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 ond also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, 25c; Monthly, $1.00: One Year, $12.00. 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; Year. $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, January 25, 1950 New Minimum Wages The amendments tothe Fair Labor Standards act go into effect today with its revised regulations and interpreta tions. The original act was passed in 1938 during the de pression and almost every provision has now been revised or expanded. But its original intent remains, to enforce a minimum wage to restrict the work week to certain hours and prevent child labor employment. The principal provisions pertaining to minimum wages, maximum hours and child labor are altered as follows : 1. The minimum wage which must be paid to "covered" em ployes is increased from 40 cents per hour to 75 cents per hour. While the 1949 amendments increase the minimum wage, the rules governing what constitutes the minimum wage are not changed. 2. The maximum work week of 40 hours, beyond which time and a half "the regular rate" must be paid, continues unchanged. In this respect, however, whereas the original act was silent on the meaning of "regular rate" and the methods by which "over time" might be calculated, the new amendments furnish not only an elaborate and comprehensive definition of "regular rale," but indicate the methods for computing overtime. 3. The child labor provision of the original act limited the employment of "oppressive" child labor by prohibiting the ship ment in commerce for 30 days any goods coming from an estab lishment in or about which child labor was employed. Under the new amendments there is an outright prohibition against the employment of child labor in establishments engaged in "commerce" or in "producing goods for commerce." The basic scheme of the act is not changed though there have been changes in definition of items "commerce" and "production of goods for commerce," which have been lib eralized, and certain employes removed from application of the law, as for instance, newspaper carriers, and other ex ceptions in other industries. Among the exemptions, however, Is one class which cuts across and applies to all industries the so-called white collar exemptions which include executives, administrative employes, professional employes, local retailing employes and outside salesmen. The law provides that employes who come within these white-collar classifications are ex empt from both its minimum wage and overtime require ments. Further, the law directs the wage-hour adminis trator to "define and delimit" the various white-collar categories, which has already been done. They have been redefined and reclassified on salary basis. The increase in minimum pay from 40 cents to 75 cents corresponds to the shrinkage of the value in the dollar, for 40 cents in 1938 bought as much as 75 cents does today. The lengthy law is wrapped so much in red tape that com ment like this can only touch high spots. A Hydrogen Bomb Some time ago Senator Edwin C. Johnson (D.t Colo.), In a radio and television speech, stated that our physicists were engaged in trying to make a hydrogen super-bomb which would be 1,000 times as powerful as the plutonium (atomic) bomb. Johnson's announcement received a great deal of pub licity in the press and brought a rebuke from President Truman, who chided congress for permitting secret mili tary information to leak out. What a hydrogen bomb would cost to produce has been variously guessed at from $200 million to over $2 billion. Whether with a debt of a third of a trillion dollars and an administration running $5 billion a year in the red, such a bomb would be seriously considered remains to be seen. What is a hydrogen bomb? Few know anything about it outside of scientists and their languageis over the heads of most of us. So we reprint the simplest definition yet seen from the New York Times : "The technical problem is utterly different from that of the uranium-plutonium bomb. To produce a Plutonium bomb rare uranium 235 must be split to start a chain reaction which ends in converting fairly plentiful uranium 238 into plutonium; to produce a hydrogen bomb, hydrogen must be built up into helium. In this transmutation of hydrogen to helium excess mass is converted into energy, which is what happens in the sun. "Can we imitate the sun? Only if we have at our disposal heat that cannot be generated by any furnace. The transmuta tion of hydrogen in the sun occurs at a temperature of 20,000, 000 degrees C. To attain this there is nothing for it but to set off a uranium or plutorium bomb. The explosion would be accompanied by heat which for a flash matches that of the sun's interior. "If hydrogen can be transmuted in this flash it may well be that a hydroRen bomb's radius