LIFE-AND-DEATH EXPERIMENT Wife Chauffeurs Attlee Britain's Prime Minister Clement Attlee is driven by Mrs. Attlee as they leave Walthmstow, England, town hall, after he filed his nomination papers as labor candidate for West Walthamstow in the coming general election. Attlee verbally spanked Winston Churchill for his suggestion that British motorists be given more gasoline. 4 British motorists are now limited to 90 miles a month of pleasure driving. (AP Wirephoto) NEW BRITAIN ELECTS Parliamentary Majority Holds Key to Government Editor's Note: Here is IT. P. Washington Manager Lyle C. Wilson's first dispatch from London A simple explanation of the differences between a national election in Great Britain and at home. He arrived in England yesterday to cover the British political campaign and elections in terms familiar to American readers. Wilson's by-line is well known as he has covered every national election in the United States since Al Smith ran against Herbert Hoover in 1928. As the British campaign warms up he will accompany lead ing candidates into the country and describe the political rallies. He will also write the main story on the results of the balloting of Feb. 23. By LYLE C. WILSON (United Press Staff Correspondent) London, Feb. 13 (U.fi) A national election over here seems very like a national election at home until you get close up to It and then the big differences begin to stand out. The chief difference is that we elect a president and a host of senators and congressmen, whereas the British elect only members of the house of com-e mons. The British voter doesn't cast a ballot for a candidate for prime minister or for any other such executive office as that. He votes only for the candidate for par liament he likes best in his con stituency, which corresponds to our congressional district in the United States. Members of the British upper house of lords are born to it by inheriting a title of nobility or are appointed to it by receiving a title of nobility. How to Stay Alive in Frozen Arctic North at Sixty Below? (Editor's Note: The Arctic survival phase of "Operation ' Sweet briar" Joint American-Canadian military exercise is getting an unscheduled life-or-death trial in the frozen wastes of the storied Yukon. In the past two weeks, two separate ground-rescue parties have been sent out to match wits with the elements.) By ROBERT HERTZLER Whitehorse. Y. T.. Feb. 13 U.R) Somebody said once that it's easier to winterize a machine than a man. In the Yukon where a single gust can chill an unprotected nerann into a stuoor. the word goes double. Arctic clothing is the lesser part of equipment carried by hand- pickea military rescue units. When any Arctic wind is up and tiny snow pellets are whizzing like bullets, a man's best ally is his own mind. Moisture is the worst enemy. One must be on guard constant ly to avoid anything wet. A damp mukluk (Eskimo boot) can cripple a man and bring him down in the snow to die. Over exertion, or even a mild panic can cause sweat that freezes between the fibers of. wool un derclothing and slowly cnius man into unconsciousness. Our election days are fixed by law and the constitution. -British elections usually are usually timed by a combina tion of law, constitutional tra dition, and the convenience of the party in power. The socialists who control the labor government in power here could have called this election much sooner or somewhat later. The law and constitutional tra dition require that the party in power shall call a parliamen tary election at intervals not greater than five years. Parlianment which finally was adjourned last week had been in office four years, six months and two days. But in times of national crisis, the five-year rule doesn't hold. This month's elec tion will be only the second since 1935. The conservatives won in 1935 and formed what was called a national government with repre sentatives of some minor sup porting parties in minor posi tions. When Winston Churchill became prime minister in 1940, he formed a coalition which the other two major parties, labor and liberal, joined. It continued, with many changes at the top, to govern Britain throughout the war. Later, a caretaker cabinet served until the July 1945 elec tion. Churchill's No. 2 man in the coalition was Clement R. Attlee, a socialist, who has been prime minister since the last election. One of those two men al most certainly will be prime minister after this month's election. Regardless of the outcome, Prime Minister Attlee will go to King George VI in Buckingham Palace, when the results are known, to present his resigna tion. At that meeting, the King will ask Attlee to form a new government if labor has won an other parliamentary majority, If not, the King will merely ac cept the resignation and call the leader of the winning party, in this case Churchill, to form a Try cuticura FOR ITCHING SKIN Set bow pronnXrr Caeterr Sow and Ointment brtos relief to dry. Itching akin. Cotkarl Used br maw doclora. none. BT wi"-" CettkOoopndfcntme" at jma tkaallat