Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 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, $13.00. By Mail in Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos., $4.00; One Year, $8.00. V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos.. $6.00; Tear. $12. BY BECK Wives 4 Salem, Oregon, Thursday, January 19, 1950 Lifting the Gag Admiral Denfeld is writing his own ending to the dis graceful handling of his recent dismissal as chief of naval operations. He is asking that he be retired after 40 years' service in the navy. It is probably best that way. When his retirement becomes effective March 1, he will be free to speak his mind as he found he wasn't during last fall's hearings in Washington, D.C., on unification of the services. Denfeld admitted that no one had asked him for his side of the story which covered the appearance before congress and ended abruptly by his being fired by Secretary of the Navy Matthews. It made no difference that the house armed services committee had asked Denfeld to give his honest opinion on the way unification of the services was working. It made no difference that the Secretary of Defense several months before the hearing had directed that the gag be lifted on statements of officers except for material classi fied "for security reasons." The only threat to security in Denfeld's criticism of the way in which the unification law was being administered was to the security of those defense officials administer ing the law. Congress had asked Denfeld and other rank ing naval officers for information which would help mem bers of congress act properly in shaping the nation's armed forces. Because President Truman and Defense Secretary Johnson didn't like what Denfeld was telling congress, Denfeld got bounced. In disciplining the then chief of naval operations in that manner, Truman and Johnson were defying the right of congress to investigate the armed forces. Senator McCarthy of Wisconsin has raised the startling possibility that Admiral Denfeld had already been com missioned until 1951 as chief of naval operations when he was fired. This would make the actions of the top Fair Deal brass toward Denfeld even more odorous. To give out the phony excuse that Denfeld was "incompetent" to do a job for which he had been recommissioned but a month or so before is to make the case just plain stink. The invincible Johnson and his crony Matthews may not be so invincible when Denfeld is in a position to tell the facts about his case. Denfeld's retirement will lift the gag that Johnson tried by bully methods to enforce in what appears to be a crude, ruthless manner. A Fine Judicial Appointment Governor Douglas McKay is to be commended for ignor ing partisan politics in his appointment of Judge Earl C. Latourette as associate justice of the supreme court to re place Justice E. M. Page, whose resignation was forced by illness. He has thus lived up to the spirit and intent of the law creating a non-partisan judiciary, something that some of his predecessors ignored, placing judicial fitness the main consideration. Judge Latourette is a democrat and was appointed cir cuit judge by another republican governor, Albin W. Norblad, Sr., 19 years ago, and has been regularly elected since in a republican district. His record as a jurist shows that he has had a "phenomenally small number of opinions reversed," is well versed in the law and has that rare quali fication, a judicial temperament, fair and impartial in his decisions. Justice Latourette was recently favored by a margin of S to 1 by the Oregon State Bar association for appointment to the newly created federal judgeship. But the newly elected left wingers now in control of the state democratic organization recommended instead a little known lawyer who had rarely appeared in court and had no other recom fendation than his partisan politics, which seems to be the only qualification required in the "Fair Deal." He has not yet been confirmed. The qualifications of Judge Latourette for appointment to the federal bench were thus listed by the bar associa tion: "Learning in the law. A background of highly credi table judicial experience. High personal standing and hon ored Oregon family ;" he follows to the supreme bench two other Clackamas county jurists, the late Thomas A. Mc Bride and James U. Campbell. MWP YOU'VE BEEN SO HElJFULlSil m f imL'N STRAISHTENINS OUT MERTON) jLJ . fepj MAYBE YOU CAN ADVISE ME r -J ' WSfcl ON A FEW PROBLEMS Z . - " WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Dixiecrat GOP Coalition Gives Seven Men Lower House Control By DREW PEARSON Washington Here is how the republican-Dixiecrat coalition is riding roughshod over the right of free democratic processes in the house of representatives. Meeting behind closed doors in the rules committee the re publicrat coalition not