1' jr Th Strrfftmrm. aUnu' OnqoeL TnW&ff, SpL 14, Stalin Pledge Worthless in Berlin Crisis mJio Favor Sways Us, No Fear Shall Aw" From First Statesman. March ZS, 1131 THE STATES JIAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher J Mmbtt of Um Associated "t "e By I Joseph and Stewart Alsop WASHINGTON Unless the Soviet i attitude abruptly changes, the scene of the unending strue gle to solve the Berlin crisis will bej transferred I from i Berlin tor Moscow. Such, it I can now be dis- dosed,; was the basic i decision, of the i emergency I yuO VCIO I National Secur-1 nru xy ,V. , i. 4V. of TTniiarf Nstnnt h helnrt main-I ITT jthitmii ar iiwi meaning r i v .1 i X The As dated Press Is entitled exclaslvely to the se fer repnbB- eatlen W aU the lecal sews printed ta this newspaper, a well aa all AF sews dispatches. tain, will be the main issue as the UN general assembly meets I . An r in Paris this week. How to prevent any further slipping in the moreover, jj farLJ . L. direction of war will be on everyone's mind, and the delegates more grave than; Jovph Alsop 4 must labor knowing that the world looks to UN as it last bast- appears on thew . . surface. It means, first, that the tag against destruction. i . . Rian Mmmndr in Berlin. But before the delegates can work effectively to secure what I Marshal sokolovskv. has reduced peace there is, they may De asKea to maae umieo nations a us criucat talks with lien, lu more effective and positive instrument. This involves the prob- ciusi Di. Clay and the other West lem of voting in the security council, particularly the misuse of ernnerso the evelof veto powers, iner.securny councu is specuicauy wwrisevi attempt to negotiate with Soko keeping the peace, and the veto has often been indicted fbr ham- llovskyj is to be abandoned, un- iless he quickly I changes his tune It means, sec lond, that no one (really expects jany good result Iin Moscow eith- !er. Ambassador IW. Bedell Smith (and his French Sand British col leagues have al J.-eady failed once ieWart ATsoy l extract a set m. 1 e m e n t from Generalissimo Stalin and Foreign Minister Molotov. After the farce that has been played in Berlin, there is no reason to suppose that their second attempt will be more successful. And thus the appal ling: danger of the Berlin situa tion will probably not be remov ed by agreement; and the danger stringing definite council action. To remedy the situation the UN interim committee, or "little assembly," has studied the voting procedures since last March and now proposes that members of the security council recognize . 38 items (in the list of 98 possible decisions the council is author ized to make) as procedural and therefore exempt from the veto. Decisions on them would be taken by vote of any seven mem bers. Other proposed changes: That permanent members agree to drop the veto in cases In volving peaceful settlement of disputes and applications for 'mem bership in the UN, and to drop the "double veto" decisions on whether a question is substantive and therefore subject to the voted or not. That wherever possible permanent members consult among themselves concerning important decisions to be made; and to consult, before a vote is taken, whether their Unanimity is re quired to enable the security council to function effectively. That, if there is no unanimity, the minority of the permanent members would only use their veto when they consider the: ques tion of vital importance to the United Nations as a whole; and that the veto would not be used simply because a proposal does not go far enough to satisfy the permanent members. t is accordingly likely to grow pro- These recommendations would liberalize voting procedure by gressively more acute. voluntary agreements between members of the council. That is Hopes Again Crash their weakness. The interim committee, which Russia never ap- 14 short, the hopes of the West- fwtu, w v & - " , 1 era :poucy-majcers, once raised so cidentally, which even the United States wants to keep. The. In- high, have again crashed to the tentions are obviously the best, but the loopholes are equally grojmoi it is instructive to ex . amine in detail how this has hap- DV u. v., s-. PL.To begin at the begin- ine vcio iistfu was uumuicu wiui mc uesi vi