BY H. T. WEBSTER The Timid Soul weLL-wMAOOV KNOW-' MAS That! ifrmP of Me.' Hen! hem! Hen! isut tuat soMerHws-' r'Wwi" llVvr.' gRAiO of Me.' Hen! hem! j HCH.' ISMT TfMT sowerawS j :.: Capital Adjournal 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 otrn vise credited in this pqper and also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, 25c; Monthly. $1.00: One Tear. $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, Monday, February 6, 1950 Oregon's Mountain Musicians Of all our numerous birds, the water ouzel or dipper, seems to embody more of the characteristics of the pioneer American than any of the others, embodying their free dom from convention, their industry, self reliance and in dependence. They are individualistic and diligently work out their own salvation. You never see one of them, even KRISS-KROSS jn the worst oi winter weatner, seeking aims or ioou or shelter, as so many other birds do. The ouzel is a slate looking curious bird that frequents roaring mountain streams and nests frequently under waterfalls. Its body is as large as a robin's, but looks much smaller, because its small tail gives a chunky look. Wines are short and rounded and its clumasre soft and so ,!!. j.!.. :4. j ..,. -r i junM. ,in, Marion county is always in the market lor a good usea Driage. unwi. umi. lb toil u uimci natci i iu..K u,ovo..v.o ,,.- - , , u.u. 1,J t ,.. Mill, ,rrm lilt? LUUJUJ UUMfiMI. a U.7-HI1 .v,a..L uw uwvk. ... the state highway department last week at a bargain-basement price of $3913. Buying second-hand bridg es is no new ex perience for The ouzel seems inpervious to cold and never migrates. Marion county. It flies about in the snow, dives under ice and sings as if hasedthe it was summer weather, but never goes far from the old brldge which stream. John Muir the naturalist, fell in love with the crossed the Pud nnznls and most, that we know of the bird comes from him. ding river at He says it sings the year around. The birds range is from northwestern Alaska south to California. It is a perma nent resident of the Cascades. Trout anglers who blame every creature except them selves for the shortage of fish, claim that these small acro bats are destructive of small trout, but Ira N. Gabrielson AIR. MILQUETOAST HAS unusual expeRieNce OwH. IHBl ttn Vwt M4I TWt It WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Discussion on Dogs Steals Lead From Politics at Lunch By DREW PEARSON Washington Harry Truman has frequently said that the two men he would most like to see retired from congitss are the republican senators from his home state Forrest Donnell and James P. Kem of Missouri. However, the president leaned over backward to fcc polite to these bitter foes BY CLARE BARNES, JR. White Collar Zoo when he and Mrs. Truman luncnea w 1 1 n the Missouri congress i o n a 1 delegation. In fact, politics played a minor, role at the luncheon, giv ing way to a discuss ion of dogs, led by charming Mrs. Bennett Champ Clark, wife of the Judge and former senator from Missouri. There was a time when a P. i lASri Drew Pearson seemed easy. But it wasn't. It took days of careful organizing, plus a lot of courage on the part of Legion leaders, to start such a gigantic project especially at a time when everyone wanted to relax after Christmas. However, the men who have fought our wars in the past real ized that there is only one way to win peace for the future by working at it. For peace is not a beribboned parchment which diplomats sign after a war is over. It is a living breath ing day-to-day document which the people of a nation must work 'We-Buy-Old-Bridges' Could Be Slogan for Marion County By CHRIS KOWITZ, Jr. Like the fellow who makes a hobby of collecting talse teeth, out getting wet. It has a shining white eyelid. Its food is small insects that live under the water. It can walk on the bottom with swift running over his head, can even fly under the water. legendary dog played a famous at year after year. role in the lite oi Mrs. uiarK a late father-in-law, Speaker Champ Clark, whose theme song when he ran for president was: "I don't care if he is a noun', you've gotta quit kicking my dog aroun'." But Mrs. Clark, a former Eng lish actress, probably did not remember that famous conven tion battle of 1912 in which Woodrow Wilson finally beat out Champ Clark. For she dom inated the conversation with a eulogy, not of her hound, but of Peace is like a successful mar riage. The hardest part begins after the marriage license is signed. And the fact that so many Americans forgot to work at1 peace and retreated into their shell of isolation during the Harding - Coolidge days after 1918, was one reason why we had to fight again in 1941. Wars, the American Legion naires know all too weii, come in cycles of about every 20 years. And the children of to day can be our friends or the Aurora ... paid only $2800 for that one. But the Au- m Jr Chrll Kowllz, last Thursday evening. Mrs. Jennie