'4 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Monday, Sept. 8, 1947 Capital 6journed SALEM, OREGON ESTABLISHED 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, An independent newspaper published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Chemeketa St. Phones Business Office, 8037 and 3571. News Room, 3572. Society Editor, 3573. FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AND THE UNITED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively all news dispatches credited to it end also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: BY CARRIER: WEEKLY, .20; Monthly, $.75; One Year, $9.00. BY MAIL IN OREGON: Monthly, 8.60; 8 Months, $3.00: One Year, $6.00. United States Outside Oregon: Monthly, $.60; 6 Months, $3.60: Year, $7.20. Let's Have It Over With With the ordinarily patient public fed up with the con troversy surrounding Salem's effort to select a type of park ing meter which promises to give the most satisfaction in service at the least ultimate cost, the city council will tonight have the opportunity of settling the squabble once and for all. The opportunity will come on the question of whether the city is to accept for permanent installation the 800 or more manually operated mico meters mat nave Deen on trmi use here for the past five months. Under the terms of its contract with the meter manufac turers the city is required to give written notice that the machines are unsatisfactory at least 30 days prior to the expiration of the contract calling for six months' trial use if the council decides the meters to be unsatisfactory. The 30-day notification period expires with tonight's council meeting. Failure of the council to give the company notice t- re move the meters means the city will be stuck with the con tract. If for no other reason than to clear the atmosphere of suspicion and mistrust which has hovered over the council chambers through the entire life of the new council, reflect ing itself in the alignment of councilmen on other important matters of public business, should be permanently removed. That can be done only by a clear cut decision upon a meter policy. r After months of debate, the 4) and ordered the initial lot of meters on trial, some of the members voting in the affirmative, explained that they had been influenced by the apparent economy of the Mico meter. The difference in cost of the manually operated meters $9.50 less than that of a next favored automatic contrivance was the deciding factor in their choice some of the coun cilmen said. The argument of economy has been more than offset by the trouble experienced by the police department in keeping the machines in operation. The chief of police recently re ported that it requires the full time services of four mechan ics to keep the manual meters repaired, And as many as 15 complaints a day have been received from parking motorists who fail to get the full time they inserted coins for, the police find in checking the particular meter in question. Where the economy exists, with the matter of maintenance costs as high as that, it is difficult to determine. (Water seeping into the mechanical heads of the meters, causing them to rust, corrode or freeze up and split in cold weather is the principal complaint registered) . Whether the Park-O-Meter, a fully automatic type of meter which has very recently been installed along one block of High street, is the best that can be had for correcting Salem's problems remains to be seen. It is in use in a big majority of the cities in Oregon and Washington where climatic conditions are much the same as prevail here. Its use for Salem was recommended by City Manager Franzen on the basis of his experience with them in Oregon City and after he had traveled around 1000 miles at the council's behest to witness their performance in various Oregon and Washington cities. The initial cost for the meters and their installation is not important in the economic questions to be determined. The purchase price, as well as the installation cost, will have been completely paid out of revenues which would not otherwise accrue to the city when the meters are turned over. The question for the council to determine is which meter will give the best service at the least ultimate cost to the city. If the council is satisfied with the performance of the Mico meters it should accept them. If not, it should give the company offering the next best parking device an oppor tunity to demonstrate what their machines will do. Retirement Age If age justifies the retirement of public officials, it should call for the retirement of race horses for the latter use their lees more than their seats. Racing at the State Fair last week were 20 thoroughbreds with ages ranging from 11 to 16 years. In years past a shortage of race nags justified the acceptance of such entries, but times have changed. The Oregon Racing commission should adopt a rule which would prevent the racing of horses 12 years and over. This is the rule in many states and Canada.. Thoroughbreds have slender legs and the terrific pound ing on hard tracks leave few sound at 7 years of age. At 10 years, practically all are unsound. The betting public should not be asked to wager their money on cripples. While these old nags are weak in their underpinnings, they are wise to the tricks of the racing game. They usually are away from the gate first and will run over horses to get the rail at the first turn. Thus the young and inex- ferienced