4 Tho Statwmcm, Ccdota; Qreqotv Tu doT; Tthnarr 18, 1843 THE. EGG AND YOO rcfion f ...... -LJ-.i. -Wfr Fvor Sways Vt, No Fear Shall Awe" Frai First Statessaaa. March it, 1151 THE STATESJIAN PUBUSHING COBIPANY rwABT.tg A. SFRAGUE, Editor and Publisher Xatara4et the poatettae at Sakua. Oregon, aa elaaa matter under act at tU S. CommtftUI. Salam, Mareh X. lam PwMtaha TatephMM M441. mum or associated raxss ffca Ataadam fy Ma la aaffila naran PAcmc coast dctxsxom or buksav or ADvmawo Adrartlrim KapraaentaUvaa WarCrtmai Ce, Naw Tar. OUaefft, HBttt audit bvxxau or osculation Bjr MaS Oa Alaan ittt. vraroa hnwmtibvm. On month 1X9 Sia mofcUM. . a.aa JIM Six One jrar JtXt -t . - ltateMiaii . mmtf" ' "' i .i... -.rt- --T.Mi ji Mm n anil w . r "-aak i r- if aterlalleatt aall .i.-:- Protecting Capitol Zone The state board of control is asking 'from the Salem city council a statement of policy to pro tect the zone about the state capitol. What is desired is protection against further commer cial enroaenment. Back of the board of control's request is the concern of the legislature which Is called on to appropriate money for more cap ital development. This interest of the present state board of control is commendable. Its predecessor either approved or refused to take any stand when ' requests for zone changes were made, and that despite a resolution adopted by the 1939 legis lature asking for creation of a capitol zone with restrictions. Salem, which is vitally interested in the de velopment of the state capitol group, should comply with the board request and remain faithful to it. And the state board of control should be vigilant to see that the city doesn't weaken in its resolution. to make it more liberal in their direction. An other employer sponsored bill would reduce con tribution rates; and still another would lift the mfnimyfn for exemption of employers from $500 to $1,500 per quarter. Minimum earnings for an unemployed worker to be eligible for benefits would be raised from $300 to $500 per base year. The commission has put in a bill to bring all employers with tbne or more employes and pay ing out $225 or more per quarter in wages, un der the act. Then it has five other bills to alter some of the conditions of the present law. A mere reading of the list suggests how in tricate the amendments are. They have to bo meshed into a machine already in gear and run ning. This field is relatively new, a product of our industrialization. The rehearsal proves the point that lawmaking for Oregon is more than a. 50-day job undertaken once in two years. Compost from Cannery Waste Maybe the great waste of fruit and vegetable materials from canneries can be turned into something useful after all, instead of creating a bad smell if dumped on the countryside or pol luting streams if turned into sewers. The New York Times describes a process developed by Joseph Frazer, auto manufacturer, and Eric Ewenson, biological chemist, for converting such organic material into compost for fertilizer. Frazer Products, Inc., is said to have proven the success of the process in a pilot plant at ML JKolf, Pa. t e m m ine process involves use oi special cultures In the fermentation of the material in a large digester or tank, with aeration of the mass by compressed air. If the process proves practical Salem would be a good place for such a plant because of the quantities of cannery waste here, which now are pure loss for the raw material and for the handling. W. I. Jackson, co-publisher of the Albany Democrat-Herald, will be remembered for his good, practical judgment, his interest in civie projects and community development and for his kindly personality. With his associate, Ralph Cronise, he took over the old Albany Democrat In 1919, merged it with the Herald in 1925 and made the consolidated daily one of the most suc cessful of the upstate dailies. In his long life (he died Saturday at the age of 81) he carried varied responsibilities, both private and public; always with credit to himself. His colleagues in the newspaper business note his passing with regret. Lawmaking Is Intricate Business Oregon legislators get paid for 50 days; but they cannot complete their work in that period. If the ways and means committee is to do its job in scrutinizing appeals for appropriations and the recommendations of the budget officer more time is required. Other committees which may be handling technical or controversial leg-: illation do not dare rush bills through if they want to enact laws that will be sound and work able. Just to illustrate how complex this business of legislating is one may