Schmidt, who answered the phone, failed to answer the question asked her. She had also been unable to give the right answer on the previous time her number was called. Here's the twist: The "Tel-e-Test" announcer always relates the question at the beginning of the program. Hundreds of regular "Tel-e-Test" listeners in Salem had prepared themselves with the answer Thursday by rora span later turned out to be referring to an atlas or ency- a white elephant. The gimmick cloyedia. came in moving the bridge from But not the Schmidts. its old site to McKee, where it They were listening to a dif- and Stanley G. Jewett of the U.S. biological service in is now located. The moving job ferent staiion. In fact, Loring their "Birds of Oregon," say that "stomach examinations cost the tidy sum of $25,000. and Jennie are somewhat prej- , , , ' , .. . , . . , , . The county doesn't know just udiced against tuning their radio have shown, however, that its bobbing and probing among what u wiU do with its iatest to KSLM the local Mutual out- the pebbles is to obtain aquatic insects and their larvae, surplus bridge. But, as United let. You see, Loring is program not baby trout." Press correspondent William director for KOCO, Salem's Warren points out, "nothing like other station, nr mu j nr.iii.-i i- having a spare bridge saved up Mrs. Theodora C. Stanwell-Fletcher in her charming ac- or a drainy bay." Little weather tragedy: A lo- count of naturalists spending a winter in northern British Come to think of it, that cal church which prides itself Columbia entitled the "Driftwood Valley" (Atlantic Month- bridge could come in pretty on serving king-sized dinners ly book) , speaks of the night singing of the water ouzels as handy during the thawing-out was forced to Issue tiny portions follows : , season. "As we drank our tea and rocked in the easy chairs, the last daylight faded, and the world was locked in silence and glit tering snow and moonlight of early northern lights, suddenly from outside came a burst of rippling notes. Birds singing a clear sweet song on a bitter cold night with the temperature at zero and two feet of snow. It couldn't be possible. But the music was still there, now just above the cabin roof, now down over the lake. "We rushed out bareheaded, and there by the open water number was called by "Tel-e- patch below on the bank were three fat little gray dippers, or Test," a Mutual Broadcasting water ouzels, with short bobbing tails. Neither of us had any company give - away program, idea that any bird ever sang at night in the depths of winter, much less a northern one. In vivid moonlight we could see them distinctly dipping and bobbing on the rocks in cold, shin- MacKENZIE'S COLUMN ing waicr ana singing. "Their song echoed back and forth so that all the lake was ringing with it. When we went inside, the birds flew above our roof, and poured their music down upon us. No European nightingale, singing in a hot, lusty summer evening, ever wove the spell of enchantment that the dippers did with their crystal tinkles, which matched so perfectly the icy purity of the win ter night." one evening last week. Church officials had originally expected Being called by a radio net- about 100 persons to turn out work telephone quiz program for a certain banquet. How is getting to be almost a common ever, weather conditions became occurrence for the Loring so bad the day of the banquet Schmidt residence at 1717 John that they thought surely no more her smooth-haired fox terrier soldiers of tomorrow. That's why which, she boasted modestly, the friendship gesture of toys, outshone everything in Washing- the first installment of which ton canine circles and was prac- sails from Philadelphia today, tically out of this world in pedi- can be so important, grees. That's also why the distri- This went on for some time, bution of the toys, which will with Mrs. Truman saying noth- be in the hands of the efficient ing. When Mrs. Clark finally CARE organization, will have ran out of adjectives about her t0 be distributed with a little pooch, the first lady broke in publicity and fanfare to make gently: sure that the people of Europe "We used to have a dog, too." understand the full meaning of "How wonderful," enthused this carefully and patiently col the Judge's wife. "What kind?" lected Tide of Toys from the "Oh, just a plain dog," replied veterans of America. Mrs. T. ... "INVASION" OF MARYLAND TIDE OF TOYS Twelve short years ago Demo- Every Christmas I hear some cratic Sen MiUat.d E. Tydings folks arguing that Christmas has screamed about a "collapse" of become too commercialized, that the democratic system when we give presents chiefly to those President Franklin D. Roosevelt who we think are going to give personally invaded Maryland in us something in return, that we an unsuccessful effort to purge should not merely practice tne senat0r. Christ's teachings on His birth- At that iime a jot of peopie day, but every