Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 20, 1950, Page 14, Image 14

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    14 Capital Journal, Salem,
r? A ; lifi'i lit"
Sloop Aids Flying Arrow The British Sloop Black Swan
is alongside: the American freighter Flying Arrow at the
mouth of the Yangtze river while it's orewmen assist the
Americans in fighting fires caused from shells fired into
the Flying Arrow by a Chinese Nationalist warship. The
American ship was attempting to run the Nationalist blockade
with a cargo for Communist held Shanghai. (AP Wirephoto
la radio from Manila)
Gen. Arnold Laid to Rest in
Military Rites at Arlington
Washington Jan. 20 VP) Gen. Henry H. "Hap" Arnold was
buried yesterday in Arlington National cemetery, on a high
knoll over which the airplanes he loved so well roar day and
Bight.
Ironically, the weather during the General's funeral was so
. bad that the 100 planes which
Gloria Smith in
Census Office
Mrs. Kenneth J. (Gloria)
Bmith has been appointed ad
ministrative clerk for the Salem
district office of the census bu
reau, and will leave Sunday for
Seattle for a week's Instruction
In census operation.
Her appointment was an
nounced Thursday by Cornelius
Bateson, census supervisor for
this district.
' For the last five years Mrs.
Smith has been secretary to E.
A. Taylor, chief deputy state fire
marshal. She is a graduate of
Snlem high school and Capital
Business college. Her home is
at 76 Lansing avenue.
She will be in charge of the
district headquarters office with
a staff of 14 working with her.
Bureau Greeted
By Dairy Co
The Dairy Cooperative asso
elation extended the hand of
friendship to the Oregon Farm
Bureau federation at a Salem
meeting Wednesday.
W. W. Henry, manager, travel
ed to Salem to discuss mutual
problems of the many dairymen
represented by the association
and Farm Bureau members.
Henry and Joe Kendrick, field
representative, met with Presi
dent Lowell Steen, Marshall
Swearingen and Bill Howard
of the federation David Reyn
olds of the American Farm Bu
reau was present.
Henry reviewed the 30-year
battle to protect individual milk
producers on the unstable and
oft-times vicious Portland mar
ket. He indicated that dairy
men, even though members of
the association needed the sup
port of a general farm organ
isation in future problems.
Henry cited examples of mis
use of the Oregon milk control
law which have caused inequali
ties in the marketing set-up He
sain that though the milk con
trol law has been a great ben
efit, dairymen and all farmers
must stand together to protect
themselves from misuse of state
and national laws.
President Lowell Steen said
that he welcomed close associa
Hon with all truly agricultural
groups and that he foresees the
only real security for farmers
will result from organized agri
culture.
Ross Named
Surgeon
For Fighter Group
Cecil Hoss, Portland phvsl
elan, Thursday was appointed
flight surgeon for the 142nd
fighter group, Oregon National
Guard, with the rank of lieuten
ant colonel in the National
Guard.
Boas, who has been a major
In the U.S. Air Force reserve, is
a veteran of World War I, hav
ing served with the 28th U.S.
air squadron as a mechanic
A graduate of the Northwest
ern University Medical school in
1925, Col. Ross in 1930 e.itered
the U.S. army school of medicine
at San Antonio, Texas, and from
1931 to 1939 served as flight sur
geon with the 321st Observation
squadron of the air force.
Ore., Friday, January 20, 1950
JtL i ill
were to form a canopy over the
procession had to be grounded.
President Truman, bundled up
in a black, doublebreasted over
coat, headed the dignitaries who
sat in the open amphitheater un
der a steady snowfall.
The amphitheater's stone
benches were covered with ice
long before the ceremonies start
ed. Although the jets and the four-
motored bombers were missing,
all the other ceremonies that go
with the burial of a nation's hero
were observed.
There was the slow parade
down Constitution avenue, with
six white horses pulling the cais
son bearing the flag-covered
casket. Behind came a black
horse, with the symbolic empty
saddle.
