Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, February 10, 1950, Page 10, Image 10

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    10 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Friday, February 10, 1950
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Assassin Misses Herbert Nobel, one-time gambler re
cuperating from gunshot wounds received in a New Year's
Eve assassination attempt, stares at bullet hole (arrow) in
ceiling of his hospital room in Dallas, Tex. It was the seventh
attempt on his life. Note broken blinds and blankets covering
lower portion of windows. (Acme Telephoto)
Nourse Says Truman Ignored
Advisers on Nations Economy
Dr. Edwin G. Nourse, who resigned as chairman of the presi
dent's council of economic advisers last fall, charged in Collier's
today that President Truman never discussed with the three-man
council its analyses and suggestions bearing on the economy of
the listion.
At the same time, the former
top economic adviser of the
country said that the other
members of the council "want
ed to advance philosophies or
causes for which they had a
personal enthusiasm." Dr.
Nourse served on the council
with Leon H. Keyserling and Dr.
John D. Clark.
Dr. Nourse gave his reasons
for quitting the economic post
In this week's Collier's in an
article entitled "Why I Had To
Step Aside."
"On no occasion did the coun
cil have so much as a single
' hour's time in which we could
sit down, with the President
to answer any question that
arose in his mind, clarify data,
or examine alternative courses
and probable consequences,"
he wrote In the national week
ly. "We learned of his final policy
decisions through an assistant
or an assistant to an assistant on
the White House staff."
The Council was set up by
the Employment Act of 1048 as
a small advisory agency with
no administrative powers or re
sponsibilities and its members
were to analyze and interpret
economic developments and to
formulate and recommend na
tional economic policy.
Dr. Nourse wrote it was true
that the President's course often
substantially paralleled the coun
cil's recommendations.
"When we handed our final
draft of analyses and suggestions
to Mr. Truman, his almost un
varying formula was: 'I'll take
this home with me (or on the
Williamsburg) nnd read it with
great care. Then we can discuss
it further.'
"But never from the first
annual report of January, 1947
to the third midyear report of
1940 did such a discussion
materialize."
The 68-year-old economist,
former vice-president of the
Brookings Institution, slated it
was in February, 1049, that the
first real show-down came about
between the political and econo
mic interpretations of the coun
cil's role.
"The President had several
times toid us: 'You bring me the
economics of the question. Ill
take responsibility for making
the political judgments and final
decisions.
"I was content to obey this
directive, but other members of
the council were not willing to
terminate their activities at this
point.
"They were not content to
wait for the council to win
prestige and usefulness based
solely on professional com
petence, mature judgement,
practical realism and a slub
' born refusal to let economio
judgment be warped by poli
tical considerations. They
wanted to advance philoso
phies or causes for which they
had a personal enthusiasm."
In the Collier's article, Dr.
Nourse quoted from part of the
President's address In Pittsburgh
Inst fall In which Truman de
fended deficit spending by de
picting it as only a "scare word"
to "turn the American people
against the programs which the
people want and need."
"It (the President's reasoning)
seemed to me a casting to the
winds of any economic analysis
of the intricate process by which
the several tegmenta of a total
economy can be helped into
workable balance and sustained
high production," Dr. Nourse
commented.
In Its place I seemed to dis
cern a highly political and
dangerously inflationary econo
mic program.
" 1 view this as a menace to
our American hope of making
free competitive enterprise pro
duce continuing abundance with
in a framework of free government.
"And since my position as
chairman of the Council of Eco
nomic Advisers gave me no op
portunity to do anything honest
ly to bear on the merits of these
pressing issues, I was glad that
the day of my retirement had al
ready been set."
Mrs. Marshall
Rites Saturday
Swcgle Mrs. Margaret Elisa
Marshall, a resident of Swegle
community for the past 31
years, died at her home on Gar
den road early Wednesday
morning.
Mrs. Marshall was born at
Eric, 111., and on Thanksgiving
day, November 28, 1888, she
was married to John Marshall.
Shortly after they went to Lew
istown, Montana, to establish a
home and lived there until 1919,
when they came to Salem, and
in June of that year moved into
the Swcgle home, where she
died.
Although a cripple most of
her life, she was Interested in
the community life, helping at
the school, a member of the
Community club, the PTA and
a charter member of the Swegle
Woman's club, and in Salem of
the Court Street Christian
church.
She and Mr. Marshall ob
served their 50th wedding an
niversary. He died in May, 1946.
She is survived by four
daughters, Mrs. Mildred McCol
lum of Lewistown, Mont., Mrs.
Nina Smith of Mill Valley, Cal.j
Mrs. Grace Kufner, Salem; Mrs.
Blanche Schweening. San Fran
cisco, Calif.; four sons, Dana.
