Capital A Journal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wanf 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 and also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, 2!c; Monthly, SI. 00; One Year. $12.00. By Mail In Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos., S4.00; One Year, $8.00. V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos., $6.00; Year, $12. BY BECK Animal Life Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, July 5, 1949 What Has Happened to the Fourth of July? Use of the. words now of a "safe and sane Fourth of July" are ridiculous. A death toll of 663 persons is enough to give a sardonic twist to the holiday which commemor ates a declaration that gave birth to our nation. Instead of birth the celebration now stands for death. It seems that, given a three-day whirl at "celebrating," the results can be certain of breaking a new record of fatal ities each year. Of those killed over the week-end, the largest number, of course, died in automobile accidents. This is explain- -ffrirf gHfcgMI IfflffPy VOU CAN COME 5gg SSfKajfy COT NOW... THE i22i SFS(2l iH CELEBRATING IS i4;4'vSffiv ALL OVER.. THE 1 ffiS3f;SOT' LAST FIRECRACKER! 1 Sep-I IffiUL HAS BEEN SHOT J i dontN ?wffiryWi f HEAR fffl I Wl I ANYTHING,) )$kiJ gr WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND What's Happened Since The Louisiana Scandals? By DREW PEARSON Washington It has been exactly 10 years since this column exposed the Louisiana scandals, resulting in the imprisonment of Gov. Richard Leche and various members of the old Huey Long gang. Today, the Long family and friends have staged an amazing comeback. BY GUILD . Wizard of Odds SIPS FOR SUPPER Sad Scribe By DON UPJOHN A well known Salem newspaper man learned something about able, true, because of the staggering volume of traffic that priSOn management yesterday. He was one of the warden's guests tne nignways nanaie on sucn a ween-ena. bud ii is line- at the penitentiary boxing show and Fourth of July indoor cele wise true, that a concentrated effort on the part of the newspaper and radio might make a dent on the minds of mtie fav0rs ex-S me uni clean ujivcia mat nuuiu uung n y&i., lenaea 10 uie 111- es those drivers maneuver down the highways. mates on the big It has been done before. The record ot the r ourtn oi day are some July calls for some new "refresher courses" for the care- tickets entitling Jesai them to free . bottles of pop. And for the fireworks type of celebrating, there seem e "-TThirstv i- u- -i ii ...u- ... i i tuu. V,. man got imraiy T.0 De always muse wnu waiiu lu npuii iuuio, wu, iui mo and more careiui Huey's brother, Earl, is gover nor of the state, Huey's ' son Russell, is U.S. senator from Louisi ana. So the other day I went back to Lou 1 s i a n a just 10 years af ter writing the first column on the L o u 1 siana scan dais to see how the re built Long ma chine is handl ing its comeback. Things have changed a lot in 10 years. The name ln the governor's mansion is still spelled "L-o-n-g," but the atmosphere is much dif ferent. It's calmer, less spectacu lar and far more serious. Earl Long is giving the state Draw Ptftriou such an even keel administration a BA, degree. well was honest. He soaked the big oil companies, taxed the utilities and squeezed campaign contributions out of all sorts of people. But the money went back into free schoolbooks, better roads and a network of bridges that have left a lasting mark on the state. Huey's brother Earl is a quiet, easygoing farmer, just the oppo site of his brother's high-strung, ripsnorting bundle of nerves which once made Louisiana the most spotlighted state in the un ion. Earl also has followed a soak-the-rich policy, induced his le gislature to pass a heavy tax against the oil companies, put through free lunches for all school children regardless of their means, and has increased Negro school teachers' pay from $70 to $200 a month if they have UNEMPLOYED? IT'LL TAKE YOU AN AVERAGE 854 WEEKS TO FINP A JOB. II I ' Q Q 'ill WANT TO RflWI A 300 CiAMF? none. Apt Iflfl flfifl Tf) I ArtAINST you. (him ioii mm it, wroiak, chicmo) JlSSV YOU BELIEVE IN n JfVi FLAT10N IS A GREATER THREAT THAN LV V) COMMUNISM TO J A PROSPEROUS , AMERICA, I7& P CM UaVJ Don Upjohn They Meant Well, Anyway (Salem Exchange Club Bulletin) It is true, perhaps, that other of the fraternal and civic organ izations around this city have done more than we In the past year. But there Is no one that can say that they have consider ed doing more than we have. The Exchange Club of Salem has considered more projects during the last year than any other or ganization on record. 