As the procession approached
the knoll where the leader of
the world's mightiest air force
during World War II would have
his final resting place, the snow
fell harder.
It covered the shoulders of
Gen. Omar Bradley, chairman
of the joint chiefs of staff. It
powdered the hair of General
George Marshall and General
Dwlght Eisenhower, standing
uncovered as the casket was car
ried up the slope.
Maj. Gen. Charles I. Carpen
ter, chief of the air force chap
lains, said:
'The flight of another airman
over, life's battles are all
fought, his victories all won, and
as in other days he lies down to
rest awhile under the arching
skies awaiting the bugle's call."
Then the salute the rifle vol
ley, and taps ... the sad, sweet
call of the bugle.
Angry Mine Workers
Boo Lewis Aide
Brownsville, Pa., Jan. 20 U.R)
A meeting of 3000 angry United
Mine Workers broke up in a
near riot Thursday as rebeling
rank-and-file workers booed
down a UMW official without
hearing his appeal from John L.
Lewis for resumption of work.
Body guards were forced to
take UMW District No. 4 Presi
dent William J. Hynes and Dis
trict Secretary Michael Honus
from the hall. The miners
jeered and lunged at the pro
tecting guards as the officials
left Moose hall.
First fights broke out. Hynes
attempted to stop and talk to
reporters but his body guards
pulled him away,
Hynes managed to say that
lie had wanted to tell the miners
that Lewis wanted them to go
to work so the union "doesn't
run into an injunction."
"The miners have been en
slaved long enough by injunc
tion," he said. Then his sup
porters pulled him away and
into a waiting car.
Sclo lets Conference
Scio The missionary confer
ence will be held February 5
to 12 at the Baptist church, with
different missionary speakers
each evening.
INCOME TAX
Returns Prepared
LEON A.FISCUS
4947 N. River Rd.
295 Pint St. Dial S5285
Farmer Truman Beginning
To Be an 'Old City Slicker'
By MERRIMAN SMITH
Washington, Jan. 20 UR President Truman may be "just a
farmer from Missouri" like he says, but his White House staff
is glad he's getting to be an old city slicker in one respect:
He gets up later now.
Mr. Truman, an early riser since his farming days, used to set
Gen. MacArthur
In Good Health
Tokyo, Jan. 20 0J.R) Gen.
Douglas MacArthur is in "su
perb physical condition" on the
eve of his 70th birthday, his phy
sician said today.
, Lt. Col. Charles C. Canada
made public the following state
ment: "General MacArthur is in su-
p e r b physical condition as he
approaches his 70th birthday
(Jan. 26). He is as alert and vi
gorous as he has always been
throughout his active career. No
further proof is needed concern
ing his good health than the fact
that he did 365 full days of work
in the past year. With such a
rugged charge, what chance does
his doctor have?"
Dallas Streets
Clear of Snow
Dallas Big county road main
tainers dominated Dallas down
town streets Thursday afternoon
and for a few hours not a parked
car was to be seen.
As the heavy snows began to
thaw, gutters clogged and water
began to run across sidewalks,
The city engaged the county
maintainors to scrape snow from
the sides of the streets and into
the center of the main avenues.
In a few hours the job was
done and a long ridge of snow
separated travel lanes, but the
sides of the streets were clear
for the first time since the snow
started.
Meanwhile, residents and bus
inessmen were assessing damage
done by the silver thaw Wednes
day night and Thursday morn
ing. Many shrubs were broken
down and two short power fail
ures were noted.
Mrs. Don Greene, owner of
Mildred's beauty salon, came to
work Thursday morning to find
three inches of water standing
on the floor of the establishment.
The water came in from melting
snows when drain pipes clogged.
Bruce Cooley, owner of Coo-
ley Furniture company, stated
that a considerable quantity of
furniture, including mattresses
and bedroom sets, was damaged
when a down-spout clogged and
water flowed into his place of
business.
