t 4 Tho Stetotman. Salom. Orqoii. Tu day. Octebw 15; 1948 "So Fanot Sway U. a Feat Shall Awt" rrorn Flrat SUIhiml March tt. 193 1 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A SPRACUE, Editor and Publisher Meeaber ( the AimcUIH Prees Dr. Newburn Gives C of C Peace Talk The basic discipline of an indi vidual that make for a better. - . e l l - TKa A -mm-Is led Preae la esrloalvely entitled UtMwW pDueauo peaceful World arc developed on ef all new dtspatehea credited U It or ael thorwlea credited la thai the community level. In the opih estspaoer. ,on Dr Harry K. Newburn, president of the University of Ore gon, Who addressed the Salem Chamber of Commerce Monday Dr. iNewburn'a lecture featured the chamber luncheon meeting ob- serVance of businesswomen's bf . . L. - int aiem uusinesa and Prorea- lain j.mi the Unite Stale. Mis siaiemeni n "- I -ii ... i a a w ire u- wars w a&i4rsfcaj M.i Ianiil anil I)artlanflIM If. a contribution in today's Safety Valve, Col. A. C harh furrorts the Russian position relative" to the Danube river and the Ms -its of the Dardanelles, as against positions taken by weeki fflclals and members ' i . i . .it of p!uib.hty: however, it do- not give proper wriKi" w at the. meeting ti.r fhi ! Becau no organization for FuM as to tiie n.imibi- It has been a river open for free worldwide peace wll be effective . .... , ' ...- tk. tfnit .malM fmore unless tha men who run it can w:im- i'. " " "j r "fight" for peace as courageously than ;.. Britain) has insisted that us iree siaius o r'' and Intelligently as men fought Th ha. nothing, to do with military control, as n reiaies oniy the war, Dr. Newburn said, em ,. mr,v,.-ir.f nf mmmprriitl vessels. The United States la firmly phasls; must be placed on train . .i . i- mmm,rr frnm the svstem I in f "better men" for world f-' II I o 10 mr ivi fi i. !- ... ii i inn - " I lanilMliln of qiKjIfF. restraints and preferences in the belief that thii iK.liry mill improve th economic health of nation ann so neip cipline. that would make "better rim.ia iuema in favor the closed economic men the realization that free i.i v. i.,.ii.,ii if ih- rianuhe Is dom is relative and accompanied . em. -.i.u .?......., " " ." ," :, J by responsibilities, the proper Use bar ied to freedom of commerce. The effect would be to bind Qf baic o( iearning to com. the Dftoubian countries more firmly within the Russian orbit, munlcate One's essential thinking. Second as to the Dardanelles: Britain and the United Slatei the trained mind, full understand . . rl..j r..n frnm f trantit throneh 1 lhg of tht power of knowledge. the ,a.t both of merchant shipping and war vessels. What is '"L!".. , - - , i esi iiiiiiiii "vet VIIV tUUUUVl osetl if Russia s demand lor a military oase on me airaua. arKj strength . of character that The anvrteiffntv of the straits is Turklh. For Russia by prea- will recognize the necessity of ... .ir.w. would he an act of diligent labor for any accomplUh 1 . " . " I " , ment and the Importance of spirit aii;:rrMMori which wriainiy touia noi ie ronoonra m U, thing above material things or later . Introduction of Dr. Newburn T. i.itifv Hiiasia'H demand, as Colonel Church attempts to was made by Carmalite Weddle. d . by the process of comparison, is to follow the same line president of : the locals business , -J , . .-j t mnvm women club. Other club officer o: rr.M.nir,K usen ju.i I were introduced as were two state of asrimion. What Colonel Church Ignore is me cnangea f.''f.r in international relations which looks to maintenance of !,. thMwh the United Nations. If this agency can be made to fi.r.f tw.n thn Ruaaia nvl no military base on the straits. The 1' nu-d ites ha placed Hs.elf squarely behind the charter and ja . i ready to meet its obligations under it for the restraint of 1 lrCIHCIl Jl 11 KC iwo. In agreeing to the concessions of Potsdam the west- e:-. naitona have gwie at far as they should in meeting Russia' IJ.'Vi'l ITIS I Vafl fl VT Eight candidates for city fire man civil service appointments will be put through their paces-- mental ;ann physical today In civil service examination. They will report at. city hall at 9 a.m. Candidates are Kenneth L. Bur- officials. Membership Chairman Charlene Edwards of Philomath ; and Publicity Chairman Marian Lowry : Fischer