only demanded the reinstatement of the old gag rule hv ... which that com- "v" mittee can bot- ' M "-1 tie up any bill.J 5 but even refus-tj Jf? , BY CLARE BARNES, JR. White Collar Zoo Drew Pearson 'Cougar Scare' Scared Off Wenatchee, Jan. 19 (PI The 'cougar scare' has subsided here today. Yesterday a man telephoned police to say tracks of a cougar could be seen clearly in the snow of his front lawn within the city limits. Police dispatched a man. Cougar tracks, sure enough. But, after the story was printed In the newspaper, a high school student called in to say he was the cougar. The student made a drawing of a plaster cast of a cougar's tracks in the Wenatchee museum. Then, In woodworking class, carved a set of wooden cougar feet. Strapping them on his feet, he walked home from school. This Story's Got Everything Especially a Laugh or Two ed to let Chair man Adolph Sa bath of Illinois, who opposed the gag rule, speak. Each time the 83 - y e a r - old Sabath started to talk he was shouted down with cries of "vote! vote!" by Democrats Gene Cox of Georgia and How ard Smith of Virginia and their republican cohorts. Finally, GOP Congressman Leo Allen of Illinois took pity on the little chairman. "He has a right to talk," pleaded Allen, above the bed lam. "Let him speak for two or three minutes." Sabath didn't appreciate the humor in this. He was so riled by the roughhouse tactics of the coalitionists that he almost choked up. "We ought to at least have a public hearing, so that opponents of this resolution can be heard," he demanded. "This is a matter of vital concern to every mem ber of the house. Since we re- lution and to give house mem bers a right to testify for or against it at a public hearing was smothered under a 7-4 vote. The three members who joined Sabath for a free discussion were: Democrats Ray Madden of Indiana, John Lyle uf Texas, and James Delaney of New York. The seven who voted for im mediate action without a public hearing were: Democrats Cox, Smith and William Coler, of Mississippi, and Republicans Al len, Clarence Brown of Ohio, James Wadsworth of New York, and Christian Herter of Massa chusetts. Lyle of Texas and Delaney of New York, however, backslid into rcpublicrat ranks on the fi nal, 9-2 vote for the gag rule, leaving Sabath and Madden stan ding alone against it. Delaney, who usually supports the fair deal, somewhat sheepishly ex plained his defection by saying that he wanted to restore the power and "prestige" of the committee which, he contended, was abolished by last year's rules reform. What this amounts to, though Delaney didn't say so, is that the New Yorker favors giving seven men on the rules commit- -J'':M. - : ... ..r V .;,-S .w; "I'm looking for an interesting job that doesn't1 call for typing or shorthand." year, this committee voted out 55 rules on bills and resolutions, the greatest number in history. Socialized Medicine Has Come To Great Britain to Stay Editor's Note: One of the most controversial measures en acted by Britain's labor government during the past five years was its national health plan of socialized medicine. The British Medical association fought it bitterly, but finally agreed to cooperate just before it went into effect July 5, 1948. (In the following dispatch, a United Press correspondent tells of the status of opposition to the plan as the British general election approaches.) Jan. By GERALDINE HILL 19 (U.R) Socialized medicine has come to Britain Tacoma, Jan. 19 W) The seige of Roy took place again Mon day afternoon and, as usual, the Pierce county sheriff's de partment won out. In the latest chapter, a crew of telephone repairmen set out to free long distance lines tangled by a tree branch during Friday's blizzard. The trouble spot was located MacKENZIE'S COLUMN taa vnnxn nnutaw l.an Gil ft ntUa. pealed the gag procedure last members of congress. Wayward Minors Not Protected From the nation's rogues gal- laKiaD tha nhilAyan'a k,.Mf,, ha. "Some of you say that the re- ,,,, ' . uf.. i i,i,i., solution will give the committee st It is a side of American more power-that is, power to life that isn,t generai-y knowni stifle legislation which you op- but the bureau estimates close to pose as committee chairman, I 100,000 children were thrown don t want that kind of power. I into adult jajls last year along. "" " "B" s,de hardened criminals. hmicp mpmhorshin " . Youngsters were even found un their fieht to reDeal it And , . .. Fair Dealer Backslides shoveline dirt on road Banes and bfH .. umP. i." . George's physician. Under his London, to stay. Enacted by the labor government in 1948, it will remain on the statute books regardless of the outcome of the general election next month. - Even doctors who prefer free Heading the fellowship is 79- enterprise in medicine have given vear 0id Lord Horder, King by an elderly couple noted