18 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Friday, March 3, 1950 4 T 0 P -a Ji' ( ""' " ' v , A-Bomb Spy Gets 14 Tears Crowd stands outside Old ' Bailey criminal court in London where Dr. Klaus Fuchs, 'Britain's third-ranking atomic scientist, pleaded guilty to be- traying Anglo-American A-bomb secrets to Russia and was f sentenced to 14 years in prison. The trial lasted only 90 min . utes. (Acme Radio-Telephoto) Great Wire Basket Mystery Has N.Y. Cops Red-Faced p, ; By ED CREAGH ' New York, March 3 VP) The great wire basket mystery has New York police running around in circles. - Somebody is stealing wire trash baskets from the streets. Hundreds, jn fact 316 in mid-Manhattan in the past five weeks, or about 10 a day. Who? How? Why? The police, red-faced and hot under the collar, say it's got them beat. i "No baskets have been recov ered to date," admits police de partment secretary Frank Doyle. The city, in a burst of tidiness, put out 4,800 shiny new baskets last Jan. 23. They're big 34 inches high. They're heavy 45 pounds. They stand on crowded streets. The cops watch them as If they were filled with emeralds. ; Still they disappear. ". "I ask myself who would be Wanting baskets," says officer Wilfred O'Mahoney, "and I tell myself hah! Apartment house uperintendents. , "So I scout around behind partment houses and what do I find? Cats. ' Laundry. Milk bottles. And baskets! But legal, boughten-and-paid-for baskets. Not our baskets.' Not hide nor hair of them." You can get plenty of tips from sidewalk sherlocks: Out-of-towners take 'em. Use 'em to burn leaves." But who burns leaves in Feb ruary or March? "Bird fanciers are doing it. The baskets would make wonderful parrot cages." Hmmm. Three hundred six teen larcenous parrot-keepers in five weeks? Glatts Are Home Woodburn Mr. and Mrs. Ray Glatt have returned to their home here after an absence of almost a month during which Glatt underwent surgery in a Portland hospital, February 3. They remained in Portland dur ing His convalescence. POLITICAL POWERHOUSE BUILDING Oregon Demos Reported Tied To Disciplined National Units Two men President Truman and "Bill" Boyle, chairman of the democratic national committee are today building an across-the-country "political powerhouse" in order to elect democrats this fall and to "cement the foundations of the general welfare state," Collier's reports this week- Writing in the national week-.' lv. Lester Velie, Collier's as sociate editor, says that what the late President Roosevelt accom plished with personality the President and Chairman Boyle seek to do with straight party organization politics. "Already in Wisconsin, Ore gon, Minnesota, Michigan even in Maine Boyle has erected the first state-wide county-by-county Democratic organization in the history of these states," Ve- lie's survey shows. "Across the country there is being built the most formid able political machine in two party history. When Repub licans square off against Dem ocrats in this year's crucial elections, G.O.F, candidates will find they're not only up against the persuasive issues raised by the party in power; they'll be up against efficient, disciplined political organiza tions as well.." Collier's found that doorbell-to-doorbell organization, Boyle style, is transforming the politi cal face of the Midwest and the West. Idaho, the Dakotas and Michi gan, traditionally Republican, blossomed out with tight, state wide Democratic organizations. In Wisconsin, national com mittee money primed the or ganizing pump, and federal pa tronage helped. Paid organizers moved into Republican strong holds, found local people to take jobs as Democratic county lead ers, rented clubhouses, helped organize ward and precinct com mittees. And Boyle, ex-precinct cap tain in the Pendergast machine of Kansas City and now a $30,-000-a-year captain of the Demo crats' voting fortunes, relies on youth to lead the way. In Wisconsin, as well as in Oregon, Boyle has given the pa tronage nod to new young faces. At a recent Democrat conclave at Green Bay, Wis., more than half the delegates were under 40. In Minnesota, the state Dem ocratic bosses are now 39-year- old Hubert H. Humphrey, Jr., Fair Deal senator, and Orville Freeman, 34. To those who cry "Pender- gastism," quotes Boyle as say ing: "There are good and bad bosses, but we must have party leaders and party organizations to make our two party democ racy work. Cities are too big for town meetings, and good party or ganizations take their place to give good government and good candidates. "A man who starts out in precinct politics, who has pick ed up a few votes while helping his wife bring the groceries home from the corner store, knows his people what