Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 17, 1949, Page 10, Image 10

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    10 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1949
LABOR.CLAIMS DISTORTED PICTURE
British Split on U. S. View
Of 'Utopia on the Rocks'
London, Aug. 17 (U.R) London's rightwing newspapers report
ed Scripps-Howard senior editor E. T. Leech's "Utopia on the
Rocks" series without editorial comment today, but the Laborite
Daily Herald termed it a "distorted picture."
Leech's series is an analysis of "British Socialism In Action."
The Daily Express, with a
circulation of 4,000,000 put
page three banner line on the
itory. The Express said over a
column of excerpts from Leech's
article:
"Under the heading, 'Utopia
on the Rocks,' an American
gives America a close-up of Bri
tan, over - taxed, over - nursed,
over-optimistic but no security,
as the government is itself so
Insecure."
The Independent Daily Tele
graph carried excerpts under
the heading, " 'Utopia on the
Rocks,' U.S. view of British So
cialist state."
The Telegraph's columnist,
"Peterborough," said he had met
Leech during his visit here and
"My impression . . . was that he
was probably a good reporter
... He seemed to have arrived
without preconceived ideas."
The Daily Herald headlined
Its report from Washington by
Correspondent Arthur Webb,
"U.S. 'Hatchctmen' Lash Out at
Britain."
The Herald report said "the
reactionary S c r i p p s - Howard
chain today began a series of
articles on Britain entitled
'Utopia on the Rocks,' with the
avowed purpose of defeating so
cial and economic experiments
similar to those undertaken in
Britain and now being urged
upon the American people.
. "The first article, Is a distort
ed picture of Britain today."
The Herald coupled its attack
on the Leech series with an at
tack on the Chicago Tribune.
"(Tribune) Publisher Col
(Robert R.) McCormick's num
ber one 'Hatchet Man', Arthur
Sears Henning comes out of re
tirement to suggest that 'if Brit
ish Socialists . . . fail to get an
adequate handout they will prob
ably lose the next election and
(Winston) Churchill and his
hut Hfrn iMftlinwum,,, . MP'AWMWWMi.
Conservatives will return to
power."
(Henning is the Tribune's cor
respondent emeritus in Wash
ington), "American Tories and big
business have never concealed
the fact that that is what they
desire," the Herald said.
The Manchester Guardian's
Alistair Cooke, without noting
the Leech series, took an op
posite view of the situation.
"There is today in Washing
ton and New York no rising tide
that did not last spring or last
year. There is, as always I
hankering among unreconstruc
ted America Firsters to prove
the British to be inept in finance,-
lazy in their work and
reckless of their, fate.
"But . . . the disposition to
blame Britain andor her labor
government for the dollar gap
and the plight of the gold re
serve Is if anything rather weak
er than usual.
Cooke said that except for
Secretary of the Treasury John
W. Snyder most experts agree
that the Socialist economy has
little to do with the current
crisis. President Truman, though
his goodwill is overflowing,
has not been able to lead the
people, Cooke wrote.
'If there is a job of education
to be done," he said, "... It is
by the American Economic ex
perts in the administration on,
first, Mr. Snyder and secondly
on the congress."
2 Boys Kiliedby
Exploding Grenade
Rome, Aug. 17 Mf A group
of boys went exploring yester
day in an abandoned ammuni
tion dump outside Rome.
They found a round, rusty
ball of metal and had lots of fun
rolling It about until the hand
grenade exploded.
Marcello Cimini, three, and
N a t a 1 e Cordiali, five, were
killed. Two others were injured.
Cigarettes Stolen
Rio De Janeiro, Aug. 17 P)
Burglars broke into the offices
of the U.S. naval mission today.
They took nothing but Ameri
can cigarettes.
Britain's recent survey of
housing conditions revealed that
most of the people interviewed
were "broadly satisfied with
their quarters."
jmftt( '''- VS&b, ..as J&.M
WILL LEAVE SOMETHING VALUABLE
Champ Bulb Snatcher
Runs Out of Hoarding Space
By HOWARD C. ALEXANDER
Detroit IU.P) Charles B. Sero, champion bulb snatcher, has
20,000 bulbs and no place to keep them.
