n fill, .vrhrv" 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, Want 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, 2Sc; Monthly, $1.00; One Yeai, S12.00. By Mail in Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos., $4.00; One Year, $8.00. V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos.. $6.00; Year, $12. BY BECK Life's Little Tragedies 4 Salem, Oregon, Monday, July 18, 1949 Recalls the 1922 Oregon Primary The sudden death of Charles Hall, 69, from a heart attack, at Portland, former state senator and three times candidate for governor, recalls the hectic Oregon primary campaign of 1922, when Hall, endorsed candidate of the Ku Klux Klan, at the zenith of the hooded-shirt hysteria, was defeated by Governor Ben W. Olcott, who had the courage to denounce the Klan and was defeated in the general election by Walter M. Pierce, democrat. Mr. Hall was a personable, handsome fellow, a good campaigner, energetic and resourceful and attained suc cess as a promoter. He came to Oregon from Pennsylvania, was first a timber cruiser, then public works laborer in Portland, then a druggist in Clatskanie county, learning the profession he returned to later in life. After a course at the University of Michigan he returned to Oregon and acquired a drug store at Hood River, dealt in orchards, tind built three business blocks. In 1907 he promoted the Independent Telephone company, and con tinued as manager there until the merger of the line with O.-W. Telephone system. In 1907 Hall moved to Marshfield where he organized the Coos and Curry Telephone Co. and was off and on an executive official until 1930. In 1917 he organized the Bank of Southwestern Oregon, which he sold in 1921, the year he organized the American bank in lViiirshfield. He alse served as chairman of the board of the West Coast Telephone Co. and as president of the Pacific Bancorpora tion composed of 11 banks. He was state senator from Coos and Curry from 1921 to 1933, was prominent in community and lodge activities, until he left Marshfield for Portland. During the 1922 primary campaign, Governor Olcott issued a courageous attack on racial and religious intoler ance and the outrages perpetrated by the recently organ ized Ku Klux Klan, which was having a mushroom growth in Oregon. He was about the only state official that dared to take a stand against the rule of fanatical terrorism threatening the state. State, county and city governments, including the police, were mostly dominated by the Klan, especially in Portland and other cities. Politicians are usual ly opportunists, and after votes. The newspapers of the state were pretty well silenced or sympathetic. Only five of the dailies vigorously fought for preservation of constitutional liberty, including the Capital Journal. All five faced systematic boycotts and reprisals from the bigots. Only one of them was serious ly affected, the Portland Telegram, the only daily in the metropolis that rejected, amid torchlight parades and fiery crosses, a hush-hush policy. The following was the 1922 vote in the republican pri mary for governor: i domY mind vou MAKING YOUR FRIEND A SANDWICH. BUT THATS ALMOST A MEAL . HE SURELV ISNT STARVING...' HIS FOLKS CANT, i rem POOH. V Mi WTrl THEY AREA r MOM. THEY - 3PJ HAVENT EVEN A g SSgBJ GOT A PIANO flffiftSI V BE THAT r-rfM FOR HIM TO 3 SSmmi WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Private Power Lobby Sabotages Truman Promise By DREW PEARSON Washington The private power lobby pulled skillful wires in the senate appropriations committee last week and created a neat short circuit in one of Mr. Truman's famous campaign promises. The effect was to switch public power over to the private utility companies in the west. What the committee did was that public power lines would cut out appropriations for gov- rob Montana of power by trans- ernment transmission facilities porting it to Idaho for an atomic energy plant. Released to the press by James Flaherty, presi dent of the Montana Chamber of Commerce, this was categorical ly denied by Atomic Energy Chairman David Lilienthal. BY GUILD Wizard of Odds S and invite the private power compa n i e s to build them in stead. This would stop pub lic power from being transmit ted to the pub lic except through the pri vate companies at their own higher rates. The committee voted so secret- Drew Pearson Montana is a long way from Iowa, but the Montana Power company even influenced Rep. Ben Jensen, Iowa republican. Arising on the house floor, Jen sen produced a map of Montana. Congressman John Rooney, lire tuiimiiucc .cu u-l,l J ly behind closed doors that its '", '' action was scarcely noted by the j J SIPS FOR SUPPER press. Yet the effect was to sa botage the entire Truman