Streets, sidewalks, trees and
wires were covered with a heavy
coating of ice all day and rain
and sleet continued falling.
Hormones Slow
Cancer Tumors
Wichita, Kan., Jan. 20 0J.B
Two hormone treatments have
brought regressions in cancer
tumors, according to a report
made at the second annual mid
west cancer conference today.
The team of doctors who made
the report warned, however
that the treatments could not be
considered a cure for cancer.
The team, which included Dr.
Roy Hertz of the National Can
cer institute and Drs. J. K.
Cromer and Lois Piatt of the
George Washington University
Cancer Research service, said
huge doses of female hormones
were used in the treatments.
One of the hormones proges
terone which is secreted from
the female ovary, was adminis
tered to 20 women with advanc
ed cancer of the uterine cervix,
the report said.
In eight of these, lesions heal
ed, tumors became smaller and
bleedings were reduced and tis
sues became pliable, the doctors
claimed. The effects were not
as decisive in the other patients,
they said.
The second hormone, estrogen,
also secreted by the female
ovary, was administered 12 men
suffering prostatic cancer and
20 women with breast cancer.
The estrogen was dripped into
the veins of the patients for pro
longed periods, sometimes 72
hours. ,
The doctors reported a "visi
ble regression" of the growth in
the cancerous breast and that
several patients experinced re
lief of bone pain.
Sea lilies are really animals
but they look like the plants for
which they are named.
$$ MONEY $$
Real Estate Loans
Farm or City
Personal and Auto Loans
State Finance Co.
l&J 8. Hlfh St. Lie S-216 M U
out for his morning walk at 6
7 a.m. Then he would slide
behind his White House desk at
8, and begin his daily confer
ence with the staff around 9.
But things are different now.
He goes for a walk around 8,
shows up at his office at 9, and
holds his staff meeting about
10 or later.
White House sources deny
that the President Is getting soft.
They said he changed his sched
ule because of the late winter
dawn and because the old one
(1) interferred with secret serv
ice shifts and (2) was hard on
his late-sleeping staff.
Members of the staff were
quick to say they like the new
timetable a lot better.
But Mr. Truman wants it
known that he's still just a farm
boy at heart. He said so the
other night at a "get-acquainted"
dinner the federal reserve
board of governors gave for
bankers from New York and
Minneapolis.
The President told them he
had no right to be hobnobbing
with "financial brains."
"I'm just a farmer from Mis
souri, who had bad luck and
got kicked into a big job," he
said.
He said the only reason he
showed at all was "to meet you
and get acquainted with you,
and to let you know that in spite
of certain information, which
has been pretty well distributed,
that I do not wear horns and I
haven't a tail.
"I am just an ordinary citizen
of this great republic of ours."
In a more serious vein, Mr.
Truman appealed to the bankers
to help him bring peace out of
the current east-west struggle.
Whether we like it or not,"
he said, "we are at the top of
the heap in world affairs, a po
sition which none of us likes to
contemplate, a position that has
responsibilities almost too big
for any man or any group of
men to contemplate.
"Yet that position is ours. And
the fact that we are willing to
assume the responsibility that
goes with that position is a part
of your responsibility as well
as the responsibility of the U.S.
government."
Bone Grafting Needed
Scio Mrs. Kenneth Ellis, who
was seriously injured in a trac
tor accident several months
ago, was taken back to the Good
Samaritan hospital in Portland
recently for further bone graft
ing, which was done by special
ists. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis and
children live in the house for
merly owned by Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Funk, who now live in
McMinnville.
Got a Talented Pet to Star
In Movies Like Talking Mule?
By PATRICIA CLARY
Hollywood, Calif., Jan. 20 (U.R) Universal-International movie
studio has discovered that the U. S. is swarming with singing
goats, auto-driving skunks and tap dancing pigs.
