,1: Bito f op -Right at Home Where Sho&Flies in Quebec 51 . ; : ?No Favor Swayt U8;tfoJS1uXt& f .1 - From First SUtesman, March 18, UtV SjHELDON F., Sackett , -Editor and Manager, "THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. Charles A- Sprague. Pres. - - Sheldon F. Sackett, Seer. I ' Member of the Associated Frees , - - ., The Aassciatad Praaa Is exclusively entitled to the on for public Upa of ell sews dispatches credited to it or not otberwle credited U this paper. By JU X BXNDRICKI' When a mob raged 1-1-St against the? dancer of Salem stealing the Santlam river, back la 'SO I - V -' (Concluding from yesterday:) The mem who organised the' com pany which erected and operated in Salem the tint woolen mill -on this coast were big men. George H. Williams was a supreme judge. oecame united states senator, at torney general of the United States, etc., etc Joseph a. Wilson $56,000,000 Mistake When the question of appropriating 1725,000,000. or $875,000,000 for the WPA was before the United Stat ann ate last week, Senator Adams of Colorado, in arguing for the I elected to congress; John rx lower figure, chanred that CoL P. C Harrii.rTr. wh . f100 WM al Un territorial H.mr WnW- wd a rZLs? rZ: 1' , ! """"er, Became first state treas- IwwS rsis TftAfl TaaaT ""iw, aa maae an nrer; L. F. Grorer became mem- error oi 56,000,000 In computing the amount necessary to her oi congress, governor, u. s. operate this agency until the end of June, based iiDon already 8enator. etc. Joseph watt brought eaiauusnea iizures as to navmpnt. nvprhpar. snH nrnntuii i . . " w- m T w . vwnvuuvi T 2 ..A . a." a j . It is interesting to note that the .ntinvn. v . fi w" P1 TT-ti. J Oi a . - i ouvuuaiui iw inn erection OI ine united states was, in round numbers, $56,000,000 in the year ml: Joseph Hoiman was one of ' l Th wV . e j v I a, . erection of the I860: Expenditures were a trifle more. $63,000,000. Kvprv Salem's Tery first town boosters: year since, it has taken nine, ten, sometimes ll figures to m.e lth p?orta parlT of represent either of these amounts. Of course, the United U'LZSSVl Mates was much smaller in population and wealth in 1860. Bamum was a pioneer attorney But the government revenue in that year was $1:78 per car- and orator: Alfred Stanton was a ita. In 1938 it was $47.89. public spirited pioneer resident. Think what a furor there would. have been in 1860 if mm waswted"nnNorthhsaiem! someone had remarked in the senate, in rather offhand fash- That waB ri&t. North Salem did ion, that there was a $56,000,000 discrepancy inhe natinnl not et toto the cIy limit ontu nccounbi in nfhpi vnrHa ffco V,a " : . C many years thereafter. v k. uauvu s ciilix c mcuiae iiati been unaccountably mislaid! Now, $56,000,000 represents slightly less than one per cent. , Appropriately, the senate sDent almost ATI Pntirp lptrila tive day discussing this alleged error and other matters in volved in the varying estimates of WPA nooH Trio nota fills 30 of the large, fine-type pages of the Congressional Rec- tne 801,111 Larmer warehouse is ora. UUl me senate never came to unanimnna oTamnf uu.w- remission mills passed into about this discrenanev. ArcorHir, fA St A-JL : ?mate. nand- These were the - - i , ' . . . v Auouio, it, vYtta i men who in 1850 starts t a- were sioppea ty the mob. The machinery of the mission mills was sold and mmui r.w and, when the woolen mills build ing was erected, the same site was available, and acquired, and usea, ana tne same water uw The first building by whites in what