Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, June 18, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    Capital A Journal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor ond Publiihir
- ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher
Published every ofternoon except Sunday at 444 Che
meketa St., Salem Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont-
Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409.
Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press and
' The United Press. The Associated Press is exclusively
! entitled to the use tor publication of all news dispatches
', credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper ond also
news published therein.
i SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
' By Carrier: Weekly, 5c; Monthly, 11.00; One Tear, 1Z.00. By
j Mall In Oregon: Monthly. 75c; 6 Mos.. S4.00: One Vear, $8.00.
iU. S. Outside Oregon; Monthly, S1.00; 6 Mos.. $6.00; Vear, 112:
Salem, Oregon, Saturday, June 18, 1949
i
t
Grange Leaders Inaugurate a Purge
' The Oregon State Grange, under the leadership of
Grangemaster Morton Thompkins, is rapidly becoming a
political pressure organization intent only on enacting its
leaders' ideology into the law of the land, which was far
from its original purpose.
At its Marshfield convention it has followed for the
first time the tactics of labor organizations, the prohibi
tionists, the Ku Klux Klan, the New Dealers, the commun
ists and other special interest blocs in resorting to the
purge of those legislators who voted their honest convic
tions instead of accepting the dictation of the grange
lobby. Legislators are supposed to work for the general
public, not for special interests.
The targets of Tompkins' ire were those members of
the Oregon legislature who at the last session attempted
to revise Oregon's initiative and referendum last spring,
which would have enabled the legislature to require sig
' natures of 8 percent of legal voters in each county of the
state to place an initiative bill on the ballot.
The bill did not pass the legislature but those 22 legis
lators who voted for it are put on the Grange blacklist and
the membership is asked to work for their defeat.
On the purge list, Tompkins said, are the following represen
tatives: ' David C. Baum, Union; Sprague Carter, Umatilla; Raymond
C. Coulter, Josephine; Ben Day, Jackson; Joseph M. Cyer, Clat
'sop; Dean B. Irwin, Wallowa; Giles French, Gilliam, Morrow,
Sherman and Wheeler; Edward A. Geary, Klamath; Robert C.
Gile, Douglas; Warrer Gill, Linn; Earl H. Hill, Lane; John P.
Hounscll, Hood River- E. W Kimberling, Grant and Harney;
'C. L. Lieuallen Umatilla; Charles K. McColloch, Baker; Ralph
T. Moore, Coos; William B. Morse, Crook and Jefferson; Henry
E. Peterson, Gilliam, Morrow, Sherman and Wheeler; John I.
'.Sell, Wasco; henry Scmon, Klamath; J. F. Short, Deschutes
and Lake; Vernon Wilson, Malheur.
All are republicans except Semon.
- One of Tompkins' fixed illusions is that the interest of
Industrial workers and farmers are the same whereas their
interests conflict, and he seeks a common front politically.
Labor is interested in lower living costs and for cheap farm
'products, and the farmer in higher prices. Labor wants
higher wages and the farmer can't pay industrial wages
..unless he gets high prices for his products. Only by gov
ernment subsidy in one form or another can he pay high
.wages, and sell his products at lower prices.
The great delusion that the interests of labor and farm
ers are common was inspired by the Russian revolution
and the adoption of the hammer as labors', the sickle as
farmers' symbols on the Soviet flag. But Russian labor
-found itself regimented and enslaved, and Russian peas
ants found their lands confiscated for collective farms and
themselves forced into the ranks of the regimented prole
tariat. The purge will be futile because the average farmer,
Including the Grangers, are rugged individualists and do
their own thinking and resent dictation.
t-
World Wheat Pact Folly
President Truman has signed the international wheat
agreement for United States participation which the sen
ate ratified last week. The world-wide wheat agreement
includes all big wheat exporters except Russia and Argen
tine. It will be effective July 1 if 70 percent of the other
countries ratify it by that time.
