Capital JiJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher Published every otternoon 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, SI. 00; One Tear. $12.00. By Mail in Oregon: Monthly, 75e; ( Mos. S4 DO; One Vear. $8.00. V S. Outside Oregon: Monthly. $1.00; 6 Mos.. $6.00: Vear, $12. BV BECK Easier Said Than Done W 4 Salem, Oregon, Monday, September 12, 1949 The New Rush to Gold Coast The Pacific coast states, particularly California and Washington, aie .having a phenomenal growth in popula tion. In an article in the New York Sunday Times Maga zine on Los Angeles, Sam Boal comments: "The questions are easy but the answers are not. Even the physical facts about Los Angeles, its phenomenal changes with in the past 10 vears, are hard to explain. People are today swarming into Los Angeles at the rate of 3.000 per week, and they have not come to see Van Johnson's house. They have come to stay. The metropolitan area has acquired just over a million and a quarter permanent residents since 1940. Within the last year Ios Angeles has become the third largest city in the country nosing out Philadelphia." Citizens from Washington here for the state fair, re ported a similar rush is on to Washington with hundreds of families arriving every week. They attribute the in flux to the state's new social security program, liberalized age pensions and socialized medicine and hospital service, that insure social security from "cradle to the grave." This mass migration to the coast is a modern version of a gold rush for a social security bonanza which has an irristible appeal to those seeking something for nothing stimulated by favorable climate and scenic attractions. It is the culmination of a long campaign which the magazine Time describes as follows : "Ever since the depression, noisy prophets had been spring ing up along the Pacific coast to lead the aged in holy wars on the nearest slate treasury. They were an odd lot power-hungry communists, vote-hungry politicos, sharp-eyed promoters and croupy and lugubrious old bucks with top-heavy cargoes of park-bench economics. They herded their 'senior citizens' into irascible pressure groups, made pensions a permanent poli tical issue, and damned those who opposed them as monsters who would starve their own grandmothers. "The a vera op citizen in California, Oregon and Washington voted for pensions with something of the attitude of a night club sot, listening to Mother Machree it was hard to be critical because the words were so sad. Furthermore, many of the old folks had a legitimate case. But this summer thousands of taxpayers were recalling their own generosity with purse clutching alarm The Pacific coast had become a minor league welfare state of its own, and new pension and welfare plans seemed to be pushing the states toward the brink of bank ruptcy." Californians voted last November for "Proposition No. 4," an amendment to the constitution, boosting pensions for the aged to $75 a month, lowering the age limit from 65 to 63, ended the embarrassment of proving pauperism, per mitting pensioners to have $3500 in real estate, an auto, furniture and jewelry, $1500 in liquid assets and support in part by relatives and still qualify. In the first six months pensioners had increased from 198,000 to 245,000 and are still multiplying. The cost had jumped to over $17 million a month and the state treasury faces bankruptcy. An effort is underway to modify by initiative bill the amendment, but the original "ham and egg" organizers are conducting a statewide radio campagin and protest meetings to "protect the old folk." Washington's welfare system is even gaudier than that of the California gold coast. Its citizens voted for initia tive 172, a measure put over by the communist domin ated Washington Pension Union. Under its terms, one out of every 12 persons In the state gets financial assistance for two years and the other 11 would pay almost as much to keep them as Grand Coulee dam cost. The old folks not only get money for mortgage pay ments, rent, tax assessments, insurance, food and cloth ing, but free medical and dental care, free hospitaliza tion, free home-nursing service, free medicine, glasses and artificial limbs. And the cost is bankrupting the state. Oregon had a narrow escape because of faulty construc tion of the illegal initiative bill passed by our big hearted but thoughtless electorate. But they voted for increases that would have cost more than the