ii i: - lit ini : i t" 4 The SateVmarL' SajmT Oregon. Smdxry, lftomtir 18.1 m ' rejsott MUMM MM tafemaatt y ononen to tart on ramsn "JV faror Sway Us, No Fear Shall Awe" Tnm First Statesman. March It. IUI THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher (Entered at tfta postofflca at SaWtn, Oregon, aa second claaa matter unJr act ot confrcas March 3. Il7t. PvbHana4 every morninc except Monday. Busineaa office 213 S. Commercial. Salem. Oregon. Telephone S-J441. MIMBtt Or TBK ASSOCIATED PUSS The Associated Preia la aatitlae exctaalvely te the far repaMteattaa an the leeal itwi yrUitetf la this aewtpeser, a wcO as all AP ttwi alspaukea. MEMBER PACinC COAST DIVISION OF BUREAU OP ADVERTISING Advertising Representatives-Ward-Griffith Co.. New York. Chicago. San Francisco. Detroit. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATION By MaU (la Advaace) By City Carrier uregon waewnere in u.s.a. w month One month .71 1 nn Six month 4.00 ........ .0o Six month One year S.ea ...... u.aa One year . 1.6 - CM U.te Enough Numbers It's getting tough when some of the powers-that-be want us to be a vital statistic all our lives instead of just when we are born, get mar ried or die. Take this plan to number all babies, for instance. In fact, take it out and bury it as far as the state of Washington and a lot of other .ttates are concerned. But Oregon apparently will adopt the plan. It appears that the U. S. public health service wants to have all babies numbered at birth, but several states have said "no" after testing the water of public opinion and finding it sub-freezing. it sub-freezing. We're inclined to think it would get a chilly reception here, too. We've got house numbers, social security numbers, car - license numbers, driving-license numbers. If we get tossed in the pen we get another one, and we're tabbed with one if we venture into a liquor store. We've got 'phone numbers, postoffice box numbers, rural route numbers, political district numbers, school district numbers, lot numbers, township num bers and bank box numbers. In fact, if we'd put all our numbers end to end with a dollar sign in front of them, we'd dad gum near have the total of the debt we'll be in after Christmas. We're inclined to think it will get a chilly It looks as though we've got enough numbers now without, being one. business and economic activity will suffocate Somebody is going to have to do some work around here if people are to eat and have houses and clothes. A majority vote doesn't raise pound of potatoes or cut a stick of lumber or weave a yard of cloth. A political system that encourages sloth and discourages effort sows the seeds of its own decay. This is unpalatable gos pel in these times, but it is grim truth. Threat to Democracy California voted itself a pension headache without the escape hatch of a bill clearjy un workable and unconstitutional. It moved pen sions and blind aid up $10 a month and lower ed f the minimum age to 63, freed relatives of duty to support their kin, and allowed benefi ciries to hold up to $1500 in property. Also the bill named a woman to a $12,000 job as pension administrator. The budgeteers have been estimating the cost of the measure and find that the number of pen sioners will be increased by about 95,000, and the costs will increase by $86 million in the next fiscal year and nearly $111 million in the year following. The bill, like Oregon's, put a lien on 11 moneys in the state treasury, so reserves that had been held for other state purposes may be raided as long as they hold out. The San Francisco Chronicle, noting that the voters have put their state government "into a situation bordering on financial depression," ays it will take increased taxes to feed the maw f the pension promoters "unless other state agencies are to be plundered or the state govern ment as a whole sent spinning into a financial deficit." What should give the public concern is not Just the immediate problem of trying to finance til-advised pension schemes but how to save democracy from itself. Many people think the public treasury is a bottomless reservoir and proceed by ballot to open wider the pipes drain ing it. -There is grave danger they will exhaust public funds or pile up taxes so burdensome Problems Loom with Project Charles Wolvetton, editor of the Mill City Enterprise, looking ahead to 1949 when con struction of the Detroit dam will bring in an estimated 3900 workers, shudders a bit at the headaches that will accompany the advent. Needed will be about 1000 new home units, better community recreation, some way to find schoolteachers and pay them, better police pro tection. The Mill City editor proposes that a confer ence of various agencies be held soon when plans might be laid to meet some of these prob lems, instead of just letting them roll in on the communities and flatten them out. This suggestion can very properly be referred to the Willamette River Basin commission and the unofficial Willamette Valley project com mittee. It is recalled that when Camp Adair was established the nine cities in the vicinity formed a group to coordinate effort and meet the va rious problems created by the influx of a two division