14 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Thursday, October 27, 1949 TL--, A tMMMJ TL-l C-,..!. I IICWIJ MUTUIIWCU I IIUI hUllll Created From Dust; Not Fire C J s'v 7."- :f . I -S3 M M Rochester. N. Y., Oct. 27 UP) A theory that the earth was created from dust instead of fire was unfolded before the national academy of sciences today by one of the world s foremost chem ists. The author of the new theory is Dr. Harold Urey of the Vnl versity of Chicago eminent Pension Hearing George McLain (center, with moustache), California pension promoter, fights his way through a crowd . of his followers to enter the hearing in Los Angeles at which a state senate committee is investigating McLain's Citizen Committee for Old Age Pensions A boisterous crowd of elder ly spectators clamored for admission to the hearing room after all seats were filled. (AP Wirephpto) Christmas Trees Raised as Commodity on Valley Farm By FLORENCE CAKLTON Stayton, Oct. 27 Christmas trees grown to order is the plan of Lloyd A. Craft, who has created a veritable Christmas tree farm on his place in the hills 10 miles east of Silverton and just north of Drake's crossing. Craft, who first got his idea of the novel farm from a. pamphlet flpsrrihinff itrh nilliirp whlrhe - was Issued by the Oregon State 1 6.500.000 dimes daily. But in 'one respect the sub ways haven't changed much since the day in 1904 when the first line was opened from City hall to Broadway and 145th street by way of Grand Central and Times Smiare, That day a 'rter wrote: t ... . . j . able difficulty was experienced I ' herS nf thp r.h tnin nnH .OVd to get Otv" I college, believes he' is a pioneer in it in Oregon, although such practice has been carried out in the east. At Christmas time last year. Craft cut over 280 acres of land to get some 3000 trees out for the holiday market. Consider- because of the rough terrain and it was finally necessary to use fleds to bring the trees out. Last April Craft purchased 27,000 of the two-year-old-Douglas fir trees for a half cent each from the Oregon State Forestry department at Corvallis. These were set out In blocks, each 'tree having been given a three foot square of space around it. As the buds appear at the ends of the branches Craft cuts them off, knowing that three more buds will appear where each one has been cut away. This tends to keop the trees symme trical. ' , . Outside of occasional hoeing, little cultivation is necessary,, and the trees seem to thrive in the red-black soil. -They do not need irrigation and trees which were six to 10 inches high when set out In April, have now grown to approximately 25 in ches In height, the owner said. Coming to Oregon some four years ago from Los Angeles af ter his discharge from the serv ice. Craft first tried raising strawberries on his 30 acres In the Silverton hills, but met much discouragement due to weevil, marauding deer and ca pricious weather which Insisted on being either dry when it should have been wet, or down right cold when it should have been, warm to ripen the berries. Berries take a lot of cultiva tion, too. Trees are of a marketable size three years after they have been let out, and Craft plans to buy ISO, 000 of the two-year-olds and add them to the ones set out in ' April. Christmas trees, which Craft i took from his forest lands last year were shipped mostly to the California market, but the trees he is now growing commercially will be shipped to eastern mar kets, Craft said. The tree venture Is only a sideline with Craft, who is a roofer by trade. However, he aid recently 'in an interview, it is a lot easier than growing strawberries. Since Oregon is the natural habitat of the Douglas (ir, Craft believes the Christmas tree ven ture Is one destined to prove profitable for its owner. New York Subway 45 Years Old Today New York, Oct. 27 The New York subway' system cele brated Its 4Slh birthday today. It's grown some: 241.56 miles along 37 lines collecting abovit CAdv.rtUfmrnli Piles Hurt Like Sin! But Now I Grin Tlt'iuanndn chni'froani to (trim. ilWfort' formula to rllv dinfomfort cf Mien. Brnt druittl bjr notfd Thorn Inn A Minor Clinic. Surprising QUICK rallmtlv rMf of Win, Itrh, lrrlttnn. Trnrln to often, an rink awHItng. I'm ilnrtnm' m-y, 0t tub Thornton A Minor' Hfx'tnl OtntmMU or Itrrtnl Hit fwuMtorlPB today, follow 1nh dlrtrt Innt. For ml at all drug itorfi vrywhyrn. atomic scientist, Nobel prize winner and discoverer of heavy water. Urey did something unique. He looked with a chemist's eyes at the earth beneath our feet to find there the signs and clues to its origin. The first thing he found was the temperature which had to exist in the top crust of earth about a billion years ago to form the present