of Salem. The Great Beyond claims for consideration as to the strait. Decontrol for Meal Tho Safety Valvo LETTERS FROM STATESMAN READERS The King of Frtw-e went up the hill '.V.th twenty thousand men; Tl- King of France raniflnwn the hill. And ner went up SgJin RUNNIA AND Till DARDANELLES To the EdlUr 'U.S. and niitain call on Ktisala says today's dispatch re- n A,-1 r, mnti bitfer fAttigation of the willful men who had confounded, ni field, 309 N. 24th t. All but Bur-1 our Vandenberg declared In the rx.lifie nki i reflection of the gall he must have tasted overlnett and .Patterson have been peace conference that England h-f1fat rvlng;: recently as temporary cannot .accept the proposed treaty Piet.ni.nt Tt.mi.in completed a similar round trip last feri'n 'Njfcr'rtCo'- r.u;M Alter bravely niairliing up the hill of price control on don o. c;'emmeli, w'lf.Uth s!l n ttl Micking t its slippery summit for days while f rati tic Hoiand M. Dahl. 807 S. Commer- h.Hmxi tallocMNt in with due political tidings, he marched cial st.j James W. Iockard. 1980 ri..n it .:ll to order d.n ontrol. Seldom in our political history HenfrVArtr. r.own', L 'if? the D5nVw'" . , . . , . :i;.,i- w T,,rr,mn, N' Robeirt L. Prime, 1990 headlines, and the c h,. a .tident ti.l- such a humiliating retreat. Mr. Truman Center ; .t.t and James C. Hat- lates that England's firemen on the Salem force. .I f ie n trol w killed month ago by public restlessness o.tr ..ti.l. by faulty administration, by lifting of wage con ti!v , f fingresoional throat-slitting, by defiance o T: .m powerless against the sweep of the tide ebbing ff m the vi r's crent While the cmtgrcinnal bloc he castigated did do much in y r.rwo r.itrnl m the eaae of meat the real villain! Seven veterans administration " r a " ... - - - - --- - - i ,t m... i aii ii ill. ifia u i m . r iir nil were the jreedv livestock producer. Tliey held their cattle C0",1' n 25. V practical purposes the Black Sea off the market. It wa a sitdown strike as regardless of the fMrt tt,, ,, " ...... 1 1. 1 itussian sea, containing me g ' ieril eifare as the strikes of labor unions - . a . er : r M iu n ini ri riK ana a union uriice the f wage con- rt r S r o tide ebbing J ct Hospitals 'unless ; Cteat Britain Is given precisely the same treatment" a other nations. Very proper, per haps, although Hrltaln has no iegitinwil iiitereNta on the Dan ube, wliich flows only ; through European countries now largely under the protectorate of RusMia Let's shift the scene. For all .rdlej. or the irS LR I. The only differ- world war I. it was dl.cloeed yes- Hli ll'f beVtrrairTng a U that it w.? rdbyJam- Harris. VA idBrirtSl Xcentfh: n! oneifj; n picket lines were aet up: anyone could sell Vi.i. .T.J ,u. .ll great grain-producing area. if he wr.i. d to. Common consent served the purpose however. mad af the beginning of Septem- IJkr"in' F,r S c?tur IU! r mhniuimA K. 1TNS t K- " ""-"' f - ar-d t. eminent wa brought to its knee in a period of ber showed that 1788 of the pa li en la about two thirds were being treated for disabilities not connected With their service. Tho Litorary Guldopoot By VY. O. Eager THE riRg OF THE COED, by Nersaaa" rtvem.m contiaa; .). The scene of this novel Is Od borough; a little English village where farm gives way to factory, with a monstrous slagbank over- le tiiiin two month Friier.t Truman seems still greatly concerned over Infla tt . Ayain his timing may be poor. The present price dance U the utf.mry lmt fling of inflation. Just over the horizon l,Mm -tefij,t mn as a greater danger. "Meat ' has Iwen a sorry shibboleth of politics in recent w-eks N.ne of the parties involved in the late controversy over meat cn take much pride in their performance: politicians, livertexe rrowern. consumers grumbling though they are still th bee-f-d people onarth. The record i a aorry one for the Amertcn r-eople. i 'K'nluinaf Srliool We ,ruM that the attempt of the state board of education l8 f)n XL' VHTH 1 -P ssia tlet to the Mediterranean through the Bosporus and Dardanelles, the only outlet to the Black Sea. But England consider the Men iter ranean her own private lake and wants no ships there except her Own and those of her political pimps of Europe and America In the present controversies Russia has asked to be ; allowed