4 The 8 SotUm, OwgcB. rridcry Januarr t. im "So Favor Sways Us. No Fear Shall Awe" " Tnm first Statesman, March tt, IMl THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUK, Editor and Publisher el the Associated rreas Tha Associated rii Is entitle exclaslrely U the see fee W eatiss ef all the Ueal mwi printed la this newspaper, as wU m all AP sews dispatches. This it Leap Year Only 357 days left in 194S to lasso and brand that handsome and illusive dreamboat for " t is leap year, lady," and therefore open season for that most tempting of all wary quarry. The custom of women proposing in leap year is said to have originated with a 13th century Scotch law which gave the offen sive to the lassies with a gleam in their bonnie eyes. In this enlightened day, leap year is the time when woman' fancy frankly turns to what she has been plotting secretly, for the last three years. The constitution guarantees life, liberty and the pursuit so let the damsels have at it. "It is a woman's business to get married as soon as possible and a man's to keep unmarried as long as he can," George Ber nard Shaw advises, nothing that, "The world la strewn with snares, traps, gins and, pitfalls for the capture of men by women." It was always? thus. "Womankind more joy discovert making fools than keeping lovers" but the current nationwide man-shortage presages a grim feline feud over the panting spoils of the chase. Even if "man's not worth a moment's pain, base, ungrateful, fickle, vain" the gals would insist "a man's a man for a' that" (with a sidelong glance). Very smooth Very melloroony. The technique, the operating procedure are most important once the objective is cornered. Shaw's traps and gin are a little too crass and corny for the modern jet-propelled atomic bombshell. She has discovered (along with the ultra-feminine "new look") that the subtle approach is the best strategy: "A man always chases the (hard-to-get) woman until she catches him." Men. doubtless, will be on the defensive all year (pulling in their ears and acting coy) because "marriage is a lottery in which men stake their liberty and women their happiness" but "he is a fool who thinks by force or skill to turn the current of woman's will." Leap year is a free-for-all with no holds barred. And Eve pulled the trigger on the starting gun. One warning, however, don't shoot on sight, sisters. "Look ere you leap, see ere you go. It may be for thy profit so" but you might say it is better to have leaped and lost than never to have leaped at all. Farm "Relief" in 1948 When President Truman calls for continuation and modern Lzation of price support for major farm commodities he may hope to gain favor among farmers but city consumers will not feel so good, even though he tosses to them the vain hope of rationing and price controls. With butter and eggs flirting around the dollar sign for the pound or the dozen, with bread selling at 22c a loaf and meat at prices not at all gastonomical, consumers are more interested in price brakes than price support. Joe Doakes. plain citizen, wonders if government aid to farmers is a one-way street in which the farmer is assured a minimum price to protect him from the vicissitudes of a free market but not barred from enjoying the maximum price which the market will bear. That was the way the commodity loan plan works, which makes the deal heads I win, tails the gov ernment loses. A dozen years ago when farmers were on or over the edge f foreclosure, there was a social emergency which the gov ernment undertook to meet by means of special grants for agriculture. But in the years since 1939 the farmers have prob ably enjoyed the highest relative prosperity of any large group. They were promised price support two years beyond the end of the war and the huge demand for food has assured them of continuing good prices. It would seem therefore that the farmers are now abundantly able to stand on their own feet. During the war the farmers performed magnificently in producing foods and fibers. There is no desire to minimize the country's debt to them on that account; but measured by fi nancial returns that debt would seem to be well liquidated by the price structure. In the competition for votes however, it is not at all im probable that the republican congress will even outbid President Truman in extending subsidies and guarantees to the country's now