Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 18, 1950, Page 4, Image 4

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    I
Capital AJournal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1 888
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher
ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher
Published every afternoon 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 for 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, $1.00; One Tear, $12.00. By
Mail In Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos., $4.00; One Year, $8.00.
V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 8 Mos., $6.00; Year, $12.
4 Salem, Ore., Wednesday, Jan. 18, 1950
Morse's Announced Opposition
Oregon's Senator Morse, self-styled "constitutional lib
eral," now has an announced opponent in the republican
party.
For months there were undercurrent rumors that cer
tain prominent individuals in state G.O.P. circles were
planning to fight Morse's renomination this spring in the
primary. The names of Vice Admiral Tom Gatch, Dorothy
McCullough Lee and Bill Walsh were mentioned as pos
sible contenders. But, instead of any of these, a men's
furnisher from Medford, Fred E. Robinson, files first.
In Robinson's stated reason for running, one finds why
It will take more than a listing of "political convictions"
to beat Morse in his own party.
BYH. T.WEBSTER
The Unseen Audience
ff-Ano ww if itxj wu."TgLi us fie ookkcct-HTt- or
foe AivsreRV MrtrrtY Hexes what Sbo wiul GST A
MCW 1950 MODEL SOPCR-OOOPfR COOPC Mn
AHO 35 OTHER HOCeSSORieS A BLATX AtaBLOTZ. CM
CAMERA A GCNUINC INDIWJ PWTO PONY A OETSPEffO
MOTORCYCLE -NO A UtoUSV DaLUV S4VMGS BOW.
vmaT is ifie corvcT TfTLC or f)e myshky exoov?-
iWr kwow? oh im swV. BUT wvwav we
HAve For You a ecAunFut. WTH.OPH Hoer vanity
CAse coMPtere with sterlinc sveR rrrrwsg
A COMPACT WITH PoWOr AllXaSO
To suit Your complexion up-
GTirK- WITH YtHJK OWW CHOICE Of
rn. nKeBROMJ PeJNCIl. OOMB-
MIRROR- CIGAReTTG CASE- BOTTLe
of wocFtwr FcRFUMe, and a
CwintY Box of ncxjce. IRAN
You FOR TRYING
r
ga- I
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
MdcArthur Held Responsible
For Much of Formosa Furor
By DREW PEARSON
Washington Only a handful of republicans know all the de
tails, but General MacArthur had much more to do with stir
ring up the current furor over Formosa than even the state
department realizes.
The General may or may not have meant to throw a political
DomDsneii, d u i
BY CLARE BARNES, JR.
White Collar Zoo
rue con sol An om pwz
tiwH IMA, M- T-4 W ft hfc
Drew PeanoD
has been corruption In the Chi
ang regime, but it is a product
of his environment and tradi
tion, and no fault of Chiang
himself."
MacArthur seemed to take
pleasure in overriding the state
department in sending two of
the senators Ferguson and
Smith to Formosa. After the
state department vetoed airplane
flights to Formosa for the two
senators, MacArthur sent the
two senators by a special plane
with, a guide from his own staff.
Note 1 Secretary of Defense
Louis Johnson, who also made a
big try for U. S. intervention
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
Fable of Henpecked Husband
By HAL BOYLE
New York Of) Once upon a time there was a henpecked hus
band. Nothing he could do was right. His eardrums had callouses
Take this excerpt from Robinson's "political convic- from listening to his wife's friendly criticism, and his shins
tions": were bruised from being kicked she was an active woman.
". . . If ever there was a time in the history of this great One night af
country of ours we needed men of conviction and with courage ter his wife
and backbone enough to stand up for their convictions regard- went to bed, the
poor man sat in
the living room
brooding over
his lot. Sud
denly he heard
a tiny cry:
Morse s position as a constitutional liberal" qualifies , , i2
t .i HT i tji.. save mei a-
less of the outcome, it is now
How better could Robinson describe Morse?
Here's another from Robinson's statement:
"We need men that believe In America, that believe In the
very fundamental principles upon which this country was
founded . . ."
him for this description. Morse has repeatedly stated in
Salem his conviction that progress of the nation must be
Released from her spell, the
wife leaped up, grabbed a
candlestick and rushed back,
shouting: "I'll fix you two,
you !"
he has certainly .
caused more po
litical headaches
and come near-,,
er to splitting t
the bipartisan
foreign pol i c y
than anything
in ten years
though, of
course, Britain's
simulta n e o u s
recognition of
China also helped.