uiwimwiu, u rung, the man who raised the the result is clear: The fate of UN and of the- world hinges on hopes iso high in the first in the whims of the Big Five permanent members of the security was Generalissimo Stalin council. Because of the veto no action can be taken against a big himself. power (as when Russia annexed Czechoslovakia), or against a Lnd ; Western ambassadors oc small power supported by a big one; only against a little nation curred in an atmosphere of un- with no strong friends. auoyed gloom, after weeks of TK. nmn rhon.ot in tini TiwvrfiiT.. Would wnrk nnlv I ""'" uM..cruig. w xnis meet . - " --o f inff I r h,m. r..mi- I to long as uie Dig powers lei 11 wors. as me ueiegaie irum iuuw Ambassador Smith and his col pointed out, to be effective the accord between the Dig powers leagues, Stalin asserted that the nnf vMinino nnt morhaniral Th liberal nu of the vetn bv I currency and other problems in- t. . n; , mmnnitil ifforonnoc Ktwm th " "Jc mi crisis were - - w y-r"-:7rr--:-lr&ly technical, and as techni- Bauons; u is a symptom, not uie aisease liseii. unce me uiaixusi. cai problems should be solved on and tension are eased, the use of the veto would decline accord- the j working level. He proposed lnzlv. -r - - therefore that Marshal Sokolov- Making UN more effective, therefore, requires wrestling di-r'' L:f'w ? me, ' r5.ncn K f5. Ktwo K. Kir w0r that onHxn. 'T: vumuumuers ill oer- " "- i many snouia oe instructed to ne- s-ering peace. It means putting out the lire, not quiDDung aoom I gotiate an agreement And he which hydrant to use. But to banish the frictions, UN must be I promised to instruct Sokolovsky mn offootivp and that Is the hir dilemma the delegates face. J t-arry on ine negotiations In a Good Faith Assumed lXmpilISOry iar lesiintl r staim s proposal was accepted .... . sn vnnn t o i t r wni. - a. In view of current agitation to eliminate compulsory motor : LTnT ' w res" vehicle inspection in Portland, on grounds that result are not at which Molotov and Andrei Vv- worth the cost, it is surprising to note that efforts now are un-1 shinsky showed very little enthus derway to place such inspection on a state-wide basis, i l11? lI?T 'h staun formula. But We can understand why Portlanders feel their present law la I wit hTw, w rian OTZ discriminatory, but we fail to see justice in the plan to expand Vyshinsky aDDeared' to E. . rJZE something that many authorities contend has failed of its pur-1 to go along. Accordingly, instruc- pose. It would not seem to serve Portlanders any better 5 merely i Kussian, American, uuau ma r rencn zonal com- Perhaps, too, there is another way to get at the problem I patched forthwith- -rhi ... hl the insurance companies themselves should be Interested in see- high ; water mark of hopes in ing that its insured property is worth the risk. But if such com- Washington, London and Paris, panies hold that driver-failure is so much more of a factor than JfJi wal ,th vehicle-failure as to make compulsory inspection of little com-hovsky, day and the others when parable value, that is something to be considered. j they met in Berlin. Stalin had It may be that compulsory inspection is valuable. But it will pecincauy agreed in Moscow that have to be "sold" to the state on its value and not merely on j e"um Iour ,. . . I power control of the Berlin cur- the premise that Portland doesn't want it all alone. j rency should be the aim of th. new; talks. Either the Soviet dic tator' changed his mind, or hi It can't happen here? The bosses of the Onomea Sugar Co. mind! was chanaed by the Polit- of Hilo, Hawaii,, recently signed, a contract with the CIO planta- buro.; In any case, as soon as the tion workers' believed (by Herb Caen of the S. F. Chronicle) to 5Sj? It J?3?' ll beca,m ob be th. first agreement of it, kind ever negotiated with a Harry ffiS wl SrJLSi Bridges union. The contract calls for a wage cut for every am-1 what ; had been promised in Mos ployee! Jcow. j i Demands. Block Accord The Salem Senators are a long way out of first place and An exclusive Russian veto on have no chance even to finish in the first division, but they have J1 questions concerning the Ber- provided the city with a lot of good entertainment this summer J,enc7 was only one of