14 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Saturday, Jan. 21, 1950 Power Development Funds Solve Problem By C. K. LOGAN Present electrical energy supply problems of Linn and Benton counties and affecting other communities in the Willamette val ley, including the Detroit dam area, are believed to be solved by the Inclusion of necessary funds in the department of interior budget for 1951, according to W. E. Trommershausen, manager ot "the southwestern district of tne Bonneville power administra Counties Get State Money Secretary of State Earl T. New- bry Friday announced distrmu tion of $1,709,708.21 out of state highway funds to Oregon coun ties. This amount represented 19 per cent of the receipts into the state highway fund for last Oc tober, November and December, from motor vehicle registrations motor vehicle fuels taxes, motor carrier fees and motor vehicle fines. The distribution by counties included: Baker, $20,801.88; Benton $32,878.06; Clackamas, $89, 310.30; Clatsop, $32,906.82; Co lumbia, $27,002.48; Coos, $46, 630.94; Crook, $9,841.56; Curry $7,135.28; Deschutes, $26,907.55; Douglas, $58,816.42; Gilliam, $4,377.22; Grant, $9,907.71; Har ney, $7,992.31. Hood River, $16,614.47; Jack son, $73,843.35; Jefferson, $5, 355.05; Josephine, $33,847.26 Klamath, $56,834.88; Lake, $9, 680.51; Lane, $136,732.14; Lin coln, $23,956.81; Linn, $63, 581.00; Malheur, $29,918.69; Marion, $109,473.72; Morrow, $7,210.05; Multnomah, $495, 865.74; Polk, $29,064.53; Sher man, $4,446.25; Tillamook, $22,- 846.69; Umatilla, $50,248.91 Union, $22,783.42; Wallowa, $9, 999.74; Wasco, $18,800.20 Washington, $67,585.24; Wheel er, $3,511.56; Yamhill, $42,-998.59. Bank Growing, Changes Made Growth In every categbry was reported by G. Carroll Meeks, president of the Willamette Val ley bank, at a meeting of stock holders Friday night with all directors re-elected. Plans were made for minor remodeling to provide additional room for of fleers and business. Al H. Flicker, who has been cashier since the bank opened in 1947, was advanced to vice president, a new position. His place was given to William F. Baker, a former bank president in Glenwood City, Wis. Robert Jungling was promoted from tel ler to assistant cashier. Baker has been here four months and the family is living at 1739 Market until a home is purchased. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin and served in the army air force during the last war. He fol lowed his father as president of the First State Bank of Glen wood upon separation from the armed forces and served over three years before selling his in terests. Jungling graduated from Sa lem high school in 1943 and came to the bank as clerk in 1948, moving his family here from Carlton. He has complet ed a home at 1080 Lamberson street Chindgren Can't Hold Two Offices, Opinion Attorney General George Neuncr said Friday that Her man Chindgren cannot simultan eously hold office as a member! of the state legislature and as a I member of the Clackamas coun-1 ty fair board. j Neuncr wrote the opinion at request of Leonard I. Lindas of Oregon City, district attorney of Clackamas county. Lindas had asked: "Is a mem ber of the Clackamas county fair , board the holder of a public of fice?" Neuncr ruled that he would be. Under Oregon law one man cannot hold two "public offices at the same time." , tion. Projects contemplated by the BPA for the area, including pro jected work at Albany and Leb anon, are designed to augment greatly availability of power in the mid-Willamette valley from McNary and Detroit dams and the northwest power pool. Completion Well Timed A new extension, the McNary- Detroit-Albany 230 kilowatt transmission line, is budgeted for $179,000 and is scheduled to be completed at the time initial generation is available at Mc Nary dam in 1954. The present budget item will be used for in itial engineering and line sur veys. The 230-115 kilovolt sub station that will be installed at the terminus of this transmis sion line will be located in the vicinity of Albany and will have a capacity of 150,000 kilovolts. The budget request of $939,- 000 for the Albany-Lebanon line and the Lebanon substation covers completion of work now under way in the Albany sub station, terminal facilities in that substation, a 300,000 kilo- volt static capacitor installation and complete facilities in the Lebanon substation to provide for 12.5 kilovolt delivery for the Benton-Lincoln Electric co operative and 66 kilovolt deliv ery to the Mt. Mates Power company. From Goshen Substation The main 230 kilovolt grid extension from Mid-way-De- troit-Goshen and the Goshen substation are budgeted at $12, 180,000 on the bassis of comple tion in December 1951. Upon completion of the Goshen sub' station it is anticipated that power from" Grand Coulee dam will flow from Goshen north ward to Albany and that Albany and Linn and Benton counties will be obtaining their power supply from the Goshen substa tion rather than from the over loaded 115 kilovolt transmission lines now leading into Albany from St. Johns, Oregon City and Salem. A third loop is known as the central and southwestern serv ice with eventual extension from Klamath Falls to Medford, Roseburg and Goshen. This fa cility is budgeted for $2,000, 000 and the proposed grid will provide loop service and assure a reliable supply of power for central and southwestern Ore gon. Mother, 2 Children Burned to Death York, Me., Jan. 21 W A mother and two children burned to death early today when portable oil stove exploded their bedroom, splattering them with the blazing fluid Those killed in the blaze which burned out their five room frame home, were Mrs. Thomas McDonald, 41, and her sons Arthur, 5, and Richard, 7. The woman's husband was burned seriously when he open ed the door to the bedroom as the oil stove blew up. Doctors said he also suffered a heart attack and shock. Two other children, Thomas Jr., 18, and Sheila, 11, fled unharmed. Unshaven Man Is Sen. W. Morse Portland, Jan. 21 (JP) That crumpled, unshaven man who got off the train looking for a locksmith yesterday, was Sen. Wayne