Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Thursday, March 16, 1950 New York to Nudge a Cloud And Hope for Rain Downpour By H. D. QUIGG (United Preu Stiff Corrupondent) New York, March 16 u.R) On March 22, if the heavens are ripe, New York City will gently nudge a cloud. -It may rain. Snow may fly. Mayor William O'Dwyer and the city fathers came up today with a $50,000 appropriation in a sly plan to urge rain clouds over 'itip van winkles uatskins into new and greater efforts. U. S. Spending HeldTock-eyed' The scheme of "spending our selves rich" was termed "cock eyed" by E. C. Sammons, presi dent of the United States Na tional bank of Portland as he closed an appeal for widespread purchase of government savings bonds during Wednesday's luncheon of the Salem Rotary club, ' Sammons likened the govern ment to a large corporation in which the people are the stock holders and congressmen and senators are the members of the board of directors. "It Is up to you to see that they follow your Ideas in the matter of what sort of a government you want," said Sammons. During his talk Sammons urg ed employers to cooperate with their employes in the matter of pay roll savings for the purch ase of bonds. He said there were approximately 8,000,000 persons saving an average of $21 a month under this program. Sammons took occasion to ask for support of the Hoover com mission report which he said was approximately 20 percent adopt ed at this time. Russell Tripp recently selected by Rotary International for a scholarship to New Zealand, ex pressed appreciation for the ef forts of Salem Rotarians in his behalf. Teacher Pay Bill Set for April 17 Washington, March 16 VP) The house labor committee pull ed federal aid to education from a day-old pigeonhole today and set April 17 to consider a $300, 000,000 teachers' pay bill. The vote to take up the meas ure was 13 to 12, the same mar gin by which the committee yes terday shelved a senate-passed $300,000,000 bill to help the states with general school oper ating expenses. Before voting to consider the teacher-salary proposal the com mittee turned down a move to go ahead with immediate study of a bill to authorize $600,000, 000 in loans and grants for choolhouse construction. It also tabled an attempt to consider a proposal for $136, 000,000 in school assistance only for the few neediest states. The pay bill by Rep. Burke (D-Ohio) would provide funds to the states to raise teaching Itandards and provide "ade quately paid teachers." It puts state participation on the basis of a minimum aid floor amount ing to $70 per pupil per year. But it leaves unanswered the controversial question of letting church and private schools share in the aid. Like the shelved sen ate bill, it leaves distribution of the money up to the states in ac tual teacher pay. City officials decided yester day that scientific cloud-wringing might be one of the answers to the city's critical water shortage. In a six-month "noble experi ment," the city will sow the seeds of cloudburst or, at least, of April showers into every likely lonely cloud that floats over a 1000-square mile area that comprises New York City's watershed. Mayor O Dwyer decided on the program with the help of a six-man advisory committee on rain making, composed of scien tists. The man they hired to tickle clouds with dry ice and silver iodide smoke is Wallace Howell, research meteorolo gist at the Harvard Blue Hill ob servatory. Dr. Howell planned to go af ter some man-made rain or snowfall in one week In an in terview after the board meeting, he said it was entirely possible some man-made moisture might fall next Wednesday. Dr. Howell will command an outfit that includes air crews, two police department amphibi an planes, a ground-control ra dio station in the Catskills, radar capable of "seeing" rain developing in a cloud, and two ground units with cars operat ing silver iodide smoke generators. Dr. Howell said he expected to have four to 12 hours warn ing from his weather depart ment that the clouds are ripe for "the art of rain stimulation." The planes, operating from Floyd Bennett field in New York City, will reach the likely clouds in about an hour Each plane will carry about 50 pounds of dry ice and one gallon of sil ver iodide. The dry ice will be crumbled in a hand-grinder to cakes one-fourth to one-half inch in diameter. "You can dump dry ice into the cloud with a kitchen cup from a cardboard carton and it will work," pr. Howell said. But we will use little chutes. Each plane will carry a gener ator for silver Iodide, if we need it. We'll fly above the clouds and sow the dry ice into them." Thus icily titillated, a proper cloud will bestow gentle rain on reservoir, farmland and Mrs, Murphy's wash on the line. In iii i I 1 1 in in'itfr i Tf iv'ifiififfl UTi 'T ' I Leaves for Derby California's brilliant 3-year-old "Your Host" received a fond farewell at Del Mar, Calif., as he de parted for the Kentucky Derby. The horse is wearing a bright red and green blanket presented by Del Mar track for his victory in the 1949 Del Mar Futurity. (L to R) Louis B. Mayer, breeder of the colt; Harry L. Daniels, train er and William Goetz, owner. (AP Wirephoto) Weed Control County-wide An order which will lead to the setting up on a weed control district for Marion county was signed by members of the coun ty court Wednesday afternoon. The weed control project Is on a county-wide basis, ana will be the first such district ever established in Marion county. A hearing for the purpose of hearing arguments for and against the proposed district was held before the county court Wednesday. No one appeared in opposition to the weed control district. Juke Nuefelt of route 6, Sa lem, was to be named control of ficer of the district. An order was being made to appoint him to the position, and that order will be signed late Wednesday along with the order to establish the weed control district. Once the orders are signed, official notices of the weed con trol project will be inserted in the newspapers. Two weeks from the Initial publication of these notices, the district will legally go into operation. The establishment of the dis trict has been pending for sev eral weeks. Numerous com plaints regarding tansy ragwort and gorce led the court to take action on a weed control project. tion of the Northwestern Dis trict of the American Lutheran Church Brotherhoods will be held at Emmanuel Lutheran church at Walla Walla, Wash., Sunday, April 10. As the evening's entertain ment feature, a series of colored slides of scenery and wild flow ers of Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado were shown. Refreshments were served by Martin Albers, Allen Yost and Ben Ingalls. Evergreen Chapter Social Club Meets Woodburn A meeting of the social club of Evergreen chap ter, Order of the Eastern Star, was held following the regular chapter meeting Monday night with Mrs. Evelyn Morris pre siding. Plans were made to serve a dinner for the Royal Arch Ma sons and their wives Saturday evening, March 18. Mrs. Morris will be general chairman and the kitchen committee will in clude Mrs. Edward Schoor, Mrs. Marian Anderson, Mrs. Mabel Harper and Mrs. Jess Fikan. Mrs. Freda Burt will be in charge of the dining room, as Lutheran Affairs Scheduled Soon At-'ora The March meeting of t..e Men's Brotherhood of Christ Lutheran church of Au rora was held at the church. At the business session with Presi dent Martin Albert presiding, the group discussed the selec tion of delegates to attend two forthcoming conventions of the Lutheran Brotherhoods of this area. The quarterly meeting of the Willamette Valley area Brother hoods, of which organization Paul Gooding of the Aurora chapter, is president, will be Sunday, March 19, at Faith Lu theran church in Portland. Salem Heights Troop Has Charter Review Salem Heights It was char ter review Monday night at the scout office for Scout troop 19 ot salem Heights. The troop was reregistered with fifteen boys as scouts and nine boys in the ex plorer troop. Ken Hills was registered as the scoutmaster and Harvey Pe terson as scoutmaster of the ex plorer troop. Troop committee was C. F. Southwick, Floyd Mc Clcllan, and Bill Stinson, the committee chairman. Institu tional representative was Earl Ahlers. The American Legion Post 136 sponsors both troops. explorers registered were Boyd Aydelott, Don Blanken ship, Mark DeCew, Lee Peter son, James Ponsford, Frank Vi- Taris, John Wilbur, Gail Mc- Glauflin, and Louis Kurth, Jr. Scouts under the leadership of Ken Hills were Dick Colgan James Lawrence, Roger Colgan, Bruce Lethin, Edwin Keech, Jim Lehman, Jerry Walling, Wilbert Kurth, Ronald Coon, Rodney McClellan, Lane Olson, Glen Da vis, Martin Southwick and Fred Bolton. sisted by a group of members. The annual one-day conven One of the newest words is "radiothermics," defined as the "application of heat generated by radio waves," such as is used in molding plastics. lencfer-smallerluna ONLY! Increase in Defense Budget Washington, March 16 VP) The defense department today requested a $187,142,770 In crease in its pending $477,974,- 410 public works bill for con struction of high priority mili tary projects, some of them closely guarded secrets. This makes a total of $665,- 117,181 which the army, navy and air force now want. In addition, Chairman Vinson (D., Ga.) of the house armed services committee, instructed the marines to submit new proj ects one for $2,476,000 for liv ing quarters at Quantico, Va., and the second for a $25,000,000 new marine depot. This depot reportedly may be located at Albany, Ga. With these two new items, the grand total would be $692,592 410. The amended defense depart ment request was presented to