day. figured that the defeat of the I have heard quite a few peo- elongated reactionary from pie talk this way, but until now Maryland would not be a blow I haven't known many people to democracy, but Tydings to do much more than talk about demagogued his way through it. This year, however, it's been th. Pruclai battle and was re- "After twenty-five yean with the firm they gave me a lovely gold pin." POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Will Future Farmer Find It Necessary to Just Park Cars? By HAL BOYLE New York, (IP) What shall we do with the American farmer? Shall we turn him into a parking lot attendant? This appears to be one forward-looking solution of a problem as old as the republic the fight between the city and the countryside. It looks as if the city has won. The next step is to pave the farmlands, leaving the United States one vast sea of concrete and as phalt, studded I with parks, sub- urban lawns and billboards. This will give n1 ' everyone room to park his car, and the farmer can make more money renting his acres as ga- if u wmtmu femni going in for large tractors in. stead of large families. He hai learned that one good machina is more of an economic help around the farm than five strap ping sons used to be. What does this mean? It means that instead of the farm boys going to the cities, the city boys are going to move out deep er and deeper into the country side. But the water mains, the electric light lines, and the bus routes are going right along with them. The cities are on the march, different. Christmas has been over more than a month now, and at Phila delphia tomorrow an event will elected again in 1944. However, Tydings once more is aspiring to election to the sen ate in 1950 and, this time, the street. For the second time in recent months, the Schmidts' than half that number would show up. To be safe, they pre pared food for 80. When the banqi"t was over, 92 diners were still hungry. A Call for Help Years Ago That Still Haunts a Fellow The ouzels remained all winter, says the author, became By DeWITT MaeKENZIE (dP) Foreign Affairs AnalrM) reminiscence has to do with a tragedy which ii . ' i (i i Todav s reminiscence nas 10 uu wim uagi-uj "" our greatest source of music and gay company" and the uymed me these many yearsa nightmare of mass-death and vuinci ii, svii me muic mcjr oui-mcu m unc n, apenuiiiK inuai. cans for neip wnich had to be ignored. of their time in the open patches of water, swimming and The German submarine campaign of early 1917 was at the awful diving among tne rocks, ineir powers ot ilight matched peak which all but brought the allies to their knees iuui, iij mn in me on, diiiiiik a niuj uur snip iruiujt- rK go ana cnasing each other in endless games, spiraling down the Far East,! from the sky showering music like the English skylark, filled with Aus-i They sing on and off all through the dav and often some tralian and New hours after dark." Zealand soldiers1 enroute to the tl m. kl i ! r western front, Threat to Naval Air Facility Here came steaming First it was United Air Lines that was in jeopardy at the '"t0,..a w 1 n 1 ry ciM : i in. -i:..:i i i. -n . Mediterrane a n auicm uupuru me vivn Aeronautics uoara last summer which was boil wanted to know why West Coast Airlines shouldn't be sub- ing with U Dl-.'l..ln 4n. TTilAJ 1 TV -r:nlj hnntz ""'tu iui uiiutu uv, i.icinuy lllMll. . DeWHI HHkenm Now the Naval Air Facility at the airport is in jeopardy was me for"lhe submersibles, because of a lack of interest shown by the 519 naval air and they were taking a terrible reservists in the Willamette valley. With the navy looking to11 ot shipping and human life, for places to close in order to save money, it is understood Mrf the Salem fncility is being eyed by the economy-minded. cargo vessels were forbidden to When the navy authorized the air facility last snrinir. attempt any rescue work for we couldn't see much the Salem site was chosen because it was centrally located sinking ships. Instructions were leaned against the rail, in the Willamette valley, where almost one-third of the to turn tail and run llke the Suddenly a steamer loomed reservists in the four Pacific Northwest states live. An- devi1' lest the submarlne aIso "P "ly comparatively short other reason was that the Columbia airport in Portland get you' . . . d;fta"cre uh;a"d Tdnft didn't have the room, while the Hillsboro field didn't Tnls was tUe periocl which kLwhy we hadni spotted have a control tower nor the needed runways and hangar. produced one of the strange tales them before. Perhaps they had balem, however, had just what was needed. of the war not the one I set just been turned on. or a belt of As a result, navy personnel started remodeling the han- out to tell you, but one which fog may have been between us. gar on McNary field last April and seven planes were into our picture. Anyway, there they were, turn- brought here in September. Air reservists