prosperous farmers. Death Comes to Charley Michaekon The late Louie Howe was credited with being the personal guiding genius who pushed Franklin IX Roosevelt along in pol itics. And Jim Farley, as national democratic chairman, supplied rare talents as a political manager in two of the four Roosevelt campaigns. But to Charles Michaelson, dead now at 79, should go much of the credit (or blame) for the Roosevelt victories in 1932, 1936 and 1940. As publicity director for the democratic national committee he was the expert minister of propaganda, with in late years no equal. Michaelson was master of the smear technique and used all his talents for undermining Herbert Hoover and his adminis tration. Using the worldwide depression that was touched off in 1929 and 1930 Michaelson made Hoover into a grim ogre, one to be hated and reviled. So thorough was his job and so unreasoning the popular mind that Hoover's name still stands as a symbol of disregard of human mirery, a characterization quite false as Hoover's long career in relief of human want should prove. Michaelson was hired for his job by the old democratic committee, and he performed it to the supreme satisfaction of his employers and to the bitter despair of republicans. His role in journalistic history as a matter of destructive propaganda is hardly one to be envied. Las Vegas marriages' and divorces both declined in 1947. Would you call that a mixed blessing or proof that there is some good in all evil? Editorial Comment Frees Oar Ca temporaries SENATORIAL DILSMMA j Idatfeo'e senior senator, who can come up instantly with a complete solution for the most perplexing problems of the world, now has a personal problem that he admits is going to require some thought. It u whether he should run for vice president on Henry Wallace's third paity ticket. He is presumably torn between love and! not duty, but-prudent considerations of self interest which even a senator has, you know. All of Glen Taylor's instinct must call upon him to mount and ride off mith Wallace. The two are as alike as two peas out of the same, pod on most any question you'd cars to raise. They are a natural team. And a vice presidential candidacy would bring great gobs of publicity to a man with Glen's talent for showmanship. He might over-shadow the republican and democratic candidates for vice president, neither of whom in all probability will even know bow to ride a horse. But there's the possible after-effects, the hang-over, so to spesk. There lsnt a proverbial Chinaman's chance to be elected to anything next year. And there is the vital need to be reelected senator in 1950. Will Idaho democrats, who must renominate the senior senator, else he will certainly become an ex-senator, regard a third party candidacy as just good clean fun or will they regard the senator as a betrayer of his party and retire him to the showers come August, 1950? And even if he wins renomination, 10 per cent of the democrats could easily defeat him in November by bolting his candi dacy, even if he could win otherwise. Aye, there's the problem. The plaudits of the multitude and possible oblivion two years later or fewer 194 plaudits and a better chance to stay on the senatorial payroll. But a chap who can solve all the weightier national and international problems without even Uking his overcoat off should be able to figure it out, given a little time. Ontario Argus. GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty Mi gft Till ' p ftp "Hew diagnosis be wrs? Ws'vs had S reliable f the patient's bank aeeeant! MATTER OF FACT Anglo-American Mediterranean Base Answer to Greek Problem ( , i VL 1 b a n 1 a n 4''ii r five miles f" y .Bbur!7r-UV2) frV By Joseph and Stewart Also. WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 If any further proof is needed that the world is now in the zone of war, it Is only necessary to consider the possible American responses to a Soviet recognition of the "government" of General Markos Vifiades. Already, of course, the Markos drive on Greece is based squarely on sup- port from the Soviet satellites. The main mili tanr base for the I ' " lt communist gen era uiwuLww- " ful drive on Kon- I . w i. t i " im was aciuu r "V J the A 1 b a n 1 a n 'hJ do raw away aeanda casts, it has been Joseph Alaop j from a mobile railway car across the Yugoslav frontier. But this sort of thing is still