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Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos., $6.00; Year, $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, January 31, 1950 An Atrocious January The present cold snap at a time when rose bushes are usually trimmed and camellias in bloom, has Salem, the Willamette valley and most of Oregon in the deep freeze class, perhaps another gift from Major General Vaughan, that needs congressional investigation. The thermometer has dropped down to the lowest level since in December, 1919, when similar temperatures were recorded and wide spread damage to fruit trees resulted. The official McNary airfield station reports a low of 10 degrees below zero, some 6 or 8 degrees lower than ther mometers in the city itself recorded. But the airport is located in a draw some distance from the city and consist ently has lower temperatures in winter and higher in summer than Salem averages. The same' condition exists in Portland and draws a month-end protest from the Oregonian, which remarks from a publicity standpoint: "When an airport minimum reading is 8 degrees above, read ings In the city proper, even in the northeastern suburbs, may be several degrees warmer. But the temperature which is offi cially recorded, and publicized, is that of the airport. Whatever the advantage may be to the weather bureau, in restricting its readings to the airport, this scarcely concerns a great city of the northwest which finds such service inadequate to its inter ests. This raises the question of whether it is sound economy to record temperatures not truly representative of the city proper and give these--improperly? nationwide publicity as Port land's very own." It will be some time before an estimate can be made of the damage of the freeze, but we have the 1919 record to go by. Then the record cold of below zero killed off many of the valley's fruit and nut trees as well as cane fruits. The 10 degree below zero temperature was fatal to peach, apricot, sweet cherry trees and-did irreparable damage to some apple, pear, prune and walnut trees, damage from which they never recovered. Many old trees were so irre pairably injured that they had to be pulled out and new ones planted and in some instances the owners after wards realized that the entire orchard should have been replanted at once. Of course, much depends on the condition of the trees and their vigor, upon the thawing conditions, whether gradual or sudden as is usually the case with winter killing from freeze. In 1919 however, there had been a mild fall and the sap was still In the trees and the sunshine split the bark. We will have to wait and see what proportion survives. In Salem the principal loss will be to residential gardens. A temperature of 15 degrees above is usually fatal to camel lia blooms, but zero weather is fatal to camellia plants. In 1919 the 17-year-old camellia trees at the state hospital were killed to the ground, but they came up from the roots and are now much larger than before the freeze. Zero temperatures are fatal to many shrubs, such as Mexican orange, Portuguese laurel, daphne and some ever greens, natives of tropical countries. Many rose bushes are also killed below the grafts though the briar roots survive. Many other shrubs will also have to be replanted, and they will be. Shivering temperatures have prevailed since January 13, when the blizzard struck. But we have had fresh snow every day but four in January, a total of 35.8 inches, a rec ord for one month in Salem. It has been a most disagreeable month, with every vari ety of weather winter can offer, blizzards, gales, fog, rain, soggy and powder snow, sleet, silver thaw, and then slush, have contributed their misery to a country used only to alternate rain and sunshine. We are glad it is over and wait for the ground hog to summon spring. The weather man is on a strike. The Quiet Before the Announcement There is a strange quiet preceding a decision by the pres ident as to whether or not the United States will build an H-bomb. The quiet docs not indicate a lack of interest in what the decision will be. Nor does it cover the deep concern over the consequences of putting the nation's top scientists to work figuring a way to put together a bomb 1000 times more powerful than the A-bomb. The usual loud-mouths in congress have been strangely silent about the momentous question before Truman. The flag-wavers have been too impressed with the consequences of a "go-ahead" signal to break into a patriotic demonstra tion. The leftists have been rather stunned by the terror of the decision that puts aside all consideration of