What MacArthur did was to
have stern, private talks with
visiting GOP congressmen, es
Deciallv bustling Senator Know-
land of California, plodding in Formosa, is peeved at Gen
Senator Ferguson of Michigan, era". MacArthur's extracurricu
and fussy ex-Princeton Protes- lar showmanship, due to the fact
sor Smith of New Jersey. Mac- mat Assistant Secretary of Ar
Arthur's lectures were delivered my- Tracy Voorhees was espec
in a confidential manner with ially sent to Tokyo in December
severe instructions that he was to consult MacArthur and bring
not to be quoted. His language back his views. However, Mac
was also stiffer to the congress- Arthur gave Voorhees no such
men tha,n in his reports to the alarming views as he gave the
army. wide-eyed congressmen.
Usually he started by saying Note 2 Though not as elo-
something like this. quent as MacArthur, Adm. Ar-
"I have not been consulted thur W. Radford also argued to
by Washington on strategy in congressmen who stopped off
the far east, and particularly on in Honolulu that Pacific fleet
Formosa. If Formosa falls, the units should cover Formosa,
cold war is lost. Russia will
control India in two years, and KICKBACK AFTERMATH
our position in Japan will be Judges sometimes have pecu
liar ways oi nanaing down 1m-
i -iJt-Jul ''"V
4k.
j, .it
"hit
untenable. Russia now has 4(1..
Well, the elf ran Into the 000 troops in fortified islands Partial justice.
mousenoie 10 get away duc me to our north."
mouse was in there too. There Those wno raised delicate
was a tiny scream, and nothing Uon about chi Kai.
more was ever heard of the elf. nek,s integrity reCeived a
Nothing much was heard from haughty: "The Generalissimo
the husband after that either, is one of the ereat men to come
He was shame-
"You've been with us for a long time, Jackson, but
we've got to start retrenching somewhere."
Couple Mortgage Home, Spend
Savings to Find Lost Terrier
Long Beach, Calif., Jan. 18 U.R) Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Rummel
have mortgaged their home, spent their savings, borrowed on a
salary and traveled 8,000 miles through five states all to find
a terrier they lost four months ago.
"What else can we do? It's like losing your child," Mrs.
,. . ,. Rummel said today. "We can't "
J nfiu, W11C1I u. . . .
Judge Henry A. Schweinhaut of s'vc u
the District of Columbia was a
He rushed
mtar In a onrnpr
oasea on ine pnncinies outlined in tne constitution, f or .a fn,mH a
instance in opposing the CVA bill, Morse said : "I am satis- thumb - high elf being dragged His wife saw to it that he kept out of the war.
lied that under the . . . bill three men (as directors) could into a hole by an angry mouse,
so abuse . . . power that, to all intents and purposes, they Startled, the mouse dropped its
could administer the law so that the government which prey and ilea into ine noie.
would flow from it would be a government of men, not
a government of laws.
More from Robinson:
"We need men of courage that will not take a fatalistic view-
"Thank, you mortal, for sav
ing me from that rat, said the
elf, brushing himself off. "Ac
cording to custom, I will now
grant you any wish you want
his mouth shut fully sold down the river at
Moral: Why do chicken-heart- Yalta and Potsdam. He has
ed men insist on marrying been smeared by the apologiz
eagles? ers and the radicals. Yes, there
MacKENZIE'S COLUMN
a si M m k m . m m m
?annstohpa!t." 6 wave of sociallsm has Eone 50 'ar that nothlng bt please don't ask me to give Astrologers W aminos Ignored
As India to Become Republic
In his elaborate statement of position on CVA, Morse
you the winner of the Kentucky
TnU.r T ..n't iln n thinff Wltn
auieu nimsen to tnis aescripuon or our state wnicn ne Worses
represents: "In my section of the country a high degree oh' can,t do anything
of individualism and frontier independence characterizes for mgn said tne man, despon
our people." That is the opposite of socialism. dently.' "I'm just a poor mlser-
As Robinson will find during the primary campaign, able, henpecked husband."
Wayne Morse has developed himself into more than a
run-of-corridors senator inj Washington. Morse has as- "Well," said the elf, "would it
sumed stature as an individual. When Robinson tries to help if I turned your wife Into
By MARC PURDUE
(For DeWltt MacKenzle, AF Forelsn Affairs Analyst)
New Delhi Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's government
has rejected as superfluous the warning of astrologers that Janu
ary 26, 1950, is not an auspicious date for launching the Re
public of India.
