; Tit 0113011 CTATCMAlI, Cctaa. Oxnoa.7idaMda7MoKs!ag. Id 4, ltd "No Favor Sway Us; No Fear Shall Atce From lint Statesman, March IS, 18S1 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. s 1 CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President , '.'. Member of The Associated Press ' " - The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the as for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Brilliant Jurist Retires Time, though subject to rigid man-made measurement, actually is one of .the more il- lusive phases of existence, a fact of which hu mans loath to face hard present realities often take advantage by slipping, in recollection, back to a more pleasant era. Retirement of Charles Evans Hughes from the United States J supreme court affords the means to such an es cape, i . " L :- i ' One might turn time backward to Novem- ber 7, 1916, one of j the most hectic election nights in American history; the night when most of those who crowded about the fronts of newspaper offices agreed that though "he kept us out of war," Woodrow Wilson was defeated and Charles Evans Hughes was to be the next president It was not until the morning of No- vember 9 that the nation knew of the contrary r, result, and those citizens who were disappoint- " ed began to realize that despite his brilliance In the law and his undeniable statesmanship and sUture, Mr. Hughes of the spreading whis- " kers had proved to be a trifle short of that in definable political sixth sense which is not so essential in regular league contests, as for the governorship of New York, but inevitably be trays its presence or absence in the presidential "world series." If Hughes had just thought to give a pleasant nod in the direction of Hiram Johnson. . . ' r Or if 1916 is not an ideal "escape" recol lection because it so closely preceded 1917, one may turn time backward still further;: to. the early opportunity for youth and the choosing of careers received more attention than such sub jects do today, and when a minister's brilliant son who had read all of Shakespeare at age 8 and been ready for college at age 11, grievous ly disappointed his 'parents by turning from ecclesiastical studies to the law. . . or to the ear ly years of the present century when life was simpler and when the regulation of public util ities; was just being demanded , by a public which had no thought of the eventual results. But j there again you'll find Charles Evans Hughes, selected because he was a "lawyers' lawyer" to investigate gas company rates in NewYork City a job which launched him on i long career of public serviced After that it was the investigation of life Insurance practices, out of which present state and national regulatory laws developed; then the New York governorship, "mention" for the presidency which was stifled by Roosevelt I, and ithen the supreme court; actual candidacy for .the presidency in 1916, the cabinet post of secretary of state under Harding and Coolidge . . . and that is a pleasant place to pause. For it was Charles Evans Hughes who labored, suc cessfully at the time, for naval and arms limi-: tation and the mediation of international dis putes. It j was he who inaugurated the "good neighbor jolicy" in the Western Hemisphere. Then came his elevation to the chief jus ticeship and a brilliant record as presiding of ficer; of the nation's highest tribunal a career, in which, to the surprise of some who had la- beled him "standpatter" in those earlier polit leal days, he proved to be more often on the lib eral side in the court's -divided decisions. jAble to" scan through a complicated brief almost as fast as he; could turn the pages, and to acquire an amazingly intimate knowledge, of the Issues which became his concern as a jurist, his was one of the greatest minds ever -to grace the bench in America, but it was a mind admir ably! fitted for the law, not for politics as the events of 1916 proved, and possibly not for the duties of the chief executive. If the voters had known him better, and if liberalism had been so well defined and so popular a concept then. . . But though time is elastic enough for pur poses of emotional "escape" into the past, it is nevertheless inexorable. The springy tread of a jurist whose physical endurance matched his intellectual brilliance, finally faltered; the milepost marking fourscore years approached, and that outstanding career must end soon in a well-earned retirement. His place on the bench will be filled; his place in American life