V . . " - rf " 1 'Mi . T'' ?! r ; ! t . i S 5 ? W3JLU2 Fffor Swmym U. We Fmmr XKaXL Aunt THE STATESMAN PljBlisHINC COBtPANY CH A KPRAGUT. Editor and PubHshar EaUred a the ptcxl raUtelMd ery afxarar or m luocum nui to to m hr null of aX I : M aS AS Orwra. as office SIS S March S. U7t. 2-2441. The AmiUli Ptm I KTVBPI PAOnC COAST DTTISlOW OT R1UI OT Advertising Bsprss irtHMii Wsrc-C)rimta C. Kiw Yre MCKBT3I AUDIT aymKAP OT CmCOlATWW Daily ad SmxUy j - j W kdar Paly j ' ; Sunday ty By comer. dti-' 1 ' - 1 "Qta j 1 .Jwrt a month j I .1 menta I ; . month By ma m Orcoa 4 71 six mo. ' 1 423 at dm. I ; six moa. Ia advance) ' SQC yeor ; 1 , iM yen r ; I 4-00 year By apeclal Sunday delivery r rrwlr rata or weak-day papwi by tnafl and i I JC weak n rojy rural rout, near j deUvT SAHKUy 213.3 year (In advance). 4.1 yaw (la adv.) I M month i" 1 06 maatli l ? month By mall la U 5 A outside ' -t at moa. I i M et mo. I iM at mo, of Oregon (to advaoca). i 14 year V j U 00 year ; I .00 year Available In certain area UN and Peace Negotiations The Statesman has made repeated emphasis on the role of diplomacy in breaking the dead4 lock between east and west Not the diplomacy - of the international conference, with klieg lights and microphones and muvie reels and r-portera with the whole world sitting as it v.r In the g-ljt. .es; but the niore artful method of quiet negotiation. Intermediaries might be used Japan started overtures fof --- ;- The "break actually came through conversa tioni by national representatives at the United Nations general assembly, There were prelim lnry news reports from Europe, Hints seern - tj have been dropped here and there. One s,tory dii-J the Russians in Berlin - were having the railway rolling stock put in shape, suggesting resumption oi traffic 'was not far off. . Th- tate department did not follow up these tips. That would not have been wise, because rebuff would hav ben painful. Instead approaches were made, through whose instiga--tijn we are not informed, at the UN general vmbly. Philip Jessup. the U Sf delegate, got Into conference with Jacob A. Malik, the Rus sian delegate. Jcssup learned that thera was aubt'.ance to the rumors, that Russia H'as inter Ttfi in resuming the four-power conferenc and was willing to lift the blockade. Later Tasi. the Russian news -agency, broke the story and American officials confirmed the fact that conTvations had taken place. S No "deal" has been .-made yet though ofta iwnii in the making. Secretary Acheson has conferred with representative, of Britain arid p France, to develop a joint policy. Maybe the overtures will fail and the stalemate continue. A"H the world hopes however that the blockade at Berlin may be lifted and the cold war graly eased. " Here we have evidence that the United Na tions has proved valuable as a sort of neutral meeting-ground. It may be that. Secretary Tr v 1 u U was instrumental in HrSncinir Jm- sup and Malik together Lie has been earn est I y trying to resolve the difference in Ger many. It may prove that the UN had an Im portant part In effecting a peaceful settlement. If tht does develop then assuredly world hopes for UN as an instrument of peace will have been lifted. It is too early to charge off United Nations as a loss No nation has withdrawn from it. Sams a r - . a t . . V m xne u.k stm prores.es allegiance to it. u."M , alone deserve credit for ending the civil war ' aa Palestine. It has functioned successfully -in Iran and in Kashmir, and had partial success - In Indonesia. 'f We must preserve lN as an Instrumervwhose power will grow with use. The mora it 4 is used and relied oh the faster it will develop as an agency to save the peace of the world. Painless Politics It's election time again. Time for genial gerrymandering, carefree cabals, jocund juntos. Or so it would seem to the uninitiated look ing at the annual extracurricular political goings-on on most American campuses. Not the rnore-or-less serious activities of the junior branches of major political parties young re publicans, budding democrats, juvenile pro gressives or infant communists. But the sea sonal revival of student Interest in collegiate governmental organizations. This is when the campus politicos have their spring fling. Caucuses are held, openly and off-the-record; slates of candidates are made up: speeches are written and the fina phrases polished in practice sessions before mirrors or: roommates; campaign posters are painted and nailed up by the manual laborers essential to every political party - humble and eager freshmen, and jalopies are dusted off and de corated for parades and cross-campus stump ing. AH this brisk and bouyant business leads up to the great