of destruction would be 50 miles, as some reports that come out of Washington have it, instead of the two miles credited to plutonium. But the estimate that a hydrogen bomb will be 1.000 times more effective than a plu tonium bomb is probably an exaggeration. Even a bomb a hundred times more powerful than any we have so far produced is enough to make us shudder." Outside of the moral issue raised, which exists in the use of the atomis bomb as well, and really in the use of any bomb, which is forgotten under necessity, with its scien tific knowledge and technical resources, the United States could probably produce a hydrogen bomb, as its secret has long been known, just as it produced the plutonium bomb, but would it ever be used if produced ? Frobably not, except as a threat against aggression, How Attractive Will Oregon Be? Despite the cold weather, the boys are warming up al ready to the idea of building 1950 into a record tourist year for the Pacific Northwest. Travel men from the northwest states and the western, section of Canada got together in Spokane to figure out what would likely be doing in the tourist business in these parts this year. That was when the boys came out with optimism and the belief that last year's record of $110,000, 000 tourist business for Oregon would be broken. This section of the nation offers so much to the tourist, and especially to the sportsman. And, fortunately for the individual states, the best way to promote the section is through unified action, which is what has been realized. There is one thing that should be remembered regarding the visitors, a& far as this state is concerned. Oregon can realize, as those travelers come to this state in expected record nurrmers, that many will be looking the state over as a possible place in which to locate. The growth figures for Oregon indicate that the state apparently sells itself. But that selling job can't be taken for granted. Visitors should be extended the friendly hand of wel come. One of those visitors may become your next-door neighbor. BY H. T. WEBSTER The Unseen Audience - bjs j. ffltilZ PROGRAM i sWr AfFaKO To take chahcs- hCome Txes kio . I e- eestoes IM HOI 1- I To PARIS, A s lurrci r-iuv- , HfO OR A root- i""-- Own,.,. ItatoMI H1 1 B-W-R-f- gj t I-is- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Poker Game Between Stalin And Mao Has Asia as Stake By DREW PEARSON Washington A secret month-long poker game between an ex Georgia priest and a Chinese peasant may settle the fate of all Asia. This is the confidential advice given President Truman by Secretary of State Dean Acheson. The game is in Moscow and the players are Josef Stalin, shrewd i n d BY CLARE BARNES, JR. White Collar Zoo impassive, who sits oppo site China's communist boss, Mao Tze-Tung. The prize is Manchuria, the rich northern provinces of China eyed with sharp desire by both czars and politb u r o s for more thana century. Mao went to Moscow Decem ber 16. He is still there. KRISS-KROSS Jolson Just About Had to Go Into March Routine in Show ByCHRISKOWITZ.Jr. Diane Bray, who docs a creditable pantomime of Al Jolson, came treacherously close to an embarrassing moment during Monday night's March of Dimes talent discovery show at Salem high school. Diane, a lovely young lady under her black paint and white gloves Waving newspaper editorials from his district, Congressman John W. Heselton of Massachu setts declared that his constitu ents were overwhelmingly op posed to gagging legislation. "My people like to see issues fought out openly on the floors of congress," said Heselton, "in stead of being bottled up in the rules committee so we can't vote on them. I have the greatest re spect for Joe Martin, but I'll have to oppose him in this fight." Rep. J. Harry McGregor of Coded cables to Washington t b, opposed to this gag pro say a stubborn quarrel over T : e ' v. Manchuria has prolonged what " ZXTJHZ vTl should have bee a brief formal til?! w 7..' I . dodging them. We're hurting the party by 'me-tooing' the Dixie- back Drew Pe.rtoD visit. Stalin has proposed an au- tonomous Manchuria under an out-and-out Moscow stooge, Li " jo insisting nua&id live uu iu us I Aid' : - f& was to mimic Jolson s actions while a rec o r d i ng of Jolson singing "Swanee" was t played over the public address s y s tern. Diane carefully placed the record on the backstage phonograph turntable sev- cbrl eral minutes before her act. Jr Kowltz, packs a wallop In entertainment as well as a wallop against polio. The well-rounded display of vaudeville acts plays in Stayton Thursday and Silverton Friday. Next week it hits Mt. Angel Monday, Woodbtirn Wednesday and Mill City Friday. Mary Bourke. the gal who wows 'em with her takeoff on Sophie Tucked, actually looks Sophie Tucker, actually looks Question What will happen Aug. 14, 1945, treaty with China which