will not;! it is not transferable. . that in 1938 they were In distress? one might Imagine that with the up-surge in production and transportation of heavy goods,-they are on the road to prosperity. It is true that long, Hea vy freight trains are frequently seen these days; that freight business is "good", arid, will be still t better as the defense program speeds up. . This increased business is not clear, prof it -by any means, for there are increased operating costs, necessity for adding new Tolling stock, . higher taxes, than were formerly paid, a possi bility that the higher net income will be re garded as "excess profits" though it is modest in relation to invested v capital; and finally, , there is the circumstance that speed of delivery has priority over economy of operation. The railroads still have their headaches, though they irritate in new places. Maury Maverick, noisy and ardent new dealer who nevertheless displayed decided ten dencies toward independence of mind while a Texas congressman, who staged a political come back after his defeat in the race for reelection by getting himself elected mayor of San An tonio, has hit the skids again; he was edged out in the race for reelection to that office. That makes him "available" for a key defense job and we expect to hear from him again soon. Threatened by a LaGuardia invasion of the democratic territory, Tammany is seeking an alliance with its old enemy James A. Farley. -Well, Italy switched sides in this war and France has come awfully close to switching since the war started. Nothing should surprise the genus homo. r' News Behind The News By PAUL MALLON Mil Paul MaHoa Railway Wages Transportation employes of the railroads are seeking a 30 per cent wage increase. The railroads are vital links in the defense program. Recalling the excellent labor record of the rail roads since the first World war and noting the machinery for settlement of railway labor dis putes, there is no reason to suppose that the present wage' negotiations will cause any cessa tion of railway operation. ' ' , The present wage scale was established in 1937 and is reported by the Western Asso ciation of -Railway Executives to be 8.5 per cent above the scale which prevailed In 1929 wheji living costs were 14 per cent higher than they are now, so that the '"real wage" requested would be 58 per cent higher than that received in 1929. This, estimate leaves out of account the! possibility of increases in living costs in the near future. , ' j . . ; ' '. ... ; The rail executives meanwhile have made a "counter-attack." They, propose elimination of the "featherbed'' rules under which railway workers are paid for "work, hot performed." This is done either on the basis of a minimum number of hours or a minimum number of miles of assumed train operation. In some cases a worker is paid for a minimum day when he has worked less than three hours. Miles "paid for but not run" according to interstate commerce commission figures quoted by the rail execu tives, amount to 11 per cent as much as the pay ments for miles actually run. "; j Unless the machinery of mediation fails, this is not strictly the business of the general public though it has a bearing upon the cost of livin and upon the differential between mar ket prices of agricultural products and prices paid on the farm. One might, In passing, con clude that railway labor does fairly well by it self without striking. A related factor which has not been much in the public mind this past year is the relative prosperity of the railroads. It will be recalled .1 I - ' -, ' "-4 ; ' i- ''...;; ::f v;.. ;-. - V " By BARRETT WTLLOUGHBY 4tTlirowing Down the Gauntlet! Bits IfoirJ IBinsaErifasfr By R. J. HENDRICKS (Distributed by King Features Syndicate. Inc.. re production In whol or in part strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, June 3. Vast war programs i j ' often run off into fragmentary absurdities, but rarely into as intricate a labyrinth as the agricul ture department s hog buying for Britain. Our government is paying high prices for pork products to ship to Britain and getting them from Canada. The Cana dians have a surplus of hogs and are sending not lending or leasing these Jo the Brit ish for pounds sterling. The United; States on the other hand Is buying' at relatively higher prices ; and lending : or leasing to London. Thus, Cana dian hog growers have been able to get more for their hogs by sending to the United States to give to Britain, rather than selling directly to