cradle-to-grave programs with a weapon that would have con sideration for absolutely nothing on earth not even votes. As mentioned by General Wedemcyer, Sixth army com mander who was in Salem last week, the next war, if it comes, will make a potential battleground of everyone's backyard. David Lilienthal, atomic energy commission chairman, is correct in his implied complaint against the H-bomb as being a poor use of the nation's resources, scientific skills and money. But, regretably, the question of the H-bomb has now resolved itself into the mere question of survival of the nations believing in the freedom of the individual. Those western democratic nations would be helpless if Soviet Russia were to put out an ultimatum a few years hence that the western democracies would have to give into communist rule or be blasted by H-bombs monopolized solely by Russia. Trend of events since World War II still verifies the con sidered opinion that only United States monopoly of the A-bomb kept Russia in check. With the Soviets now build ing a supply of A-bombs, the period of freedom from at tack because of a monopoly is no longer present. As reluctant as Truman was to order the A-bomb used against Japan, the president obviously has an even greater reluctance to make the same type of decision only of even greater importance. When the decision is made, he should make it publicly to the people of the nation who are re spectfully quiet during the waiting period. BYH. T. WEBSTER Life's Darkest Moment g y pew, i should thimk B I'm pcrishins. lfcj jl4V, 3 vfeu'o FReeze with That iwrfH the colo. Jv4jHt I SHOKT 3XCKT. I DONT fii rTnevtK OCCURRED The SHORT 0CKCT . huff KRISS-KROSS Kiss on Willamette Campus Was Absolutely Shocking By CHRIS KOWITZ, Jr. Hollywood produces many passionate love scenes, but none quite as electrifying as the one between a jpair of Willamette university love-makers on the porch of Lausanne hall last week. A Willamette male was escorting his blonde co-ed sweetheart to the girls' dormitory just a few minutes before Lausanne's dead- I 1 men s dormitory at Willamette: "Unless all visitations are of the utmost importance and the continuance of life in the bal ance all frequenters intent upon discourse with the inmates of this enclosure will please reserve such intercourse until after February 3, by reason of prepar ation for final examinations." We'll bet a bucket of grade-A snow that those fellows won't flunk any vocabulary tests. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Truman Gets Rugged Pointers From Rep. Dingell on 'Economy' By DREW PEARSON Washington Before President Truman cut loose against tax evaders in his message to congress he got some rugged pointers from Representative John Dingell of Michigan. "The costliest 'economy' move ever made by congress was when it lopped 7,000 internal revenue agents off the payroll two years ago," Din- " gell told the1?1!, tav"-' i j reading Einstein and the Smyth President. "This j report. was an open in-jan..., IJ Douglas, incidentally, said vitation to dis-""!,? it""! that ne "ad Pondered long over honest taxpay-lt ft jf j the hydrogen bomb and had ers to cheat the ? j V- 1 come to the conclusion we must government. ItjV'lM make the bomb. "We saved! If,' J I ft Meanwhile, Chairman Lilen $20,000,000 by J VlJM A- thai will soon be available for that cut, but itJl!Y y g i a lecture tour in opposition to cost the govern- i$B&Mamanj9 the H-bomb, ment about Miners Oiumble $600,000,000 in A $33-a-week cut in wages uncollected taxes. In other and a sick Industry are back of words, for every dollar saved by the swelling chorus of miners' the penny-pinchers in congress grumbles against their onetime we lost $30 in tax frauds." god, John L. Lewis. Dingell added that most of The revolt against the aging the discharged agents have been Lewis is so strong in Penn rehired, "but we are still pay- sylvania and West Virginia that ing for the mistake." As a re- his old crony, CIO President suit of the cut, he said, some phij Murray, could snatch the 300,000 cases of tax frauds, miners away from him. Murray many of which were close to js a former UMW lieutenant who completion, had to be dropped broke with Lewis, or pigeonholed by the internal The miners are chiefly up in BY CLARE BARNES, JR. White Collar Zoo revenue bureau. Millikin Joke Solemn - looking Senator Eu gene Millikin of Colorado is arms over the three-day week which reduces their take-home pay from $78 a week to $45, but the three-day week is 10 p.m line. The cou ple paused out side the front door for brief parting cere monies. It was one of those slushy nights, and the L u s a n n e hall porch