Capital A Journal 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 othi vise credited in this paper and also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, 25c; Monthly, $1.00; One Year. $12.00. By Mall 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, Thursday, February 2, 1950 "Worlds in Collision" In the January Harpers magazine appears an article that has attractednationwide comment entitled, "The Day the Sun Stood Still," by Eric Larrabee, one of Harper's editors. It sets forth a preview of the remarkable theory of Dr. Immanuel Velikovsky, which will be set forth at length in his forthcoming book called "Worlds in Collision," to be published by Macmillan. The article explains the Old Testament account of Joshua and the battle of the Jewish tribes at Beth-Horan : "And he said in the sight of Israel, Sun stand thou still upon Gideon; and thou moon, in the valley of Ajalon. And the Sun stood still and the Moon stayed until the people had avenged themselves upon their enemies. So the sun stood still in the midst of heaven and hastened not to go down about a whole day." The article states that there are traditions all over the world among the aborigines of America as well as in folk lore of Asia and Europe of a great catastrophe, in which the sun did once stand still, which refers to a disturbance in earth's orderly rotation. The author continues : "It is conceivable that a large celestial body approaching the earth could exert an attraction sufficiently powerful to slow down its turning and make the sun appear to stop in the sky. The heads of comets are assumed to be composed of clusters of meteorites. If a comet were to come close to the earth, it would be accompanied by meteors, falling in a torrent. The Old Testa ment, two verses above the description in the Book of Joshua of the sun standing still, contains the following passage: "As they fled from before Israel ... the Lord cast down great stones upon them in Azekah, and they died. . . ." Velikovsky will present a great mass of evidence, the result of many years' research, to show that about 1500 B.C., a comet, a new member of the solar system, did pass close to the earth, at the time of the exodus of Israelites from Egypt. Some 52 years later the same comet return ed. At both of these meetings with the comet, "according to the memory of mankind, the earth refused to play the chronometer by undisturbed rotation on its axis,!' and that many times the earth has undergone vast and disastrous cataclysms in which its rotation was interrupted. Larra bee says: "Dr. Velikovsky brings strong evidence to bear that the comet which so terrorized the earth was in fact the planet Venus newly born, by eruption from a larger planet. While it was still a comet, Venus wandered erratically, which is why its course was so closely watched, why the Venus Tablets of Nine veh do not seem to make sense, and why the appearance of a comet has always aroused premonitions of disaster every where in the world." The years of terror lasted until the seventh century, B.C. Venus as result of encounter with another body, Mars, lost its tail and took up its present orbit and changed from a wild comet to a tame planet rotating on the serene orbit it now occupies. Larrabee continues: "There is a hidden purpose in Dr. Velikovsky's book, a warn ing to the world that threatens to explode with hatred among the nations: the cosmic catastrophes may repeat themselves. This world will be destroyed,' reads a passage from the Visud-dhi-Magga whirb serves as motto for his final chapter, 'also the mighty ocean will dry up: and this broad earth will be burned up. Therefore, sirs, cultivate friendliness; cultivate compas sion.' "Bringing to this perspective all the apparatus of learning from astronomy and physics to folklore, religion, classical liter ature, archaeology, geology, paleontology, biology and psychol ogy Dr. Velikovsky has undertaken the awesome task of mak ing an 'inquiry In the architectonics of the world and its his tory' and of applying the techniques of scholarship and psycho analysis to the entire human race." Certainly humanity, with the aid of science, not content with nature's return to comparative cosmic peace, is doing its best to bring back the "years of terror" on earth with Its atomic and hydrogen bombs and synthetically recreate on earth the hell of turmoil and destruction of cosmic power. Changing Presidential Elections The senate, by a vote of 64 to 27, has approved a pro posed constitutional amendment for abolishing the 162-year-old electoral college system of electing the president. To become effective it still must be approved by two-thirds vote of the house and must be ratified by the legislatures of three-fourths of the states. The amendment introduced by Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (R., Mass.), while retaining the present system giving each state one electoral vote for each senator and representative, would divide each state's electoral vote among candidates in proportion to the popular vote. A state's entire electoral vote now goes to