recognizes Chinese "full sovereignty" over Manchuria. Mao is a tough customer who knows he must show a streak of independence to keep his hold over the Chinese people. Like Yugoslavia's Tito he has com plete control over his own army, but if Mao returns home with out Manchuria and with com mitments to supply Russia with troops, laborers and food, Mao will lose face ingloriously. Former GOP Floor Leader Charles Halleck of Indiana tried vainly to stem the oratorical tide, chiding his rebellious col leagues: "I remember when a lot of you fellows who now oppose this resolution to change the rules came to me during the 80th congress urging that certain bills be held up in the rules commit tee. Some of you are not being very consistent." ' However, Halleck's dig seem- n e s e communist government, and now control its propaganda machine. Also on Mondav night's March to the historic Christmas tree on of Dimes show was a drum ma- the courthouse lawn when the jorette act. Two majorettes were new courthouse is erected? to twirl their batons while a Answer It'll probably come peppy band rendition of "Stars down. and Ktrinps Forever" was nlaved 0nly chance for the tree's drum ma- survival would be to set the new county edifice far enough back i 1... 4Un4 a i. -r jorettes took care to see that T" J ,", t u . ii,.!, h , ni. , the new building would be back over the amplifyer. Like Diane, the Present plans would have the 73-foot fir yield to the axe. There shouldn't be any con- teke care him.' Life in "GOP" turntable. The majorettes placed "Stars and Stripes Forever" on top of the "Swanee" disc. You can guess what almost happened. Only fate caused gestion of traffic in moving baby someone to glance at the turn- cribs about the matcrnity ward table seconds before Diane was at Saiem Generai hospital for to go on stage before 1,000 peo- tne next few dayS- A p0cket. Ple- sized traffic cop is riding in Had not someone noticed the one of the vehicles. The junior title of the record atop the turn- gendarme is James Hunter, table, Diane would have dash- 2-day-old son of Jim Hunter, ed out on the stage all dressed city traffic patrolman, up like Jolson, only to have . "Stars and Stripes Forever" Willamette Valley Lumber blast out. company officials at Dallas re- port that 731 tourists visited Don't miss a chance to witness eil PIant durin8 1949- Guide t,l. . . w , , . , F. J. Holman must have been the March of Dimes talent show puttin(, a meral translation to which begins a tour of Marion the old saying of "run 'em county Thursday. The show through the mill." While the poker game goes ed to inflame the insurgents fur on in Moscow, the Soviet is sec- t h e r . Representatives Clifford retly trying to undermine Mao. case of New Jersey and Jack Hundreds of Soviet officials, pa- Javits 0f New York served no rading as farm advisers, military tice that GOP support of the experts, engineers and welfare Cox resolution would "play in- omciais are moving into tne Chi- to the hands of the democratic opposition" in the next election. Another foe of the "gag rule," Rep. Reid Murray of Wisconsin, lashed out at southern democrats A few days ago at the state for inveigling republicans into a department there was a round- political coalition against civil table discussion between an rights. Murray, who opposed the American, a Chinese and a Fili- oleo tax-repeal bill, was greet- pino. ed with shouts, "the oleo fight is The state department man over," as he took his feet, asked "but what can non-com- "Yes, but the same gentlemen munist China do? You have no frm he south who prompted leaders." repeal of the oleo tax are going The Chinese agreed, "That is f. eiv uyu anothuer lickinf true but we do not need leaders. ls llBh over hT! -ule?' If Mao sells out to a foreign Murray d e c 1 a r e d , furiously, power the Chinese people will ?he. southerners are always p ajr iiifi itHUWUtoiio lui ouvn.1 s and too often we fall into their trap. The secret republican caucus that the .re against the Truman over reviving the gag-law" in social and snendin nnii-ip. "Tell him my brother-in-law handles all my insurance" POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Hypnotism Can Be Man's Best Friend-lf He Doesn't Dog It By HAL BOYLE New York W) Have you hypnotized your wife or husband? Why not? This is the best solution of everybody's marital problems yet dreamed up. A New York professor recently indicated that problems of this Icliai luuil&iuiesa limb ail uina- tors get caught with: They never realize that power is a solitary enterprise that nobody is go ing to admire them merely for their muscle. It also is needless to point out that wives are the soft instru ments of power in our civiliza tion. Why remark again upon the female fist in the velvet glove? We all have felt it. Our only possible defense is Hal Boyle the rules committee