' The pact was worked out by the United States and four
other exporters of wheat: Canada, Australia, France and
.Uruguay, and 36 wheat importers. The five exporting
'nations are to ship 456,000,000 bushels annually to the
importing countries. Sponsors said that would make an
:export market of 168,000,000 bushels of American wheat
.each year for the next four years. Importing countries
would pay a maximum price of $1.80 a bushel. The mini
mum would scale down from $1.50 this year to $1.20 in
: 1952-53.
.
Such a movement of wheat is what could be expected
normally but the cosmic planners have given it their cus
tomary touch by establishing "quotas" and fixing arbi
trary prices. As Russia and Argentine, both major wheat
growers, refused to participate, the authors of the scheme
substituted Uruguay and France to take their places.
Neither of these, nations are wheat exporters.
This puts Russia and Argentina in a position to offer
imorting nations barter agreements to exchange wheat
for machinery and other needed products, which will make
Xhc world wheat pact a joke, like many other fanciful New
Deal projects.
Why then does the administration endorse such a futile
project? The only plausible reason is because it promises
to some extent to relieve the government of the conse
quences of its farm policy folly. With a record wheat crop
there is a heavy wheat carry over totalling 1,650,000,000
bushels. This is the result of the misguided support policy
passed since the war of encouraging the farmer to produce,
not for the market, but for the loans they are guaranteed
In the government price support program.
The pact commits us to provide wheat importing nations
with some 170 million bushels for the next four years at
$1.80 a bushel. But the farmer ran turn his wheat over
to the government at around $2.25 a bushel, which he will
do. This means that the government will be buying wheat
at $2.25 and selling it at $1.80, taking a loss on every
bushel sold at taxpayers' expense.
Secretary Branuan states that the wheat pact will
assure the American farmer of an export market of 300
million bushels of wheat over the next four years. Vet,
without a pact, wheat exports have been running 450
million bushels a year and the Marshall plan has three
years more to run. It provides an "assured export mar
ket" when it is least needed and an artificial market at
taxpayers' cost and postpones a real solution of the prob
lems faced.
by BECK
Animal Life
jp
SOMETHING NW HAS BEN AOOEO
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
Truman's Secret Hero Is
None Other than Jesse James
By DREW PEARSON
Washington One of President Truman's secret heroes is the
notorious railroad bandit and Robin Hood of the early west
Jesse James. What's more, the President is convinced that the
whole rootin1 shootin' James family were democrats.
So confessed President Truman the other day to two youthful
visitors, Buster
BY GUILD
Wizard of Odds
McLain of Crag
ford, Alabama,
and B 1 e v y n
Hathcock of
Oakboro, North
Carolina, who
were invited to
the White House
after winning a
contest as shin
ing examples of
rural youth.
The President
greeted them
IAX1
Or PnnM
cordially
THE FIRESIDE PULPIT
IF YOU RE ENGLISH. 40 I
OF YOUR INCOME GOES QlujWWk ttR4ICWA5IIr
FOR GOVERNMENT- flfV&k JWWI"",MSft'
U.S.C1TIZENS FAY25. v
average healthy jllljlll funiA
EUROPEAN CHILDREN HAVE ggTOigffi
ODDS OF 10 TO 9 AGAINST tamfMf ailSLrS
THEIR BEING AS TALI AND I Tf aumcm. '
STRONG AS PRE-WAR If 1
CHILDREN. M II
was the bare cost of $7,828.97 to
the government printing office
for reprinting the speeches.
The New York congressman
paid this by personal check but
refused to say where he got the
money except that it came
from friends. Some of these
friends In the past have been
the foundation for economic edu
cation and the committee for
constitutional government which
in turn are financed by the Mel-
and Ion interests, the Du Ponts, Re-
spoke of their home states. Not puoiie steel, u. 5. Steel, Stand
wanting to be outdone in his ard Oil of New Jersey. Texas
knowledge of states, Buster Mc- u" " Joe few bun OH
Lain of Alabama spoke up about interests.