take the bills dealing with unemployment compensation. This is a highly involved business in which employers and workers take keen interest, as is natural. All of the 13 bills now introduced dealing with unemployment compensation amend the present law in various particulars. The legislator must know what the present law is and -what effect the proposed amendment would have. If he is a greenhorn in this field he has to dig in to get the facts, and that takes time. One bill would increase the amount of bene fits and length of time they are paid; another would eliminate the one week of the waiting period. Labor asks that all provisions relating to seasonal work be repealed; employers, chief- ly canners, want this part of the law changed Because he proved to be just another Ferdin and, willing to smell the posies and eat hay but not to do his stuff, T. Royal Rupert, 99th, went to the slaughterpen last week. This prize Here ford bull, bought as a two-year old by .Gov. J. Turner of Oklahoma in 1943 for $38,000, will become just bull meat for hambergers. As a sire he failed. Veterinarians tried to "make a man out of him" by means of a pituitary operation, without success. He died without progeny, his royal blue blood which reached back for gen erations in the herdbook, just ran out. There will be no T. Royal Rupert, 100th. Great Britain went all-out for health with its socialized medicine program. It provides den tures, spectacles and toupees for an who need them, and even pays for cleaning of toupees. The cost is putting a big hole in the health bud get however. The ministry of health is asking for $332,000,000 over and above its 1948 budget to meet costs of the health administration. Bankers have gone to the legislature to get permission to keep carpenters' and plumbers' hours, by means of an optional Saturday clos ing law. 'Pax Anglo -U.S.' Getting in Stride Joepb Alf PAX ANGLO 3-24-T.dit Pg ALL 11 By Joaeph A Imp LONDON, February 14 One of Ernest Bevin's favorite complaints is that Britain's post war economic weakness has pre- ventea mm from doing a proper job as foreign minis ter. Behind his r u mi native grumbling lies an 1 m p o rtant fact. For the past three years, while at tempting to play her habit ual part as a great power, Britain has re ally lacked the means to sustain that position. It has been the old and very human story of fallen fortunes concealed behind a bold front. The bold front has failed, how ever, to deceive the planners and policy makers in the Kremlin and other, capitals. Britain's in ner weakness has been a central element in all calculations of the world balance of power. Many - prophets have forecast that this weakness could sever be over come. Thus the superb British recovery of the last year, with its promise that with any luck the British people will be stand ing entirely on their own feet by 19S2, is a major development of world politics. If the British people go on as they have been going, in fact, the prophets are going to have to eat their prophecies, and the calcu lations of the world power bal ance are going to have to be .made all over again. This process of calculation is already going on here. The tentative results should deeply interest Americans. In brief, the highly practical British know that even with the greatest dexterity, ingenuity and self-denial, they cannot hope to regain the dominance they once enjoyed by sheer weight of wealth and strength. New giant powers have emerged, in Amer ica and Russia, which would make such at attempt foolhardy. The British solution, therefore, is to replace the "Pax Britanni ca" of the 19th century with a "Pax Anglo-Americana'; in the 20th. The partnership of the two nations is to do the job that Brit ain once did alone. The position accorded to the United States in this partnership can be grasped from two simple facts. Behind the French accept ance of Field Marshal Montgom ery as Western Union chief of staff lay and) still lies a secret understanding with the British. Both parties spontaneously agreed that in the event of the outbreak of wai in Europe, the United States would be invited to name an American officer to supplant Montgomery in the su preme command. r Again, in the course of the sor did Italian colonies dispute, the British have repeatedly pressed the proposal that the United States accept trusteeship of Tri poli tania. The desire was that an American base should be built in Tripoli tania, hard bf the pro jected British base in Cyrenaica, thus further 'strengthening the partnership's . position in the Mediterranean. The project may yet come to partial