Page 4 Capital Journal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emerltut Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. , toll taul win linhi 1 u kmtltU4 Mn ul TM Vmltt hm Ttw amkuim Prat to aeliumi wutitd u ih, w (or NlUtuin M 11 otwi dUMUhM Miu4 u II m wMivim uMius l thu ur a4 1m bwi auftiuhad urela. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: r Ctmn: MooUUr. ll.Hl 1 Month, 1.Ml On, Int. Ill 01. Sf ITifl la Uulea. Polk, Linn, luui, cUdnH Countiu: Uonthlr. M: sn Montu, M M; Oh Tu. M 00. S? Mall IU,ntn la Oruon: Montblr, II W; ail UvMt, M.OOi Oat Yaw, II J 00. Br Mill OuUkto Oram MUU. IUI Su MraUu, 1140; On T,W, III.M ADMINISTRATION POWER POLICY What is billed as the new Department of the Interior power "policy, which means the administration's power policy, was spelled out to the public Tuesday in a state ment by Ralph A. Tudor, the undersecretary. The basic principle of it la that the provision of electric power facilities is primarily the responsibility of the re gion affected, but that the federal government will help, particularly in the Pacific nized a particularly urgent growth of population and Thus the government will and start new ones, as manv but it does not seek a federal power monopoly in this or any other region. Nor does it limit its thinking on power to federal and private Corporations. Local cooperatives, called PUDs in this region, . . a perfect right to develop and sell current if they desire and will be encouraged in their extorts. Another important point is that the department ex pects to place the demands of residential and rural con sumers higher than that of enough power to go round, which suggests that there may be no occasion for future surcharges to be paid by such customers due to cutting off government current in favor of industrial users. There is nothing spectacular about this policy, but we submit that it makes good, solid common sense and is essentially fair. There is no reason for Northwest people to assume that the federal government must build tax exempt power plants whenever they run out of power, when it does not do this for other sections except the Tennessee valley. If we insist on this sort of discrimin atory treatment we are likely to antagonize congress and j lose all future appropriations. For congress includes many representatives of states whose industries we seek to entice out here with cheaper, tax subsidized power. , It's a wonder they have treated us as generously as they have. ' All power plants congress is willing to authorize will be built on our streams, but congress is vitally concerned with balancing the budget, so it is unlikely that congress will be willing to build them as rapidly as the need de velops. Hence the need to have both horses, public and private, pulling. Neither can do it all. 'PROGRESSIVE' AND 'REACTIONARIES' We imagine American leftists must be writhing with agony over this new definition of a "progressive" that has come out of the Korean prison camps. The term was applied by the Chinese to such few Americans as succumbed to their blandishments and went over to communism, either wholeheartedly or to get rice and other favors. Probably the latter in most cases. They dubbed the stubborn majority who held out as "reactionaries." The Reds of all lands have always been clever in the use of words. "Reactionary" has been applied by them to anti-Communists for years. But "progressive" which has long been a good word in America, and is today ex cept insofar as 'it has been given a bad political odor by some extreme leftists is now applied to Communist dupes, and by the Communists themselves. What a break for American "progressive" political groups. American P.W.s come home proud to be reaction aries, first time in history any Americans have been recorded that way. Words are what they are caused to mean by use. Re member the kaiser's reference to the "contemptible little army" of Britain and 1914 and British pride ever after in the "old contemptibles" who soon halted the kaiser's march toward the English channel? The word "reactionary" has been given a shot in the arm now by the Chinese Reds, but we hope it doesn't thereby become a badge of honor except in this very lim ilea sense, r or - reactionary" isn t a good word or a good attitude, unless you're in sented with a brain washing. negative attitude is in order. V i an WHY OUR STOCK IS Norman Thomas, several times Socialist candidate for president of the United States, is a wise and helpful observer of the national and world scene, whose comments are often more frank than those of politicians of other parties who still have hopes of being elected to something. He has just returned to the United States from Europe with the gloomy report that was never so low as now. 1, McCarthyism, which Europeans seem to have blown up into a "menace" comparable with the spell the villain In the old fashioned dime novel used to cast upon his intended victims. No. 2, reduced U.S. appropriations ior tne support or Europeans in the manner to which we ve enabled them to become accustomed. The cynics will promptly one that ought to be No. 1 in importance, and little as we normally