the President's home state. In 'her words, It looks as if
"The main thing I know about General Eisenhower, now sup
Missouri," he said, "is that you Psed to be an expert on higher
and Jesse James came from Ie" nto a trap set nsviD UAKI'C sunncADuro
there. I have read a lot about 'or hlm by spokesman' of the rUUK MAN 3 rnlLVSUrncK
both of you, and I admire both anti-education lobby. - . , .
of you." ,14 a1' more inconceiv- Vrrfln rind I hflf Earth
-A Int nt n,nl. nninnerl able that Ike-should have an. ClCrUll riMU I IIUl bUTlll
the President, "haven't liked swered Gwinn because the con
either one of us." gressman has written a book
Then the President admitted called "Fifth Avenue to Farm"
.v..,. .. j a ..j .,i.ihi- .in f ., inward that he, too. had a secret ad- " which he made such amai-
and invisible checking account. A check is good only if there is miration for Jesse James In '"f.T.
j i- .v.. v,ai, hlh ih rhprlc i drawn efficient fact, Jesses uncle had been a .. A compulsory system of pub-
funds to cover
the amount of
the check.
Ha n d 1 n g a
person a check
without funds to
cover its face
value is like
making an out
ward show of
friendship when
there is no genu
People Unhappy Because
They Fail to Let Light Shine
By REV. GEORGE H. SWIFT
Rector Pi Paul' EputcoPk. unurcn
Has Swallowed Up Old War
By HAL BOYLE
New York W A letter to any veteran:
Well, soldier, I made my trip into memory.
I went to see
0
mm
leadinrpolUicianlnd the who.: He edu nnotbe" ped 'he fx holes of Europe that I remembered,
familv had been "bi demo- to maintain a high civilization ..Ana.. u 11 1 . , .
nthpr arts nf lnvt nnrl kindness. i i i u: to maintain n hiaU .-.a,,,..
Our love for one another, while crats ., the President said. ... the feeble-minded remain p'an w, Jji'i
an invisible thing in itself, is Truman explained that the home ton the farm) those ,? , f,", ,
morla manifpit thrnncrh nntwarrl . . ,j .i i t - uhn ar nnt fSAula..tnj tnai Still QlSlUrD
coumrysiue wnere uie untiles ...cmc-iiiiiiucu
and visible channels the voice. , m.. h.,j kitioriu niv. enough to be institutinnniirf vour a r e a m s.
the handclasp, the little cour- uj ., ,u- r,riHontini w. the weak-minded and the hl. maybe
ine inner fund orra
of friendship to
back it up. Be that as it may, worid because they shut them
this
dra
The main!
thing, I would
say, soldier.
don't go back
alone if you can
help it. You'll find it quite
jf a t I
can
tesies, tokens of friendship and tion 0( 1824 and broke off into low-minded. The indolent, weak- glve. yo" ,p
kindness. , -tif. Th countv dom- willed and unimaginative re- or ,w0 .. nclp
If we have love In our hearts inated bv the republicans was main around home. So do the y0" on ' . v
we should let it shine out. If named after Henry Clay, the -iseased, the fearful and tt
we have spiritual qualities they Gop candidate. The other coun- more timid."
should be put to work in out- ty was r.alr,ed after Andrew In writing to Congressman
ward and visible ways. There jacksorli the democratic candi- Gwinn, Eisenhower apparently
are many unhappy people in the date The james farm came didn't entirely understand what
iirr1H koioiiCO thou h Itt thfm ... i t r- ri fnrlnrr, ! I J - l ...
, world would be a dull, ,clves up witnin themselves in- Sty tat the Tame, brother, all about for he ignored the shock to see how much the earth hear vou shacked with in Bel.
b, hateful place in which to cad 0f lettin their light shine, f0".. J5 , , fact that h mii ,..? swallowed your war. gium .
