Bay 20 minutes after Cady was found in a critical condition. TOKYO, Nov. 9 (U.R) The Far East war crimes tribunal blamed former premier Hiedki (The Razor) Raz-or) Tojo today for engulfing the entire Orient in war and for developing the axis alliance which linked Japan with Germany and Italy.' A pattern of aggression began shaping up as the tribunal worked through the third day of the-read-ing of its verdict in the trial of Tojo and the 24 other Japanese leaders. The blame for specific phases of Japanese wartime strategy was being fixed to certain of the defendants, de-fendants, although the fate of the warlords will not be pronounced for several days when the end of the epi-length verdict is reached. The first official indication emerged that a dissenting opinion had been reached by one or more of the 11 judges of the interna tional tribunal. The defense filed a motion th; such opinions, which it "under stood" existed, be read in opei court The tribunal accepted the motion for later decision. The day's reading tended to give, a clean bill to Emperor Hiro-hitd, Hiro-hitd, whom the allies decided after the war to leave on the throne. The tribunal noted two clearcut instances in which he opposed op-posed aggressive plans of Japanese militarists, and in each case lost out to their connivance and chicanery. The verdict, as read so far, made it plain that the army brooked no pacifist interference from the throne or those members of the cabinets who happened to dissent on aggressive policies. Hirohito, according to the court. Polio Epidemic May Set Record Within 2 Months violently opposed the alliance . ' with Germany and Italy in 1940, LOS ANGELES, Nov. 9 (U.R)- and resisted the expansion of the e nation s current ponomyeu-Chinese ponomyeu-Chinese "incident" in 1931 which tia epidemic probably will become touched off 14 years of fighting.iPe biggest In history within two in Asia. "The evidence is abundant and convincing that the Mukden inci dent Was carefully planned beforehand be-forehand by officers of the army, general staff officers of the Kwantung army, members of the Cherry society and others," the judges said, adding that the Chinese Chi-nese had no plan to attack the Japanese. months, the medical director of the National Foundation for Infantile In-fantile Paralysis predicted today. Dr. Hart E. Van Riper of New York said 25,000 case occurred' in 1916 during the biggest previous pre-vious outbreak. Los Angeles has the country's' lowest polio death rate although it is the "heaviest hit" area, Van Riper said. 1 McMimilMjl 5 Starts TODAY OpeiTUaily 1:1." 5 39c 'til 2 B K$"" 0 10Q0 LAUGHS mount Village, pleaded guilty the same day to charges of not stopping stop-ping at a stop sign and the court fined him $15. John Barney Chase, 43, Rt. 2, Box 222, Orem, also pleaded guilty in city court Saturday Sat-urday and was fined $15 for speeding. Forfeitures for that day list. Gerald Webb, 19, Sandy, forfeited for-feited a total of $30 on two counts, failure to stop at a stop sign and a speeding charge. Slayer Dies In Chair, Joking BELLEFONTE, Pa., Nov 9 0J.R) Daniel P. Taranow, 23, of New York, a bridegroom of 60 hours, died smiling and joking in the electric chair at Rockview penitentiary peni-tentiary Monday for the hitchhike hitch-hike slaying of a motorist. "Make this strap tighter, will you?" was Tarnow's last comment as he sat in the electric chair flexing flex-ing his right arm and waiting for the charge. It came at 12:33 Vs a. m. He was pronounced dead two minutes later. Taranow was executed for the confessed slaying of Franci: Devon, 23, a motorist who gave him a ride. The slaying occurreo near Media, Pa., July 9, 1947. Taranow was permitted to marry auburn-haired Stella Noto of Brooklyn last Friday in order to give a name to their nine-month-old daughter. The ceremony cere-mony brief and joyless wa. performed in the office of War den Earl H. Allen at Broadmea- dow prison farm. The two wer allowed to hold hands for several hours before the youth was returned re-turned to his cell to await execution. ARLENE OAHL Ass Kan curves the Alison Zkxaa . Line. i INSULATION v. n'gfrom jin Slj Kentucky! Jojhll I lS ir-. t Fiber Glass Insulation BLANKET TYPE IN MED. & THICK THICKNESSES We Deliver Anywhere OPACO Lumber & Realty Co. 1001 South 3rd East Phone 1924-J Just East of Golf Course Provo, Utah (E1BIRAV l Tonight & Wednesday Complete Shows 7:00 and 9:30 L CD II Borfi06SBS Ma ia ihii TBIGGER m is r2 It? Z4 fW . -UK FIAZEE '.-V WAziattH IIVIMCtTAM A RENIIMC rtQDICTION ALSO ADDED: "YOKEL BOY" JOAN DAVIS and ALBERT DECKER 'tin TP FRIENDS ... WE THANK YOU! The time has come when, though we hate to say "so-lonsr, we must close your "Entertainment Headquarters" for the winter win-ter .... We have truly enjoyed your patronage and offer a sincere sin-cere "THANK YOU" for your ever-welcome compliments and words of praise about our efforts for your enjoyment. .We Hope We've Pleased You All! Next season we are planning an even greater number of topflight top-flight entertainments only the best Hollywood has to offer and many, many more special improvements will add immeasurably im-measurably to your movie-going fun, comfort and DOWNRIGHT DOWN-RIGHT JOY! Best Wishes & Much Happiness ... See You Next Spring DRIVE-IN Sincerely, the Management & Staff PIONEER MOTOR - VU THEATRE ni& nofi iriM. 'ICO" i'diM-mit- n ! , . 1 I J7 ' MM mWi k mwm mm. iniwJliMtuyiffiii) W 1UUU LAUlxtlB fflgrsz 1 ' r ; " 3slr 1 C See JLW 0 I .aSSipl (in V ,.113 : vWUlUlLlU UUUUI WtrZJM ..FOOTBALL MAGIC 11 1 Merrle.Melodie 1 Coor 1 -...Paramount Newa J -VTVTT.T J " fl.l I IIH'i .IViBB'J I 111! HIT r'M-w-M-ttr with i Two Great Hits I STARTS TOMORROW! , NATIONAL DISTIltmS f WDUCYS COIR, n. v. wrvcsr v.fKcscr - a iisno m raoor jr gkajn neutral wiuti Jtck Odue June Havoc Richsrd Arlen Jsaies Glesson WALTER LANG GEORGE JESSEL Added: PeU Smith's "Bowling Trtcki Color Cartoon La tot' Ntws Starts Today Or! m Ik V. 1 ..Vif 0 V 1 LAST DAY? 'Junge Woman" & "Tioga Kid" tin MT 1CI MEN... aii iei win 9 ciqsiei . DEANNA OURBIH . . EDMOND O'BRIEN . il MSB fl tr" SJ&V JTnd Big Hit! 0 m IfflKT ITM KM TtTLOf IT TT L! A |