is now Salem was for the Jason Lee mission mills, saw' and grist, under one roof; across the street from present 960 Broad way. Tnat building stood where. Mrlv t1a xj ' 777" , , " . I"eu. wfl m iao surted to " 'J Iv; . " ""Kiun sammea naving iunus I ne ditcn to the Santlam, and l" io reoruary v, but he figured from Febru- VkJtf estate of needed funds. That accounted for $45,000,000, and the remainder was accounted for in an allo cation of WPA funds for 90,000 relief workers employed un- uuicr leuerai oepartments, up to March 1. '.;:;r;::;;::::.::5-: v::x::?::::'x .?sr:sg5.5;: SOUTHERN CLIMATE COULDN'T TEMPT THESE Siberian hnskies who rale supreme la the snowy kingdom. Mrs. Harry Wheeler of 8t Jorlte, Quebec, finds them gentle pets. xiiwiuroverxiDie iacts tnat the day's discussion did r"; "u 8ame water Pwer bring forth were that in the dead of winter, 1937-38, at the USerTht fiS V?". low point of '-the "recession," there were only 1,900,000 per-KSTiotLVSi sons on WPA, as compared to 3,245,000 on the Saturdav nine MmDie"' now. days before the ireneral election last KnvamW lact tnat there had been a marked imorovement in business. The officers of the woolen mill industrvariHAmnlnv-AA ti "iT Z ; 7. vu . were: Daniel ; vi-.wjiuvui ouiw wujjt. xiieie uau ueen a similar increase m the comparatively prosperous year 1936 also an election year. waiao. president; John F. Miller, ice-presiaent; Wm. s. Ladd, treasurer; L. F. Grorer. John F. Miller and Daniel Waldo, dlrec- r n. n I " .MT5.r managing vwuu i iuictuuu uuw J-esiraOie u josepn Hoyt. superin- a J10 yeaS ag0 most r Proponents of Presi- J? "U'A dent Kooseveit s mnrr narlrinap Kill . j- , . , ra . . CiC cv"B ""ii un; woo! a year; malting 50,000 yards power of judicial review of legislative action had been us- ' blankets. 129.000 yards of uiyw uy me supreme court, me same group inferred that a . caMlneres, and 120,000 law as made by the majority, whether in congress or by di rect vote, constituted the expressed will of the nation and should m no instance be invalidated by a little group of nine old men. It is a bit amusing in the light of such reasoning, un sound though it was, to note how fervently the opposition to the anti-picketing measure in Oregon is appealing to the courts for relief. The-arguments will be that the measure, de- tnitA Rl flAA msinn'i.. ..J .1 1 a. ... . toin inalienable constitutional privileges including the right th fiHaYn tSTST of free speech. Either the Oregon supreme court or the fed- of Noyember 17, 1857 aji eral supreme court, or both, ultimately will have before them 1r?gon of"didom and high so- tne tiuesuon or laying the law alongside the constitutions and ury' dimitarieT a mU- ZlZl W I youngs " uB-ucc, vue tuiuu win oe msKea to wminis ter judicial lethal gas to the initiative measure, no matter now lartro -a? am Wa ma i. . WHa Tnf n f aiL j 1 -wl. . I -world's greatest cailr, leaj - - .v6-4-cu wMJi, ctass, was uui- er. tie was one of the thre em. - - a.. , Hx mwwai ui xux. iwuacveii ana 1 jtckdi at Appomattox to yards of flannels, and the goods wB oemg sold "in erery town and hamlet on the Pacific coaat." Then what happened? The mill burned to the ground on the night of May 2. 187. That was the greatest low eTer dealt to pio- oaiem. r or a dosen years. ..-. tvwn languisned because the loss. of 10 ears Ago February 1. 