showed that iT Z Bio"" is taken care of first. If you don't party" yet, Vtfil lATin vnn nin4k iUnt Un House Leader Joe Martin was when tne biu to relieve hardship for the gag but he didn't try to cases under tne cotton acreaBe shut off debate on the hot issue. "Speaker Rayburn," he warned, "wants to get off the spot him self and put us on it. If the Cox resolution reinstating the gag rule passes, he won't have to cases under the cotton acreage. control program comes up in the house. "Our southern colleagues use us when they need our support to protect southern economy, but that's the extent to which they nature can solved by the mumbo- jumbo of hypnotism. He didn't say it quite that way. But he did say that he nonlH hvDnotize a gent, snap lum 8 out of it and yet still have the guy come back 1 tic suggestion at 3 o'clock the , , following afternoon to pet a big Personally, I have no desire black dog that wasn't there. to fork out $15 to a hypnotist who will mesmerize my wife I say that this opens the an- into caning at my library In mid swer to all the problems of the afternoon to pat a non-existant western world, which are large- dachshund, ly male versus female rather Lefs be realistic, even if it than American against Russian. costs $25 if I can hire a mumbo (The Russians must have as jumbo artist who will get her to much trouble getting along with pat me lovingly on the cheek on their wives as we do). the morning after the night be- Personally, fellows, regard- fore under the mistaken impres less of what you do, I am either sjorl that I am a misunderstood going to learn to hypnotize my Saint Bernard. Well? Bow wife or hire a man to do it for wow! me- The onry danger I can see is How can a guy afford not to? that this terrible weapon of hyp You take the average wife, notism may fall Into wifely What does she give you but a lot hands. of common sense and "love's old Looking at it that way, boys, sweet yelp"? She has no real our secrets are gone. Our favor- MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Forces of Communism Draw Closer to Pakistan and India By DeWITT MaeKENZIE Foreign Affair Analyst) The isolated and mountainous state of Afghanistan, heretofore regarded as anti-communist and for generations a buffer between Russia and the Indian peninsula, suddenly has begun orienting her foreign relations toward Red Moscow. That's a development which easily could create a further threat to the vast pen- f? time, northern democrats will accuse us of being against civil rights, -,7- V,r A. em.PI0ymen? want to play ball. I'm getting TtrnrtlPtaQ mil nnri fhornfnro mnn'r " o o r .7. " : " tired oi it. rnn.m.i'.n? ? h;s uthern NOTE: Despite Murray's out- constituents. But at the same spoken remark wnicn TltT10 rtrirthorn ncmnniAtp unl 1 - . . . have been tinged with bitterness over losing the oleo fight, repub- llanc tfVn hQira Vtaan i.onj K.. VVDr, " "V ,.;-iT'. 7 7 i u Dixiecrats can blame only them- FEPC and will vote for it if the selves. Broad-gauged southern democrats give us a chance, I nouse members like st hen still believe it is in the interest Pace of Georgia, Brooks Hays of of economy and good govern- Arkansas, Percy Priest of Ten- lution, because it is the most ef- r0,ina. Wright Patman of Texas fective way to stop extravagant and Tom steed of Oklahoma spending by this administration. to mention only a lew have it any oi you teel otherwise, get Dlaved stronee, roles arainst spp- appreciation of the mysteries of life that make existence worth enduring for the male. Her life is ruled by a crass sense of man's injustice, which is the mixed product of lady loneli ness, lady insufficiency, and lady propriety. For all this she blames her husband. A wife not only insists on be- ite bartenders wil sell us help lessly down the river at the snap of female fingers. Our little white lies will stand out like 5 o'clock shadow at 10 p.m. or like John Dillinger at an FBI chowder party. Believe me, friends, hypnot ism should never become the poor woman's radar. But it it off your chests. Martin's colleagues took him at his word. insula (now comprising the new nations of Pakistan and India) from the swelling com munist of fensive in Asia. The reason for this start ling shift in A f g han senti ment is due to the heated quarrel between Af ghanistan and neighboring Pak istan over the territory sur rounding the famous Khyber the forces of communism are pass which lies between them, drawing closer rapidly to the During the British- rule of the 400,000.000 people of Pakistan peninsula this narrow belt of d,ln inia DrlVItt Markrntla official Russian trade mission has visited Kabul, the capital, and Russian technicians are be ing employed by the govern ment. So the shadow of commun ism looms over the towering Khyber pass through which in vaders of old made their way in to India. However, that's