their mother coun ' try. First four- months this year Canada exported 10,450 hogs to the United States, compared with4 only 18 head the same, four months last year. . The Canadians do not like this, are trying to stop it, The Canadian bacon board first promised a dollar extra per hundred pounds to its ' growers on sales to Britain. This was done in May, but failed to prove sufficient inducement Now a licen sing system is being imposed on packers who want to ship to the United States. To top it off, the British are selling the pork they get from us and using the money for general purposes. The way this works, th United States federal! marketing administration buys tha pork with the lend-lease money and ships it to Britain on credit Presumably this government will be paid back in th same way it is repaid all lease-lend ad vances, sometime in the future. Hitler is always doing the unexpected, but an invasion of England before September is Just too unexpected to be considered possible. The nights now last only five hours or less at the channel and -fogs cannot be counted upon to cover any invasion effort before early fall. It would seem logical for Hitler to try to clean lip the eastern Mediterranean and then Gibraltar before trying invasion in September. . 3 ; - . . . -i-. - . - - . - ' The president's designation, of Interior Secre tary Ickes as director of the oil industry was a move which Ickes long had sought before congressional committees, by legislation and otherwise. Mr. Roosevelt sanctioned it at long last, presumably to implement his defense action speech. The only new Justification for government sei zure of the reins of one of the largest industries apparently is that the government had . recently seized ; coastwise oil tankers for British aid and therefore had itself caused a transportation Short age. Resistance from the industry is likely, to re main as anonymous as the first comment from the manager who said he was "knocked speechless." The move has clearly hit a demoralized industry. Ickes, of course, is the man least likely to suc ceed in coordinating an Industry whose leaders, ha has always fought bitterly. How much unity and ; cooperation his choice will promote is therefore a matter of intense speculation here, all on "the obvi ous side. The first result is likely to be that the America First committee can raise a few million ' dollars' in Oklahoma and Texas. . - . ......... The British have picked up some information indicating what they 'Jiay expect next Benito and Adolf, they hear, planned intensification of the di rect land attack on Egypt and a simultaneous strike for Cyprus and Syria. To meet it, the British may have .to destroy the Mosul pipeline and oil wells and Invade Syria, regardless of, Vichy. , Odds are heavily against them, but the strong est possible resistance is necessary in furtherance of their general war policy. Their authorities have led ours to believe they win not "get out of the eastern Mediterranean one minute before they are forced out Letdown in bombing attacks on Britain during the 12-day attack on Crete has made the British wonder whether Hitler has as many planes as claimed. No other explanation for the sudden ces sation of bombing is available except the obvious indication that Hitler had insufficient fuel, pilots, or ships to fight actively on two fronts at the same time., -'":.". : --;- -, ... Report of a fatal ji 6-4-41 quarrel on State street; Salem, during the summer-, of 1847, in the 1871. Directory: (Concluding from, yesterday:) Among the children who were born into the home of Almira Phelps Holman and 'Joseph Hol man was Mary H. Holman. f; She was married'. to John H. Albert, who for a long time was cashier of the Ladd St Bush Wife Sentenced 1 , .'.v.- Ml. Kenneth Stetdauui - ; Bringing an abrupt end to; the trial of Mrs. Ruth $teadman, ac cused of the slaying of her mar ried sweetheart, Robert Emery, the blond defendant pleaded guilty to manslaughter in Boston superior court and ! was immedi ately sentenced tof Iff years In prison. In the trial' the state had contended that Mrs. Steadman bad given Emery an overdose of sleeping potion and then strangled him. Mrs. Steadman's husband, Kenneth Steadman; of Craft on. Pa, la shown as h appeared a t .the trial. bank, pioneer institution of its kind in Salem, and afterward in chief charge of the Capital National bank of Salem, for many years, and connected with various enterprises which aided the growth, and prosperity of the capital city. w .V Mr. Albert died