whole cost of running the state, but failed to provide any means, of paying for them. Pensions, however, will still cost $28 million for the next two years as against $300,000 in 1933-34. And another effort will be made at the 1950 election to put over a "large, wide and handsome" security bill that will spell bankruptcy, killing the goose that lays the golden eggs. Farmer's Luck Ran Out Winrioin, Kan. (U.R Every grain farmer knows that draw ing wheat is a great gamble, but Carl Teterson can add a special attest to the statement. Hail hammered down fields of wheat nearby. Peterson's grain grew unharmed. High winds then hit some of his friends' crops. Not his. Wet weather diseases deeply slashed yields all over Kansas. The glume blotch, leaf rust and mosiac fungus were not as damaging on Peterson's farm. He harvested 1,200 bushels of wheat and stored it In his combination granary and machine shop. Then came a bolt of lightning In a post-harvest rainstorm. It set fire to the building and the entire 1.200 bushels were destroyed, along with machine tools, a 14 -ton truck and 1,200 pounds of clover seed. Angler and Bass Change Places Ratavla, N. Y. (Mi William J. Ilnusenger caught his first bass in 30 years because he thought he had met up with a snake while fishing for bullheads. Ilnusenger am! a companion were angling for bullheads on Silver Lake when they heard a commotion In the water near thrlr boat. Thinking It was a watcrsnake, Housenger Jumped out of the boat, which was close to shore. A few minutes later he and Smith discovered that a S'i pound bass had Jumped Into the boat. He Must Be a Tough Sarge! Taroma (UP) The state patrol reportrd today that a con vertible driven by Sgt. Melvin K. Kenoyer. Ft Lewis, had done the following In this order on the highway near here: Passed a truck on the right hand aide, struck a light pole, turned over completely, continued on for 614 fret, knocked down two guard rails and went over a small embankment near a motel. Power In the district waa off for an hour. Sgt Kenoyer waa booked lot Investigation of drunken drlv- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Truman Coached Vaughan On 5-Percenter Testimony By DREW PEARSON Washington White House intimates say President Truman is taking the battle over MaJ. Gen. Harry Vaughan more seriously than the fight over government reorganization, arms for the North Atlantic or any of the main planks on the fair deal program. Before Vaughan testified, President Truman personally coached him A GUILD Wizard of Odds on every possible quel tion the sena tors could ask. Vaughan's state m e n t was re written three times and re duced from 20 odd pages of vi triol to a reas onable length. f ' The president fc;!u also urged his " ' military aide to be all sweet ness and light, not to lose his -2V SIPS FOR SUPPER So Be It By DON UPJOHN We note by press reports that now the Russians claim to have been originators of the tank. As far as we're concerned there's no objections to the claim. From what we've heard about' their bouts with vodka they were not only the original tanks but are still at it. Numerous ar guments today about town as to whether by the switch over again to time as it was intended folks lost an hour's sleep or picked one up. It seems there are arguments for both sides of this question or When Franklin Roosevelt was president of the United States, he applied to government the same strategy a military com mander applies to his men in the field. If a member of his administra tion became a liability, made too many enemies in congress, Roo sevelt eased him out even though they were intimate friends just as a military com mander sometimes has to desert men in the field. Rexford Tuewell. once sum- temper, never to insult the sena- marized it this way to friends tors, never 10 mennon ms m- when he resigned as undersec- tics by name. retary of agriculture: Mr. Truman was chiefly wor- -a general in battle can't af- ried over any probing of Vaug- ford to go into the front-line nan c a m o a i g n contributions, trenches. He'i ent to tav he. since the haphazard general had hind at staff headquarters. When DfnO AvIAM'C DWfnCDDWCO insisted on bypassing the Demo- his subordinates become casu- IYMIV J rn I LKJjKJ rnci cratic National committee ana allies, they either get shipped worked direct with Louis John- back to hospitals or get buried, son. No 'commander can hold up a How much Vaughan raised In war because of them, the last