public-power program. True Liberal The man who really threw the switch I merely want to ask the gentleman who prepared this beautiful map?" sweetly inquir ed Rooney. "Who does the gentleman sup- AFTER MAKINu A PLANE RESERVATION, IT'S 19 TO I YOU WON I WNltL. (AN INJlntSJlHQ R00S,KeitMTX.) IF YOU'RE AN AMERICAN BUSINESSMAN, ODPS ARE 3 TO Z YOU TOOK AN 0VERNI6HT BUSINESS TRIP ONCE DURING 1948. SOMEONE INJURED IN A SOCCER 6AME? IT'S 17 TO 3 THE MISHAP OCCURRED TO THE LEG. (8 INJURIES PER PLAYER PER SEA SON IS PAR.) V HA V"i " By DON UPJOHN From a little town in Lincolnshire, England, comes a dispatch that the vicar at the village church yesterday staged a special service for the 10 pubkeepers of the town and their regular cus tomers number- in favor of the electric . rir.C- " irrrnTn. nv Promptly replied Rooney. ing about fifty F"? He invited the customers along so it would not interfere with the bartending and drinking for the day. Each nub was given its own pew and the vicar made the rounds on Saturday night versing the practice established by the Salvation Army many years ago. The Army took re ligion into the pubs and the vicar was merely bringing the pubs into the church. Thomas, .Oklahoma democrat, Thomas, who has not hesitat ed to use his prestige as a U. S. senator to influence the commod ities market on which he was speculating, rallied enough dem ocratic votes to give the repub licans the voting majority. "Why, of course they did," blustered Jensen. "They are fighting for their lives. I am glad the gentleman asked." Don TJpJotra Twas Ever Thus (50 Years Ago in Pendleton East Oreeonian) Editorial: "The women are beginning to plan to go away to have a few beers and explain for the summer to disport them- the plan. "The pub and the selves in cool idleness, leaving church are close together," he their husbands their lesser said, "both being for refresh- halves, whose sorrows as well as ment and good fellowship." He joys they are supposed to share, plans to repeat the affair a year to bear the dust and heat as well from now and oDen a barrel of as the burden of life, alone and beer after the service. unaided." So skillful did the lobbies op erate that the senate appropria- The two senators who fought usual en o nami th in hardest to save public power dividual p 0 w e r companies WTt CaL uyde" ?L Arlzona which they wanted to receive and Joe O'Mahoney of Wyoming, the lush bonan2a of government democrats. They were joined on fmanced power, most votes by Senator Dennis T , .. Chavez of New Mexico, demo- Jto.JEL?E j tvt!i named to carry power from the aVdw uv g0f Anderson Ranch dam near North Dakota, republican. Boise Those who voted with Thomas pac'ific Gas and Electric com. for the b i g power companies is to get the shasta dam were Senators Pat McCarran of facimies, supplying the rich Nevada and Kenneth McKeller California central valley. 01 x ennessee, democrats, ana Chan Curney of South Dakota, Clyde Reed of Kansas and Guy Cordon of Oregon, republicans. Democratic Webster Holmes J, 995 Walter M. Pierce 15,144 Will E. Purdy 1,261 Harvey G. Starkweather 6,325 Republican Louis E. Bean 3,870 Charles Hall 42,511 J. B. Lee 2,066 Ben W. Olcott 43,032 I. L. Patterson 13,019 Geo. A. White 10,156 After the election which was so close that the result was in doubt until the official count, the .publisher of the Capital Journal was arrested and stood trial for having changed his registration from democrat to republican, being sworn in at the polls by freeholders, which was sanctioned by the then existing election laws. He was promptly acquitted but the incident reflects the bitter ness of the KKK rule or ruin campaign for dominance, attempted boycotts and other reprisals having been tried and found futile. Marines Are No 'Luxury' Salem's own Marine Corps reserve unit had a birthday Sunday. C battery of the Fourth 105 m.m. howitzer bat talion was formed locally two years ago. It was this unit that was first in the Pacific Northwest to reach full strength. And the same unit won the Northwest company pistol league championship this year. The pride and record of this particular unit of the Corps Is typical of the United States Marines. That esprit de corps, the compactness of the combat units, and the special ized training and missions have won for the Leathernecks a place in the nation's history. What will be written in the future, however, is what concerns the Corps these days. There has been recent agitation in Washington, D. C, to eliminate the Marines. A behind-the-scenes campaign would disband the Corps as such. The Leathernecks' duties would be taken over by the army. The Marine air wings would be merged with the Air Forces. This kind of opposition thinking considers the Marines as