www ii ui.) iii.i in niiiwiiiuippiik i hi i. , m . - . Log Between Peaceful Ways, Mobilization May Save War The surest deterrent against another war is to narrow the time lag between our normally peaceful ways and the mobilization that war requires, declares Bernard M. Baruch in an exclusive article in the February Reader's Digest. If the gap is bridged, no enemy will gamble upon overwhelming :il e,iVl ng US Wim B turpi in: --,, ,. .. nn.u hprv On Horseback Again Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, who was seriously injured in Washington State's Cascade Mountains last October when his horse rolled on him, takes his first horseback ride, near Tucson, Ariz., since the accident. He has been resting in Tucson for several months. (AP Wirephoto) Death Isn't so Terrifying as We Are Led to Believe, Writer Says "Look death in the face," counsels J. D. Ratcliff, in the Feb ruary Reader's Digest. "His countenance isn't so terrifying as we re led to believe. "All available evidence indicates that death is generally wel comed by the aged and infirm, offers merciful relief to the sick. Although they have feared? death all their lives, the over whelming majority of people are willing to meet it when it comes." Testifying to the absence of agony and terror in death is the experience of thousands who have "died" by drowning, elec tric shock, asphyxiation only to be revived by prompt medi cal attention. These people, Ratcliff points out in an article condensed from Liberty, "have indeed returned from the dead . . . and invaria bly, they report that there was no anguish, no pain, no terror merely an all-enveloping peace." The final flutters of a failing heart pump an ever-diminishing supply of blood, Ratcliff says and pain attending the final ill ness disappears as sensory per ceptions fail. Oxygen starvation that, ac companies failing circulation af fects the brain; the patient drifts into darkness without pain without sensation. The final blacking out, preceding death is in no wise different from falling asleep. The great physician, Sir Wil liam Osier, studied 500 deaths Only 11 showed mental appre hension, only two showed signs of terror. Dr. Arthur MacDonald adds his testimony: "The belief that dying is accompanied by se vere suffering may arise from misinterpretation of outward physical signs. The act is con fused with symptoms of the dis ease which preceded death. There seems to be a pause in na ture the disease has conquer ed, the battle is over. The body fatigued by its efforts to sustain itself, is ready to die. All is tranquility." Dr. Alfred Worcester, profes sor emeritus of hygiene at Har vard, says: ., "Death is almost always pre ceded by a perfect willingness to die. It is easy at the last. . . . All competent observers agree that except in Imagination there is no such thing as 'death agony.' Contractions of the dying body are merely the contractions of reflex muscles. Facial contor tions are involuntary and not in dicators of pain. Remember, faces are often contorted in sleep." One physician, carried to the brink of death by a severe heart attack, reported his sensations as those of mild intoxication. Three others, who drowned but were revived found only peace and pleasantness after the ini tial struggle was over. William Hunter, 18th-century anatomist, murmured with his last breath: "Had I strength to hold a pen I would write how epsy and pleasant it is to die." Japan attempted at Pearl Har bor. But that time lag which is the crux of our danger is being ne glected, Baruch warns. "Such neglect, becoming ever more perilous as the potential enemy acquires a stockpile of atomic weapons, is all the more tragic because it can Be remeaiea so easily." Stating that the cost of full mobilization measures would be slight, the author contends that this small expenditure would strengthen our defenses far more than would larger sums spent for other military purposes. If we can reduce the time lag by a year, the margin might ave the whole democrat ic world." Baruch urges three actions to accomplish this end. First, we should enact into law now a full, stand-by mobil ization plan. Under this plan, emergency laws would be pass ed at once and held ready for instant operation upon joint proclamation by congress and the president. "To wait until war starts before we begin to legislate is to invite disaster, for Washington itself may be the target for destruction." These stand-by laws would cover an "impartial ' selective service; the prevention of prof iteering; the power to give mili tary needs priority, to ration scarce materials, and to impose higher taxes and price controls Such laws would prevent the "wait and see" attitude of the fall of 1941 which, Baruch says, prolonged the war at least 1 year. Creation of a permanent mo bilization agency, composed of civilians and capable of swift expansion, is the second step to insure that there will be no fu ture "too little and too late" pe riod in which we might be ov erwhelmed. "It is time we stop ped treating the task of mobiliz ing America as a job for volun- The third major requirement "a constant, vigilant inven tory of our natural resources in relation to the probable de mands of another war." Rela tive wartime and peacetime needs for many raw materials are widely different, and where ever the variance becomes dan gerously wide, steps should be taken to narrow it. The essence of the American dilemma, Baruch emphasizes, is that totalitarian countries are perpetually mobilized, while a democracy such as ours tends to resist the necessary measures until the emergency is at hand. Damage Suit for Name In Movie Title Lost Tulsa, Okla., Jan. 25 (U.R) A woman whose daughter's name was used in a movie title has lost her suit for $400,000 damages. U. S. District Judge Royce dismissed Mrs. Celia F. Ivers suit against Paramount Film Dis tributing Co. after he and a jury saw the movie, "The Strange Love of Martha Ivers." Mrs. Ivers alleged the film violated the privacy of her daughter, Martha. But Savage said any injury the girl sustain ed was purely imaginary. Nation's Honor Students Cast Nominations for Hall of Fame By LEO TURNER (United Press staff correspondent) New York, Jan. 25 (U.R) The nation's high school honor stu dents have urged the election of