The government of India knows without consulting the stars
that the constitution of the new
On weekends, he has travelled
The seven-year-old Boston nnnn miles to nut uo the Dosters
babe in arms, he was pushed Bul1' Sif ie' 3umped out the in California, Arizona, Nevada,
around in his carriage by a
young woman named Helen ped lor a moment in the Mojave
Campbell, a neighbor of the de?eJ't and they dr0Ye ?n Z'
Schweinhaut family. out her- Thev came back withln
Years later, Miss Campbell, ive minutes but couldn't find
63, gray-haired and in need of her
a friend, came before Judge '
Schweinhaut, now in the prime Mrs. Rummel, weeping, told where Sissie was lost have comb-
oi nis me. as secretary to the story. ed the guiiies and abandoned
Congressman Parnell Thomas, i can't have any children," mines. They haven't found a
she had been instructed by she said. trace of her.
.rtZ?XnT?e?JT Certai" "After I lost my baby, the doc- The Rummels think Sissie was
!.: ...1 ff. . r ' Jas a ,ra; tor told me to get a dog. When picked up by motorists who saw
you can't have any children, you her wandering in the road. Six
can love a dog just as much, cars passed them before they
I nursed her when she was sick started to search, and a service
and when she was paralyzed and station attendant reported see-
Washington and Oregon.
"We haven't had a single
lead," Mrs. Rummel said, "but
my husband has gone out to look
at 50 dogs. None was the right
one."
The people of the desert area
suit of carrying out orders, had
been indicted, along with the
congressman.
But when her case came be-
j.,0 jj- . " wueii sue was paralyzed ana siauon auenaani reported see-
rZnn tdZiJl,,fl culd't move. I wonder if she ing a little black and white dog
is sick now, or crippled. in an auto that stopped there.
'I don't care so much if they
Campbell had once wheeled in
a baby carriage, he showed
great compassion for the con
gressman, gave him
several don'' Sive her back to me, if
use words like "betrayer of his party" against Morse, such a hen?"
descriptions are meaningless in Morse's case. They fall flat. "Could you?" asked the man republic is being launched at a Already they are meddling
Morse is a leader of Oregon background who can be eagerly. most inauspicious time and un- politics. .
described as an asset to the republican party, both in the "I can try," said the elf. der most unfavorable conditions. PffllitIca, l a p a c , t yA1.
arnro nnrt nnrmn Hia monvri o thnnnrh nnt intiia ir nhaa. lOEEiner lllliV auu, iiiiu hid ." "
ing to any one group, does express the outspoken view- bedroom
point oi Wayne Morse, the constitutional liberal,
oostnonementa on tho nronnH f she has a good home. If they , lne e
in hositv, tji 4..j would iust let me know she's Close to ?i
......... uufug ow, me juuge 1T . , -
The search so far has cost
000. Mrs. Rummel, an
m let his former nurse remain
all right.
invalid, gave up an operation to
help finance it.
Mrs. Rummel has also written
under the crushing stigma of "She has cataracts on her eyes
an inriirtmAnf fni. nnn ...t.nln AnH npprlK trpntmfint Tf aha anaa
year, during which she was blind, who wants her then? We a poem to slssl:
The elf waved his being under heavy internal and though Nehru leads a number of barely able to make a living. do. 'I pray that in your little dog
little wand madly, like Toscan- external pressures. The proD- i" ' " j-, '""b wecanigiveupiooKing.no"----
ini conducting the storm scene lems confronting its government f''"-" 1""""" ma"" uuw mucn u cusis. uon i " j"-
in "wuiim Tnll" are complex, and solution of politics In the new India present 'or Congressman Thomas, more you see., it's like losing your yur daddy and me . . .
in William uu. , .... , mHM nlpfnro Vlnnklln rr. ComDassinn for Misa rsmnhall n,. .hIM ut,r- i. i i
'n,,,mn rmn nm Intn many oi mem appear impossiuie. - --r ---- vu. c Imvo llul given up uupe.
a,uuu...u, , j - , , Rnnn nvn rips mwpp.Drann no uuuue rtiexRnner nn I7mr rn.
iMFtvfrrnpifKK. inumi leducia ' . o -
Senator Homer Ferguson (R.-Mich.) has told the sen- ne"' laaV, ,? commanaea- lt,s now or never. Having cliques, inexperience and in- fused further postponements,
ate that "a secret report" written by former Vice Presi- T,n? w st"? 8 tup, wad- . ability and plain corruption and in the end dismissed the
Did Wallace Devise Our Chinese Policy?
case against Miss Campbell.
own child."
and we'll find you, dear.