animals are placed at a disadvantage. We saw, ast Wednesday, a green 3-year-old go over the rail at the turn and its rider injured, while the aged nags went on to win. If, as alleged, the purpose of racing is to encourage the breeding of thoroughbreds, then it should be so conducted as to protect green entries any give newcomers to the sport a break. The "gyp" horsemen should no longer be permitted to monopolize the racing events at our state and county fairs. Thursday and Friday's racing saw spills in which a num ber of bad legged horses were involved and in which several horses and riders were seriously injured. Such occurrences can and should be avoided. Missing Planes Figure in Search McChord Field, Wash., Sept. 8 J.R) Army and coast guard planes today searched for two private planes missing in the northwest since yesterday. Flight service center here Identified the rircraft as a yel low Piper Cub flown by a Mr. Bryan which has been missing on a trip from Kelso to Belvue, Wash., since its 3:15 p.m. takeoff yesterday; and a Cessna mono plane piloted by Sgt. Bill Snow, McChord field, unreported since taking off from Bremerton for Bellingham at 4 p.m. Two coast guard planes from Port Angeles, Wash., left this Editor and Publisher entitled to the use for publication of or otherwise credited in this papsx council broke a tie vote (4 to morning to search for the two aircraft, and air rescue service here also had assigned planes to the search, flight service said. The first skull of the so-called Neanderthal man was discover ed in 1856 in Germany. n nn KEITH BROWN LUMBER YARD Front & Court St Ph. 9163 Wives! i. imitmXt By Beck J .tl6HT. NINeTEMSrls' I n-S ONLY THE SECOND HOLE. ffiEW'i I DEAR, WHV DOMT WU GO Jlajir (-, BACK AND START ALL fS f W ' 7 V OVER AGAIN. J $f Sips for By Don So far we haven't run across anyone who admits losing money the horse races last week, they all came out ahead. But even in the face of that happy condition we don't look to see the emergency board called into action to make up a deficit on the races. Magazine cover girls showing on rows on a rack at a local con fectionery store this a. m. didn't show enough clothing altogether to furnish a respectable length skirt for one of them. What with a sharp wind blowing some drap ery should have been provided. Playing Safe New York (U.fSTwo of the biggest collectors of cigar bands in the nation don't smoke, it was reported at the convention of the International Cigar Band Soc iety. G. Budlow, West Allis, Wis., has the largest collection, 50,000 bands, but he never smokes. ICBS President G. A. Greasby, Milwaukee, has 40,000 I have never had anything to do with tobacco," Greasby said. Rain came along and washed Propaganda School Opened For Key Communists By Lyle C. Wilson Washington, Sept. 8 u.R) American communists are back in the world revolution groove today and have set up a special school for key party members to Salem Ambulance Crashes Into Car . A Salem ambulance crashed into the rear of a passenger auto mobile in Portland late Saturday night, but the patient and the two car passengers escaped in jury. Police said the ambulance pa tient, Jesse Brosius, Salem, was transferred to another ambu lance and taken to Good Samari tan hospital where attendants re ported he suffered a fractured skull from an earlier accident at Stayton. The ambulance driver was identified as Cecil Abbot, Salem. Novelties Hospital Inviting Oakland, Calif., Sept. 8 (IP) Roger Houchins, 19, always winds up in Jackson Lake hos pital for the big events of his life. He was born there. He had his tonsils out there and his ap pendix out there. Saturday, while two tonsili tls patients groaned from ad joining beds, he was married there. He and his bride, Louise Schwatka, 18, hadn't planned a hospital wedding. It was sched uled for Saturday afternoon in church. They were on their way to get a marriage license Friday when Houchins collapsed on the street. Heart trouble, said the doctor, ordering a week's rest in bed. About 75 per cent of all car thefts occur where the owner has left his ignition keys in his automobile. UvJ tVYor SUMAC A V. S. GOVERNMENT BUREAU KLTOKl announces the discovery o( a new tannic acid treatment for ivy, oak and sumac poisoning. The treatment his been found eicellent; it is gentle and safe, dries up the blisters in a sur prisingly short time often within 24 hours. These government findings are incorporated in the new product IVY-DRY At your drugstore, 59c. 'irrntr i 4r irr coitr., n. ), Supper Upjohn our Salem Senators securely into fourth place as the Western International league wound up its season. It should have started raining a few weeks ago and the boys would have stayed in sec ond place. Just as folks were beginning to get an inkling that Christmas isn t so far away they began re ceiving the white slips from old Uncle Sam reminding them that September 15 is even nearer which kinda takes the fun out of thinking about Christmas. Tonight the city council will have to determine the vital ques tion whether hereafter when folks drop a nickel or a penny into a parking meter they'll have to turn a crank or just drop the nickel or the penny and let nature take its course. The town will be all agog until this is de cided. Our Miss Oregon succeeded in landing a $1000 scholarship back in Atlantic City but we'd say from her pictures she had plenty even without the thou sand dollars. pep up their propaganda. The propaganda text book is frank in its