Sok j . .... . . olovsky's demands. The net of his wnu spuxt u un w "u wiuuuow iminimUm proposals was that the night. But nowthere's football. Soviets should gain total econom- f - t 1 lie an4 political power in Berlin, A new rumor from Berlin says the ccanmieS are planning to I SS? toT. tin " seize control of Berlin on "X-day," just after the November elec tions in the USA. What, do they still think Henry Wallace is going to win? , The opening date for the mixing of culture and victuals Is announced. A commentator will commentate after th course. And j while this shameless farce was being enacted at the Kom man datura, the Berlin commun ists, under Sokolovsky's orders, began their attempt to seize Ber lin by direct action. This attentat coffee I culminated in the forcible capture of the city hall. Concurrently, Sokolovsky's farce negotiations President Truman has abandoned plans for a lengthy cam- n"n nt"Th mZ paign tour in the deep south. He doesn't want to go off the deep would hold mass air maneuvers end down there. I over Berlin, with the obvious pur pose of stopping the Anglo-Amer The soviet official newspaper blames the western allies with I IT .h. "mciung" the street Iighung in Berlin. That s our entry in the understood why the president and next liarr contest. i 1 the National Security councu con eluded! that little more time need Mann- . mflm w. A U UW y w-ieu m pui ww wwui J " wvu, " I IMintxi nf Mi in' nrrnn u in uiue Mary ana jonnny unaer ieet ail summer, out many a ma- Moscow. ma is a bit lonesome today, too. GRIN AND BEAR IT "That buyers strike we stated back la the days when we didn't have any money, was much more effective . . . Salem Legion Delegates Plan To Attend Oregon Convention Approximately 100 delegates from Salem American Legion posts 9, 13S and 149 plan to attend the legion s annual three-day conven tion beginning Thursday in Astoria. The three posts will attend the convention in a unit. Charles Huggins, commander-elect of Capital post 9, is general chairman of the local delegation. Headquarters are to be in the Astoria hotel. Owens, post 9 member and de partment vice - commander, as state commander. An effort also will be made to bring the conven- uon to : saiem next year, it was reported. Annual grand promenade of the Ifeai'Kiteset For W. P. Lord, Native of Salem Final rites for William P. Lord. well known Oregon resident who died in a Portland hospital Satur day will be held at the J. P. Fin- ley and Son chapel in Portland to day at 1 p.m. with concluding services In the Portland mauso leum. He was the son of the late W. P. Lord, governor of Oregon from 1894 to 1898, and was born in Sa lem August 22, 1885. After receiv- ing his primary education in Sa lem public schools Morgan park academy. Lord was graduated from Willamette law school in 1908. He practiced law in Salem until 1912 i when he moved to Portland. A specialist in maritime law. Lord was appointed by the senate supreme court to aid in compilation of Lord's Oregon Laws and Olson's Laws of Oregon. For many years i he was a member of the committee on uniform laws of the American Bar association. Lord was owner of large onion acreages in the Lake Labish area and was instrumental in organisa tion of the Labish area drainage district. Surviving are his widow, the for mer Wiebka Schemer of Portland; a sister, Elizabeth Lord of Salem: a brother, Montague Lord of Man ila, P. I., and several nephews in cluding Jack David Allard and Robert F. Allard of Portland. Goal of the Salem convention delegation is to elect B. E. (Kelly) The Safety Valve Will Complete Record Japan is going American, fast. Judges there have adopted I cotiations in Moscow is mainly to black silk robes, cut USA style, in place of the ones formerly in complete the record, so that no use, which looked like robes-off Shinto priests, one ican charge the western pow- The weatherman is back with a forecast for showers. Any-lie means. Two Questions remain. way, the ten days of summer in September was good while it I First, i why was Stalin's promise lasted. 