the committee by Assistant De fense Secretary W. J. McNeil, comptroller. McNeil told the committee the amended requests a number of which step up amounts originally asked are mainly for research and development, communica tion projects as well as general operational projects. Hint That Days of Fabulous Salaries for Stars Is Past Hollywood, March 16 VP) A hint of the bitter days which have fallen on this fabulous city was seen today in the new contract signed by a ranking movie star. William Bendix, long a top box-office draw, yesterday signed a seven-year contract with RKO which pays him less than $1, 000,000. He will make 14 pic- tures at a rate of two a year. That is only $70,000 a picture. A few years ago studios were paying more than that for mere feature players. Even writers got that much and thought noth ing about it. Some stars were making $500,000 or more per picture, especially if they insisted on a percentage of the' gross. Then along came the British' ban on American movies with the resultant loss of foreign rev enue; and, finally, television. Studios have been firing help by the thousands. The number of players under contract has drop ped from 742 In 1947 to 315 this year. Studios have been pretty cagey lately about disclosing stars' salaries, and maybe this is why. Seventy thousand a pic ture doesn't sound nearly so ex citing as the old days, when al most anybody could count his weekly salary in five figures. RKO, in a statement announc ing the contract, said It "may well set the pattern for future negotiations in Hollywood." The statement was not refer ring to the salary level specific ally, however. A spokesman said it was referring to the fact that Bendix would be paid every week instead of on a 40 weeks a year basis or in a lump sum as has been customary. Comparative salaries for other stars weren't immediately avail able but the word in the indus try is that Bendix is not an ex ception. He's just another vic tim of that new epidemic in the movie colony. It's called "economy." Veteran Portland Fire Official Dies at 82 Portland, March 16 VP) Charles A. Savariau, who set up Portland's fire alarm system, died here today at the age of 82. He superintended the fire alarm and police telegraph sys tems here for a quarter-century, retiring in 1932. BURNETTS Vanilla gives your Puddings wonderful new flavor 1$ BACKTOMOtWOW-' risii l if, I i) i ,;u Nrl I - ' 3 I 3 'V For Tempting LENTEN MENUS IYm i ."H ) economy stie FRESHER at your GROCER'S John S. Service Ordered Home Washington, March 16 UP) The state department has order ed John S. Service back from India to testify personally in a departmental review of his loy alty record. Service, a veteran diplomatic officer, was among four depart ment employes charged yester day by Senator McCarthy (R., Wis.), as being pro-communist. His recall was ordered on re commendation of the civil ser vice loyalty review board. It said the state department's own previous investigation of Service should have included his per sonal appearance. Press Officer Lincoln White told reporters the recommenda tion does not mean Service is "under any new suspicion." "We assume the board thinks that Mr. Service should have an opportunity to speak for him self," White said. Shortly before, Senator Tyd ings (D., Md.) said the senate in vestigators expect to get state TydingsWill Examine Files Washington, March 16 Senator Tydings (D-Md) said today senate investigators ex pect' to get state department files on persons accused by Senator McCarthy (R-Wis) of commun ist leanings. He told a news conference that John E. Peurifoy, deputy undersecretary of state, had in dicated to him that the files will be made available. Tydings is chairman of a sen ate foreign relations subcommit tee which is investigating Mc Carthy's contentions that com munists have infiltrated the de partment. In four days of committee hearings, McCarthy has named nine individuals he called sub versive or bad security risks. He also has handed the committee a list of 25 other state depart ment employes he said are ap parently bad risks. The state department has de clared that all those named pub licly by McCarthy if they ever worked for the department were thoroughly Investigated and found to be loyal. Some of those he named never were state department employe!. Others no longer are. department files on the person! accused by McCarthy of com munist leanings. The first sip tells you here's finer, richer coffee! Always de licious and satisfying because it'sThermoReguIated roasted. TWO KINDS-DRIP OR PERCOIATOR Shilling .Very Uottle of is Pasteurized is Laboratory listed is Grade A Qualify i2 8 1 MAYFLOWER Stueet &teH BUTTER Here's the newest member of the Mayflower family. You'll like its fresh appetizing sweet cream flavor fresh butter at its very best. UW.:.,cACAS the wesrs favorite bock beer, PHONE 3-9205