far from being the whole story of the red approach to the penin sula. If you will take a look at your maps of Asia you will see that tional politics than most north erners. (Copyright 1950) ing boss, but she demands that can be man's best friend if he she not be alone. This is the doesn't dog it. College Boys - Regardless of Ism Hong Kong, Jan. 25 VP) A Chinese college student in communist Peiping wrote his father here this week: "I should not call you father because I now belong to the state x x x. I am short of funds and would appreciate a check by return mail." rocky British territory between India s northwest frontier prov ince and Afghanistan was re The whole land side of the In dian peninsula is ringed with the advancing red host. The con- garded as a "neutral" zone in quering Chinese communists which lived the fierce Pathan are closing in on Burma. They tribesmen. This was by agree- have an army on the border of mcnt between Britain and her Tibet and have announced that neighbor. The British left the they intend to free this "roof Pathans alone so long as they of the world" which is asking behaved themselves. However, when Pakistan was created as an independent state and took over the northwest frontier province, she claimed the democracies for aid to de fend itself against the reds. So the Indian peninsula on its entire extensive land side soon is likely to be in close contact with the communist political Classified Ads Help Out Dog Baton Rouge, La., Jan. 25 VP) A lost dog found his mas ter through classified ads. Pug. a frisky fox terrier, left his master's car in down town Baton Rouge, and strayed right into the classified ad department of the State-Times. Clerks checked his tags, and united dog and master in jig time. OPEN FORUM Working of State Civil Service (Editor's Note: Letters to the Open Forum must be limited to 300 words and must be signed by the writer.) To the Editor: Oregonians will always be a strange' and won derful breed of people to me. When they get something on their mind that needs to be remedied, they want action and right now. Maybe that is how they have built such a powerful state in the short space of a little over a generation. After reading the article by ' Mrs. Lewis (on "Save Civil out of their own experience the Service System"), I can not help problems and hopes of the men but think how right she is. who work under him. The shocking fact is that to- But, this experience is too fre dav getting a state job and hold- WetMJ short-circuited because ing it depends far too often upon they have not followed through knowing the right people. And to see that his social conscious it is unbelievable that a good ness is written into practice and CapitaljkjJournal civil service system would give imbedded in the minds of the she inherited the neutral belt drive. And don't think that com- and the Pathans. munists aren't busy within In- The tribesmen meantime have dia as well. br i trying to create an hide- That presumably was part of pendent state called "Pathani- the background which former stan," and Afghanistan is sup- Undersecretary of State Will L. porting this native movement. Clayton had in mind in address The Afghans say Britain is ing the house foreign affairs backing Pakistan. committee yesterday. He declar- Anyway, Afghanistan is turn- ed that "Stalin is winning the ing away from the Indian penin- cold war" and that if it contin sula and is raising its eyes to ues, the year 1955 "will prob the spires of the Kremlin, to- ably find the western hemi ward which until now it dared sphere surrounded by commun not look. For the first time an ism." the department head the last foremen. To my knowledge. word instead of the commission. lnere ls one aeparuneni mat , , . T, when a civil service em- I believe I know most of the p,oyee js discharged that $64 department heads and I must word always pops up, insubordi- say I never met a finer group nation. of men. Most of them have come HERALD HOUGH, up the hard way. They know Route 1, Salem. Editor's Allergic to Printer's Ink Pasadena, Calif., Jan, 25 W Allergy, schmallergv, says Newspaper Editor Frederick G. Runyon, what's to do? Runyon, who works for the Pasadena Independent, Is in Huntington Memorial hospital for treatment of asthma. He is allergic, doctors have told him, to blue trass, cats, dogs and printer's ink and newsprint. During World War II Car SLSF laoaon. taining 150,000 copies of Selecctones, the Readers Digest Spanish language edition, van ished in northern Mexi co. Three months search having tailed Want Ad uns IriaH 3 days It brousht word that the missing car was on a siding in the small town of Empalme Escobedo. t Classified advertising has been called an tl cniial coKunltr Mr-Act. mm I In rTI(M 1119. HnM firm, f M iht- u. . ril off. Your Ad Will Get Results, Too. Dial Result Number 2 2406