Ctctosa gcfe- Qror Wednoa day; March l'lC? (j)rtjBOiiCDtatcmaatt snaaaaBaaaa SanW u 7re Favor fuuyt "o Fear Shall A tee" Free FM IUHhu, Msrta U, U51 TI1E STATESBIAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAOUT. Editor and Publisher at Ue AmmUM TIm Aiinfahl rreea to entitled ndutTtly to the ase fee reaabcU mIIm ef all the towl news acta ted la this MfiHHr, M well m all AT eWl elsnelel Remov Taxes on Margarine For sixty years the dairy industry ha fought margarine through punitive legislation. Federal law Imposes heavy license fees on manufacturers, wholesalers and-, retailers of unoolored "margarine with lighter fees charged wholesalers and retailers on uncolored. In addition 10 cents a pound is levied on each retail sale of colored margarine and Mi of a cent on uncolored. Some states have additional taxes or bar margarine altogether Oregon has defeated attempts to levy such taxes. Various arguments were used originally against margarine: It was manufactured in unsanitary conditions. It used foreign oils. Coloring it like butter was am attempt to deeeive the con sumer. Margarine was deficient in food values. Time has pretty well removed these objections. Margarine now is manufactured from domestic vegetable oils, from soybean or cottonseed, in modern sanitary plants. Through addition of vitamins it has been made fully equal to butter in food value. Both butter and margarine are sold now in carefully labelled cartons; the public is quite familiar with each; so the chanee of deception is pretty well erased. As for coloring, butter itself Is artificially colored most of the year. We cannot follow the reason ing which gives butter an exclusive claim to yellow as a color. In view of these facts it is difficult any longer to defend the legislation against margarine. It seems like putting sn unfair hobble on a competitive product. The dairy industry is hoi.estly fearful that taking off the taxes and permitting the sale of colored margarine will "jeop ardize the whole dairy industry," as Congressman Murray of Wisconsin says. But that is taking far too gloomy a view. Butter has an important place in the diet and will retain it. It may be that the ratio of margarine consumed will increase, but that need not sound the doom of the dairy industry. Butter has long been the backbone of dairying, but its rela tive importance within the industry is shrinking. Fluid milk for consumption, ice cream, cheese, evaporated and powdered milk offer presently huge markets which will permit great expansion, pver the years it should be possible to lower produc tion costs of butter and thus prevent losses of sales. This is a great dairy country and a great butter-producing state, and our personal sympathies are all with the dairy indus try. But we can't justify now the artificial protection afforded by government under pressure of the dairy farmers and butter makers. And we have full confidence that the dairy industry, shorn of this prop, will be fully sble to stand alone in competi tion with colored oleo. The issue comes to a head in congress with hearings on II bills to repeal the discriminatory taxes. The Man from Waukegan Name-it-and-you-can-have-it lotteries have become part of the American scene, like double-features and singing commer cials. The "Walking Man" contest was the epitome-it was. In the vernacular, "real gone': How America loves a Cinderella story! Little, old, gray haired Mrs. Florence Hubbard nothing ever happened to her. But she had a good reason why people should support the Ameri can Heart association; her husband died v of heart disease. Now, with $22,500 worth of prizes, she can cast off her humdrum existence with Chicago's proletariat and take off for romance and high adventure. Just like millions of housewives and shop girls dream of doing. How America loves a ' worthy cause! Contributions to the heart association fund for research in heart disease, the nation's No. 1 killer, came to $1,300,000. Contestants who didn't place can feel like good scouts. Donors of the prizes got their share of publicity, and MC Ralph Edwards has it made as an all-time promoter. And how America loves a good gag! Comedian Jack Benny, his fiddle and his "hmmmmm" quartet, are welcome Sunday afternoon visitors in millions of homes, as sure of a laugh as Junior's first bright saying. The contest will give Jackson's joke smiths raw material for weeks, i.e. Rochester: "Hello, master, this is metropolis." And, hence, Benny can begin with, "L3MFT Let s Sit, My Feet're Tired." Etc. But if these shenanigans continue indefinitely, the listening public, brain-weary from trying to decipher obscure riddles and car-sore from straining for that phone to tins;, will react to contests like they once did to auctions at war bond drives they'll start walking . . . the other way. Then the "guess who" games will be real gone for good. OTP SSGQDDQS (Continued from page 1) religious movements as the Ref ormation; or art without refer ence to sacred art; or literature without reference