they want. "There are 10,000 political machines in this country. They are modern instruments for run cities and the nation." With this faith, plus national committee cash and federal pa tronage, Velie found, Bill Boyle is moving political mountains. Reds Drop Embassy From Mailing List Moscow, March 3 W) The United States embassy disclosed today it has been dropped from the mailing list of some 40 So viet publications it used to re ceive. An embassy spokesman said the magazines included decrees and official orders, but otherwise were technical in nature. The spokesman said the em bassy received about the same selection of newspapers it always did. They include 14 papers from outside Moscow. Center Will Elect Lincoln Election of officers will be held at the annual meet ing of Lincoln Community Cen ter association, to be held at the Lincoln school house Monday night at 8 o'clock. Residents of the four districts of Lincoln, Spring Valley, Zena and Brush College are urged to attend by the president, R. F. Yungen. 'Mystery Witness' John L. Sherman of California speaks from the witness chair before the house unAmerican activi ties committee in Washington, as he was revealed to be the "mystery witness" called by the probing group. He will tell of Hiss - Chambers relations. (AP Wirephoto) School Enrollment Shrinkage Slight Grand Island The seventh and eighth grades of Unionvale and Grand Island joint enroll ment has been regularly 23 and Monday the first day school was held at the Unionvale church social room. There were 20 pres ent and only two of the absen tees were of Grand Island. Mrs Glen McFarlane is the teacher and principal. Regular attendance in the fifth and sixth grades has been 19 and . there were 14 present. Mrs. H. A. Murphy is the teach er. Lethal Gas Chamber for Insects Given Official Test Four executions in a lethal gas cnamoer in Polk county oc curred with indifference upon the part of spectators. The Oregon penitentiary has not moved its death equipment across the river but a thorough test was given new equipment at a Dallas furniture company fumigating room. Executed were four tiny but hard-to-kill carpet beetles, plac- L,, . r uiri xoui iroops Will Honor Founder Liberty The Liberty Girl Scout troop 51 held a regular meeting at the home of their ed in a small box with a single pinpoint hole. Representatives of the state board of health were the executioners and tested the efficiency of the new room to be used in fumigating mattress es, bedding, fur coats ana simi lar objects. The four "guinea pigs," in their death chamber, had been placed in the center of a mat tress. The experiment was a success. Conducting the tests were Allen A. French, chief of the furniture and bedding inspec tion service and Glen Howe fumigating technician, both of the state board. Howe says the room operates the same as the death house at the state penitentiary with the exception that a pellet rolls down a tube into an acid filled vessel at the prison while discs containing cyanide are used in the fumigating room. Oregon law requires all second hand merchandise which carries a concealed filling and is used for sleeping, sitting or reclining purposes to be fumigated before being sold. This includes daven ports, mattresses, blankets and quilts, upholstered baby car riages, pillows,, box springs and upholstered hammocks to name the large clasifications. The vari ous section fill a 20-page pam phlet. Regulations and standards relating to bedding and furniture are separate another booklet of 40 pages. The fumigation law has been on the books since 1920 but until August 16, 1949, sulphur and formaldehyde could be used. Cyanide is now required leader, Mrs. Robert Morrow, oa Boxwood lane. The girls voted to send Yvonne Pool as a delegate to a meeting to discuss the party in honor of Juliet Lowe, founder of the Girl Scouts, to be held on March 11. The girls selected material for dirndl skirts as the last project in their sewing assign ment. Margo Hudkins and Shirley Hudson became members of the troop, and Margo Hudkins gave the history of the scouts. Mar go Hudkins was in charge of the entertainment and Patty McMillen served the refreshments. INVISIBLE SWEATER Mending! Runs! Hose Mending . DOWNSTAIRS Pulls! Miller's Holes! The finest Typewriter Ribbons for Bxecutive-Quality Correspondence No ribbon con beet the beouliful, nhorp typing tmpresiloni mod through "Silk Gauze" silk, which Immediately betoken "front office" authority, dignity and conviction. The super itrong silk and quality Inking of Silk Gauze Ribboni will give yoe em entirely new concept ! Hon of tuporb typing, OKtro-long wear, typewriter ribbon economy! 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