Frank, John nnd Ray, all of
Snlem; a brother, Clarence Eg
gleston, Eric, 111.; eight grand
children and two great grand
children. Funeral services will be held
Saturday, February 11, at
Clough - Barrick chapel, with
Rev. Harold W. Lyman officiat
ing and Interment in Belcrest.
Pear Subsidies to End
Portland, Feb. 10 WV-The
government export subsidy on
winter pears will end Feb. 15,
the department of agriculture
announced yesterday.
The total of shipments made
under the subsidy totaled about
90,000 boxes.
Announcement!
Jacquanerre
Kunzman
Ballet Teacher
(Vasilieff Style)
Formerly with the
Mrs. Howard Jonks Studio
Now conducting my own
classes each Monday at
155 No. Liberty St.
For Information Phone
3 6126
No-Host Dinner
For Cub Scouts
Veterans of Foreign Wars
sponsored Cub Scout pack No.
12 held their annual blue and
gold no-host dinner this week
with 17S cubs, parents and
others in attendance. Additional
guests included Dave Holtzman,
VFW representative; Howard
Higby, Cascade council area as
sistant executive, and Val D.
Sloper.
Holtzman commended Cub
Master Gordon Winchcomb on
three successful years as head of
Pack 12.
Higby presented Robert Rus
sell with the Webelos award,
highest in cubbing.
Other awards distributed in
cluded: Wolf Roger Barry, David
Saunders, Donald Jarrett, Alan
Whitaker, Dareyl Donaldson,
Darold Klinge.
Bear Jerry Shiprrtan, Jim
mie McKinnye, Robert Kirby.
Lion John Kraft, Herbert
Shipman, Duane Kent, Gary
Maedcr.
Den mothers recognized were:
Mrs. Russell V. Whitehurst, Mrs.
Russell F. Shipman, Mrs. Clyde
Bancroft, Mrs. John W. Weekly,
Mrs. Clinton G. Lammers, Mrs.
G. Wallace Beckett.
Angell Protests
Food Loss
Washington, Feb. 10 (ffl Rep.
Angell (R., Ore.), opposing de
struction of surplus foods by the
agriculture department, has ask
ed congress to provide other
means to dispose or. tnem.
He has introduced legislation
to provide for distribution to
worthy organizations and insti
tutions of foods acquired by the
department through price sup
port programs.
His measure would make sur
plus foods available for school
lunch programs, to college dor
mitories and to non-profit co
operative eating houses and cafe
terias; to needy Indians through
the Indian bureau, needy persons
in the United States through pri
vate welfare organizations, and
outside the United States
through similar organizations.
Oregon Gets Large
Share in Forest Funds
Washington, Feb. 10 VP) Ore
gon has received $2,044,693 from
the U. S. forest service, the larg
est amount received by any of
the 40 states, Alaska or Puerto
Rico sharing in the 1949 national
forest earnings.
The total kickback to states
and territories was $7,719,301
an all-time record, the forest
service disclosed today.
Washington received $1,107,-
482 and Alaska $4,922.
Size of the "dividend" is shar
ed in proportion to the amount
collected from national forests
within the individual state's
boundaries.
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Kit 'tfs'li
New ' Hudson Custom Commodore Sedan Shown is the
new 1950 Hudson Custom Commodore Series sedan. Hudson
last week announced price reductions ranging from $87.50 to
$166.50 on all models in its Super and Custom Commodore
series. Although these cars are only five feet high, they
provide full road clearance and more head room than any
mass-produced car, due to the exclusive "step-down" design
with recessed floor. Both lines have a wheelbase of 124
inches and are available with a choice of the 123-horsepower,
high-compression Super-Six or 128-horsepower Super-Eight
engine. Shrock Motor Co., is the Salem dealer.
Rescue Plane Pilot Recounts
Mercy Drop of Paratroopers
(Editor's Note: Squadrcn Leader Al Mackie, a Royal Cana
dian air force pilot from Regina, Sask., flew a Dakota plane
which dropped five paratroopers to aid the 10 survivors of
a C-47 transport crash.
(The C-47 crashed Wednesday atop a mountain 84 miles
west of here while participating in the search for another
U.S. air force plane missing with 44 persons aboard. A
ground party was climbing toward the crash scene to help
bring out the 10 men.)
is good this morning, I'm going
to try and drop some blood plas
ma to them.
By SQUARDON LEADER AL MACKIE
(M told to the United Press)
Whitehorse, Y. T., Feb. 10 (U.R) It was the most difficult drop
I've ever done.
I flew about three and a half hours in 60 below zero weather
and had to make seven dummy runs because of the fog, before
the five men were dropped.
