i Th Starteemcm. golem; Oregon, Tiies jrr, 'July '1 93 1 7Tb Favor Sways Ut. ' From First Stsiesaaaa. March Z. mi, I THE STATES3IAN PUBLISHING x)niPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. Editor -end Publisher Member of the The Associated Press Is entitled excessively to tbevse for reeabll . cation of all the local news printed la this newspaper, as well as sJl AT news dispatches, j ' J The Fittest Willi Survive f I For thousands of young men their wartime dream of "a little business of myjown' is coming true. In Salem, and nearby communities, - as throughout the nation,, many jjof them started with little more than a GI loan and, unbounded optimism, but they are making good. . ji 1 - At first it was easy. Hie war, which had stimulated mergers, comtetition and rivalry, also created the great demand which gave the inexperienced small businessman achluice thing" at any price. Backed by easy credit, eas$ bank loans and government loan guarantees, hamburger stanrds, ; radio repair shops and service stations sprang tip everywhere. The birth rate? ojf new businesses climbed higher: than popula tion increases. The V. S. has at least ZVz per cent more inhabi tants now than in 1940; it has gained 15 J per cent more business establishments. The Pacific states and New England are the only Regions where, business increase has not surpassed population Increase. In some areas, the per cent of business growth is four times that of population growth. I J .In 1941, 448,000 new enterprises were started. In 1946, the birth rate leaped td 750,000 a year. Of the 3,870,000 individual places of business now going concerns, one ouf of every four is new. Of the young firms, 97 per cent are small businesses because half the veterans who went into the field chosej the retail trades or service line's and average about eight employes:- " Some clouds have appeared, however. Earjfy this year, new business ventures fell off to a rate of 340,000,jand "discontinu ances' have been increasing rapidly. Thousands of disappointed young merchants are throwing out their rose-colored glasses and filing bankruptcy. . Apprdximately217,0(ji0 establishments will go out the hard way this year. (In 1940,; 361,000 died and in 1942, 604.000 faded from the scene when owners and employes were drafted.) t ' The margin between flower-bedecked opening days and crepe-hung Windows is growing smaller. There weip 221 per cent more failures in 1947 than in 1946. Last year, seven-times as many furniture and house furnishings stores collapsed as the year before. Xhe lines that are failing first anji fastest are those most young managers thought would be easiest-Ismail electric appliance stores, restaurants, night clubs, frosted food plants, fox fur farms and similar enterprises . . . most pt them originally under-capitalized. ! . The mortality is caused by several factors. One is Jack of managerial know-how. At first, consumer deniand made up for Gaany mistakes but competition is tougher now- and buyers are more particular about where and what they purchase ahd how much they pay. Shortages of merchandise also ruiried many new comers before their feet were firmly planted. J Despite these, figures, the picture is not (gloomy. The 1946 boom could riot last indefinitely and the leveling out process was inevitable. The fact remains that there ar$ still more people "being lured into View enterprises- than are bf ing crowded out, and many of them: are headed for success. Thk spirit of Horatio Alger is as strong las ever; 1 Hartley's Inquiry Congressman Hartley, co-author of the Taft-Hartley law, announces a new investigation to round up the commies in - the labor movement. There are a good many of them there, all right. Some unions are tadly infested with them. Always their guide is the party line, their goal the establishment,-of the communist state. They have no interest in trades unionism as such, nor in collective bargaining, with a viewto peaceful settlement of ques tions about wages and working conditions. fThey seek to stir up strife and trouble, to promote strikes, to prevent settlements. , Fortunately the leadership, in the labor union movement both CIO and AFL is strongly anti-communist.. Such is the poor repute of congressional investigation of un American activities" that one of . a new great inquisition. The but the wayThey j havs been political use made of them is it .1 : : . conduct an inquiry both thorough and decent I i : ' n v j Tax Cut Prospect ; Congressman ; Harold Knutsonf nails the reported treasury surplus of $8.5 billion with the-prediction that if republicans are returned, to power; they will chop off another $4.5 billion in taxes. The news is welcome, but first we ought to see just what ERP and our rearmament is going to cost, and to get a clearer view of how