1929 The will of the late Eric Habs- rer who died in Portland recently Includes 1100.000 to Willamette university according to an nouncement made by President carl G. Doney. P. H. Sheridan, who danced with the most beautiful of Oregon's belles. Eight years later k. ... oJJlhe implications of that legislation. Many union men were, f Lee's sword. The other w argument warniade lhat the courts had grown stale, that ioHiTZTr Bd xcjr were unprogressive, tnat. judges looked With jaundiced Oregon and WahrnVton " The Thomas Kay Woolen mills ?lem now use only .about 400 000 pounds of wool a ymf .nW theirs is a four set mill, while the Directory reported the orlainal yes at what was new and modern and necessary in legisla- .LF VM n . j e a. a xumi. ine wm oi tne people, whether expressed by congress in hastily drawn NRA or AAA act, must prevail. Now all that "new thought jroea out the window. Th courts re again constituted as the last barrier of defense Anti-picketing act in Oreron am mfn ti n.,AK.. f h nVi,f I!ct?,Z.?.7ve the ' " Pio- .,, . . . v . : -- w.. i uor wiuametie mm at caaaa gainst allegedly coercive legislation. No antaironists nf the mui Jam- But the Dt- anu-piciceting act in Urejron ar mrinir to niiHnn th HW i : f,T' f judicial review of legislation and its invalidation by the ontb. while that omVy miii courts, if the legislation is found unconstitutional. nn oTeii2,oo a. month. Last in tneiace uf what happened in Oregon last November. ?r; "!J? WM I?r theportty to potest to Se courts noV appears a sacred SVuS waY S privilege. That privilege would be sterilized if any governor leading woolen nin man o" tS had power to pack the state jrapreme court;. if any president co"t the day. workedior had power to make a hurried house-deanin of th M.W Mtalling machinery for United SUtes tribunal. i .rHi",rr"!J' 800,1 aft" hU Merit Rewardea L What ha FPned to the water Felix Frankfurter la now an associate justice of the which ST SSJlJ ?nf aupreme court, Tilling,the4uace made vacant by the late Jus- tice Cxrdozo. A tribute to his ability was the unanimous vote " ta.atm to Tn Oregon -received in the United SUtes senate. Often criticized in that KSTSfTt tTtheea Doayits the lear who. sent so many young attorneys into why. when you pass that instito- jrovernment service, when the test came on his confirmation. tlon at rou see its groands ' . A mmm . .. . - waII 1 a a . a .b - no-fwr was wiuing-to say thathe was not a fit member w"VJ5": . wr Pwer FrankfurtCT'a advancement is a-case of. merit Forty "d than is t.rnuhed this I0Urearsaohe Waaan Immitrrant fnm AnefWa ntiM tA power eiDeciallT when tfa nv f Pk wrd of Englirii. By intellectual force and through machlnery f fuU tut. the drive of a splendid character. Frankfurter schiovpH n. th v.- --.!L lT. . . . , nvuicu miu uses aoont tional recognition as a lawyer and & scholar of law. The close "$ horse power. The city of sa- xnendship he held with the late Justice, Holmes as well as le,a nsed to develop, from the wn ms immeoiate predecessor on the bench were strong for at hu been tnsrrY ?ZL ces in molding the character of the new judge. He will & lib- Sai 5SDnSfctoS erai within the constitution but he will not be a judge who Pan an ned' largely for iorsaices tne complete right and duty of the supreme court to ntna'Ir purposes; that it, surplus nan .ia i i m I When other innriH f a- .. me wjusuiuuonauiy oi laws. I n , .,w "c vuon oi uie narvara proiessor to the bench is Then the Oregon Pulp and Pa- proot anew tnat tne united btates recognizes merit. The sen- Per company, Salem's greatest m- ate could have argued that his appointment was unwise be- ?U8imi "wutution. mm some wa- cause the court wa lPff witk n i t , , I ter power, from the same eource. , - --. Uv ivoM.n ureuiuw ii tuuiu l But the-amount la lnim.rik- have argued that it was unwise to provoke the Jewish issue. I compa"d witll the wnoi? "ioS I ITM III Tnjjen ITTaPVfl HFM ! A Ha m 1 v A I -vi BMW.U " uuiuc uu uw new justice, lnrougn out the nation the bar as Well as the public recognized super ior ability in the latest nominee of the president That abil ity makes Mr. Frankfurter a worthy successor to his mentors, JHCf IKO Ullmo. .Jt-. -iuiuva uuuuca cLuvl varuuzo, - i r, . .-- rerenmal rmbaU Games representative ; ureenwood's pinbaU and punchboard Z IZZ T.Tul-.!foe " nni hill ahnnM Va triwn oAi.t- H.-itA. ai. i i j I . Haie prison, ana n ,4 a tICiCT: j rrl" -ZZZZZZ 7t V, . . . I .nc. Sonth Mm creek 7. .1.. v iuccxicu. wo years a so tne utrney and the Mar I other North MUX creek In Tin hill MKh harnima V.. LI- j. - 1 , " v4 wwuuig gauiuuuy enterprises irom ure- thelr- courses to the Willamette tnrougn saiem. The amount of water power that was available In drr seasons for the use of the mission mills, erect ed in 1840, coming from North Mill creek, was Tery small. In some periods, the mills were idle, for want of adequate power. The original race was where North Liberty and Broadway streets meet. In the old days it was neces sary to maintain a second bridge mere across tne race. S S Of course, some water power is going to waste, at several points aiong xsortn Mill creek. The present Statesman building was used, in the closing sixties and early seventies, the basement and part of the ground floor of it, for a own town neaaqnarters and show room of the Willamette woolen mill; the second floor for the of fices of the governor of Oregon and his private secretary, the su preme court and state library rooms, and the office of state sup erintendent of public instruction. DGsaqflBfl) .Programing Capital City Cooperative creamery organised here in 1918 nas been taken over b Green wood dairy and two Institutions win oe conducted as one at 1220 state as announced by D. B. Mc- &enxie, manager. Mrs. Josephine Corliss Preston. former superintendent of pnbUc iastrucuon in Washington, has oeen a guest in Salem and is on a lecture tour of country. 20 Yearo Ago Febrmary 2, 1919 secretary of Bute Oleott is oaniy u need of services of James B. Young, chief auditor ii secretary's -office, who has en listed -for army service and gov ernment baa not released him. CHcott nas sent telegram to Sen- . a rsa. . wr aamoeriaia asung for re lease. unaries a. Johns lr.. bob of judge and Mrs. C. A. Johns, was a mem ocr or ine flatn coast ar tillery which landed at Philadel- pnia Tuesday. witn a score of 25 to 14 th saiem nigb school quintette de feated the McMlnnvUle basket- oaii team la the local rvnna. slum. GUI and Latham were high nturrn ior aatem. employed by this plant, when an parts of it are operating at' fan capacity. No power la now being. taken from North Mill creek.' though originally, when the first woolen mill was erected, none other was used. The stranger ahonld be told that the mala Mill creek Is dlvld- one January Shipping Angurs big Year PORTLAND. Jan. S1-pi Steamship men, reflecting upon January s outward bound ship ping from the Portland area, be ttered today the year would re. cord a steady trade increaaa. aaeven cargoes of wheat total-1 ing .3vv,ooo bushels and valued at $2,200,900 have been loaded for England. China and Mexico. mw exports to China and the Philippines reached 160,000 bar rels. The movement to other for eign and