unofficial, un admitted. The Soviet bloc Is thus as yet not finally com mitted. But the expected official recognition of the Markos r e g ime will commit the Soviets to open aggression igainst the Greek government. The nature of the de cision with which such a Soviet . a I challenge will " r'' confront the Uni ted States can be understood from the fact that one response now be ing seriously considered is the es tablishment of a great Anglo- American base in the southern Mediterranean. Three main alternative courses of action will in fact be open to the United States if the Soviet bloc recognizes and gives armed support to the Markos govern ment. These three alternatives are now being anxiously debated by the American policy makers. Balld Greek Army The first is simply more of the same more aid to the Greek gov ernment, with added emphasis on building up the Greek military forces. It is argued that if the Greek army were enlarged from its present strength of 150.000 to its wartime strength of 400.000 men. and if it were completely equipped with American arms, the Greeks would then be able to withstand on their own anything short of an open, all-out Soviet sponsored assault. On the other hand, such an army would con stitute an intolerable drain on Greek manpower, and on the inflation-riddled Greek economy. Greek economic stability, without which Greek political stability Is impossible, would be indefinitely delayed. The second alternative is to send American troops to Greece. Both Greek Foreign Minister Constan tin Tsaldaris, on his visit to Wash ington, and Greek Ambassador Vassili Dendramis, are believed unofficially to have requested American troops. There is some support for this proposal both in the state department and In the Pentagon building. It is argued that to send even a regimental combat team of 4,000 men would serve to stiffen the backs of the Greeks and would be a token of American determination to thwart the Soviet push south. Yet there appears to be a grow ing body of opinion against such a move. There are cogent argu ments that to commit American troops to Greece would be merely to fall into a trap designed by the Politburo. A small force would be useless, except for morale pur poses. A few thousand Americans could not crush the guerrillas where 150.000 Greeks have failed, and as soon as this became clear any morale value from the pres ence of American troops in Greece would disappear. The only really effective American military action In Greece would be the sealing off of the Greek borders. If this could be done at all. It would require several divisions. Thus an impor tant segment of American mili tary force would be concentrated on one small point on the Soviet perimeters, leaving the Soviets free to shift their main expan sionist drive elsewhere: to Italy. or to Persia, or to Austria or to Turkey. New Approach Considered That is why an entirely new approach to the problem of con taining the Soviet push south is being seriously considered, both in Washington and in London. This approach would call for an all- out effort, both in the United Na tions and through normal diplo matic channels, to persuade the Kremlin that its Greek game is not worth the candle. It would be made clear to the Kremlin that the end result of an intensified drive on Greece would be the establishment of a great Anglo American military base within striking distance of the whole So viet zone. Such a base might be in the Bengaui region in Af rlca. now held by the British by right of conquest. This possibility might cause the rulers in the Kremlin to think twice, since the establishment of such an Anglo American base would certainly be vastly unwelcome to them. Yet it is argued that if persua sion failed, such a base would pro vide precisely what American troops In Greece would not pro vide. It would provide the capa city to bring counter-pressure to bear, not merely at one point on the Soviet perimeter, but wherev er a Soviet-sponsored push out ward from the Soviet zone oc curred. These are the broad outlines of the msin alternatives which the American policy makers are now debating. Of course the final de cision may call for combining two or more of these alternatives possibly the Greek army will be strengthened, while the establish ment of an Anglo-American base Is held as an ace in the hole. The one alternative which is not be ing