'The only way to have com pulsory education is with free books and free lunches," says Governor Long, who has no children of his own. "Kids can't study when they're hungry, and an awful lot of kids down our way just don't get enough to Most Interesting development eat'" ... Is the way many of the old Huey that It's almost humdrum. The ci ty of New Orleans, under young Mayor De Lessers Morrison, is still rowing with the Long ma chine, but the row lacks the mel odrama and bellicose pyrotech nics of Huey's day. went over in the clnnH tn Take the matter of firecrackers and the other super --i three bot- noise-makers that have been selling at the wayside stands ties of same for and in the stores. It miorht be called a tradition for every himself and friends." A happy boy to have his day with firecrackers, but when some keep looking colored chap who waited Yea, that's the same old road firing those 'crackers way into the wee hours of the morn- on him said, "Boss, there's no paved with good Intentions, lng, some people start rebeling. Some of those voting reason for you to spend your Exchange Club Competition parents might get sore enough to encourage tne legisia- money for this" and handed him (Salem Klwanis Bulletin) Long crowd have staged quiet comebacks. Seymour Weiss, former demo cratic national committeeman, who went to jail for Income-tax evasion, is now back running the Earl Long discusses his late brother quite frankly. "The oil companies hated Hu ey," he says. "He taxed era and they hated him. I have taxed them too, but they have taken it Roosevelt hotel in New Orleans out more on Russell than on me." and going out of his way to be a patriotic citizen. Everyone re- He referred to his nephew Russell, now U.S. senator from speets Seymour's quiet come- Louisiana. back. "In fact, every mistake I three tickets to cover. "You We know you'll likely need a tors to put a ban on fireworks. That's when reason on both sides is gone. i,, n -waII hnvp the rest after the strenuous Fireworks, sanely handled and sanely fired, are an in- """ ' week-end but try not to go to tegral part of the Fourth. But they could- well be banned money then' sald ,ne news" sleep during the meeting to- if the sanity part goes as far as it did locally this past paperman and handed him three day. - weak unrl dimes. A broad grin covered , weeK-enu. umico. n. , . . The boys who really were pay Parents, however, are as much to blame for permitting the convict's face and he re- Ing (or thc lon(? week-end this the shooting off of fireworks in the middle of the night marked, as he kissed the dimes, morning were Uncle Sam's mail as any young people who happen to do it. "Boy, that's the first money I've carriers. That long hiatus just felt or seen for 17 years." The n?ade beasts of burden out of Now that the Fourth Is just another crossed-off dale on newspaperman felt so expansive them, as it were. the calendar and rows of crosses in the cemetery, it might about doing a good deed he told We got one big thrill out of be well to consider how to avoid such calamitous "celebrat- the warden about it a little lat- the good old p0UTih anyway. We ing" in the future. teI "" said the warden'.!'s got our hands on some lady fin Perhaps a hammering away In the newspapers and on you're the guy. A guard saw that gers an(1 we doggone hated to the radio will alert drivers enough to cut down the highway ; Tr k.i J. (,,7j let g0 of same- The Inmates don't have money Governor Leche. who got 10 make Russell gets blamed for. years for taking bribes, is living continued the senator's uncle. on his farm near Covington and raising flowers. His garden is so unique that tourists pay 75 cents to visit it. "Russell's going to make a good senator. He has all of Huey's good points and none of his bad. "Huey wanted money for DoWUt Hockcntlo Dr. J. Monroe Smith, former nower " exnlainerf Earl "Hp HP- president of Louisiana State uni- ver wanted it for himself. As for versity, who got 30 years for em- me j don.t need money because bezzling university funds, is dead now. But before he died he was given a chance, as