for their dislike of railway section crews, highway crews, plow salesmen or anyone else who sets foot on their land. As in previous Roy seiges, the crew was turned back by the old sters and returned later with sheriff's deputies Bob Forrest and Russ Wall. The sheriff's office said deputies had been dis patched to aid road and line crews through the farm on other occasions. The old folks took a stand under the tangled lines and re fused to budge. Deputy Wall began an ad vance. It lasted five steps ana However, Sabath's motion to serving sentences in state oeni- .... ,u i, nnni,. i, leadership. postpone action on the Cox reso- tentiaries. These were not mere wnen'they see it, say flatly in drawn up lauicticu coses,, um ,u.su. nave their election handbook: nappenea ngni in your nome county, for in 34 of the 48 states children were discovered in jail with grownups despite the fact that most of these same states have laws protecting children from such treatment. "It can never be too often stated that the conservative party is wholeheartedly in favor of a national health service avail able to all." the fellowship has 10 amendments for presentation to parliament. "We are not against a health plan," Horder said, "but we are against this one in its present form. We hope that the abuses . in (health minister) Aneurin Bevan's scheme will be recti- Bizarre Tale of Plotting in Caribbean Under Investigation By NORMAN CARIGNAN For DeWitt MacKenzle, AP Foreign Affairs Analyst) Assorted gun running, filibustering .plotting and other tricks of the political trade in the Caribbean are currently undergoing a waus, but in some instances uu? ,Mimn hMl practice on a broad basis as an searching investieation bv a SDecial five-nation committee. i ,1.. Public ultimately pays uie nuge Not only were juveniles often that a party wnich opposes free tied with the help of our amend found in fithv iails with foul j; f 5 , ---- ,1 ments. 7 meuical aim iiubpiiai uuie xui an toilets, splotched mattresses, and wouId have mtle chance at tne wim roacnes running along tne British pollSi even though the He said the amendments are designed to preserve private youngsters were loagea in tne bill throuffh heavv taxes. same cells with murderers and Tne only questions remaining rapists. In Taylorville, Ky., a are how socialized medicine shall ij-year-oia runaway Doy was b administered, and how much survive. state searching investigation by a special five-nation committee. The tale that this group of hard-working diplomats will uncover will undoubtedly make your favorite "whodunit" seem pale by comparison. ' " Already much of the story has Today's Caribbean expeditions locked up in a two-cell log jail rivate oractice shall come out throueh a blisterine are based on the hottest a irnlanp. - ,.,.-,u . : . private practice snau - r xvi ivLu uaja witii a adccuiuii, cross-fire of charges, counter- revolutionaries can get hold of. laughing maniac. A 10-year-old charges and denials of varying The only sailing venture occur- Neero bnv was sentenced tn the jiMpii j j ,l e ,n,f u n ; . . tne xsruisn meaicai association, icw:iviub n iciuhu uuiu wc aunc mtAe?tSly;(. , ,...h " lh"tme: o47' .S..1!?: andoned organized opposition according to the cost of the ser- ........ .v ellj" Uy lyJICUlt l UUgC 1V1. A. IVlclIlIl and air-borne invasions of the known as the Caribbean Legion, in Abbeville, S.C. Dominican Republic, a secret organized an expedition at Cayo Just across the Potomac from meeting in a village church, as- Confites, Cuba, against the Do- the nation's capitol, the chil- sassination, bomb and poison minican Republic. dren's bureau found 14- and 15- plots have all been brought into Cuban Dolice broke it ud be- year-old boys working on the alternative to complete control of medicine. "The most important amend ment is that every Briton should be given the choice of either re- The British medical profession maining in the national health as a whole, under leadership of service or leaving altogether and the British medical association, receiving a refund from the state, tumbled throueh the ice of a.'ne amazing drama. fn th. LCI,jnri set out in some road gang in Fairfax, Va, small nond. He clambered out. .. Just what the truth is in all surplus landing craft and small In fact, 2650 Virginia young- to the labor government's nat- vice at that particular time, ional health service in the Horder said, summer of 1948. "If a Briton remains in the But a core of medical diehards scheme but wishes to occupy a remained. They acknowledged private bed in a hospital or that they could not hope to get nursing home, he should receive repeal of the health service plan, a government grant toward the this IS trip Rrwrif m Inn ff (no , sfprs wprp hprriPfl info f ha catrta ... ... . "MV" v took five more steps and plunged fact.inding e0mmittee now at r k.v .,.. jails