like to agree with cynics we've an uneasy suspicion mat in tnis instance Woodburn Woodburn Three more home extemion unlu. North Howell, Union end Aumsvllle, hive signified their Intention! of entering boothi In the North Marion County free fair In Woodburn. Sept. 24, 2S and 28, announced by J. F. Lacey, fair board chairman. Word has alio been received that both the Woodburn Grange and Wood burn Farmers Union will enter displays In the community ex hibit division of the fair. Guests at the home of Mr. A. E. Austin during the week end were Mr. and Mrs. Elton Jon n, Ray Belter and Miss Laura Austin of Portland, Mr. and Mrs John Kallak of Al bany, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice - Northwest where it is recog situation exists due to rapid industry. complete present projects as congress will authorize, and municipalities also have industries when there is not an enemy prison camp pre Then a simple, pigheaded LOW American prestige in Europe Reason 7 Two of them. No, dub the second item as the they are right. Hubbard Hubbard Mr. and Mrs, Cecil Van Lieu of Los Ange les, Calif., and Mrs. Louise Adams of Warrensburg. Mo were guests of the James Van Lleua last week. James and his youngest daughter. Jane, accompanied the guests to Lot Angeles for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Rhelnhold Hlldebrand returned home the tint part of last week after a short vacation trip to northern California and the Oregon coast At Power! they visited their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mri. Gene Myers. Gardner and daughters Molly and Joan of Richland. Wash The two little girls are great granddaughters of Mrs. Austin. mm CRIMINAL I UCKTHt BOX- 7 I court I Pf f EVIDENCE THAT S 1 ' l HE HAS BEEN U f v ; ENGAGING IN THE J (CSUMBSf) a ll DANGEROUS f Ar I CAPITALIST J 1 V ACTIVITY j QTT vSpSJSlSSl WASHINGTON MERRY Doctor Warns May Be Poisoning People By DREW Washington One of the many things vitally affecting the public which didn't leak out during the late lamented congress, was a hassle over fruit sprays, which one promi nent doctor warned may-.be slowly poisoning the American people. These poisons, inhaled while spraying or eaten as resi due on fruits and vegetables, accumulate in the system and may take as much as ten years off a person's life, it was testi fied. The warning was given by Dr. Robert Mobbs of Aberdeen, N.C., who told how he had spent five years intensely stu dying the problem after a child in his home town had died of what he was convinced was pesticide poisoning. He cited one chemical spray, benzene hexachloride, which was found in tests to produce abnormal, cancerlike cell growth. Yet it is used to spray on crops, to dust troops in Korea, and in vaporizing devices, to air out homes and restaurants. He declared that doctors and chemists have prepared reports on "insecticide toxicity," but added ominously: "I think that these reports have been large ly ignored, minimized, and suppressed." Testifying before the house Interstate and foreign com merce committee, Dr. Mobbs appealed to the congressmen to put teeth in the laws regulat ing pesticides and insecticides. Instead of doing so, the com mittee boosted a bill, introduc ed by GOP Congressman A. L. Miller of Nebraska and en dorsed by the insecticide com panics, that would' leave it up to the manufacturers to test their own pest killers and sub mit their findings to the gov ernment. Following this, the food and drug administration would be given 60 days to de cide, on the basis of the manu facturers' own report, how strong a dose could be sold to the public. Food and Drug Objection This bill brought this warn ing from food and drug com missioner Charles Crawford: "Irresponsible operators might submit the sketchiest and most inadequate toxicological data." Yet the government would be forced to fix the dosage, Craw ford said, and issue it "within the rather brief time limit pre scribed." We believe it essential to public health and highly ad vantageous to the industry, that tests, deemed adequate by a competent and unbiased scien tific body, be required of all new pesticides," the food and drug chief urged. The real danger, he pointed out. was that "you might find yourself with a meal that con tained 20 different poisons, none of which by itself would hurt you, but all of which put together might be getting into the critical zone." Most startling tes tlmonv. however, came from Dr. Mobbs. Perforated Stomachs "We now know," he declar ed, "that many foods are con taminated by these Insecticides and that human tissue Itself now contair DDT and proba bly other insecticides and yet no one knows what the ulti mate eflect will be . . . "Ore baby food company has tried to get away from having insecticides in those foods they THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon THE "SABOTEUR' - GO - ROUND Fruit Sprays PEARSON are preparing for babies," he addeu, "yet today they are about ready to abandon that search. They just cant find foods in sufficient quantity that do not contain some insec ticides, yet they do not know what the result, the ultimate result, will be." Dr. Mobbs told how he be gan his investigation