rehabilitation officer at the state penitentiary I don't care about power, and I'm retiring from this job when my lerm is up. Those who know Governor at Angola, to help others who T u. . . .v,t had suffered his misfortune 'theV to'fiim tt N,tr,o rn orvittv, ii, k., 'n '" governor s mansion and toll. Perhaps an educational drive by the fireworks people , .rnnri hnr anH imni int nf fnik, amnnri town themselves and all interested parties can get the celebrnt- nobody is supposed to pass it if they have any thrift in their ing confined to reasonable hours. There need be no ban to them." So it doesn't always souls at all. And that is what if some reason can be introduced to the noisy part of the make a guy happy to be doing to do with their old cherry fes- occasion. good. tival buttons. The signers of the Declaration of Independence would be a sad lot if they were to see what their descendants had done to a day that has such meaning to the nation. Couldn't Hide It Very Well Seattle, Wash. (U.R) Police were looking for a 38-foot bar rage balloon reported stolen from a war surplus store here. The balloon was inflated. An Emergency Exists in Hawaii The pepole of Hawaii have issued an appeal to congress for federal interference to end the blockade of shipping by . nunrcrouea Harry Bridges' longshoremen's union, claiming that the POOR MAN S PH I LOSOPH E R prolonged strike is not a local labor dispute, but an active threat against the government, which U. S. Senator But ler (R., Neb.), told congress "was ready made in Moscow." The Honolulu Advertiser says that during the past 15 years, Bridges has "amply made plain his ambition to sub jugate the American people of Hawaii to his will, wreck their industry and commerce and reduce this free unit of the street and hailed the cab, tne united states to poverty ana seriaom. as a result, "oh, oh! a all transportation to Hawaii has been severed and all busi- g00a looker for ness paralyzed and the threat of starvation overhangs this a change," snld loyal territory. the driver. He The record of 15 years of warfare Harry Bridges has halted and for a waged against the territory, through his West Coast and moment consid- Island labor monopoly, now known as the ClO-Interna- red opening tional Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's union, which ,the ,or r wrt r..;.i.,t tit u j: tj ; j : her. Then he Avy iiuaiutm muiiftj' linn ucfligiitucu Luitlill llllin L-uunu- flinnpht "Oh F nated, is summarized as follows: 1934 Hawaii-West Coast shipping hailed by strike for 84 days. 1936 Hawnil-West Coast shipping halted by strike for 88 days. 1939-40 Hawaii-West Coast shipping halted by strike for 53 days. 1946 Twelve strikes against 43 longshore, fruit packing, sugar growing and milling companies, sugar industry (31) companies) paralyzed for from 80 to 122 days, irrigation stop page effects Mill being felt In 1949 harvest. 1947 Twenty-four strikes against 30 companies, including entire pineapple growing growing and packing industry, eon manufacturers tuna packers, Island sea and land transportation companies, longshore operators and two sugar plantations. 1U4B snipping crippled 84 days by West Coast longshore Love Can Be Complicated By HAL BOYLE New York W) The girl was dark-haired and young and pci ns a pony. There was a waggle lo ner Doay as sne sieppea into and hailed the cao. He's crazy jealous If I'm five minutes late for a date. I also got a dance instructor boy friend. He'.s more fun, but I can't depend on him. Some times he shows up for a date two days late." "Uh, huh," said the driver. Well, if you ask me ." "And then there's my bus driver boy friend, he's really the sweetest," the girl went on. "And there's the embalmer he makes more money than any of 'em. Calls me up 17 times a and gray they'll still think they day." deserve it." "Marry the embalmer," said So the young girl opened the the taxi driver. "Follow the door herself, perched on the dough, kid." But he gives me the creeps," she shuddered. "He is so proud of his work he wants me to come she down and watch him. And afterward I can't touch his hands giving Doc Smith this job, but when Doc got out of jail he was refused a real estate license, found himself unable to make a living, and pled with the gover nor to send him back to the peni tentiary where he could help re build others. Dr. Smith knew something about the