chemical compounds on the ground. That tempera ture was nearly 2000 degrees Fahrenheit. But the temperature was not the creation, he reasoned. A billion years still earlier the earth was cool, just a huge ag gregation of dust gathering Into a ball as the sun passed through one or more vast dust clouds in space. This primeval dust contained every kind of chemical, includ ing a lot of radioactive dusts. The temperature of the dust ball began rising, due to the heat from this radioactivity, and the heat pressure of gravitation as the dust got denser. Thus it rose to nearly 2,000 degrees. Iron and everything else was uniformly scattered through this dust ball. That would be im possible according to former theories, which required a liquid ball of fire in order for iron to concentrate in the core of the earth, where it now is. But Chemist Urey sees an easy way for the iron to sink to earth's center while the earth was still a large, hard ball of dust. He names the chemical condition necessary, by which melting iron slips in little rivu lets along silicate paths. Utey's idea of iron sinking to the center of a solid earth also would explain a lot of mysteries. It explains, he says, the Pacific ocean, the continents, their drifting apart, the lost contin ents, the tropical climate of Ant arctica, the great glacial periods, and the fluctuating length of the day. It explains, for example, how water formed from the incoming dust and how originally waters probably lay literally boiling upon the whole face of the earth. As the iron sank, it dis placed the lighter material at the earth's center. This material rose on one side of the earth- where Europe now stands as the first land. On the opposite side a compensation depression formed, which now Is the hug basin of the Pacific ocean. Latvians Don't Understand 'Kill' Tacoma, Oct. 27 (IP) Armed only with a dictionary and spurred by a too-recent memory of a life of oppression in their native Latvia, Mr. and Mrs. Os- Uars Karlins came to the Puyal lup valley last summer with their three children. They settled at the summer farm home of Dr. and Mrs. Harry Johnson. They could speak lit tle English; none at all when excited. Last week Dr. Johnson re ceived a frantic call from Kar lins. "Very bad, come quick," was all the doctor could make out of the obviously terrorized plea. He raced to the farm. There he found Mrs. Karlins and the children huddled in an upstairs closet. The father was in the yard, worried appearing but resolute. He handed Mr. Johnson a slip of pink paper. It read: "Kill Thursday." It was a notation from the circulation department of a Ta coma newspaper to stop delivery of the paper during winter months while the Johnsons lived in town. To the Karlins it meant what their dictionary said "kill" meant: "Make dead, take away life." i'K No Comment Defense Secretary Louis Johnson (right) and Secy, of Navy Francis P. Matthews (left) talk with re porters after they conferred with President Truman for nearly 30 minutes at the White House. Johnson declined to com ment on reports of an impending shake-up in the navy high command, but admitted that he and Matthews had. conferred with Mr. Truman about recent Capitol Hill testimony on their inter-service battle over unification. (Acme Telephoto) Expelled Doctor Witness for U.S. Portland, Oct. 27 VP) A phys ician testified today he was ex pelled by the Multnomah Coun ty Medical Society in 1937 be cause he treated members of the National Hospital association. The physician, Dr. Leland Bel knap, said he applied two years ago for reinstatement but re ceived no answer. His testimony was in the gov ernment's suit charging that the Oregon State Medical Society and affiliated groups sought to monopolize prepaid medical care with their own organization, Oregon Physicians' Service. Dr. Belknap said that as a result of his ouster, he had to pay more for malpractice insur ance, could not subscribe to the American Medical Association's Journal, was not listed in the doctor's telephone exchange and could not care for patients who were members of the Oregon Physicians' Service. A fence made out of shrub bery of anv sort is knnwn s 9 "living fence." One of the oldest is me neage, wnose sharp barbs kept animals in as well as out. BIBLE PASSAGE FOR LYRICS Religious Music for Peace Comes to Tin Pan Alley By CLAIRE COX ) New York (U.B Two Tin Pan Alley song writers have turned their attention from syncopation to the Scriptures so they can help fill an unprecedented demand for new religious -music. Howard Fenton, 28, and Gene Bone, 32, are trying to fill the needs of atomic age worshippers with songs set to the Psalms and lyrics of their own, appeal-- ing for world peace and broth erhood. They started