campaign probably he ! the battle over pure food himself doesn't know, but some lnd drug advertising," continu insiders estimate it at around e(j Tugwell with no bitterness, $100,000, from all sorts of "I was carrying out Roosevelt's sources. ideas. But it was much better for me to take the raD and let The White House has really him stay behind the political IN 40 ODDS SH0WU3 100.7 MEN FOR fc EVERY 100 WOMEN; NOW ODDS HAVE CRANED TjC TO 99.1 MEN FOR 110 WOMEN, n o W JW TOWN OF rtVit'J NOT mfS&-- A MINOR LEAullE MmMWkmT BAIL PUYER HAS ooos 0FI3T0M6AINST " LEAGUE PUYER (lomwiTHciAa.umKOHiCK v'""'uXsih , One of Hal's Fables For the Atomic Age an unholy temper." They were r,d in oEudgert0"' M-uSept' ni been using police-state methods firing line ioio. one was 10 lira aim , ,; ,ltVi the Vauohan All .l .j i; .i in Lumiiiiiu.i ...... .. o in i tnc auvciuscis in John was celebrated anniversary their 70th weddini '"vesugauon. coumry, plus tne newspapers, him a lullaby meir lum weaaing Nnt onlv do senators have a in iu mn at me r,H if. . ,,. pretty good idea that their better for the chief if I now i,00k. pnones are ueiug iajHcu, uuv resign. certain witnesses and investiga- He did, tors have been subjected to pres- What's in a name. For In stance there's Pete Haveluck who got into the city jail this week and Martha Washington also picked up by the police and re turned to Hillcrest home. Don Upjohn By the time he was five he sure. Harry Truman, however, be- r i j , Francis Flannigan, ace investi- lieves in getting into the front- Brittannica from gdiui iui mc aciiois vu.... line 11 entiles, regaraiess 01 po got a threat from the Trumanite litical shot and shell, and taking Charles Clark, formerly attach- just as much criticism as his Now that the pari-mutuels ,a! . ' I.T... . . " mun f 0151 there wouldn't be a n y argu- have folded up after a busy week j-'"' nnn . mnnih u suuuru.ndiea. . ,otf..i in .i -i i j i. i, Clark now draws Sl.uuu a montn It s a fine personal quality, ments. It seems so restful to there should be quite a run on get back on a regular time shirt counters around town to- schedule again maybe we did day. make up an hour's sleep. And we're not going to lose any more The weather started off In as lobbyist for Franco Spain, but seriously impedes his politi- and is on intimate terms wnn cal program. the White House. And, after all, Truman was Congressman Schafer of Mich- elected on the basis of his pro- By HAL BOYLE New York W) Once upon a time there was a great scientist named Dr. Alfonso Cortex. No mind like his had ever entered the world before. The day he was born he asked the nurse If he could borrow tho hospital's microscope. He wouldn t take his atternoon nap unless the his mother ""g , leaning statesmen, Banners, cler gymen, industrial leaders, gener als, admirals and educators to his laboratory. When they wero all assembled, he walked into the room carrying a large box. "Gentlemen," he said, "in this hoy T have 3 fi04 385 mnsaultoes. I have bred, and cross-bred them a. i iui live ywia lu wictru uui tucu vicious instincts. I have read them the Bible, the Koran, the i Boju Talmud and passages from the lege at 7 before he could play philosophers. They have been hopscotch well. taught not to sting anyone who 4. in h In . , ni WllOliy gUUU. .C UlC memory, for ward or back ward, including index, he grad uated from col- were not going to lose any more ine weamer aiarieu on .n , Republican, also says he gram, not because of his ability giveaway quiz contest. They ' rf of the same by further arguing such nice shape this morning . tu.t.ni'e Dnon f " Im; . ".. " i"y couldn't think un a ouestion he ever reared. only trained moral mosquitoes about it. At any rate, as our seems too bad there couldn t be , . ... w. .. imm.rii. , '"J"' answer The network friend Paul Hauser indicated in another week of state fair. a communication sent over, the grandfather's clock in the court- Making Movies house tower finally caught up "See." ately after his public statement . . finally paid him $5,000,000 to And with that he opened the that General Vaughan should be CAPITAL NEWS CAPSULES Quit it was the only way to box, and out swarmed the mo- HnllvwnnH IPiA new version court-martialed. Madame Chiang in Exile keep from going bankrupt. squitoes. nouywooa i-i a new version rn.. .hn h3u. tolorf milh mj -ut v.. eu.,. ,.. . , j .. m.j "louanit viiiong nai-oncii is wnn inai nest egg ine young uun i dc aiarmeu, Biuuea ur. saaVn7 