army camp. The North Santiam project is oh a much smaller scale, but the municipali ties nearby are much smaller and will need out side assistance. Aid to Arab Refugees The intermittent warfare in Palestine may be tiny in comparison with great wars, but it has been extremely bitter. During itsNprogress thou sands of Arabs fled from area falling to Israeli armies. Now over half-a-million refugees hover in neighboring pro-Arab states like Lebanon and Syria where they get very meagre assistance. International bodies have considered their plight but little has been done for their relief. Now the American Friends Service committee, that great agency for relief of human need any where, is launching a project to succor these Arab refugees. Emmett Gulley of Newberg, for mer president of Pacific college, now executive secretary of the Oregon Friends Service com mittee, is being sent to direct this relief work. Gulley had experience in similar work in Spain during the civil war, then in Cuba among refu gees from Europe's troubles. How long will it be before the Friends' con ception of human brotherhood ends the wars and the strife which make refugees out of folk long settled in community life? Seven members of Phi Kappa Psi at Swarth more college resigned because the fraternity's Amherst chapter was suspended for initiating a negro. We've an idea they were pretty good men. With every juke box in town dreaming of that white Christmas, all weather forecasts are off. Truman on Horns of Defense Dilemma By Joseph and Stewart Alsop WASHINGTON, Dec.. 18 The extreme oddity that sometimes marks policy making in the Truman admin istration is be ing brilliantly illustrated at the moment On the one hand, the p r e s ident seems determ ined to demand from congress 4 rfr tg Mvmnm- ic controls and 1 I f much higher L-l V taxes. And on Jirpli AIo , the other hand, r r the president seems equally de termined to enfeeble his whole foreign policy by cutting back the rearmament plans that were adopted with such drama and urgency ia i spring. There- are hidden ironies ; and con cealed , contra dicti o n s here which de serve careful investi- gation. In the It - first place, the I president's mor I J I preside nt's Mrwart AUop advisers. Budget Director James Webb, Secretary of the Treasury John Snyder and the chairman of the Economic Advisory Coun cil. Dr. - Edwin Nourse, are re sponsible for the rearmament cutback. They persuaded the president to impose the $15 bil lion ceiling on defense spend ing. And it is this budget ceil ing which is knocked into a eccked hat the services' plans tor making America strong. The sole motive of Messrs. Webb, Snyder md Nourse was to avoid the necersity of strong economic controls and higher taxes, which would certainly arie from defense spending above $15 billion. But subse quent to the imposition of the $15 billion budget ceiling, the -ected struggle over the pres ident's fiscal and economic poli-. cies took place anyway. And this struggle has now appar ently been won by the other portion of the president's advis ers, with Dr. Nourse's colleague on the economic council. Dr. Leon Keyserling, and the White House counsel, Clark Gilford, in the lead. They reminded the president that he had already twice publicly asked congress for extensive economic controls, an excess profits tax and other unpalatable measures. And the president decided to renew his former requests without much change, and to insist upon them strongly. Thus precisely what the spon sors of the $15 billion service budget ceiling so much wished to avoid is now to be done after alL But thus far at his meetings with the service chiefs, the pres ident has given no sign of grasp ing that this ought to alter the situation with regard to the budget ceiling. e e If the president does not change his mind, the outcome will be different from what it would have been at the time of the great seventy-air-group row last year. There has been a sharp reversal of thinking among de fense department leaders, in cluding Secretary of Defense James V. Forrestal. This time, if the budget ceiling holds, air rearmament will be cut back less than either ground or naval rearmament. But there will still be some reductions in - planned increases in air strength, and there will be very severe re ductions in planned increases in army and navy strength. The effect abroad, of course, will be to terrify all our poten tial allies. And immensely to encourage the Kremlin. In truth, such a rearmament slowdown in this time of visible danger of eventual war savors of British policy in the mid-thirties. . The effect at home, moreover, is likely to be just as drastic. The congress will be about as eager to adopt the president's proposals for strong economic controls and much higher taxes as to drink bis health in a flow ing bowl of Mickey Finns. There is one ground, and one ground only, on which the president can hope to secure acceptance of these proposals. That ground. of course, is the existence of a grave world emergency. The world emergency requir ed the draft of man power last summer. If the president insists now that the same emergency now requires the draft of money and resources, no