business (and income tax t2 months." " ' I ' ' ! If Russia had, been cooperative the Unitejl States could have scaled down its military expenditures, and European recovery, could have advanced more rapidly. Russia is an enigma to the rest of the world,! and. as such makes our fiscal policy something of an enigma. Assuming a continuance of government revenues it should Is used in expenditures) to whittle the tsljr Wartime tax bill considerably in the next session She Plead for; Roadside Beauty Far into the future residents state will be, indebted to Mrs. Jessie M. Hbneyman who suc cumbed ih Portland Saturday at the age off 96 years. For Mrs. Honeyman was the leader in the' work of preserving roadside beauty, for acquiring and developing state parks. Her consecra tion to this absorbing interest and perseverance bore rich fruit, and while she did not attain all of her objectives in freeing the streets and. highways of that which lacked eauty ishe achieved much and educated' the people of Oregon t? the importance of preserving the native scenic grandeurs surrounding them. Appro priately; her name is given t,o one of the fine parks of the state system, one on thie coast south of Florence. I ; i I - ' i After looking at the toll of death and Occidents one is apt to refer! to- Sunday-Monday as te "inglorious': Fourth of July. Automobile accidents, drownings -account fot most of the trage dies; but fireworks come in for. blame., One death at Eugene, a serious .in juryhere and an unusual orgy of noise-making raise doubts as to the at the last state wisdom of the legislature whose put fireworks under a ban. Even if tolerated their use should be greatly restricted in areas, outside of cities ail well as inside. Senator Wayne Morse says'the republican old guard philoso phy died at Philadelphia. It didn't die, bu it -took some hard punishment. However there is always a plaice for' a rear -guard in an army! A liorce composed 'only of advance units, pioneers and skirmish outfits wouldn't be able to iake and to hold ground J In, the field of political philosophy! there is ground to d neia as weu as laKen. - This fellow who has been Identified by Al, Jennings, why Xears to claim njs notoriety? Any got free from the law's clutches. No F far Shall Atom" A cUtti shudders a bjt over the prospect country needs developed in to know the facts; the past and the not reassuring . m .rm ailn Msvha Vi A will receipts) will j fare in the coming " j . present levels of business and be possible of congress. of Oregon! and visitors to the petition of the youthful attaches opposition defeated a bill to h I posing as Jesse James and been has he been waiting all these circus would want him if he Red SatoIIIto Rulcn Aro In Difficult Spot By Joseph and Stewart Ala ' The Tito Trouble H WASHINGTON, Jury 5 . Th men whose flesh must really creep . when they : consider the consequences j of Marshal -Tito's declaration of . independence are the rulers of the still loyal Soviet satellites. For it is virtually cer- v tain that a purse of the whole So- viet empire in. if., eastern Eurooe.--r' eastern eomp arable to fix nternal J in th the i DUe in the So viet Union which f Jrpfcl(N?p j culminated in the treason trials, is about to get un der way. .-- Heads have already fallen, or are in the process of falling. In ;r-iiy Kumania, com- yti ii n i i t laanAP Gheorghiu. - Dej has: been- ac cused, like Tito, of "grandee im, and .if he is not already " experi encing .the dis eomfortsofa peoples' prison, he soon' "will. "Tsola Dragoiche- E Stewart Akop iva, heroine of s- 'Bulgarian com munism, has been ruttuessly rele-? gated- to plaintive obscurity. In Russia's eastern German province, communist leader Otto Grotewhol has loudly demanded a purge of "diversioniSt and obstructionist" elements. But this sort of thing is only the beginning. The real ques tion is how far the purge will go and what technique the Soviet overlords will use to bind the So viet empire with hoops of steel. . Military Holds Control The" Soviet masters will have liltle difficult in Poland. Ruma nia, eastern Germany and Hungary. The reason is simple. In these areas the Red Army and the Soviet se cret police, the M.V.D., are al re?dy openly present. The whip is there to crack. But where there is no army and M.V.D. whip, es pecialy in Albania. Czechoslovakia. Bulgaria and Finland, steps will almost certainly be taken to pro vide one. The most. interesting case is Albania's. ' Albania has always been considered . a satellite of Yugoslavia. A glance at the map is enough tc&explain why. Al bania is completely fenced in by Yugoslavia. Yet Premier Enver Hoxhas defiance of Tito is a mea sure of the pressure which the Kremlin is capable of bringing to bear. 