ugf il'tml tuV"oo Sran backed," wUh the enough mney S , S EE" anT rami' Z- S fSJi JM" - . .. ' .... The mosquitoes Degan settling on his uneasy guests. For a mo- with the citizenry again after of the Hollywood wolf has turn- . . : .. .. ii i I... 41.., -1 ,.. " iiuraiciini scrutaDie lace letting tne city punve jcoiciuaj ui j,rjbed council think what it may. piunnea on me yuu-niiuw-w.iai For instance, Col. politically people. All she has to do, she believes, is turn on the charm. Wm. Lee, Friends who have discussed In time every branch of hu- Prophets Without Honor South Gate, Calif. (A) Just aft- She er her honeymoon Mrs. John by buckshot-shooting youths who h t , t ' ,' itn' John' the Mad- man knowledge was illuminated ment there was a sudden silence, tlted.uhe.r Ei? ' P?.reela"ln Maraion in Rome and was sub- ,m living in oriental splendor by hi. brilliance. Hi, invention, a st Winning, and then- uiua a'"c ean unn 1 1 r rannmanripil onfi rip- at 41i Um U uilli. : . i ol, WiC ui inn uuuuiiHii enaoiea men 10 live iony yean ZTITZ br0thTLn"IH- M' Kun- S.he I""". drink 811 niht w"ht me secuna -,i .im.H,rf nnH He. i u . . . ., 'nnn" iri in reen Hav "l,lul""' ' ok nuiuc ui nn uuuuiiait e enamea men to live iorty years oops girl in recent days. ,. fir,t to,ri newsmen i,.tv., i 1 u v ou- Doke said sne was warned tnat Earner, miss K.atnieen ulou- ,h . th .rmv -rarkHown rame . , u:u jonger, arm, an nigm wun her marriage couldn't last be- nor, 19, had reported that she , slllt of the MaraBon jn .mu. . ' T ' getting a hangover. Get by ill I l A 4. t . D D n . fire laincu, millUM cause her bridegroom "had such too was a target for a B-B gun. This Time It Was on the Snake Wheeling, W. Va., U.R Charles Johnston was picking ber ries when a copperhead sank its poisonous fangs Into his leg. Calmly, he killed the serpent and went on with his work. The leg was artificial. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Ouch!" "Ouch! !" "Ouch! ! !" The famous people, slapping at McGranery of Philadelphia Vr'Tto Then he emerged. , VnV r Vi A . . iCnYrlht 4S) In 1946, McGranery, assistant ' to the attorney general, was sore at Truman because he wanted a Circuit Court judgeship and Tru man would only appoint him to the District bench. At that time McGranery also told this writer, who was in his office when Gen eral Vaughan phoned, that the general sought to intervene in WIS DfWIlt Marktcml Both Tito and Stalin Say No Armed Strife, But- By DeWITT MacKENZIE ui Porelgn Affair Anilrsti Marshall Tito, Yugoslavia's hard-boiled dictator, reaffirmed his belief Friday that his country isn't headed for armed strife with Russia despite the propaganda-war and economic-boycott by the Moscow-controlled cominform. At the same time, Pictro Nennl, a pro-communist Italian socialist leader, ternational communists who . n 1. k.l. I M ff IOM UICII UlUaS JlUIll 1T1UMUW. r m H,,l naM 1. IVTa... h0,J . ,n 5en!'f " cuMe Orleans, Burton having been in a d that the Russian policy for dic(ed f bribj international communism pre-, Tod McGr.nW. a U. S. eludes war among member,. msMc Judge ,,' Catholic. Birds of a feather flock togeth- cherishM an ambitlon ,0 filI tne next vacancy on the Supreme Obviously the position is ex- Court. Shortly after Catholic plosive and, as this column re- Justice Frank Murphy died, Mc- marked the other day, Tito him- Granery even made a special self probably wouldn't claim to trip to the White House, be a good insurance risk. And with Justice Rutlcdge It is the type of crisis which seriously ill. McGranery last could produce a shooting war week denied that General Harry but. as things stand at the mo- Vaughan had ever intervened in ment. isn't expected to by most the Burton jury-bribing case in observers. New Orleans. OVER HEADS OF READERS Company, Union Papers Get 'Highbrow' Rating By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEb' Denver. Sept. 12 Some company newspapers and national She has. of course, frequently union newspapers write over the heads of their readers, when declared that she maintains a judged for ease of reading. policy of non-aggression against This report waa made to the American Psychological associa all countries communist and tion today by Dr. Edward T. Raney, of Wayne university, Detroit. otherwise and will fight only He studied a large auto cor- ' ; ; rr in self defense. She hasn't dif- poration's house organ, and the for"i'' ny sentence over 21 ferentiated between communist publication, of