on can refute him. But he cannot make this point if he simultaneously makes nonsense of any plea of emerg ency by slowing down rearma ment. If we do not need to be ready and strong by 1952, which is the target date for present rearmament plans because it is the first year when the Soviets are thought capable of produc ing an atomic bomb, one won ders why we need to be strong at all. The president cannot find any way over, under or around this inconsistency. What makes the situation odd er still is the way strange po litical bedfellows have been brought together. Secretary of Defense James V. Forrestal, the supposed banker-in-government, began talking of the need for controls and taxes many months ago. The chief advocates of con trols and taxes, the supposed left-wingers, have emphatically not participated in the drive to enfeeble defense plans. To be sure, these men advo cate immediate legislation for housing, aid to education, health insurance and power develop ment. But the whole resulting addition to the budget will not fun much above $1 billion, and this social effort is considered entirely consistent with a strong defense effort, always provided the right economic safeguards are adopted. And the sense of world emergency is as much the motive for the administration left's desire for economic safe guards as it is in the mind of Forrestal. Altogether, the whole business would be comic if it were not tragic. (Copyright. 1. Mew York Herald Tribune, Inc.) School Project at First of Year By Winston B. Taylor Staff Writer, The Statesman Fourth project in Salem school district's current building program will get under way by the first of the year, contractors announced Saturday. Lumber is already being accumulated for start of the work at Parrish junior high school, whose addition will be the most costly put of the $1,500,000 bond issue I 2 I approved last spring Viesko and Post of Salem have the contract on a bid of $362,616. The project is expected to be com plete, or nearly so, when school opens next September. At least part of it will be usable. Meanwhile additions to Bush and West Salem schools are in the finishing stages, and the latter is expected to be available when classes resume January 3 after Christmas vacation. Officials hope Bush s six new classrooms will be ready about March 1. West Salem work includes four new class rooms, a library and a cafeteria. as well as remodeling of gymna sium locker and shower rooms. Desks Available Securing of equipment and furn ishings is one of the district's pri mary problems in the program. since deliveries are a year and more behind orders. Desks are available for the new rooms at West Salem, but considerable hardware is lacking. At Bush no more desks will be required than now in use, but they will have more space to occupy. First work at Parrish will be excavation for footings, since the structure has no basement. Addi tions will be constructed on both sides of the building's central rear wing, and the contractor will work on tbem simultaneously. But the one at the south will be specially rushed, since it contains a new boys' gymnasium which must be finished before the present rear wing can be remodeled into a girls' gym and a cafeteria with folding tables. It now serves as the school's only gymnasium, auditorium and fTPronmrs (Continued from page 1) tensions between east and west, with results as dire as we see today. The two final paragraphs of his letter were as follows: "There is not much comfort in looking into a future where you and the countries you domi nate plus the communist parties in many other states are all drawn up on one side and those who rallied to the English-speaking nations and their associates or dominions are on the other. "It is quite obvious that their quarrel would tear the world to pieces and all of us leading men on either side who had anything to do with that would be shamed before history. Even embarking on a long period of suspicion, of abuse and counter-abuse and of opposing policies would be dis aster hampering the great de velopment of world prosperity for the masses which is obtain able only by our trinity. I hope there is no word or phrase in this outpouring of my heart to you, Mr. Stalin, which unwit tingly gives offense. If so, let me know, but do not, I beg of you, my friend, underrate the divergencies which are happen ing about matters which you may think are small but which are symbolic of the way the English-speaking d e m o c racies look at life." Stalin had clear notice and warning. Why did he not heed the "outpouring" of Churchill's heart in frank but friendly coun sel? Probably because he was driven by nationalise aspira tions for Russia, by fears for its system and by the rigid dogma of communist ideology which is uncompromisingly revolutionary. This last thesis is developed in a lengthy article in the coming issue of "Foreign Affairs' which concludes that all Stalin's assur ances that diverse systems can exist side-by-side is propaganda and a temporary tactic: "World communism is the supreme aim, Soviet power the major instru ment by which it will be achieved. , So long as this bigotry pre vails the world has an uneasy truce. lunch