Presidents Woodrow Wilson and Theodore Roosevelt and the Unknown Soldier to the Hall of Fame, Mrs. Bertha L. Lyons, curator, said today as nominations poured In for the 1850 installations in New York university's Shrine of Great Americans. Elections to the Hall of Fame are held every five years. A maximum of seven native-born Americans may be selected. The candidate must be dead 25 years before he can be considered. Nominations for this year's election will be received until April 1. Ballots will be prepared and mailed to the 118 prominent persons composing the college of electors on June 1. They are to be returned on October 1 and the results announced on No vember 1. To be elected to the shrine, a candidate must receive a majority of votes. The Hall of Fame, an open air colonade 630 feet long and 10 feet three inches around the Gould Memorial library at the university, was established in 1900 when 29 outstanding Amer icans, including George Wash ington and Abraham Lincoln, were named. Christopher Columbus, dis coverer of the continent, is not included. He was foreign born. Seventy-seven persons, in cluding seven women, have been elected so far, and bronze busts of 76 of them sit on pedestals in the circular colonade. Nominations already received from students and the general public include Benjamin Ban neker, John Burroughs, William Robert G. Ingersoll, William James, Gouverneur Morris James Edward Oglethorpe, Wen Lloyd Garrison, John Gorrie, dell Phillips, Lucy Stone, Joseph Wharton, Sarah Margaret Full- William Crawford Gorgas, Charles Thompson Harvey, Thomas Jonathan Jackson, La fayette Eliphalet Nott, Robert E. Peary and Charles Steinmetz. cecause tney received more than 20 votes in the 1945 elec tion, George Westinghouse, Hen ry David Thoreau, Edward A. MacDowell, Henry George, Su san B. Anthony, Josiah Willard Gibbs and Theodore Roosevelt receive a place on the ballot automatically. The members of the high school honor societies have been invited to cast honorary ballots this year. The ballots will not be counted toward the election, but will be compared against those of the 118 electors. Wife of Tin Heir Says Drugged New York, Jan. 25 (U.R) Jua- nita Eden Patino accused an "emissary" of her multimillion aire Bolivian husband today of drugging her in an attempt to gain custody of her five-year-old daughter. The sultry 28-year-old dancer told police her mysterious re appearance in Fredericksburg, Va., last week-end after a week- long "blackout" was another nerve-wracking incident in her three-year marital battle with Ramon Patino, 35, heir to a $300,000,000 Bolivian tin for- tun. Mrs. Patino was brought to her home here Monday night from Virginia by her twin sis ter, Anita Eden, and placed in the care of a physician. Miss Eden said her sister was suffer ing from "severe mental shock" which made remembrance of her experiences "slow and difficult." Mrs. Patino said the last thing she remembers the night she dis appeared was having a drink in a midtown Manhattan bar with Emiliano Rengifo, an employe of her husband. She said Rengifo has tried without success to force her to sign papers releasing all claims against her husband for $40,000 he owes her for support and giv ing him custody of their daugh ter, Valerie. "I had two or three drinks of brandy with him," she said. "The next thing I remember is run ning down a road toward bar in Fredericksburg a week ISSS 4 Mysterious Chemical Raises Hob With Women's Clothing Jacksonville, Fla., Jan. 25 (U.R) The gallant mayor who couldn't stand to see the ladies lose their unmentionables had his street cleaners hosing the downtown section cleaner than it's been in a decade today. The street-cleaners were not so sympathetic to bending their backs in an effort to wipe out; the mysterious chemical reaction Tenor's Tribute Eugene Conley, of Lynn, Mass., tenor in Bellini's opera, "I I'uritani" at La Scala, Milan, Italy, dusts a statue of the composer be fore the opening night. Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Wednesday, Ian. 25, 1950 9 that has caused women's stock ings, blouses and unmention ables to virtually vanish within seconds. It may save tha ladies' stock ings," one grimy laborer com plained, "but it's sure ruining out of my socks." The weird nylon blight has been going on spasmodically since the war. City health au thorities theorize the nylon at tacks are caused by atmospheric moisture, combining with fuel soot to make an acid which eats things made of nylon The women raised a ruckus with Mayor Haydon Burns after their clothes disappeared in the most embarrassing places, One federal office building worker said she walked away from a file cabinet with her blouse intact; when she reached a desk a few feet away it was in shreds. Another lady's stockings dis integrated as she walked to church in her finest get-up. Such incidents did not exactly cause the men untold anguish. But the besieged Burns asked the fire department to wash the streets as a possible preventive measure. Fire Commissioner Richard D. Sutton, who probably will run against Burns for mayor-commissioner in 1952, flat ly refused. He said the mayor couldn't tell him what to do. He did consent to lend hli hoses to the street cleaning de partment. Yesterday and today the sanitary workers sloshed hundreds of gallons of water over downtown thoroughfares. later minus about $10,000 worth of jewels." Mrs. Patino said custody of the children could not be set tled until Patino agrees to come to this country to complete set tlement of the term of a di vorce for which she filed two years ago. , The yard originally was based on the distance from the tip of the nose to the ends of fin gers on an outstretched arm. jy Will litiircti Your Savings Earn More S A L E M F E D E R AtSAVIN G S IQAN 560 State Street Salem, Oregon Telcphonn 2 4139 .1. PLEASANT TASTINO 9. ORANGE FLAVORED 3. NO NEED TO CUT OR BREAK TABLETS 4. ACCURATE DOSAGE Moiheri An Atking For ST.JOSEPH ASPIRIN FOR CHILDREN Serving Salem and 1-" I I -.V "X y f Vicinity as Funeral I 1 f " i if J Director for 21 Years I J r i -J J ! l 1 17 iW: SI " VlrfU X. Golden Grsc i. Gold.es Convenient location for both friends and family. Direct route to cemeteries no cross traffic. 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