Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 16, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    i: il
j ; l
i
tr
J tc'r
5 h
B-n
! Eire
B"
wir
'
c'i
I A
ilK
i ail
I ft!
Jit
aih
m
grh
B
2
r (
! lit:
I
llir
i
to
IE
i M
in
I h
ibe
th
li
J -i
Capital AJournal
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.
SUBSCMPTION RATES:
By Carrier: Weeklv, 25c; Monthly, SI. 00; One Vear, $12.00. By
Mail In Oregon: Monlhly, 15c; 6 Mos.. S4.00; One Year, $8.00.
TJ. S. Outside Oregon: .Monthly. SI. 00; 6 Mos., $6.00; Vear, $12.
BY BECK
Easier Said Than Done
4
Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, August 16, 1949
New Housing "Modernistic" Architecture
The magazine Time in its current issue has an illustrated
article on the "new shells" that pass for homes in this
mechanical age which "modern" architecture has taken
over. Mass production in the erection of homes as near
alike as peas in a pod or autos off the assembly line fea
ture housing projects all over the country, and even the
custom build homes reflect that modernistic craze.
Among the housing projects pictured is that of Levit
town, a whole city of 27,850 population of identical $7,790
bungalows, on the flat potato fields of Long Island. A
new house is knocked together every 16 minutes, including
fireplaces, picture windows and movable walls that double
as closets.
T 4U fl.'H.'n ,,,nn..n V..,;l,K knnn,o nno nni.
Ill nuuLllcin tdlilUi ilicl Willie uuiJuiiiK uuuiuo oic - . i 7i
petual, there is more variety some sectors showing most v JJJi'h may X
of the "trials, errors and nostalgias in architectural nis- , ,,
i. it T5..1. iU I 1 il J "cr " "i r(
lory, nut me muuuiiiH nave luiych uvci jiuvv, even jii plan5
cosny Housing, nine says;
3 OUCH . MY FEET ! WHO'LL STOP ME FROM W
n-H05E SHARP ROCKS )'fMM THPOWIN" STICKS IN THE J
ssfesSgT 1 HURT... i WATER FOR MY POCj Jjpi.
'Sfflifck coMerro chase .. comb pm
mm down on
SPLASH T4$LA&(- ' Tf'
SPS fOft SlPPft .
Get Your Wood In
By DON UPJOHN
Our compatriot Fred Zimmerman has a cabin up in the Abi
qua country along with the Dr. Grover Bellingers and made a trip
up there Sunday. The trip revealed something of great Im
portance to the
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
New G.O.P. Chairman Plans
Clean-Out of 'Defeatists'
(Ed. Note While Drew Pearson is on vacation, the Wash
ington Merry-Go-Round Is being written by his old partner,
Robert S. Allen.)
By ROBERT STALLEN
Washington Republican national headquarters is in a dither.
The air is thick with reports that new chairman Guy Gabriel
son plans a wholesale head-lopping.
Gabrielson takes over active command this week. Friends
have been dropping broad hints that high on his agenda is a
hardboiled housecleaning of
"defeatist-minded deadwood." union is making "inroads." Also,
It is known that, since his that the fight between the two
election Gabrielson has confer- organizations is intensifying,
red with congressional and "The militant opposition of
other party chiefs on revitaliz- the national officers of the farm
ing the committee's big staff. bureau to the plan is unques
Former Chairman Hugh Scott tionably causing a lot of doubts
made no changes when he took among rank-and-file members,
over. He became very popular Thye said. "It looks like the
with the staff, on which he lean- ff!ht between the bureau and
ed heavily. Some of his critics tne umon wl" get hotter in the
'held this as a complaint against months to come."
nuii.. wHiiaies luwa rarm
no indication '"I"?6?"0" WiU! Pnry?
vv,i icicasc uguica UCA, ween.
on a poll on the Brannan plan.
Thpv will rpnnrt ihet -fnllnwintf'
v.!.,j 2 Per cent of Iowa farmers are
hard . .. .
ui me piau, lu pel Weill UUIJUS-
ed, remainder no opinion. Twen
ty-six per cent of Iowa farm bu-
BY GUILD
Wizard of Odds
for the
coming winter.