the United Auto wor"' .,ong "m more "- t r . .... fliMilt- In roari T.iLcauHoa, mnM ana non-communist nation, in Worker,, C.I.O., all going to the this respect. ,ame employes. However. Moscow has ldenti- He found the union paper, fied its political ism as "inter- even more high-brow on word national communism," as oppos- ing than the corporation's, ed to the nationalism for which "The information was judged Tito stands. The sovereignty of a, hard, or very hard to read, as she talked. Almnet xiHent I.ee even nut thic in ... ! l .:. hiir.in.hmir'i ilun 9nJ urn ill llieiaillt writinlr while the official text u j I ' clgaretu " their f ra en maMe from of h"s rDrimand sued icai? ' bodu"t PPP Into the they wanted by working one ,he laboratory, all except a stub- . !i refrimana. specincaiiy room to make sure sne waJ a1 hour a day- general He walked out cites the Maragon incident. riht , . . , Dorn general, ne waiKea out. Despite these written state- "S1,, ... ..Toiirl,t,.. Th. u Brushing the mosquitoes f r 0 m ments however Colonel Lee r- I , . T"ris The world-wide. His name was a his cheek and hi. medal,. MTiZKt- stategnde0DartmentZr: word-In houhold. Dr. Cortex looked sadly ly think his demotion resulted i rf'at8e0d0e "."'Jl! ?"! P60"10"1" reatd' But,.ln around hi, deserted laboratory. , ,, ::jt TV,. are near'y o.ouu Kussian agents hm old age that great scientist ..tv. ,, u. .. ,.,uii.. from the Maragon incident The , Albania disguised as tourists, was unhappy. There mu' b me ,Y0l,!y reversal had all the earmarks of Tn Frpnrh ., ,. B. w' good person in the world," he a quick and powerful reminder Jnh' LTlctnT 2', "7?.r is st.iU .e.vil In. ' "AH my mosqultoe. can't from Washington that he would storinff . hu ' olianliti worm, ne .am. x musi solve be wrong. be ud for promotion again soon. .,... . me proDiem oi m iiiis mat iiusi.uvv is senaing TO Albania. s problem of right and wrong." Jut then he felt something nn So he went into his laboratory his neck. lTr "lln- a"d 'ad there for five year,. He summoned the stated ra"JLj,."w:' visit to Moscow that Russia will stop short of war with Yugo slavia. N e n n ib said the Soviet never will in tervene "at thrf point of the bayonet" but proposes that the Yugoslav people themselves "judge and condemn the policies of Tito." These and similar declara tions have brought me an in quiry as to whether there is a communist policy that one com munist nation won't go to war with another. I, Russia's hope for world peace based on the idea that, if all nations should turn commun ist, there couldn't be wars among them? Russia hasn't announced such policy in so many words "Ouch!" cried the scientist. Moral: Never trust an educat world', ed Insect. How much Ufe Insurance should I have? ficuit to read. Likewise, more difficult 1, more than 13.1 syl lables per 100 words. Dr. Flesch I, a consultant for the Associa ted Press on readibility of news. "The very things management would like Its employes to nation under international he said, "when It was like the Know, asm ur. naney, are communism rests in Moscow. material found in a quality mag- being pitched at a level far over The marshal has refined tn ajine. nrh as Harner's." their heads." Now, you can easily determine your own individual life insurance re quirements through a new device developed by Prudential which in sail surrender nis country s sov ereignty, and on that point hinge, the current conflict be tween Russia and Yugoslavia. He rated the company papers Dr. Carol S. Bellows. Detroit, a, 6S percent hard to read and recommended that executives the union at 74 percent. He said learn to read faster. She told of the union papers covered a 80 exeoutives who In 10 week, wider and more national field. training Increased their average The ratings were based on lest reading speeds from Just under sume that there can be no formulae of Dr. Rudolf ncsch, 300 words a minute to almost armed HrU between loyal "in- A'ew York psychologist. Dr. 473. Pacific BmintNO J18 State Stmet is known as the "Dollar Guide." Ask the Prudential man in your com munity about this. He will show you how to use it to your own advantage. THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMfANV Of AMERICA A Mmttsl Lift Imttmna Company Wiiiww Ha n 0n,a in Awoli, Cnllfw an It is. I suppose, logical to as- MORTOAOt ttOIMMION AMIIT INCOMI MOIICtlON I JAIAKT IXtlNSION IOUCAHONAI HANI I HIS I MINI INCOMI ANNUITIES JUVENIIB PgOTBCflON tUIINEIS INSURANCE COVER AOS