were asked to Australian transports, loaded ing into a suicide ship, come in to sten up. But, so far, only about 80 have signed wi'hrooPs and nurses, were "The damned, crazy fools," up. The navy can figure rightly enough that only 80 out hea,din? for the we,stern fron.t ex,e alm.ed my oficer- "They re of a DOtential of 500 is not ennno-h under JaPanese naval convoy. A asking for it!" oi a potential oi ouu is not enough. submarine stuck a torpedo into He had hardly got the words Another way to look at it, Salem could have the air facil- one of the transports, which car- out of his mouth when a tor Ity become a naval air station with about 100 more offi- ried both soldiers and women pedo hit them. It was a mortal cers and enlisted personnel added to the station force itself nurses. The stricken steamer was blow, and their wireless began if 150 to 200 aviators sign up. That means a doubling of sinking fast. The Japanese ad- to beg for help, word spread the present list of flyers. Probably about 30 additional miral in command gave the or- through our ship. Men gathered vy iiic iaii aiiu uicic , . u i . ti mother's son who didn't want to go to the rescue. And the strick en ship was so nearl Our skipper almost never left the bridge. I recall one stretch of 48 hours of duty which he did without rest. All the pas sengers were assigned to the sub marine watch in pairs. It was no time for slackness, for thir teen ships were sunk near us as we plowed on towards England: It was on a black midnight, as I was standing watch on deck with a ship's officer, that we encountered the tragedy with which this account is concerned. We were, of course, running without lights. Not even the glow of a cigarette was permitt ed. It was an eerie business, for we take place showing that several shoe is on the other foot. This million people have been follow- time Tydings wants the Presi ing the above advice and are dent to "invade" Maryland and trying to make Christmas come recently urged Truman to ac not once a year but in January, cept an invitation to dedicate a February and March too. new airport near Baltimore in For tomorrow the U.S. Lines June, steamer American Adventure "You will have a great op embarks for Rotterdam carry- portunity to help the boys on the ing the first installment of one ticket," expanded Tydings, not of the most precious cargoes referring to himself. "By all ever collected in the U.S.A. means, you should accept this The Tide of Toys. These friend- invitation to speak in Maryland." ship toys are being donated "Now, just wait a minute," through the tireless efforts of broke in Republican Congress the American Legion to the chil- man Glenn Beall. "I'm in the dren of Europe. minority here, but I think if the Of course, this column is sup- President is to make this air posed to report the closed-door P o r t dedication a political meetings of congress and the speech, maybe he had better backstage manuverings of diplo- stav out of Maryland." mats. But no story is more im- "oh- yu won,t Bet hurt, and nortant than the backstaee ac- lou won 1 De nelPea eimer 11 Ine count of how the American Le gion collected some 3,000,000 toys in the short space of five weeks, got them sorted, packed for export, and shipped to Phila delphia. On the surface, this may have President decides to accept our invitation," declared Tydings. However, the senator wasn't happy when Truman broke in: "I may touch on international matters if I go to Maryland to dedicate the airport, but I won't make a political speech." Copyright 1950) rage space than he can growing tooback to the countryside. unnecessary poaioes. There used to a pretty sharp line between cities. There isn't At first glance this may seem any more. The city slicker and a far-fetched solution of the the hayseed are neighbors. Often present parking and traffic prob- they are the same guy this is lem, but is it? Not if the pres- the fellow who has a day job in ent population and way-of-living the city but goes home at night trends keep up. to an acre or two in the country. In 1820, the year Daniel Boone Or it is the suburban farmer who died, there were 5.5 persons to wheels five miles into town to the square mile, and the old sell his produce, frontiersman felt the country Gradually the cities are was too crowded to live in. What spreading like pools of water would he think today when there that eventually will unite into are 50 to the square mile? one vast American municipal The population doubled from lake. 75,000,000 in 1900 to 150,000,- What about food? Oh, the 000 by 1950. And there are also scientists are learning to grow some 50,000,000 autos and trucks that in the laboratories. And cruising over the trails along when they do, then the cities will which the buffaloes used to lope, only mushroom faster as the And thousands more are being amount of food available is the built every week. only real check on population. . So someday the whole wide For decades