Mrs. Rummel works all dav "Then the sun will start shin-
making posters advertising the ing a6ain-
.i i. u nrn : inn i c a : died into ine living room, enmu- . .." . ... . ... h.. wio.icio,! iha n..v.nn
uoni, iiuiiiy vvuimcu in 1-jH'k mm tne uu.iih lur inericHii . .. . . j i road, tnere is noming io De gain- ."e,.v. ... uu,,... - - - i j ..u
foreign policy in China. It sought, he said, to discredit LIL J . Z th w 3 ed in waiting for favorable Independence came to India However, due to more than loss Rummel works nights writ- ,n. '
the Nationalist regime of Chiang Kai-Shek and foster 5 under her arm murmur- mens- be,ore U nad cnough caPabl Tn I i M'-? CaP" lng(.lette" to newspapers radio ln? hea7" ern
close trade relations with the Chinese Reds "whom Wal- SSKiS" ' and trained administrators, bell has lost her ciyil sery.ee stations, dog societies and hu- And lov. has a way of eras
lace hopefully saw emerging as the postwar power in X-kP The cloud, that hang over the Many of those who got govern- s'a"d'n5:icfn"Pt. !lepi?y- mane S0ClertlS- in P1"1"
China" ib. if I did do it my- new nation are so heavy it is ss".ere unaDle re" Thanks To the o
The state department's White Paper on China, review- self," said the elf. "I'll drop diff cult to find a hopeful ray x"' "p"s- . the judge she once pushed
ing American policy in China, did not contain the Wallace back in three nights to see that of m(m ana"ep "y,J BJ"J around in his baby carriage. -
renort Wallace admits writino- the renort and snv he everything's all right." And ho Here are some of the more ment, the congress party which ...
repmt. wauace admits writing tne report, ana says ne d, ' d pressing concerns of the men led it to freedom. There are . GILDING THE DOME
is glad to see someone taking an mterest m .t, for "unfor- disaPPeared. who lead India: no serious rival parties. So- An artisans' row over the
tixnatcly it was not included m the White Fnpcr. It was . , Economy - India's dilemma cialists are a fraction of the painting of the cathedral-like
written after his visit to China in 1944 and was entitled lhe ncx or" ln " ' reaKI a" for generations has been how potential voters and communists interior of the capitol dome has
A Possible Policy Line Relative to Liberal Elements in l"e "u sf , 'lllH.t ',t to feed, house and provide em- have strength only in a few lo- become so bitter that G-Boss J.
China." Wallace says: a',i el. u ployment for a population that calities. Edgar Hoover, who usually soec-
ializes in criminal rather than
Communism Versus Democ- artistic pursuits, has been
racy India is caught squarely dragged into the act.
in the struggle that affects all Hoover's FBI is now probing
the world in some degree. Her charges that the Schriber Con-
"If the administration and General Chiang had followed the aj .k ;....ii .( w k. continues to grow by the mil-
line I laid down in this report and memo we would be In a and . Sne jus, ciuck-cluck- "on yearly- The Nehru gov
mueh stronger position in the Orient than we arc today. In , kf mnnrnfnllv ernment has declared India must
be self-sufficient in food by the
,.nf T n,n l,n ,.,l,nl V,lln.. 1U . ,1.1 1 tiUUnCU I1IOUI II1UI1J .
"Manffnrt tnprphv " ........ j ... nv. n , a
.". ... . . WrHwH anil nt It on Ate. M rKMl. '' the WOl
tcrguson, discussing a synopsis of the report, declares ... k...n.. . sacrifice and hard work, this DnmD. i ,n,i tracting comDanv of Washine
that Wallace reported that "the Chiang Kai-Shek govern- But lhen she wouid look llD at Boal can be reached. Many ex- to stay aioof but India's pres- ton. which did the paint job
Burned Up Over Nickel Fire
Camden, N. J., Jan. 18 (A3) Bank vault attendants were
"burned up" yesterday over a fire that started In a pile of 65
canvas sacks containing $13,000 worth of nickels.