the leading candi date in that state. Before the final vote, the senate adopted by voice vote changes in the amendment proposed by Senate Democratic Leader Scott W. Lucas, which would require at least 40 percent of the electoral vote. If none did, the house and senate would pick the president from the two highest can didates with each member getting one vote. Numerous other amendments were rejected, including the election of president by popular vote and nomination of candidates by nation-wide primaries. The new proposal is an improvement over the existing electoral college winner takes all system under the unit rule and a bare plurality of popular votes swings a state's entire electoral tally to the high vote candidate. In the debate preceding the senate's final decision, Lodge claimed his proposal would revive the two-party system and open up the entire nation to intensive political cam paigning. Under present circumstances, he pointed out that the candidates are inclined to concentrate their efforts in pivotal states, making only token tries in areas consid ered safe for their opponents. Newlyweds Sue Best Man Minneapolis, Feb. 2 U.R Bride and bridegroom sued their best man and his mother for injuries received In an automobile collision on the wedding night. The suit was brought by Mr. and Mrs. Donald Nelson against David Hastay, the best man, and his mother, Mrs. Leona Hastay. Hastay was driver of the car In which the newlyweds were riding when It collided with another. The Nelsons also sued Robert L. Schroeder and his aunt, Mrs. Ida Caplstrant, driver and owner of the other car. Donald, 21, asked $10,000 for shoulder Injuries. Bar bara, 20, asked for $5000 for rib and head Injuries. BY H. T. WEBSTER How to Torture Your Wife f yuxlineo our, huh y usreu. cXI BK TfcAMP I WOW Fhon A C J CAKC OF Tfe HOUSe, LOOKIM& " J AFTER We? CHILOKM ANO 6CTI1W I your meals -amo what Do vto ( DO ? LeP AND LOAF ALL. WIWTCW- I N l IFfCM Ohl FCBRUARV SECOND Htxj J T i GO COT AND LOOK FOR YOU ) MR. GROUND HOG HAS JUST i f FINISHED HIS CXHAUSTIN& 1 L mWv ANNUAL CHOKE If?1! WKwWWlT4ht 2-2- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Frankfurter Brought Many Men To Capitol, Most Good; Few Not By DREW PEARSON .Washington Ever since the Acheson statement supported Alger Hiss, congressional corridors have been teeming wi'h comment regarding the so-called Frankfurter "red-hots" and the supreme court justice who has put Hiss and Acheson plus so many other men in key spots in Washington. This column- BY CLARE BARNES, JR. White Collar Zoo ist has no rea son to love Fe lix Frankfurter. Not only have his supreme court opinions been a disap pointment, but twice in private supreme court discu s s I o n s , Frankfurter has berated this writer, and on one occasion de manded that he be jailed for criticising certain supreme court moves. Drew Pearson can. And though some people, including Frankfurter, soured on Corcoran, his final impact on history, in this writer's opinion, will be on the plus side. Thomas D. Thacher, able and conservative, who served as Hoover's solicitor general, was also a good friend of Frankfur ter's and owed his appointment partly to the controversial gen tleman from Harvard. Stimson Was Frankfurter Man Frankfurter was also 100 per cent responsible for the appoint ment of one of our finest elder statesmen, Henry L. Stimson, as When Chief Justice Vinson FDR's secretary of war. The KRISS-KROSS This Lunch Counter Won't Sell You Doughnuts to Dunk ByCHRISKOWITZ.Jr. There's at least one lunch counter in Salem that doesn't allow its customers to dunk doughnuts. The place is located at 445 Court street. Go ahead, try it. Ask them for coffee and dough nuts. We guarantee you'll get a reply ... A certain robin out at Roger Bailey's place, 2065 Breyman street, is keeping care of himself these t 1 4 about preserving the clock, any how? . . . The up-again, down again Wheatland ferry goes back into use today after a long period of idleness. and a majority of the court rul ed against any criminal action, Frankfurter even went over their heads, through a friend, to the justice department and demanded prosecution. However, in the spirit of two had served in the U.S. at torney's office in New York when they were young. Further more, Felix also had a finger in the pie regarding the appoint ment of Republican Frank Knox to be secretary ol t n e navy, fairness which Justice Frank- though the two were not close! xuilci lias uul always anuwn to others I should like to review the whole list of so-called "red hots" whom the supreme court justice has brought to Washington. Frankfurter and Republicans Robert Patterson, Stimson's undersecretary of war, and la ter secretary of war, was also a 100 percent Frankfurter ap pointee. Here is a partial list of the Jut Most people don't remember otheJ so-called hot-dogs, some cold days and nights. Bailey reports that the bird has estab lished home in a big firethorn plant loaded with berries, and fights off all other birds that threaten to trespass thereon . . . Don ' Upjohn, for whom we are pinch- that