difficulty of staging comeback, and thought he was qualified for this Job, so the gov ernor appointed him. He died, however, before very long in of fice. Then there was George Cald well, who went to jail for steal ing WPA materials and padding WPA payrolls. He is now the leading building contractor in Baton Rouge. Abe Shushan, who built the New Orleans airport, is now back in the business of being an honest man. Monty Hart, of all those convicted, failed to stage a comeback. He committed suicide. that even now he spends every spare minute he can to slip away from Baton Rouge on his farm. I got into a discussion of farm methods with the governor. "A pig," he said, "won't put on weight if it's unhappy. And a pig that is kept in cramped, dir ty quarters is unhappy. A pig likes to keep himself clean just as much as a human being. When you coop him up in a lot of filth, he just doesn't put on weight." I told the governoc that I was going to quote him to my wife who was still irked at the ornate hog barn I had built featuring running water and upstairs du plex sleeping quarters. The gov ernor allowed that it would be almost worth a trip to Washing ton to see this, and we both agreed that womenfolk didn't really appreciate the importance , L ..... . of comfort and cleanliness in the It was always my belief that life oi a hog (Copyright 19491 Huey Long and I knew him hell, why spoil! 'em when theyj are young? Give 'em some atten tion now, and when they're old Hal nJ)l. back seat, and said: "Welfare island ferry." As the cab started off, said: "Say, how many thousand dol strike, at cost of $10,000,000 to Hawaii's people. Further losses lars are there in a million dol- through two sugar plantation strikes, one railroad strike. 1949 Mainland-Hawaii shipping totally paralyzed by ILWU longshore strike against seven longshore companies which of fered 12-cent hourly wage raise. Bridges demanded 32 cents. Blockade of Hawaii already has lasted 66 days, estimated cost over SI4, 000,000, with no relief In sight for Island Americans. Sugar employes, same union, have voted strike against entire sugar intiustry. or bear to let him kiss me." "'Don't he wear rubber gloves?" "Yes, but " The Hawaiian bar association has called on the U.S. de- The driver mulled this over. As he halted near the ferry terminal, he said: "Honey, I've got it all figured out. Your detective is going to lars?" "Look," said the driver, "quit picking on me. If I knew how many thousands was in a million would I be driving a hack? Why do you want to know?' "Cause that old lady we Just passed on the sidewalk has a million dollars. Just Inherited partment of justice to investigate this "blockade of Amer- it. She lives at the hotel where while cleaning his gun. Your ican territory" and urged legislation that will prevent I work." embalmer will fix you up pretty. Bridges from isolating Hawaii whenever it suits his fancv. The cab paused at a red light, Your dance instructor will dnnro They see their means of livelihood, their jobs, their homes, and the driver asked: at the funeral and your first industries and their future hopes being destroyed bv ruth- wnaicna gom an tne way o husband will play the piano. i i , . ' ilnj u - u mi . i. . j. . ,,. , . nninic imuiiu uu snuu n nuv inen me dus oriver win tane day for?" everybody out to the cemetery "To see my daughter. She's for nothing. a bum heart really bum. -And. sister 11,. u-hnl. rfom nickel. worry She tossed her mane of mid- The girj pal(, ner lare and DeDt Of Vifnl Infnrmnfinn niRht nair back from hor damp laughed uneasily. LSCpr. OF VirtH inrormariOn forehead. She lit . cigarette "I know vnn'rp nnlv tnlrlnff moodily, "Oh, Hell! ,he ,aid, "but you're the second "Watsa matter now?" person who has told me the de- "Oh, my love life's all fussed tective will end up by shooting up" me." "How, little chicken?" The cab driver watched as she "Oh, I've divorced my hus- walked away. Thert was a de band he's piano player. And fiant waggle to her body. I've been going with a detective. "If I wasn't married and had BUt he's such a perfectionist, thxet kids" ht said. less blockades. Certainly the government should end this intolerable Altlllttlnn nnrl Hputrnpfiv. rilto v o nmi-i0uwliMf nr.,,. r. mi In Vim. I,- ..ui':- ...-it ' :.... Rot .uui uwo nniiuigiiiuiioi, iuuuc weiiiuc, ill ll eillcrgrilcy Ttnnirinp tlmt And lio' nnlv ivi . . caused by a labor monopoly dominated by a professional rgari old " w,! T ' cost yo.u .a bell rnisni. 