considered is a total Ameri can withdrawal from Greece. For the consequences of such a with drawal are entirely predictable. Resistance to Soviet expansion all around the Soviet perimeters would immediately become mushy, and further Soviet expansion both into me Middle East and into Aus tria and Italy would only be i matter of time. Copy rich t. 1947 New York Herald Trlbuna Ine. Erickson to Represent WU Walter X. Erickson. Willamette's recently returned director of ad missions, will leave the campus today as the university's represen tative during the Oregon Inde pendent college visitations to high schools in Portland and vicinity Erickson, who returned to the campus last Monday, had been doing graduate work at the Uni versity of Washington where he will receive his master of arts de gree in June. Besides visiting all of the Port land public high schools, the col lege representatives will also in terview interested applicants in West Linn, Oregon City, Milwau kee, Gresham, Parkrose. Tigard, and St. Helens high schools dur ing the coming week. Already, Willamette has ac cepted 40 of 80 applications for the spring term beginning next February and Erickson expects to accept about 10 more students to complete the spring registration of approximately 50 new students. Awaits Grand Jury On Charge of Bad Check Passing A man who Salem city police said admitted cashing at least nine bad checks here within the past week, is in Marion county Jail awaiting action of the county grand Jury. The checks totaled $187. it was reported. John Wesley Kafton of Pea body, Kan., arrested Wednesday by city police, waived prelimi nary hearing on his appearance in Marion county district court Thursday and is held in lieu of a total of $3,500 bail. He is charg ed on two separate counts with obtaining money by false pre- Jersey Cattle Club Elects Aurora Man By UUlie L. Madsea Farm Editor. Tha Stat man Calvin Mikkelson of Aurora was elected head of the Clacka mas Jersey Cattle club for 14S at its annual meeting held Thursday. Mr. Mikkelson with his father, Halvor Mikkelson, now own one of the largest registered Jersey herds in Clackamas county. The herd is recognized by the Amer ican Jersey Cattle club as a "Gold Star" herd because of its high production and classifica tion. Prior to buying their pres ent ranch near Aurora, the two farmed on the Pudding river not far from Silverton and the young er one of the two says he learned much of his dairying while at tending vocational agricultural classes at Silverton high school. C. E. Finnegan of Oregon City is the new vice president, end Barbara Gilmer of Canby is the secretary. Miss Gilmer and her father, R. A, Gilmer, own Oak Lane Jersey farm. The newly elected treasurer, M. C. Malar, is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Andy Ma lar who own Firwoodeen Jersey farm at Sandy. R. E. Shick of Gladstone, and a 20-year mem ber ox the club, was elected di rector. Reports showed a tremendous gain in Jerseys in Clackamas county in 1947. There are now 1,442 registered Jerseys in the county, with 629 of them on test. These Jerseys are owned by 77 breeders. There were also 290 registered Jerseys sold from Clackamas county in 1947. Re ports showed that 150 Jerseys were exhibited at the 1947 show with 500 people in attendance. Outgoing officers are John O. Lienhart, Wood burn. president, and Mrs. Lola Gale, Canby, sec retary. National YM Officer to Visit The Salem YMCA is preparing for a visit March a by the nation al YMCA president, Kirtley Ma thers, who is head of the Harvard university geology department. The local YM board of direct ors discussed the visit at its noon meeting in the YMCA Thursday. Appointed to a committee on ar rangements are Loyal Warner, Frank Bennett, G. Herbert Smith and Carl Greider. It also was announced that Har old J. Rounds of Los Angeles, hesd of the YM's world service organ ization who has Just returned from the orient, will visit here Janu ary 28. $1 062,9 5 at the end of 1M. Deposits of the three banks ag gregated $42777, just over the previous high Salem bank deposit total of $84,274,338 at the previous year's close. The figures include the combin ed totals shown on Dec. SI, 1947, by the new Willamette Valley bank and the Salem branch banks of both First National and US. National banks of Portland. Harry Lovald Succumbs to Long Illness Harry Lovald, 1131 Chemeketa st., died