the rural areas countryside will be paved, the have been losing to the city in mountains levelled, the deserts terms of percentage of total pop- gone, and only a little bush grass ulation. For a long time coun- left here and there to keep the try people complained about cricket's chirp alive, and a tree this. They said the cities weren't in each community to welcome really self-sustaining in popula- a robin each spring, tion their bright lights just There's to be no traffic prob lured the boys off the farms. lem, as there will no longer.be This may have been true once, much need for streets. You can but you know what the census drive anywhere except across an bureau has just discovered? It airfield. But you'll still pay to has found out that, man for man, park. the city dweller is now having I only wish I could live long more children than his country enough to bid on the paving con cousin. The farmer today is tractl nlnnna wnulrl Iia hrnnirhf Vinrp Tlinf ic Kann,l nn V. a;i..n der: tion at Spokane, where the naval air facility there became lhl'Save themen lirsl' Bnd thon in time a naval air station. In comparing the Spokane a vouni Jaoanese officer ..tuation it should be noted that the Salem and Willamette ,ninking hf, sZrf Z: valley potential is even better than the eastern Washington fused the order, said to him: situation. "Pardon, sir, but you mean order hung over us. And Two inducements should bring about a pick-up in sign- ave tne women first and then knew that there wasn't a chance uus nere. rirst. Deiier weniner snnn n nrnicr hack irii.no rf "n-.i, uuu v ,u; flvintr. And spennd. th start, nf ivn.woiV r.r,,i,na !, "No," replied the admiral. Still, that iron-clad admiralty over us. And we Tviv in M.rl. u,in offo n.nnoton, 4nnn. mu-i "The allies have plenty of worn- leaves out the obvious consideration that if the Salem air Sci?1?, "eed m SaVe th" facility can't continue to grow, Oregon would not get an- Wcll, they saved both women other air facility for years to come and the area would and men. get a black-eye among naval air reservists. But to get back to my ship: in the world of our escaping torpedo ourselves if we didn't clear out. v So we steamed away as fast as we could go. The pity of hav ing to do it! No wonder that call for help sMll haunts a fellow af ter all there years. Why Do Women Work Nights? Most Don't Like to By HARMAN W. NICHOLS Washington, Feb. 8 (U.R) Why do ladies work nights? Take the department of labor bulletin on the subject and the case called No. 6. A 44-year-old telephone operator in Atlanta, married with two grown children, works from 11 at night to 6 in the morning six nights a week. "We don't have enough beds ' to go around," she explained, school had moved into the build "And besides, It is possible for ing across the alley, our family to have breakfast, The labor people interviewed dinner and evening together." 270 persons who work part or But do the ladies like this 8,1 of the f these. 148 night work? Some of them do, wef e women the rest men. most of them don't. . s,0"?.e f tht ladles llke the . , . . night business, because they find it more suitable to their "per Many of those interviewed by SOnal needs and desires." Most the women's bureau of labor de- 0f these had no domestic re payment complained about not sponsibilities. being able to sleep daytimes. I a counter-girl in Atlanta said can sympathize with them . that despite the fact she had I was on the all night shift for kids aged two, eight and 12, she a long time and I had a very sad liked her shift because she liked experience. It was in New York, to "sleep late in the morning." The old story about a cat stamp- "My husband." she said, ing its feet while walking across "works a day shift and he takes a thick rug is no fable. The ter- care of the children in the eve mites boring through the walls ning." used to annoy me. So I went to Several women working in a real estate dealer and said I hotels, bars and restaurants said wanted the most quiet place in they got bigger tips at night. Jackson Heights. He had just One woman said she had been the spot a back apartment five working as a baker for the same stories above the kid's play-yard, boss for six years on the night I signed a two-year lease. shift. She said she didn't sleep A month later around 2 too well in the daytime, because o'clock on afternoon I was cud- of the racket outside her bed died in the feathers when all of room window, "but I take great a sudden I heard the doggondest pride in my work and you don't blast you ver heard. A musio bake in the dayUme. Capital Journal WANT AD WONDERS To form the now fa mous Collegia to Chor ale, youthful Conductor Bob Shaw turned to Classified advertising to recruit singers. His 2-llne Want Ad attract ed hundreds seeking parts in the chorus. Classified Advertising is the People's Market-place. CvrrtiM 1141. Htrd rut. f.H ft. . S W. tfl Vour Ad Will Get Results, Too. Dial Result Number 2 2406