to help manage the Dardanelles and Bosporus and make them open to the world, but our great democracies call the Idea Russian aggression," while saying nothing about England's century-old de termination to keep Russia con to where the people worship, the artjuife Klamath marine barracks for a vocational school Mungo Arms where they drink, I i nrt a of the apfxMite being larger than the stomach. The and Marsh Edge Street where they at.: ieip,ti-i nrollment of 600 vocational students may just rattle UUZ.P .!,e' . . . ., .. . . . - ,.. , . The time is a short five war arounrl m the barrack with accommodations for 5000. The state time months from November '3 board of higher education, which runs the institutions of higher I "Papists' Conspiracy," to the fol- lesmini?. uVcided. wixelv we lelieve. not to narticioate in thel'owing March 24. Easter Sunday, Klumath venture. The other state board whose duties relate Th J'ii""1 wlcin ack . .... . j u ..j.t. . 4 and forth between righteousness m inr iT.mriam biih vo aiiuiitii mihums nas unuri laivcn iu BCi I and sin, loving and not loving up a vcKational school there and the state emergency board has! But the people are the thing, mJe avaiifcble funds to carrv the Droiect through until the r thlsri as all novels should be, is aooui peopie. r irsi you meet W f ri nkla n- T. .,(-." II.- I , a j I -,-, mm iiir is neen lor riwnwnn oi irue vocaiionai eaucaiion in I na.irln. Imiv eall him a r,1in th;s state, a system was set up in a IB4I act of the legislature, officer who can't see anything in but no M&te funds have been nrov ided to date for making it blackout and misses a lot in effective V.rtually all the coht of war and pontwar trade educa- lArididv'5h,t' Jnw h?..?& ti .M w W.me by the federal government, with assistance of bakeshop; her assistant Elsie who.l s .ooi eji'tricts. KUni.iih hairacks give an opportunity for contrary i to "Twins, understands: laL:nrhii. h vocatnnal nroiect on a lare acale more than her deafness allow her? Rh r. .nterrwisu- will l. fr. f -om hnrlir that . to hw,r Jbn Birker, the young? ; . .. . Vi " husband; and finally Benjy Fell G! unwtMty wo.ild have f;tced. It doe not pose as a college. Uneducated, godly. Itinerant evan- It can cfet&in instructors from the wartime, schools or from gellst always preaching the need Industry. It has little duplication. It shoufd fill a real need in for burnt offering, after the ex- provubitj u ell-rounded training in trades and crafts not as six-weeks' course in nirtal working or a two-weeks' r' .r m uclding It can provide ample housing both for students a;:1 inMrm tor. It hs no diversions of "big games." fraternities, arrl ivy-l;.cl traditions to interfere with serious work. The 'tw opal dr.iwbacks are remoteness from thickly popu- U'ed -diMr ic t and from varied lines of industry. Instruction I Elsie and Jim while the other will m l I ft, if flv on -e.irtirin VL-ith lilll ivviiwrallnn uilti im l I-al I hot. ...a i-(.,.,i. l-.h.- ... i . ...... .j.. ; .i. So of c-ourse there Is plot, but . -.....- ... wo,r uu.inrNi unfolding easily and without n rxfi nncere ami well-intentioned, will do all it can to I strain; it springs naturally from overcome these difficulties. r I the people, all of whom hold my If the federal government ants to the plan at least we undivided attention. Nicholson shall rr.he a teat of the interest of rwr-on. in -h o-.fi-l Ca.he". -oln n coming. . ; . . . . W1U1 Wnai rui people do and also w nooi; and in the interval Iitrit may dawn for the permanent with what they are. and you will , ue of this facility, far too valuable just to be junked. be absorbedby the effective shift in jiove, i jeaiousy. rear, misiruv I conniving, godliness and ungodli- Ar iici.n censorship was too zealous when it banned a I n, 171f cn which the girl J.p.n,M ..,.! which urged Japa.se not to aet up General uTwToni and then, whe ITe ha HuAithor as a nw gol in lieu of Ilirohito. In the portion persuaded him of It. the man re- q oted it it. hard to anything "derogatory to occupation of- fuses to love the girl, are admlr- fi. ia!.' in.puted as the cause of the ban. The American general 'trlyejt. .. .... i i . .. i j ... The book is full-bodied, adult. i drnng ,,xk1 )ob in g. tt.ng Jpn ti-org.mired, and the Nip- earnest, as If the author believed .ese M-t-m to le f;illiii) over IhfMisclvM in adulation. But the a novel was Worth writing as well e! tonal it correct wlnrn it ia.ys that MacArthur is no god but Just. selling It's calmly written. a living, fnample of the demociatic system. That idea should ramex inan emouonai, ana i t...... ..J.