Capital Adjournal 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, 25c; Monthly, S1.00; One Year, S12.00. By Mail in Oregon: Monthly, 15c; 6 Mos., S4.00; One Year, S8.00. V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos., S6.00; Year, $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Thursday, August 11, 1949 The Eagles' Iron Lung The local Fraternal Order of Eagles has acted to pro vide an adult-size iron lung for possible use in the Greater Salem area. This step is a precautionary one in case a polio outbreak should occur here. For this initiative, the Willamette aerie No. 2081 de serves proper recognition. The state has been spared any outbreak of polio on an epidemic scale. Idaho and Texas, among others, have been less fortunate. But, for the health and welfare of the community, the bringing here of an iron lung will relieve the anxiety that might arise if the disease should strike. The wisdom of taking such safeguards in advance is so obvious. This helpful move of the Eagles is similar to the one taken several years ago by the Salem labor council in leading the campaign to make the first aid car possible. It is another example of local people sizing up the needs of the community and acting to meet them. It is that same kind of initiative on a regional scale, for instance, that can develop the Pacific Northwest and make a Columbia Valley Administration unnecessary. Records so far this year indicate that 1949 may be a banner recent year for polio. More than 3000 nevn cases have been reported already in August boosting the na tion's total to over 11,000, roughly 4000 ahead of 1948 at the same date. Last year, with a total of 27,680 cases reported, was the second highest on record for polio inci dence. The worst year was 1916 when more than 30,000 cases were counted. Case figures, health authorities say, however, indicate that many of the polio cases reported are so mild that they would, a few years ago, have been diagnosed as colds in the head. The 11,000 cases represent a ratio of 1 victim to every 15,000 persons. There is as yet no accurate check on the number of deaths this year, but they are expected to run between 6 and 9 percent of reported cases one fatali ty to more than 150,000 persons. An Associated Press survey shows that eight states had reported more than 500 cases since the first of the year. They were Arkansas 577, California 626,'lllinois 720, Michigan 669, Missouri 597, New York 1,110, Oklahoma 592, and Texas 1,339. Texas' health officer, George W. Cox, said the heavy polio incidence in his state continues baffling. This month and next are still expected to be the worst. Indiana re ported 10 percent deaths, with no slackening in new cases. Wisconsin counted three times as many cases this year as in the same period of 1948. Minnesota noted fewer cases in some areas. California, despite its high figure, reported only about half as many cases as last year, and noted 101 new cases reported last week compared with 250 for the same week last year. Oregon in 1948 had 63 cases and 4 deaths. Up to (late in 1949, there have been 89 cases and 2 deaths. Neglecting Our 'Achilles Heel' The military appropriation bill containing Alaskan de fense projects, carrying $137,738,712 for defense construc tion, has been shelved by the House of Representatives. This in spite of the fact that Alaska is almost entirely defenseless and an inviting field in case of war with Rus sia, as has been testified to by numerous members of Congress who took junket trips to inspect the territory. Congress has just voted $5,797,000,000 to check Rus sian aggression in Europe and the advance of communist totalitarianism in Europe 3000 miles away but is not in terested sufficiently in our back door, only 54 miles from Russia, against invasion of the United States to appropriate two and a half percent of that amount to defend a region that practically adjoins Russia in Asia. Governor Ernest Gruening, commenting on the action, says that it is "nothing short of unbelievable that Congress should perpetuate Alaska "as America's Achilles heel." He continued: "Alaska was (he onl.v part of America Invaded by the enemy during World War II, it could be taken tomorrow