"Southern California is also the stamping ground of one of Fred and Gro-
the world's best and most influential moderns: Los Angeles ver discovered
Architect Richard Joseph Ncutra. The broad, glassy brows of that the fir
Nculra's buildings (and those of such onetime Neutra appren- cones are thick-
tices) line the Pacific shore, nestle in the canyons and beam er than fleas on
down from a hundred hilltops, in residential architecture, an alley dog
rueuira s own lann oous uown iu two main nuns;
"Spaciousness and compactness combined. Lots of glass and
livable porches or patios custom-tailored to the landscape make
all outdoors sivm like part of the house. Drawing and dining
rooms are merited into one low, wide and handsome living area,
comfortably lined with built-in furniture. But cellars and
attics are eliminated, kitchens made smaller and handier, to cut
construction costs, heating bills and housekeeping chores.
him
There has been
who is listed for the ax. That's
the reason for the staff's uneasi
ness. Also, Gabrielson has
business reputation of a
worker and driver.
National headquarters has 80
full-time employes. Highest rpa mBmhrs r fnr th. t.i.n
paid are Publicity Director Wil- i8 per cent opposedi
liam Murphy who gets $27,000 . . .
a year and Finance Director Ed- LOTS OF PEPPER
win Bacher who receives $20,- House appropriations commit-
"" tee members rubbed their eyes,
figuratively speaking, when
Meanwhile, democratic war- thev spanned th iw lut f
CORPORATION PRESIDENTS' 'MMfabfcir
AVERAOE WE TODAYS 59 - M
mg&J' 6IRLS, IF YOU WEAR BLUE
MEN, 0PPSARE2T0I
YOU'RE MORE LIKELY TO WEAR A
HAT IN WINTER THAN IN SUMMER.
JEANS, FASHI0NISTS CLAIM ODDS
ARE 9 TO I YOU ROLL THEM UP TO THE
KNEES (MTSYBYW. irUHTAWANIEDTOMOH.)
Send your "Odds" questions on any subject to "The Wizard
of Odds," care of the Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. .
MacKENZIE'S COLUMN
Will U.S. Channel Feeling
In Asia Toward Democracy
stable
man found that out yesterday
when they tried to reenact the
ernment spending.'
The brickbat is the fact that
and are virtual
ly running ram
nant, as it were.
Doi Gpjohn
to be.. Acting Postmaster Jack
L. (Hopalong) Freeman and locks have a brickbat they are strategic materials being stock-
operator Clarence War- nursing for the first time Ga- piled by the munitions board.
orieison suunus on on uik guv- nni Horn rnlloH tnr h...o
amount of pepper.
"What's that for?" ocl-orl Vnrf
old days by carrying 80 pounds one of his firms is a heavy RFC ctpfan (R Nph "a
of mail on horseback to Hunt- borrower. planning sneeze warfare- to the two peoples he springs Irom. "Perhaps without knowing it.
ineton Dark two miles awav The Cartha2e Hydrocol Corp., biow tnis stuff into the ace o And from that fence he may communism has climbed on the
I j . , . , f ' which Gabrielson heads, has re- the enemy'" see things coming before either Tiger of latent race hatred in
They wore beards, check shirts ceived three RFC loans totaling Mnitinn hnr world does. Asia. That is it's real throat, to
ana boots in honor of May- $18,50U,UU0. The first loan, for nlainnH lam. .)ii;
, . M..ii...a w, f -P
By JAMES. D. WHITE
8ubstltutlm for DeWlu Mac Kenzle, AP toreltn Newj Analyst)
One of the more thoughtful men I know Is a Chinese, born
and educated among Americans.
A man like that never quite belongs to either world. Life
has put him on a fence between
'I his WOUIdn l i wppl, But the stunt back.
mean much except to weather jred when the horsemen lound
propnesying experis ime uiu-
ver and Fred who say that ac- the railway roadbed they had
cording to the Indians and such to travel cluttered with rocks,
like who are supposed to know stones and unpioneer-like bot-
May- $18,500,000. The first loan, for nlainsH lnro. n,,ntin. f This man was talking recently the world in the lonu view .
wood's forthcoming silver jubi- $9,000,000, was granted in April, per woud be needed in wartime about tne way communism is That it may be tempted to try
as a lood preservative. .weeum uvC1 mc uuu ui uu wnai japan inea ana lauea to
(Copyright, 1949) ancestors, China.
(Copyright 1949) He said:
1948.
Subsequently, the com
pany got two other loans of
$3,500,000 and $6,000,000, the
last in April of this year.