Frankfurter's influence be gan long before the Roosevelt and Truman administrations. As a Harvard law school professor, he enjoyed a unique relation ship with two of the greatest su preme court justices Oliver Wendell Holmes and Lewis D. good, some bad, some indiffer ent, but on the whole an amaz ing and constructive contribu tion for one man to have placed in government office. Chrli Kowlts, Ctmon practice about the streets these days is rapid move ment of arms, legs, etc., in order to keep warm. Oh, how we envy those people who can wig gle their ears . . . Jary Florists are selling lovely bunches of hitting, is still in Salem Memori- blue J'leis fr nly., a quart,er' al hospital recovering from a Prvid the buyer drops a do couple of operations. He's ex- ?a 'on ln the March of Dimes pected to go home early next bttle . There 1000 of week. Doing fine . . . Sign in !hos? niature iron lungs in basement of First Christian Ma"n Als0 serv,lng church rearis "St Kntpanpp." s marcn Ol iJimes money coiiec- Do they mean "street" or "saint?" . . . Kids west of the Francis Bfddle Former attorney gen eral, former circuit court Judge, solicitor general, and presiding Judge of the nazl war crimes tribunal. Blddlo was former Brandeis in that each year he ommended to his first government post selected the brightest Harvard he"' " Mm Frank,ur- law graduates to be their law David Llllenthal Former head of the clerk Thim a cjtpariv ctrpam nf Tennessee valley authority, now chalr- cterKS. inus a steady stream o , , tne alomlc 8y Frankfurter proteges Came to Wiley Rutledge Now deceased and ft Waihineton Hurinc thA Vnnvpr reat Justice of the supreme court, was Yvasningion auring tne ioover, nev , rruuan protege, but Franic- Coolldge and Harding admmis- furter helped pick him for the court, tratinns manv of thpm rpmain. Arter th appointment, however, they con- UdUUIlS, many OI tnem remain- ,i,t.M, disagreed on court nnlnlnn. Sole authorized photo of ninth vice president . for publicity release to metropolitan dailies POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Now They're Listing Parlors in The New York Social Register By HAL BOYLE New York VP) Chalk 1950 down as a complete failure for me. We've gone and missed it again. Missed what? Why, missed having our parlor picked as one of the ten best-dressed living rooms in Manhattan. The selection was made by some housekeeping firm that says it manicures. ing on. Tn nrfrlitinn in thic HVanWui. "cretary ol war. head of the world in aaaition to mis, JjranKtur- ,nd hB commissioner to Germany. John J. McClov A verv able assistant secretary of war, head of the world bank ter was consulted by many re publicans on government per sonnel. During the Hoover ad- tne clv11 aeronautics board. James M. Landls Former head of the securities and exchange commission, di rector of civilian defense, and head of tors are meters . . 1500 Salem parking Any dime placed in ministration for instance he was solely responsible for the ap pointment of Joseph P. Cotton Wilamette have been behaving tnet metff Joins the March . . since they became citizens of B.ut dn Pect o get 12 min- Salem as a result of last No vember's merger. Salem juve nile officer Allan McRae has had but one complaint regarding ac- utes of parking for your 10-cent piece dimes don't register time . . . Police say that some of the thinner dimes placed in 4nno UlriB tn cninm ,.., meters hi e uruupniK into tne nie- side ... Of course there's no chani! d clogging up the way to determine just how much of the vandalism on the east side of the river is being done by W. Salem juveniles ... A works. Roy Remington, purchasing agent for the state board of con- man from Boston was among trol has bought enormous quan- those donating a pint of blood tities of anti-freeze for state at the Red Cross bank the other vehicles recently. A few days day. But his blood was just as ago, Remington showed up at red as the rest not a tint of the State House late. His car blue in it . . . The courthouse had frozen up ... So they fi- clock, frozen into inoperation nally pried the U.S.S. Missouri the last few days, is now thawed loose from her riverbed mooring, out and back in operation . . . The Missouri was about as hard If the whole courthouse can't to move as a mule from that be saved as a museum, how state. Ben Cohen One of the Roosevelt brain trusters, later counselor of the state de partment, now a delegate to the United Nations. Llovd Garrison Dean nf thn flnlwraltv as undersecretary OI State, Who, OI Wisconsin law scnoot ana cnairman ol though a Wall Street lawyer, J.m?,r Bwe-Sie1' no. a man in th. turned Out to be one Of the fin- Justice department for many years and , . . . . , . ..... now one of Herbert Hoover's aides ln gov- est Of State department Officials ernment reorganisation. in two decades. Frankfurter was .D1"1? " A" assistant to fdr and , .. . ... the only Roosevelt man remaining in the also responsible for picking Truman entourage. James Grafton Rogers, then . ot"er Frankfurter men include Francis , . A. , , , ' . , Shea, formerly of the Justice department; dean