10l,r years oia. What have you got to neil-raiser. ..Tcn tch.. cluckcd the driver. ab0ut'" Moscow, Ida. (U.R)Thls ought to make Idaho's hens feel better. The poultry husbandry department at the University of Idaho's agricultural experiment station sent out the following announcement today: "We regret to announce that w have an error to correct In the new extension bulletin 117, entitled 'Rations for Your Laying Hens.' On page 7, line I, the amount of fish oil anould bi two pints Instead of two quarts." CaV Is Favorite Proposal Spot Cincinnati (IP) An automobile Is the favorite place for pro posing marriage. Dr. Paul Popenoe told the Social Hygiene institute at the University of Cincinnati summer school Thurs day. "Tabulation of 1181 proposals reveals that an automobile now Is the favorite place for asking the question," he said, "because In many instances, this is the only place where a couple can find privacy." Next on the list comes the girl's home, Dr. Popenoe added, and in close third place are engagements started on the street, in the park restaurant or other public places. 'DONATING OUR OWN TIME' Four Americans to Build Home They Owe Japan' for Hiroshima Seattle W) Floyd W. Schmoe and three other Americans will sail for Hiroshima July 17 to build the house they feel they "owe Japan." Schmoe, whose daughter mar- Andrews, associate rJastor of the ricd a Japanese during the war, Japanese Baptist church here; said he has felt an obligation Miss Daisy Tibbs, home eco to build a house for some one nomics teacher at South Caro ln Japan ever since the Hiro- Una's Harbison college, and shima bombing. He has raised Miss Ruth Jenkins of the Univer $4,000 to fulfill it. sity of Arizona, a relief worker "We're donating our time." In Germany last year with the he said. "We are shipping American Friends service com nails, wiring, glass and roofing miltee. and plumbing materials from The structure they will build Seattle and will get the lumber will be a child welfare clinic, in Hiroshima. We'll use Japan- Schmoe's daughter, Esther, ese carpenters." married Gordon H. K. Hiraba- Schmoe will sail from San yashi during the war, an event Francisco aboard the General which caused considerable corn Gordon with the Rev. Emory ment at the time. The Wild and Woolly West Klamath Falls OJ.PJ Animal pedestrians, not auto traffie, bothered Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nichols, of Pelican City, on their trip to the mountains. Nichols said as they drove through the mountains from California, these things happened: 1. They nearly hit one deer. 2. They had to nudge a bull off the road. 3. A mountain sheep leaped completely over their ear. 4. They hit and killed an eight-point buck. The buck wis turned over to the Klamath Falls Old Folks home. Tha Nichols' car went to tht repair shop. Send your "Odds" questions on any subject to "The Wliard of Odds," care of the Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. . MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Snafu of Languages Gives Sidelight to Navy Maneuvers By DeWITT MacKENZIE IJPl Foreign Altalr MiajyMI England's historic Penzance Bay is the scene of a naval ex periment which is calculated to result in the creation of a united , western Europe fleet for defense against aggression. British .French and Dutch men-of war are massed In tht bay, while smaller Belgian warships are engaged In separate manu- igtmnm vers wun nrilisn vessels in neiiiuuriiig waiers. It is the beginning of an effort to coordinata tne widely varying memoas oi mese iieeis so that they can work as one. That's far from being as easy as It sounds. These navies are as individualistic as are tho men who sail and fight them. Their various customs and methods of operation are devel opments of many centuries. The different lan guages in themselves are a hazard for coordina tion. The very idea of such a submerging of iden tities probably would have brought shudders to that great sea-master, Admiral Lord Nelson, whose spirit paces the deck of every British naval ship unto this day. Yet the four navies are setting about the job in deadly earnest. Of course, this isn't the first time that British, French and ' Dutch warships have operated together (after a fashion), fof they joined with American