with adult prisoners during ! Si" ......... . ,4o .. .. ...v. ..,u,u a,.UEU ""5" in again waist deep. The ad vance became a retreat. The deputies conferred. They laid planks to reach the defiant couple when the family bull strode up to watch the fun. But he strode too far. There was a crack and splash, and the bull was in the pond. The animal carried away a good section of the ice coating, leaving a lane of open water be tween the deputies and theit quarry. work in Washington. news Jasa ilulic wiieii ail : niu: u- ... as four times. This is -the same pun PRY Patalinn nirnraft was The committee is made ud of j , t h tate' incidentally, that is run by freedom of medicine." and certain agreed appliances." Our Brave New World The modified plans for the new Marion county court house show an improvement on previous designa but still retain the frlorified barn or warehouse effect that is in sharp contrast to the stately architecture of the state buildings it was supposed to conform with. That of course, is a mere layman's viewpoint, one prob ably not qualified to pass on the "beauty" and "symmetry" and "simplicity" of the new architecture, whose dwellings resemble hencoops or outhouses and whose windowlcss bipr business and public buildings, warehouses and grain elevators. There are many, of course, who rave over the "modern istic" architecture, just as there are those who swoon over the nonsensical freak dabs of the "futuristic" and other "modernistic" cults, and in the same category the jarring discords that masquerade as "modernistic" music. And the same "trend of the times" is evident in the crack-pot "liberal" politics of the New Deal, the Fair Deal and social Ism, communism and other ideologies that are demoraliz ing the world. To many however, contemptuously relegated to the rank of "has-beens" in the creation of "the brave new world." these modernistic crazes may in future perspective be viewed are evidences of a gradual decadence that is bank rupting humanity and ushering new dark ages to over whelm civilization. o This so delighted the old folks that they broke into wild guffaws so wild in fact that, yes, the ice broke again and they got their turn in the pond. The woman reaching for a hannging branch of the tree, in tending to haul herself back on the ice. The branch became snarled with that entangling the phones lines. Another tug, and both branches crashed to the ground. The phone lines sprang back into position. That restored the long dis tance line. The cast retired amid much sneezing . representatives of the Organiza tion of American States (OAS) from the United States, Uruguay, Bolivia, Ecuador and Colombia. The OAS used to be called the Pan American Union. Its main aim is to keep the peace in the Western Hemisphere. Its ma jor weapon is the RIO mutual de fense treaty. All 21 American republics are members. On Jan. 9 the OAS council, alarmed over charges of more plotting, invoked the Rio treaty and set the committee to work investigating the whole Caribbe an situation. The bizarre tale of plotting which the committee is trying to unravel surpasses, in technique at least, the filibustering activi ties of William Walker, who is perhaps as well known in Cen tral America as any other Amer ican. Walker, a Tennessean, organ ized four expeditions during the middle 1800s. One sailed from San Francisco, two others from Mobile and a fourth from Mexi can territory which he had grabbed. At one time he man aged to gain control of Nicaragua. norm coast ot tne uominican ne- Qni,jQ public, after those aboard tried Scnools for Crime Criminal studies mL?"ZZId'a eficient po- She Had Ideas on Tax Form 15 show that to unload munitions. All aboard were either killed or jail doesn't cure as much crime captured, including three Amer- as it breeds, especially when ju- lcans veniles are locked up with pro- Meantime, two Mexican and fcssional criminals. For cell two Guatemalan planes were re- mates don't make the best tea ported by the state department chers, and sending children to to have landed at Yucatan, Mex- jail is actually like putting ico, where they disembarked them through a school in crime, some fifty armed persons. The A much better method of Dominican Republic charged the handling young lawbreakers has Legion with plotting an air- been worked out by the Big borne invasion of the country to Brothers of America, ndw cele ovcrthrow President Rafael Tru- brating national Big Brother jillo. week. . . Volunteer "big brothers" are selected from prominent citizens In January, 1948, a plot involv- i each community who are ing citizens from four countries willing to put a friendly arm aimed at bombing Caracas, the around a wayward boy. Their . . , . ,,,, , ii, individual guidance saved more capital of Venezuela, was broken Bnnn . v . than 5000 boys from a life of up. At about the same time Cos- crjme ast year less than 7 per- ta Rica was fighting off rebels cent of the boys who have been that had invaded the country given this individual counsel from neighboring Nicaragua. hve made second missteps. Yet ' K .. 