odar. CUTICURA government. The prime minister then chooses his cabinet members on ability and to bind party cliques and factions together just as they do at home. Whoever may win control, the new parliament has been sum moned by the King to meet March 1. There are lots of "splinter parties" here. On the Feb. 23 ballot, there will be as many as 30 parties with candi dates in one or more consti tuencies. Most of them are obscure and Insignificant. But the British have an elec tion system which gives all of them a fair chance. New York City's Smartest Horse Dies of Old Age New York. Feb. 13 W) The old boy that has marched at the head of New York (Jitys pa rades ever since tne iau s is dead. He was a bay gelding namea Steady." smartest horse that ever pran ced up Broadway, said police nstiector James P. Meenan alter the horse died of old age yester day. "Steady" led many a parade in which President Roosevlt and later, President Truman, rode. He headed the march when Gen. Eisenhower, the wartime allied commander, was welcomed home from Europe. He'd keep time to any Kina of music," said Meehan. Manegre Again Head Rodeo Association St Paul For the twelfth con secutive time, Ray Manegre, St. Paul implement dealer and hop rancher, has been elected presi dent of the St. Paul rodeo association. Named to serve with him are Ray Kerr, Salem, vice president, and Pete Kirk, St. Paul, secre-tarv-treasurer. Other associa tion board members namea at the group's annual election are Lester Kirk. Carl Smith and John Smith, all of St Paul, for three-vear terms. Mr. and Mrs. Lester J. rune, Mr. and Mrs. Willie Richardson of St. Paul were co-chairmen for the dinner preceding the an nual stockholders' meeting at the city hall. In spite of in clement weather, around 80 per sons from Salem and Portland and other Willamette valley communities attended. A num ber of new stockholders were special guests. Auxiliary Will Meet Willamina The Firemen's auxiliary will meet Tuesday at the fire hall. Luzelle Benefiel and Meredith Webb will be in charge of entertainment and Jes sie King and Blanche Yoast will I have charge of refreshments. Bergman-Rossellini Romance Branded 'Disgraceful' by Paper Boston, Feb. 13 W.R) The Pilot, official organ of the Boston Catholic archdiocese, called the romance of Ingrid Bergman and Roberto Rossellini a "disgraceful union" today and said "scuttle butt has brought the name of the church into this indecent situation." In an editorial headed "Un holy Doings in a Holy Year," the Pilot said: "Nothing is more beautiful than a new baby . . . "Last week, however, there was a birth in Rome not quite so bright with promise, not quite so pleasing to talk about. While thousands of pious people milled about the Eternal City with the glow of holy pilgrim age in their eyes, a simpering Swedish actress and an Italian director became the parents of a little boy. And the whole world . . . is informed of the progress of illicit love." The editorial said "it is horri fying to reflect how the heinous ness of the sin is augmented by the degree of notoriety." "Scuttlebutt has brought the name of the church into this in decent situation," it said. "We are informed by 'reliable sour ces'coffee house gossip in Rome, (1) That the woman is planning to become a Catholic; (2) That the man is to seek an ecclesiastical annulment of his previous nuptial ties; (3) That the baby is to be baptized a Ca tholic. "This presents, to those who mind the church's business more assiduously than she does her self, a triple query. To the first point we may briefly reply that Christ died for all and his mer cy endureth forever; that the precedent of the repentant Mag dalene will be honored for all WHY SUFFER ANY LONGER When othsrj fall, um our Chine re mediw. Araixlnc aucceu for 5000 yean In China. No matter with what ail ments you are affllstcd, dlaorderi, sinusitis, heart, hints, llvrt kidneys, gas. constipation, ulcers, diabetes, rheumatism, gall and bladder, ftver, skin, female complaint. CHARLIE CHAN Chinese man co. Offlet Start t to i, Taat. aai Sal. taly tS4 N. Commercial Phone S1S30 SALEM, GSt. time. To the second it can be said that ecclesiastical courts, absorbed only in the integrity of the sacrament of marriage, may review an alleged non-marriage without respect to persons. To the third we say that we devout ly hope so, but remind our in quirers that no child can be bap tized in the church unless there is reasonable expectation that he will be reared conscious of the grave obligations involved. Naturally decent people will not take much notice of the film, good or bad, which was the occasion of this disgraceful union." Why Be Curious? Just Order More! Quincy, 111., Feb. 13 VP) When Mrs. R. H. Niggemeyer opened a can of sauerkraut for supper, she found some cabbage of an unexpected va riety. She found a tight green roll Inside of the can. It turned out to be four II bills. Mrs. Niggemeyer has writ ten to the canning company about It She isn't mad. Just curious. Youngsters like chopped salt ed peanuts added to raisin-oat