The blaze of undetermined origin burned holes In most
of the sacks in the main office of the First Camden National
Bank and Trust company, scattering the coins on the floor.
After the fire was extinguished, the vault attendants had
the job of shoveling the nickels up again, running them
through a counting machine and re-sacking them to be sent
to their original destination, the Philadelphia Federal Re
serve bank.
"the Chiang Kai-Shek govern- n, ,ha . wlri iv ,, t goal can be reached. Many
ment was no irood and it would collnnsn in fiO dnvs." that hi r-inu fi,.nir" perts doubt India's food produc- rnmn( i iii,.i.. under conditions rivaling a cir-
"the United States should shift to the side of the Com- very sadly, and tears would roll ,lon can KeeP abreast of its Birth over to the Reds How. cus thriller, violated its con-
munists and give no help to Chiang Kai-Shek because we down her cheeks.
rate.
could expect more favorable treatment from the Com
munists than the Nationalists.
ever, unless it can bring some tract by using a sprayer instead
CapitalJournal
TV.!. ...nnt nn fn lhr. ri.v. inHlH IS Classed BS an UIIQC- n-n-nnHtv (n Inrfia thi. Uniltm. OI nanQ DTUSneS.
nnrt the kind-hearted husband veloped area. It needs capital t b , id ,,k The charges were
. . . ' .. . . i , . r, for Industrial government. In-
in his senate speech, Ferguson said that our China f " " , " ' Y" dian capital is virtually on
returned from work, he found strike,
his wife had ripped the stuffing
out of his armchair, arranged
it in a corner, and was squat-
So long as Indians re
fuse to finance their own coun
try's development foreign capi
tal is unlikely to volunteer.
Britain still owes India an en-
iiiiin nrt ormous war debt. So long as
Chiang Kai-shek's.
Cold War Engrossed with
problems of wider scope, much
of the world has overlooked the
policy might be called the "Henry Wallace plan for Asia"
and that the mission to China headed by General George
C. Marshall "was the culmination of what I call the Wal
lace plan in operation. When the Chinese Nationalists
refused to mix water with gasoline, an experiment we ting on it.
naively endorsed, lor a coalition government, they were "Make yourself
written off our list and left to shift for themselves." while I was gone, dear?" he said JJf " J unable to break Kashmir dispute is unsettled. He explam. thi
During his abortive 1918 campaign for the presidency, P'ensantly. awayfr'om the 'sterling bloc and An aImost complete business aPpa 'eu
nrtl., l:u i ..m.j xr: .: n -- "C. Hrlr . . rlnpk . . . cluck." Bway irum iiic simuii . h.ntlna hlnnlronn hi. noon on lne couereo
i .uiiiLU uitLuii aaniuiuii urn lillttlullullMl, lexiIIIU. II, Is '
to be hoped that congress lifts the veil of secrecy that she snifled (
made by
two other contractors who lost
out In the bidding, and who
contend that the spraying ef
fected a big saving to the
CnK.iUn. ,
cold war being waged between w rn....
India and Pakistan. Visitors by .th.e n'rac1V , SAchr?ter' P"
h hon nrr,rirt t (ho hu. Ported by Capitol Architect Da-
terness on both sides. The vid Lynn vigorously denies this.
lie CAllldlllS LIldL, Willi Liyilll 9
a sprayer only
surface of the
lofty dome, where It was neces-
mik Marft
shrouds American policy in the Orient.
At ,i ...
Ilnlt StiirU in M1I-I1 M fVJInf kKn aH "Hi. Ko lnlrf nn oiib vol?" , . u.. tl .
w...7 -."..v ... "v.r. muM'KuiiEu - 'Vha flared into the open last year TT .,, 4U w j low $26,000 for the job, more
Thn r..nrM: lvn-nof httl..i,ln onn tn nnl.r nn in h puckish sprite. The M,in0,. ,,. gTessive aims. Until the bad ,w '" ..j.'"fu.J .'... ,...
o u. ""V hushnnH looked startled. He . ui.-j oiin,ltrf
About then the little elf ap
peared.
and banking blockade has been
In .lfl fn.n. .n4nR n..nM.
Is . ' sarv to Bet into crevices and
claims and even the border it-
Each country is
must share Its headaches.