"I've been collecting these bulbs for 46 years," he said. "But
don't get me wrong; I don't want my own museum."
Sero wants to put his bulbs in an Edison Palace of Light,
where each could be displayed :
Individually with the name ofi1 simpiy asK ior u, ne sam
Gets New Post Rear Ad
miral Felix L. Johnson
(above), of Leonardtown, Md.,
former director of naval pub
lic information, will be new
director of naval intelligence,
succeeding Rear Admiral
Thomas B. Inglis, Houghton
Lake, Mich.
Air Circus in
Tillamook Dated
Private pilots from many
parts of Oregon will converge
upon the former iinamooK
naval air station this week-end
when Tillamook entertains the
Oregon Sportsmen-Pilots Satur
day and Sunday with the public
invited.
Walter and Ivan Herd, man
agers of the airport, have lined
up a varied program for the en
tertainment of visitors and have
completed arrangements for
those interested in the county
fair, which closed Saturday, to
provide ground transportation
although the airport is within
walking distance of the entrance
to the Fairgrounds.
Navy planes will give a dem
onstration of formation flying
and other planes will be on the
ground for inspection. Other
arrangements include an oppor
tunity to go crabbing or clam
ming both days.
Visiting pilots and friends
will be provided sleeping quar
ters to the former naval bar
racks on the field but should
bring their own blankets, Herd
states. Special accommodations
will be available for women
fliers. Visiting pilots will be
served breakfast at the airport
Sunday morning from 8 to 10
o'clock, standard time.
New Sheik Tony Dexter,
29-year-old World War II vet
eran of Talmadge, Neb., has
been chosen by producer Ed
ward Small for the leading
role In a movie based on the
life of Rudolph Valentino, the
"Sheik" of the silent films,
Dexter is described as a "dead
ringer" for the "great lover."
(Acme Telephoto)
LEATHER OR COMPOSITION
HALF SOLES
FOR ALL
THE FAMILY
Fast
While
11 Wait
Service
1.29
THURSDAY
and
FRIDAY
SHOE REPAIR
DOWNSTAIRS
aseup! enjotj a glass
There's a full measure of pleasure
' in every glass of light and livelj
Blitz WBtnhard. Light, cool, clear
...livelg, refreshing, satisfying.
IS
5R
fin
iM mUj IUMH! J
1 7 ml
the inventor, the materials used
and a complete explanation of
the bulb. ,
"I want the collection to be
used in an educational way," he
said. "I want them set up so
they can be useful to anyone in
terested in electronics."
The bulbs that still burn, Sero
said, could be operated by push
buttons on stepped-down cur
rent. Sero has every conceivable
size and type of bulb in his col
lection from tiny surgical "grain
of wheat" lamps to a huge, 400
watt high intensity lamp built
experimentally for the torch of
the Statue of Liberty.
"Some people spend their lives
making money, and when they
die, everyone fight for it. I
spent my life collecting bulbs,"
Sero said, proudly. "When I'm
gone, I'll leave something valu
able." Sero would like to leave his
Palace of Light in Detroit be
cause he is a third-generation
Detroiter. But, he said, unless
the Motor City wakes up and
offers a building he'll be forced
to take his collection to some
other city.
He gets many of his bulbs
through the mail from people
who have heard about his col
lection. Others, the bulb snatch
er gets himself.
"When I see a bulb I'd like
And I have never been turned
down."
His collection includes a bulb
from the battleship Maine which
was sunk in 1898; one from the
bomb bay of the Enola Gay, the
plane that dropped the bomb on
Hiroshima; one from Hitler's
limousine, and the dial light
from Heinrlch Himmler's radio
' "Perhaps my strangest bulb,"
he said, "is an ordinary 25-watt
electric bulb. It killed a cow
and was found burning in the
cow s mouth."
The collection keeps growing
and the bigger it gets the more
anxious Sero is for a building,
He said he spends more time try
ing to find some place to keep
them than he does in taking care
of them
HOYT
Insurance
Agency
(Constitution Life Ins. Co.)
