12 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Thursday, March 16, 1950 Strange Show Sen. McCarthy Is Staging in Attack on Loyalties By JAMES MARLOW Washineton. March 18 (&) This is a strange show here . , the hearings on Senator McCarthy's attack on the loyalty of present and former employes of the state department. No one is predicting how long the hearings will continue. The Wisconsin republican, McCarthy, hasn t finished reading his list -""of people upon whom hes cast ing suspicion. The five members of the for eign relations committee's sub committee, which is conducting the hearing, are now sort of sitting back, letting McCarthy roll off the names. Movie lights make the room brilliant. Cameras are busy. Newsmen line both sides of two long tables. Policemen keep traffic moving through the door. People are continually moving in, standing or finding scats, and leaving. The big room in the senate office building is packed with them. Every chair is taken. I Am Not' Former Judge Dorothy Kenyon is shown as she told the senate foreign re lations subcommittee in Wash ington that "I am not, and never have been" a commu nist, a fellow traveller, or a sympathizer with any organi zation she knew to be domi nated by communists. Miss Kenyon appeared to answer charges brought by Sen. Jo seph McCalrthy, who did not attend the session. (Acme Telephoto) Delake Monster Faces Cremation Delake, Ore., March 16 (U.B Delake's unclassified "sea mon ster" will be disposed of later this week if a combination of oil, gasoline, and old tires can feed a fire hot enough to boil down the remains. Randolph Allum, operator of the "Tourist Cafe" here, said today. "We tried to burn up a chunk of 'Jughead' the other day with a gallon of gasoline and five or six gallons of oil," Allum said, "but the flesh just curled up." County Commissioner Jack Patterson said he had seen all kinds of sea life, including rem nants of whales, but the Delake "monster" was something new to him. "I'd say It was a member of the jellyfish or squid group, he guessed. Delakers debunked the results of a chemical analysis of "Jug head" made shortly after it was washed ashore. They said an in complete test was performed by an Oregon state game commis sioner when he said the "mon ster" was whale blubber. Residents said seagulls refused to touch "Jughead," even when pieces were cut off and spread out on the sand. Delakers said the aroma of their castaway is rot too strong yet, but they want to dispose of the prize before warm spring weather arrives. Strange Project Spotted in Korea Seoul, March 16 W Com munist North Korean border guards are using some strange projector to send propaganda handbills into the South Korean republic, the United Nations Korean commission said today. A commission party returned from a two-day visit to Kang nung at the eastern end of the 38th parallel which divides the republic south from the com munist north. Commission Chairman Kasim Gulek of Turkey told a news conference that a bnttHlion commander descrbied the use of a projector of unknown type to scatter handbills from the red side of the line. Botli sides use loudspeakers to bombard the other with pro paganda. The Kangnung trip was the fourth taken by the U.N. group to study conditions in South Korea. U. N. representatives have been refused admission to the norih, first by the Russians and since by the North Korean regime. The commission has asked U.N. headquarters at Lake Suc cess to send eight trained ob servers to help keep it informed on any threat to peace in Korea. The dark-haired and heavy browned McCarthy, a former marine, bends his head over his lists and reads on, naming names. Newsmen hurry from their ta bles to send out bulletins on their wires. Those news bulletins flash around the country. Other news men in other places see the Mc Carthy charges and if one of the charges lives nearby, he's quick ly asked for a statement. Back across the country flow the denials of the people Mc Carthy has just named. It's "boring," one says. "Fantastic," says another. "McCarthy is a cowardly liar," says another. People listed as suspects by McCarthy will be given a chance to answer him in front of the same subcommittee and the lights and cameras. One of them, Miss Dorothy Kenyon who testified Tuesday and flatly denied McCarthy's charges against her, spoke of the damage to her reputation