Capital Adjournal An Independent Newspoper Established 1888 J GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher t Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che- meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want- Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. J Full Leased Wir Service of the Associated Press and The United Press. The Associated Press is exclusively t entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and also t news published therein. I SUBSCRIPTION RATES: .'By Carrier: Weekly, 25c; Monthly. $1.00; One Year, $12.00. By 'Mall In Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos., $4.00; One Tear, $8.00. "U. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos., $6.00; Year, $12. BY H. T. WEBSTER WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND The Thrill That Comes Once in a Lifetime U. S. Military Secrets May Be iBWl Withheld from British Radicals By DREW PEARSON Washington Ambassador Lew Douglas made a special visit to the Pentagon this week to discuss with Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson the idea of withholding U. S. military secrets from new British Minister of Defense Emmanuel Shinwell and from British War Minister John Strachey. ly, Tokyo Rose and James Monti. Bureaucrats get a lot of kick ing around on Capitol Hill and in the newspapers. But Campbell is one of the so-called bureau crats who not only did a superb job, but played an important role in the destinies of the nation. BY CARL ANDERSON H e '4 Salsm, Oregon, Saturday, March 11, 1950 "Mortality from Diseases The annual report to policy holders of the Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York, presents the following table showing the causes of death among its 10,343 policy hold ers who died in 1949: Diseases of heart and circulatory system, 56.8 percent. Can cer, 15.8 percent. Accidents, 4.5 percent. Diseases of kidneys, 4.3 percent. Influenza and pneumonia, 2 percent. Suicide, 1.7 percent. Tuberculosis, 1.3 percent. All other causes, 13.6 per " cent. Total 100 percent. The cause of death percentages are probably good for all large insurance companies and correspond to those gath ered by the Public Health Service at Washington. The J latest published statistics are those for 1947 compiled in - the World Almanac, listing deaths for selected causes and rates per 100,000 estimated population as follows : Diseases of the heart, 400,000, rate 321.2; cancer, 189,811, rale 132.4; accidents, 99,570, rate 69.4; pneumonia nad influenza, 61,836, rate 43.1; diabetes, 57,515, rate 26.2; nephrites, 80,288, rate 56.0; suicide, 16,538, rate 11.5; tuberculosis, 48,064, rate -33.5. The American Heart association states that more than w 625,000 Americans die annually from 21 distinct types of heart disease. The death rate heads mortality from any j cause, 3 times as high as in cancer, 6 times as high as accidents, 10 times as high as pneumonia, and 13 times as ;i high as tuberculosis. The Institute for Cancer Research states that between $' 180,000 and 200,000 deaths occur annually from it. In 1949 an estimated 278,164 persons were being treated for v cancer for the first time and 879,550 others with a history of cancer were living in all stages from cure to imminent death, while 229,765 had received treatment for five or ?. more years. The mounting death rate in 35 years has risen nearly 300 percent for a population increase of 50 percent, due to the fact that cancer is principally a disease of middle or old ' age. Gratifying progress has been made the past five years in it3 treatment. Poliomyelitis recorded about 40,000 cases in 1949, striking the nation for the fourth time with epidemic fury, compared to : the 1948 maximum of 28,000. Progress is reported in its treat - ment, requiring Individual care, the most expensive known, ex- hausting the $25 million funds of the March of Dimes raised to i combat it. Some 620 respirators, 495 hot pack machines, 320 cribs and i mattresses, and other supplies were shipped to emergency areas. The National Foundation recruited for emergency duty 153 physical therapists, 2427 nurses, 35 resident physicians and a . long list of other specialists. The discovery of a new polio virus marks an important advance in treatment. It's About Time! Secretary of State Acheson's call for "total diplomacy" to curb Russian expanion sounds as if the Truman admin-- istration has finally realized what's going on in the world. The people of the country, from their crossroads posi- tions, have been puzzled and concerned that Washington, ' D.C, had not previously sensed that only by an all-out global effort could the Soviets be stopped without re h sorting to actual use of arms. Those people the average "guys" have been wanting the administration to get wise to what's doing on the world .