They all want to get in the movies too, the company's casting
office said as it pulled out a sheaf of advices from animal owners
from Lovelock, Nev.. to St.-
Augustine, Fla
"I have a well-trained zebra,
wrote Harold Franks of St.
Augustine, "who would be a
novel addition to movies. He
can be made up to look like a
number of movie stars and poli
ticians." The studio also filed an appli
cation from a nubian goat who
tap dances on his hind feet while
bleating tunes through h i s
whiskers.
"He singe 'Dardanella' best,"
the owner wrote. "You can tell
what it is."
E. O. Dwiggins, a Memphis,
T e n n ., streetcar conductor,
sought a contract for his bull
frog, who stands on his head
while waving an American flag
with his feet.
"He owns a complete scale
model dress suit," Dwiggins add
ed, indicating the future star is
ready for Hollywood night life.
U-I is getting all these chances
because it starred a talking mule
in its comedy "Francis. It has
no present plans, however, to
produce an all animal-star pic
ture. In case they ever do need an
eagle which smokes cigars,
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Hugh Fair appearing with
the Sons of the Pioneers.
Bad Men from
Movies Coming
Something new in the way of
western entertainment turned up
this week with the Hollywood
Outlaws, a group of motion pic
ture meanies who have pooled
their talents and come up with
western review and dance
band which hits the trail for the
northwest this month with the
Sons of the Pioneers.
Billing themselves as "The
Men You Love to Hate," the seven-man
group of screen villains
figure they've played a grand
total of 1200 badmen on the
screen.
Tired of being hissed and
booed, the veteran group of
cowboy heavies have turned to
comedy and music, and are com
bining their personal appearance
tour with a sixty-minute varie
ty act and an evening of west
ern dancing.
Business manager of the Hol
lywood Outlaws is Eddie Maj
ors, noted screen outlaw, stunt
man and precision archer. Steve
Cody heads the band, takes along
his rope act and doubles on the
lead guitar. Jack Tucker, sweet
ballad singer, will greet old
friends and make many new
ones.
Other western actors who have
joined the group are Vern Mar
tens, who plays the accordion,
Orville Betts, the bass fiddler,
and Jack Bergland on the drums.
They will be seen at the Glen-
wood Ballroom in Salem, Friday,
January 20.
Jury Awards $35
On $10,187 Claim
San Francisco, Jan. 20 U.R
Mrs. Ethel Stubbs sued Insur
ance Broker Clifford Dorman for
$10,187 for injuries suffered in
an auto accident three years ago.
A jury listened to the case for
three days, deliberated 40 min
utes and awarded her $35.
though, a Portsmouth, Va., man
wants his name on file.
"He smokes only the most
expensive type of cigars," the
man added, "so I am very anxi
ous to get him a job."
A fertilizer salesman wrote
from Bentonia, Miss., that he has
a two-headed bantam rooster.
both heads are anxious to get to
Hollywood.
A farmer in Beaver Crossing,
Neb., wrote in about his seven-
year-old Jersey cow. It moos the
musical scale in two different
keys.
A garage mechanic in Gem-
mell, Minn., sent information
about his barn owl, which hoots
"God Save The King."
A de-scented skunk which
swings on a trapeze and drives
a small automobile lives in Love
lock, Nev. Another skunk in
Arlington Heights, O., can ride
a bicycle and pitch horseshoes
with its mouth. Its owner said
so in a 14-page letter.
A bumble bee in Tyler, Tex.,
has been trained to buzz the
phrase, "Oh, Death Where Is
Thy Sting" In Morse code.
My pig is an excellent tap
dancer," wrote a Kansas City
CREDIT
AT CENTER
3 - 6506
Dr. Sam Hughes
U0
Uncle Sam Doesn't Want to
Miss a Nose in 1950 Census
By HARM AN W. NICHOLS
(United Preu SUff correspondent) I
Washington, Jan 20 (U.R) When Uncle Sam goes out to count
noses, he doesn't want to miss a nose.