1 1 1 - A year later Haiti tried unsuc- i" " " , v. it. bi.i fr each boy for club dues, camp life and vocational guid ance. This is only a fraction of Oklahoma City, Jan. 19 (IP) An Oklahoma county opera tor of a second-hand magazine shop has individual ideas about completing tax forms. County Assessor Cragin Smith received one from her yesterday she wasn't identified which listed her "furni ture and fixtures" as "orange crates, tables, book rack and magazines." She gave her inventory at the close of the year as "$200." And even the next question "Is this the same as shown on your income tax return" quickly answered. "Yes and no," she wrote, "nobody figures it alike." As "Other Assets (describe fully)" she listed: "God, friends, enemies, customers, second hand merchan dise and me inclusive." CapitaljUournal ,..?:Sfc.A -'i'rtrj.-.'A.Vtiii cessfully to invoke the Rio -treaty against the Dominican Repub- Trujillo was involved in a plot . ,rma,, , . Doy to overthrow her president, marsais Estime. Du- f Is a Small World Spokane, Jan. 19 W) Small world department Friday, Jan. 13, a car slowed to a stop during a bliziard Bear Klamath Falls, Ore. A second enr slid into the side of the first. Police Trafflo Sergeant George Pymm of Spokane stepped out ot the first Allen Goldberg of Spokane got out of the other. They knew each other. The greetings? "Fancy meeting yon here," of sours. Guests Left Waiting at the Altar, While Groom Argues Over Age Los Angeles, Jan. 19 (VP) The church was ready. The guests were waiting and so was the priest. But the bride and bridegroom were missing. It all happened because the bridegroom looked too young. Arthur (Bob) Miller, 21, or Hobart, Ind., had tried for five days to get a marriage license to wed dark-eyed Joan Pullara of nearby Eagle Rock. But he was turned down at every bureau office because of his youthful appearance. Came time for the ceremony and the prospective newly weds In formal wedding attire still were chasing around In search of a believing marriage license clerk. But no luck. The guests in the church then were told would be no ceremony. However, the reception went on as planned Saturday night the food couldn't wait. But there is a happy ending. Miller wired back home for an affidavit to prove him the required 21. The county clerk opened up shop special Sunday when the affidavit arrived. The priest was called and so were the guests. So in St. Dominic's Roman Catholic church, the two were wad. in a reformatory for a year. Meanwhile the public, though aroused over the current prime Haiti said Trujillo was work- waVe, seems indifferent to the ing with Astrel Roland, a former practices that are breeding a new Haitian army colonel, and Jo- generation of criminals. Right ' hanna Verbracken, a Belgian wo- under the public's nose, children man whom Roland met at the are being clamped into adult Rio de Janeiro while on a good jails even though this is just as will mission to Argentina. much a violation of law as the Haiti's complaint contained ex- crimes for which the children cerpts of love letters between have been sentenced. Roland and Johanna Verbracken Tne problem was summed up and mentioned a secret meeting Quite simply the other day by a between her and the Dominican former inmate of the Indiana ambassador to Haiti in a village boVs school at Plainfield, Ind. He church near Port-Au-Prince, had bcen the son of the town Haiti. The Dominican Republic drunk, had stolen money to help denied any complicity in the care for hls neglected mother. pl0t when the war broke out, he marched off into the army. Talking to a children's bu reau worker the other day, the delinquent remarked: iirat VipaUa ,Ia n 1 Dominican of- mmin, , ,0j op I IV IIU1IU1 tuj 1 flUDPP 10 ago came Haiti two weeks back with another complaint former against tne uominican nepuonc. "when This time, it said, Dominican of- ,-,.. ficials-were involved in a plot to of donars to buy me clothes and assasssinaie i-raiaeni raune, food and ammunition. But dur the chief of the palace guard, the ing peace they were not wiUing army chief of staff and the chief to spcnd one cent to help the of police. Haiti demanded the town drunk's son." Rio treaty be put to work. iconniut ipmh . Amused when a stray springer spaniel came to his door with a news paper In her mouth, Stanley T. Gray of Los Angeles looked through the Lost Ads. Finding one that fitted the dog, he phoned her owner, who lived several miles away. 0.3. ud Canadian nsws papers print aora than 300,000,000 indlTidual Want Ada ararj yaar f!HM mi. Unix r.ri. i a bi o. a. rii m. Your Ad Will Bring Results Too TELEPHONE RESULT No. 22406