a 'luxury" force. Those would-be wreckers of the Corps have closed their minds to a record of 174 years in spearheading attacks and moving into tough spots. The Marines have always been small in size so as to be ready at all times for jobs that called for a readiness to die. How could a nation forget what a debt it owes to the men who wear the globe and anchor on their uniforms? How can their services be considered a "luxury"? Salem didn't forget its Marines Sunday. The Leather necks' record is one that will stand up with that of any military organization in the world. There is no reason for ever forgetting the Marines. And there won't be so long as the Corps is permitted to remain as a specialized unit of Uncle Sam's armed forces. An 'S' in Three RV St Louis (U.R) Chairman 3. Harry Pohlman of the board of education's finance committee was a little hasy about the "three R's" of education at a committee meeting. "Every child in our school system," he said, "should have a thorough grounding In the three R's reading, writing and spelling." 4 Grandchildren in 11 Days Butte, Mont W) Four timet within 11 days Mr. and Mrs. Don Cronln became grandparents. The quartet of cousins were the main attraction for several lays at the hospital nursery. This is an ODen-mindedness not often found among the cler gy. But if it worked so suc cessfully with the adult pub minded folk, why couldn't some similar plan be worked out to stimulate interest in Sunday school? We expect the kids could be made to flock to a spe cial Sunday school gathering where free comics were dis tributed, a few transcription of radio crime thrillers put on, free pop, candy and gum and a range set up after the session for a little target practice. As long as the kids are going to have a regular diet of these things there's no reason why they shouldn't be included in their Sunday fare, as well. After all, the English vicar was only re- It seems the county has picked up a neat piece of change from the new parking regulations at the courthouse block as result of a law of the last legislature allowing enforcement of the rules by fine or imprisonment. But the early examples will probably bring about what Fire Chief Roble has asked for free lanes into the courthouse building in case of fire or emer gency. As soon as it is found the county officials mean busi ness night parking will be found elsewhere. The showdown fight will now take place in the conference be tween senate and house appro priations members. The house has already voted The Public Service company fo Colorado is to construct fa clities for the big Thompson project. - The committee report stated that private companies should transmit power to government projects free of charge. This was not required by law, how ever, in the past, the electric against the power companies and companies have flatly refused. fight for the public interest is NOTE During President TViimon1 rtnKnptnrminM itrVii( tough Congressman Mike Kir- te.st tour th th'e west wan of Ohio. Though he hasn't he repeatedly warned: "The a. single tivwci piujcit 111 ills uis- trict, Mike is always ready to Send your "Odds" questions on any subject to "The Wizard of Odds," care of the Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon.. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Louis Goes 14 Years On Borrowed Blood ; By HAL BOYLE New York VP) Little Louie, the kid who lives on borrowed blood, has had a good year. "I don't get as tired as I used to," he said, as he rested on a hosDital bed aft- Wmmmmmmmmm "tney tnrew adverbial phrases at us, and I can't tell a depend ent clause from an independent clause very easy" -but that doesn't worry him. He feels, with some justification, that grammar isn't everything in sports announcing. He used to have to stay in the hospital several days, receiving a pint of blood each day. Now he only comes each Thursday, gets a pint, and goes home. "T know n lnfr nf npnnla Im-a to fully replenish their own now.. said Louie who has be-blod- . , , come a kind of mascot at the There is no cure known. They hospital. "After all, I been corn must live on the blood of others ingiere since I was just a kid." or die. And usually they die v . . . ,, .u . . Rnf in T.nnio'e wW "Yes, and you teU the doetori ai .,j 4k... j. . now how to give transfusions,1 93 pound frame there is a great ., . , f,rf ,. '. gusto for living, a stout heart that won't give up. He is in his 14th year now, and there is a good chance he may yet win his long and tedi ous gamble for life. er receiving his 500th transfu sion. Louis was given his first transfusion a t the age of seven months when doctors discov ered he had Cooley's a n e mia. This rare childhood dis ease whose victims are unable Ha) BoyU power