Internal Division India
not yet a completely unified,
lnl.orala1 notlnn TVioro ara In.
. . , . mi self continue.
Has she laid an egg yet?" " r? ,on" " e''.t " suspected by
?. . . . . j than S16.000 under the next low
American navy not put to sleep by the administration ZZ"t thought of that possi- ced constitutional provision that '"Ja:?"lZ bidder and $37,775 under the
,;i h tv,n n,nti,noii iot ak nn sui.. ' hou8ht ol mat possi notional l.neuane. country can progress far in con- .... , ... Ki ,,,
ouuy.
1 am
cornices which wouldn't take a
hand brush.
Schriber bid an amazingly
with the "mothball fleet," the 45,000-ton "mighty" Mis
souri is now experiencing a similar fate, "stuck in the
. structivA development.
. . , univ a Doriion oi me country
t run nr ims wnoui - . .. .. . ...... . ......
muck" and clinging tenaciously to her Chesapeake bay business," he said. "I can't stand ''am'liar Hi 1 111 Tto ta. Wght Jwrtop attribute, his low bid
mudbnnk near Norfolk and daring the navy to pull her to see my wife this way. Why, Ps'n ? 15 r5 V, m to the l!me and m,one?' saved b.y
highest of eight bidders so the
taxpayers didn t lose. The con-
she doesn't even have feathers.
Vn i!rn hor intn "orth and south, east and west optimistic outlook for India
tO turn ner intO , . Th li In tho Hotormlnatlnr
I wanted you
a real hen not
hen."
"Look, I'm no Houdlnl I m
off. All efforts so far to free the "Mo" have been futile.
Veteran watermen predicted that the battlewagon, on
whose main deck the Japanese surrendered to end World
War II, would be freed only after a sub-channel has been
j i , . i : , , . , . , ,, 1.00K. 1 m no nuuuiiii i in
iireiigcu irom tne main snip cnannei to tne spot wnere ine just a mUe elf .. raid the eif. Reactionary Movement. In
Missoun lies stranded. .Tm oniy in tne ,econd grada dependence has given a boost to
Two fleet tankers removed most of the ship's two mil- In magic school. It might tako the popularity of ultra-orthodox
lion gallons of fuel oil in an effort to lighten her. That me a whole year to turn her in- and near-totalitarian organiza
hasn't helped. So they planned to remove her ammunition, to a real hen."
It was her name Missouri that saved the battlewagon . "Wcl1- can. yu m.nk.e ,h" j,"5"
from being mothballed, as it has kept so many Missourians nhe
it. r.j ...i ii r,.i - A band nervously.
oi ine leuurai payroll, remaps mis liiciacnt may ngure ..Y mortnli never satis-
new-fangled, aluminum scaf
fold similar to a ladder topped
bantam-size and between province and pro- They lie in the determination b platform that whirled the
uniiiaiii om nnrt nnnrou nf In. rnnnlrv's val. . . ... .
and energy of the country's vet
eran leaders and in the increas
ing national consciousness and
growing loyalty of the masses.
painters about the dome's ro
tunda like men on a flying
trapeze.
(CoprrUht 19M
tions such as the Hindu Maha
sabha and the Sikh Akall Dal.
Among India's British rulers
were some who feared Indian
freedom would bring a theo-
A Long, Hard Winter
with the superstitious as a turning point in the luck of ied.. grumbled the elf. "Well, cratic dictatorship, intolerant
Ihd "ohnill tnn .Inlnl .nnMn .... ...Ill ..... i., .n ..l.. ...... ' ... .. ... ,. . . . , .
the "show-me state" regime, but we will have to be shown, ni do my best."
Perhaps it is an omen that some Fair Dear policies will He waved his wand grandly
also be "stuck in the muck" before congress ends the pres- and cried: "Razzo, Gazzo, turn
ent session. back Into a lady, hcnl"
and isolationist. If their fears
ever are realized, these organiza
tions, led by power-hungry fa
natics, will ba the Instruments.
Spokane, Wash., Jan. 18 (U.PJ An unidentified man report
ed to the fire department today that snow on the roof of his
house had melted and frosen solid over both the doors.
"I can't get out. I'm too old to go out a window," he said.
Fire department officials suggested he call a carpenter
If he wanted to get out.
"Oh never mind." the man said. "I don't really think I
want to go out in this weather anyway."
Spokane reported a low of 18 degreea below sero last night.
)
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