to some of the great sacred writings; or biological science without getting into con flict with fundamentalists groups that deny Darwin's theory of evo lution. Surely the schools should not be required to tear out all such pages from textbooks. As far as church groups are eoncerned they will have to re organize their programs. Funda mentally they will have to stand on their own strength. Childrmn do need instruction in religion; but the responsibility talis back on the home and the church. The school can no longer be used as a prop to lean on. A somewhat different dash a fees recently In Newark. N. J. There the superintendent oC schools, a Catholic, banned the magazine The Nation from the schools because It published a se ries of articles which offended many Catholics. That ami ma arbitrary exercise of authority. While the church may ban the magazine for reading by Its com municants It does not seem Just that non-Catholie students should be denied access to the magazine. The basis of the success of the American system is tolerance. Our constitution guarantees freedom of religion The public schools which are open to children of all sects have to delete anything which might carry religious bias. With out doubt this leaves a great void ka youth education; but the court ruling makes It clear that Instruc tion in religion must be carried on outside the public schools. Trade in China An AP writer from Shanghai reports that extensive private trading Is carried on in China between areas controlled by the government and those dominated by the communists. The latter control mostly the rural areas. They bring in their products to the cities and take back with them kerosene, farm tools, some times American-made weapons or jeeps. This should hot be surprising. The Chinese have operated like that for centuries. Generally they have had some war lord or bandit on their backs. They have learned to carry on their occupations and trade regardless of what general was boss of the countryside. They had to do this to survive. China will somehow manage to go on no matter which side wins in the current civil war, and even If neither wins and the strife goes oa and on as it has, in some form or other, for centuries. m jmaaeei - Minister of the Interior In this country the secretary of the interior is administrator of public lands, of reclamation, of unorganized areas (Alaska, Puerto Rico) and a medley of other bureaus such as mines, fish and wildlife service, etc. In continental countries of Europe the minister of the interior has a different function. He is chief of the internal police system. The countries being smaller the police system is usually nationalized with the minister of the. interior at its heed. That is why the communists make a grab for this office at first opportunity. Once In control of the police they have the grip for the final coup to gain control of the government. The only competent opposing- force woui be the army. In Czecho slovakia they put their man in as minister of 'the interior and a stooge in as head of the army. The pushover under such a deal was easy. The base of communist control is control of the police. With 101 inches of snow reported at Santiam pass the fUh will not have to swim on their sides 'this summer-, to keep submerged. it" Highway Department To Consider Road Bids. Bids lor -highway department projects aggregating expenditures in excess of $1,000,006 will be con sidered at a meeting of the state highway 'commission In Portland Thursday and Friday. ; ? . This will be one of the Unrest contract settings In the history of the : commission. Included in- the proposals is construction of the new highway from New Era to Oregon. City. Scout Circus Plan Aired by Committeemen Rough plans for the Cascade area Boy Scout council's fourth annual Scout circus on May I at the state fairgrounds were out lined at a meeting here this week by circus committeemen. Floyd Bowers and Floyd Seam ster, co-chairmen of the major activities committee of the Salem Lions club, which is helping sponsor the circus, appointed a circus executive committee. The committee consists of Lions Roy Stewart, Julian Burroughs, and Seamster and Jerry Scott, as sistant scout executive, and Gard ner Knapp, acout council camp ing chairman. Advisers are Bow ers and R. W. Land of the. Lions club and Gordon Gilmore, council scout executive, and Harry Mich elsen, assistant executive. The circus will be held in fair grounds' horse show pavilion as it was last year when 2,500 scouts performed scout skills and con tests for 4.000 spectators. A par ade through Salem streets be ginning at 10:30 a.m. on the 8th will precede the circus proper which is to start at 8 p m. V a. I I y I M I M7. jf (Act - Jj. i St. ' 1 1 Comedians Muff in jTFU Play Ray Later (left) and Ray Yecam, Willamette anlversity seniors, ehaaan clears and sztert straw hats la a scene fceias; rehearsed for -gvW Great Expectations MATTER OF FACT- Even More Misery in Store for Truman as Political Meet Nears Apartments on Permit List A four-court apartment con struction project and two moving projects were among building ac tivities approved by city permits issued Tuesday by the building; in spection department. Emma Blixskth received a per mit for the apartment construc tion, estimated to cost $7,000, at 1842-4 S. 13th st. Vernon Wiscarson was author ized to move a house from 1130 Marion St., at the site ef the pro posed retail trade center, to I860 N. Cottage st St an estimated cost of $2,000. Chandler Brown was permitted to move the small res taurant building Just east of Cap itol theatre, around the corner to 139 S. Church st, at a eost of $1,500. Repairs ranging la value from $50 to $250 were approved for the Salem YMCA garage. 