fruit. Al though Washington at first re acted very coldly, the possibility cannot be discarded that Ameri cans will be invited into Tripoli as a third party, to see fair be tweenArabe and Italians. The acceptance of the need for an American j commander in a European war, the effort to re- i J) III 5 - fjaV-7 With Watson at the Legislature. Too Many Recipes at Capitol Offered for Money Troubles For four weeks the attorneys in the trial of 11 communists in New York City have been horsing around with all sorts of antics to delay the trial. Federal Judge Medina has been both courteous and patient. Now he demands of the defense attorneys that they outline what they propose for the rest of their challenges to the jury, which hasn't been selected yet. The judge ' said the lawyers were trying to make a mockery of justice, which is almost an understatement in view of their tactics. By Kalph Watsea Tempus fugit, but the legisla ture, like old man river, just keeps rollin along. Monday when it started up again it had been rollin' for 36 days. Two weeks and two days from then, February 28, it will have been rolling for its constituteional 50 days. After that its 30 senators and its 90 rep resentatives will start living off their own indi vidual accumu lated fat or, in some cases, the p a y c h e cks of their wives which are un- hampered by the fundamental law of the land. But it is not a bad legislature, 1 In the main. It is fugiting along about like other legislatures thave done in the past. For 38 days now it has been i -c;i SUla W; gorging itself with bills until pret language always ready on tap to committees will commence to suf fer from indigestion and start heaving them out again. Then there will be some forward move ment visible toward the close of the session. So there is no reason yet for folks to commence getting peevish and uneasy. What is happening always happens every two years, except that this time there are more young press agents in the house and senate than usual who know how td dish it out and get It printed on the front pages. It used to be that Jake Bennett from Portland was what you might call a lone voice crying in the wilderness and he, single handed and alone, raised a whale of a rumpus and slowed up the progress quite a bit. But this year both houses are overstocked with Jakes, each of them full of bills, full of ideas and overflowing with ty soon, in the usual course. Its Literary Guidepost inforce American influence in the Mediterranean region where Britain once sought to reign alone, together tell their own story. The story is annotated further by certain recent doings of the American and British mil itary staffs. One such was the cooperative "Pandora" operation designed by the United States air force and the Royal air force to test the effectiveness of long range strategic bombardment. Another has been the constant scurrying of the American and British planners between Lon don and Washington. The once moribund combined chiefs of staff have been taking on a new life. All of these are straws in the wind of prime significance. Their meaning is underlined by another fact of great: interest. Where the Atlantic pact alone is unlikely to restore a full sense of security in Europe proper, this formal commitment by the United States will go far toward soothing the lurking fears for their own future which even the rather stolid British have occas ionally felt. The whole develop ment that is thus foreshadowed will, if not halted by misfortune, strongly tend to shape the polit ical future of the next decades. Such a development has long been hoped for in Washington by such wise policy makers as George Kennan, .who recognize that Anglo - American partner ship rests on the best of all foun dations - - almost complete com munity of interest. But for the, sake of efficiency, and as a mat- v ter of public policy, it would seem desirable for the leaders of both nations to be a bit more ar ticulate about this great though rather formless process that is now going forward. (Copyright. 