by a minor scale airborne invasion. Congressional action means the loss of at least a year and a half in military construction that should have been completed by now. Postponement is moreover the height of wastefulness. It will mean all work will have to be . stopped, construction crews shipped back to the States and recruited all over again if and when congress decides to act probably not until June, 1950, if then." Congress is not much interested in the Pacific as is shown by its refusal to grant statehood to either Hawaii or Alaska yet an invasion of either territory would cause as great a panic in the United States as the fictitious "men from Mars." BYJECK Nothing Perfect 0J$iM THIS DUDE KANC" A SWELL ZvyMM VW'fZMf PLACE FOR A VACATION . THEY HAVE Vf?vffi'0ffi' A SNAPPY ORCHESTRA, A CUTE FAWwMW fMMmfo) COCKTAIL BAR AND LOTS OF MfXJwfflwft1, iWfflm0?Zk MEN APOUND. 1 LIKE IT ALL FKfP '"&mS THE HORSEBACK m&WMmm vWW'- V RIDING. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Brass Gets Off to Bad Start In Testifying on Arms Bill By ROBERT S.ALLEN (Editor's Note: While Drew Pearson is on vacation, his old friend, Robert S. Allen, will pinch Jilt for him.) BY GUILD Wizard of Odds Washington Maj. Gen. Lyman D. Lemnitzer encountered rough going in his closed-door testimony before the house foreign af fairs committee on the $1,450,000,000 European arms bill. The working-over was administered by Rep. James G. Ful ton, R., Pittsburgh, a plain-talking navy veteran. Lemnitzer is one of the prin- ' cipal authors of the giant arma- further, let's cut out all the ment measure. A 50-year-old gobbledegook." MEN, BY 3 TO I, SMOKE AA0RE THAN WOMEN. (put that in yom Wf, jMHoam, us Amies) Sips for supper West Pointer, he is deputy com mandant of the national war college and chairman of the for eign assistance coordinating committee. In this latter posi tion, he has played an important behind-the-scenes role in for eign policy. Lemnitzer appeared before the was worked out committe flanked by a score of arrive at this Lemnitzer came to an abrupt halt. Fulton pointed out that Lem nitzer was addressing the for eign affairs committee, not the armed services committee. "What we want to know," he said, "is how this arms program How did you $1,450,000,000 CITIES WITH INCREASED STREET ILLUMINATION SHOW 5 TO 3 BETTER SAFETy RECORDS THAN POORLY LIGHTED CITIES. Big League Stuff By DON UPJOHN This opening of the new Sears Roebuck store today in the new business center out Capitol street way might all be termed as big league stuff, as is the entire development, so it seems quite ap- a p p r o p r I senior army officers. They were figure?" so numerous they filled all the Lemnitzer replied that an front seats. arbitrary price was fixed for the As a result, the ECA and state cost of weapons to be sent to department delegations had to Europe. These arbitrary figures remain in the rear. These dele- have no direct relation to the gations were headed by two top original cost of the weapons, experts, Dr. Lloyd V. Berkner "Are all the weapons to be from our i jay 5U OCULISTS CLAIM ODDS ARE 50 TO I A6AINST AN ADULT HAVING PERFECT VISION. Send your "Odds" questions on any subject to "The Wizard of Odds," care of the Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. ijf- eV Si and Edward T. Dickinson, but of the com- Lemnitzer did most of the talk on it when ing. He got off to a bad start by the committee the only member mission who was Swart also Joined up. A plat was filed at the court- addressing Don Upjohn house today for Sylvan Park, a thouuh it were a staff confer- surpluses sent to Europe. Fur- proposed summer home colony ence he was briefing. Heavily 'her, that as a result of this re- up the little North Fork just be- interlarding his comments with Placement, the actual cost of the low Taylor's grove. If things military terminology, he talked European program would be follow the course pursued around at length about logistics, tables $1,850,000,000. here the last few years as soon of organization and equipment . ""so am-iosed, un- as it gets built up somebody and other technical matters, will probably want to annex it "Just a moment," finally broke to Salem. in Fulton. "Before