and wondered whether denials could ever catch up with McCarthy's charges against her. Senator Hickenlooper of Iowa, a republican colleague of Mc Carthy, questioned Miss Ken yon and then said he has no doubt about her loyalty. Whether the other charges, if they come1 here to state their case, will make out well remains to be seen. But, of course, this isn t a one-way street for Mc Carthy. When he undertook to throw suspicion on the loyalty of a number of Americans, he was sticking his neck away out. If he can back up his charges, he's done a public service in un covering disloyalty. But if it turns out that he can't back them up, the public memory is long, and, although McCarthy doesn't have to run for re-elec tion until 1952, this situation probably will not be forgotten. Senator Tydings of Maryland, chairman of the committee, for the first two days of the hearing which began last week, gave McCarthy a rough time, making him stop every minute to explain in detail the charges he was making. But, beginning Monday, Ty dings has remained fairly silent, letting McCarthy rattle off the names and charges. Junior Racing Car Terry Evans, 5, sits in the car his dad, Ted (left), built for him at Bell, Calif. The auto is 62 inches long, weighs ISO pounds and travels IS miles an hour. Linn Passing Peak of Idle Lebanon The season of slack employment in the East Linn area is definitely past, Fred W. Worral, office manager of the local state employment of fice, said this week. Increased hiring and back to work orders are expected in ever increasing numbers. By the first of March a large number of logging operators, working at lower elevations, had swung into action as snow dis appeared and load restrictions on roads were lifted. While the lar ger operators have yet to open their camps, it is significant that the number already back at work bodes well for employment in this industry. With a rising lumber market and favorable weather condi tions, employment should be maintained at a relatively high level during the year, Worral said. No new commercial or indust rial construction permits were issued in Lebanon during the past 30 days and building con struction was confined to small dwellings and remodeling jobs. Retail and wholesale business firms generally experienced a lull but the outlook is for a sharp increase within the next 30 to 60 days. The labor supply is more than adequate to fill all openings re ceived at the employment office. No labor shortage is anticipated n the foreseeable future, stated Worral. Club Entertained The Friendlv Hour club met at the home of Mrs. Lester Thomas. Present were Mrs. Wy koff Mrs. Klock. Mrs. Kleins- mitch, Mrs. Hamilton, Mrs. Thornton, Mrs. Dutoit, Mrs. Loll, Mrs. Ernest Neuenschwan Hr nnri Mrs. John Neuen- schwander. The next meeting will be at the home 01 Mrs. Er nest Neuenschwander. Rosalind, 5, Got Her Wish: Baby Sister New York, March 16 W) Some time ago, five-year-old Rosalind Fisher decided that the new addition expected in her family should be a baby sister. Nothing else would do. "Boys always like to fight," she explained to her father, Wil liam Fisher, a yarn shop pro prietor. "Anyway, they always fight with me." Fisher, who was silently root ing for a boy, told Rosalind that the newborn's sex would be de termined by the hospital, which supplies babies. . Rosalind promptly hauled out her stationery, and with help from her father on spelling, wrote: "Dear hosDital: Mv mnthpr is coming to your hospital to get a baby. Please give her a baby Sister, and I will thank von verv much. Rosalind Fisher." Fisher thought that end of the matter, and that the letter would never be sent. But Rosalind had other ideas. She found a stamp, and gave the let ter to the postman. From Beth-El hospital in Brooklyn came this reply: "Dear Rosalind. I snnk in the doctor about vour leitpr Ho says he hasn't decided yet wheth er it is going to be a beautiful baby sister or a wonderful baby brother. The doctor will tell your daddy when your mother comes to the hosDital. (Siunprfl The Hospital." Early vesterdav. Mrs Fishpr gave birth to a seven-pound, 12 ounce girl. "I knew it all the time," said Rosalind. "I alreadv hniiphr a toy. It's a clown you can stick on a nign cnair, and I'll give it to her as soon as she comes home and gets old enough to sit." Ingrid to Fight For Daughter Hollywood, March 16 u.R) Ingrid