was cov ered with a sloppy and very ""' Ko,lu' '' wet substance commonly known as melting snow. The man, being a gallant sort rnnwrvative republican but he desperate move by Lewis and delights in cracking sly jokes the operators whom he curses about the National G.O.P. lead- in Public and talks with in pri- ership vate to stave off anarchy and A few days ago, Senator Mil- a.cu,t-,tha,t price war m an likin was discusing a big hue aiIlnin1du(stry- . and cry in his home state of Coal i"?dust S"knef Colorado over the proposed .Studle,s J the. bureau of Echo Park Dam. One citizens' mines-locked up in the files so group complained the dam lheJ wm ,be11 1,mtheLe would cover up "dinosaur beds." name '. ?a'n bat"es- reYfal .... ,. , , ..., . how slck the industry is. Pri- ., Auh ?e1 S'?.hed M'i' A"' vately, the bureau expects to see "if the beds aren t covered, the a return of tne host towns that republicans will come in and haunted the coal areas in the uig up uie uuues ul a uinu&aui 30'e The Help-Wanted Ad Said: "Splendid opportunity for advancement" POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Language Alone Won't Bridge Gap Between Gorilla and Man By HAL BOYLE New York W The late Arthur Brisbane used to contend that if you sat a couple of apes down at two typewriters they eventually would write all the books in the British museum. So far this remains only a theory, as no one yet has managed to keep an ape interested in a typewriter long enough to writ a short story fori One of the requirements of and make him the national chair man." "Peace Offensive" The state department, Pen The trouble with coal is: 1. Over capacity. 2. High cost. 3. Competition from natural of lad, allowed his girl friend to faculty members at WU is that stnnrf nnrinr the eaves aeainst n tests be given during "dead c- U11C1I31VC 11 U III 11 the building, while he stood " which the Russians would pre- ankle-deep in slush. The girl accidentally leaned last week- anyhow. It may be against a loose connection in OI some comiort to you guys ana a light switch. When her escort 8als in his class to know that planted a goodnight kiss on her said professor has been severly lips, the results were most sur- reprimanded by the higher-ups prising. n the school administration. The combination of her lean- . . ing against the light switch and A person who identifies him- his wet feet caused a spark of self as "Snowbound" asks "why electricity to jump from Up to not get Ellis Cooley out In his lip. straw hat to bring rain and get The girl wasn't surprised that rid of this snow?" It might be her date kissed her she was worth a try at that. Cooley's shocked. wearing of a straw hat is white man's most effective approach Sign on door in Baxter hall to the rain dance. tagon and atomic commission gas and oil. have been alerted to a "peace In the war years, when Nazi offensive" from Moscow, in subs were sinking oil transtMrts. the railroads used 135.000.000 tend to agree to international tons of bituminous coal a vear control. It might come in a now the railroads have cut to dramatic announcement from the 70,000,000 tons. the Saturday Evening Post. There is an s interesting ex periment going on at the San Diego Zoo, though, that may in time af ford an oppor tunity to see if j Brisbane was right. Three young gorillas are get- 1 ws .f 1 mw mi Hal Boyle gain by learning to talk? Get ting right down to the blunt truth, what have captive gor illas got to discuss? Suppose all three gorillas turn out to be mental wizards, I still can see nothing but trouble ahead for them. If Albert learns to spell "Africa" at the age of 3, won't he at 12 be asking why he can't go to Yale and become the first gorilla to win a college degree? Boy, what a halfback he'd be he'd make Frank Mer- ting a chance to see if they can riwell look like a monkey. understand a college professor. The gorillas-Albert, Bata and chan(,e3 aR! nQ !-.U?Zf0m.e lH1Cv- matter how educated Albert and "7;;j Tv r. r. two Pais become, their ny Kremlin that the U.S.S.R. had perfected a hydrogen bomb. The strategy behind the In the home-heating field, while new residences have gone up at an amazing rate, coal comes from Yale, and he is a re nowned authority on anthro poid apes. The campus would remain a locked cage. Even if they learned to shave and wear clothing it "peace offensive" is to confuse consumption has gone down American opinion and delay the slightly. This is because oil and H-bomb project. The Russians natural-gas heating is being in- may say, for example, we know stalled in new buildings, partic- how to make the H-bomb, but ularly along the eastern sea- for humanity's sake