ships to form the allied eastern fleet based on Ceylon during the late war. However, this association served to emphasize the differences and consequent difficulties of combined operations. Even their all important inter-communications at times got so gummed up, . because of the difference of language and customs, as to be most disconcerting. My colleague Charles Grumich, who is an old sea-dog by. virtue oi naving Deen wun me auieu navy ill me e i- xjh&i our ing the war, tells me the consensus of naval officers concerned was that there were a good many rough spots In the opera- ' tions of the combined fleets. ' By way of Illustration Grumich says: "This fleet made a series of 'club runs', as they called them, going out once a month to lay barrages and carries air-strikes on the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Sumatra and Java. "Arrival of the U.S.S. Saratoga, a rather ungainly old carrier from the Pacific led to a lot of celebrating. The British wera so happy that they changed over to. American signal flags, not knowing that the Saratoga had changed over to British signal flags. They had a helluva time making signals for a while. "The real snafu came when the French battle-wagon Richel ieu joined the fleet. Saratoga signaled over, asking if there was anything Richeleiu needed. The French came back with a re quest for 1,000 brassieres and the American gobs were just about to swim over to see why when a French linquist discovered that's what the French call life-jackets." Well, that's a page out of the past. Penzance Bay may well be seeing the beginning of a new tra in allied naval coordination. TRIAL FAILS TO ANSWER QUESTION: Why Did Judy Coplon Become a Spy for Russia? By DOROTHY WILLIAMS Washington, July 5 (U.R) What made Judith Coplon becoma a spy for Russia? Even the experienced, elderly jurist who sentenced her ad- mitted that he is mystified. - ; - "Here was a young woman Her school days were a series with infill its nrosDects." Federal of scholastic triumphs. At Bar- Judge Albert L. Reeves said, nard college the women's col- 'Before her a great future. "What prompted her to do it, I do not know but she under took to betray her country." Some have pat explanations. They talk of "an Inferiority com plex," of "frustration," of a "thirst for power." But to most of the reporters lege of Columbia university she was elected to Mortarboard, scholastic honor society. She was graduated with high honors. She worked while she was in college jobs in the school lib rary and such but no more than many students. Summers she was a camp counselor. There is no indication that she who covered her 10 weeks long " "v" trial she i, still an enigma muc'h prefer They have chatted with her than average with iarge dark and laughed with her more eyes and fine whlte leeth Her than is customary with defend- tinv figure is and ght hfJ ants but most of them admit a likeable personality, they do not know her. Hfir feosses cgUed her Judy, . ,, and they obviously liked her. Even when she was delivering They gave her a iwell lunch- a defiant tirade she seemed to eon before she went to Europo be masking the real Judy Cop- for a vacation in the spring of Ion. Even her hysteria seemed 1948. controlled. There was only once when she seemed about to shed her ar mor. That was when she enter' At the age of 27, Judy Coplon might have been a proper sub ject for a modest success story. juur. juui was wiicii one cuici- , . . . . ed the courtroom to hear the L6" ?"d.,She appeared to " verdict. ",s """ ... Her pale face was drawn. Re porters heard her whisper to Then came the information . her attorney that she didn't stlu undisclosed which started know whether she could "take FBI agents on her trail and led it or not." Defense Lawyer Arch- the unfolding of one of the ihnM Palmer nn hi nrm nhnnt most astounding espionage cases her. He patted her hand and in in the country's history. a few seconds she was, as usual, And the way she took It sug- . a sphinx. gested that she was no green The record shows she was hand, born into a Brooklyn family of But when and why did the better than average means. Her break come? What turned her i father was a toy merchant whose to Russia and away from her nat- gifts to the poor won him the ive land? nickname of "The Santa Claus At this point only Judith of the Adirondacks." Coplon knows tht answer. 1