Capital Journal. Salem, Ore.. Thursday, Nov. 8. 19493 MIAN MlldlllK UIIIUII IU Be Discussed Formation of a Salem chapter of the Atlantic Union committee will be the objective of a public meeting called for 8 o'clock next Monday night at the Cham ber of Commerce. The announc ed purpose of a group of inter ested citizens is "further ac quainting the public with the Federal Union plan, and for seeking speedy congressional ac tion on the bill already intro duced for this purpose when our lawmakers reconvene in January." I m PW1WWW1JI' I .. . I - U . . U,i. J II I . l f LA Model Model System This model railroad of Herman How ard at Los Angeles county (air, has block system which flashes signals and gates which drop as trains approach. Chinese Reds Open Drive To Rule People's Thoughts Shanghai U.R) The Chinese communists are trying to regiment .thinking throughout the areas they have wrested from the na tionalists. They are organizing "learning groups" in factories, business offices, stores, farming centers, women's clubs, schools," the armed services, youth corps and, in fact, everywhere but the home. The groups are formed with the aim of converting all Chi nese except "capitalists, bureau crats and reactionaries" to com munism. Even the hated capi talists are called into some groups to be "educated." The groups are dedicated to the study of Marxism and the writings and teachings of Mao Tze-tung, president of the Peo ple's Republic of China. O f f i c e workers, especially those in government depart ments, are required to spend their spare time in reading and discussing communism. In factories, workers gather during lunch or rest periods to discuss Mao's speech at the in auguration of the new People's Republic and other communist dogma. At Tsingtao, where U. S. Vice Admiral Oscar C. Badger once based his Western Pacific fleet, communist political workers are telling factory owners: "Comrade manager, you've got to learn the new demo cracy." The underlying thought be hind all the "learning groups" was stated by Mao last July. It was: "We must be one-sided. We must be either with the people's camp or against it. There is no third route." Following the recent appear ance in Salem of Clarence Streit, author of the Federal Union idea, a local organization com mittee was named to further the plan here. This committee in cludes Guy Hickok, ' Loraine Meusey, Dr. Henry Gunn, Steve Anderson, W. E. Richardson, Robert Letts Jones, Judge James T. Brand and Laura E. Kellar. Dr. Gunn, president of Ore gon College of Education, Mon mouth, will attend next Mon day night's meeting. Smog Worries Portland Portland, Nov. 3 The city smoke control commission v ordered yesterday to start work ing on the problem of clearing the metropolitan area atmos phere. Chairman J. Donald Kroeker said he would attend the national air pollution sym poslum at Pasadena, Calif., Nov. 10-11 to get ideas. Smoke plus early winter fog has created smog conditions for several weeks, slowing morning and evening traffic in the city. Sick Children Found To Be Better Students Boston (U.B The will to learn Is stronger in youngsters confin ed to sick beds than In most healthy children. That opinion is shared by two former Boston school teachers, Mrs. Helen Hannan and Mrs. Margaret Kamp, after tutoring some 750 Chilren's Hospital pa tients during the past 15 years. Seven-year-old David Spinney of Milton is a typical hospital student. Confined to an iron lung 2214 hours out of every 24, he must do all his learning orally. TODAY'S BUSINESS MIRROR Recapped Tires Come Back In Style Again; Sales Up By SAM DAWSON New York. Nov. 3 The recapped tire poor relation in the depressed thirties and about the only thing you could get in the war years is back in style again. Sales this year are up m per cent over last. Demand for retreads started to revive last year, after the early postwar tumble. The retread in Four Babies Die Of Starvation Hanford, Cal., Nov. 3 U.B Four babies have died of star vation in California's fertile San Joaquin valley during the past month, according to testimony before the Kings county board of supervisors. The infants were children of migrant cotton pickers and farm workers, many from the mid west. The board called a meeting to discuss the deaths of two of the infants since Monday. They heard an appalling story of "in tolerable conditions of misery" In the squalid tents and shacks dotting the highways. Officials said these conditions, reminiscent of those described in the novel, "Grapes of Wrath," prevail among the 150,000 mi grant farm workers now harvesting- California's cotton, veg etables and fruits in the great central valley. District