Starting April 1, the census taker will start counting. He'll
knock maybe more than once on every door in the land
to find out how many people we have in the U. S., what each
person does for a living and how
manv mother hen. in the backl
yard.
It's a thorough-going job. But
your Uncle has jusr. admitted
with a red face that in the last
census, in 1940, he missed maybe
half a million noses. Those folks
happened to be in hotels when
the count was made.
Your Uncle corrects his mis
takes.
The Department of Commerce
has announced that on April 11,
we'll have what will be known
as "T-night," or transient night.
The government and the
American Hotel association had
quite a fuss about it at first.
Should the census people go
around hammering on doors at
all hours to route out hotel
guests for a count of noses?
Should the government tag
folks as they went through re
volving doors?
The hotel men said "no." Al
though they had no right to be
cause the Uncle is the ruler and
could do just that if he felt like
it.
So the hotels and the census
people got together and devised
a plan.
Hotels that have 50 rooms or
more come under the program
if at least 20 per cent of the
guests are transients. A person
who registers on the night of
April 11 will get a census form
along with his key. It will be
an individual form not the fam
ily job which calls for all of the
information back to the third
generation.
Says Johnson
Wrecks Defense
Washington, Jan. 20 (IP)
Senator McCarthy (R.-Wis.) to
day called Secretary Johnson "a
dictator who has just about
wrecked the defense depart
ment." He said Secretary of the Navy
Matthews is "an unfortunate lit
tle man who has to be a yes
man lo noid his job he has to
follow a goose-stepping mood."
McCarthy called a news con
ference to loose these fresh darts
at the officials.
He has directed a drumfire of
criticism at them since the oust
er of Adm. Louis E. Denfeld as
chief of naval operations and
cutbacks in the navy and ma
rine corps. The senator was a
wartime marine officer.
McCarthy disputes the legality
of Denfeld's removal. Senator
Tydings (D.-Md.), chairman of
the armed services committee,
has promised the senate he will
get the facts and put them be
fore it no matter where they
nn.
Bandit Chief Who
Robbed Khan Dead
Paris, Jan. 20 (IP) Th chief of
the bandit gang that robbed the
Aga Khan of $500,000 worth of
jewels last summer has been
murdered, five others of the
gang are in jail and two have
disappeared with the loot,
French police announced today.
The bandit chief, Roger Sen
anedj, and his girl friend, Renee
Remy, have been slain, police
said, apparently by their accom
plices. The bodies have not
been found.
The 72-year-old Moslem ruler.
one of the world's wealthiest
men, and his wife, the begum.
were held up by tommygunners
as they drove from their villa
near Cannes on the Riviera on
their way to visit the Aga's son,
Prince Aly, and daughter-in-law,
Movie Actress Rita Hayworth.
farmer.
"I made him clog shoes for all
four feet.
The studio said all the appli
cations are being field.
"Who knows," a spokesman
said wearily, "when some pro
ducer will holler, 'get me a tap
dancing pig.' "
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MORRIS KLORFEIN PACKING CO.
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11 the ues can't figure out
how the form should be made
out there will be a government
man in the lobby to help him.
The census bureau figures that
the permanent residents already
will have been tagged.
There will be complications,
there are in all big opera
tions.
Say a man comes in around
check-out time and calls the
transportation desk to find when
he can get a plane to Omaha. A
half hour later, the desk calls
this is on April 11, of course
and says that the weather has
lifted and he can get right out.
Right there may be an un
counted nose.
And how about a nose being
counted twice?
Under the system that's
hardly possible. ,
Take a hypothetical case:
A man comes into Washington
on business from Urich, Mo. He
registers at the Willard hotel on
April 11. He gets the slip in his
mail box as he goes to his room.
He fills out the census informa
tion and leaves it at the desk
The desk sends it along to the
government. The government
sends it to Clinton, Mo., in Henry
county (Urich's county seat)
where a record is kept of all
that sort of thing.
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