1 I broken? He gave clear evidence I or wanting a Berlin settlement. The clock on the courthouse tower stopped at 5:30. Just try- need to lift the Western Dowers' ing to save more daylight. I economic counter-blockade of the Bus$ian zone of Germany. Prob- Just think, a girl from Kansas wan the Miss America bathing 1 1?;! rLem beauty contest at Atlantic City. She must be a sun-bather. I persuaded him to break his prom- Preflta and Wares To the Editor: You merit appreciation for giv ing facts regarding the oil strike, as you did in last Wednesday's issue, and while conceding that the oil companies' claim that the wages of their workers have been increased 83 per cent since 1941 sounds Impressive, it loses its im portance when compared with the fact that during the same period the companies cash revenue in creased 152 per cent, which prompts you to impatiently ask: When do company profits be come hi en enough?' It Is too bad that you goggle-eyed citizens do not seem to under stand that high profits to our great Industries is the cause of high wages, instead of the reverse. and that every time a dime is grudgingly added to the payroll the price of the product goes up a dollar, and it is all blamed to the cost of labor. A long list of our billion-dollar industries are doing the same thing. For In stance the telephone company is one of the biggest. It is In the nine billion dollar class and its cash revenues have increased 101 per cent. Being a public utility it cannot arbitrarily raise rates with out permission, but it is now clamoring for higher rates before the utility commission, and will probably get what it wants. The list is almost endless. Gen eral Motors has increased profits of 177 per cent; Swift & Co 184: U.S. Steel 135: Armour & Co. 174: General Electric 199; Safeway Stores 189; the top of the list is Sears Roebuck with 221. Our big Industries have entered into an orgy of hoggishness which Is making the gap wider and wider between wages and the cost of living. A. M. Church Salem. Opea Ticket Booth en Time To the Editor: A suggestion to the State Fair Board 11 to opening the ticket booth on time. After driving from Medford the day before and entering the Fair Grounds about 8:30 ajn., we had planned to get our grand stand tickets early and then look at the exhibits and patronize the concessions until the races started. The ticket booth, we were told, would open at 9 am. so at 8:40 am. we went to the booth and got in one of the lines already formed. The wait became so bad that I alone of our parry remained In line. After, one hour and 25 minutes and after moving the booth, which disarranged the lines and caused several near fights, the window opened at 10:20 am. That length of time on a space as big as a dime of concrete is tiresome as well as wasteful. Furthermore, the several hundred people would have been spending money to the advantage of the board had they been cared for and allowed to circulate. Bert R. Elliott, D.M.D. Medford, Ore. ise. as happened after Yalta. Second, what comes next? The question will be referred to the United Nations general assembly, if there is no agreement in Mos cow or Berlin. But the assembly Is unlikely to find a solution eith er. That will only come with some decisive action, which will con vince the Kremlin that the west em powers are not bluffing. (Copyrifht. 1948. New York Herald Tribune. Inc.) . Injuries Fatal For Linn Man Struck by Car LEBANON, Sept. 13 Andrew Jackson Cornwall, 63, died here Sunday as the result of injuries received about 9:30 Saturday night when struck by an automobile will be held Wednesday. Al Feilen of Salem, grand chef del 40 et 8, Legion honor society, driven by Malcolm Baker. The ac cident happened in front of Corn- wall's home seven miles south of gare of the Marion county voiture, Lebanon. He had just alighted from and Ira Pilcher, Ethan Grand and the Bend-Lebanon bus and started Walter Kirk, all grand officers, across the street to the home where will lead the delegation from this I he had uvea for 11 years. county. Other Salem committee chair men for the convention include hospitality hour. Brazier Small, assisted by 18 other Legionnaires including Chester Fritz, Harriet Belcher and Susan Faherty. Ira Pilcher Is to head the steer ing committee assisted by Joseph Felton, and 12 other members. Ethan Grant is to handle publicity. Election; of officers of the conven tion is to take place Saturday night He died Sunday morning at DIP 65S33JQB