domestic markets was es timated at 190,000 barrels. The value to the export trade was aoont 11.000,000. Scrap Iron shipments to Japan w January reacned f 100,000. Californian Head Of Pro-Americas - SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. JMflV -Mrs. A. a Mattel of San Prat Cisco was elected nresldent of th National Association of Pro-Am. erica today at the annual conven tion r of the republican women's organisation. . Other officers elected to tha u. tional board Included! -ricm nmii. dents, Mrs. Barry Carpenter, BI1- uaga, jsonc, Caroline "Unander. wwifcr, vvasn. , ' f - i ww iutt were siuea uy me governor, ine ureenwood nas indicated the nei referendumwas towkedagain the measures and the peo- behest of the "mama and papS pie sustained them last November by substantial votes. Ore- need the additional revenues ninl AYIYl fitiuil Va4-U -.. .M i . i m- I 7' 4 . . - ,;i ' - i Vr ul4 y we governor, me I ureenwood has Indicated the new bfll was lrtrAHl if a ma' .J..m.J a. a . by direct vote on the Deration of thes t.ir mji u... XI uy w "?a.ie wmcn nas de- , M . .. . - .vp . v -mmmmrm iwmi a UlAk LJJC UlUUVV KflllWTyjWI TTYITVI Ml Alf-MM Mwik & ?enU that they are rueprucers a people and distressed tax-levying bodies fall on deaf ears.Mr.lmittee. aJuung uences. ine Dili should -die in con SaUt WXDHSSDAT 1S7S Xs. 7:80 Kew. 7 :4a Tim, 0'DT. 8:00 Mora lag Mcditetiona. 8:15 Eisht o'clock Clipper. 8:10 Htb af Bctt 8:45 Nwa 9:00 Patr's Can. 9: IS Home Town. :S0 Hit ni Eaor. 9:4& i'ricnaly Cirel. 10:15 Newt. 10:30 Professor Thompson. 10:45 Voics ot KzparisBc. 11:00 Tele-Topics. 11:15 "Man I Wouldn't Giro TJp." 11 :30 WiUanette Unirersity ChapaL 11:45 Muse and Masic 12:0O Vala Parade. U:15 Kewi. 12:30 HiUbilly Serenade. 12:45 Maahattera. 1:00 Interesting Facta. 1 : 15 Midstream. 1:30 PTA. 1:45 Book a Week. 2:0O 8pice of Life. 2:15 Johnson Family. 2:30 AJnerieaa Legka Talk ea Amar tcanism. 2:43 Helene Daniels, Blues. 8:00 Feminine Fancies. 8:30 Public Health Forma. 4:00 Fulton Lewis, Jr. 4:15 Jack McLean's Orchestra. 4:30 It's Box Office. 5:00 College ot Mnsic. 5:80 Johnnr Lawrence Club. 5:45 Dinner Hoar Melodies. 8:15 Shatter Parker. :30 Legislative Roundup Statesman ol the Air. 8:45 Tonight's Headlines, T:00 Walts Time. 7:30 Lona Banger. 8 :00 News. 8:15 Betty Jane Rhodes, Chicce'g Orchestra. 8:90 Dick Jargeni' Orchestra. :0O Newspaper of the Air. t:15 Masters wt the Batoa. 0:30 Crrstal Oardsna Ballroom. 10:00 Pair-O-Dice Ramblers. 10:15 Shep rielas' Orchestra. 10:80 Jiauny Orier's Orchestra. 11:00 Jack McLean's Orchestra. WWW XOAO WXSXXSDAT 659 Xs. 9 :03 Homessakers' Boar. 9 : Neighbor Seraolds. 10:15 Sterr Hoar lor Adults. 10:5S Today's Mews. 11:00 Tnp t rraaea. 11:15 Oldea Orena. 11:30 Your Sports IQ. 12:18 Safety Talk. 12f80 Msrket, Crap Seporta. l: Variety. 2:00 AAUW Study ClaK 2:45 Oaara Teer Hwtlth. 8:15 Facts and Affain. Ir5 Monitor Vrews the News. 4:00 Sysnhoaic Halt Boar. 4:30 Stories for Boys and Girls. 8:00 On tha Csmpasea. :45 Vsspan. 8:15 News. 8 :8 Agrienltnre Viewed Vy Xdltort. :5 Market Beriews. 8:18 DAB. 1 0 Artbnr I in arte a. T:15 Student As Ctab. 7 :45 Csn.aaers IWu. 8:15 Maaic of Caecheslerakia. e e UW WznmUDAT 829 Tm. 1:99 Btory at the Meath. 7:15 Trsil Blsiers. 7:45 Km 95 T4 Waita. 8:15 Virgir-U Laaa 8:80 Sure of Today. 9:00 Una Harding' Wife. 9:18 The O'Keills. 9:80 Tena sad Ttav 9 :45 Organ. 10:00 Jehn'a Otkwr Wifs. io:i -jnst naia Bill. 10:80 DiQgerees Ratds. 10 US Dr. Kate. 11:00 Setty and Bob. 11 US ria'i Daaghtor. 