you go any a t e that Jim1 Mosolf, manag er of the new Scars store should be an ex big leaguer l n baseball as he is now in the big league business. Jim played baseball in his younger days with the Los An geles Angels, Pittsburg Pirates, Chicago Cubs and Boston Braves OREGON SCHOOL EXPERIMENTS and he has a nostalgic look when he glances at three small fig urines in his air conditioned of fice, a tiny umpire in the center taking a beating from a tower ing batter and a catcher not quite so tall. Yea, the Sears op ening has been getting quite a play, even nationally, as we not ed a headline in our favorate paper saying it is "Searing Hot in the East." That's spreading it out. surplus supplies?" asked Fulton. Lemnitzer admitted t h e v would not. Also, that army needs would require replacement of How to Raise Blind Child? Parents Get Lessons Here By WILLIAM WARREN (United Prt'jui Stall CorrJ-lpantieir.) Don't mollycoddle your kiddie just because he's blind, if you don't want him to become a spoiled child. Remember, in every respect he's a normal child, who happens not to see. Treat Lebanon A night-blooming cactus cared for by Miss Helen Clem for 15 years, redeemed its bloomloss existence this year in the nick of time. Keeping it in a south window these many years without a bloom or sign of a bud, Miss Clem and her sis ter, Miss Dorothy Clem, reach ed Ihe end of their patience. So they decided to throw it out. Af nim nice ini. happy, normal , one he Is, and ' he'll grow up to happy, normal adulthood. The point. was stressed and: stressed again b over the past week at Ore gon's first pre- tLk i ner questioning, that army in telligence had greatly under estimated Russian m it i t a r y strength two years ago and con siderable doubt exists as to the currenoy and accuracy o f present information. He sidestepped direct criti cism of army intelligence, but the import of his remarks was unfavorable. "There is a great deal of feel ing in the country and in con gress," observed Fulton, "that the military are shaping our for eign policy. If that is true, it is not a sound situation." NOTE: Before testifying, Lem nitzer submitted his lengthy pre- MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Quirino Puts the Question: , 'Well What About Asia? ' By JAMES. D. WHITE , fSubstltutlni for DeWltt Mae Kenzie, AP Foreign News Anelrst) In the midst of a debate on how much to spend on arming Europe against communism, congress paused Tuesday to hear a question from another precinct. President Elpidio Quirino of movement might well help him the Philippine Republic asked, in effect, what about Asia? Quirino's point was that Asia will be lost to communism by default unless the "same cour age and vision" is applied there that went into the democratic Pacifjc union was Cnina.s chi. get reelected next fall. He faces very stiff opposition. e It's also worth keeping in mind that the first Asiatic lead er to whom he talked about the defenses of Europe ang Kai-Shek. Tuesday he didn't Inelilntn ter being set temporarily in the for parents of blind children, back yard, the cactus got busy, hcld at the gtate schooi ior the starting new growth which turn- blind here, ed into a bud and bloomed for the first time early in June .Last whiio 25 blind or nearly stitute? week it bloomed for the second blind youngsters, from 7 months Let's go back to the begin- Symington eir fmir nlhor tnrirtli-c anrl couple of attendants. Mary and Parea Discourse to William rye, Jane, the brown - haired twin defense department press direc- girls, are playing besides the tor' 'for suggestions." small, hand propelled merry-go- " round. POINTED BRUSH OFF Others are exploring the big Last month, Rep. James Van doll house and still others are Zandt, R., Pa., telephoned re scooting down the home-made tlred alr General "Tooey" chute or wriggling through the Spaatz and invited him to parti-built-in culvert at its base. Some cipate in the centennial celebra are bucking the hobby-horses. tlon o Altoona, Pa., Van Zandt's And in their buggies, the babies home town. Spaatz, also a Penn are lolling off to sleep, bottles sylvanian, promised to try to wtintv. come. How come this preschool in- Several weeks later. Van