-wl .l I " -mm lllll .uh'v--u. . 1 novel in month. ample of Abraham and Isaac, to hallow the land whether for crops or for red hot slag. 'Twins ' has unearthed a secret which Mrs. Birker wants him to keep, but also he has something which she fancies shed like to share; and the one will benefit it be that England and the Uni ted States are scared to death at the possibility of Russian! compe tition in world commerce? Eng- y land owns the Suez canal and the United States owns the Panama canal. What a fuss there would be If these were closed to certain nations Instead of being open to world commerce. A. M. Church. QSEDQS frpmmnra (Continued from page 1) leftist writer who failed to make the turn from pacificism which "The Nation" successfully negotl ated. Not until about the time of Pearl Haibor did "The New Ne public" change its line from Isola lionism. Hence it will not lie em barrasaed to accept the neo-lsola tiouiam of Henry Wallace, This magazine will give Wallace a sounding board. It circulation is small, less than 80,000, but this is hardly a fair measure of its influence. The magazine does have a following among the lib eral leftist groups. Its Influence on the maaaes, however, la second hand and In late years has not been very pronounced. In many ways the new assign ment fits Wallace very well, He is an "advanced thinker" whose peraunal following is small bu loyal; ditto the magazine, Me is something of a political i ono clast; ditto the magazine. He is branded as a "screwball" by con servatives; ditto the magazine. As a vehicle for political ad vancement, if that is Wallace's objective, the editorship of "The New Republic" will probably prove a 1933 model. Urilea he can supply Jet propulsion he will not get very far in the political world from the editorial tripod As an editor Wallace becomes unt another editor: Just as Harold Ickes as new-paper cinumnist be came just another columnist. He oses the halo of public? office, and the perquisites of political power At that the editorship may fit him better than the seals of office- at least it has better promise of permanence. And for the time be ing at least, the circulation of The New Republic" should move ahead. Georgia is called State of the South. the Empire GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty vBp L. Reder Named WU Student Vice-President William Hedar, Poitland, Wil lamette football end who was all con fete nee in 1941 and who re turned to the campus lat semes ter after f(ur years in the army, yesterday was elected vice presi dent of the associated student body, Reder is a memlrr of Al pha Psi Delta fraternity and presi dent of , the Alpha house doiml tory. iteder's elet titwt to fill a Indent body office Vmvmncy highlighted (he campus campaigning of last week and the rerun election which on Monday filled tiie class offices lor wnicn no candidate had re ceived a majority of votes at last week's election. Officer elected yesterday: Senior Wlnsor Acton, Salem, president; (mm don Kurike, Turner, secre ta ry - ti eu su rer . Junior Fred Ciraham, Lnngview, Wash., presi dent; Patricia Miller, Portland, vice preaident; Joan Kuthan. Rogue River, secretary; Darrell Williams; Portland, treasurer. Sophomore Fi a nk Newell. Pen der, Neb, president; Joyce Reeves Salem, vice pieanlent; Itaibai MacDuffee, Poitland, secietaty Frehman Charles Patterson Burlingame, Calif., vice pre I dent; Roger Adams, Millbrae Calif., treasurer, and Travl Cross, Salem, class represents tlve. Derailed Car Hits Hotel Lobby a, j waSSS ; v N. , t Oil' .hi i O''i e- 4 T sjasssBiaaBsstss-i- -aMcasfSSSSasssssa sjifcajr HPRINC2FIELD, O- Of t. II A wrecking ersn Is buty trlcBlUg a rerrlterater car that amashed InU the lebby ef the rrsnces hUl here today. It was one of three ear ef a New York C entral freUM train derailed la the renter ef the elly, (Af IVIrrphote). Salem Groups Join in Coast Road Openin it Several hundred Salem rest dents including the high school band, the Cherrians and chamber of commerce representatives oined residents of North Lincoln county In celebrating opening the new stretch of coast highway from Ocean I .ike to Delake Sunday W. M. Bartlett of the postwar development commission repre sented C!ov. Earl Snell in cutting ribbon to symbolize official pening of the highway. E,. Burr Miller, chamber president, and W. W. Chad wick, head of the Cher rians, also spoke at the ceremony The band played at Taft, Nel- scott and "Oceanlake, principal tops in the caravan parade of motor vehicles carrying visitors for th occasion. 