The transactions were per
fectly legitimate. The corpora
tion, with offices in New York
and Brownsville, Tex., is engag-
the world into a
ROAMING DAYS GONE?
all the signs ana omens mat c tu- an ,.; r--i -u-j
European architects, after the first World War, evolved when fir cones are plethoric like ... ' . ana. urownsvuie, iex., is engag-
the "international" style, strict and angular, makim? the this it's a sure sign of a hard - V v., I T,ra , unrip, T7n
fullest possible use of steel, tflass and concrete for maxi- winter. We thought we'd heard to horseback again a few blocks SurttoS taSS:
mum light and apertures, with the slogan "the house is a and discussed in this column from the Huntington Park post f November
machine for living" and they long since set up shop in the over the years most of the signs office. Then the rider, galIoped win ' t attack th
Un ted States. u " . up and delivered it.
' . . . . . . wise but we confess this is a K
Meanwhile 1'rank Lloyd Wright has been marking out new onei or t discussed before
a style of his own and calls the "International" "Dead Sea we'd forgotten it. But Fred
Fruit," the Flat-bosomed Facade," "The Whited Sepul- seems quite certain of it. Also,
chre." But it is hard to tell the two styles apart. They it may be added for what it's
look the same to the layman
Gypsy Band Tries Life
In U.S.; Marie Seeks Man
loans. But if and when Gabriel
son assails administration spend
ing, they are all set to counter
Commenting on the new modern architecture, Henry L.
Mencken, the iconoclastic "Sage of Baltimore," in his re
cently published book, "Chrestomathy," says:
"We live in a machine age but there are still plenty of us
who have but little to do with machinery, and find in that no
answer to our a.spiralions. If I were building a house it would
certainly not follow the lines of a dynamo or a steam shovel;
It would be wiMi few obvious changes a replica of the houses
that were built in the days when human existance was pleas
anter and more spacious.
"The 18th cei.tury dwelling has countless rivals today but
Is as far superior to any of them as the music of Mozart is su-
The Cascade Highway associa
tion is a live organization over tnat he is a big beneficiary of they can outwit a proverb,
at the east end of the county tne spending Black-eyed Marie Stephenson
made up of terrific boosters for , . . , . ......
the Cascade highway, proposed SHORTS and her kin have P'ted "camp
route for a cutoff into Portland Washington's fetid heat has in thickly - draped quarters on
By WILLIAM GOBER, JR.
(AP Newsfeatures)
Jacksonville, Fla. Far from their ancestral hills of Spain a
band of gypsies has come to rest in Florida, trying to see if part of the world because noth-
ing has replaced the once-great
prestige of the white man,
do plunge
racial war.
"Japan failed because China
saw through her flimsy promises '
of an Asia for the Asiatics, and
cast her lot with the west. But
in this cold war, China is fall
ing on the other side, and as a
colored people fighting for free
dom from western control she
will affect all other colored peo
ples fighting for the same thing.
"The thing is," my friend went
on, "communism flows into this
worth, that the cabin and firs
in question are up on a ridge
. , Jl A 1 ri.ul
idLi ng "'"'"J , - i 7 t from the North Santiam, and a made no dent on Rhode Island's Jacksonville's busy Adams
fame 7ni Vis al o should make very happy idea' at that' Last Se"at0r T,hedore,,Gre?": T.he street. Traffic thunders by a
same, and this also snouia mane . M h d bj fe rugged 82-year-old millionaire , , , ... .
the cones more potent as win- "If " 3 M , ,M, j , u:. few feet from their door.
dock, state highway engineer, in 'ce m crowdd, steamy street Here, they hope, is the end of
for a speech. And Sam made ears. -the trail; the vanishing of a
ter producers. So before tossing
in your old coats to the rum-
mo0A an pa t rplpra u s wpll ' .
o nonder this Information-if darned good one, too. He to d ing tne sen- wanderlust. why are gvpsies
you go in for that sort of thing
pcrior to Broadway jazz, a pattern of simple beauty, durable pony express ain't what it used mention the Cascade highway
relatively inexpensive and pleasant to live in. Wo other sort
of house bettei meets exigencies of housekeeping, and none
other absorbs modern conveniences more naturally and grace
fully. And why should a man of today abandon it for a house
of harsh masses hideous outlines and bald metallic surfaces?
"It fits a civilized man almost perfectly. He is completely
at ease in it. Ir. every detail it accords with his ideals. To say
that the florid chicken coops arc closer to his nature is absurd.
When men live in houses as coldly structural as step-ladders
they will cease to be men and become mere rats in cages."