... ... . i i - . . . remaiucu mjoi .u ' . u, Ju.,fc T i.nn,., i,, Kn... n,.t . . .... ...
live wunoui ine numutn The happy people in this woria cratic , passed by the senate does not in
little outward and visible mani- are those who use all the out- ,.Th. ,m, hnv. wer. nushed any way permit control of edu-
group of 47 war correspondent!
on a tour sponsored by the Amer
ican Overseas Airlines. And we
were grateful afterward that
we'd had each other's company
when memory kicked us all in
the face. '
Whether you should take your
wife along, soldier, I couldn't
say. If she's the right kind of
wife, sure okay. But there is
also the other kind who jaws:
"You call this a battlefield? I'd
rather see that blonde ruin I
festatlon, of inward and spirit- ward and visible means at their
ual qualities of love and appre- disposal to scatter their spiritual back .. added Truman, in ex
so hard they began to fight cation by the federal govern
elation. Dualities where they will bring
Even in religion, it is through real happiness and inspiration iaws
the sacramental principle of out- to those about them.
ward and visible signs that we In order that there be some
learn about God. The created light to shine out from our hearts
world and all that is in it is an and light the home, the office,
outward manifestation of the and the circle of acquaintances,
nature and power of the invisi- there must be a continual re
ble God. Our love for God is plenishing of the spiritual res-
plaining how they became out-
ment. It helps individual state,
through federal funds, with no
control by the government over
how those funds are to be used
in each state.
- Congressional leaders also
point out that Eisenhower let
How General Ike Eisenhower
happened to answer one of the
900,000 letters Congressman rr", VI. ,e'
Ralph Gwinn of New York sent '".;" I"??'"
, . j, ;j by a premium would be placed
out opposing federal aid to edu- . ,
I don't know just how to put This tvDe of wife It would hit
into words the feeling you get better to jettison in Pari,. Let
when you learn that the fox- her go shopping while you go
holes you remember so well on to plumb the past by your-
don't remember you at all now scif
no more than a hotel bed re- Probably you will want to call
calls its last guest. But it is a on a buried friend, or the friend
mixed feeling a kind of re- 0f a friend, and bring him some
sentment of life and death and flowers. Before you do that it
change, and an utter loneliness might be better to write the
and desolation of spirit. American graves registration
That is why it is better to go command, care of the war de
back with someone who can partment, In Washington. Give
share that feeling a buddy or a them the name and the location
matin knfiu'n thrnnuh mir nut. ttrvmri within nz 1 horofnrp it canuii is muic iiinsi anw'w u.. m, , ,
ward and visible signs wor- is well to examine the extent around Capitol Hill can under- ergl mon;y or Jtates whjcj group of buddies. Together you of the grave you want to visit,
snip, aeeas or. sacrifice, tne cup oi our spiritual resources irom iuu. failed to tax themselves but no ...; ana get permission
of cold water," and the many time to time.
SIPS FOR SUPPER
Queen Pat
BY DON UPJOHN
We take it that she'll be known as "Queen Pat" this petite,
pretty smiling Stayton girl selected to rule over festive Cherry
land in this year nineteen hundred and forty nine, God bless
ner. tor a may hin' horiv and tail resulted. Ac
cording to airport officials, Fir
chau settled the craft back to
earth, but struck roui'll ground
fail,,,! M liv thameal.,A. K...
Maybe, conclude congressional ,,,, "
leaders, Ike is just a better gen
eral than he is
politician.
federal money for states which Z. .''.'..1. 7 "W
eiier gen taxed themKPlvp i,ffir.intlu fn
an educator- have adcquate education.
be noted that
although her
first name Is
Patricia her last
name is O'Con
n o r, and if
there's a better
name for an O'
Connor than
Pat, even though
she be every
dainty inch a
queen, then we
Congressman Gwinn, the man
who induced Eisenhower to an
swer him. ha, abused the frank
ing privilege more brazenly
than any other member of con
gress in opposing aid to educa
tion. Not only has Gwinn sent
out 2,250.000 copies of speeches
against education, public hous
ing, rent control, etc., but this
abuse of his free mailing priv
ilege cost the taxpayers
iCoprrlfht 194S1
EXPERIMENTS IN CONTROLLED BURNING
Periodic Forest Fires
Helped Timber Stands
By RENNIE TAYLOR
'Ajnnclatpd Pm nrience Writer)
Vancouver, B. C. W) The west owes the existence of some
of its great timber stands to the fact that the areas once were
The reason for this is the
U. S. permanent military ceme
teries overseas are still in pro- T
I know. I went back with a cess of completion, and some of
the soldier dead are being re
turned home. Under such cir
cumstances the AGRC doesn't
want any mere curiosity seek
ers around. By next year the
cemeteries will be in final shape
landscaped and lovely.
