Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, July 30, 1949, Page 9, Image 9

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    House Group OK
FEPC Bill Wins
Washington, July 30 The
. administration bill for a perma
k.nent federal employment prac-
ticei law (FEPC) advanced a ma
jor step in congress Friday.
The house labor committee ap
proved FEPC by a reported vote
of 14 to 11 and sent it to the
house for possible action at this
session.
The bill came out of commit
tee unchanged, and retaining the
"teeth" provided by its enforce
ment feature. This feature,
strongly opposed by southern
democrats, permits a federal
commission to issue cease and re
sist orders against discrimina
tory practices in employment
and labor organizations.
It is the administration's long
delayed bill for creation of a fed
eral fair employment practices
law (FEPC) to prohibit discrim
ination in employment and la
bor unions because of race, re
ligion, color or national origin.
West Side Bus Runs
To Resume August 1
Resumption of twice a day
service between Salem and Port
land on the west side highway
via Dayton will go into effect
August 1, it is announced in
Portland by Carl J. Wendt, gen
eral manager of Oregon Motor
Stages. The service was discon-
tinued a few months ago.
. The first bus will leave Sa
f lem at 8:10 a. m. and arrive in
Portland at 9:50 a. m. The sec
ond round-trip starts here at
2:30 p. m. with Portland arrival
time 4:10 p. m.
On the return the bus will
leave Portland at 10:30 a.
and arrive m Salem at 12:10
p. m. The last bus from Portland
will leave at 4:45 p. m. and ar
rive In Salem at 8:30 p.m.
Communists in China
May Set Half World Afire
San Francisco, July SO (U.R) Communism in China will even
tually go the way of all other imported philosophies, but in
the meantime the 4,500,000 men under arms and under Red lead
ership may succeed in setting fire to half the world, the Common
wealth Club of California was told here today by Frank H.
Bartholomew, vice president of
the United Press.
"President LI Tsung-Jen told
me at Canton last month that he
had twice proposed to Com
munist Leader Mao Tse-Tung a
proportionate reduction of both
the nationalist and communist
armies, and had twice been re
fused," Bartholomew reported.
"There is only one reason for
the maintenance by Mao of the
largest army in the world, Li
(who is himself a four-star gen
eral) said. It won't take four
, and a half million men to cap-r-
lure Canton. The Red army is
maintained at full strength for
a march across China's borders
southward Into the French and
Dutch areas.
In Hard Straits
"Britian's Hong Kong is cer
tain to fall unless Britain can
trade herself out with the com
munists. Li predicted, and said
that the United States would
require rare good luck to escape
involvement in an Asian con
flict that might inevitably con
cern our commitments to Japan
and the Philippines.
"The Marshall Plan, said Li,
is like a dike around Europe. If
it protects Europe from the poi
soned flood waters welling up
from Moscow, it will only be at
the expense of diverting the
tide acorss Asia.
"The flood of communism is
already ereeping Into the most
thickly populated areas of the
$$ MONEY $$
FHA
W
m Real Estate Loins
Farm or City
Personal and Auto Loans
State Finance Co.
Id S. Hlfh 8t Lie. 621 !
Blue Angels Pilots of the famous "Blue Angels of the U. S.
navy. Left to right they are Lt. (j.g.) H. C. MacKnight; Lt.
(j.g.) H. R. Heagerty; Lt. (j.g.) E. F. "Fritz" Roth; Lt. Comdr.
R. E. "Dusty" Rhodes, the leader of the team; Lt. (j.g.) J. H.
"Jake" Robcke; and Lt. (j.g.) G. W. Hoskins.
Buckley Talks With Hug
About Facility Dedication
Flying here from Seattle Friday Capt. A. E. Buckley, command
er of the Naval Air Reserve Training Unit at Sand Point, Seattle,
conferred with Lt. Comdr. Wallace
the ceremonies established Salem's Naval Air Facility and com
missioning the Aviation 'Volunteer Unit, Active.
The captain, accompanied by9
the executive officer for the
training unit, Cmdr. D. A. Mc-
Isaacs, also inspected the Salem
facility during his visit here.
Plans for the establishing cere
mony set for August 5, schedul
ed it for 3 p.m. on the apron to
the facility, located on the west
side of McNary field.
Housewives Picket
Town's Sin Joints
Gary, Ind., July 30 (U.R)
About 100 Gary housewives, de
termined to rid the steel town
of sin and vice, paraded as pick
ets before 17 bawdy houses and
bookie joints.
Despite the 96-degree heat,
the women vowed to continue
their picketing until lawless ele
ments were driven from the city.