we won't board. make one if you don't. A surplus ot oil from the All this came uo at a secret middle eastern and southern session of the National Security American fields plus the new at- around work prob- And what would happen to the San Diego Zoo then? There would be no discipline Alberta, His Reelection No Surprise Knoxville, Tenn., Jan. 31 VP) Andrew M. Tolmic's re election as treasurer of his union local didn't startle any body. Tolmie, who'll be 80 next March, first was named to the office in 1900. Every year since then he's been reelected by Hill City lodge No. 58, International Association of Machinists. MacKENIIE'S COLUMN council at which President Tru man made it clear that we can not agree to any international control plan that does not in clude inspection. tempt by the British to shut out American oil have increased oil surplus in this country. In addition, 25,000 miles of natural gas pipelines have been Meanwhile, it is definitely es- aPPr0Yed by the federal power tablished that the theory of the j hydrogen bomb is no secret. The A" !h,s, " why, a f've-day first "leak" from the U.S. was w.f k ln the, coal fields would an article by John McCloy, then Plle a su"p us . f coalt ?bov asst. secy, of war, in 1946 re- grT and lead t0 what, Le,wis vealing we had plans for such and the operators secretly fear hmw ti,. ..... a cutthroat price war that for an obscure army ordnance lIlve , but ,f 0?1 ef der in age, too young really for tell Dr. Yerkes, "No, thanks, little gorillas are anthro- ,,.,. f thom ,rao,nm poid apes, but they don't know . .... . " ..!, this yet. If Dr. Yerkes has his ft" . .nriS. 3 H way, however, they will find out looen ff he can wc - W VV lems in Algebra, OUT UVJUJ O The professor hopes to teach Albert, Bata and Bouba to talk. T ho is enifnoccfiil iVmtr will VlO the first gorillas in history to Bata and Boubi, would spend employ the English language, their time drafting petitions de- Until now gorillas have been manding equal rights for gorillas able to get anything they want- r complaining about the quality ed out of life by grunting or of the bananas. And they would grabbing But from here on in make ill-natured remarks about any gorilla that really wants to the visitors and the ancestry of get ahead in the zoo will have to the visitors. They would take be able to make a public speech. UP swearing. No, language alone won't Somehow the whole experi- bridge the gulf between gorilla ment seems a bit unfair to the and man. All the knowledge In gorillas, who, if they were hu- the world won't make Albert man, would still be wearing happy. And if he is as wise a diapers. All are a year or un- gonna as l tninn ne is ne win publication ConflfctBetweenCoinmiesand-SH5S.J ficient operators out of business. Actually and only a few kindergarten. professor" and remain a nor- f Tw """J"' 8 eood years in the last 25 and West to Continue Indefinitely XSSl t were a b f th he had merelv figured it frnm By DeWITT MacKENZIE (W) Forelsn Affair Analyst) Major General Frederick H. Osborn, who has resigned (ef fective today) as U. S. deputy on the United Nations atomic energy commission, says he believes the world is still in for a period of trial and Americans will be deluding themselves if they feel an easy time is ahead. (Copyrltht IBM) The general has been try ing for three years to find tho basis for an agreement with Russia on world atomic control , Never having5 got close to a solution lie now declares: "I do n o tl think the Soviet spondents a t CrMJ DeWItt Markfnile out of inequalities is taking so many forms that it can't be pin ned down with one characteriza tion. The most clean-cut divi sion, of course, is the political and economic strife between communism and democracy the cold war which now reaches around the world and is swell ing daily. The cold war is the chief bar rier to world peace. This is true because communism and democracy are uttery irreconcil able. That's the reason General Union will come to agreement Osborn wasn't able in three years on the control of atomic energy to find a basis for agreement, until they (the leaders) reassess It's the reason the United Na- thcir relations with the world tions haven't been able to get as a whole and decide that they together, and aren't likely to do want to live in a cooperative so. and friendly world." ... So the conflict between com This means, I take It. that munism and other ideologies atomic control isn't the primary will continue indefinitely. Gen consideration. World relations cral Osborn puts it mildly when come first ln importance, ana ne says Americans win De ie- atomic control depends on them a thesis with which