1M9. Maw York Hcraid Tribune, Inc.) By W. O. Keren SHALOM MEANS PEACE, by Robert St. John (Doubleday; 2.5). What was new-born Palestine like last year? Newsman St. John went there to find out, vis ited Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Haifa, Nazareth, and a typical kibbutz, or communal agricultural settle ment; talked to government lead ers and to obscurer Jews from a score o f different countries around the world, to Irgun chiefs and to soldier boy and sol dier girl, businessman, artist, po liceman, zoo keeper, taxi driver, hotel clerk, waiter, Arab, Bri tisher. And here is his answer, rather a travelogue than a history, a series of personalities instead of a record of events; and it is all the more- revealing for its infor mality. He met one girl named Rachel who, with one sister married to an English lord and another sister traveling around Europe from one luxury resort to another, bit terly condemned the Israeli gov ernment for refusing her an exit permit Everyone else he saw wanted more than anything else in the world to be exactly where he was. There are exciting stories of Monroe Fein from Chicago, who captained the Irgun's ship Alta lena, and Jerry Rosenberg, out of Hamilton, Ontario, of the corvette that sank her; of news paper proprietor Gershon Ag ronsky and his columnist David Courtney; of David Hacohen whose reward for giving four years of his life and of his in come as well to the allied cause in World War II was four months in a British prison; of Mane Katx art exhibitions, and of Izler Solo mon's contiucting. Perhaps his most interesting material deals with the commu nal, but not communist, settle ments on the land. Though Jews in other countries have often been in the professions, they were needed as farmers in Pal estine. The kibbutz, despite the hard work and, at first, primitive living conditions, attracted doc tors, lawyers, teachers, none of them paid, none of them "own ing even the shirt on his back," taking part in "the most success ful of any attempt at living so cialistically anywhere in the world." Of course politics can't be ig nored. St. John had his doubts about Irgun Leader Beigin, and you know where he stands on the English when he reports with glee that the ostrich in the Tel Aviv zoo is named Bevin. explain them. The only thing holding back the show is the tar diness of the committees in feed ing the oratorical fodder back to the floor where the boys can get their teeth set in it and howL Some unkind things have been said about the house taxation committee, to the effect that it was "dilly-dallying" and that it had better get going if it didn't want to get turpentined or some thing. Now the fact Is the tax commit tee has been humping right along. It almost has got its collective mind made up and knows just where it is headed, an it will say so just as soon as it gets a few of the members to line up and start marching. It has almost decided to wrap up the so-called $50 mil lion surplus in a couple of pack ages or so and tell the house to blow out the candles and cut the cake. Once that were done there would not be much left for the committee to do but sweep up the utter ana close up tne snop. And the ways and means com mittee; it feels like somebody had landed a low punch to its plexus by suggesting that it was sagging back in its breeching instead of rampaging ahead and spewing out bills. The fact about that is that the committee has its pots and pans all spread out on the work table waiting to dish its "outside the 6 per cent" stew where it be longs, and its "inside Mulligan' where it belongs. What it is hes luting about is that it wouldn't be good housekeeping to put the stew on the table until the cake was baked and all cut up for dis tribution. ' So, after all, there is no use in getting all steamed up over the delay, you can't help it if the cap itol is all filled up with new cooks each trying to peddle his own pet recipe or force his particular brand of goulash down, the gullets of his fellow members. It is just too many new cooks running round on the loose and not enough chef. So, just tuck your napkins un der your chins and bear it. May be it will be good soup when you get it. Official Visiting New SAE Chapter W i 1 1 a m ette university's new chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity is being visited this week by Barry McNulty, the fra ternity's national assistant chapter supervisor. SAE recently granted a charter for the local Phi Alpha chapter. McNulty came from California to visit SAE chapters at Oregon State college and here. He later will visit the chapter at Univer sity of Washington. He works out of the national SAE offices atEv anston, HI. S,' mm I 's v 1 v w-y- ' ':$ 'Apfh !J ft j I 7 II;-' i S ' it it ' : f A f "V SJ ? -' : 1 if 1 HH-MMMMHtoil iMMlBaMMMBSfcl ittltnvtiat&Jk1! 