Looking back over this let
ter, soldier, I wonder If I have
given you the impression that it
isn't worthwhile to make this
In the field. tpp:ng the plane , the post 0ffice depart- swept by forest fire,, says a United State, Forest Service official, trip into memory at all bau
over. Firchau, flying alone, was m,,,,7oii Thi. i rpiiw ,r. i ,h. ,1 '?..,,. ? m.emory at all because
ii win ue iuu jainiui. well, II
I did, I didn't mean to. It if
very much worthwhile.
It is painful but one pain
uninjured. In addition the taxpayers had Douglas fir, western white pine lln?-
' Yea. the day that plane went to pav $1775 for Gwinn's free and ponderosa pine of the moun- F'res four decades ago con
down from icing on its wings is envelopes, plus $3000 for stuff- tain and Pacific Northwest, Rus- tributed to an increase in the
the same dav somebody left the ing the envelopes with Gwinn's ,ell K. Lebarron. Chief of For- moose population, said James
refrigerator door open around speeches. Only thing that thi, est Management Research at "aller 01 "e British Columbia mxwoui anoiner.
here. propaganda barrage cost Gwinn Missoula, Mont., told a meeting ame department at Victoria. To many men who fought the
of the Ecological Society cf Moose on young willow war have secretly hugged it too
haven't heard it Report has it .1 LCKt-flC'C rnillkl America Wednesday. ana oiner snort undergrowth In """-'''"''
fhat the vivacious imie Sueen CKfNZF S COLUMN .-Th timber stands would area, when this m'
. ........ I. . naiw nonn rn atwfl rw t wfii. p. ' " - " kiu ,vfv inu mc miliums '
seems all the more appropriate
tor royalty with the O'Connor
name. There's no doubt she'll
have the loyal support and love
of all her subjects and may her
reign be happy and prosperous,
as it's sure to be.
, a . nave Deen replaced Dy less vai- '" omumia .i.. .L !
K ininn Wl Rlmnnrtonhn uable tree species long before the canno' ach it. Fire destroy. ho m much, gave
IVeiigiOn TY IM OS lm,TOriPni III ,,,,t,emem. ;f ,his Continent if "d brings about a regrowth them little, and took their youth.
Orient Ideological Warfare
A New Weapon
Bridgeport. Minn. UR Mrs.
Catherine Tichnor Combier ex
plained to the judge that her develo ping in
husband displayed intolerable the orient,
cruelty by "hitting me in the On July 1 the
face with the family cat." Mrs. old and prince
Combicr testified in superior ly state of Trav
crurt that she was seated on her ancore will com
bed when her husband, Donald bine with the
C. Combier, Fort Lauderdale, adjoining prin
Fla., tossed the cat in her face, cipality of Co
She told Judge William J. Shea chin and the 36
that she was badly clawed and year - old Maha-
bitten. The divorce was granted, rajah of Travan-
fnr will he
We're going to be happy to m, ii,,.!., head.
greet into out FT & BA big burly reSpon,ible to the new gove
jonn nargcr, arpuiy .iit-nii un- ., o( indla
der uenver voung, wno piana
in the next couple of weeks to
take off to Tongue Point to
have his uppers removed. Now
we know of no more appropriate
it had not been for periodic for- of young short plants. But nothing cures an old ro-
est fires," Lebarron said. mance like seeing the old sweet
Forestry leaders have come to Limited use of fire to retard heart again year, after. And
realize that fires can be bene- sagebrush and promote grass that is why it 1, good to go back,
ficial as well as destructive, and growth on ranges wa, reported soldier. It'll put the war In
are experimenting now with imi i-tn-nanec oi me k'" iinn-iivc.