141 S. Winter st; George Grabenhorst, for an office at 360H State it, and Catherine Shand for a house at 45 S. Commercial st. V V LAV Br Jeseeh and Stewart Also. WASHINGTON. March 0 The miseries of Harry S. Truman are becoming so numerous that it is almost inhuman to report them. Nonetheless, it is an i n e v It a bly significant polit ical fact that the pres i d e n t has more misery in store for him when the great est satraps of the democratic party rather in Wash ington March 11. - Stewart Atop jf This is the date-' "'- -5 of the meeting of the executive committee of the democratic national committee. Several of its members have al ready let It be known that they will seize the opportunity to tell the president a ' four KstnrtA V I The o p i nion that home-truth-telling ia need ful arises from the man Tru- il man, which the Yi sa trans also com- plain of. Initial yACly, Truman seemed actually to dislike the Joseph Alaop t the change in - " immense burden that had been laid upon him. There followed a period when be simply and rather admirably re solved to bear the burden as best he could, letting the ships fall where they night. The re sults of this approach to his duties were good. These good re sults were in turn gratifying, and now the satraps complain that the president is suffering from a bad case of president! tlx. Nothing is more difficult to penetrate than the obscurity which inevitably surround the personality and state of salad ef a president. It does seem to be true, however, that the president has met his recent misfortunes, J S r-1 GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichtj I r4 a bit te people avetatag seer his run of bad luck and his chick ens coming home to roeet with a curious mixture of complacency and sense of, being unjustly per secuted. He is no longer so eager to be advised as in the past He is not even aware-how desperate his political situation Is. Indeed he has ao one to tell him how bad things are, for the voices of the few really competent men with continuing access to the White House sre daily drowned by the smoking-car Jollity of Brigadier General Vaughan and the smooth reassurances of the pursy Dr. Steelman. Hit the President with Facts The first stage of the satraps' reaction to this situation will be to beat the president over the head with the grim facts. It may be expected they will tell him he has almost irretrievably lost the south. (There is a faint hope that the southerners may be woo ed back: by naming a southern vice president and re-using the 1944 civil rights plank in the 1948 convention platform. But even this hope is too dim to be voiced with real enthusiasm.) What is almost worse, the satraps will also tell the president that he is losing the mass vote in the north and that nothing can win this vote back except strong leadership. The difficulty la that telling tne president large numbers of home truths like these, even In the loudest and most menacing posaiDie voice, wui neitner alter the man not simplify his prob lem. At this Juncture, In the opin ion ef the most competent demo cratic strategists, there is really nothing muca that the president oan do te restore himself. The real prlee of the southerners Is the resaeval of Truman from the head of the ticket The only real means of regaining northern mai support, la present circumstances. Is actually to put through the aoeial and other measures which the president has advocated. And he would have to. JaU most of the congress to pass these measure The strategists close to the White House count on the inevit able worsening ef the foreign sit uation to bring their man baek. But the more impartial demo crats are even unable te see hope in this grim remedy. "Truman isn't the kind of men," one of them admitted bitterly the other day. "that people think they've got to keep in office Just because there's a crisis. reUttoal Blgwif Uneasy If all this is so, moreover. It is necessary to look forward to still another stage in the reaction of the great democratic satraps. They made Truman, and he has not used the presidency in such a way as to prevent them from un-making him. On a recent trip around the country, one of the president's closest political advis ors was shocked to discover how many party leaders , wistfully speculated