40-YIAR RECORD Mrs. EUsabeOi Barrttt sag gaal Pett ertmtne the serapbeeks ef 4f years la shew keataeas pre; seated to the N. T. Pabli Library by Sophie Teeter, stager.! Baldock Surprised at Balking Of Salem to One-Way Streets State Highway Engineer R. H. Baldock expressed surprise Mon day at opposition, which has been voiced in Salem to the one-way street phase of his over-all recommendation for a $7,600,000 traffic improvement here. Baldock reiterated his endorsement for one-way through streets and a one-way street grid downtown in Salem in a talk before Salem Chamber of Commerce, and the ONE MAT PLAT CHRIST R O L E Last girea fat 1S34. the raeslea Flay at Orr- imerrae, Germaay. will be rttnaed la 15. A bare are three Candida tea far the role ef cansn (Left) Bace Kats. blacksmith: leeater) frans swing, weed earreri aa (right) AloU iaag. as. highway department head further recommended that the one-way grid be established "as soon as possible." Terming the critics of one-way traffic "ill informed," Baldock maintained the business people of Salem will gain by a one-way street system which more con veniently accommodates vehicular traffic. Most of the objection raised has been based on possible loss of business to merchants along the affected streets. Speaking at the chamber's weekly luncheon, Baldock assert ed that "people always resist change." He noted that probably no solution to this city's traffic troubles would suit everyone and that businessmen would find that "the plan best for the greatest number of people would in the end be best for them." The Baldock plan calls for a bypass route east of Salem, for rerouting other Pacific highway travel through Salem on several one-way streets, for establishing two one-way bridges over the river by improving the Center street span and building a two lane span at Marion street, for a one-way street grid downtown and for a connection with the North Santiam highway. He said he would take full re sponsibility for the success of the over-all plan he has recommended to the highway commission, but "I cannot accept responsibility for the alternatives proposed." Baldock said . one-way traffic has been tried and proved in such places as The Dalles, Pendleton and Lebanon where opposition had originally existed to the plan. He said only recently Hills boro has asked the state to present a one-way plan for its through traffic. Church Votes New Building AtWoodburri Owl Makes Wrong Turn to House, Then to Police Salem city police Sunday appre hended a not-so-wise old owl, who had bungled into a private resi dence at 535 N. 24th st but re leased the bird after temporary custody. Patrolman O. O. White, who outsmarted the fowl, said when he arrived at the residence the owl was perched atop a parlor door "popping and snapping" its bill. The officer said he "confused" the bird with his red traffic light. grabbed it by the feet and whisked it off to jail. It was kept in a cage until night and then released. Former Salem Employe Charged with Larceny Donald Webster, 27, formerly of Salem, is being held by Huron, S. D- authorities on a Marion county warrant charging larceny. Marion County Sheriff Denver Young said Monday he would re turn Webster to Salem as soon as the roads are opened. Webster is charged with larceny of two elec tric heaters from Broadway Ap pliance company here, where he was employed several months ago. WOODBURN, Feb. 14 Mem-!? bers of Wood burn Methodist church voted 42 to 18 Sunday te accept the plans for the new church which will replace the 57-year-old structure destroyed byjji fire April 1, 1948. Clearing of the ' ground at Young and B streets is ! underway. The new structure will be L-shaped, 60 to 85 feet and will face north. ' The new building will be of I tile with brick veneer construe-j tion. It will Include auditorium, kitchen and Sunday school rooms j on two. floors. ! The church services are being held in the high school pending construction, much, of which is being done with volunteer labor. Charles Bruenlnger is chainnaa of the board of trustees. West Salem Grange To Hear Proposal WEST SALEM, Feb. 14 Mrs.; Mildred Norman, state grange de-'-puty, will speak on the Blue Cross insurance plan as It concerns the grange at a public meeting Tues day night at t o'clock of West Salem grange in the city haU. The meeting Is to be a "social i night" with the men serving refreshments. COLUIIBIA RECORD New Releases Songs to Remember Peter Yorke & Orchestra C-178 4.00 O Chopin: Mazurkas Maryla Songs - Piano MM 810 - 4.75 List - Sonata in B Minor Gyorgy Sandor - Plane MM 788 - 4.75 Beethoven: Trio No. 4 Busch - Serkin Trio Violin - Cell - Piano MM 804 - 4.78 ' I) Downstairs Oregea Bldg. State and High X-ttlt "SPRING" TIME For Your Watch Is your watch lost in a dream? Then could be it's "spring" time. Stevens car ries the highest quality springs and replacements for repairing watches, clocks and other timepieces. Seasonable Prleae State At Liberty