day when the mighty masses, the boys and girls trooping to the ballot boxes, reveal the people's choice. After that except for some gleeful statements by the winners in the college press and some marvelously know ing post mortem by the dejected defeated it is all over until; the next campaign. Or so it would seem to the casual onlooker. Actually, however, campus politics are not quit so innocent nor so insignificant. As sometimes . father accurate small-scale models of mature civic activities, campus poli ties serve as a reflection of adult tactics. Parties may stand on certain platforms or they may base their appeal to class prejudices. Splinter organizations develop and coalitions arc formed. Fence-mending, coercion, pork-barrelling, brib ery, gaudy promisee and other dubious tricks of the trade are practiced in miniature. And general apathy between elections usually pre vails. On the other hand, all that is good about democratic procedure is ajaqr evident: issues are brought to light andd)trferences thrashed out in public.. the electorate, is urged to get out the vote, and the irule of the majority Is re spected. Campus politics for all their sportive ap pearance can be $ valuable training field for future oitizens. Just as the student who plays intramural baseball "for fun" may later find he could qualify for the big leagues, so the collegiate voter oast learn painlessly outaide the classroom the elementary facts of bigtime politics and everyday citizenship. Damage Heavy in Mt. Angel Flax Fire , 1 O I- - I M: sr.-: MT. AN G IX Pictured here Is the tmterier ef the flax shed which was toned Monday at ML AsweL Machinery Here, including a traeter, a tew machine, heller, wagem and three meters, was rataed by flame and heaL (SUteaaaaa Fana phete). ' f- " ""T" i ' "j T?j - - -r.... -. 'a iaJy-.3iat4..wj 'i iii awl al Profit CasKing Cuts Grain Gain CHICAGO. May Fair gains scored midway through to day board of trade session ran into profit cashing at the dose. The result was that dosfcoe prices were oft more than cent from the day's high. The upswing started La wheat and reflected some mill buying and abort covering. Italy bouxht 400,000. hundredweight of flour overnight and traders had reports that Norway and Holland will soon be in the flour market. At the close wheat was V to 4 higher, corn' was unchanged to higher, oats were to. IS higher, rye was 24 to 34 higher, soy beans were H higher to a cent lower and lard was 12 to 2Tcents hundredweight lower. Pat's Bridge Closed By Court's Order j After Faults Found Pafs bridge, an inter-county structure across Pudding river in the northeast corner of Marion county, has been closed following a conference of officials from Marlon and Clackamas county courts. , Trusses under the bridge were found to be spreading whan ex a mined by Ted Kuenzi, bridge foreman, and E. L. Rogers, com missioner, of Marion county. The bridge condition was described as so dangerous that fatal eonse quences might result from its con tinued use. Physical maintenance of the bridge rests with Clackamas coun ty. It is located on Marion county road 428 west of Barlow. MT. ANGEL Fred Schwab, plant tnaaacer (left) with WUltam Harryfleld aad Mike Uetaachmldt, plant employ, are shewn pattaag eat the fire In bales ef tew after eaa ef the flax buildings at Mt Angel Flex Growers association burned Monday. Extinsnishinc fir la tow 1 difficult and small biases eon tlneed to break oat throachoat the day. Twenty teas of tew was detroyed. (Statesman Farm phot). Pact" Talks Show Typical Approach By J. M. Robert. Jr. AP roirn Affairs Analyst Dt4Cussion of the Atlantic pact In the senate foreign affairs com mittee repreM-nt a typical American approach to great in ternational problems Diplomats and senators alike feel the obligation to let the pub lic know what its affairs are be ing handled with -earchng care and deliberation. Somttinm this sterns to deteriorate Into an ef fort to ronvince ourselves that w aren't doing what e are do In When it was decided that Brit ain needed a tug victory 1-van, everything was agreed upon anion- the top leaders Th?n It went to congress, where Britain was so berated that much of the gi will of the action was !t. Congress approved the Mar shall plan and then scared Eu rpe to death with a last minute fiht over the actual appropna ti n. Now the United States hjs tak en the lead in forming a histori cal alliance. Norway, far In sunce. joined under' considerable pressure and in defiance of threats from neighboring Tttwaua. But. instead of standing as a firm and shining example cf western unity, it seems likely that the p-ct will be delivered all tam Uned "with legalistic quibbli ;s. It would