- front and start offering leadership, instead of waiting and ' waiting with nothing but indecision to mark their actions. "' This "total diplomacy" idea amounts to a mobilization of the nation's people and resources in an attempt to stop Moscow's imperialism without having to go to a shooting ' war. Acheson has admitted that the Soviet rulers in the Kremlin are now at war with the United States and other v western democracies. But that war is still in the "cold ;.- war" stage. ii Acheson's call for complete support was really not neo : essary. He already hnd that support, generally speaking. It was typified by the bi-partisan foreign policy. If that bi-partisan policy was falling apart, it was only because "" the White House had failed to show the leadership that . was expected of it. , When President Truman showed leadership in meeting .; the Russian expansion in Europe, he was being bold, but ,, he was taking the only sensible course open to him to pro tect the nation's interests. The people blinked a few times, but went along with the president. ,r Then when the airlift thwarted Russian attempts to blockade Berlin, the people again went along. But when the president failed to follow his Truman .; Doctrine in Asia, the people became disgruntled. Ameri- cans lost as much face last year in the Orient as they did I in the years preceding World War II. But Truman would " do nothing about it. So when Acheson finally comes through with a call for nationwide support, he is greeted with comment like this: "We've been ready for a long time, but where have vou been?" It is hoped that this belated awakening to the facts of the world by the Truman administration won't be labeled : "Too little too late." " Mistaken Appeasement At the government's request, the sentence of 15 years' o imprisonment of Valentin Gubitchev, the first Soviet citi ' zen convicted of spying in the United States, was suspend ",' ed for his deportation to Russia within two weeks. His .. co-conspirator, Judith Coplon, will have to serve her 15 year term, her second conviction. " Trial Judge Sylvester Ryan flayed both Gubitchev and the 28-year-old Brooklyn girl as betrayers of their trusts. ' He called Gubitchev a "betrayer of all human mankind" a man who came to the United States as an "emissary of peace" and who was accepted as a friend, but violated his ; oath to the UN and "all the peoples of the world." The leniency shown Gubitchev was an act of appease ment of Russia in the hope of similar leniency to Ameri cans behind the iron curtain, held for espionage under . framed convictions and extorted "confessions." The formal " official statement said: "It was believed that suspension of the sentence conditioned on Gubitchev leaving the Unit ' ed States would best serve the public interest." AH Russian nwspapers, however, assert that Gubitchev Is being sent home because of the "collapse of the accusa- tions groundlessly brought against" the Soviet official. " They did not mention the espionage charges for which he t was convicted. Like all of our appeasement efforts, this one will only " intensify the persecution of Americans in the satellite nations and be twisted into anti-American propaganda. Que- wi tm t 3M1. .ttwmro iy HQunr . BIO TRACKS mploym5 cooper STeppws in tus euew MOCCASIh) THACKS Drew Pearion The two Brit ish cabinet members are colorful left-of-center labor party politicians, one of them ac cused of having communist con nect ions, ' but with enthusias tic followings in England. Shin well is a hot headed British Pole, represent ing Ramsay MacDonald's radical mining constituency and thor oughly hated by the British gen eral staff. Once, during a parlimentary debate, when another M.P. de manded of Shinwell, "Why don't you go back to Poland?" Shin well stormed across the chamber and punched him. When Shinwell moved from the ministry of fuel to the war ministry, Winston Churchill said hopefully: "When he was minis ter of fuel, we had no fuel. Now that he is minister of war, per haps we will have no