And though they sometimes
partook of refreshments offered
by the prorietors they picketed
they steadfastly refused to- en
ter the establishments to cool
off in their air-conditioned at
mospheres.
The pickets were members of
the Women's Citizens committee
organized last spring when a
school teacher, Mary Cheever,
was slain brutally In an alley.
They contend that thieves and
murderers have been attracted
to the city by wide-open gam
Ming and prostitution. They
staged an all-out fight to clamp
a lid on the city last spring but
the campaign subsided after of
ficials promised to clean the city
up.
The women charge that the
officials failed to do so.
world here in the orient, where
living standards are lowest and
unrest is rampant."
Li pleaded for aid from the
United States on a basis of Am
erican self-interest, the news
paperman said.
Won't Retreat
"As long as I am head of the
Chinese republic we will never
retreat to Formosa and leave
our southern borders open for
the communists to march into
French Indo-China and the
Netherlands Indies, Li told' me,"
Bartholomew said. "We will
fall back to Chungking, into a
naturally defensive area, and
try to do our part by holding a
protective corridor parallel to
China's south border."
Li strongly criticised Chiang
Kai-Shek's apparent intention to
abandon the Chinese mainland
to its fate and establish the
national capital on Formosa,
Bartholomew said. And predic
ted that a showdown on the
point would develop almost im
mediately as the Red armies
steadily approached Canton.
FARMERS LIME
We have high test Roseburg
Lime, available at
Independence.
Contact Bradley Lime
Products
1145 Hood St. Ph. 2-0594
or Independence, 2nd Sc E
Lliten to koco I p. M.
PLUMBING!
CONTRACTING
J Featuring Crane ;J
M and Standard Fixtures
Call 3-8555
Salem Heating & t
i Sheet Metal Co.
i 1085 Broadway !
J; FREE ESTIMATES $
Hug on preliminary plans for
The main address is to be
made by Capt. Buckley, who is
to be accompained to Salem from
Seattle by a party of naval of
ficers from the 13th naval dis
trict. Among those invited to at
tend the ceremony from Seattle
are Rear Adm. H. H. Good. USN
commandant of the 13th naval
district; Cmdr. W. W. Jones,
assistant district director of Na
val Reserves (air), 13th naval
district; and Capt. F. B. John
son, commanding officer of the
Naval Air. Station at Seattle.
Also coming from Seattle for
the ceremony is the 13th Naval
district 17-piece band under the
direction of Navy Bandmaster
C. G. Ellis. The band, to be
flown to Salem for the ceremon
ies in an R4D transport, will
give a concert of from 45 min
utes to an hour in length.
As part of the program for the
ceremonies the "Blue Angels,
the official flight exhibition
team of the U. S. navy, coming
here for the American Legion
state convention, will give about
a 20-minute exhibition of preci
sion flying. In command of the
group of six fliers and eight
ground crew members is Lt,
Comdr. R. E. "Dusty" Rhodes.
Thirty-four naval planes from
Seattle are also slated to flv into
balem for the August 5 ceremo
ny. Twelve of these planes will
be TBMs and 22 of them FBFs.
Farraguf Institute
Not Opening in Fall
Coeur D'Alene, Idaho, July 30
P) Farragut college and tech
nical institute, created to pro
vide schooling for GIs will not
reopen this fall.
The board of directors so an
nounced today.
The school opened October
14, 1946, utilizing many of the
buildings where thousands of
sailors attended boot camp dur
ing the war. . The school former
ly was Farragut naval training
station.
Peak employment was 1.100
students during the 1946-47
school term. The school was
financed by tuitions and funds
solicited from persons and busi
nesses. 'Announcing plans not to re
open after the summer recess,
the board said the "educational
emergency which existed at the
time the college was formed has
ceased to exist."
STATTON
BEAN FESTIVAL
DANCE
Curt Kennon Orchestra
SATURDAY
NEEDLES OIL BEITS PARTS
TO
White
SEWING
MACHINE
YOU!
AUTHORIZED AGENCY
EXPERT REPAIRING ALL MAKES
Miller's
Downstairs
LEON'S
FRUIT STAND
4905 N. RIVER ROAD
Cantaloupes . 2 for 35c
Peaches-Apples-Plums
OTHIR FRESH FRUITS
Filbert Spray
Deadline Set
The second spray or dust for
filbert worm control should be
applied before August 4, accord
ing to Dr. B. G. Thompson, en
tomologist at Oregon State col
lege. Thompson reports heavy moth
emergence and egg laying on Ju
ly 27-28. Since filbert moth eggs
hatch in about eight days, Aug
ust 4 is the deadline for spray
ing or dusting to kill the lar
vae before they enter the fil
berts.