L. Morse. He found the locksmith, too, then shaved, got some rest and was ready today for a series of speeches that will keep him in the state until January 26. Morse was caught in the snarl ed transportation resulting from Mother Nature Turns Lumberjack Winter's icy ax brought this tree limb crashing down on an auto and across a street during a severe ice and snow storm at Portland, Ore. The week-long blizzard left 13 inches o ice and snow in Portland and caused the death of 39 persons in Oregon, Washington and northern California. (Acme Telephoto) What's This Super-Bomb WOO Greater Than A-Bomb? By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE (Associated Press Science Editor) New York. Jan. 21 W) A hydrogen bomb is merely a lot of hy drogen gas which explodes by the simple process of fusing hy drogen atoms together to form helium gas. In this fusion a lot of energy is given oil. The amount is seven times greater than the energy from an equal weight of the split- tine atoms in A-bombs. So thise- More than 4,800,000 American farms have electricity. hydrogen bomb rates about 1000 times stronger than an A-bomb because of possibly less trouble in handling the mass. To produce this explosion, you need temperatures and pressures of millions of degrees and pounds, such as exist in the sun, An A-bomb gives you both but only momentarily. The question is can science use this momentary A-nomo flash to set off a hydrogen bomb? The troubles are serious. It is true that hydrogen does just this in the sun and stars to make their heat. But the change is not directly hydrogen into helium. The hydrogen first changes carbon into nitrogen the latter into oxygen and then down the scale to helium as the final product. That process may take too long to furnish an explosion. It would also require many times more carbon in the bomb than hydrogen. There's no evidence that if you started tne nyarogen flash it could continue by itself long enough to explode. In fact, some scientists have held that only sustained million-degree temperatures would make it possible. On the other hand, the pros pects for success rest on a num ber of facts. One is that scarce ly anything is yet known about the details of this process ot nature. This means possible short-cuts to be discovered. It is a fact that there are three kinds of hydrogen to play with plain, double weight known to the public as heavy water and a triple weight hydrogen known as tritium, and with some mean radioactivity. These com plicate and increase the possi bilities. A five-year chain of events leads up to the present hydrogen bomb. Soon after the war ended, Dr. Robert M. Hutchins, chancellor of the University of Chicago, said new horrors in physics lab oratories might make the A bomb obsolete in five years. He did not explain. In 1946, the hydrogen bomb was named by John J. McCloy, Ai.riiiiN, (flUUlliJr, SAVE With SAFETY AtlM fiDERAt SAVINGS Tol t.tleli.llinL' Solenv. Oregon -iiumih 1 ti WANTED ALL GRADES WALNUT MEATS We Pay Top Market Prices Can Use Any Amount Bring in All You Have AT ONCE WILLAMETTE GROCERY CO n Phone 3414 105 So. Cottage St. BUYING HOURS 8 cm. to 12 neon - 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m. to 11 o.m. then assistant secretary of war. He said his information came from scientists who had actually worked on the A-bomb. They told him that, working at the wartime pace, we were within two years of producing a hydrogen-helium type bomb 1000 times more powerful. Dr. E. P. Wigner of Princeton, said the hydrogen reaction would yield seven times greater energy. Next year, Dr. W. O. Roberts, superintendent of the high alti tude observatory, of Harvard and the University of Colorado, wrote that a superbomb of the hydrogen-helium type for det onation by an A-bomb was on the drawing boards. The same year, Dr. Philip Morrison of Cornell, one of the Los Alamos bomb scientists, was quoted that "the possibility ex ists" for a hydrogen-helium bomb. No one has been definite. The gossip has persisted quietly. A year ago, General MacArthur was reported to have mentioned a bomb 1000 times more powerful. How much worse is a hydro gen bomb? At 1000 times more powerful its concussion won't lay every thing flat for 1000 miles but only for 10 miles. That's a ra dius, meaning the possibility of flattening most everything over 300 square miles. Will there be radioactivity from this bomb? Probably, but not likely from so many differ ent kinds of atoms. But you will have all the present a-bomb ra dioactivity anyhow. One horrible possibility is in the published scientific records. It is that when a nuclear bomb gets powerful enough, the flash of searing heat will rise in direct proportion to increase in energy of the bomb. That, if it should come true, might mean searing heat reaching out hun dreds of miles. Under the atomic energy law. only the president of the United States has the right to tell you how much of the hydrogen bomb reports are correct. Everyone else on the inside has lips sealed by a possible death penalty. Those who talk freely are outside the know. INCOME TAX Returns Prepared 403 Oregon Bldg. Ph. 3-5780 FOR APPOINTMENT winter storms. When he got off the train here, he was 30 hours late. His suitcase was locked shaving equipment inside and the key not to be found. Chapter Will Initiate Woodburn, Ore., Jan. 21 Two candidates will be initiat ed at the regular meeting of Ev ergreen Chapter No. 41, Eastern Stars, at the Masonic temple on Monday night. Members of the refreshment committee are Mr, and Mrs. Jess Fikan, Mrs. E. Hughes, Mrs. Edna Lytle, Mrs. I. L. Anderson and Mrs. Bertha Baldwin. Plague first .invaded Europi from Asia in the sixth century. DON'T THEY HAVE CURLY'S MILK? CURLY'S DAIRY Phone 3-8783 Cheer-up Your Home ... by treating tired-looking woodwork and walls to a beautifying dose of our quality DUTCH BOY PAINTS! Available in a variety of fresh, exciting colors and soft, subtle shades, they go on smoothly; dry to a radiant finish that will bring out the true charm of your rooms and furnishings! 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