u.o. roresi service at foruand, It'll teach you how unimport
ant you or any other man is.
a tool for fighting That hurts. But It a 1m twill
By DeWITT MncKhNZIE
itt Porrlfn Afritr Anftlrati
Out of mvstic India comes a story so strange that It reads
... . ... : .j i. i i i. iti,. are ciueruiiciiii
"."S"w-u.iw,n " ,, . .V.T .ta.h.V: ; controlled burning, he added
H SllUtlllUII WIIIVII 1 UVlir.C JiHtJ nt K... . ... .....
of the ideologies m jitr. t-h
columnist accept, tne princes . described bv .lamps rr F.un. nn. Ko.iiriij .u...u t. . '
..ni.n.,in .inn.r. hvinr orusny unaergrowtn wnicn rf . ... ,. c -y i.- ot your
Ore.
Fire
j. a white pine bark beetle was teach VOll how linimnriHant anir
by James C. Even one battlpfiplri hnnlH i vn,'.
ni.aH ha Vine U r U I II V UllUCI KlUWlll WI1IWII j . , - c ... jwu.
ncere, naving r, ... den of the U. S. Bureau of En- 1 fp wh rh ie th-aBi ut nu
spent much time in India and ?J tomology and Plant Quarantine manv bslkV,.
how intensely reli- the timber lands. This growth D Alene d7h0
h the Hindus and the develops under the big trees and v'oeur Aiene, ""ho.
many
peace than in war.
He will be
rn-
There's nothing startling in
this transaction, of course, be
cause some 565 principalities tne ordinary wav of life, even In
of India are being absorbed by the matter of food and drink
t h New Delhi ffnvernment. ri.- n. n .. k. n : .
place for getting the uppers out rhe ranw par, ,. o(hcr reli ,ons , , h
K a M I miai IrAint hill fnnl Ittl T . .
thi -special reason for the Hegira of Travncore has been the Hin- ThCre are few atheists In the
John is an old nav man, 24 du god padmanabha, and the (ar .a,t.
ui iv ... m,hara)ahs have acted as stew-
knowing
ifimii Hnrl,
. .' . . rjrevents their seeds from sain-
Aiosiems are. 1 nave seen one ,,rj . , " rirruf i inrniv i
of the greatest of the Indian foothold. When the par- SALEM'S HOSPITAL DRIVE
rulers a highly cultured man " 'rE a m ola e
with a western education pros- would have been no more pine
trate on the temple floor before or flr without the fire, which
a Hindu idol. He wa, a verr cleared the way for the seed
religious man, and hi, fervor
wan tvrjieal. war: . . .
. .i- Thl Moslem IS Al Sayed Nour (Mitori Not: In trw rkj th Siltm hoipiul dtxlopmtnt procriin will m
Religion pla a major part Muhammefi Ismail, head of the ' X? T""" !,iB1h""m "" 8 ",,t iim tin .M m.,
In the live. Of both HindUS and Tnrlro.lan mlinn In riro' J!, ? ?k. ' l"u "S" .V" "" I""'"' " c'll l eoowrttlm hr
, ...ii i , lUrKeStan mission tO lairOS prinnnt lhm 4a y. QUMI mi mmy b A rctrd to the hoipltal Drttrim htiilaiii.i.,,
Moslems. It not only is spiritual t Moslem university He 3" H"h - " -m.i iu.rt.ri.
but in many respects dominate, charged that in the middle Asia QUESTION: Mr. (Name withheld). Tell us your experience
areas of the Soviet union there out 10 tne overcrowded condition, in Salem Hospital,.
are virtually "no Moslem in- ANSWER: Not long ago. my wife was stricken with a severe
habitant, left." ntn attack. It was imperative"
Fund Drive Seeks to Ease
Overcrowded Conditions
It i, there he used up all but ,rd, of ,he dicty Xhf princM
Of course the Hindu and Mos- that ,he receive immediate ho,- available and the mll.nl .A.