war." Strachey is now under fire THE FIRESIDE PULPIT Don't Pay Too Much Attention To Exceptional Cases in News BY REV. GEORGE H. SWIFT Rector, St. Paul' Episcopal Church There is an old saying that it is not news when a dog bites a man, but it is news when a man bites a dog. We should have this from Lord Beaverbrook's London Graham has just as consistently in mind when we read the parable of the Good Samaritan. In the Evening Standard for "failing supported President Truman as parable of the Good Samaritan, a certain lawyer asked our Lord, to renounce your known com- his colleague, Senator Hoey, has Senator Can't Slap Back Sen. Frank Graham of North Carolina, who has made as great an impression on congress as any newcomer on Capitol Hill, faces a tough re-election battle. Graham, a former president of the University of North Carolina, has turned out to be a fine sena tor, but is a babe-in-the-woods as far as politics is concerned. He doesn't know how to slap backs, raise money or roll logs. Furthermore he gives so much of his money to charity that he has almost no funds with which to run a campaign, and the other day had to borrow from his wife's savings account. So far organized labor, whom he has supported, hasn't lifted a finger to help, nor has there been even a whisper of help from the White House despite the fact that n ry r Anotibon POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER incident which a certain" man was r ob- bed, and left half dead by the road side. Two men ob served the un fortunate man, but went along without render ing aid. These two' men, by the Rer. Georce H. Swill very nature of their profession, would have been expected to care for this sufferer and give him every at tention and assistance. If they had rendered aid, they would munist views." In reply, Strach- opposed him. incident because it had news ey, who was once held up on Graham is opposed by ex value. Only thoughtless and un- Ellis Island as a suspected radi- senator Bob Reynolds the old observing people would look cal, said he was never a com- isolationist, whose daughter in upon the parable as a blanket munist party member and re- herited a fortune from Mrs. Eva condemnation of the priests, and pudiated communist doctrines in yn Walsh McLean of Hope dia a. blanket commendation of the 1940. In his new post he is in mond fame- and by Willis Smith Samaritans. charge of counterespionage. former president of the Ameri ' ' . Thef appointments come on can Bar association, who has the In reading the daily news, we top of the jitters given our joint backing of the big mill-owners, should be careful about drawing chiefs of staff on British security the tobacco interests and the conclusions from isolated cases over Dr- Fuchs, whose tips to bankers It It hpl invert fhat pith. liiv quvicl enauieu me uoatt to set off a bomb five years ahead of American estimates. Romance of African Chieftain Becomes International Issue By DeWITT MacKENZIE (OP) Foreign Affair Analyst) The romance of the young Oxford educated Negro chief of the South African Bamangwatos, who made a white London typist his queen, has suddenly become an imperial issue and put the British government on a most uncomfortable spot. The 27-year-old chief Seretse Khama, ruler over 150,000 sub jects in Bechu- which make the headlines. For, as a rule, they are exceptional cases, or they would not have gained particular attention. A mother told me that she would not send her son to school beyond the grades because she had read Rabbits vs. Education Behind closed doors in the house labor committee, blunt- representative Graham ma! education beyond the lower which would prohibit federal staying neutral in that James J. Hill, the railroad spoken not have been mentioned, for builder, and Thomas A. Edison, Harden of North Carolina was one was a Jewish priest and the the electric wizard, and other arguing the merits of his new other a Levite. So few priests men she mentioned had no for- federal - aid -1 o - education bill, or Levites would have ignored the man that it was startling news when they did ignore him. Just as startling news to the lawyer was the act of the Sa maritan, who later came by and tenderly cared for the wounded Jew, because the Samaritans did out direct religious training. But it would be disastrous to sup- not like the Jews. Christ made pose that therefore we need no the lawyer and the countless religious training for