Thursday at a local hos pital at the age of , following an illness of several months. Lovald was born in Norway, Aug. 14, 1801, and came to the United States nine years later. He had lived in Oregon for the past six years and in Salem for 14 months prior to his death. In addition to the widow, Mrs. Helen Lovald of Salem, he is sur vived by a daughter, Mrs. Ruth Kennedy of Portland; four sons, Herman B. Lovald of Philip, S.D- Arthur J. Lovald of Kenosha, Wis, Gordon W. Lovald of Los Angeles, Calif., and Richard H. Lovald of Washington, D.C., and also by sev en grandchildren. The funeral will be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday in Howell Edwsrds chapel, with the Rev. R A. Krueger officiating. Concluding services will be st Belcrest Mem orial park. Bank Loans Total Higher Bank loans showed a 35 per cent higher total at the end of 1947 than at the end of the pre vious yesr, s compilation of year end statements of three Salem banks showed Thursday. Combined loan total stood at $14,284,895, as compared with 3rd Annual ooob Jan. 8-11 First Evangelical United Brethren Church Marlon and Summer St. Dr. E. W. Petticord Evangelist ProL Roy Clark Prof. Herschel ornborg ProL Paul Thornberg Featuring Three Piano Brass Trio Vocal Selections Service Each Night Including Saturday 7 :11 P. M. CONO TO NEW YORK? A? Duicludb Heiv (Orisons no JtfflTG coil voir. On your roondtrip to New York and most other Atlantic seaboard cities you can go or return via California, the sunny southwest, the Old South and romantic New Orleans for no mort rail fare than U ootts to go straight East and back! And the trip can be made in surprising ease. Our West Coast carries through Pullmans to Los Angeles. From Los Angeles through coast-to-coast Pullman service is provided on the fast Sunset Limited. While not the shortest route it certainly is the most romantic. You'll see California, the ranch and cowboy country of the Southwest, the Mexican border country, 1 Paso, Houston, miles of bayou land, a stopover in New Orleans; then the historic cities of the Old South: Montgomery, Atlanta and on to Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York. On your next trip East plan to go this thrilling way. You'll never regret it. Th friendly Southern Pacific C. A. LARSON rbes 4418 Yi mile north of underpass Salem At the foot of the bridge Uesl Salem Prices effective for entire week, January 9th through January 15th, Fit. through Thursday. Open Sundays Coffee Folgers 2 lb. glass 890 Coffee Schilling's JL lb. glass 430 Coffee Red Dot A lb. bag 300 Syrup 3.uC s-ita. 530 Mb?49fi Boiler &&P???ZLl 89 Ilncoa 2-lb. carton 730 1-lb. carton 4m9 a, W Shortening teUr.. 3 $1.25 ; Spry, Crlsco, Snowdrift, Jewel, etc. ,j ' ' 17. F"h Grade "A" t L ''! LggS Large Dozen OSP 1 Ililk 48-can case, 5.85 Can JL a w All popular brands, Pet, Carnation, sic. j Sngar bl"3Ttar. 1C0 .u.8.75; Flour r.sr.'" 50 n.. 4.39 Drifted Snow, Gold Medal, Crown, Fisher's, etc., 2.19 Kitchen Queen 50-lbs. 4.19 25-lbs. 2.09 Soap brands Large package 350 Rinso, Dux, Oxjdol, Dreft, Vel, Super Suds, etc. j i Tomalo Juico Hunt's 46-oz. ca Grapefruit Juice r"Vl 170 Tangerine Juce , J 90 In Onr Self-Service Ileal Department If for ANY REASON ypu are not satisfied with the neat you buy in our Self Service Markets, we will replace or refund cheerfully and gladly, and, we DO mean gladly. We operate these stores to" please YOU, because upon your patronage depends our suc cesa, so don't - hesitate to tell us if you are not treated right. . ill Sliced Dacon 790 No shank waste Shoulder Hams n? T-Bone Steaks Loin SiealiSotnelT. u, 650 ...Lb. 5101 ...Lb. 6901 f -.r1 Swift's aUuTQ Silrerleaf 1 lb. carton I-Iellow Freeze ICE CREAI1 ; l 0, Quarts, All Flavors . . ROCKY ROAD this week (Flake Chocolate, chopped nuts, marshmallows, mm mm' food) I j In Oar Self-Service Fresh Produce Department The finest assortment - - the best quality. Refriger ated to guarantee freshness. Self service, so you may choose that which you like. rivnlr Bunch, young, ten- OC taOlTOIS der, crisp a bun. p Lettuce Crbfp, solid heads M JCL 7 1 Celery Very nice - Per head 190 Apples Midou??. 5 ibs. 4-90 Box 3.69 ' j I Juice Oranges shopping bag . 590 5 .i I We Po Not Sell to Dealer . We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities lillbi CE Ml At the foot of the bridge West Salem ! ! ! i mile north of underpass Salem !