monopoly wants to own rou up nis sleeves ana Dauie ior carry tne p0wer from govern- public power. The senate's sellout to the pri- 'If we can pull him through until he's 20, he may improve smuea ur. Margaret Rice, a pediatrician. "And some Thurs days you don't come when you should." Louis squirmed and looked busy. He doesn't like to talk about the times he plays hookey from the transfusion needle. The usual reason is he gets too ment dams to the users. . . . The monopoly wants the transmission Multnomah county's sheriff is familiarly known as Mike but his first name really is Marion. Wonder if he was named after our favorite county? vate power companies was the lines so that it can charge what result of high-paid, high-pres- it likes for the power. The sure lobbying. power companies want to take The Montana Power company neir cut out of the investment was an example. John Corette, made by the government for the vice Dresident of Montana now- benefit of the people. Tragic Twist of Fate Davis, Calif. (U.R) Arthur Greenbaum of San Francisco crawled out of his overturned automobile in a field near here only to walk onto the highway, where he was killed by a car. CAPITOL COP IN NEW CAREER 'Skeet' Hunt Went Home To Die-But He Fooled Em By HARMAN W. NICHOLS Biloxi, Miss., July 18 (U.R) Five years ago, Washington kissed Walter "Skeet" Hunt goodbye and sent him home to ol' Mississippi to die. They took him to a hospital, parasol with a bow to the irate and the surgeons said "so long," lady. er, personally visited every member of the house and sen ate appropriations committees. While he was exerting h i s charm in Washington, his com pany back home was publishing a propaganda book called "Pub- lice Power Means High Taxes, Truman blamed the G.O.P. controlled 80th cogress for obey ing "the orders of the power monopoly" and refusing "to pro vide the money for public trans mission lines." Now the senate appropriations committee, con trolled by democrats, has gone a step farther. They stipulate too. The late ReD. Marion Zion- But none of them reckoned ehek, the madcap congressman with "Skeet," a tough old cop wno lined to waae Dareiootea in and a champion fighter of odds, ornamental pools around Wash- He'd been on the rones before ington, was another headache. financially and otherwise and nobody was going to count him out now. "Skeet" was right. Socialism and Less Money for tnat the - lines actu irngation. aUy be built by the Mme ..power The Montana Chamber of monopoly." Commerce even spread the lie (copyright 1949) Daredevil Stunt Is Costly Cheboygan, Mich., m Haste wasted 1 53.35 and four auto mobile tires for Edgar Malin Malin, speeding to get across the Cheboygan river State street bridge before it lifted, poked his car through a guard rail, raced it up the raised part of the bridge and jumped the four-foot opening. As the car landed at the other side of the span, all four tires blew out. Then Malin was fined in justice court on a reckless driv ing charge. said Dr. Harvey Gollance, dep-..interested in a baseball game uty medical superintendent at and forgets to go to the hospital. A the King's County hospital. play first base and the out- "There are cases of that kind field," said Louis and added in the medical records." modestly, "of course, I do a Louis is a quick-witted, cheer- little pitching, too." ful, intelligent boy. Somehow He has never seen a major he has learned the odds are league game, and one of his big- against him, but he discounts gest ambitions is to watch his the odds. He's sure he'll make hero, Joe DiMaggio, knock a it- " home run. He prefers the New And hundreds of New York- York Yankees over the Dodgers ers who never saw him have treason in Brooklyn, helped keep the small, dark- "I just like the way the Yan- haired kid alive through blood kees play," he said. " I like donations to the Brooklyn Red their style better. I saw them Cross. on television once." He talked about his future as he lay there waiting for his The 500 pints of blood bor- 0me a"d me- rowed by Lou'e in his short life- "When I grow up, I'm going time is equivalent to th. amount to be a radio sports announcer," that flows , tn yei f he confided shyly. "Every- aduUs Sometime he'd like to body at school says I got a . . . , good speaking voice and I take be a donner himself, part in all the plays." "I'd like to help someone the Louie didn't do too well in same way people help me," he, his English studies this year said. But he was no match for 'Skeet," who once carried the lawmaker, kicking in protest, to dry land and personally laced nn hie eVinna and 4nnlr him Today he and Mrs. Hunt opcr- ,ome atc a thriving sea-food estab- . . . lishment here, by the Gulf v.nm ,ar.ii hill n th. ih of Mexico And