'r The pressure of Bulgaria can be more direct. There Dictator Di mitrov some months ago openly suggested the Balkan federation which the. rebellious Tito has now indorsed. Dimitrov at that time was rudely slapped down by the Kremlin, but he has not yet re jected Tito's ' invitation. Even if he does so, a wholesale purge of doubtful elements in Bulgaria is virtually- certain. Ruse May Be Used The several tens of thousands of Red Army and M.V.D. troops left behind in Bulgaria after the Soviet "evacuation" may be suffi cient to make sure that the job is done. If not, Bulgaria may be required' fo "invite" units of the Red Army to re-enter the country, to "protect the Bulgarian people's democracy" against 'Western im perialist aggression. It is quite possible that Czecho slovakia may be required to ex tend a similar invitation. Indeed, Prague is perhaps the first place to look for trouble. Czechoslo vakia's submission was recent and reluctant. Soviet deliveries of promised raw materials have been far behind schedule and the Czechs are suffering from a severe bard currency shortage. The Czech standard of living, important in a country where almost every adult is at least comfortably stout on a diet of five meals a day, has Ipwered perceptibly since the com munists took over. Two Courses Faced All- this must make Moscow fear separation at Prague. Two courses may therefore be adopted by the Kremlin. Either the Czech communist leadership may be sub jected to. a ruthless purge, to re move all but the completely- re liable 100 per centers. Or, if the purgees refuse to be pureed, the invitation to the Red Army may well be required, even though the return of Soviet troops will arouse rebellius horror in every Czech. At a minimum, any Czech com munist who Is even capable of holding a conversation with a Westerner and this category in cludes Premier Gottwald, Foreign Minister dementis and Interior Minister - Nosek should begin to wonder whether ljis doom Is sealed. - Finally, only time will. tell the fate of Finland. The Finns are already anti - communist. They have been emboldened by Tito. As this Is written, a free Finnish elec tion is getting under way. These are circumstances which could produce almost any result. Such are' some of the repercus sions which may be felt within the Soviet empire as a result of Tito's v bold heresy. Repercussions Noted Elsewhere, repercussions are al ready -observable the Berlin problem, for example, 3ias ceased to cause quite such anguished con cern in Washington,. London and Paris. And last but by no means least,' there is reason to believe that there will also be repercus sions in Moscow ; itself. Tbe best opinion holds that the Yugoslav crisis is an outward and visible sign of an inward and in visible power struggle behind the 'dark walls of the Kremlin, More-, oer, there is solid . evidence that Soviet Premier Josef Stalin has m i . Li i. ! I I'm.- v V v.UE C6PiTAltSr Ohrr,. "Voice of America" played little part in the struggle uihirh lrt tin t r tw rri cic Thi does not mean that Stalin's hold ; is seriously weakened, but it does stiggest that the battle of succes sion is already in progress. And whatever may the battle may go, one thing is certain. The need to tighten the screws everywhere in the new Soviet empire, with which the defection of Tito has confronted the Kremlin, will cer tainly greatly increase .the strain on the whole vast, monolithic structure of Soviet power. And if the struggle in the Krem lin is already capable of mani festing itself in so shattering a way, one may assume that as the strain increases the tension in the Politburo will shortly reach some sort of crisis. tfovrrUht. Hit, New Trk Her&M trlkut Inc.) Union Votes to west Power Strike ST. JX3UIS, July .MTh-A strike of electrical workers which would have paralyzed industry through Out a large Mississippi valley area was temporarily averted tonight when the men voted to extend the strike deadline until next Monday. The strike was to have taken ef fect at 7 a.m. (EST) tomorrow.. The strike delaying action was taken -at a two-hour meeting of members of the AFL operating en gineers' local hastily called by un ion leaders. The meeting took a se cret vote on S compromise pro posal submitted by its negotiating committee, which has been in al most continuous conference the last two days with representatives of the Union Electric company of Missouri. A previously agreed on settle ment was rejected by the union members at a meeting - Saturday night. Should the strike take place; it would deprive the company of about 75 per cent of its generating capacity and place St Louis and the nearby area ton emergensy power basis. j . Charity hospitals of Beaune, in Burgundy,! France, own-some of the world's most famous vineyards. GRIN AND BEAR Ts vseless tm attack America a American workers have decided Delay Mid &gr Bin i 'J, J