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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1948)
1 The Vandenherg to Air Views on Foreign Policy ' By Jack Bell WASHINGTON. Aug. 14 -(flP) Senator Vandenberg (R-Mich) nay make m foreign policy broad cast soon to -help lay the ground work for Got. Thomas E. Dewey vigorous discussion of that issue In the campaign. Before be left Washington for a vacation, the chairman of the senate foreign relations commit tee told a reporter he hopes to outline on a nation-wide hookup his view that republicans have very right to talk about the "his torical aspects" of foreign policy in the campaign. As the chief congressional arch ltect of the bipartisan internation al policy, Vandenberg is in agree ment with Dewey and John Fos ter Dulles that nothing shall be said which might make other na tions think this country talks with two choices on current foreign affairs. Hay Not Keep Silent But the Michigan senator made it plain the republicans have no intention of keeping complete silence on an issue they regard as vital to the nation's future. Dewey himself said a month ago that the democratic platform con tained "extremely partisan and provocative assertions concerning foreign affairs." lie didn't go then into the de tails he is expected to provide in at least one and possibly more campaign speeches. Observation Significant Vandenbergs observation that the "historical aspects' can be aired was regarded as significant In the light of a July 24 state ment made by Dewey, after the GOP presidential nominee had conferred with the senator and Dulles, his foreign affairs ad viser. At that time Dewey said the Russian blockade of Berlin had become critical largely because the administration had neglected "ele mental principles" in the original occupation agreement. "Our representatives at London, Yalta and Potsdam unfortunately relied on assumptions rather than specific inter-governmental agree ments to define our rights in Ber lin," he said. Coast Guard Aids 6 Boats; Vessel Sinks SEATTLE, Aug. 14 -OP)- The coast guard Went to the assistance of several fishing boats off the Oregon and Washington coasts to day, including one that swamped"- when it nit a buoy. i The 32-foot 28N2 with two peo- Tllo atw-tart Kit tha Kn v TV J -lamnAlr Kaw f- T'wm U sAw Jng vessels and a boat from the lifeboat station there were able to m?neuver the disabled craft onto the beach before it sank. The 42-foot Sea Amber with two men aboard had to be towed into Coos Bay when it was dis abled by a damaged stern bearing 10 'mHes west of Cape Argo, Ore. Fire in another 32-foot er, the 28C516, off Port Orford, Ore., also brought in a call to the Port Or ford lifeboat station. The coast guardsmen extinguished the blaze. Damage was confined to the bilges and engine room. The fish boat Inga was dis abled eff Cape Lookout Ore. The Tillamook lifeboat station sent aid. A purse seiner, the 71-foot Res olute, was in trouble in the same area with a broken rudder. Be cause of its size, the coast guard cutter McLane from Aberdeen was sent to its assistance. Earlier in the day a coast guard cutter had pulled the fish packer C. S. Todd of Victoria off the. shore a mile from the Kingston ferry' landing in Puget Sound. The 68-footer was only slightly dam aged. I Br LilUe L. Madsen Letters; have : been coming in within the past 10 days complain ing of leaves on oak, apple and I namental trees. I particularly crab f ippl e. - turning k brown and with- .., , i n m. n uuuwci . i i At. . At i I ' SI LliJi 4 reportetf that the v trees look like 4 they are drying an. but that thev save been given Information re ceived from D L. Rtim ussen, out Marion coun ty horticulturist, is to the effect that the leaf skeltonizer has become i major pest this year on unsprayed apple trees. The leaf skeltonizer. a yellow worm with black pin-point markings, eats the green matter in the new leaves. This causes a skeltonized or lace like appearance. Some of the trees art so badly infested that the tip leaves are brown colored as if they -had been scorched by lire. ? i Rasmussen advises a spray con taining inree pounds lead arse nate to 100 gallons of water, or, in smaller quantities, one ounce to two t gallons of water. This spray should be applied thorough ly, so that the lead arsenate will be deposited in a thin layer on the leaf surface. To improve cov erage, a spreader recommended by the manufacturer can be added to the lead arsenate. If a fast killer is desired, the tree owner may spray with one ounce DDT ; to three gallons of water or two pounds of 50 per cent wettable DDT to 100 gallons of water. Rasmussen reports that the leaf skeltonizer will not kill the tree. but it will weaken it and cause a reduction in the size and quality of the crop. Garden .? Calendar Aug. 17 Lebanon Herb Tea. Aug. 18-21 Tillamook County fair flower show. Aug. . 19 Dallas Garden club. Mrs. AiMickleson to talk on fu chsias.. "? Aug. ; 21 Silverton Flower show, sponsored by Silverton Jay-cee-Ettes. Aug. 23 Petunia Judging. Stay- ton petunia contest. Aug. 23-28 Multonomah coun ty flower show, Gresham. Aug. I 26-28 Polk county fair flower show, Monmouth. Sept to 12 State fair flower show. Salem. Questions and Answers Ct F. J., Lyons, asks what to do with Easter . lilies just finishing blooming and what to put in veg etable garden where peas. are be ing taken out. Ans.: She doesn t say whether the Easter lfly is, in a pot. If it is lift it out; and plant it in some semi-shady place in the garden. It will probably bloom next year, although some of the forced ones skip a year, and again others Will bloom within a few months if set out and watered. It is better for . the: bulb, however, if buds are picked off when they appear this fall. t ' Spade up and work well the pea ground. Add a little fertilizer and plant either purple top tur nips, set out cabbage or broccoli, kohlrabi, curly kale or some other winter vegetable, Mrs. A. M. B. Dallas asks if crushed 1 egg shells are of any value in the garden: also why some of her dahlias did not come up this spring. . Ans.: l I have never