our child number of people who have read ren. Such cases are so rare they this parable since remember the have news value. grades, and she thought they did spending for any school buses, all right. public or parochial. Occasionally we hear of some "When I was a boy in North man of exceptional influence for Carolina I had to walk three good who has become so with- miles to school," Barden recall- er Reynolds or Smith may later withdraw, in order to pool their votes against Senator Graham. Meanwhile no one is running against Senator Hoey, who Is ex pected to become an open Dixie crat after the election. Note Secretary of the Army Gordon Gray, who will replace Graham as president of the Un iversity of North Carolina, is the North Carolina race, but his family is backing Smith. (Copyright 1950) analand, m a r ried Ruth Wil liams, 24, in London some months ago and took her to his clay - hut capi tal as q u e e n. You wouldn't think that was anything tol worry the em pire upon which the sun never sets, but events soon proved any such idea to be fallacious. The great Union of South Af rica, which is a neighbor of Be- DeWitt Mackenzie It Wasn't Fire-Proof Seattle, Wash., March 11 U.R An airplane fuel tank de signed to be bullet-proof, leak-proof and fire-proof was tested yesterday at Boeing field with bursts of bullets from a machine gun. Two fire department crews spent half an hour dousing the resulting blaze. Name Was Reason Enough Pocatcllo, Idaho, March 11 Wi Municpal Judge R. Don Bistline today dismissed an overparking charge against a young woman who told him she inadvertently placed her , coin In the wrong meter. Her name? Fonda Parkin. KRISS-KROSS Rain, Snow and Sunshine . . . Where Else But Here? ByCHRISKOWITZ.Jr. Where could it happen but in Willamette valley, Oregon? For about a half hour Friday morning, right in downtown Salem, rain, snow and sunshine came down all at the same time. Nice weather for a contortionist ... he could have opened up his umbrella, put on his snowshocs and shed his coat simultan eously. ea. ".nowever, it didn t seem very long because I got so I could run the whole three miles. My classmates didn't consider a fellow much good if he couldn't run all the way to school in the morning." "That's nothing," drawled In diana's homespun Andy Jacobs, "Before I could even start for school my father used to send me out to catch a rabbit for break fast. Sometimes I'd have to run as much as five miles before I caught up with that rabbit. "Then, I'd reach down and feel his ribs. If he wasn't fat. I'd let him go and take out after another rabbit." More Tax Fraud Another income-tax evader ex posed in this column was fin ally collared by a federal grand jury last week, when Earl Sher iff, the ex-sheriff of Prince Georges county, Maryland, was indicted. This commentator first expos ed Sheriff on June 26, 1949, for having "received money from the gamblers who do such a lucra tive business right under the nose of the nation's capitol," and for having failed to pay income taxes on it. The Sheriff case illustrated how U. S. attorneys sometime fail tq prosecute after a case is Too Efficient Exterminators Lake Charles, La., March 11 (U.R) A dog fancier blamed the loss of two retrievers on too efficient state health facilities today. Carl Robinson, Fenton, La., breeder of golden retrievers, said two of his pure-breds died after: Eating a rat, That ran out of a warehouse, After eating poison placed there by state rodent extermina tors. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER You Just Can't Know Nothing for Certain Now By HAL BOYLE New York VP) Slip the rumor to me, junior. Did you see a bird flying backward? You say a lion stopped you in the street and wanted to know what subway to take to the Bronx zoo? How's that? You just trapped three men from Mars in the basement and winged 'cm with your atom gun? Do I believe you, son? Well, let me put it to you this way I don't disbe lieve you. I no longer disbe lieve anybody or anything. The k. .. j ujaudieu ii chuanaland, has constantly be fore it the burning issue of seg regation of the white and ne gro races. The case of Chief Seretse Khama and his wnite queen suddenly got entangled in this broader question and 'he young couple were In trouble. The British government In vited Seretse to London recently to discuss his status. The gov ernment decided that it couldn't recognize him as chief because of what