Now Located ot
1875 N. CAPITOL ST.
Meat Prices
May Be Lower
Chicago, Aug. 17 (U.R) Falling
prices on midwest livestock
markets will cause retail price
drops at meat counters within a
few weeks, experts said today,
Hog prices dropped as much
as $1.25 a hundredweight yester
day, mainly because use of the
record corn crop will make it
cheaper to feed animals. Hogs
were down from a high of
S23.65 last week to about $20
yesterday.
An agric u 1 1 u r e department
FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP
AUTO TRUCK FIRE
Ploy it safe insure with Farmers
Ins. Group. SAVE money and hove
the best coverage available. Your in
quiry is invited.
ma 31
BILL OSKO
Phone 3-5661
466 Court St.
! "It's our j
family's whiskey, !
I neighbor-and j
j tasty as the j
! day is long!"
' 1 fLM&w I
Pfisr in
!
For information relative to
family hospitalization as
advertised over Radio Sta
tion KXL.
Phone 2-3872
BILL OSKO
Dist. Mgr.
BLENDED WHISKEY
now. n rain mm smt. nc
fftlKIM FAMILT CB., MWIENCEIUIC. MD.
spokesman said hog prices
should continue to fall and "may
reach support levels this fall or
winter."
Wife Stealing Charged
Chicago, Aug. 17 (U.R) Rob
ert M. Shaw, 38, President of an
air conditioning company,
charged today that his wife,
Florence, 39, ran away with his
star salesman and $3000 of the
company's money.
Drought Injured crops recent
ly throughout French Morocco
except In the Rharb region.
ITCH
(AtfvertUemeoti
arlaua do wftdia con-
Unite far life If not
topped. Its iole came if
the Itch mite which
U Immnne to ordinary treatment!. EX
40RA kllla the Itch-mite almoit Initantlr.
Only three daya EXSORA treatment tf
-equlred .
"Mall orderi given prompt attention.
At all Fred Meyer Drug Section! and oth
er GOOD Drill Store!." '
HISTORIC MEDICAL HIGHLIGHTS No. 47
NEW LEASE ON LIFE-
CONTINUED life for thousands was the di
rect result of Banting and Best's discovery in
1921 that Insulin was contained in extracts
from a partially degenerated pancreas. This
was the vital fluid that was known to make
proper assimilation of certain foods by the
body possible . . . without which diabetics suf
fered and eventually died. By skilled balanc
ing of dietetic treatment and insulin injection,
diabetics can live almost a normal life, even
though there is no known cure for the disease
itself.
THF QWStN&tm COtNfK
COUtI 4 COMMtKMl Hmmm
titDlCAl CiHTtn IMNCH
lfot op rat as cm
HIT! WflNHAtD COMPANY, PORTLAND, OMGON
DISTRIBUTED BY GIDEON 8TOLZ COMPANY I
I A
I
I
Come to Our Big Buy-Now Birthday Parly
Our Celebration of Hudson's 40th Anniversary Year
NO WONDER WE'RE IN A TRADING MOOD the New Hu'dson
Is riding a rising tide of popularityl Official figures prove il: Hudson sales
are up 33 over last year at this time. And how people are switching
to Hudson! Already, more than 107,000 have traded in other makes of cars,
from the lowest to the highest priced, to own a New Hudson.
NEW
WE want you to discover the inside story
of Hudson's success that the New Hud
son gives, not just "more", but the most of all
you want most in a motor car! That's why
now, during our big Buy-Now Birthday Party
we're oftering the longest trades, best deals
in our history I
Come in and bring your car. You'll be
amazed how much we'll allow you for it! Enjoy
a thrilling Revelation Ride in the New Hud
son, only car with "step-down" design. One
ride will convince you that the New Hudson is
America's 4-MOST Car: 1 - MOST Beautiful.
2 - MOST Roomy. 3 - MOST Road-worthy.
4 - MOST All-round Performance.
It's America's most beautiful car, for example,
because it's the lowest-built, most streamlined
of all yet there's full road clearance. Indeed,
this is a car of such advanced design that it's a
protected investment for your motor-car dollars!
Uucbn
ONLY CAR WITH THE STEP
HERE'S WHERE TO COME FOR THE BIG BUY-NOW BIRTHDAY PARTY
SHROCIt MOTOR (0.
1 DOWN DESIGN
316 N. Church St.
Salem, Ore.
Of
A