11:80 Valiant Lady. 11:45 Betty Cracker. 12 fOO Story af Mary Msrlla. 12:15 Ma Perkioa. 12 :30 Pepper Toeag'e Faasity. It :4ft Onidiag Li rat. 1 :w Bschstsg t Wife. 1J 5 Stella Dallas. 1:20 Vic sad Sada. 1:45 Olri Alone. 2:00 Houseboat Hanaaa. 2:15 Radio Review. 2:20 Leo and Ken. 2:30 Hollywood Fleshes. 2:45 Charles Sears. 3 :00 News. 8:15 I Love a Mystery. 8:30 Woman's MafazioV 4:00 Easy Aces. 4:15 Mr. Keen. 4:80 Orchestra. 4:45 Musical Interlude. 5:00 Stars of Today. 5:30 Hobby Lobby. 0:00 Paul Carson. Biltmor- Trio. 0:30 Martin's Music. 8:43 Variety Parade. 7:00 Kay Kyser'a KoUege 8:00 Amos 'n' Andy. 8:15 Edwin C. Hill. 8:30 Toauny Doner. 9:00 Town Hall Tonight. 10:00 News Flashes. 10:15 Moods Mellow. 10:30 Orchestra. e e XOIH WEDVE8DAT 940 Kc. 8:30 Market Xeports. 8:35 KOIN Klock. 8 :0O News 8:15 Old Cowhand. 8:30 This and That. 8:15 Threo Merry Mea. 9:30 Helen Trent. 9:45 Onr Gal Sunday. 10:00 The Goldbergs. 10:15 Life Csn Be Beautiful. 10:45 Woman in the News. 11:90 Big Sister 11:15 Real Life Stories. 11:30 School of the Air. 12:00 News. 12:14 SiBgia' Saas. 12:45 Fletcher Wiley. 1:00 Kitty Kelly. 1:15 My rt and Marge. 1:0 Hilltop Hons. 1 :45 Stepmother. 2:00 Scattetfood Boiaes. 2:15 March at Games. 2:30 So You Want te Be. 2t45 Surprise Tour Hasbaai. 8:05 Lew Weber. 8:80 Newrpapar at the Air. 4 :45 Chiquito. 5:00 FWe 0'Oteck riaaa. 8:15 Howie Wing. 5:30 Clark Rosa. 5:55 News. 8:00 Star Theatre. 7:00 Leon F. Drew. 7:15 Rhythm Rhapsody. 7:80 Aak-It-Basket. 4:09 Little Shew. 8:11 law aad Abner. 8:80 Oreheatra. 9:00 Gaag Busters. 9:30 Sophie Taekar. 9:45 Orchestra 10:09 FW, Star TiaaL 10 :15 -Nihteap Taraa. 19 :30 Orchestra. a e r iui xs. 8 J0 MusUal Oaea. 7:00 Family Altar Hon. 7:89 Tiaaaeial Sarrtea. 7 ?48 Swerthearia. 7:55 Market Quotations. 8:00 Dr. Brack. : Ranch Boys. St48 Originalities. 9 :00 Alias Ceraett. 9:15 Show Window. 9:30 Tana aad Hoaaa. 10:15 Agriculture Today. 19:89 New. 10:45 Hem laaUtatc 11:00 Xat are Tiail. 11:15 Melody Time. 11:80 Voica of Amerieaa Wi ii:45 aadia Bartow. 11:50 Mariaa-Baaa. xs.OO Dapt. Asricultar. 12:15 Orchestra. 12:30 Kwa J3. 45 Market Keporta. u:ao tfui liaar. 1:30 Club Mstinea. 9i09 O dMstra. 9:15 Tiaaaeial aad Grata. 2:20 Jire rire. 1:25 Taar Savy. 2:45 Onrbataae Quia :00 Jasaa Crawford. :15 Oreaeetra, 8:25 News :0 Marlew aad Lyes. Bj DOROTHY THOMPSON m n i ' BeUeT aad RnploTroent - What we need Is not a cat In anoreoriations for Teller lint analrsU of way tne relief rolls remain so enor- mous at all points ot the business cycle. The center of interest has been the' appro priation. . The. center of Interest onght to he how ' a produce greater productive em- employment. I .suspect that onr continued sure unemployment Is not an act ot God but the res ait of policies. If It Is the result of policies, then by all meant- let us reconsider them. - . The WPA Is an attempt to create jobs for workers at sub sistence wares. A real national employment policy would concen trate on creating an economic situation in which. jobs for work ers at normal wages woald na turaliy ocenr. It Is Just this economic situ ation which has not, after six years of reform an " recovery. materialized. We have a stagnant economy. It has become stabilized and ri gid within, of course, a certain area of high and low. This is, no doubt partly due to the relative stability, at long last, of our population. It is also due, as Mr. Llpp- sann pointed out the other day. to the effort to stabilize all prices at a high level, whether they be prices ot farm and in dustrial products or