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
Lou, 38, Built His $50
Into a Big-Time Outfit
By HAL BOYLE
New York The way to success in Tin Pan Alley today Is
as wide dpen as a closed door.
"But it is usually an amateur songwriter's own fault if he finds
the guests a lot of the prob- ate and house chambers are un- forever wandering? An old pro-
iems of tne nignway department . . verb o theirs explains it: "Chu-
jt a lot of facts and u""n L e caPU01 ov e quel sos pirela. cecal terela"
"A wandering dog will not
starve."
Marie and her clan are
going to see about that:
Whether they can stay put
and stay fed,
They draw only one line
no romance, no love, no mar
riages with non-gypsies.
nnri Davp nut
The Phony Pony figures. The speech was lacking British. The marks are under
Maywood, Calif. IU.fi). The nnlv in one detail. He foreot to inch-thick coats of paint.
Robert Taft emphatically deny
that close ties prevail between
him and National Committee
man Harrison Spangler. The
Taftites are saying they favor
the Iowa state central commit
tee's demand that Spangler re
sign. All three of Connecticut's re-
Marie, like her great-grand-
Navy Secretary's Stand on a CVA
When Secretary of the Navy Matthews flew into Port
land Sunday, he was cautious, almost leary, of a Columbia
Valley Administration. But that was before he had a
chance to get the "word" from the democrats who run
the Portland branch of the party.
Then suddenly later the same day he cut loose in his
talk at the annual democratic picnic. From his admitted
ignorance on the CVA and power situation in the Pacific
Northwest, he jumped to an arm-swinging type of attack
on all those who would block a CVA for the region.
That was all in the same day.
In his press interview before the gathering of the faith
ful, Secretary Matthews gave a sensible answer to the
question of a Columbia Valley administration: "I think You get ahead bv hard work.
41io f'Y A i uitmnt li imr f',,,' llii'u ill',,,, Milt lim'n ii flm.wlp " '
v..t.v. ...v.. u,.,. ,,w.. "But the amateur won t keep
nni ivhint, liic nrnHiint If hp'H
For a lawyer from the middle west, that was almost an even take tlie trouble to dream yll,'re
expected answer, considering Ins tiniannliarity with tne
CVA controversy itself.
the door is
closed," argues
Lou Levy, pres
ident of Leeds
Music coiripany
and manager of
the Andrews
Sislors.
"He doesn't
dig hard!,
enough, t ne i,
song w r i i i ii u
game is like any
other game.
WfWHHH
' fete isC-w1
ten. li
of his song. He needs a profes
sional demonstration of his creation."
puDiican congressmen James mother, took up the profession
Patterson, Antoni Sadlak and 0f paimistry while very young.
John Davis Lodge would like she is shVi But even s0 she
to run as successor to Sen. Ray- is the oniy one o( her ci0sely
mond A. Baldwin . . . Rep. Chase knit circle who win taik about
Going Woodhouse (D Conn.), the hopes and fears of the gyp
is practically certain to be nam- sjes
ed to Baldwin's
Chester Bowles.
seat by Gov
Levy, now 38, started his mu-
She is pretty by the standards
of Spain, land of her forbears.
Traditionally, Spanish men say
that a beautiful woman must
eyebrows; and
elegant: hands,
eyes,
three
lips,
He even went so far as to sav he did not favor a Mis-
up a great title for his song,
he'd be half-way home.
"And anyone who gets one
souri Vallev authorilv (.similar to the CVA1. He ore f erred good song hit will find every
a development program handled by the army engineers ",n..'"n P" A"7 W'U ie firm just to get the coyp-" Pe
(Pick-Sloan plan) for the Missouri valley. .hl w have right on . mil. song-"Piccolo
Rut then the Multnomah county democrats, who happen rate." 1 Pete.'
to be running the party in the state now, got him aside. ' "But I made my money back
Thev must have nut him "strniirht." Thu chance in the ...... ... . ... because the number on the other
. , , ,. . i no siausncs are a nine ae
man in a coupie ot nours tune was amazing.
From his rather noncommittal stand of a few hours
previously, Matthews turned around and voiced the
preachings of the CVA enthusiasts. Before, however, he
said he wouldn't even talk on the subject.
He had become convinced in that two-hour interim that
all should cooperate to defeat the power lobby. He accused
the republicans of attempting in every way possible to
hamstring the development of hydroelectric power for the
people.
irip wnc 'Hpnrtnnhp nnp nf
pressing to anyone who just the hit revivals last year," he
wants to write his nation s songs gajd
and practically everybody ' ...
seems to want to.