The same materials as used in
the first spray or dust are re
commended. For spraying, grow
ers may use either three pounds
lead arsenate to 100 gallons of
water or two pounds of 50 per
cent wettable DDT to 100 gal
lons of water.
For growers following a dust
program, a 40 percent lead ar
senate or a 5 percent DDT-dust
applied at the rate of 40 to 50
pounds per acre is recommend
ed. Where DDT is used, it is sug
gested that the ground beneath
the trees be well sprayed or
dusted also. Regardless of what
insecticide is used, thoroughness
of application is n e c essary.
Thompson reminds growers that
the only feeding done by the lar
vae before they enter the nuts
is on the undersides of the
leaves.
A combination spray is recom
mended for those growers hav
ing a worm and blight problem.
The recommended spray con
sists of Bordeaux mixture 6-2-
100 (6 pounds of copper sulfate
2 pounds of quick (caustic) lime
or 3 pounds of hydrated lime.
and 100 gallons of water) plus
lead arsenate (3 pounds in 100
gallons of spray) plus an effi
cient, compatible spreader-stick-
The combination spray is
based on experimental work
carried on by Dr. P. W. Miller,
plant pathologist of the U.S.
department of agriculture, and
Thompson.
French Ratify
Atlantic Pact
Paris, July 30 P) The upper
house of the French parliament
ratified the Atlantic pact, 284-
20, Friday.
The lower house had previ
ously ratified it. The treaty
now goes to President Vincent
Aunol for formal ratification.
The motion of approval also
called on the United States to
back the treaty with arms,
It asked the French govern
ment to "use all its authority to
obtain the furnishing from the
United States government of
armaments and modern equip
ment indispensible to the French
armies in effectively filling the
obligations of defense and aid
under the Atlantic pact."
This request took the place of
a demand by General De
Gaulle's brother, Pierre, that
would have conditioned ap
proval on an American guaran
tee of arms.
The 20 opposition votes were
cast by communists and their af
filiates. The Bahamas exported more
than 2,500,000 pounds of toma
toes last season.
That phona number is
FOR THE BEST
Hauling
Storage
Fuel
VAN LINIS CO.
LARMER
TRANSFER
and
STORAGE
889 No. Liberty
"Our reputation
Is
your security"
3-313T
j
' il I
fit zs Si J
Spots Before Their Eyes Herbert Harris, 11, (left) and
Sally Brady, 9, display the myriad freckles which won them
their titles as king and queen of a freckle contest conducted
during children's day at the Chicago Railroad fair (July 28.)
(AP Wirephoto)
Earlier Days Recalled in
Letter From Gaylord Cooke
By BEN MAXWELL
Gaylord W. Cooke, once a Capital Journal compositor and
popular among the younger set
1890s, has written friends that he soon will leave Fairmont Hos
pital at San Leandro, Calif., and expects to re-establish himself
so soon as his son can find him a suitable place to go.
Mr. Cooke mentions having'
started to school in Salem in,
1878 (probably at Big Central)
and names Ossian Shirley and
Etta Calvert as being in the
same grade and graduating from
high school with him.
(Beginning about 1888 the
ninth and 10th grades were of
fered at East school and these
upper grades were called high
school.)
Other schoolmates mentioned
are Jessie Creighton and Delia
Payne, along with Milton Mey
ers who, Mr. Cooke relates,
joined the class about 1882.
Hotels Listed
Some of the historical articles
published in Salem papers are
wrong in respect to dates, and
others, says Mr. Cooke, tell only
part of the story. There were
more than two hotels in Salem
in 1852, he says, and goes on to
relate that E. N. Cooke was
proprietor of the Mansion house
which stood at Liberty and
Division streets. His father and
mother lived there after their
marriage in Portland, August 4
1852.
Mr. Cooke mentions that when
he was compositor on the Capi
tal Journal, Fred Lockley was
pressman and Walter Williams,
foremanr Flora Spriggs was
also on the staff.
Gaylord W. Cooke, who left
Salem more than 50 years ago,
was one of six children in the
family of Joseph Cooke, Oregon
pioneers of the early 1850s. For
many years the family lived on
North Commercial street at a
fwt KmoG&s hm immto emi twts
YOUR 'eOOD MORMlN&'HAerT!
Try Kellogg's new improved 40 Bran
Flakes! Crisptr, tutterl They supply
whole-grain Yitamina, minerals, and
extra bulk. Many diets need thle to help
prevent constipation. The good-to-eat
way to encourage "good morning"
habits. Enjoy Kellogi'i Bran Flakes . . .