I've never had such trouble
before. I was bothered by a 300-l'oot-thick
layer of fog around
the 8,000-foot level. We just had
to pick holes in the stuff before
I could let the American and
four Canadian para-men go.
And they did a wonderful
job, too.
On the very first run, I got
my only good look at the C-47
It had made a good forced land
ing judging by the wheelmarks,
then swiveled around to the
right. It stopped with its nose
pointing toward the summit.
In all that dipping up and
down the valleys and climbing
over the saddle through that
fog, I never got more than a
20-second look at the scene.
I spotted a sizable hole about
300 yards down the mountain
side from the camp. All five
men dropped into a compact
group Into that hole.
They were wonderful.
The first man to go was
major (J. W. Boczewski, a U.S.
army doctor from Conshohock-
en, Penn.). He was raring to go
tight from the start.
When I finally got back to
the hole again, I looked down
and saw six men in a group,
The sixth must have been one
of the crash survivors.
I think the para-rescue men
will save the lives of the 10 sur
vivors.
I was lucky. If the weather
Hospital Groups
Accuse Doctors
Portland, Feb. 10 W)--Oregon
doctors boycott commercial hos
pital associations to this day.
So testified two government
witnesses in federal court here
yesterday. They were managers
of two hospital associations, tes
tifying for the government in an
anti-trust suit against Oregon
medical societies.
The medical groupi are accus
ed of trying to monopolize pre
paid medical care in the state
through the doctor-owned Ore
gon Physicians Service.
Appearing as a rebuttal wit
ness for the government, Ray
Brunkow, general manager of
the Industrial Hospital associa
tion, said his firm still was en
countering opposition from doc
tors. He said that only two weeks
ago a lumber mill was reluctant
to join his association because
doctors in the mill community
refused to accept cases from the
association.
Similar testimony came from
C. C. Bechtold, general manager
of the National Hospital association.
Club Given Report
Monmouth The Monmouth
Community club met in regular
session in the local youth cen
ter. Miss Alice Pendlebury, di
rector, gave her report on the
progress of the center. The next
regular meeting will be on
March 6.
Americans had 1,300,000 tele
phones in 1900.
OLD
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r-ABlend
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A Gentleman's Whiskey from Kentucky
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WAlt AND UNIT f f51 VfffTJ. l'ltl t
Cool mr tt drawn in
from floor Uvtl mni
u arm tir dttehargtd
into Itring ton
both t'ultt of w'
for comfort through
cut lb bom.
COMPACT DESIGN -COMPLETELY ABOVE FLOOR
Installed in the wait. No pit below house. No wasted floor space
COMFORT THROUGHOUT
Living room AND bedrooms wwm in tnj weather.
BURNS LOW COST CATALYTIC FURNACE OIL-
Patented burner uses low cost furnace oil -even catalytic oil
with high efficiency.
ELECTRIC IGNITION MAKES THE UNIT LIGHT ITSELF -
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oil. No attention 00 your part. Maintains EVEN temperatures.
ALSO-
Clean . . . silent ... no moving parts to wear . . . listed by Under
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NO MONEY DOWN 3 YEARS TO PAY I
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I Today we unveil the
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1 AT SENSATIONAL OrfiP?CS
0N EVERY SUPER AND
CUSTOM COMMODORE MODEL
Withlhe New Step-Down Ride
Here or 1950' most betwtlhil mtomobilts The Mily con with "ftp-awn" design, which provides Amorlco'i
lowest tenter el gravity and the steadiest read-hugging rid ever hiww Along with more room than in any
thor cor Here's th added solely of Hudson's extlosive Monohilt body-and-frame Th high-compression
performance ol America's mast powerful Six Or on even mor powerful Eight And nil-rang, Super-antic
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TradtHMrii and paltnlt PMdlnai
it
Today's the day!
The day to see the gorgeous Hudsons for 1950 that
bring you a fresh motoring experience "The New
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This is the ride that cradles you in the lowest-built car
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You instantly see that these New Hudsons have the
lowest center of gravity in any American autc mobile
and as a result, you. know instinctively, as yta view
them, that they hug the road more tenaciously and an
therefore America's best-riding, safest cars!
You quickly see, too, that these low-built Hudsons for
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And amazing head room Is only one kind of spacious
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xclusivn
SUPER-MATIC
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Hudson brings you no-shift driv
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includes the fuel economy of over
drive the only transmission that
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want, doesn't creep on starts or
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roll along and that can be con
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down" design and ingenious use of space that is wasted
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In fact, when you try "The New Step-Down Ride";
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You'll thrill to the get-up-and-go performance of your
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But these are only a few of the great features of "Tho
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316 North Church St., Salem, Oregon