"Nine out of every ten peo
ple have tried to write a song."
said Levy. "Every year 85,000
new songs are copyrighted."
And what happens to them?
"Only about 5.000 of the 85.-
000 are even glanced at by the
POINTED HINT
sic publishing firm ten years n, ,!!., i rfotir.no ""v': "'" " ui..r.
ago with $50 and a single song ises of aid whiI in Washington, !?,h'
copyright. Today his firm con- but he did take away with him a gs
trols some 17,000 copyrights, nnintert hint tresses.
And Lou is buying up more It was that the U.S. would
right along. look wjtn favor on the libera
"I think they're a better in- tion of several hundred impris
vestment than diamonds or old oned wartime Filipino guerril
masters," he said. ' las who fought under American
"When vou buv a new sonB officers.
i ne. partisans lougnt valiantly
against the Japs. After the war,
they were imprisoned on mur
der and other charges made in
many cases, by former collabor
ators now holding high Philip-
office. Many of the alleg-
offenses were "liquidations"
ordered by American officers.
The imprisoned guerrillas were
offered amnesty several years
ago on condition they "confess
ed their crimes."
They flatly refused. One rea
son was 'their desire to avoid em
barrassing their former Amerl- soundly criticized by Marie and
Lou, a former vaudeville can commanders. her kin. In it, the gypsy heroine
dancer, is as adept at picking NOTE: Members of Quirino's tears a hunk of meat apart with
talent as song hits. In a decade party told Washington officials her hands and gnaws it like a
as manager of the Andrews Sis- that Chiang Kai-Shek's visit to she-wolf.
ters he built the trio's salary Manila was chiefly to try to ob- ujf. neVor 1 jg tj,at wtth us "
from $125 a week to $12,500. tain funds from 'wealthy Chi- says Marie with a serious ijght
He went nto the entertain- " " was inumaiea an
MARIE STEPHENSON
A Gypsy Finds a Home
mon feast later this summer.
And there will be barbecued
pig. wine, music and fast flam-
She is 20 years old and small, enco dances by Marie,
standing barely five feet. Her Mj atfpmrl(c o) ,;,, ,
A r. ; AmoWnni,orf u.. th... ... . . i.i
"Communism's headache will
come when the problem of re
taining this vast new area of
power becomes paramount. It
has to satisfy Asia's highly vari
ed peoples who today are buy
ing its promises for a better
world.
" I think communism is too
inflexible a doctrine ever to de
liver on these promises. When
itf time comes to put up or shut
up, communism will answer in
Asia by preaching hatred of the
white man.
"Regardless of Moscow's pose
of racial harmony the local boys
will beat the drums of race
hatred just to stay in power.
People will listen then as they
listen now because they are
poor and know there must be
something better than what they
have.
...
This talk took place some
months ago, but very recently
its viewpoint has been backed
up by two interesting sources.
One. is old Field Marshal Jan
Christian Smuts of South Africa.
Here is another man who has
lived with the racial problem all
his life.
He sees the world as being in
the middle of a century of revo
lution by the "colored" races of
mankind. This is a revolution
out of backwardness but it also
is a revolution among the black,
yellow and brown races to get
oui irom under the domination
ere tnlinnc lu !c J lim. v... """ "" '
still remains a trace of the vivid payllos-non-gyPsy men. They calWwhUe USUa"y
nL'.LJLr,i"b"nr seem e the people C'S'?-thM
never sure of what
you've got. But if an old song
made money once, it can do it
again. A good song never dies.
It comes back every 14 years."
Once Levy bought a small mil
gles so loved by the Roman!. ar rfpariiv orm,i .hni tool.
Her voice is soft with a slight moral codes
accent. ... Someday, Marie believes, a
lithe young gypsy will come
along and take her for his
bride in a blood ritual. He
will have tight bronze skin
and a quick eye for the future.
He will know, and help her
understand, the American
way.
in Manila.
Thomas H. Lockett, top Amer
ican career diplomat in the Phili
ppines, said that Asia is defin
itely on the march. Whether
westerners like it or not, he said,
Asia feels that colonialism be
longs to a dead era.
He said the United States
would be wise to try to chan
nel DODUlar feelins In that nart
"Tt will haxra t Ko tlUo l.n 4K ....u j
Her favorite female star U Joan ., . " " uuu luwaras democracy
FmMltenM, T nothing' she "Because, and freedom now, rather than
fr T 1. p ."a L , you are 8yps.es and we see it stream into communism
Marie likes American girls
but for one thing: "Some of
them are shallow and some
are bold, especially where
men are concerned," she says.