December 30, 1920, leaving no will, but the administration of his estate showed that he left real estate holdings valued at $83,000, and personal property valued at $92,660. The records show his heirs as Elizabeth McNary Albeit, wi dow (second wife); Jos. H. A1-, bert and - Blanche Rodgers, Sa lem; Myra W. Wiggins, Toppen- : ish, Wash., and Harry E. Albert, Portland. , The 'widow renounced her right to be administratrix, and Chas. A. Park was appointed administrator. Jos. H. Albert lived till a few years ago, and died In Salem. His daughter is the sweet singer of Dallas, the girl with a golden voice, Joseph ine Albert Spalding. (Both Sa lem newspapers have been spelling it Spaulding. Her hus band being related to the Rev. H. H. Spalding, the noted as sistant of Dr. Marcus Whitman, the martyred missionary, that is -manifestly incorrect Of the same family are the Spaldings of Hawaii, springing from Am erican Board missionaries who were the first to . take both Christianity and civilization to the now , rich groups that now make up a great territory of the United States; the Spaldings there being among the- leading pioneers, statesmen, industrial ists, financiers, families of wealth, and benefactors gener ally. - . v v Mrs. Wiggins, wife of Fred A. Wiggins, former leading Salem citizen and business man, has her home with her husband in Seattle, though his business ex tends as far as Chicago and New York.: Mrs. 'Rodgers has her home at Court and High streets, Salem. Harry E. Albert still has his home in Portland. The ap- Another Home for "Our Boys" fern. - ( jr I o rr ' I ::-':.':fe:--:::iV:3:-ir -r . praisers of the J. H. Albert es tate were Paul B. Wallace, E. M. Croisan and W. I. Needham. The bond required of the administra tor was lone of $174,000. i ;- m This columnist has not been able to find in the county clerk's records of . Marion county any mention of the estate of Joseph Holman,4 This does not prove be yond question that there is no such record, for some of the old files running back to those ear ly pioneer days are rather vague in their 'indices (or indexes.) ' Therer is another case of the kind on this desk that of J. Quinn. Thornton, once a very prominent citizen of Oregon and of Salem; having lived his last years in the capital city. - For the benefit of historical accuracyy and to answer the cur rent inquiry, this writer would like to j have information con cerning, both cases, that of Hol man and the one of Thornton, to be published in this column. There; will be more to say, concerning ' the Joseph Holman family and that of J. Quinn Thornton, in j future issues of this column, j Today's Garden By LILmC L. MADSEN By LILLIE L. MADSEN : I i F. A. asks what spray is used for leaf spot on rhododendrons. Answer: Copper oxide sprays. E. V. writes that she has been offered a couple of little lilac bushes ft very good varieties if ' she moVes them at once. She wants to know if they will grow if moved now. Answer: They" should grow, if plenty of soil is removed with them, if the roots are. not per mitted t dry out and if the) bushes are given sufficient wat erings i during the summer months.! N. , SJ, reports that she finds hundreds of slugs on her little annuals ; each night She has tried baits of all kinds but the slugs sUll come. Answer: Possibly the slugs are not' the same ones each . night The countryside is cov ered with millions of slugs this spring and every time we poison a batch a new one seems to come on, but continuous work at control is the only way to get rid tf theraJ know one gar dener , who goes out with a flash light each night around 10 o'clock, "and with the aid of her husband, a couple of little sticks and a DBDer bac. rather all h can find around the place and burns them. Then she puts out bait forj the remainder. She tells me it Is finally beginning to helpj A j Salem gardener informs me she had tried a new com mercial! bait which seems su perior. If you will send me a self-addressed envelope, 111 send the name of the product Chapter 21 Continued " - : With a hollow feeling of dismay, she caught up the, brassiere to which she had pinned the en velope, and found only the safety pin. A hasty shaking of the garments she; had worn brought no better result She re-, alized, guiltily, that she hadnt given the document a thought 1 since her talk with Liane on the way to the fishing grounds. Even while getting out of her wet clothes in Chris's cabin, after her tumble overboard, she had been so concerned about the loss of her goodluck bracelet