most ob servers are likely to agree. That hiding themselves if they feel an easy time is ahead. Most observers feel that the warfare brings us bang up against the is bound to extend far beyond troublesome question of what the present generation. can produce "a cooperative and friendly world. There has been a slackening off of the cold war in Europe. Most people know the answer The communist offensive across to that, but it is so disconcert ing that they try to evade it. The answer is that we can't have friendship and cooperation un til our world-wide politico-so cial upheaval has run its course, Europe has been halted, at least for the time being. However, simultaneously the conflict in the great Asiatic theatre has swollen to startling dimensions. Having overrun China with its That isn't confined to the cold vast population, communism is war between communism and now using this as a base from democracy. In one form or an- which to strike in many direc- other this politico-social read- tions. justment Is going on in every Asia may well be the decisive thinking country. As a matter battle ground in this war of the of fact you find it beginning to Isms, but obviously it will take show Itself even among the many years to reach the decision, primitive peoples. There is small prospect of "Peace ln Our Time". "One This struggl for tha Ironing World" is a long way off. G us Got Warm Revenge St. Louis, Jan. 31 (U.PJ A $400 fine and a 30-day jail sen tence didn't bother Gus T. Andert, 45, one bit today. He knew the taste of revenge. Andert, who admits he has no real home, got cold just hanging outside, so he went to the nearest fire station and asked it he could warm himself. He was turned away. Andert promptly made the rounds of fireboxes and turned in five false alarms in quick succession. Apprehended, he said that he just wanted the firemen to know how cold it was outside. He said he not only got even with the firemen but for 30 days he'd have a warm place to stay. Aga Khan Expects His Weight In Platinum From Followers By ROBERT BRANSON (Unllad Prau Staff Corrtapondent) New Delhi, India, Jan. 31 UM The Aga Khan, the fabulous heavyweight Moslem spiritual leader, looked forwara Jubilantly today to receiving his weight in platinum from his followers. The aging Aga, father-in-law of Actress Rita Hayworth, esti mated he would receive 675.000 pounds sterling ($1,890,000) when he hits the scale again in 1954. weight matched in both dia- When he weighed in last in monds and gold four times for a . 1946, the 220-pound Aga's total of $3,835,945. weight was balanced in dia- The money received in the monds. next weigh-in, he said, would be The Aga indicated in a press spent on science instead of horses conference, however, that he and jewelry, has lost interest in diamonds, It will go for research, espe even the $710,000 worth stolen cially in the field of nutrition, . from his beautiful French wife, and for education to teach peo the begum, in a holdup last sum- pie how to get more value out mer. of food," the Ismaeli Moslem Approximately half of the leader said, diamonds now have been recov- He said his decision was ered. But the Aga said yester- reached when he viewed the day he was not the least bit in- widespread poverty in India, terested. "I've been shocked to see how "We are not going to replace thin the people of India are," the the jewelry," the Aga said. "One Aga said. is safer these days without jew- "It would be a crime for any elry. I have no Interest in what one of Rita's ability and possl the Surete National (French po- bilities to abandon her career." lice) recover because that now the Aga said. "She expects to re belongs to the insurance com- turn to films within a few pany. months, when she Is completely recovered from having her Tht Aga, 72, has had hi baby." And what have they got to mal ape. Story for Shore Patrol Portland, Ore., Jan. 31 (U,R) Portland's police station was like a recruiting station early Monday when some 70 sailors came In to tell the shore patrol they oouldn't get back to their base at Tongue Point, Ore. The sailors, on week-end leave, were stranded when ice and snow blocked transportation. The shore patrol said it hoped to have the sailors on their way back to duty during the day. Capital jkJournal F rent a cheap car to take "wW" Jj fsM i Jf SN Becky to the hospital -J " illra3l 3 g for dally treatment. It p SBrKIH S" brou8hl Wro '5 oilers . fJPltiSfsi V "f of cars FREE. eWaoa&SfeK'vSlfeq Want til, till ondi of fVSSsSISfT llfa-ud-duth lapor- T aV-1JT!' Uac. mrj iv. Vtfl' I l AnntM nil hM ran. I bi o a. r,t aft Your Ad Will Get Resulls, Too. Dial Result Number 2 2406