objectives, as this sample from page 30 will demonstrate: "The first thing that must be done, the thing with which to begin, is to form a united front, in every district, to establish unity of action of the workers in every factory, in every district, in every region, in every coun try, all over the world. Unity of action on a national and inter national scale is the mighty weapon which renders the work ing class capable not only of successful defense but also of successful counter-attack against fascism (capitalism), against the class enemy. Results of the teaching in the propaganda school located in New York are beginning to be felt now in communist party cir cles throughout the country. Stu dents are Informed that commu nist tactics and strategy now are exactly as they were in 1935 when the communist Interna tionale was booming the world revolution. School graduates are filtering back to their homes with the gospel, , The party school text book is a 10-year-old volume by Georgi Dimitrov, former general secre tary of the revolutionary com munist internationale and now prime minister of Bulgaria. The book is "The United Front," published by Interna tional Publishers, New York City. It was prepared by Dimi trov as an attack on fascism and, especially, upon nazi Germany. Now by substituting "capital ism" for "fascism" where the word appears in the text, and "United States for Germany," the communists use Dimitrov's book as a manual for political action in this country. USUI SALT O As YOU KNOW, our business is salt. VVe make it, refine it, package it, and sell it. No frills. Nothing fancy. That's the way our customer! like it and that'i the way we like it. Over the years, it leemi to work out pretty well. By DeWitt MacKenzie (AP Foreign Afltlrs Analm) The bloody Moslem-Hindu dis orders which have been occur ring in various parts of the In dian sub-continent, and especial ly the savage butchery in the great Punjab district of Pakistan, bring us face to face with the dreadful possibility of large scale civil war among the 400,000,000 of the peninsula. It should be emphasized that we are speaking of a "possibil ity." While further bloodshed and destruction must be expect ed, a general conflagration may well be averted. However, the contingency is there, and should it eventuate it would be the most terrible of all conflicts-religious and racial strife which knows no bounds. The neighboring Chi nese political civil war would be milk and honey in comparison. Unity Lacking , Unhappily the groundwork for grievous trouble was laid when the new dominions of Pakistan (Moslem) and India (Hindu) re cently were formed as wholly separate states, instead of being united in a federal government. The Moslems, outnumbered three to one by the Hindus, refused to place their futures in the hands of this great and dis'trusted ma jority. So two suspicious and in nu merous respects hostile nations were carved out of the peninsula like a jig-saw puzzle. And when this had been achieved many of the 100.000,000 Moslems were within India's boundaries and large numbers of the 300,000,000 Hindus were inside Pakistan. What more natural than that violent wrath should descend on the unprotected heads of these unwanted minorities? Indians Primitive The Indians are a highly in flammable people and many are primitive in their passions. There have been, some nasty communal outbursts in numerous places, but by far the worst trouble has developed in the Punjab. Terrible stories of unbridled outbursts of killing are coming out of the Punjab and untold thousands are reported to have died. Great numbers of women are said to have been abducted from their homes. Property de struction has been widespread, both in urban and country areas. Farming operations on both sides of the Pakistan-India frontiers in some sections have ceased a grave menace to a land which always is-hungry. But fate sometimes achieves its ends by strange and awful methods. Perhaps this trouble is the crucible in which the giant peninsula is being molded into a unified nation. Funeral Rites for Roy Morgan Set Funeral services will be held in Modesto, Cal., for Roy Mor gan of Modesto, and formerly of Salem. He was born in Napa county, California, in 1884. He attend ed Albany college, and later Willamette university where he graduated in 1908. In Salem he was associated with the Falls City Lumber company for sev eral years. He retired before the war, but was active again during the war, retiring again in 1945. He is survived by his widow, Chloe Issam Morgan; two sons, Leslie Morgan of Ceres, Cal., and Dr. Banner Bill Morgan of Mad ison, Wis.; a daughter, Genevieve of Modesto; and two sisters, Mrs Ben H. Hawkins and Mrs. Lu ther Cook, both of Salem. Planning Grange Fair Union Hill The Home Econo. mics club of the Union H1U Grange will meet at the home of Mrs. Jo Ann Speed Wednes day evening at 8 o'clock. Mrs Lois Hansen will be co-hostess. Plans will be made for the Grange fair of October 11. Mrs w. M. Tate will be program chairman. August Special MERCURY MIKE ASKS? It your motor burning oil? It your motor losing power? It your motor slow and tlugith? IF SO Mercury Mike Says You Should Have NEW RINGS VALVES GROUND AND REFACED MOTOR TUNE-UP $OC00 Complete Job eefeef Plus Parts rut mi txcvvsmic swm see you Warner 430 No. Coml. The Precession of the Equinoxes By J. Hugh Pruett Astronomer, Extension Division, Oregon Higher Education System When Dr. Robert G. Aitken dren came home from the little