that the contract had never (entered her mind. ' " , - . , She recalled how Liane had Jerked off her sweater. The en velope must have been torn from its pin then; it had fallen to the floor and in the dim light from the porthole had escaped notice. It must be there in Chris's cabin, it Just must be! She would go down now and get it before the Tanya left the float. Dynamite would be certain to ask for it when she told him ' about the blowing of the safei . Hurriedly, she got into a sports frock and coat and dashed out into the halt She had reached the head of the stairs when a ' bumble of voices inside the sit ting room halted her. Polena'a shrill and with unusual agitation, rose clearly "With my passkey, Captain, X go into the library to tidy the mess that Liane woman made. And there was the safe, all " . , . I .; JSondra turned into the sitting room to face the situation. ' The Captain, looked up sharp ly, "Sandy, do you 'know about the safe?". ' . , "Yes. It happened during Li ane's dance last night! But noth ing, of value was in-the safe, lamb, and I didn't want to spoil your party by telling you then. Afterward well, we all rushed out to the fishing grounds in such a hurry, and so many things hap pened out there, that I well, X Just never thought of it" She explained, without men tioning Jean ReynalTs presence, how she had entered the li brary, had caught 'one glimpse of Alexander on the floor, and then had been flung aside in the dark. I f ' j Kemp's quiet voice broke in. "Let me tell you what I know Oregonian Editor Gels Fellowship ; , CAMBRIDGE, June i" -ijPt-(iP-Edward M. Diller, Sunday and feature editor of the Port land f Oregonian, was named a Nieman fellow Sunday; giving him year's study at Harvard university. , ; Fifteen: fellowshsips were awarded to newspaper men un der a grant which gives recipients the equivalent of- their salaries for the period of study. about IV Captain.", "I'm listenin'." : - "I had , posted Alexander at the light switch beside the door ; opening between the drawing room and the library. After we'd switched, off the light, X slipped back there to give him some further instructions, and found him3 gone. : I supposed he'd be back any minute, so X waited, my back against the li brary partition. When Liane touched off the Venetian pow der, the effect was rather start ling there in the dark, as you know. But apart from the flare of light and the roll of drums, I felt a vibration that didn't seem . Just right to me. So,' knowing the library doors were locked, I slipped out into the reception room. X was surprised to find no light there. And while feel ing for the switch X found that, the library door opening off the reception room-was standing open. X went In, switched on the 'lights, and found Sondra. Wln throp, the Forest Man, saw me leave the drawing room, and followed me into the library." He went on to describe the manner in which the safe was blown,- and the Forest Man's vain search of the premises. "Since Sondra assured me that the safe held nothing of value ' to anyone but yourself, the attempted burglary dldnt seem important enough to trouble you with last night - air.". "ou're alt too darned consid erate of me!" rasped the Cap tain. "The I Bates contract was in that safe, Starbuck. And m that's of definite value to the " Baranov Packers Just now. With it Reynall could force me to furnish him all the fish he can use until the middle of next . month. Sondy! Was that fellow here last night?" Sondra hesitated; then ad mitted it rWeHT yes. He came in the full-dress uniform of an American naval, officer; but " ' "Ramps ,Reynall's old uni form, by Jiminy! I saw him, but . with all that confounded punch in me I" . "But he left before the safe was blown; Dynamite. I recog nized him and" (To be continued) Kadio (Programs KSLM WEDNESDAY, lltt Ke. S JO Sunrise Salute, i 70 News in Brief. 7 K OldUme Music H 730 News. - - - 7 Bert Hirsch's Orchestra. 1:00 rarm Talk.? ' 8:15 Town House Orchestra. - S -am News. 8:45 Tune Tabloid, i S:00-Pastor's Call. ' S:1S Popular Music I :45 Four Notes. ; 10KM The World This Morning. 10 :1S Prescription for Happiness. 10 30 Women in the News. 10:3-Whol'a Sophisticates. 110-Melodic Moods.! 1130 Value Parade. - 110 Ivan Ditmars. 12 :i Noontime News. 1J:30 HillbiUy Serenade. 1135 Willamette Valley Opinions. 12:50 The Song Shop.: 1 0 Alvino Rey's Orchestra. l:15rlsl of Paradise. : 1 30 Western Serenade. 2:00 News. i 2:15 US MariAet: ' 230 Joan Brooks. 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