Zandt, navy reserve captain, blasted air Secretary Stuart and demanded a time. Nearly six inches across, tn 5 years old. dozed in their ning, with the birth, let us say. the flower has several rows of hnhv hneeies or romped merrily of Susie there are three Susies pointed waxy-white petals with nrnund the olaveround of the among the 25 drooping stems. It began to show seven - acre campus, mothers ents take healthy, normal Susie white petals as dusk fell and "went to school." Girl Scouts home ivith them. Then the time was fully open shortly after and other capable attendants comes when her eyes should dark. The Clems and their watched after the tots, who had start focusting, they don't. neighbors sat up until after mid- come from all parts of Oregon, Concerned parents take her to ment and purcnase of the B 3g night watching It and enjoying from Ontario in the east to their doctor and learn Susie . . , its fragrance. By 7 a.m. it was Astoria on the coast. will never see, witn ner eyes. ... Allnnna fnnrtinn still fresh and fragrant, but one And a group of experts, tops What to do? What to do for onZfflqt 8 I al nnTa w hour later the outer row of in their field, taught the mothers the best interest of Susie? ' . " petals willed and by midmorn- the rudiments of care for the The preschool institute hence- f . , , ,,'" ing it was gone. blind child, telling themin ef- forth will supply the intelligent, "J August 9 for feet treat 'em normal and scientific answer. And so to "j " u gust ior This is our old friend Hedda thovTl be normal. None of that school. " "eJ "JJtJ Swarf s birthday, which one he ..oh. the poor little kid!" stuff. Crtaed riocsn t opine. But by coinci- Throughout the one-week of That first Thursday night, ?hat make Tit iitota? dence, it also is the 23rd anm- the institute, the note among Aug. 4, was get-together night, to accept your invTtion " versary of his taking ocre as a mothers was one of jolliness and Blind Frank E. Saunders, mu- ... u,uu"' member of the Salem zoning avid learning: among young- i iantr nt thL .hnni ninv,H . probe of B-36 procurement. The The proud par- gatjon - Last week, Van Zandt wrote Spaatz reminding him of the Al toona invitation. Spaatz, who had a big hand in the develop- and planning commission, and stcrs. screams, scrambles, during the entire 23 years of laughter and wailing for the such service he hasn't missed a milk bottle same as in any single regular meeting of the other gathering of 25 normal commission. When it is consider- kiddies ranging from 7 months ed how much his job of engi- to 5 years. ncering has taken him out of Look at them. town during that period, this Pat and Mike, the Wnnd twin the munu tur uieiii. iviuuicis .ij.- rt,l.,n, tr-i cu.i. and ins ructors chatted and got dropped out o sight last . acquainted. Then to bed. Moth- following the failure of hemis! ers and youngsters were put up sjon t persuade President Tru- fr iha u'onlr in tin hnve1 rinrm . U. S. aid to her husband's totter ing regime. But she is still in the U. S., and still at work. Madame Chiang has an estate near Warrenton, Va., a mansion in Washington and a large apart- shows quite a job of meeting boys, are roughing it on the the tykes in tow, and mothers attending. W. W. Rosebraugh is wooden swing, along with three went to school in the girls' dormitory across the campus. Walter R Its Cooler in the Cooler tory. Meals were in the school's dining room. Friday, the attendants took He said Asia must first of all mention Chiang, who has lust help itself, but that conditions been pictured as pretty hopeless are so bad that western techni- as an anti-communist bulwark cal aid and capital are needed by the American white paper on if the job is to be done on time. China. These are footnotes, and do His sense of urgency, he said, not detract from the basic va had led him to start a move- lidi'y of Quirino's basic ques ment toward a union of Pacific tlon: what about Asla? countries against communism. He makes it plain that the It could serve as a reception spread of communism is forcing center for whatever aid Ameri- this question into more equal ca decides to extend. President Perspective with Europe. Truman's "bold new program" Assuming