t MRK 1 J. too pa cur Let's Guard Painful Migraine Headache ; By Herman N. Bnndesen, M.D. Periodic attacks of excruciating headache on one side of the .head, preceded by flashes of light before the eyes and accompanied by nau sea and vomiting, add to the con dition known as migraine; one of the most perplexing of all medical puzzles. - Dozens of theories have been ad vanced to explain its pecular be havior but evidence is lacking to support many of them and none has led to a completely successful treatment Experts of more than 70 years ago believed migraine to be due to spasm of the blood ves sels in the brain and, even; today, this theory is still favored by some. Our constantly expanding knowl edge of allergy has led to the Idea that migraine may be due to over sensitivity, and it is also suggest ed that some disturbance of the glands of Internal secretion may play a role in producing this dis ease. Vitamin deficiencies have also been proposed as a cause. Thorearh Exaaaiaatiaa Sometimes a thorough examina tion will reveal the source of the trouble in the individual case and here treatment can be directed at preventing the recurrent bouts of headache altogether. In the vast majority of cases, however, no definite cause can be found; hence, treatment can only be useful in stopping the attack as soon as pos sible after it develops. For this purpose, the most help ful preparation seems to be one known as ergotamine tartrate. Drugs which dilate the blood ves sels, and simple pain-relieving, Four: Tourists Rescued from Forest Canyon OROFINO, Idaho, July; 5-P)- Four prominent Spokane tourists were rescued from the Black Can yon of the Clearwater national forest today after spending a har rowing 34 hours alone in the prim itive area on an ill fated boat trip. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Porter. W. W Powell and Miss Sally Paine were brought out of the canyon at the IT By Lichlj prosperity comrade Editor '. . to pat ap with it ne matter Our Wealth drugs do not seem, to be of much value. ; In using the ergotamine, it is important that it be given in suffi cient dosage as early in the course of an attack as possible. A derivative of, ergotamine, known as dihydro-ergotamine me thanesulfonate or . D.H -D.-45, has also been employed with good re sults. ReccBt Treatment A more recent treatment consists of the giving of a combination of ergotamine tartrate with ..caffeine by mouth, or by giving it combined with a trephine in a suppository which is administered through the rectum. It has been found that either of these treatments has been more effective in relieving the mi graine than the ergotamine alone. During an attack, the patient should be put at complete rest In bed, preferably in a darkened room. The drugs mentioned above should, of course, be administered under the direction of a phvsician. Questiaas mmd Answers H. M.: What Is the danger of an enlarged heart? Is it serious? . - Answer: When a heart is en larged it indicates that the heart has been damaged, often as a re sult of an infection or possibly from a toxic goitre or hardened arteries. Whether or not the condition Is serious depends on the degree of enlargement and its cause. A thorough study should be made to determine the exact con dition of the heart; then proper treatment can be advised. Copyright IMS. 'King Features Syndicate . Lachsa ranger station about 5 p.m. today, cold and tired but appar ently uninjured. They left the Powell station 12 miles west- of the Montana-Idaho border and 60 miles southwest of Missoula, Mont., Saturday morning m a seven-man rubber 'life Taft They were headed for Kooski. Idaho, 100 miles down the Lachsa river. Fifteen miles from their starting point, tne boat overturned, spilled out their supplies and left them cold and wet. Thrv maH it tn shore. sliDned a Inn? th id of the steep canyon walls and event ually stumbled into a ranger sta tion were they summoned aid. Trend Toward terCars " !H ; ' V"'- CINCINNATT, July 3 -vfV The nation is in pretty good spirits; if you can Judge by its taste In car colors. ' Powell Crosley, jr small-car manufacturer, says that fifteen years ago mere than 90 per cent of the nation's automobiles were turned out in three or four' sub dued colors. Today the demand or live colors is the rule rather n tne exception, he ? says, People want apple green, ' can ary yellow, light blue and a dar ing red. Undoubtedly it's the trend of the times plus the fact that women have more than ever to do with selecting the family Car.", ; ' f ; i :: , . i F1MCER F03M KEYS Keea Typewriter, , ..j v ae iwi Btreei Brigk .J Cbm fa lodbyl X. f ; set tki Hrw 'i V 11 Keep First Aid MenVolice On Jump Over the - Fireworks and minor accidents were' the most prevalent dis turbances over the Fourth of July week-end In Salem recorded