Capital AJournal An Independent Newspoper Established 1 888 I BERNARD MAINWARIN6, Editor ard Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus . Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketo St., Solera Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-24W. tv) UhM Ih Santa at W IwtW ttM aa k VmHtt em. II am aVMtahai ndllaf la a m attcrwlM fMII a Iklt turn mm ate Mn evAUaha ibarala. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ' t Carter: Vrathtr. It.: ts MoaM. ST.H: Oh Yr. til -t. MMI IW, UBS. UDtM, cucIftlBM Cffniw: Tmt, m. Bt M8 Bmtm t Orwoa: Moouur. Il an Moauu, taar. Ill Ml Mr lull OnttlSa OrllW MeaUUf. HJtl fu Moallu. HM: T r, . UN PENALIZES LOYALTY PROBE A top United Nations tribunal has ruled 11 American employee of the UN were fired illegally in connection with the U.S. loyalty investigation. Four were ordered reinstated to their jobs with back pay and seven others awarded a total of $122,500 damages. The decision was handed down at Berne, Switzerland, by the administrative tribunal, the U-N.'e highest court of appeals. The total estimated cost to the U.N. is $135, 000 in addition to full back pay ordered for the 12 whose dismissals were overruled. The dismissals of 9 were up held. Most of those discharged mend (relating to self-incrimination) in refusing to answer senate or federal grand jury questions to to wnetner tney were communists. Only one of the group ever admitted communist connections. The tribunal held that it was no violation of staff rules to invoke the Fifth amendment and this alone was not efficient cause for dismissal. It also held that mem bership in any particular party would not, in itself be justification for firing In most cases of employes holding permanent contracts with the U.N, the tribunal services" charge was not ever, the secretary-general s ation any holders of temporary contracts. - The United States would be expected to pay approxi mately 35 per cent of the amount awarded the dismissed employes, under the present basis lor sharing united Nations overall costs. But inasmuch as the U.S. pays mmr. if th natjt Af that TT greater. The decision means that the United States must pay salaries to communists employed by it in the U.N., which emphasizes the carelessness shown in their appointments by the state department under the Acheson regime which it has been charged was honeycombed by Reds. It may lead congress to refuse to make appropriations to pay the communists. As Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R., Ind.) said, "it's more proof of how far the government of the United States has gone in giving up the sovereignty of the American people. Our government is growing subservient to the United Nations and is giving up our prerogatives and sovereign rights." ' One thing seems certain, it will increase sentiment for passage of the Bricker amendment curbing the power of the president in treaty making, favored by the Ameri can Bar association, and the Dulles proposal for a revision of the U.N. charter. G. P. BANKRUPT IRAN SEEKS HELP The kind of rabble rousing politics Mossadegh played inlran gains plaudits, votes and power in many countries, including some with much less of a "rabble" than Iran, but it usually leaves behind the same kind of a legacy as old Mossy did when he was overthrown. The young shah reveals that the country is some $500 million in the hole, the treasury empty, the army, upon which the power of the government depends, unpaid and unlikely therefore to rebel The government received the bulk of its revenue from oil. It could have received a good deal more under the more liberal contract Mossadegh could have negotiated with scorned. Mossadegh evidently believed the free world had to have oil from the world's largest refinery at Abadan in Iran, and so did many others, but all underestimated the ability of the free world to cope with emergencies. Pro duction was increased elsewhere and now the free world is glutted with oil. Abadan's production isn't needed, or wanted by the oil industry whose problem now is to sell. not to produce. But the new Iranian government needs financial heln right now, and will doubtless dare not leave the shah with nowhere to turn but to Russia. Ironically not Iranlcally, please note Russia needs this oil which the free world doesn't need, but Rus sia has no present means of transporting it. We have very reason to keep the oil from Russia, for oil is a sinew of military power. So presumably the shah will get his help, on the basis of resuming negotiations with Britain over the Abadan refinery. Britain is said now alization, but wants a contract to operate it and to nay itself something for the property, out of its share of the profits, which were very large before the trouble. The fr world will have to ahsnrh thm unneeHnri nil. inmohnw. for we dare not let it go to Russia, along with political control of the country, which Russia also wants. But it will take Iran a long time to gain back what old Mossadegh threw away in his avarice, passion and ignorance. Keeps Job New York Times The dectiloa reached by Secretary ot Commerce Weekf to retain Dr. Allen V. Aitln In definitely as director of the National Bureau ot Standard is the only en that could have been reached In th light ot the record. Though th iiit plcion engendered by the dis missal of Dr. Aitln that hence forth th directorship ot the bureau was to b a patronage Mat may not hive been jus tified, the Secretary must now (ace the new on that Dr. A tin's reinstatement 1 a matter of political expediency. The ippotntment of James C Worthy. Assistant Secretary of Commerce, as supervisor of business administration for the bureau may be wise, but time alone can tell whether or not It it a face-eavini procedure. From the beginning of this unhappy affair the Secretary's rJpSnt has been faulty. Dr. Sja was dismissed, not after rLW aelentifl com. Mxnpw1" .Mae had investigated th bu !?!rM before ich com- MOBUUF. mc. mv mvmwm, r wm. - had invoked the Fifth amend held that the "unsatisfactory proved. It recognized, how right to fire without explan N if nrnnnrt.tnn mav ra the British, but which he get it because the free world to be reconciled to nation Transient Arraigned For Albany Assault Albany Ernest Forest How ell, 33. transient, arrested late Monday on a charge ot auault with a dangerous weapon, was arraigned in district court Tuesday before Judge Wendell Tompkins, who continued the case until Thursday at 1:30 pm. and who set Howell's bond at $2000. which h fail ed to produce. I Howell is accused of assault ing Jickie Lee Cochran, 23. Unlontown, Pa., In hobo Jungle camp east of th city limits with a poker Saturday night. Cochran Is under treat ment at th Albany General hospital for serious Injuries, Including a suspected skull trsctur. mlttee had been appointed. Even now we have only s rather casual reierence to that cwnmums reoori, still un published. THAT WOULD DO IT I AN IDEA FOR. rSjfl M A new bomb!vt. rV 1 1 will jgnr wnyj llivL oh I I S wr KnaJ' 1 1 um i w ear w i i . m r .i anas m t i bom&vyill ; . m KILL 1 At?? 1 POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Heedless Hal Boyle Scales Catskill Mountain Ledge By HAL Editor's note: Giant's Ledge, I hitherto Irreproachable out cropping ef the Catskllls, has been scaled by a party led by Atop Giant's Ledge, N.Y. OT At last! At last! We are here! I can hardly breathe. Boy, even at 3,000-plus feet the auto exhaust fumes get you in the Catskllls. Our party has planted the Confederate flag on the peak here and w are negotiating to sell th place to Gov. Thomas E. Dewey. First of all. I would like to say that this feat would have been Impossible without the careful planning of my faithful Sherpa wife, Frances. She fixed the sandwiches. She Is back at base camp No. 1 home. I will never for get her heartening farewell words: "Anyone who tries to scale Giant's Ledge after 40 when he could stay here and play gin rummy is nuts. Nor can I wipe from my mind her querulous fsmlnine query: "Why is Giant s Ledge such a challenge to you?" Surely you must remember my quiet but firm reply: "Because, my dear, it is there." "Well, It is stiU there and I and my party are atop of it. We did a typical American thing on accomplishing this feat. We first sat down and panted, scratched our initials on a rock, and cooked some hot dogs. Naturally the world won dera what it la like up here in the clear, clean cough, cough ozone. Well it appears that this area one had a tropical cli mate, as the first thing we saw was a ruined orange peel. Also it had been penetrated earlier by a barbarian explorer who inscribed this proud message of his achievement: "Kllroy was here." Nothing else Is left of his passing. On can but wonder what emotions stirred the breast ot that forgotten rude Pains, distress of "those days'1 stopped or amazingly relieved in 3 out ef 4 cases In ejectors' tests! Here's wonderful news tor women and girls who each month suffer th tortures of "bad days" of functionally caused menstrual cramps and pain headaches, backaches, and those "no-good," dragged out feelings. It's news about a medicine famous for relieving such suf fering! Here Is the exciting news. Lydla E. Ptnkham's Vegetable Compound gar complet or ttriking relief ot such distress in an average ot 3 oat of 4 of the cases In doctors' tests I Till Lydla Plnkhun's hu been firoved to b sclentitceUy modr a action I This news win not surprise th thousands of vnmen and rirU who take Lydla Ptnkruun'e retmUrly and know th relief It can bring. And It should enceurwe yrm (if you're not Uktnt Ldi Pin khaai 1 to see If your experience doesnt dont avoid trie nermann' tn,j Irritability. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem. Orefoa ' I'eftsSB ? BOYLE Heedless Hal Boyle, a barefoot Missouri boy with an Iron pur pose. His first-person story follows: savage chief as he ' surveyed the tremendous scene. ' He has gone, but time has not dimmed the splendor of that vista. Humbly we stood in the dread shadow of an even more unassailable peak called well, let's be honest Mt. Pleasant. With two more oxy gen masks and three more hot dogs we could of climbed it, too, and that's the truth. Below us spread the far splendid acres of the lady who sells fresh corn for 73 cents a dozen ears on weekends and 50 cents a dozen on Mondays, when tourists are scarce. History, of course, will want to know who first reached the top of Giant's Ledge. Was it Bill and Fredrika Gray of Life Magazine, the sponsors of our expedition, or one of the six freckled young animals in their keeping? Or. was it I? Or was it Mrs. Hugh Tenzing Blake, who previously had prepared for the ordeal by climbing ev ery rugged cliff in Bermuda? The world may wonder, but we mountaineers have no jea lousy. For us it was a team job, You will never get from us the secret ot who was first to reach the top. What difference does it make? We made the peak. But I will give you a tip. It you are middle-aged and try. ing to scale a mountain, al ways follow behind the pret tiest girl in the party. It will give you something to look forward to, as you climb from peck to peak. One whale can provide much meat as 100 cattle. Mw lySta StHkfcew's wwtts ft ha wra!ml0 n4 snetM f?Mt o thm iruf ...qvttme I ht cwntranioiw IM tht chart) that mo often mum mtiwmiel poM, cnmpi, MHtr SlrtrM. and pain so often aamrlated with "those days"! Remember Plnkhsmt, too tf you're sufferlnc the -hot flushes and other functlonaUr-teused dis tress of "chant of life." Oet Lydla Pinkham's Compound or ara, rmprored Tablet with added Iron r'frlal nt oaly 5J, Start taking Finkfcam todajl R.-A5PIRIH AT IKRm- in HV -.MS st? v ' . t .1 . , is-S ' -r-J" ' ' VH I ' i 1 : s Religious Schools The Christian Century Incisive commendation of some privately supported col leges and universities comes from a study published re cently by the University of Chicago and Wesleyan Univer sity presses. It indicates that such schools are the main producers ot fu ture scholars in this country. Two Wesleyan psychologists Robert H. Knapp and Joseph R. Greenbaum studied 862 colleges and universities to discover students who show most promise of intellectual achievements. They found that since 1948 some 50 American institutions produced more than 10 male scholars for each 1,000 graduates. A scholar by their measurements was a man who earned a Ph.D. or a uni versity fellowship or a private foundation fellowship in open competition. By this measure, 31 of the 50 schools turned out to be privately supported liberal arts colleges. Nearly all of these were founded by churches or by churchmen with a strong religious inter est. Only 12 are universities and three technical schools. Quaker-founded S w a r t h more leads the list with a pro portion of 61.2. Other top scores: Reed College, Oregon, 53.1; University of Chicago, 48 4; Oberlln, 39.8; Haverford, 39.5. The dozen, women's col leges which . also had more than 10 scholars per thousand were likewise, with two ex ceptions, private or church-related. Th Younger American Scholar deserves to be care fully studied by persons who are weighing once more the meaning of education and the relation of a Christian purpose thereto. Jl ... "nil 1 SSZI h7 y' - --p a I ! ! -', ' ' r. ; . - 1 I 1 I Centrally located hi etewntawti Sl)ss, Hie W. T. RIG DON CO., MORTUARY offers ample perklna space end convenient eccess te Salem's cemeteries. Threvehotit Hie years, every effett Is made to keep f.VilU g He modem . . . te better serve Selom. PHONE 33173. v WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Think Acid in Baby Talc Caused Infants' Deaths By DREW Washington The federal food and drug administration la quietly gathering evidence that the so-called "harmless" boric acid contained In baby tale and ointments has actual ly caused th Death of scores of infanta in recent years. "When all the evidence Is In," said one FDA official, "we're going to insist manu facturers put some type of warning label on their prod ucts. "In the meantime," he con tinued, "we're encouraging manufacturers to stop the use of boric acid In any product where a substitute can be found." For years, borated tale and ointment have been standard items in. almost every home medicine chest. Mothers have considered it a routine, safe treatment for minor cuts and rashes diaper rash in par ticular. No one knows how many infants have died as a result of boric-acid poisoning. Gener ally, such deaths have b-en at tributed to some other cause. According to Dr. James Ducey of New York's Roosevelt hos pital, "Infant deaths often at tributed to meningitis and pneumonia actually are caused by boric acid in a powder ap plied by mothers in a mistaken belief that it has soothirig therapeutic value. "The error In diagnosis oc curs," says Dr. Ducey, "be cause autopsies in these cases are so rare. Relatively large quantities ot pure boric add are available for absorption from ordinary dusting powders containing boric acid." EARLY WARNING What started the food and drug administration's probe of boric acid in baby talc was medical reports such as that by Dr. Russell Fisher, chief medical examiner of Balti more, who as early as 1931 wrote: No attention has been paid to the possibility of absorption of boric acid from powders or other preparations applied to the surface ot the body. That there is real danger of poison ing by boric-acid absorption through areas of dermatitis (srin Infection) has been learned during our study of the unexpected deaths of in fants in Baltimore in the past two years. "The usual history,' warned Dr. Fisher, "is that ot the de velopment of a 'diaper rash' In an infant under one year of age, and the treatment of tne dermatitis by repeated appli cation of boric acid in a starch or talc mixture ... It Is con sidered highly probable that many cases of fatal boric-acid poisoning occur but go un diagnosed." NOTICE TO MOTHERS Another Earning published in the AMA's Journal of Dis eases of Children by Doctors Clement Brooke and Thomas Boggs stated: "Boric acid and sodium borate are sufficiently poisonous to cause severe sym ptoms and death when used in amounts commonly considered to be perfectly sate. Boric acid is readily absorbed by a number of different routes and is particularly Insidious in that symptoms may be minimal (minor) until e lethal or near lethal dose has been absorb ed." Despite numerous warnings by medical experts, the food snd drug administration finds that some manufacturers of boric-acid products have been hard to convince. As a result, unsuspecting drugstores con tain millions of cans of borated talc and boric-acid ointment PEARSON with no warning labels to alert the unsuspecting house wife or mother. Note Due to curtailed funds, it will be another year before the food ana orug aa ministration can complete its study and force manufacturers to place the necessary warning labels on boMc-acia proaucu, HEADLINES AND FOOTNOTES Secretary of th Treasury Humphrey is burned up over a New York Times story that the administration hopes to balance th budget with a na tional sales tax. Actually, Humphrey had talked off the record to a group of newsmen, but what the treasury secre tary actually said was that "national sales tax is one of many things being consider ed." Secretary Humphrey feels that the Times not only violated ' th off -the record agreement, but got .the story twisted. As a result, the New York Times will not be invited to any more of Humphrey's off-the-record conferences . Along with a national sales tax, the treasury department Is considering a manufacturing excise tax at the production rather than the retail level, and is even studying another boost In income and corporate taxes. No final decision will be made until the treasury has a complete picture of the gov ernment's needs . . . Internal revenue bureau has stopped reviewing the tax returns of the big corporations, believe it or not, as an economy move. Hereafter, the word of the agent in the field will be final on whether the corporations have paid then- fuU taxes. Yet millions of dollars have been recovered every year by re viewing tax returns in Wash ington. . This means th big corporations will get off easier in the future, and, if there are any dishonest agents left in the field, they may be tempted to make a deal with certain corporations,- knowing that the returns will never be double checked . . . Senator McCar thy stated bluntly the other day that a man who refuses to testify on the grounds that he might be Incriminated, must be guilty. Thus, by McCar thy's own standards, he Is guilty of six grave violations of the law, since he refused to appear before a congressional committee and - answer ques tions about his finances. WASHINGTON PIPELINE The army has quietly pro moted Brig. Gen. Edwin SI bert, the intelligence "expert who was caught asleep at the Battle of the Bulge. He re fused to believe the Germans were massing in the Ardennes, and as a result, the unsuspect ing American army was caught off-base. Finally, after 11 years, Sibert got his second star . . . Secretary of Labor Martin Durkin still keeps an active hand in his old union. the afl Plumbers and Pipe fitters. He'll be a voting dele gate at th AFL's annual con vention in St. Louis, Sept. 21. . . . The British will soon test precision atomic bombing at their Australian proving ground. The British have so perfected radar aiming with an atom bomb they can just about hit a dime . . . The de fense department has ordered a survey of all its commissar ies and PX's to determine whether to close them down. At least some post exchanges will be closed after Novem ber ... U. S. strategists are now convinced Russia will Wednesday, September 1 1SS Salem 34 Years Ago By BEN MAXWELL September 1, 1S5I Drcadnaught Arkansas battleship Vermeat and North Carolina, scout cruiser, Blrminghsm and six destroy, ers were scheduled to b at Portland September S-10 1819. A Dutch aviator had flown over von Bentinck eastla at Amerongen, Holland, to wave a greeting to William Hohen sollern sawing wood in th castl garden, . General Pershing had sail ed from Brest, France, (or America where he will lead First Division parades tn New York and Washington. Opening of the bunting sea son today had sent hundreds of hunters into the mountains of Oregon. Forest fires In Oregon were prsctlcslly under control due to heavy rains. Although there had been a most unusual demand for houses to rent and buy. Sa lem bad very little building during August, 1919. Onlv six building permits had been Issued for a total of $3350 in new construction and for re pairs. J. B. Miller, first witnei. to testify before a congressional subcommittee I n v estlgatini the spruce division, had said that the government railroad built In Lincoln county was a waste of money and that manv engaged In the work "didn't know a spruce tree from a rose bush." Her beit Hoover had declar ed that high food costs in America were entirely due to failure of the allies to lift the blockade against Central Europe immediately after th armistice. At Indian Hill farm Craw ford peaches were available for $1 and S1.50 a bushel. A hog weighing 200 pounds had $8 less value in Salem than it had one week ago. never untie East Germsny from its apron strings Best intelligence from Inside th Kremlin Is that the purged se cret police chief, Beria, fa vored an independent Ger many as a buffer between the east and west. He was op posed, however, by Premier Malenkov, who would not agree to cut th communist tie to Germany and permit free elections . . . Here's more bad news for farmers: Farm costs, including wages for farm hands and prices of farm equipment, have climbed an other 1 per cent while farm prices have dropped a record iz per cent. (cwrrifht ii reejAMwi iVwiuy...' hap a efM yis vara omv MlW-sjl WAK(US1D i-5lk?a( UUY'lLUt Ntf ly til wit, Kj5y I to grow thririof . rn -