that congress and to help economically under-de- the American press and public veloped countries is one way awake to the reality as Quirino this may be done. describes it, the question of aid- Tuesday, Secretary of the ing Asia is likely to boil down Treasury Snyder asked congress to one of method, to get one phase of this program The techniques of helping started by guarantee.ng private Asia are ,ike t be differHent American investments abroad. china has sho'wl or instanc(!i President Quirino first sug- that aid like that for Greece, ' gested a Pacific union last win- dumped into the highly nation- ter when the Atlantic Pact was alistic Asiatic picture, can result ' announced. He got little atten- in a debacle. Korea suggests the tion at the time. apparently unbridgeable gap To keep his proposal in per- that can yawn when the cold spectlve, it is in order to note war is allowed to split an eth that his leadership in such a nically coherent people. Duke Left High and Dry London, (UP.) The Duke of Edinburg, a Lieutenant In the Royal Navy, spent an embarrassing 10 hours pacing the lop sided deck of the yacht Fanny Rosa. The vessel was left high and dry on a sandbank off the Isle of Wright In the English channel. Hundreds of holidayers walked across a mile-wide stretch of sand to the stranded yacht and milled around shouting pleasantries to the duke, husband of Princess Elizabeth, and three other crew members. The yacht was following competitors in the Cowes Re gatta when it ran aground about two p.m. near Ryde. A fast out-running tide left the boat perched on its side with not a drop of water for nearly a mile. The Fanny Rosa was finally refloated at midnight on the next tide. A Moscow dispatch says the Vnkhtangava theater has scheduled for autumn production a play called "Missouri Waltz." The Transport theater recently announced it would present a new play called "The Mad Haberdasher." Who says the Russians haven't a sense of humor? Boyd Should Have Gone Along Chilliwack, B. C. flJ.RiC'ivic-ntinded Alderman Kurt Boyd Interrupted a lawn-bowling game to rush his partner, a vol unteer fireman, to the fire station. Boyd then returned to the game, and the fireman helped extinguish a blaie. The fireman then returned to the bowling green to inform Boyd it was his house that had been on fire. Saying Upheld-Justice Triumphs Wake Forest, N. C. (UB Justice triumphed at the law chool of Wake Forest College. Jame F. Justice was top man of the 1949 graduating last. Ossining, N. Y., (UP David Spurill, of Brooklyn, said the onl.v way he knew how to bent the heat was to get back in the cooler. t Upturned to Sing Sing prison here for breaking parole, Spurill was far from diseonsulate. "What a relief to get away from New York City," he said. "Hot as a furnace down there." 'DIAMOND LIU VACATIONING Mae West Wows 'Em In Colorado Mining Town Central City, Colo., Aug. 11 (IP) Brooklyn-born Mae West, who says she brought sex out of the back room, is wowing 'em in this state called "culture crazy Colorado" by a New York critic. The musty old Central City ' Opera house, dark 10 months it attracted world out of the year, is crowded intellectuals and was one nf th summertime events that inspir ed John Chapman, New York Daily News critic, to dub the ing in the background, she car ries on a large correspondence urging U. S. arms and money for the Chinese nationalists. FLASHES As the defense department's new "unification coordinator, Lt. Gen. Joseph T. McNarney now has for his office the ante room of the Pentagon suite he once occupied as deputy to Gen eral George C. Marshall, when nightly for Mae's saga of sin titled "Diamond Lil." She in troduced the play 20 years ago in New ork when she was in state "culture-crazy Colorado. ner nnuaie ous. Her scheduled three-week run, which opened July 30 has just been extended another week to meet the demand. "I've got the feel for this one,' she told an interviewer. v, auiJCMiucnu- m , . -T -,, .. . ent nf the sehonl and th man lu'' " mle KeeP- who initiated the institute, wel comed the mothers. Gov. Doug las McKay extended greetings on behalf of the state. Betty Ann Swanson, counsellor at the school explained the aims of the institute. Miss