meal cookies. UrTI'iy Jljl'1"11'!1.1 I Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Monday, February 13, 195015 Standard clothing for "oper ation sweetbriar" combat teams includes a pair of mukluks to protect the feet, a fur and fiber glass lined parka, heavy mitts and fur-lined pants. Underneath are one, two or three sets of woolen "longies." In extreme cold, breathing is done through the four-inch fur of a wolverine or wolf-skin lined-parka. Students at the army's survival school in Nome, Alas ka, are told that there are no medical records of anyone dying from having lungs seared by extreme cold. However, 60 be low zero temperature can cause the sinus and teeth of an uncli matized person to ache severely, No one must carry too much weight. No one is permitted to run. A steady, almost unhurried pace that keeps body temper ature in balance with protec tion afforded by clothing is the only way to move cross country and stay alive. If there are injured to be carried, they must be bundled into bulky down-tuffed sleeping bags and dragged on "ahkios," a Finnish sled, light and strong, which has been adopted by Ame rican and Canadian mountain- rescue units. Next to moisture, wind is the worst enemy. A stand a r d, demonstration used by the U.S. army at its Arc tic indoctrination camps is to clamp a piece of close-woven ar my twill over an empty tin can, tie the can on a pole and face it into the wind. After a few hours a cupful of almost micro scopic snow pellets will be found inside. To survive, man must know when it's time to get out of the wind. But more important he must know how to get out of the wind. Weather-tight cabins are few and far between in the Yukon, and hastily thrown-up lean-tos of branches offer only a place to freeze to death. Insulation is the secret. The insulation is snow snow that can kill a man just sits on It in the wind, and al lows his body to absorb the chill. Contrary to popular belief, a hut built of snow blocks is not the best way to take advantage of the insulating quality of snow. The igloo is used by the Eski mo, but it would take an un trained man half a day to put one up. Soldiers and airmen are now trained to dig a slit trench in the snow, and then tunnel rooms into the sides. Once inside, a man can't just roll up in a ball and fall asleep. Every few hours it is necessary to scrape off the layer of ice on the ceiling which forms from his own breath. If the ice is allowed to accumulate, the snow no longer holds out the cold and turns the shelter into a death trap. Marathon Revival Meeting Standing room is all that re mains in Pierce Memorial chapel during a 39-hour marathon revival meeting at Wheaton college in Wheaton, 111. Some 1500 students and faculty members prayed and made public confessions during the meeting. The spontaneous demonstra tion of faith in God began during a regular weekly meeting and was called to an end by college president V. Raymond Edman to avoid "notoriety." (Acme Telephoto) Astronomer Answers Questions About Stars By J. HUGH PRUETT Astronomer, Extension Division, Oregon Higher Education Bystem A few recently-received questions are answered here, 1. "Do the planets at times actually stand still on their orbits?" The correspondent had read somewhere that on February 12 Mars would be stationary, and on February 19 Venus would suffer the same fate. In matters astronomical we have to distinguish between seeming and actual occurren ces. According to all the Known laws of mechanics if a planet should sometime tire of its ceaseless encirclement of Old Sol, there world be no outward centrifugal force to balance the gravitational force inward, and it would at once fly into the blazing inferno of the sun. But thre would have to be some mighty force in the first place to stop the planet in its revolu tion, for motion like rest re quires an outside force to change it. The "standing still" refers simply to a planet's seeming movement among the fixed stars. Its continuous actual east ward motion around the sun and the relative positions assumed by earth, planet and sun, causes the planet to seem to us to be changing its position among the distant stars. For a few months it may seem to be getting far ther eastward. Later, it appears to go westward. And at the time of change it is apparently sta tionery for a short time. 2. "What makes a bright star dance about violently at times? I cannot get my friends to watch long enough to see it." Several times I have received such inquiries. Atmospheric conditions at times make bril liant stars near the horizon twinkle energetically, seem to flash various colors and change brightness rapidly. It seems cer tain, however, that a very un usual phenomenon sometimes described when only one per son out of a group sees it is due simply to defects in eye sight. 