26 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Thursday. Octoher fi. 1949 FIGHTING SEEN BY CORRESPONDENT 'Cold War' Is Shooting War On Line Cutting Korea (Editor's Note The following dispatch i from the front linei of the cold war Korea where there is actual fighting with communists Instead of diplomatic maneuvering. The writer Is vice president and general foreign manager of the United Press, now on a tour of the Far East). By JOSEPH L. JONES Paekch-on, Along the 38th Parallel, Korea, Oct. 5 U.R) Some 500 yards across the valley, communist troops of North Korea are yelling at us, but not shooting. They are in a blockhouse atop a little tun, ana we are in me front trenches of the Korean republican troops. Between us is scattering of houses and truck a train tour of a children's town on the outskirts of Belgrade, Yugoslavia, administered by the youngsters themselves. BESIDES HOLDING THINGS TOGETHER Humble Button Gets Play As Collectors Get Together Watklns Glen, N.Y. (U.RI There used to be a game children played with buttons, but nowadays grownups are collecting 'em. Take for example Mrs. Charles Quirk of Watkins Glen. She's got the button bug. She inherited it, by marriage. And now, besides a husband, Mrs. Quirk has buttons hundreds of them. For the person who thinks a button is Just something to hold a coat together, Mrs. Quirk's en thusiasm Is a trifle hard to ex plain. But ever since she In herited the button collection of her late mother-in-law, she has found plenty of other button collectors to share her enthus iasm. Every now and then Mrs Quirk and her fellow button collectors meet for a convention to compare buttons. They have a state and national organiza tion, and periodicals and books are published for the pleasure and edification of the button bugs. According to Mrs. Quirk, a button collectors' convention at Rochester recently revealed that the most valuable button in her collection is a large disc called "The Children's Circus." A circus scene showing a child performing on a trapeze. Is finely etched into the metal of the button. In the background Is a gallery of cherubic faces, done In fine detail. Among the storybook buttons. In Mrs. Quick s collection are many depicting fables, myths. Biblical tales, historic events and famous people. One repre sents the Old Testament story of Eliezer at the well. "The Sentinel at Caracow," a button dating from about 1880, shows the figure of a trumpeter standing on a parapet. It sym bolizes a story which goes some thing like this: During the Tartar invasion of Poland, a trumpeter was playing a melody when he was shot in the throat by a Tartar arrow. From that day on the melody was played in exactly the same way, ending upon the same note that marked the death of the Polish warrior. Another button appears to have been the forerunner of modern advertising featuring an Imaginary character known "Peter Pain." On the button is a dwarf hard at work with a chisel on the face of an unfor tunate victim. The button, which quite commonly owned by collectors, is known as the "Imp of Pain." The avid button collector, Mrs. Quirk said, is not easily kidded by modern copies of old buttons. "The common everyday plas tics are called 'goofies' by the collectors," she said. And a collector would rather lose his favorite button than commit the error of mistaking black glass for true jet. "J e t," according to Mrs. Quirk, "is easy to identify. We know that jet Is a vegetable matter. We scrape a little from the back of a button and, if it burns, we know It's jet." Helen Douglas to Run for Senate Los Angeles, Oct. 6 'P) Hel en Gahagan Douglas, ex-actress turned congresswoman, an nounced today that she will be a candidate for U.S. senator next year. Before leaving by plane for Washington, she issued a state ment saying in part: "This decision is mine and mine alone. I make it without obligation to any special inter est." The seat is now occupied by Sheridan Downey, democrat, who has not announced wheth er he will run for reelection. Mrs. Douglas, wife of Actor Melvyn Douglas, also is a demo crat. The witch hazel is not a hazel tree at all, but a shrub, and the word "witch" is a corruption of "wych" and so called because its leaves looked like those of wych elms. garden patches. It is a national holiday, which may be why nobody is working in that pleasant no-man s lano. "Soldiers of South Korea," the distant voice Is shouting, "why do you show Americans your trenches? Why do you serve that traitor, Syngman Rhee (president of Southern Korea)? Your commanding officer was run back to Seoul. "Why do you consort with the Americans? You ought to work for the common people Come over and join us." The speaker was polite, if leather lunged. He addressed the Southern Korean troops as "gentlemen." He did not even call us visitors "imperialist American bastards" as does the official broadcasting station at Pyongyang, the Northern capi tal. The little non-commissioned officer at my side and turned away. "They read that from script," he said. A minute