be unnatural if Europe d es not wonder, if interpreta ti jn of the fact varies so much !', what loopholes will be vuht in case of an emergency. The alliance is designed a a firm warning that no nation can again gamble on conquering Eu rope without having to fight the United States. Its hope for peace lie in the Tact that no nation is atamg to deliberately attack the United States in all its power. The pact also has its economic objective. It is to assure west ern Europe that its industrial and . bdsmess life can be rebuilt with out fear of loss by war. a a A political objective is to con vince western Europeans that United States is nut trying ' u ue them as buffers, as they I have widely feared; that the U.S. no longer tries to Ignore th fact that trouble lril Europ is trouble in Kansas. Th U S. army, navy and air force are deployed la Britaia. Germany. Austria. Trieete and the Middle East. A war of any aii could (hardly start without Involving them Immediately, pact or no pact. For th diplomats to say, than, that th pact does not moan auto matic war in cast of aggression Is merely to disguise the taste of th medicine Th Atlantic pact represents heroic action for a nation which has sought traditionally to keep clear of th entanglements of others. It represents one of the most momentous policy shifts in American history. On of the keenest American observers of the International seeae asked me yesterday: "Way Is it, when w ar going to do oan thing heroic, w doat re cognise the value of doing at heroically." GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty The Safety Valve' IT pgr Clab Weald Widest So, Cusseiiirrtal To the Editor: At a meeting of the board of directors of the South Salem Progress club last night, in suss ming up the nds of this pert of town ax oapraaaed by the membership of the club, w unanimously agreed to the fol lowing: That for the betterment of the ntire city of Salem, for th cXanyenlonc of th people living her and for th out of town people coming here to trade, that South Commercial street should be widened five feet on each side, which would, with th 00 feet we now hav. mak a total of 70 ft from property lin to property line. Then starting one foot outaide of the property lin w vrould first hav a fiv foot sitfewslk, then s seven foot space for parking cars, next four 11-foot traffic lanes for two wsy traffic, then another seven foot lan for park ing, th a fiv foot sidewalk brings us on oot to th prop erty line and J fills the 70 foot space. If the engineers think they need a few extra feet it is OK. Th sbov plan would cost littl and would be amp! to carry two times the volume of traffic that could possibly come in over th praoont connecting streets and highways. W also should hav traffic lights st Owtsi and Mission streets aad the widening extend from Just north of Mission street to th south city limits. This would take 15 feet lees than the Bal- dock plan calls for oaf of each side of the street, and would not ruin residential streets snd would save the cost of widening and re-surfacing tham. South Salem Progress Club Board of Directors Clayton W. Jones, 'chairman. uw r II U U a a fj M ii ri 1 h (Continued from page 1) adopts, the council will have to adapt th street pattern to con form. The neat problem Is routing 091 through the city. Apparently no funds are in sight for the Lan caster; drive bypass.) Th best suggestion mad is for making Pine shreet th aecees road into the eon tor of th city foe trucks. Then ! psavaaxer oars ' can use Summer and Capitol. South Com mercial and South Liberty streets can be made bne-dir-tional whenever Its seems nec essary, if th alternate of street widening o noncommercial seems too costly. Some objection has come from Pine street residents to use of their street for trucks. Widening and improving, this street wiU however ODen uo a section of city and probably will result la increase of property values, which ; may offer some compen sation for th truck-travel nuis ance. : ( With consideration as to tim ing; our traffic problems can be solved. I feel sure that some of the fears now expressed will not be realised, though th chang will not be painless or without injury to some. Th rule to be followed 1st Mak th decision that seems the wisest solution for the loag-timc future. When that is made then close ranks for attack on other civic prob lem which confront Salem. Late Demand Boosts Stocks NEW YORK, May 1-JP-A re vival of demand gave the stock market a little bounce in the Last few minutes of trading today. Closing prices showed a fairly even mixture of gains snd loeaes running from fractions to around a point. Th pickup in buying in terest wiped out many