prices of la bor. The area in which the worker can survive, employed, therefore becomes smaller. a e Aoove ana oeyond that, we have adopted anti-employment policies. And we Bhall never radically reduce the relief rolls until we abandon these policies ana remove the obstacles to the functioning of the economic pro cess. One such antl-emuloyment policy Is government competition with private Industry. From the viewpoint of obtain ing the largest possible use of capital and labor, a 'case can be made for private industry. But not case can be ' made for com petition between them, as we at present have in the utility in dustry. in our economy there is ten to twenty times as much private capital invested In the utilities as there is government capital and government competition therefore prevents far more re employment than it can possibly auDsuiute. By subsidies and rifts for dn plication of existing facilities by municipalities and other agen cies, it prevents .the release and expansion of existing utilities. Nor is the answer for the gov ernment to buy out Dart of the utilities whether at a high price or a low price. The latter ques tion is not of the essence of the matter. ii tne government wants to prevent a coagulation of the blood of th utility tndustrr it t either bur them all out or buy out none, and stop compet ing. ror ir it burs out .soma nf them, all the others will be af fected. a a a . rar as teetmorarical anem. ploysBent is concerned, nnmer- government policies add -to are hardly cent. more than 14 per Our taxation policies also ought , to be reconsidered for their effect on employment. I have always been convinced that the financing of unemploy ment insurance and old-age pen sions out of payroll taxes, in stead of out of general taxation, definitely contributes to techno logical unemployment. It puts a premium on the use of machines. Some labor-saving devices ac tually mean a greater use of labor over the whole economy oth ers mean less. But a policy bent on increas ing employment would not tax ray rolls. It would do the exact opposite. It would grant tax reductions Zor Increased payrolls. It would us the tax power to create employ ment Incentives. a e it. For instance. It has been ed that-feh development of elec tric power by water uses far less BOaa Power than the daralnnm..! A a a oi anecuic power by steam iaeiy-two per cent of the en of hydro-electric DVr la ranL. aavt caargea- ana amorutsflnn Capital charges for steam power 45 tUmaaea LnU. 4f09 Orchestra. 8:00 Rot Shield han. 5:15 Hints to He-aewirei. 80 Keyboard Chata. 9 Maamali !.. Bpoil Oahrant. 9:45 rraaaeat Tkiu k T.. 7 :0 MWrel Shew. IJ" Democracy. 990 Nrwu. a: la Orchestra. 9:99 Aaawar Game : Varaa-Oaberaa. 9:30 Wrestling Matehe. IStSe Maaic tar Liateniag. ia.43 -Orchestra. 1 1.-90 News. 11 :1S Fast Cartas. Plenty of Power ior 45fl00-Pound Pay Load WITH TWO ENGINES 'DEAD iM. t. a. 1 liyntg Marty. The liberalization of Our taxa tion structure would also give incentives to capital employment Actually, both eovernmem budgets and corporation taxe oug&t to be planned over a bust ness cycle. British corporation t are al lowed to average their taxes orei a certain number of years six i believe. They can therefore af ford to spend money even on the downgrade of the cycle, because they get credit on th-i UDsrrade Our industries, because of th tax system, cannot do this. Britain actually h. i a higher rate of corporation tax, but be cause the Industries can averaee it they really pay this rate, whereas in this