Vlasnik began her daily series of instructions in preschool training for blind children. Saturday Miss Vlasnik con tinued her valued instructions, and Dr. Lowenfeld sDoke on "The Blind Child and His he was army chief of staff. World." The dads who came Sulphuric Rep. John Rankin, down for the week-end, and got Miss., is no longer a member in on the group discussions and of the house Un-American activi the individual conferences held ties committee. But he has an in nightly by Miss Vlasnik. side contact in the committee Sunday, the parents heard through Ben Mandel, onetime John Taylor, specialist in handi- Rankin clerk. Mandel is still on renowned capped children's programs for the committee's payroll and the state department of educa- keeps his former boss informed tion. of what's going on. Mandel sees eye-to-eye with Rankin on his Then, this week, through race views. Thursday, the mothers heard Dr. Following Supreme Court Jus Morrison discuss "Social and tice Murphy's death, a group of Emotional Development of the top Washington correspondents Child," Dr. Maynard Shiffer, Sa- were polled on whom they fav- "r've been'7roClmdytheSsteaBSen 1 081 Development of the Child.' " votes for former secretary o" war r l n' ,hi.-f,n.'""S They heard stressed and Robert Patterson. 2 for Senator stressed again the objcctive let Joe O'Mahoney, 4 scattering. me Daoy De normal, miss ttne w. Park Kennedy, new head Mae offered that. too. "They say back comment on east you've enough to know that culture can be pushed off the wings by a I ; ; li . un: LWUV I "This mining town would - " Westensee. sightless herself and of the Brotherhood of Railway have been home grounds for "uw "uw ' '"g ul an instructor at the school, war- Trainmen. assured President ned against "Smother Love." Truman that the organization Coloradoans and vacation vis- The theme was. don't isolate would continue the aggressive itors are chuckling at the same the child. Let him play with liberal policies of the late A. F. lines that tickled New Yorkers other youngsters in the neigh- Whitney. "We are going to carry when Mae launched "Diamond borhood. on their terms, and 0n with the same tempo and Lil." don't pamper him while he plays, drive as Mr. Whitney did," Ken- The buxom stage veteran gets If kids push him around, he'll nedy said. "Our organization one of her biggest laughs when soon learn to push them around, n.111 i.i,. L ,.ii.., T,-t i honoring she purrs: "It s not the men In They'll all be on eaual terms if .v, men ; 1 Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe, my life but the life in my men the adults will just keep out of for liberal candidates " German philosopher. that counts." n. icopnum that gal (Diamond Lil). She would have slept while the min ers dug the gold out of the hills. Then at night she would have dug the gold out of the miners." Central City is just over a few 14,000 foot peaks from Aspen, Colo., site of last month's inter national celebration Cooperatives Build Regular Markets for Your Walnuts and Filberts An overall record crop of tree nuts filberts, walnuts, almonds and pecans will be harvested this fall. The major portion of this largest of all nut crops will be marketed through grower-owned and controlled mar keting cooperatives. Without these organizations, such record-breaking nut crops as arc expected in 1949 could not be marketed in an orderly, economical manner. Members of Northwest Nut Growers, through their own associations, directed and controlled by the growers themselves, have developed a marketing organization with sales and advertising plans to sell their walnuts and filberts Ibis year and in future years. MEMBERSHIP ROLLS FOR 1949 CROP CLOSE SEPTEMBER 15 H you agree fherf ong-ronge marketing and sales planning Is Ihe best way to sell your Filberts and Walnuts, write or get in touch with your nearest local unit listed below. Amlly-Cotlon Nut Growers, Amity. Or. gon DundM Nut Growers, Dundee, Oregon lebonon Nut Growers, tebonon, Oregon Oregon Not Growers. Nawberg, Oregon logeno fruit Growers ss'n.(Nut Divi.ion) Eugene. Oregoe) Salem Nut Growers, Solent, Oregon Washington Nut Growers, Inc, Vontouver, Woihingtoo Northwest Hut Growers Dundee, Oregon