To her, the art of coquetry
and courtship Is missing.
She goes to the movies often.
tor Tyrone Power. A recent
film life among the gypsies was
can never change."
later.
"' ....... ... . nPrn.t 4 11 ,f
.,.,1,11.1. io t o.,.r m.oj ment ticia alter a Drier ana un- """ "iuc iu un uu
The navy secretary tried to stand up as spokesman for this S.ooo" perhaps onlv'2,000 are happy career at a vat stirrer In Cnl,ng's. tr'P but he insisted on
an issue whifh hn hud iiivofnllv ahiiiinnl hpfnrp In artnallv nlaveri anrt listened tn a perfume factory. One day he maRing it.
lashing out so recklessly at the'power lobby, he made There's gold' in song writing but 'cll1t0, the vat and had to be
himsi'lf imni.ni- uu vi,li,.iii,uiu nu nn.o r,f iYta otitLPVA it doesn't come easy." hauled to safety.
"I think I am one of the few
songs,
'To put a song over is a feat
vhnnmr-lint!'.i in II, n nltini- oi.ln thi littioo Pth )naa Tv said inn manv vntine
sight of the basic problem of the Pacific Northwest: Shall write" make the mistake of PPle who 'v hd to be
the region be developed bv leaders in this section of the "iing directly to New York to wjcued from drowning in per
o,., ..1...11 i...... ..i :.u u: trv to peddle their unpublished lume, ne laugnea.
i-umiii.,, ui -Minn uui i-mn I ins iui meir uwil l tiMllng lull
side-show try to rule the roost out here?
Matthews could hardly have been credited with doing
the cause of the democratic party or the CVA much good
by his flip-flop of position all within a matter of hours.
The kind of propaganda that Matthews tried to put out town radio' station
in nis uuk is the kind that gives the impression that the "instead of spending
aiiiiiiiiinu uLiun is more interested in ouiming up us own
CVA bureaucracy than in developing the Pacific Northwest.
BRANNAN PLAN
While Secretary Charles
Brannan's farm plan Is getting
the gate in congress, the farm
bureau federation is losing mem-
harthin in lo.i'n on4 Minna.nl.
Levy has a simple prescrip- becauje of opp0si,ion ,0 ",,.
tion to get Tin Pan Alley out
in her oblique eyes. "We're neat
and have manners."
Their quarters bear her out.
They live in one long room,
formerly a store. Heavy drap
eries partion it into clean rooms.
Brightly-burnished cooking
utensils hang on the kitchen
wall. A small shrine is there,
too. Marie and her family are
Roman Catholics.
in itself. The best way for an ' current business slump. Tne farmrs union has defi.
amateur to get his song started
Is to get it aired over his home-
$80 to
come here himself from Akron,
O., he ought to use the money
The men are trying to fit
nitely made membership gains themselves into the modern pat
tern. ime nas lasen a sieaay
job in an industrial plant and
to have a band make a recording manufacturer who'd try it,"
'We hsve to make America
nation ot piano players again, as a result of its pro-Brannan-he
said "We could do it if Dian stand
they'll put a $90 plastic piano on Sen Edward Thve (R . Minn ) wears an Odd Fellows lodge pin
the market. sayS farm bureau membership Marie does not dance in the
'But so far I haven't found a in his state is higher than last "popular" version. But the gyp-
Two Wives Swap Mates
Buf Keep Own Children
Los Angeles, Aug. 16 (P)wilma Mayfield, 25, is now Wil
ma Botsford and Frances Botsford, 28, Is now Frances May
field. A mutually agreeable exchange of spouses was completed
Sunday night with the marriage of Don Mayfield, 27, and
the former Frances Botsford, at the .home of Mayfield's
mother, Mrs. L. B. Mayfield.
It all started when the two Plru, Calif., couples, who
had met at a party, decided they would be happier if they
swapped mates.
Frances divorced John Botsford, 30, August 4,'Wilma di
vorcee, lion niayneid August 8 and that night married John
Botsford. Frances and Don were wed Sunday night to com
plete the circle.
John and Frances were married in 1938; Don and Wilma
In 1943. Both couples separated last Jnne 13.
The wives will keep their respective children. Wilma has
two daughters and Frances a son.
year, but admits the farmers ties here are planning a com-