'My promises are not idle jests on this very spot In '44 dlda't 1 .promise you the defeat of Germany aod Japan?" Hyrum Hand Dies Sunday Hyrum Hand, 80, native of Fng land ahd lesident of this aiea the past two and a half yeais, died at his lekidence on route 7 Sun day. He was a retired mull car rler. Surviving are the widow, Jo hanna; a daughter, Mrs. Johanna Alice Foley, Salem; two daughters and a son of Los Angelea, Mrs. Margaret Doremus, Mrs. Theodora Smith and Wayland D. Hand; a sister, Mrs. Nellie Dexter, Salt Lake City; eight grandchildren and three great grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are be ing made by the W. T. Rlgdon company. ICE CliEAII All Flavor, No LlmitK. ()ls SAVING CENTER Salem and West Halem Large Amount Of Clothing Surplus Sale Commercial quantities of wear ing apparel aie on aule tiy the Portland war aets a1miriintra- lion office, it was announced yea terday. The offering l aiailuht for inspection in Oiegon and south wet Washington waiehMine Iwfore the older deadline of Oc tober 21. It was staletl Among items on sale aie 2000 new caps made of veiloo mate lials, 1000 lutnlef Jack siiiits, triMjNer and biwehes, parkas women's coats and vents. Other current WAA offer trigs re mUcellaneons hardware, can ned heating fuel, marine wlie and came iikii will le leieived un til Octoler 24 for automotive pate parts, J-ep engine and iai ks and miacellaueoiis electrical equip ment and part. Former Salem Woman Kites Held Today Mrs., Sarah E. Yantis, a former Salem remdent, died in St Ixwim, Mo., (Mobrr II. More than flO years old, she made ht-r home In Salem for aeveial years liefore moving away in IDIfl Pilvale grave-ide luneral serv ices will le coudut bnl in City View cemetery, Salem, at 2 pm today, the Rev. tieorge II. Kwift officiating. W. T. Rigdou com pany is in charge of ritea Surviving are a son. Davis Yan tis, St. IOtjis, who operated The Toggery, on North Commercial street, previous to 101 fl, and two daughters, Mrs. Ueorge H. fas lln, Kau Claiie, Wis; Mis. Amoa Schmidt. Peoria 111. A Ihtid daughter, Mrs I -Inn C. Smith, Sa lem, died In February, 1912. Count)! Vole Iteistratio'us Below 1943 RegUtration for the No rmxi elei'ti,Mi in Marlon" KHintr Is aguin lower than the 191 higli Mmt, Harlan A. Judd. Mti..n county rletk, said Monday. To Ul rcgUtration for Maiton rrMin ly this year Is 31.973. while in 1943 the total was 40.40 Tha numlifr of regiatettng In Nalem was 18.917 Voter., JuM nal I. I Republican reglatration t still high In Marion county, by alrtMwt two to ne. A bHal of 21,171 registered as Republicans at again! 12,5.14 Itemia rati, Jud t reported Of other paitlo ipu. tered Ihe prngieWves hst M9, sM'laliats 23. irtdctcrit-itf 7, f'o. hililiorul N2, and 040 miVIo eons. Female voters are ooinum-l-red by male voter I7.9S7 le moss. , Pamphlets to Voters in Mail Mailing of city voting pamih. lets Ui Ihe 19,917 registered voter in Salem begn Monday, aciorl ing to City Recorder Alfred Mondt. lte1 In the pamptiM are com plete tests of three profMwet charter amendments an ordi nance to pioiilbll Ihe Ue of path ing meters, an ordinance to 1 1 - r I f r ceitain points of the new form of city goveinmit which the voters adopted laat May and an or ill -nunc-e providing city elextion fchall prescribe procedure. QaOUlst WAI IN THK CIVIL WAA. SOLDI 0-KS 9VUN IN HIS fAMILV. STEVEIIS DIAMONDS WATt'llKS JKWKI.KY I " 11: " " 1 Two fine diamond eopport tne solitaire. There are five In Ihe slwanlng bo.od. Hat- lings or Ilk yellow gold. Fs tended Pafaaeata SI9 C'oart Street m - -- ' t Tho Last Week of Ilevival Services FHEE I1ETII0DIST ciiuncn N. VVlaUr and Market ICtV. Kdxar Kim ' Eyancellat Karh Kvening at 7: IS Ktrepl Saturday October -20