12 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Thursday, March 9, 1950 FT I, I lii T p3 mimml .Tin -itnYT , ' Canned Boys Getting in was easy, but it took San Jose, Calif., firemen armed with a hacksaw and bolt cutter to free little Leo Sanchez, 6, from the garbage can he thought such a fine place to hide during a hide-and-seek game. Firemen Jim Anderson (left) and Ralph Santoro cut Leo free. (AP Wirephoto.) Giant Keeps Sub-Freezing Vigil To Get His Name First on Ballot By ROBERT ZIMMERMAN Santa Fe, N. M., March 9 (U.R) Ingram Pickett got up this morning, stretched his seven-foot frame, and gave this statement to newsmen between yawns: "I'm not going to be frozen out." Then he got back in his easy chair on the steps of the state capitol, nestled down in nls quilt and old army blanket, and said: "I'm , not going to budge, either." And so the towering member of the New Mexico corporation commission ended the first 24 hours of his sub-freezing vigil just outside the door of the sec retary of state's office. ' Pickett wants to make sure he Is the first to register as a candi date for governor. If he is the first, he may get the choice spot on the ballot, at the top of the list of candidates. He has four weeks to wait, and there's a possibility no"' that his frosty encampment will be useless. Secretary of State Alicia Rom ero, beseiged by other candidates tvho also want the favorable posi tion on the ballot, said she might list candidates alphabeti cally instead of "first-come-lirst-scrved" as she has In the fast. However, she said she would announce her Etand definitely at a later date. Her statement was enough to discourage three other candidates who spent the day outside her door They went home, but Pickett stayed on. "I'm not going to be squeezed out," he declared. But he fudged just a trifle during the night, as the mercury dipped down toward the 20 degree mark. He gave up his battered arm chair for a few hour? to his 24-year-old son, Ingram Pickett, Jr., while he went home to get some hot coffee and a brief nap In his own bed. He was back at his post at 6 a. m. Yesterday, the younger Pick ett and friends relieved him briefly so he could go home and get a bite to eat. The 52-ycar-old Pickett, who used to be an actor in the silent movies, was elected to the cor poration commission two years ago in a political upset. Since his election, he has followed through on his attempts at re form to give New Mexico a gov ernment "serving the people." He has taken pot-shots at high slate officials, from the governor on down, and he recently agitat ed for a grand jury to investi gate affairs at the capitol. The same jury only Monday made a report that scolded Pickett and other members of the corpora tion commission for "juvenile conduct." "I hadn't planned to run for governor until 1958," Pickett said yesterday, when he took up his stand on the capitol steps. "But the way things have gone the past few days I haven't any choice." America produces approxi mately 1,208.000,000 pounds of cheese a year. Outboard Motors Don't Scare Fishf Scientific Tests Show By RENNIE TAYLOR San Francisco, March 9 W) Outboard motors don't scare the fish, says Dr. Karl F. Lagler, University of Michigan zoologist. Dr. Lagler has the results of a scientific experiment to back him up. University of Michigan researchers assigned three mento fish in a natural lake, six hours a day for fifl days, Dr. Legler told the North American wild life conference yesterday. Every other day an outboard motor boat swished past each fisherman twice every half hour. On the alternate days the boat was withheld. On these "quiet days the catch by the three men averaged only one more fish every ten hours of fishing than the average catch when the boat was used. This liny difference is sc small it is meaningless, Dr. Lag ler said. That much variation could have occurred if all the days were "quiet." Also, the outboard did not in terfere with fish reproduction QUICK TREAT FOR LENT.' Borden's cottage chehse FRUIT SALAD ! LUSCIOUS FRUITS mixed with enemy BOROBNS COTTAGE CHE6SE!, Juicy bits of peon, ptachti, thtrtltt, pineapple mixed with prii winning Bordtn'i Cottage Chtti. Read to gobbtt up at quick at you can imack your lips. Atk for Borden'. Cottage Cheeie Fruit Solod of you p,roc ri now! r, wi.tv. o CRIAMID kJI COTTAGE CHEESE W FRUIT SALAD Alaska and Hawaii Have Moved One Step Nearer Statehood By JAMES MARLOW Washington, March 9 W) Alaska and Hawaii have moved a step nearer statehood. That doesn't mean they'll get it, at least this year. In a week's time the house has okayed statehood for both of them. Unless the senate also approves, and It may not, the 5.he house action means nothing. CANADA PUZZLED: Ncxt year there'll be a new wHgicaa. nuu, in a new con gress, what either house did in previous congress doesn't count. In that case, the two territor ies will have to start from scratch again. Both have been seeking statehood a long time. Here's the story on both. The U.S. bought Alaska from Russia in 1867 for $7,200,000. It wasn't allowed to become a ter ritory until 1912. A territory can elect its own legislature but the president ap points the governor. Alaska and Hawaii are each allowed one delegate in congress. But he can t vote, even when congress is passing laws affect ing his territory. The people in a territory pay all the federal taxes but, al though they're U.S. citizens, they can't vote in a national election. The U.S. annexed Hawaii, which was then a republic, in 1898 and made it a territory in 1900. Alaska, twice the size of Texas with its 585,000 square miles, has a population of about 100,000 people, which is more than many of the present states had when they were admitted to the union. Hawaii, made up of seven Is lands with an area of about 6,400 square miles, has a population of 540,000, of which 86 per cent are U.S. citizens. Hawaii's principal Industries are sugar, pineapples, cattle, dairy products, truck crops, fish, coffee. Alaska's chief industries are