on whether Truman might not be induced step aside in favor of General Eisenhower. For the present, of course, this Is a mirage. But for the future It will certainly have meaning. It does not mean, of course, that General Eisenhower, Is any more likely to want to run as a democrat than as a republican. Nor does it mean that-the presi dent will --actually be replaced at the head of his party's ticket in the election. It is simply., a sign of very bad further trouble ahead. The southern governors are meeting Immediately after the Ed Kellys, Frank McHales, Ed Flynns et si gather in Washing ton for the satraps rally. It is almost inevitable that the sa trapes best efforts will not disclose a formula short sidetracking Tru man for bringing the south Into line again. The real trouble will start at the governors' meeting, when the southern rebellion is quite likely to become formal and official. Then, if the deterioration con tinues, st least a few of the north ern satraps sre quite likely to Join in a putsch, sometime in the spring, to make the president re quest s successor. The betting is still ten-to-one that the demo crats st Philadelphia will nomi nate Truman. But after these pre liminaries, the convention should be s somewhat melancholy gath ering. (Ceerrlfht, IMS, Nw Terfe sTeMUS Trtaaaa, lata.) Lincoln Woman Told of Death Of Husband LINCOLN, March Mrs. Oeorge (Annie) Walling received a message Monday of the death by accidental drowning of her husband, George Leland Walling, 42, st Richmond, Calif. Walling was fireman on the S. S. Bryant at the time ef his death. He had been around the world several times on voyages. With his parents, Mr. and Mrs Tracy Walling, he had moved to Lincoln from Portland when 19 months old and received Ms edu cation at Lincoln school and at tended Salem high school. Surviving are his widow; small daughter, Marion Ruth; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tracy Walling; a brother, John Walling; and sis ters, Mrs. Juanita Upham, Mrs. Thelma Fisher, Mrs. Genevieve CamiUo. Dorothy Wallint Marion walling, and aunts, nephews and ni The body will be shinDcd to Salem for buriaL Funeral ar- rangasasnts are ta charge of the Clouan-Bexrtek company. Isssso Tax B3 b 4:23 Daily Saadsy and Kvealag appalaliaeiile Made 4H State St Fheae S-SSa U2H3TED Hon 16 lo IS Te trala.fer refrixeraUea i asr eoadlttsatas; la ear well esjalased school sheas. Kefrla erattoa and air eonrttrloatng year faiare with Bred table trade. Fee fell laf a representative Ilr. Vea Ilnlle-iax IS a. sa. ie"S iv as. Taeeday, Wodanediy aad TTsarsday at the Marlea Betel For Civilians aa4 CL La Matched Hardwood Chests of Drawers, Kitchen Cabinets and Bailt-ins. I Made to Order 'Filsinger's Cabinet Shop . ISO Se. 28th St. , Jest Off inssiea Gale. eeeaedy te be day. March 12, te benefit the 'U servtee fend. Glee Pay-offs To Be Part of Friday Play Toujours Gale," musical com edy to be presented at f alaas high school auditorium Friday. March 12 by the world students service fund group of Willamette univer sity, will feature payoffs on Fresh man Glee bets between the acts. Bill Smith. WSSF publicity di rector, announced xeatarday. Ray Tocum. Riverside, I1L, and Ray Loter, Portland, who play leads ia the musical, have offered to pay off their losing Glee bets on the stage, as neither is a mem ber of the Glee-winning freshman tod by seam stadeats Fri- fer the world stadeat Tocum. senior class president, and Loter, who heeds the campus Sigma Chi, wrote the script, and Bob Johnson, Kodiak, Alaska, and ; - i - . Glen Wnilama. SIau, arranged the musie. Williams band will ac company. I Tickets will be on sale on the first floor m Eaton hall daCy until Friday,:! 1,000th Vet Receives Lroan The 1,000th Oregon war veteran to obtain a state farm or home loan is Pete Herman, Sheridan route 2, It was reported Tuesday; by , W. F. Gaareastroom, director of the state veterans affairs de-i partment. ' ' of $400 for the purchase of a sixroom frame house property, including garage, chiokea house, ban and four-acres a mile west of Sheridan: The state department appraised the property at $6,000 and gave Herman the full 79 per cent allowed. - " Your Doctor Dccko Every Decision with Fccto There is a wen-established scU entifia reason for every decision your doctor mares. He ia scalded In his opinions by ths) conclusions of authorities in the field of med Even though you have bad to consult a physician, it ia well no recent to have one in mind. Pay him a visit. Then when you need him ha will be better prepared to ears) for you properly. When your doctor fives you Jl prescription, bring it to us to be filed. We art prge rlptitm noilsTi ill I cr WILLKTTS Capiial Drag Sidro Cor. Stat A Liberty - Phone Jilt sod TACCSWMSV IUIjlzI Lst Greyhound do your driving far yoo. Comfortable air-oonditioiifxi coaches. Bepeadabls drivers. Frsqotnt ssrricsi evsjrywherti -N ISaisiisIrrarasI I Irertlaad Qraata flt.S Kaddias X San J9 CO S.4S Lee Angeles tUti AAOTTWNAl SAVS40S ON SOUND TUP fAUS S2S N. Big