3. "Are there actually stars Region 7 Will Hear Sammons E. C. Sammons, president of the U. S. National Bank, will speak on "The Welfare State' at a meeting of Region 7 of the Oregon Farm Bureau Federa tion, February 18, in Oregon City. Regional Director Glen Ritchie of Forest Grove said that the region includes Washington, Multnomah and Clackamas county farm bureaus. j County Agent J. J. Inskeep will open the program which will include reports from the various Farm Bureau commodity departments. Department chairmen are: John Gale of Canby. dairy; Ed Carothers of Hillsboro. fruit and vegetable; Walter Hardy of Mo- lalla, livestock; Fred Cockell of Milwaukie, poultry; Wesley Bntchelder of Hillsboro, field crops. A forum on reapportionment of the Oregon legislature will feature speakers 'eoresentine the Newberger plan and the "balanced representation" olan. The regional meeting is scheduled to begin at 9:30 a.m. at the parish hall of the St. Paul Episcopal church in Oregon City. Kitcnie invited all interested rural people to participate In this important agricultural meeting. DON'T Throw Your Wotch Away! We Fix Them When Others Can'tl Expert Diamond Setting and Jewelry Mfg. at Moderate Prices! Samdahl Entering Home Silverton Ole Samdahl, 88, entered the Lutheran Sunset home at Eugene during the week. Mrs. Samdahl recently died fol lowing a fall at the family home on Broadway street, when she sustained a fractured hip. INCOME TAX Returns Prepared LEON A. FISCUS 295 Fine St. Dial 35283 JF WANT CLEANER HEAT? Let u show you how your home can hare filtered, m bsamidtfied heat with a Detco-Hest I Gas-Bred Cooditiooatr. I Salem Heating & Sheet I l Metal Co. 1085 Broadway Dial 1-8555 11 Authorized f tfa-, fttprtxntatht Saaaaa DEL-AN creates hair styles for you that are ori ginal and chic. We will be open evenings by appointment. Dial 3-9822 WHERE Photographic Equipment Is Not a Sideline Films Printed and Developed In Our Own Laboratory PiiCWp 469 STATE ST. that are double; two stars rela tively closer together that re volve around each other?" Thousands of them. A small astronomical telescope will re veal multitudes of such stars, huge suns at enormous distan ces from us. One of the finest is Mizar, the middle star in the handle of the familiar Big Dip per. Through a telescope, the tiny star which is seen (with out optical aid) very close to Mizar is widely separated from it, and the bright star which seems to be one is broken into two bright stars quite close to gether. 4. "At the arctic circle in northern Alaska, what are the phenomena of the midnight sun June 22 and the noon sun Dec. 22?" Around the time of the long est days, the sun for a few days never sets, but skims eastward along the northern sky line and at midnight is on the north point of the horizon. About De cember, the sun almost fails to rise at the arctic circle, but sim ply peers above the south part of the horizon for a short time at noon. You'll agree ... It's "Know-How" That Counts! when your typewriter or add ing machine acts up , . . that's when Capitol Office Equipment's "know - how" experts are on the Job putting that machine back into top condition in jig time! And at a low, low cost, tool Why not call Capi tol Office Equipment today . . . That phone number it . . 3-5584 Sales - Service - Rentals Capitol Office Equipment Co. 531 Court FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP AUTO TRUCK FIRE See us when you get your billing and before you authorize renewal of your current Protection. We welcome the opportunity to show you a savings in your premiums. BILL OSKO 466 Court St. Phone 3-5661 BILL OSKO Dist. Mgr. Pew people realize that In 1850 Lincoln was ottered the governorship of the vast Oregon Territory. "...President Taylor replaced him Joseph Lane at Governor, in 1830, after offering the office to Abraham Lincoln who declined." Fuller, Geo. W, A History c Ibt Pacific Sorlbwttl, (an of theeopleL In commemoration of the birthday of Abraham Lincoln whd dedicated his life to the principle that all men should live, free and equal, this bank will observe Monday, February 13, at a legal holiday in all of Its offices. Lincoln served his country well and as a final measure of that devotion gave his life. Now... full century after he was offered the governorship of the Oregon Territory... a free America is still moving westward. Here in the great state he would have served so well, The United States National Bank is dedicated to the task of serving the financial needs of Oregonianj. Popularly known at "an Oregon bank serving Oregon," The United States National Bank stands ready to assist big business and small... individuals and organizations ... city sec tions and rural areas alike. Whatever your banking need, you will find a warm welcome, efficient, courteous service and complete banking facilities at The United States National Bank. IADD & BUSH-SALEM BRANCH Stat atiti Commrlol 9. W. IYII VIM ffM. IOY NILSON...A.U. Vlt. Pom. L. C. SMITH., ..Ant. Vlca Pr. .MCOt FUHflER.,..Aiit. Coihlaf IIO O. PAOI Ant. Caihl t. P. IOSTRACK Am), Mf LAWMNCI R. IMSHIR.Am,. Mgr. ORVAl C. KINNir4..Anl. Mr WAIT 1 1 McCUNE. . . .Aiil. Mr" IAWMNCI MORGAN . A. N WEST SALIM BRANCH 1117 rdicwatcr Knot REX GIBSON, Manager LEGAL HOLIDAY MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13