firm nmra " I j ' " " " Meyers Named To Head Blood Program (Continued from page 1) Kashmir end Hyderabad. Kash mir (the storied vale of Kash mir) lies in the far northwest on the southern slopes of the Hima layas. Its ruler, a Hindu, has thrown the state to India, though the majority of his subjects are Moslems. Hyderabad lies In the center of India, surrounded by the Hindu state which demands that it accept Indian sovereignty. Its ruler is Mohammedan while the iumrt t. -Mvr r-hrvson n majority of his people are Hin head Marion county's Community dus. Already there has been fight- Blood program in a meeting of the over jvasnnur anu xuuiuii board of Marion county chapter, troops are poised for entry into American Red Cross, in Salem I MyaeraDaa to set up auinoniy. Monday nleht All this would have been avoided Th Pnmmiinitr Tilnod nroeram if partition had not been forced is a two-state project reorganized on India. Jinnah, who died last rnU . ha iwiiim4 nf tha mvs4- Week alter aOOUl Id IDOnUB VI nrnWinn hnsnitala and m1. rule, was the author of the parti rT loarfon TTnHoi- th nlnn 1 5 I tion DOliCV. Of doubtful Value IS counties in northwest Oregon and tne cniei iruu oi nu laoom southwest Washington will con tribute .Quotas of blood to a cen tral blood bank in Portland. Mobile units will pick up blood donations in the areas, rush them to Portland for processing and ty ping, and back to hospitals in the areas. All blood and its derivatives will be given free of charge wher ever needed. The program will probably get underway about No vember 1. Meyers, head of the wartime do nor plan in Marion county, an nounced that about 100 pints per month would be this county s quo ta. He explained that the blood program is not a Red Cross pro ject, but that must be support ed by the entire community. The chapters home service de partment made its monthly report for August. The group said It had expended $550 to care for 208 cas es, mostly servicemen, veterans and their dependents. Wauled LIFE, HEALTH and ACCIDENT SALESMAN Unusual opportunity for exper ienced Insurance man In Marion County, with possibility of a District Managership If proven ability. Old line leral reserve company writing Life, Healih, Accident Individoal and Group Life, Health, Accident and Hospital ization, including all members of families. For details write box 216. care of Statesman. Lesier DeLapp Comnv.retaI Haaling Furaituro Moving 1115 No. Coral FhaBi 2 1759 Orecea HO EXTRA CHARGE O MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS fwy mt tiU m SO Wfc for tlwHflioe Hnd OI 1 Co 0Stf9AS Ufce" CtWsWe' PlfJks Toko S, 10, IS mtnthi tm oy. 1 DAY SERVICE EXAMINATION . lYifAeaf APPOINTMENT L3-33n I Om OafsX. iMU.MT i? a erajfCBt n.f orfffrc Waters Adolph Bldg., STATE & COMMERCIAL Attaiiot t9- OptomwIraH: Dr. M. Surto. Or. mma Sphnr omc Aiso in f uccni a poctiano friftrigTnaclyfewpi mi to feeoanon. lie lost one leg in the accident and the other was in KnHl manslowf it would have had to be amputated. Born in Kentucky, Cornwall had lived in Oregon for 43 years. Sur vivors are a daughter. Mrs. Beulah Bricker of Lebanon; two sisters, Mrs. Eva Culbertson -of Lebanon, and Mrs. Frank Fielders in Ken tucky: three brothers. James A. of Bandon; J. C. and Alfred of Cali fornia. I Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 2 cm. from Howell- Huston chapel. The Rev. Lena Sommers of Lebanon will officiate with .burial in Lebanon I OOF ce- MARUAGE LICENSES ISSUED Marriage licenses have been; is sued in Vancouver, Wash., to Har old D. Thomas, Salem, and Orpha P. Olmstead, Spokane; Eugene L. Bayse, Salem route 4, and Gene va Cope land, Salem route 9; How ard W Gentry and Geneva R. Steckley, both of Lebanon, and to ' Howard A. Smith and Jo Ann Boyd, both of Lebanon. Portland licenses went to Frank D.i Hood and Marian A. Erickson, both of Salem, and to Charles A. Brown, Portland, and Ruth D. Myers, In dependence. metery. k toil-' : CUA) "Znod&ttt fact Ernaniwcoiionttt1 r . I CAPITOL LUMBER CO. N. Cherry Avenue Phone 3-82S2 im GEinxEriEii FiimiEn IMT BOTHf EES! 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Ft cosasieie trmvtl Information, commit CINEIAL PASSENGtft DEPARTMENT 7SI PkHocfc Block Pertfeoe' i. D A 11 n O A D T&Hul l tie tUtm r 4fBJOw' m W kr