Bergman will go to court to win custody of her 12-year-old daughter Pia and all the cash and property she says Dr. Peter Lindstrom owes her. The Swedish actress, who left her child, husband, and estate to romance with Roberto Rossel lini on the unromantic isle of Stromboli, filed suit late yester day to get back everything but her husbana. She divorced Lindstrom in Mexico last February 9, a week after presenting her Italian lover with a son. Miss Bergman asked a superior court to grant her custody of her child by Lindstrom and make him cough up $134,000 she says he's holding out on her. She also requested division of their community property and an accounting of all cash, per sonal and real property she said Lindstrom is holding with the Bank of America and '10 other "John and Richard Does." The suit is one of the few pub lic acts the statuesque glamour girl has made since she renounc ed Hollywood for the charms of Roberto. The two lovers are now in Rome awaiting for Swed ish authorities to okay her Mex ican divorce. Los Angeles, March 16 (U.R) Mexican mail order divorces, like the one Ingrid Bergman got from Dr. Peter Lindstrom, have been ruled void in California. Federal Judge Jacob A. Wein berger handed down the deci sion yesterday in denying a suit by Mrs. Kathleen Hiddenga, Seal Beach, Calif., to collect a $5,000 government life insurance policy carried by Navy Officer Bouwe Hiddenga, whom she married after getting a Mexican divorce. The judge held that the court at Chihuahua, Mex., lacked jur isdiction to dissolve the previous marriage because neither party was physically present in court. He added the divorces were "contrary to public policy." N. Y. toHonor St. Patrick New York, March 16 W) Fifth avenue will be about as green as a meadow in June to morrow when the colors of the Irish are strung out in the an nual St. Patrick's Day parade. A million New Yorkers are ex pected to turn out to watch the five-hour pageant, which begins at noon at 44th street and moves northward along Fifth avenue to 96th street. John J. Sheahan, chairman of the committee on arrangements, predicted the "greatest parade ever." He said more than 100,- 000 persons will take part, com pared to 95,000 last year. There'll be 65 marching bat talions, including numerous cos tumed Irish societies, and 200 bands. Grand marshal of the affair is Police Commissioner William P. O'Brien. He will march behind a contingent of the 69th "Fight ing Irish" national guard divi sion. Housework Easy Without NaggingBackache At we get older, tress and strain, over exertion, excessive smoking or exposure to cold sometimes slows down kidney func tion. This may lead many folks to com liluin of n situ inn backache, loss of pep and energy, headaches and diiiineM. Getting up nights or frequent passages may result from minor bladder irritations due to cold, dampness or dietary indiscretions. If your discomfort are due to these causes, don't wait, try Doan'a Pills, a mild diuretic. Used successfully by millions for over 60 years. While these ymptoma may often otherwise occur, it's amasing how many times Uoan's give happy relief -help the 16 miles of kidney tubes and Alters flush ui wast, (let Doan'a Tilla today 1 155 North Liberty Phone 3-3191 Demonstration Friday Night and All Day Saturday I. SH0PSMITH Five Major Tools in One 199 50 Does over 100 jobs! 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Mrs. Parks sits in prisoner's dock in court with her mother, Mrs. Vera Miller Young (left) of Seattle. Wash., and her son, Bobbie Parks, 8. After verdict, Bobbie said: "I'm so happy I could fall on my head." (AP Wirephoto.) Pretty Redhead No Murderess Luray, Va., March 16 U.R A pretty young redhead was free today of charges that she mur dere ' her partially crippled, ex- prisoner of war husband. -The state dropped charges against Mrs. Barbara Parks, 26, after hearing lengthy testimony that 39-year-old Robert Parks was shot accidentally. "I think it was very fair," Mrs. Parks sobbed after the de cision. "I thank them very much." Parks, a former army captain who survived the Bataan death Calvert's taste can be made absolutely uniform... because Calvert's master blenders can choose from an unequalled' library "of over 315 fine whiskies and spirits. Another reason why Calvert always tastes smoother! ANOTHER. 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