In the white, red and green package!
WHEN IS A BURGLARY . . .?
A burglary occurs only when forceful entry is mode into
premises not open for business. Burglary insurance at
SALEM'S GENERAL OF AMERICA AGENCY will pay for
damage by forceful entry as well as the loss.
CHUCK
INSURANCE
Cutomtr Parking at Our New Location
"JUST A LITTLE OFF CENTER"
173 N. Church
that flourished in Salem in the
location given in the 1880 direc-
tory as between Division and
Fir.
Joseph Cooke was a machinist
and for some years was engaged
in the planing mill business, first
with Smith and later with Roork
in the old Pacific Agricultural
works.
Known As Writer
Belle W. Cooke, who came to
Oregon in 18S1 at the age of 17,
lived in Salem for many years.
She was first a teacher at the
old Oregon Institute and later
became one of Salem's early
music teachers. She is more
particularly distinguished as
poetess, though her "Tears and
Victory," published in Salem by
E. M. Waite in 1871 is now rare
ly seen. The few surviving
copies of these poems now in ex
istence are cherished items
sought by book collectors. Belle
Cooke died at Newberg January
19, 1919, at the age of 85.
Mr. Cooke is correct in saying
there were more than two hotels
in Salem in 1852. There were
five and possibly seven. E. N,
Cooke, who had recently acquir
ed John Starkey's house at Lib
erty and Division streets was
running a hotel there. In addi
tion there was the newly com
pleted Bennett house, the Island
house operated by J. D. Boon,
the rough and tumble Holman
house down by the steamboat
wharf, the Union house at Ferry
and Commercial streets, and the
Washington house operated by
Made ffie
genuine Keiogg way
1
MOTHER KNOWS
AGENCY
JO"1"; I '
X BOX 1
JTBESTI
W CM ET
Ph. 3-9119
Capital Journal. Salem, Oregon, Saturday, July SO, 1941)
NEW SET OF VALUES NEEDED
Barbara Stanwyck Blames
Gimmes of Single Girls
By PATRICIA CLARY
Hollywood (U.R) Barbara Stanwyck says the reason a million
single women today can't get husbands is that they concentrate
on gimme, gimme, gimm'e.
"Women have only themselves to blame for most of their
troubles," says Miss Stanwyck, who is happily married to Robert
Taylor. "They want to be '
mounted on a solid gold pedes-.
tal. They care about nothing
but gimme, I gotta have, I want.
"Some girls ought to get
themselves a new set of values."
Miss Stanwyck, who is star
ring at Paramount in "File on
Theima Jordon," a Hal Wallis
picture, says a marriage must
be founded firmly in affection
and respect.
"If I were a man today," she
said, "I'd think not twice but
five or six times before taking
the plunge. Too many gents
have already been taken to the
cleaners.
"The little nest a girl talks
about turns out to be an air
conditioned plush nest in Bel
Air. They want to date men
with Cadillacs and sneer at the
poor guy in a '38 Ford. They're
on display like a neon sign. And
just as brittle
There's still hope for the sin
gle women, however, if they can
learn to be feminine and nat
ural, she went on.
"A girl must be herself grace
fully," she said. ' "I don't dye
my hair, for instance. It's
rather gray. Well, I like it this
way. I'm not 22 any more, and
whats wrong with gray hair?
To me it's all a part of maturing
John Byrne and Louis Demers.
The latter, first to publicize its
excellence, advertised in Bush's
weekly published at Oregon
City June 20, 1851.
When You
Think of
LIFE
Insurance
Think of
NEW YORK
LIFE
And when you think of New
York Life think of
Waif Wadhams
SPECIAL AGENT
578 Rose St.
Salem. Oregon
Phone 27930
"If yon Ilk tne oall m Wall"
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DUCK PIN BOWLING - BILLIARDS
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League Teams and Individuals Interested in
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B AND B BOWLING COURT
3085 Portland Rd. TOM WOOD, Owner Ph. 24418
"Holly
Says:
99
UALITY
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gracefully.
Things like that about a wo
man don't matter if she can be
gentle and feminine."
The nation's spinsters better
hurry up and start appreciating
the little things and the tender
thoughts of the men they know,
she added.
"Otherwise they'll wake up
one morning, she warnea,
realize they're 50 years old.
single and lonely, and it'll be
too late to do anything about
it."
Creamed eggs are delicious
served on spilt ham biscuits for
Sunday night supper dish. To
make the biscuits use the stand
ard baking powder recipe call
ing for two cups flour and add
about half a cup of finely
chopped cooked ham to the dry
ingredients before the liquid
is added.
to keep fit!
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