later, one of the men near us raised his rifle and banged away at the Northern emplacement on the skyline. Everybody ducked, and there was a spatter of fire from both sides before the Indian sum mer quiet returned. In jabbing at the Americans, the communist speaker over looked another civilian in the party the foreign minister of Southern Korea, Col. Ben Limb who spent many years In Amer ican exile while Japan ruled Korea. Others in the party were Jack James of the United Pres: and Willie Dewing, public in formation officer for the Korean government. It all seemed rather unwar like. But down the road we passed an ambulance with three dead. And 12 hours earlier, ac cording to National police, 75 were killed and 25 seriously jj l Ti I 6 .. roe M6DFH7S Vf 1 ' Vkjf IF HOPSARF BCfWrOTOOtOJO, I i(f6 p n , Birrr.RNfSS revriOPs intwf bee. I fvS?"T I ' I ifSllKf BSFWINGTTAlEAVf STrXJ f iW.liSL BECAUSE OF AGWE'S GREAT RESOURCES, ACME til M lOJO. SO AOME USES AtORC HOPS, I TijXW CAN AFFORD TO PAV MOIUT TO BE SURE OF TV4 U) TO 6IVE THf BFFR irg OFIIOME I X, -OW.WjjF 6E7TIN6 THE HIGHEST-OUALITV IN6RFO1ENTB "5 rKc rr satisfying taste, nurnif I vJ every time -the finest hops, finest yeast, 2HK HOPS ARE BHFWFO A SHORTfJJ V THE f. NEST AWLT, AND THE FINEST WATER TOO. fV.'itSV TIME. TO KEEP OUT THE 6U6ltST HOPS.FO EXAMPLE, ARE BLENDED FROW I jm JjjJCV nt .p,. SEVERAL rXWESTlC VARfTlES PUIS IMPORTED jg Tivxj Of niw, I . VARCT.es C UNTIL RFCfNUY NOT AVAILABLE I "r "1 I I tfiw PISDtSUTIOf METHOD 1 n"aZJ! ) BEER II A OEUCAIC PHOOUCT. IF B (JflTH ALL THESE NEW ADVANTAGES fljr .j3B?Ttl rVyfTM HI 10 TOO IONS V WHOirSAlFR OR RETAIUR., ADCOTOa9YlAI OF BREWINSKia yJV ITCAN 60 STALE. SO ACMf'S METHOD OF IV NO WON0E ACMt It NOW AT IT Att-TIA Jkfll"OL. FREQUENT OEllVFRf t TO DIALERS FROM If p,,K gf ffpfcnOtl, Aa22r 1 W"!"" MODERN BREWERIFC, PUIS FAST II f- P"" 21 TUNOVl,KEePSITAMaTOXI If M TWl YEARS, MORE WESTERNERS HA I S14 K .U RRFECrfONOlTICVJ. I INJOVED ACMt BEER. THAN ANY OTHER VJj t 111' M AV4MMWI IMHWNMtf. wounded in the clash between guerrillas and police at Posan, in the far south. There are two kinds of fight ing going on in Korea sport ing attacks along the 38th par allel and the far more serious stabbing raids of guerrillas in side South Korea itself. There may be 20,000 troops facing each other across the parallel, which by decision of the great powers cuts Korea In two for 170 miles from the Yel low sea on the west to the Sea of Japan. Here on the eastern end, In an active sector, the command ant estimated that 200 commu nists hold a front of 6,000 yards But there are upward of 25, 000 guerrillas within the Kor ean republic itself. They are not all active at the same time. They maKe raids like the one at Po san, killing police, burning houses and shooting up towns. Then police raid communist centers in the hills. The dead, according to nffi. cial estimates, have averaged about 25 a day for the last three months. During May and June, the fighting was much hotter. Colonel Limb believes that the present job of the regular com munist troops is to keep the republican army busy in the north while the guerrillas upset me tuumry internally. unquestionably, it Is having Vision Meteor In Daylight Eugene, Oct. 8 (At A bril liant fireball blazed through Oregon skies on a sunny after noon last week and was widely observed in northern Oregon and southern Washington, Dr. J. Hugh Pruett, University of Ore gon astronomer, reported here today. The daylight meteor, one of the few ever reported in the some effect. There is an 11 p.m. curfew in Seoul, the capital, and the most usual estimate of political prisoners, including guerrillas and accused subver- northwest, was observed at 2:30 p.m., last Saturday, Dr. Pruett said. The university astronomer has requested hunters, stockmen and others who saw the fireball to provide him with information as to its height, direction, color and speed. Dr. Pruett, director for the American Meteor soci ety in five western states, plans to chart its course. First reports about the meteor were received from hunters east of Mt. Hood. South of Bend, the fireball was observed by Mrs. Clarence Foster, who was hunting in the former Camp Abbot area. She said the object was as large as the planet Venus, and dropped toward the earth. Had the fireball flashed through the Oregon sky at night It would have lighted up much of the northwest, ooservers believe. More Slowly, Mr. Quickly New York W John Quickly, 35, appeared yesterday be fore Magistrate Eugene R. Canudo to answer a charge of driv ing too quickly. "You should drive more slowly, Mr. Quickly," the judge remarked after the defendant pleaded guilty. The judge quickly fined Quickly (5, which Quickly paid, leaving the court hastily. m m When fhe operator pulls the little itrlnqj Marionettes leap and leem alive But better have us check up on your springs !f your car starts doing the jive. OTTO J. WILSON CO. 388 North Commercial St. Phone 2-3621 Decker's is coming to Salem! 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