furs, lumber, mining, fishing. The people In both territories have voted In favor of statehood. Congressional committees have Investigated the problem. The democratic and republican par ties have promised statehood for both territories in their party platforms. The President ap proves. Real pressure to get the Job done began in the middle 1930's. First real action came in 1947. In that year the house voted to let Hawaii come in. The senate has never voted. So nothing happened. This year the house now has voted for Hawaii again and, for the first time, for Alaska, too. The people in both territories argue along similar lines: They've more than served their apprenticeship as territories. They're both mature in the ex perience of running their' ter ritorial affairs, but, nevertheless, congress really runs them, and makes laws for them. Yet, the people In those territories have no voice In shaping those laws. Although the residents of the territories have to pay federal taxes, they don't receive the full benefit from federal laws that states get. In short, both say they no longer want to be con sidered colonies. In addition, they argue that statehood would strengthen this country s hand in the Pacific. Hawaii is 2,000 miles out in the Pacific from California. Alas ka is separated from Russia by only 56 miles of water. Fowl cholera killed more than 38,000 ducks wintering in the Texas Panhandle in 1947-'48. Mystery Cycle Of Abundance By RENNIE TAYLOR (Ajjoclitted Preu Science Reoortcrl San Francisco, March 9 W) Canada has a mysterious 10- year cycle of abundance among many species of birds and ani mals which may be due to some unexplained force in the atmos phere, William Rowan, of the University of Alberta, reported today. About every ten years the number of snowshoe hares, grouse and many other kinds of birds and animals reaches a peak. Then it declines slowly for a few years, finally begins to rise and reaches another crest in about a decade from the last previous top. The process has retained this pace for 200 years. Rowan said in a paper for delivery before the North America Wild Life conference. There is as yet no acceptable explanation for this "most curi ous wildlife enigma on the continent." Rowan said factual informa tion soon to be published sug gests the cycle must hinge on some similar 10-year cycle of force "in the atmosphere or up per atmosphere." The Dominion is on the verge of another peak of abundance. Further attempts to find an ex planation for the phenomenon will be made. The declining phase of the cycle probably will begin in about 1952, Rowan said. School Consolidation Plan Before Hubbard Hubbard A vote on the pro posed consolidation of the Hub bard and White school districts has been set for Monday, March 13, by the county district bound ary board. The election will be held at both the Hubbard and WMte school buildings. Peti tions seeking the consolidation have been filed by both districts. The White area has approxi mately 30 school-age children, In two ponds near Wolf Lake, Mich., the outboard boating club of America and the Michi gan conservation department made a test. The ponds were drained, cleared of fish, refilled and planted with young bluegill and large-mouth black bass. On one of the ponds an out board motor boat spent two or three hours daily during the summer stirring up the water. Each pond produced between 72,000 and 73,000 bluegill per acre. The number of bass covered from the motor-stirred pond was slightly higher than from the other pond. A Time Saver S- l SAl SODA DOES CLEANING QUICKER SAVES SOAP SAVES WORK SAVES TIME 'L'AiglonV Cradle Visitors to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, examine a silver-gilt cradle presented by Paris to Napoleon in 1811 for his son, "L'Aiglon." Cradle Is part of an exhibit of art treasures from Vienna. West Coast Opium Ring Hit in Raid Los Angeles, March 9 (U.R) Three men were arrested and $50,000 worth of opium seized as officers struck today at what they termed a large narcotic supply ring on the west coast. Foster Rowland, 23, El Paso, Tex., Abraham Cavazos, 31, proprietor of the Two-by-Four club in Juarez, Mex., and Leo nardo Vasquez, 28, jewelry store owner of Juarez, were booked on suspicion of violat ing the state narcotics act. William J. Craig, .chief of the federal narcotics bureau here, said Rowlan was the carrier of the narcotics. Nineteen cans of opium were found in his hotel room. Rowlan came to Los Angeles from El Paso carrying the drug for the two dealers, Vacazos and Vasquez, Craig said. The latter two walked into a police trap when they stopped at Rowlan's hotel room to pick up the nar cotics, officers said. Craig claimed Cavazos and Vesquez were the "chief sup pliers" of opium on the west coast, and the two operated In Los Angeles and San Francisco. The opium was grown and pre pared in Chihuahua, Mex. International Playgirl Weds Chicago,- March 9 W) Vir ginia Hill, identified by Chi cago newspapers as the interna tional playgirl, remained in the background last mgnt wncn re porters sought interviews from her and her new husband. Hermann Johann (Hans) Hauser, a ski instructor at Sun Valley, Ida., and Aspen Colo., met the reporters and photo graphers at the Ambassador East hotel where the couple has been for a week. The Sun-Times and Herald-American said they were found at the hotel yesterday. i "Virginia has gone mopping," rlBUScr IU1U ICJJU1SWO MB, lllBMt "For dresses, I think." Hauser identified his brids as from Beverly Hills, Calli, But he did not say she was the Vir ginia Hill who was a friend of Benjamin (Bugsy) Slegel, who was slain in Miss Hill's Beverly Hills home in 1947. Reporters asked Hauser If he knew his wife was "internation ally famous," and he replied: "Oh, yes, lots of publicity she has had." We met at Sun Valley eight weeks ago," the Sun-Times quot ed Hauser. "I was her ski In structor." Yaks and ponies are the chief means of transportation over the Himalayas from India to China. 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