Mt. Hamilton grammar school one day babbling about the "procession of the oxes, something Winners Picked In Fair Rodeo Bronc riders, cattle wrestlers and other winning participants in the rodeo which was com bined with the horse show at the fairgrounds last week came for ward Sunday night at. the final show to take their honors and prize money. Winners' points will go to national and inter national headquarters to deter mine cowboy champions. Top men of the rodeo were: 3ronc riding: Tint, Stub Bartlemty; second, Earl Hoppes of Salem; third, Cleric Pruett ind fourth, Jack Sherman. Bareback riding; Ft rat, Qua Bartlev; second, Vidal Oarcia; third, Karl Hoppes; lourm, Buck Abbott. Bull ridlnjt: First, Vldal Oarcia: second. Frank Mendea; third, Jack Halter and lourin, uienn ryier. Steer Wrestllns;: First. Bill Markley second, Barney Willis; third, Joe Mendes and fourth. Dory Hlnton, Calf roping: First, Dan Poore; second, Dory Hlnton: third, Red Allen and fourth, Barney Willis, Evening Classes Open Sept. 20 Salem evening classes for the first term of the general exten sion division of-the Oregon state system of higher education will be held in Salem senior high school, Sept. 20-Dec. 5, accord ing to announcement by Dr. John F. Cramer, dean-director. In the field of general inter est, fall term classes include: lower division painting taught by Miss Carmelita Barquist, Sa lem high instructor; vocabulary building, William J. Stevens, University of Oregon English de partment; introduction to phil osophy under Rauld Bertrand, Willamette university; first year Spanish, Miss Jeanette Roberts of Salem high. Courses of special interest to teachers, but open also to any interested laymen are: Oregon school law and system of educa tion, H. E. Inlow, instructor; ra dio education, taught by James M. Morris; improvement of in struction in reading under Victor N. Phelps; curriculum workshop, Harry B. Johnson, curriculum director Salem schools; health education for upper grade and high school teachers, Mrs. Jen- ne Moorhead. Inquiry concerning night classes should be directed to George D. Porter, director of adult education and night school, school office building, Salem, or Viron A. Moore, head of state wide classes, general extension division, Oregon State system of higher education, Eugene. Belgium has been overrun by invaders six times in the last five centuries, and twice since gaining independence in 1830. n the city ... on the farm . . business or pleasure , . . There's a CUSHMAN Motor Scooter for EVERY PURPOSE 5 MODELS Buy On Easy Terms! LODER BROS. 465 Center Street Motor Co. Phone 7249 was at Lick observatory, his chil which happens in the stars. All the pupils were astronomers' children, so the teacher, not too well informed herself, thought it fitting that they should have some instruction on a subject with which their fa thers were readily conversant. The expression "precession of the equinoxes" is even juggled a bit by some copy readers, who also form a "procession" of it. But "precession" it is to scientists copy readers and as tronomers' children notwith standing and - phenomena not easily understood without dia grams and considerable study. A bare statement without any attempt to explain may be given as follows: This precession is the slow westward motion (0.014 degree annually) of the equinoxes, those two apparent points among the stars where the great imaginary circles of the sky, the celestial equator and the ecliptic, cross each other. At this rate it requires nearly 26,000 years for .either equi nox entirely to encircle the 360 degrees around the sky. One of the many effects of precession is the changing north in respect to the stars. North is the direction the north pole of the earth points. We learned in grade school that this pole is tipped 23 degrees from the upright position to the plane of the earth's orbit. The fact that the pole continues to point in this same direction among the very distant stars during its annual trip around the sun gives us our seasons. But during the long period of 26,000 years it will swing around in a large circle and point succesively to every place and star appar ently on the circle of 47 degrees diameter, or twice 23 degrees. At present our north star is the so-called Polaris. In the gener ations which follow us, many new north stars will one after another take the place of Polar- Around 2A00B. C, the ap- Gee, but lb glad I met you Sally CORN Sammy SOYA for flavor and for borfy-oiiHdliia energy proteins RED GOOSE ihoes.'ijrfenra (ftOO Good old school time... TM9Gf Swl" " SSHOCsD whh tho gang waiting J f V "" '" Jl to welcome you. Make I t t KO ooosl isSUk them take notice, wear f 5 1 thm. jta slick RED GOOSE i.r RED OOOS1 tgS222 ityU iwrtir II5S. SS0 NEILSEN'S 220 No. Commercial 'Next to Allen Hardware" proximate time of the building nf the Great Pvramid of Che ops in Egypt, the north star was . stars in the Dragon, On the north side of the pyramid there is an opening which leads into a passageway sloped downward at 26 degrees, the apparent elevation above the northern horizon of Thuban at lower cul mination at that time. An ob server at the lower end of this gallery could have seen his north star. The precession of the equi noxes will swing the pole of the earth around so that by A.D. 14,000 it will point close to Ve ga, the brilliant star now about overhead by the time it is dark. What a splendid guide star it will be! 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