Of the Colorado law school, Joe Rauh. formerly of the housing au- as assistant secretary of state in """"n Donald hiss, brother of Aiger, , . . .. X, now member of the Acheson law lirm: the Hoover administration. Ro- Adrian Fisher of the state department: gers was a reDUblican and an tne Iate Judge Nathan Margold, former r . . . repuDllLHn ana an ,o,lcllr , the it,r department: Mil- A-t cnoice. ton Kats, an EC ambassador under Har iri O S t of the mansions "list ed in the social register" al though I thought the so cial register cat alogued people rather than homes The firm said it chose the top ten living rooms from some 500 to hold the news me. Why didn't I Da Boyla nominees. And "Don't try back from win?" "What's the matter, do I need my rug lifted?" it will plead. Or "Tell me the truth, is my ra diator showing?" This will go on for days and days, with my living room de veloping more and more of an inferiority complex. "Oh, you don't have to tell me I know I'm hopelessly out- it estimated the value of the of-date," it will sigh "Just ma- furnishmgs in the lucky win- hogany and old lace that's me. ners at about $500 000 or i've had my day. You should $50,000 a room. have .gotten yourself a younger There must be some error living room." here. Could any living room ac- Then my living room will be lt was during the Hoover ad- 20l,nkHfihfnfEinH!L'.hMld'.0.nif. w.'D" tually cost $5.000? what would gin to brood and blame me. ministration also that the fam- furter proteges, who recently got caught ed Tom iwnnran In tor hrain Aenmcty on nor, Doxes. tow 18 eu xom Corcoran, later Drain what Bome foiks'in Kentucky have done truster to FDR, got Started in 'or years, though not many proteges of government Corcoran had been uo,cmerCs',,,;rwffICce.rt., columnist. . sent to Washington by Frank- dlcule the so-called Frankfurter "red- furter ae. .Timtipp Wnlmpa' law hots" they pick only one or two of the lurier as justice rioimes law weat ,p. It onIy lr hwer , Clerk, and then joined the RFC gauging the controversial Justice of the Under ElirPno lWovoi- a rr.Kli- UP"""" tours to review nis enure IK (Copyright 1990) Finds House Too Late St. Cloud, Minn., Feb. 2 (U.R) For more than a year, store manager Deryck Cawthorn tramped the streets' looking for a house for his family. He found one yesterday a couple of hours before he was ordered transferred to Marshall, Minn. Girls Behind Candy Counters First to Learn Who's Romancing By PATRICIA CLARY (United Press Staff Correspondent) Hollywood, Feb. 2 (U.R) A bunch of giggling gals behind the town's fancy candy counters know all about who's romancing who before the gossips do. But they guard their secrets like the hydrogen bomb. The folks who sell candy say they were the first to know Clark MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Bomb Development Only Way To Insure Country s Security By DeWITT MacKENZIE (W) Foreign Affairs Analyst) President Truman's order to the atomic energy commission to continue its work on all forms of atomic weapons, including the "so-called hydrogen or super-bomb," was of course anticipated as a measure of defense "against any possible aggressor." However, many folk will be shocked at being brought face to face with thci Gable, was getting seri ous about Lady Sylvia Stanley, and they have some pretty hot tips on other celebrated c oo ings, too. "Columnl s t s keep proposi-t tioning us for a pipeline into' our place for Patricia Clary umns had them a twosome," Manager Jack Scligman said. "She's a girl who likes sodas, v even has a fountain at home to make her own." Batitzer usually buys her a chocolate assortment before they leave, he added. The Marilyn Maxwell-Andy Mclntyre merger wasn't any news to Seligman either. Mcln tyre dropped by months ago to gossip," Fred Levy, president of ask what Marilyn s favorite can- the swank Blum's Candy shop, dy was. They told him choco- said. "But our ethics are as high late-covered nuts, as a doctor's. We don't tell a 4 ..she got .em by the ton from thing until after It's in the then on," he said, papers." Roddy McDowell drops in for Now that everybody knows an occasional soda with Ann that Gable eloped with the love- Blyth. ly Lady Sylvia, he can divulge "We sold him the box of candy that Gable was in every week he took to his first date with before the marriage ordering a her," he said. "Doesn't look as $35 box of candy. , if there's anything serious there "They surprised everybody," yet, but we're keeping a close he said, "but us." eye on it." Howard Duff is the most un- Thc Peter Lawford-Sharman predictable customer. Douglas whirl seems pretty "He's buying for one gal ono promising, by the candy barom- day," Scligman said, "another eter. After bcauing her around the next." Hollywood, Lawford bought One of the hottest current Sharman a bon voyage hamper items Is young Nick Hilton's when she left for the family courtship of Elizabeth Taylor, ranch in Arizona. and salesgirl Betty Field says The candy shop got the first she can trace his progress by flash when Attorney Greg Baut- the kind of candy he buys, zcr switched