doing well with market here was , ,onR nop or iruzen iisn. "Skeet," white-thatched and But, after a long inter lude in the hospital, he made it. He had a lot of time to think, missing a few important teeth, and he put his time and thoughts still likes to reminisce about to good use. Before long he Washington, and how he got came up with the idea of those there. He was just recovering fancy packets of frozen fish. His from one of his setbacks in 1932 specials are stuffed flounder, when, he recalls. Sen. Pat Harri- which comes frozen and ready son asked him how he'd like to for a quick warmover in the take a fling at Washington. Hunt oven, and crab pie a combina- said he wouldn't mind. tion of crab meat celery, onions, He started out as a capital po- peppers, parsley, mustard, bread liceman, became disbursing of- crumbs, cooking oil. hot sauce, ficcr and a liaison man between flour, salt and shortening, the White House and the senate. "Skeet." recalling the fortune Finally, in 1936. he was made that slipped through his fingers chief of the CaDitol cops, because he couldn't see World "Skeet" promptly found himself War I coming, hopes he might in the midst of trouble which be able to recouD by shipping he dearly loves. his specialty all over the coun- Mostly his job was to keep the try. crackpots from rushing the floor Especially does he hope to of congress. It posed problems recoup on what he missed when which he usuallv met with head he failed to reconnize the ap- work and Irish savvy, but, in proach of World War II. land lies in Southern Korea. That is south of the 38th parallel that divides Korea into two sepa rate countries. extreme cases. persuasion. with forceful At that time he owned a par cel of ground about 40 acres- There was the time a lady on the outskirts of his native tried to crash the house to op- Biloxi. He thought he was pull pose conscription. lng a good one when he sold it She wouldn't take "no" for for $7500. an answer. When "Skeet" He realizes now that he blocked her wav. she swung her should have held on a while, parasol and brought it down That same strip of ground, now crashing on "Skcet's" head. But part of the sprawling area he stood his ground and, like the known as Keesler air force base, gentleman he is, returned the later brought $300,000. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN 400,000 Men Asked For Little War in Korea ' By JAMES D.WHITE (Sututltutlnt tor DeWItt MacKtnzlr. AP Foreltn News Analyst) Since late May, a warm little war has been going on in a remote corner of Korea. Northern and Southern Koreans have been killing each other !? !lf."5iin-P!ni2?Uia:. M southern Korea by July 1. A n. i s(hr military advisory mission re mains. The little war on Obgjin is merely the latest clash more severe than usual in a lone The upper, smaller part is series of border incidents, north of the line. From this There have been no reports that northern region north Korean the Koreans are any more work militia moved across the bound- cd up about it than usual, ary and tried to take over. it may have helped to speed The southerners say they Up, however, consideration by threw them back, but that the the American congress of a northerners keep infiltrating measure which would give back and have to be cleaned out. southern Korea about $150 mil- lion in American aid. This little war hasn't got very hot yet. Meanwhile Dr. Syngman The front is only about 25 Rhee, head of the southern gov- miles long. Neither side has ernment, has asked United Na- thrown its real army into the tions permission to quadruple fight. his armed forces. That would There is a United Nations make them number about 400,- commission in southern Korea 000 men. which has reported that it can't Friday his assembly in Seoul do much more than observe voted two years compulsory what is going on. military training for all Korean It has tried recently to get men reaching 20 years of age. into Soviet-dominated northern His government was set up Korea. It wanted to verify the under United Nations auspices, withdrawl of Soviet troops last It is recognized by the United winter. The request was acidly States and several of its allies rejected by the northern Kor- in the cold war as the legal gov- cans. ernment for all Korea. This American combat troops left government is anti-communist. BUYING A CAR? COMPARI OUR BANK LOAN PLAN Before you finance, investigate our low-cost bank auto loan plan. You'll find it pays to borrow her at your bank, where you get prompt, panooal service. No "buried" charges we tell you th exact cost in adranca. Establish bank credit and save money on your auto loan her. WILLAMETTE VALLEY BANK Salem's Independent Bank f Savinfs Interest J 1990 Fairgrounds Rd. Phon 3-9281