by city police and Salem first aid men. jOne woman Was hospitalized for gunshot wounds, police said, and at least IS first aid calls' were answered by aldmen. , . j ,i k , , ' -Eight persona were treated by Salem first aid men for fire- 11 Holiday Toll on: ixDrdwried " SEATTLE. July 5 -0FV- Wash ington's three-day Independeeee holiday death list reached 11 to night j -1 five of them children. Six persons died by drowning, four, from j miscellaneous causes and one on the hiehway. Still unsolved Is the slaying of a t-year-old Seattle schoolgirl, Ellen Jane I Fulwiler. while play ing, hide-and-seek Sunday in a north end suburban park. - Equally tragic was the death of two small sisters, Mildred Patton, 9, and Florence Patton, 7. They were struck by a fast fruit' train Sunday on a railroad bridge near their Wallula home. Two deaths were reported yes terday. The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Qrlo Nye, Yakima, drowned in an Irrigation ditch near the home of his grandmother three miles south of Naches. The' body of a Prosser fisherman, Raschel Deaton, 34, was brought down from Menatah lake near Ellens burg. He died early Sunday on a holiday f outing, apparently of a heart attack. Others' who drowned during the week-end were Earl E Lindsay, Seattle; PFC. Gordon D..Btack wood, -19. Portland soldier on duty in Seattle; Thomas P. An gelos, 22, of Tacoroa; Melvin J. Thomas, .6, Bremerton, and Oscar Kellso,. 47, Joyce logger. Richard E. Willard, 18. son of a Yakima physician, was the lone traffic fatality. He died of In juries received In a collision six miles east of Enumclaw. War Mother Tfranka frefrienlers of Son BESSBROOK. Ireland. July S -JPY- An ! American mother vis ited this Irish village recently to thank the folks who befreinded her son before' he was killed In the war. Mrs. Leonard M. Statts of San Francisco,' mother of Col. Mal colm Stotts of the 38th regiment traveled 3,000- miles to visit the scenes about which her son had written before D-Day. mWashinirt Netc Elks' Exalted Rider 4 7 rTnLADELPIIIA, Jnly , Georre L Hall (left) "52 -year-eld New Yark basuesaman, has his hand tag his election as grand exalted rmler of tne .Beatvolenti ana rretective Order -ef Elks. Lafatette A. Lewis. rtUrirur exalted raler (rfcht) of Anaheim, Calif J Joins the festlvlUeS. (C) Wire- phete U The Statesman). . Glasses . , . Mak6 the v. -Future Brignter N. ( Vi tl.; K. E Bering Protect your eyes for mis- fatiau can rob vou of elficioTicv on th Job . . enjoy ment, at leasure. Have youij AT .'. fUrbir Optical US Ceart DIGN IFLDj) Gonscientioiis, Dignified : - Senfice iMBJtffllJ. Holidays works burns. ' ?? 1 They were Edward Fisher, S78 N. J2th st; Harry Hewitt,. 875 W. 18th st; Jack Hart, 1340 Baker st; Robert Myers, 845 E. it; Sharon and Roger Schafer, Cor vallls; and Craif Scott, all on Sunday, and Wayne Gurley, who came to the first aid station on Monday for treatment of a split fuiger; caused by an exploding firecracker. ,.. .'. ' t Violet-Moore, 187 W. Miller st, was' reported, in I good condition and improving ;late Monday night in Salem Memorial hospital, after being taken) there following a .reported shooting accident at early Monday morning, eity po lice said. First aid men treated her 'for flesh gunshot wounds on her right shoulder, inflicted with a 22 caliber revolver. I1 ; Other minor injuries treated by first aid men Sunday ' and Mon day were to Keith Wonderly, 1)73 Ew Rural st, Iene M. McCann, 1250 Peace st, and Glenn Gar rett' 1185 N. 13th st, all for cut hands..' .. . ; . , j; Two -persons were treated Mon day by first aid men for Injuries resulting from falling from cherry trees. They were Mrs. Alta Web ster, ,2570 Mapld it, who was picking 1 cherries j at a j Wallace road orchard, and Harry 1 Rhodes, . 841 N. Cottage si Mrs. ebster suffered back Injuries, first aid men said, and Rhodes a broken .left ankle. , Both are in Salem General hospital. ,; . . ' jCharies Graber 5, was treated atihis home, 48S W. MadrOna ave., Monday, when he fell' from ,his tricycle, first aldmen said. j Elmo McReyrrolds, Albany, who suffered a j heart! attack Sunday during the Salem jCapitols-Albftny Alcos baseball game at Waters park,' was 'reported in fair con dition at Salem Memorial hospital Monday sight. McReynolds Is ' manager of the Albany Alcos. Patricia Ullmart, 17. who Was burned seriously f ife-wprks . stand Saturday In exnlosion,. was reported as holdjng her ownj at Salem General hospital I Monday night BOOT FOUND IN RIVES ASTORIA, Ore-! July 5r WJ)-The badly decomposed body of a middle-aged man was! found near! the mouth of the Sklpanon river here today.- ' ' . . . j i I -. . - ."5,- . i i - i f I. v- -a , V ) I V held aloft la vicUry sifa follow tMt. Bam fJatbes future. .Heaclaches cmcU eyes thoroughly examined CREDIT G)iWAili!!i) J