five years ago after an insecticide plant In his community started mixing a dust for boll weevil spray ing. ' "The air was constantly per meated with insecticides. Many people became ill, and virus like illness was rampant throughout the town ..." he related. "There was a child liv ing in a home adjacent to this Insecticide mixing plant, who died suddenly of a virus-like infection, died in convulsions. This substance was released for widespread use where it conta minated the air we had to breathe, and yet it had been un tested in that medium. "I found," he continued, "that if you fed it to an animal, it would kill the animal in con vulsions. This child that died had also suffered a perforation of the stomach. Later it was found in experiments that ani mal; suffered perforation of the stomach. So I felt that this child's death was probably due to this chemical." The Aberdeen, N.C., physi cian told of another patient who "tried to use himself as a guinea pig to see what the ef fects of the insecticide would be. He had a coronary heart disease that seemed to be defi nitely aggravated by exposure to the dust, and on his death, we found DDT in his tissues." May Produce Cancer Dr. Mobbs was probably most "shocked," however, by the fact that "the American Cancer society not too long ago save a ernnt tn tv, nwAA 'of biochemistry at Columbia, in wnicn ne used benzene hexa chloride to produce abnormal cell formation or cancer-like changes. Yet at the same time," Dr. Mobbs warned, "we are using benzene hexachloride or lindane in a fashion in which it contaminates crops, gets into the milk supply. It is now used in many restaurants and in home vaporizing devices. It is used to dust troops and prison ers in Korea . . . "I feel." Dr. Mobbs added, "that attempts have been made to minimize the toxicity of these things." Note In fairness to the In s e c 1 1 c 1 d e manufacturers, it should be pointed out that most of them scrupulously test and label their products to safe guard the public. Without these poisonous sprays. Insects and rodents would literally spoil most of the country's food sup ply. For example, apples alone must be protected from over 200 Insects. Yet Insects develop sn Immunity to sprays, and It constantly takes more poison to kill them. Insects which once died at a whiff of DDT now are immune to It icwTttM. irsti SOCIABLE BURGLARS Klngsport Tenn. WB Res taurant owner Cardwell Houn chell told police burglars drank his orangeade and ate his ice cream, then used his tools to break open a safe and steal his cash. Salem 41 Years Ago By BEN MAXWELL August 19, 1912 Governor West had declared that nothing but giving the people of Redmond 'a clean bunch of city officials would be plessing to him. A proprietor of a local thea ter in Portland had been ar rested for showing a moving picture of the Johnson-Flynn fight. G. F. Rogers, Salem's tempo rary chairman of the Roose velt state committee, had gone to Portland hopeful of making arrangements for Roosevelt's visit to Salem September 11, 191Z. Oregon Blacksmith's associa tion had met at Albany with about 100 delegates in attend ance. Oregon artillerymen were schedued to go to Fort Stevens to get familiar with handling Dig guns. The senate had debated a resolution proposing a con stitutional amendment making the presidential term a six-year office and providing that no president shall be eligible for re-elaction. Coperman's automatic elec tric range demonstration had been arranged for Pettinglll's STARTING SEPTEMBER 1ST vfj.' 'vi this money-saving plan is good for travel starting any Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday on Union Pacific, Chicago ft North Western sod Wabash lines. Here's an example of bow it works. Ooe parent pays ooe full fare . . ; the other parent snd children ' under 22 pay HALF fare except children under five years who ride free. . . The offer applies only to Pullman passengers who pay the regular Pullman rates depeoding on , the type of space used. You can take sdrantaga of this travel saving offer on any Union Pacific train including tha Streamliners. Lit mi )ulf pint ytmr trif OtNIRAl PASSINOf ( DIPT. Room 751 Pittock Block Portland 5, Oregon UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD too as twi tuny iriMatUNiM POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Photographer Noel's Story of Life in Red Prison Fascinating By RELMAN MOWN For Hal Boyle New York In reading on of Frank Noel's stories of life in a Chinese prison camp the other day, I was struck by a particular line. He had writ ten "I went down to Ham hung to get some film, but I was in a hurry to get back to tha front because the best pic tures were there." Frank, or "Pappy" as we called him, is a news photog rapher. The Chinese grabbed him in that bleak and anxious winter of 1930 when the dam went bust in Korea. Now S2 months and several lifetimes later, he has been sprung. His memoirs make fascinating read ing As you may know, there is sn eternal debate In this ink stained trade of ours over the question: Are photographers people? Personally. I think they are, although there are many points that have to be conceded to the opposite side of the argu ment The important fact is, I suppose, that a news photog rapher sees the world exclus ively through that square wire finder on his camera. And this, for him, is the only true and valid world. He lives there.. Few things that happen outside are likely to merit his serious attention. Moreover, he is a harassed man. A reporter can come along, after the story has hap pened, and pick up the details from someone else who saw it But a photographer has to be there with his hand on the trig ger at the precise split second else. Hence, you can understand when "Pappy" wrote that he was in a hurry to get back where the pictures were. This was up around the Changjln reservoir, and Pappy had been tagging along with the Marines for some six weeks or more. It is easy for a war correspondent, news or photos, to fall in love with a Marine unit in the field, and Pappy apparently had a bad case. Once, when we were able to reach him on the telephone, we asked If he didn t want to come out of the snow and mountains for a little relief. "Nope," he said. And that was all. He hung up. Writing wasn't his lob. but he used to scribble a few hun- electric store. "No dirt, soot, grease, ashes or use of oil." A trotting match had been staged 'at the fairgrounds be tween a horse belonging to Ar thur Glover and one owned by A. J. Anderson. J. W. Shafer and Roy Bo- hannon had returned from an auto trip into the Siletz coun try after traveling over some of the worst roads ever seen in Oregon. Several cars were passed laid up for repairs be cause the roads were, in places, a sheet of mud. Fifty-first state fair open ing September 2, 1912, had a premium list of $18,000 for livestock, poultry, agricultural and other products. 1953... i dred words in pencil on the back of a photo-mailer a large manlla envelope to tell little anecdotes of life with the Ms rlnes. More often than not, we found news and color in these that we hadn't seen anywhere else. ' Then cams the terrible days when the roof fell in around the center of the line. Tha Marines obviously were in a bad spot, with a collapsed flank and the Chinese pouring toward the rear. Pappy could have come out then, before the roads were completely closed. But the last time he was on the telephone, he said he was going to stay. "I feel better up with the kids." he said. He was all of 43 him self at that time. Then, for a week, we beard no more. One morning in early De cember the news came ... A group of 18 Marines broke out . . . They had seen Pappy cap tured in an ambush. For a long moment, nobody spoke.' Everybody had his own thoughts. Bill Moore, another AP man, never did come back. We could hope that Pappy, at least, was a prisoner. Two of us had been in prison camps in the other war. A third nar rowly missed (t, having been shot down over the ocean. For tunately, he was a photogra pher, name of Bill Achatz, so he survived nicely, floating around for five days in a rub ber boat. We talked over all the angles and possibilities, the way you do when you are trying to find some good in a bad situation. Finally, somebody said: "Well, don't fornet Pappy is a photographer. He'll stay alive GHEV. FORD Owners O 7 Days Only Here is your chance to get out of the "low price field" on a trade-in deal that keeps your total investment down where you can afford it. For seven days only, we will give you an extra special trade-in discount on the re markable new 1953 Mercury. Come in and hear our offer! With Mercury's unusually high re-sale value, this is a rare opportunity to save money I WARNER MOTOR CO. N. Commercial Salem 430 Wednesday, Anruat 19, 1953 Becoming a Veteran Astorian-Budget Walter Norblad, Astoria's contribution to congress, men. ' tioned during a visit Monday that he is beginning his eighth year as a representative front Oregon. We in Astoria ar. accus- ' tomed to think of Rep. Nor. ' blad as a hometown boy the way most of us remember him ' and tend to forget that ha ' nas acquired years of experi ence in the affairs of govern, ment and is by wsy of becony. ing a veteran member of eon. : gress. There are plenty of cod- ' gressmen who have served ' more than eight years but there are many who have served far less. Rep. NorblsJ is getting into the senlo? brackets. The Astorlan's record la good one. He still maintains youthful energy and ho still works hard for his constituents. In national affairs he is ic. quiring knowledge, experience and mature judgment. His political strength is evi. dent he hasn't had serious opposition since he went tn Washington. With a Republican admlnii. tration in power, Rep. Norblad is well situated to give even better service to bis constit uents and to the nation. GOT COAL INSTEAD Bannock, O. U. Twelve. year-old Jimmy Huml went to buy an ice cream cone yester day and got seven tons of eosl instead. Jimmy ran toward a Good Humor" ice cream wa. on in front of his home with a dime in his hand. At the same moment, a runaway coal truck careened into the curb and dumped its load of fuel almost on top of the boy. "I didn't get my ice cream and I lost my dime," Jimmy complained. just to keep from missing a picture." That's the way they are, those characters.