early losses. The Associated Proa average of 60 stocks advanced .1 of one point to 63.2. The Industrial group post ed the only gain. Only S02 individual Issue- ap peared, on th ticker tap, of which 379 advanced and 220 declined. J S tSM aWatttt-grMtMU- j , SttMtsats tttf Bad- S0N0T0NE . HEARING CENTER Senate Hotel May S. i A. M. to 7 P. M. XJEW etcluslT "Fitted il Fowit" snore thee atoetaw pcarioua hoartsag mid power, for thnae who aaad Itl Tat t or people with ean aittTe ears it provide faa.: fleet minimum power! BOTH ways farther, doer. . r iicdaretamUeg than ever bafocel gagg coaaewltatioew I I I I W. F. DODGE 1232 Stat St. Salens. Or eg ess oiaxs ixAaxm'XLKxrt V i 1 LaJune Sahtx waa dactad Girl leagii president, and Beverly Wilt t waa j named i vice president at a Salem high school election- Tues day.! - j j I j . - Second Ballot win be held Wed nesday between fielen Cadd and Lee Strode for secretary, and Janet Bolt and Roecmaxy SowaU 1 for treasurer. -Ml-!. &mms fflWBIUffl J AVI! worn MUUUS MONtTl Ptowa.'Oiaca, Har- rowa. Pal ranaaa -all ia oot opara- OM-MilMiawi lict (a4 baa e is 2o e e , . 1 r'CT' aT tmT S1C3.C3 DOES MOREI ...Costs MucKL2l Wooes or aiStiraa Caa Of ft All Dr Witaox tmtia- Waiaaa oUr 84 Iba. Taraa aaaa ia I' noat. No OOWTOlar Caa Osaww SeClais aaTraa.Via. Skraa, IOIAL tor I iaa tempt. Gft mmn, N uraacrniaa. Cot enctora. Aii Growers nd Exata Oa aratora (ap to i acraa). f o - I ill. I "Vaawaaaaw-aak - j TT Hov7serBro3e 608 Edgcwater Plu t-lM PoliceOrder HoldonHaU Salem police Tuesday placed a detainer with Benton county au thorities on Richard Howard Hall, a transient being held In the county jail In Corvallis on a check charge. Salem detectives said they ar holding a Marion county district cour warrant charging Hall with cashing a worthless 384 check at th White & Sons Feed store, 261 State st;, earlier this year. The warrant sets oau at si.suu. Better English By D. C. Williams 5 ,f : i And It only cost 2ct annate , Xil haeae far traXrl 43 dollar for Folk Dancers Pick Festival Directors Cocnnaittoe chairmen for the statewide festival of folk dancing clubs at Salem Sunday, May IS, were announced Tuesday. Costum ed dancers from all parts of the state are expected to participate in the colorful pageant. Appointed by John Geisler, president 6f the Salem Gate- swingers club were Mrs. David C. Dunlway. refreshments; Mrs. Est ell L. Brunk. costumes; Harold Bowman, decorations; Bryan Goodenough. ' reception; Fred L. Hal v arson, sound; Mrs. Mary Swegart, invitations. Measles Too Lists Of County Diseases Measles topped by far the list of reportable diseases in Marion county for the week just ended, according to a tabulation from the office of Dr. W. J. Stone, county health officer. Half of the 43 cases of measles were in Salem. All four cases of mumps listed were to Salem, but most of the seven cases of chick en pox were elsewhere. Sa lem also accounted for the coun- a uuw vi luuuinfi, iwg of conjunctivitis and one of rheu-4 matte fever. 1 Jolly Neighbors Club Has Meeting at Swegle . SRWEGLX Mrs. Raymond Benson was hostess for the Jolly Neighbors club at her Brown Road home Friday afternoon. Present for the dessert luncheon and social afternoon were Mrs. K. J. Fordyce, Mrs. Thccon Kent. Mrs. Henry Preim, Mrs. fenry Mehl ing, Mrs. John Janson. Mrs. Ray 8 e r n a r d y, Mrs. Keefer, Mrs. George; Brown and the hostess. v- 1. What' is wrong with this sentence? "She was aggravated by her husband's failure to ap pear." , 2. What is the correct pronun elation of "lyceum"? 4. Which of these words Is mis spelled? Malefactor, malediction. maleable. 4. What does the word "biblio- clasm" mesn? 3. What is s word beginning with vi that means "disposed to revenge"? ANSWERS 1. Say, She was provoked " 2 pronounce li-se-um, i and in lie. e as in see, and accent second syl lable. 3. malleable. 4. Destruction or mutilation of books, especial ly the Bible. 5. Vindictive. .izajmouncement j Selections of Compartments (Crypts and Niches) now being made in New Addition to ML Crest Abbey j MAUSOLEUM and CREMATORIUM (Now Completed) For Appointment Please Call x I 3-5484 or 3 5133 e ! i ' Lloyd T. Rigdon Manager Salem Mausoleum Js Crematorium jl Let n show yon indvidee! pie, C plaoe settings, complete acts in ff J V this famous tolid silver. For ' If ffHi fV a gift to please a lovely hostess If I ff 1 " (or a whole family 0 aothmg eoald j I . , X 1 1 be more appropriate. Yet Towle H f f '' ' III Sterling, for all its distinctive I f ; ? J If beauty, is not expensive, j jff. ?-frt your Sot of Silver of STEVENS & SOU with a small aown pcrymeni pay iba bakxnc weekly eg monthly. STEVElljS & SC)N Ctafw Skwaf LtreelcY Dd0. 4 - f Pavoitw MUt