country, over period of several yean, in which years of loss predominate. It is possible, that with rate of 15 per cent, an industry may actu ally pay in taxes SO per cent ol its averaged earnings. e We also need a radical recon sideration of trade-union poli cies and plans for the training or retraining of workers for in dustries where they will be needed. if, for instance, we should go into a great housing expansion the effect would not be, under present conditions, a vtst expan sion of employment. The effect would be to raise the pay of a limited labor mono poly. jTrade-union policy at present makes it difficult, if not impos sible, to shift workers from de pressed industries to reviving trades. In Great Britain the unemploy ment assistance boards constant ly moved workers from depressed industries to the expanding building trades, and the result was that, despite and enormous housing boom, wages were kept relatively stable, whili employ ment was immensely augmented. An unemployed worker can not take a job in the building trades here without paying his back dues, and these may be more than he can earn in months ot work, and certainly he will not hare them on hand. Such union restrictions are anti-employment measures and a way whereby a privileced olicrar. chy of workers condemn their brothers to the WPA. e e o We might also consider. In th place of some of our WPA m- penditures, giving g ants-in-aid to industries for the tralninr of apprentices. Including, of course, safeguards that workers passing certain tesU would be retained by the industries und the auhai. dies for them stonned. The present system of work relief is denrirlnjr thousand nf the skills they possess and, with very lew exceptions, oroducinc no new skills for those who come on the roils without eauinment for modern industrial life. a Henry S. Dennison. Lincoln Filene, Ralph E. Flanders, and Morris. E. Leeds have done ex tremely constructive thinking on this matter ot unemployment in book which has been recently published by the MeCraw-Hilt Book company, and which is called "Toward Pull Employment. Written by liberals who are. at the same time, practical busi nessmen, it certainly does not support our present means of dealing with . nnemsloTtnenu - nor do the Tesults. It wild, seem adrkahle for the competent committees of con- to equip themselves with an expert commission to dtaw up report and recommendations oa the whole subiect. which t easily the most vital one in American life. e If the experience o" Europe 1 any criterion, free democracies 8Und or tall largely by their competence to deal with this crucial problem. Catting 1160.000,000 off the relief appropriations is not deal Ing with It one way or another. Copyright, 1939. New York Tri bune. Inc. Seals' Trip North Held Spring Sign NEWPORT, Ore.. Jan. 31-(F-The Pacific ocean hung out its own sign of spring today. Lincoln county beach residents sighted thousands of. seals migrating northward. i The seals, maklnr their annual journey earlier than usual, were feeding on small fish about hall a mile oft shore. . ASTORIA. Ore.. Jan. 3lax Observers here were skeoticsl to day ot reports from Newport that the annual migration of seal was under way. They pointed out that the northward trek usually oc curred late In March or early it April and that seal hahitnaiir gathered off the coast before re turning north. The COast guard cutter Onan. daga will convoy the seal herd tn northern Washington, where an other cutter will guard the playtal bwbibiu on nona.