room, where lunches served in an adjacent cafeteria arc eaten. Feldinr Bleachers Present dressing rooms and boiler room will be converted into a kitchen and storage. The new gymnasium will include folding bleachers, adjacent dressing rooms and equipment drying rooms for physical education and athletic teams. The public entrance will be On Lamberson street. On the north side will be erected a 1,000-capacity auditorium with sloping roof. The stage will be on the north and the entrance through the present corridor from Capitol street, with an auxiliary door on D street. This wing will also in clude two new classrooms and storage space. Between the new construction and the present gymnasium will run corridors, along which will be students individual lockers. Be tween the additions and the rear of the main building will be bi cycle sheds along open corridors. Present remodeling plans call for removal of partitions to in crease the size of one classroom in each end of the building by adding in a locker room. This work and conversion of the present gym will not be done until after school is out next June. Reinforced Concrete The entire project will be of re inforced concrete, faced with stuc co and conforming with the archi tecture of the present building. which was constructed in 1924. Architects ,are now preparing plans for the proposed Capitola grade school, which will be situ ated on Lansing avenue near Sil verton road, to serve a residential area wnicn has grown rapidly within recent years. Bids will probably be called about March, according to District Clerk C. C. Ward, in hopes of having the building ready for pupils by next September. Other tentative work on the current building program includes a new grade school at Four Corn ers, and additions to McKinley, Englewood, Richmond and Swegle grade schools and the senior high school vocational shop. I 2 X S Births SCHAR To Mr. and Mrs. Earl E. Schar, Silverton route 3, a son. Saturday, December 18 at Salem General hospital. ; JAMES To Mr. and Mrs. Gale J. James, 557 N. 21st st., a daugh ter, Saturday, December 18 at Sa lem General hospital. SMITH To Mr. and Mrs. Char les Smith, Monmouth, a daughter, Saturday, December 18 at Salem Memorial hospital. 2 The Coupon at the I 2 Bottom of this Ad is 8 R worm Une uoilar at U I I' UaM S Never did so many H MM W I g Shipments of Shoes ff ArriirA w 2 8 I I I Arrive Al Once! They're Almost Coming out of Our Ears! x 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 The Safety Valve Spare That Tree! To the Editor: The recent felling of the his toric "Cedar of Lebanon" tree brings into sharp focus the cur rent loss to the city of many of its fine old trees. The thought has occurred to the reader whether or not this is actually necessitated by the rapid expan sion that is thrusting ever on ward the boundaries of our business district or if the fruits of a wiser generation has'ud denly come of age amir a generation whose value ot the manmade far exceeds the in heritance value of those things leu to us by nature or our forebears. It would seem that the pen dulum has swung too far off center when the neon sign and the single space for a used car should outweigh all other fac tors in destroying our inheri tance. Wieprecht 1110 S. 16th St. All Shapes and Sizes S and the Finest You T T . TTT j can uuy. oai w e re ff Busy and don't have S Room to I Llove Around With AU This Stock. So . Take- Your rtrtsioci 8 2 t I 2 Clip The Coupon And Come on Down 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 HAPPY SOLUTION! IF YOU CANT DECIDE WHAT TO GIVE WE SUGGEST A STEVENS & SON GIFT CERTIFICATE f VI T J. .19 K? 503- fc. i f 1 I I r r sr sin f ; Certificate I JEWELRY L ! 1 For a After Christmas, Jewelry and gift merchandise In many new lines and ?reat assortments will be arriving for the opening of our new store in January. No need to GUESS what to get . . . give a GIFT CERTIFICATE from STEVENS and SON thia Christmas . . . then He or She can have the thrill of choosing from the marvelous items in our magnificent new store! We'll be adding new line's of Silverware ... China ... Glassware and a host of lovely giftwarel Of course you can buy a STEVENS and SON GIFT CERTIFI CATE and budget your payments for next yearl STEVENS & SON JEWELERS & SILVERSMITHS 339 Court Street Near Commercial cswssstnt&vxtt;! 5ff Wall Hirrors Jj 2 Woodry Furniture Co 474 So. Coml ' M S W n BSSBSSB SUdl j i Bra i ? P Si f 1 1 If H ? F ? ft S3 2 o l'-.S-'W t ':';M U Tho NEWEST from ho OLDEST I j f H'-fF'V' u I I n,'rac ' modern refrif- Jgj-)HSgU, I L eration! Every useful Inch l: M:rW en 1 J f crammed with convenience mff I I you've often wiahed for. NetfJ fffj " fTYlKV I I top-to-baae refrigeration, gives ' II Hm j J v I yon far more apace in the ame lis J i flj TTrf I floor area. Unexcelled Leonard I ii yrjlry 0i4jfj I - quality made poMible by 67 I J nr m ' yeara of aound refrigeration! ?tt M experience. Beet buy today! 319.95 ramiu ! 0300 00 02QQB (fyizzh 00031 0000 WB? : I Ij LC-U Seper DeUxt Other New LEONARDS As lew As 239.95 mrm far drlnry itt Open Every High! Unlu Christmas 1 nii in kja " HAMILTON FURNITURE CO. 230 CHEMEKETA SALEM. ORfGOMi t ) a. f . . t! ,,ir