heard of the use of crashed egg shells in the garden, but I presume they would have some chemical value. although it seems to me they would take long time to decay. If anyone has used egg shells ef fectively X would appreciate hear ing of it . There is a fungus disease which effects dahlia roots in storage. Tubers so effected, should be dis carded at once, as it is trans mitted through botrytis spores, should be handled carefully in order to avoid bruising. Store in a cool and dry place, and dust any scarred places with fine dust ing sulphur. Not .knowing more about the conditions of the gar den, this would be my suspicion. S. L. ,R, Salem, asks how to control gladioli thrips. Ans.: These are best controlled through the corms by treating them with naphthalene flakes prior to storage. However, a measure; of control can be had by spraying at weekly intervals with either a Paris green or a nicotine) sulphate arsenate com bination. In the former, use one tablespoonful of Paris green, two pounds of brown sugar to three gallons of water. In the latter, use three tables poonfuls of nico tine sulphate, 4V tablespoonfuls of Bindex, 2V ounces of lead ar senate and five gallons of water. In either case spraying should be started When the plants are about six incites nign ana conunuea weekly until about two weeks before blooming. G. C Salem, asks how to con trol root aphids on aster plants. Ans.: If she is sure they are root anhids. pour cupful of nic otine solution -teaspoonful of Black Leaf 40 to one quart or water) about the base of the plant, making sure that the soil is cupped out about the crown to keep the solution from running off the surface. Where there is danger of infestation a handful of tobacco dust in each hole, as the seedlings are transplanted. helps. Optimists Plan Flower Show Ontimlst club met Friday night at the home of Sid Jary on North River road and discussed plans foe the club's annual chrysanthe mum show to be neia uus year during the first part of October at the Salem armory. President Kenneth Foster pre sided at the business meeting pre ceded by a buffet dinner served on the lawn at the Jary home. Optimisses also attended the party, Following the business meeting the guests were entertained by a movie and Buck Nation, radio singer. They also played badmin- tonand horseshoes. The club's first weekly luncheon of the fall wiU be held Friday. 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GET PROOF fresi us CFO yev bay WLSTllfGHOUSZ makers of 'over 33 tnHIloa electrla ''v otppllaacos. ! f; .. ''.: Reds Plaiisto Sovietize Zone InJermanyV BERLIN, Aug. 14-CVCommun-ists were reported . today to be speeding plans for a police state on the Soviet model. in eastern Germany. -...-- Details of a plan for "complete Sovietization" of the Russian oc cupation zone were published by the Berlin Christian Democrat newspaper, Der Tag The anti-communist newspaper said Bernard Bechler, interior minister of the state of Branden burg in the Soviet zone, disclosed the plan in a recent speech. According to Der Tag. the communist-controlled socialist unity party which already is wielding virtually dictatorial political pow er in the Russian zone, now aims at economic dictatorship through its two-year economic plan. A noteworthy feature of Bech lers plan as reported by Der Tag is the centralization of the Russian zone police force "to make the entire police organization of the zone the weapon of the Socialist Unity party." from the Yaquina bay lifeboat station before It could take off again. - 'l "' 1 -" - - The pilot. ' Robert Little of Aberdeen, left for Aberdeen when visibility improvedj Typographers Found Giiiltv of T-H Violation WASHINGTON, Aug. 14.-a-A trial examiner for the National Labor Relations Board tonight found the International Typo graphical union guilty of violat ing the Taft-Hartley act by in sisting upon closed shop condi tions . in the newspaper industry. In a case begun nine months ago by the American Newsnaner Publishers' association. Examiner Arthur Lef f recommended that the five-man NLRB order the big AFL union of printers to stop insisting that publishers hire only ITU members. But he recommended dismissal of numerous other charges against me union. Bja Derby Race Starts S PORTLAND, Aug. 14-aVRo-bert Lynn, Battleground, Wash, was ahead of the crowd tonight as entries in the two-day 75-mile Bunyan Derby reached here on a walking race. Twenty-nine entries had started the derby here at 3:00 p jn. today, walked to Oregon City and then back here on the west side of the Willamette river, They will head for Banks, Ore., 30- miles west of Portland, tomorrow morning. ACCIDENT CLAIMS GIKL ROSEBURG, Aug. 14-4P)-Traf-fic injuries claimed ; the life of Gladys Nadine Orser, 19, in a hos pital here today. She was struck by an automobile on th Looking Glass road Wednesday as she stepped from behind a parked car. 'C a 'Jl a- jl'L T J-l a 1MM ' .the putting of Truman-Bark I ers Face Threat of Counter-Revolt ATLANTA, Aug. 14 JPh Counter-revolts Jabbed at the states rights democratic movement in two states today while the states righters put on a whooping rally in a third state. Budding drives to keep the "sol id south" solid in the regular dem ocratic party popped up. in South Carolina and Mississippi hotbeds of the states rights movement. The rally was in Oklahoma. In South Carolina where J, Strom . Thurmond, 'states rights presidential nominee, is governor, it was the first publicity proclaim ed balk at splitting off from the democratic party over President Truman's civil rights program. The counter-revolt in Mississip pi, whose Governor Fielding L. Wright is -the states rights vice presidential candidate, crystallized under the leadership of Thomas J. Griffith, Jr, a university law stu dent. It took the name of "demo crats of Mississippi" and set as its Plane Lands on Oregon Beach SEATTLE, Aug. 14-0P-The pi lot of a two-place plane made a successful landing on the sands at Lincoln Beach, Ore, today when forced down by poor visibility, the coast guard reported. 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