Attorney William Harp demanded that Coroner J. Larry Smith investigate me con ditions under which the children : died. He said he would file crim-1 inal charges against parents found guilty of negligence. Den Assignments Given Cub Troop Salem Heights The Pack meeting of the Cub troop 19 met at the Salem Heights communi ty hall. Twenty-six boys present were assigned to their Dens. Many parents attended. Leo Olson, Cubmaster named the following Den Mothers, Mrs Paul Harvey, Mrs. Clark Leth In. Mrs. R. V. Miller and Mrs. Harold Post of Salem Heights, and Mrs. Roland Seeger of Lib erty. It is thought that another Den will be started at Liberty. Named on the Cub Scout com mittee were Paul Harvey, Erich Leatsch, George Gregor, Lewis Bartlett, Virgil Allen and Guy Fagg as assistant cubmaster. Den 2, with Mrs. Paul Harvey, Den Mother, demonstrated their Den Yell. Refreshments were served later. Fining Made Easy Ogden, Utah, um Police have a new wrinkle for collecting parking violation fines. A com bination meter violation-citation envelope goes on the windshield of the offender. The driver may place his 50-cent fine inside the envelope and take it to police headquarters or mail it dustry says that one reason for the new popularity is that the makers are putting salt, sawdust or nut shells in them. And at least one company punches little holes in recapped tires to in crease their sales appeal. Motorists add that a chief reason they are having tires re done is that they have to watch their personal budgets now more than in the first flush postwar years. They note that several leading tire companies have just hiked prices 3 Vi per cent on new tires and there is talk of further price increases before the end of the year. But tire makers Insist that a leading reason for the Jump in demand for retreads is that new processes, materials, and methods have made the rebuilt tire sup erior to the one you bought ten years ago, or even during the wartime shortage of new tires. The postwar retread, they say, wears longer and holds the road better. Tiremen say they stumbled upon the use of sawdust in re treads mainly by accident. Dur ing the war, when they were trying to make a little rubber go as far as possible, they mixed in a little sawdust. As the tires were driven, the sawdust fell out. The pockmarked tread held the road better. So now, B. F. Goodrich and some others put sawdust in its recap material. U. a. Rubber, however, uses rock salt for the same purpose, As the salt or sawdust works out of the tire, the holes that are left- give the tire a better grip, the companies say. They scoff at the notion, advanced by some drivers, that the salt melts the ice on the road it's the hole in the tire that counts. General Tire and Rubber Co., which says it is retreading more tires these days than at any other time in its 34-year history employes a new blend to two distinct types of rubber, to get the same porosity effect. Goodyear plugs a tractionizing machine. This punches tiny holes in the recapped tread. The com pany says this gives good trac tion right from the start. Goodrich has two types of re treads. The ice-snow recapping uses sawdust to provide the grip on the road. The mud-snow re capping job usee the tread itself for the traction. Passenger cars account for about two-thirds of the total of recapping but tire men say that retreading of truck and bus tires is now increasing. It costs about $7.72 to recap the common-size passenger tire. The U. S. army ordinance has a tire rebuild plant at Ober-Ram-stadt, Germany, that has process ed a half million tires since it opened in February, 1946, at a saving to U. S. taxpayers of $2 Vi million a year. American tiremen couldn't say how the army stands on the sub ject of salt versus sawdust. Sample Line Ciose-Out Vi PRICE 250 Different Items Gloves, mittens, pajamas, shirts, underwear, hots, rain coots, sweaters. They're oil wrinkled and tome ore dirty, but we don't want them to you con have them at Vi PRICE! Only One of Each Item - All Sales Final ON THE SAME COUNTER SHEARS w1;""'12" 69c Stainless Steel Paring Knives, Slicen, Butcher Kinrts, Grapefruit OQ CQ. Knives I X7Cto J7C RAYON PANTIES AND SLIPS With Lace Trim... 25c. $1.59 DECKER'S 5c to $1.00 237 N. Liberty Open Fri. 'til 9 Listen to KOCO and Win a Prise Men. Thro Fri., S:5 p.m. MM)IB ; Beautiful Buys 'Sk,L;?i1 In Newest Fashions ' mmB-h: Choose from such famous "Names" as: "It; fJk' ' ,W ' ...SWANSDOWN (fjift V'5''r; ... JAUNTY JUNIOR tJWj 4-1 j' 'JP Sites! I f r IM tf I Fabrics! In Y-rl I Several Groups Slightly Higher P j l COME . . . SHOP MM ....SAVE at Open Till 9 P.M. r5 Irnuay j Corner Court and Liberty Sts: