Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, February 25, 1954, Page 9, Image 9

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    Thursday, February 25, 1954
NEW HOME FOR BLIND ORPHAN
f I I
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon
Morse for Gag
On McCarthy
WASHINGTON (UP) Sen
tor Wayne L. Morse urged Con
gress yesterday to adopt new
rules to keep committee bearings
from turning into "inquisitions
and star chamber proceedings.' '
The Oregon Independent re
ferred specifically to Sen. Jo
seph R. McCarthy's questioning
oi ong. uen. iiaipn zwicger as
"tne type of hearing that should
be brought to an end."
He introduced a resolution to
set up a "code f fair committee
procedure" for both the House
and Senate. It would put a
damper on one-man investiga
tions and insure certain rights
for witnesses
Morse said he would defend
McCarthy's power to conduct in
vestigations but would do every
thing be could to "take away his
power to operate, under any pro
cedure he wishes."
Mrs. Frances Lynch buttons the coat of her newly adopted
blind child, 2-year-old Elizabeth Ann, at the Boston Nursery
for the Blind. They will go home to New York, where "Beth"
will meet Susan, 4, another adopted blind daughter of the
Lynches. Lynch is a bank clerk. (UP Telephoto)
Colorado Drought Spreads
Like a Silent Cancer
DENVER W) Drought sel
dom is dramatic. Ordinarily it
spreads like a silent cancer. But
in south-eastern Colorado today
it is a tangible, fearsome force.
You feel the grit between your
teeth, between your fingers, in
your eyes, even though it may
not be blowing. You begin to
Whisker Rules
For Silverton
SILVERTON Rules and regula
tions governing the whisker con
trst for Silverton'a centennial eel
ebralion next August have been
announced by Rholin Cooley, pub
licity chairman.
Members of the Lions Club
have been delegated to enforce
the rules, which follow:
Whiskers
Deadline All males of Silver-
ton area must have started some
type of "facial adornment" (such
as beard, mustache or mutton
chops, any one or all) by June 1.
Exemptions Anyone purchas
ing and wearing at all times an
"Exemption Badge," price $5.
Any badge holder seen without
his badge will be fined not more
than 50 cents, each time during
the month of June, $1 each time
during the month of July: and
the fine will be raised to $2 each
time during the period of Aug.
l-T.
Contest Rules
Rules Not more than one (1)
quart of hair tonic per week.
Classifications
Beard Scrawniest, fanciest,
t nniest, Van Dyke, reddest. 1
Mustache Funniest, -best
trained.
Mutton chops.
Prizes Ten dollars each class.
Twenty-five dollars grand prize
(one only).
Business-Education
Day Here Discussed
A group of Salem people in
terested in holding a Business
Education day on which Salem's
teachers will visit local indus
tries and businesses met Thurs
day morning at the Hotel Marion
wiih Harry A. Lintz, Portland,
Northwest regional manager of
the U. S. Chamber of Commerce
to discuss the proposal, which
they decided to push.
Walter Snyder, superintendent
of schools, "said the best time
would be the week before school
i opens next September when the
teachers are all here, but not
holding classes. The plan contem
plates dividing the 400 teachers
into groups, according to their
choices, each group being the
guest of an industry or business
throughout the day. The opera
tions are inspected, questions
asked and answered.
The project has been success
fully carried nut in many other
cities, Lintz said. Endorsement of
the school board, the Chamber
hoard and the Industrial Devel
opment Council will be sought, it
was agreed.
Others present were Bill Ham
mond and Clay Cochrane, Cham
ber president and manager, re
spectively; Eleanor Stephens,
state librarian, and Bernard Main
waring, Capital Journal editor.
ROOSEVELT CLIMATE
BLAMED
ROME lPi Former Premier
Alcide de Gasperi said Wednesday
night Italy is not entirely to
blame for failure to uproot com
munism because "the evil plant. .
. was horn and prospered in lnc
Roosevelt climate." The 72-year-lid
leader o( the Christian Dem
crats did not amplify what he
meant by Roosevelt climate.
itch all over with it as you watch
mile after mile of fences buried
in blown dust and sand, tele
graph poles and farm equipment
banked high with the powdery
stuff that kills rich farmland.
The farther south and eist
you go, the fewer furrows you
can discern in what was plowed
wheatland a short week ago.
You can drive 100 miles east of
here and sec little sign of the
disastrous dust storm of last
week and the blow Monday that
added insult to injury.
But once into Hugo, the Lin
coln County seat, you know the
dust has been there.
This is what I saw when I
made a trip into the area:
Just a few miles to the south
and the world turned gray. A
few hundred yards off main
Highway 109 on section-like
road you could see the first bit
ter evidence. -
It looked curiously like an
ocean beach with a few weeds
rising above the wind-sculptured
sand. There was moisture be
neath it Broken cedar fence
posts looked like driftwood.
Adenauer Issues
Warning on Reds
BONN, Germany W West Ger
man Chancellor Konrad Adenauer
warned Thursday that "Sovictiza-
tion of Europe is still the supreme
coal of Russian policy and called
on free Europe to unite quickly
to block this threat.
Opening a debate in the Bunde
stag on the Berlin Big Four con
ference, the chancellor said:
"The Soviet Union intends to
maintain its present advanced po
sition as a jumping off point for
the eventual domination of all Eu
rope. "More than ever now there
exists the necessity for Europe to
unite its resources. The European
Defense Community must become
a reality."
Jazz Players
Dope Addicts
NEW YORK (UP) Variety,
the show business weekly, said
yesterday that narcotics addic
tion is so prevalent among
younger jazz musicians today that
it is virtually impossible to or
ganize a jazz band without in
cluding "a complement of reefer
addicts or worse."
Reefers are marijuana cigar
ettes. The newspaper said band man
agers were unable to make ad
vance bookings because they
could not tell what state their
musicians might be in. It said
one "topflight jazzman recently
had to turn down a $2,000 date
for a week in Las Vegas be
cause the other three members
of his quartet were flying too
high on the stuff at tht time."
Variety said in some instances'
operators of jazz clubs and mi
nor recording firms were prof
iting on the addiction of musi
cians by paying them under un
ion scale and supplementing
their wager with "the junk"
slang for any kind of narcotics.
American Indians have proved
adept in smoke jumping jump
ing by parachute to fight forest
fires.
Auto Dealers
Get Warning
DETROIT tfl Henry Ford XI,
president of the Ford Motor Co.,
and Harlow H. Curtice, president
of General Motors Corp., have
warned their dealers throughout
the nation against the practice of
automobile "bootlegging."
Both Ford and Curtice broadly
nmtea yesterday in letters to their
new car dealers that if the prac
tice continues to grow gome deal
ers stand a good chance of losing
their franchise.
4 Bootlegging is the wholesaling
by franchised dealers of new cars
to used car retailers who sell them
at less than list price.)
Protests filed by franchised deal
ers to the manufacturers to put a
halt to bootlegging.
Charles C. Freed, NADA presi
dent, and Frederick J. Bell, execu
tive vice president, have been in
Detroit conferring with top auto
executives on proposals' for stop
ping me practice.
GREEKS REMAIN LOYAL
IOANNINA, Greece Wl Greeks
repatriated from behind the Iron
Curtain say Communist efforts to
convert the thousands of their
countrymen held there since the
Greek civil war have failed miserably.
MEN!
NOW IS THE TIME
TO BUY ALL
THE CLOTHES YOU NEED AND
SAVE 33 TO 50
. On Superfine Quality
SUITS and TOPCOATS
SPORT COATS, SLACKS AND
HATS during JJ CLOTHES SHOP
COMPLETE CLOSEOUT
MM
Entire Stock Must Be Sold
Regardless of Cost or Loss
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT 'TILL 9 P.M.
J. J. CLOTHES SHOP
387 STATE STREET
2 Door's From Corner of Liberty Street of Bui Stop
Next Door to Hartman't Jewelry Store
THE FOLLOWING ITEMS WILL BE PLACED
OH DISPLAY FRIDAY FEBRUARY 26
Come In and Inspect these appliances , . .'Ask for a bid
form and place your bid. You can bid on any one or any
combination of item.
Bid Accepted Until Noon Friday March S
C fc
IT0 r"l
L v Si
Winning Bids to Be Announced
In Our Store Friday Night,
March 5, at 8 p. m.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO
REFUSE ANY OR ALL BIDS
) lHl CORNER CENTER AND CHURCH STS.
Paw 9