writing religious music more than a year ago, when word reached their ears that Bible sales were hitting an all-time high and church attend ance was increasing. ' Bone, 'son of a Menlo Park, Cal., Presbyterian minister, con sulted his father, who told him he would be doing a real service for mankind if he turned his ef forts to church music instead of love ballads. It isn't easy for composers to make a living on religious mu sic, but Bone and Fenton decid ed to live on their royalties from a couple of hits for a while and see what they could do about improving church music. "There are plenty of hymns, and good ones, too," Fenton said, "but there hasn't been any good choir or solo stuff written for a long, long time. We used mostly Bible passages for our lyrics be cause we feel the lyrics -are the most important part of a song, and who can improve on the Bi ble?" , And so, in their apartment In the heart of Manhattan's Tin Pan Alley, the boys set to work. They have written music to the first and 119th Psalms, and their own peace hymn, "Prayer of a Waiting World," which they call a' modern spiritual. They played and sang their songs while the composer next door was rapping out boogie woogie on his tinny piano and the musical neighbor upstairs chanted a corny ballad off key. "That's a lot of Junk," said Bone, who 12 short months ago was part of the tinny Tin Pan Alley chorus. "At least what we are doing is not junk. We are trying to help fill the barrier between classical stuff like Handel and Bach and what soloists can handle. We are trying to write music that the average church soloist can sing, and most of them are housewiv es, not opera sopranos.. "Of course, we'll have to go back to moon and June stuff pretty soon. Song writers have to eat, you know?" GOP Worker Dies The Dalles, Oct. 27 VP) Mrs. John Patterson, 37, secretary of the Wasco county republican central committee, died yester day after a long illness. Her hus band is party county chairman. Scientifically, the domestic cat is known as Felis catus or Felis domestica. BIGGEST MOTILE MARKET m TPOWN WHERE YOUR DOLLAR GETS TIME AND A HALF GIGANTIC MEAT SALE 0X TAILS T-Bone Steaks I SWISS STEAK I Boneless Steaks 5c v 55c k 59c V 64c For Stewing or Brazing Cut the Way You Want Cut Thick f Hound or New York Cut BEEF CUBES ROLLED ROASTS BEEF ROASTS SHORT RIBS 45c it 55c " 45c 1 t, 25c ,b Boneless Get Yours Eorly Blode Arm or Rump For Brosing AGED CHEESE SMALL HEARTS I BEEF LIVER RED FRYERS "i;jeo49c,b 25c ,b 29c ,b Dr0w,j49Eah . Limited Supply Young, U. S. Gov. Ins. Large Sixe " hcnics" BACON ENDS I SLICED BACON HENS JustHeat Alt. Swift, 1 Of lb. DraW" l 39 and Eat w 3 to 5 lb. Averate and Pieces Swift's Layer For Fricosse U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED FOR YOUR PROTECTION GARDEN FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES DANISH SQUASH 1c No Limit Each ORANGES Far Juice No Limit Doi. 10c SWEET POTATOES 2- 19c MrR?PNR MARGARINE I HO OATS I NUCOA SPAGHETTI QuickorReg. , mission 35c 2 b 45c 7 - 29c I b il 2V.lb.pk,. MayFlow., Bo, 2 lbs. 53C Large Assortment EGG NOODLES I BLEACH I SC0T TISSUE "ST r-fe 39c" 1 3 - 29c Hot Master Bread, Hot Rolls, Every Day at 4 P. M. IGA rj! Store J roadway tsrocsry BROADWAY AND MARKET STREETS Open Sundays, 8 A.M. 'til 6:30 P.M. IGA Store 3-6489 IIJJVJUJI Statt St. I Priced "Kash and Karry"-Less Cash More Carry Plenty of values here for th'rifty shoppers: quality and freshness assured. A complete variety of meats, fish and poultry. FRESH PURE LARD 2 29c Freshly Ground Fresh Country Hamburger n, iic Sausage 55c EASTERN ORE. HEREFORD Z Z 7. ZZ BEEF A" Cuti A Eastern Oregon Hereford JA ROAST 39c Rib Steak, 49c Choice Milk Fed ft Grade "A" Milk Fed J fk Veal Roost 5lZ Veal Steak 4 Tender Skinniest f Eastern Sugar Cured p WIENERS ib. JVC Hams b JjC HALIBUT STEAK lb 43c SALMON STEAK lb. 49c LING COD Sliced lb... 29c RED SNAPPER Fillets lb. 29c I AnCD DADIsf Tender Young Hogs L-WVtlCI rVrtrt' Thitisrhetim.tobuyllb. LOCKER BEEF Eastern Ore. Hereford Strictly Groin Fed! Ib. . 33c 33c Ml WW FOOD MARKET 1288 State Street Phone 2-9237 APPlj Fancy Quality Jonathans BOX S 29 YAMS 2 ib, 19c Potatoes 'Toll's 29c Celery arSTucy 10c Pop Corn HiSS 29c CIDER HOOD RIVER, OREGON. MADE, SWEET AND PURE.... GAL. 49c NABISCO : CLAPP'S. GERBER'S Shredded Wheats, 29c BABY FOODS 6for 45c STANDBY GIANT SIZE PUMPKINSi" 2 ran. 15c TIDE Pko. 75c MARSHMALLOWS ': PKG. 10' TUNA FLAKES ca25c OLEO SWANCO, Enriched. . 2 ib.. 45c D K C A U Enriched Hi lb. I T C fJiC? form Fresh CVJOd Medium A Grade. Doz. 55c Prices Effective Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. Oct. 27-28-29 Shop and Save BASINGER'S 13th & State Sts. Plenty of FREE Parkinf !h Inn .t Frd titrft Drut.