from Joan Craw- "He started with the adven- ford to Ginger Rogers. ture box," she said, "and now "They were sipping sodas at he's switched to bouquet. A our fountain long before the col- bigger assortment." necessity oft going ahead and! developing thist new horror-; weapon of un told destructive! power. Thej question natu-j rally had arisen? in most minds: whether t h e r c wasn't some1 way in which this might be avoided. DeWIU Mackensie The answer to that, I believe, had to be "no" if the security of our country was to be in sured. There is no indication, as I "Look, big boy." it. will sniff. wno were tne winners.' weii, "it you'd spend a little money 960 Fifth avenue (Mrs. John on me maybe all the other par Reed Topping) placed first. The lors in town wouldn't be laugh second place living room de- ing at me. clined to give its address, but "I'm just as good as any other admitted it was owned by Eliza- living room at heart." beth Arden, a lady who has no- And it will go on: tions about lotions. "I found out that those prize Then, third, came 550 Park winning living rooms had $50, avenue, lived in by Mrs. Danny 000 worth of frou-frou in them. Kaye; fourth, 20 East 60th You know what you spent on street, Inhabited by Mrs. Deems me altogether $684.33? No Taylor, and fifth, 630 Park ave- wonder I look like 1 don't have nue, where Mrs. Maty Roberts anything to wear." Rinehart dwells. All the other Believe it or not. I'll then prize-winning living rooms from have to start borrowing from the tony upper East Side ex- the bank to pep my old living cept 25 Central Patk West, a loom up. dark horse entry from the other "Enough of this mongrel Vic side of town, in which Ethel torian scrap," it will say. "I'm Merman sings after supper. It going futuristic even if you have placed eighth. to henna my sofa." ' And by the time we win a wnat worries me ts what hap- prize, well, I'll be living over decided not to produce such pens when I go home to 541 the hill in the poorhouse. And bombs, this would not bind other East 20th street. Apartment 8-F. t h e neighborhood hockshop countries. The only way out is That is where my living room owner will be sitting in my liv- to control the source of bomb- hangs out. How can I face it? ing room awaiting to accept its making materials. But Russia The first thing it will say is, medal. nas always saia no to tnis. mere should be one more attempt to get her to see reason. . , . "But the Russian people should be told, by radio and every other possible means of communication developed in the last war. If scientists can de stroy the world, they should be able to talk to the world. "Let them talk to the Russian people. That might do the trick." Well, that's an idea worth CapitaljJournal near future. It could happen, but it isn't likely. However, this cold war in which we are engaged this con flict of the isms is a fight to a finish. There is small pos sibility of any compromise. This means we must be pre pared for contingencies. We can't run the chance that the other fellow may have the su- order after the Der-bomb before we ket it de- atomic committee see it, that there is serious dan- turning over in our minds. Every Da, nf Bnnlha. wn.H ..row tn h . . . . . e,.. . ,..... , lMC reasonable effort certainly should be made to avert the tradegy of an atomic war. The way things stand there are a lot of citizens who feel like migrating with their families in to the far northern wilds of Hud son Bay, where they could build log-cabins and live in peace. President Truman issued his senate-house gave strong veloped, for that would lay us indication that it was about to open to a possible lightning at- recommend development of the tack which might knock us out super-bomb. His decision was overnight. And we may be sure applauded by congress members that the other fellow is think- generally. ing of his own security in simi- It is worthy of note that the lar terms. President's action followed closely the publication of Sec It is, of course, a damnable retary of Defense Johnson's first shame that such atomic weapons annual report in which he called of war should have to be built for America to be on the alert in this day and age. Thinking and stay powerful until intema along this line, the London Daily tional cooperation "is accepted Mail, one of Britain's most wide- by the adversaries who are now ly read newspapers, editoriali- doing their utmost to destroy it." zes: The defense secretary express "The question is: Can we do ed the encouraging belief that anything about this new menace "the threat of war has dimin before It splits the world? ished as our strength has in "Even if the United States creased." Birdie Tucker got unexpected results when she ordered a Classified ad in the Stockton (Calif.) Rec ord to publicize her Doll Hospital. A Chum sh hadn't seen in 35 years read the ad ana called to if she was the mechanically gifted, doll loving Birdie Henderson he had known in school. She was I Human interest gives Want Ads big readership. C Howard Parlib Your Ad Will Get Results, Too. Dial Result Number 2 2406 4 i