lem religion, are far from being pitaliiation. Application wa, at mitted. the service, rendered by
the only one, In the orient once made to both hospitals only the nurses, attendants and man
There or. numerous others, but to find that every bed in both agement were ihnva r.nm.oh
And how does this fit Into the one nd all they probably rep- Institutions was occupied and Under this excellent care, the
resent communism's toughest nal " m0Te patients could be patient recovered ,ufficlently
enemv F.ven the man who wor. admitted. Three day, later she to be discharaed at Ih. nH nl
and hrnu.-n hread an nlH nivv . mYT .i. . 7,. to tne orient tne weight of its .hios stone idol isn't aoini to had a second attack. The doc- the sixth week. Such far-Hill..
tradition. So if, a navy dentist ,'p, " " f J 7 ,k! world "volution for the spread give up hi, god. tor forbade her even to try to as the hospital staff had avail-
who'll remove John's clackers. " , ,L. nirkir th. Uv. ,n of communi'm' A vital part of . . . lift a hand lest that be too much able were used to their fullest
We don't know whether there's ,h' ' S P ,hr Red offensive I, it, attack Jus, how this will work out exertion. ' extent.
any other tradition In the navy ' . " ,. , .. " religion, wnicn is oostructive n China remain, to be seen. " the home of the patient. Reference to thi, authentic
as to whether defunct clackers " took the Indian govern- to the communist government. perhap the religiou, resistance facilities for caring for a sick case i, not Intended to be a re-
are buried at sea, but if there
five of his upper, on weekly Sat
urday morning meals of beans ,ne god ,nd every n,nht have
n.ve .wurn n..... .u M0,COw is increasingly .hlfting
ment about a year to persuade
Lipstick Prevents a Fire
is that Is what'll become of John's h P"n m.h"r)".h phange
because he's still just
man at heart.
Ik. .I.lni n hla a, at. 11. u-aa
navy ; , :" . . , . . sources have said the Russians cause
leariui inai nv wouiu ue com
mitting blasphemy if he swore
i.ucien, uaia., w . u. nrnnaiinman found a new as
lor lipstick and prevented a train fire.
He quickly took his girl friend's lipstick, picked Dp a piece
f cardboard and scrawled "fire". Engineer Otto Brammer
and Conductor Dan Wright saw the warning sign and stop
ped tha train In Unit,
there won't be so stubborn as person were such as might be flection upon the aualitv of hos.
Recent reports from various in many other countries, be- found in the average home and pital service but does point to
a large percentage of aaequaie lor cases oi minor in- tne inadequate hospital spaca
have been conducting a cam- Chinese subscribe to ancestor ness, out not lor a patient so and equipment now available to
paign against Jew, and Zionism worship. Buddhism is the dom- desperately ill and completely the people of Salem.
Inside the Soviet union. And inant religion, but there are immobilized. iphj. coruition should be cor-
a couple of days ago In Cairo some 48.000.000 Moslems and It wa, seven long and tor- rected at once. By contribute
a Moslem religious leader from several million Christians, all tuous day, of constant efforts on ing to the present campaign for
4uiiir,iu, .,1 ouvin i-iiuii oi wnuiii may rxpeciea 10 ine pari oi tne attenaing pnyjl- hospital funds, thl, can and will
The skeptical reader may say Asia, charged that Russia has battle for their faiths. eian and myself before a hos- be done. J
wiai me prince na merely siau- oeen conducting an anti-Moslem In any event. It will be an Dltal bed could be secured (Name
When space was finally nude verified.)
Our Cold Climate allegiance to the Indian consti-
Lebanon Icing conditions tution or agreed to alter the
shortly after a take-off forced Al boundaries of his state.
Firchau to land his Fairchild
craft In a field near the Cas
cade Airway,, Wednesday morn
Ing. Considerable damage to the ing to avoid changing the status purge ever sinct thi end of tht epochal fight.
withheld but story