was described as ten dencies to disruption which threatened the protectorate. He was told that he couldn't return to his state, wihout permission, until the issue of tribal rule is settled years hence. The chief blew up over that. He said he had been tricked. H i wi'- was in Africa and 'hy were expecting a baby. He de clared in effect that come hell or high water he was going back to his wife and people. He caol ed the queen to sit tight. The scene then shifted to-the mother of parliaments. No less personage than the great Win ston Churchill, leader of the conservative opposition, rose tn commons to question the social ist government's handling of the case. Patrick Gordon-Walker, com monwealth affairs secretary, de nied that the question of Se rctse's marriage entered into tha decision. He said the govern ment decided to withhold rec ognition from the chief until the disappearance of the tendencies to disruption "which threaten , . . .. the unity and well-being" of the As a matter of fact, the rumor protectorate. The secretary de of an interplanetary space ship clared it was irreSponsibie lo having crashed on the North say the chief had been trickedi American continent has been adding that he had offered to floating around Manhattan for have the wife flown back to jiiuiiuis. Accoraing 10 ine ver- T.n-Anr, uHlh ll ..in.i Television may soon feature "G-Slring" programs. No, they aren't going to telecast burles que shows. "G-string" is the sig nal corps name for a new trans age of sent them by the justice depart- smug certainty ment. And on Oct. 26. 1949, this is gone. . Borl, column further revealed that the Wonder has U. S. Attorney Bernard Flynn in niled upon wonder so fast in tacked a housecat belonging to Baltimore had sent the case back our lifetime that few of us have atomic scientist if he believed Carl Longnecker family at Elk- to Washington indicating that he any disbelief left. It taKes a lhe rumorj and he repiied: horn recently . . . Bobcat could " uyHa-" piuseuuuuu. brave or looinaray man uwu have subdued poor kitty with n Jan- '9. 1,3()- this com- today to say "that's impossible. pcrate from lack of food, at- sion I heard, it hit in the south west and the bodies of 34 "things" about three-feet high were found. The "things" were supposed to have been living beings, but without skin, flesh, scales or feathers. A reporter asked a well-known at- almost no effort, had it not been mentator also called public at- Tomorrow he may be proved mission line expected to be put for ioyai supPort from kitty's tention to the fact that Flynn's wrong and a doltish oaf. tention. "Will not the minister consid er," asked Churchill, "that Sere'- has a right to go back lo ' that very place and meet her at that very place before the gov ernment take any further ac tion?" Gordon-Walker replied that he Couldn't dn so. whprpnnnn . "I wouldn't say I disbelieved Churchill retorted: W "A very discreditable transaction." it. Anything is possible.' fracas and bobcat was so out numbered that he had to flee to the woods for safety. into use by the television indus try ... it would replace the coaxial cable. t Gloria Ellexson, University of Washington drum majorette who p e r f o rmed inK Salem Thurs-f-day night, has. been twirling; batons for only three years . , . nnd she already holds two nat ional champion ships . . .Eleven year old Mar Jane Wait, n sixth-Krader a t Rickreall school, K""' ought to be one of the best maj orettes in existanco a few years hence. Mary Jane's exhibition Thurs day will attest to that. Animal stories are always in teresting . . . and this one seems came through, and loyal SHS particularly intriguing . . . Wild supporters didn't have to cancel mountain bobcat, evidently des- their reservations. neighborhood torn cat friends name was before the senate jud- . Tom cats galore got into the Mankind seems to have lost lciary committee tor reappoint- k , j i. rfriftin holler- "t ' ment as U. S. attorney, and sug- . r.T,.J -!( ,ir,rf scientists says, vestigate why Flynn had not prosecuted the ex-sheriff of Several cracks have been dis- Prince Georges county for in come tax irauci. In the end conscientious La mar Caudle," in charge of justice to patch up aeParinient s tax envision, sent IWU UL IMS (111U11!1V3 IU X3aill- In all this exchange nobody put his finger on the apparent underlying cause of the govern- covered in brand new Public Service building . . . but it's no thing to worry about. . . . Con tractor promises to ni.a.lrc ac ertnn ne nncQililn innlvlnn n nlrl ,inn tn tho more una ticnmnaea mil ine case Public Service building, "It ain't what it's cracked up to be." Confidence: About a month ago, several Salem high school students reserved hotel rooms Can the H-bomb destroy the world? One eminent group of yes." Another j , , ,, ,, SKeuer uciuie vhhi'-1""3 cavc nankin gested to senators that they in- , h on ..nHaintv. About says' p00h! I.ADfinotB D..n V...J Vi -""-'- " . . . T . t ,. . . "... all a man can be sure of is that " """"" ueieuuam crazy menis action, mat was left lor if he steps aboard a certain bus or sane? ne psychiatrist testi- the British press to do. The Lon he'll end up home. But how fies he's a bluebeard and a sec- don Times refers to the govern about that bus driver a few years ond psychiatrist says he's batty ment being under "The urgent back who started out on his as a belfry. pressure of an embarrassing pol regular route here and ended Will anti-histamines cure the ltical situation", and adds: up in Florida? common cold? There're experts "The decision has been reached Nope, you just can't kno w on both sides. without any attempt by the union nothing for certain. There is no That's the trouble nowadays. ?f South Africa to influence basket left you can put your The world has gone beyond the il-14 is common knowledge, how dozen eggs into and count on understanding of the common fver- that the nationalists now getting all twelve back again, man, and whom can he trust in Power are not only committed when the experts quarrel among the doctrine of the separation Take that story bv the dyna- themselves? f the races but dislike sharing mite salesman about the wreck- So, junior, I won't deny you meir conuncnt wim other com be pushed. Last was indicted Crime Expert It's supposed to be traditional that a criminal returns to the of his crimes. And the for next week's state basketball scenes oi nis crimes. nci me -" , . ',,,,.,' Ktjr munities In which it is not an. other day Alex uampbell did age oi a !.: uu..u ..... ,...s ... - Those who witnessed r,?scr.val 0"! were , w. tournament at Eugene Said er day Alex uampbell did age oi a sync uu..u .. ..... ,...s He made a brief visit to in Mexico piloted by a gent only the lion on the street, or shot p"e- Long Arm of the Law Memphis, Tcnn., March 11 (U.B The arm of the Memphis law reaches high into the sky. Glenn Franks was flying along pulling an advertising streamer yesterday. But when he honked a horn, citizens complained he was violating the city's anti-noise ordinance. lie was censured when he landed. district 11 tournament had even Washington where for many got underwav . . . Salem had to hectic months he served as assis- win the district tourney to quali- tant attorney general in charge fy for the state meet . . . Vikings of (he criminal division. xiuwever, lilt: clime ait-lit? tu which Campbell returned was an office from which some of the most important and difficult criminal cases in the past decade have been directed. For it was Campbell who laid the ground work for the prosecution of Judy Coplon and Gubitchev. for Alger Hiss, for Congressman Parnell Thomas, and half a dozen impor tant spy cases such as Axis Sal- 23 inches tall. The airforce says, the three men from Mars. I The truth is that British Af "There is no evidence to support won't disbelieve anything. But r'ca is divided between one great the existence of any interplane- just don't ask me to get ex- independent state, which be tary machines." cited about your marvels. The licves in the color bar, and a But you will note that the old man is worn out with mar- number of smaller states in airforce doesn't rule out the pos- vels he can't comprehend. It which the color bar is repudia sibility. It can't it may have might be a good idea to have ted. The conflict is tragic for to fight space ships some day. a five-year moratorium on them 'he commonwealth but it can So may the navy. till we can all catch up. nt forever be evaded." The Times also speaks of the nationalists being likely to press for the transfer of Bechuanaland to Union sovereignty if they see growing up there a society fund amentally at variance with thei ideas. Multiplication Tables Changed? Seattle, Wash., March 11 U.R Delegates to the two-day rabbit production school today passed a resolution calling for increased rabbit production. i