''-.: ':! tilt i - j-iiiV gtaUwim: owhiw.,iaY r,i943 " "No Favor Sways V$, No Fear Shall Ate" Frem First SUtesmaa, March It, ltil i THE STATESJIAN PUBUSHINC C03IPANY CHAMXR A RPRAGUE; Editor and Publisher! Catered at the posUfflce at Salem, Oreg-oa, as mm ad claa cnatier eoder act ef eenrreaa March S. IS7H Published even mors lot. Business of flea 214 8. Commercial, Solent, Orexsa. Telephone 2-2441. Objections to Arms Aid Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg whose sup port of the Atlantic pact gave it great leverage for the senate's approval, is critical of the arms program presented by President Truman close on the heels of his signing the pact. The veteran senator from Michigan said the president's pro posal should be rewritten and curtailed to get favorable consideration at this session. He urg ed that an interim measure be considered while congress awaits a report from the defense coun cil contemplated'under one of the articles of the pact Senator Taft likewise demanded that no appropriation foe arms be made until the coun cil set up in the treaty prepares its plan and makes its recommendations. ; The president's program calls for spending Vt450,000,000 to be divided as follows: . ! Aid to North Atlantic treaty countries: ( 1. Equipment, delivery expenses, technical and training assistance $933,450,000 t. Assistance to stimulate increased military pro duction . $155,000,000 Aid to other countries: Equipment, delivery expense, technical and train ing assistance $300,580,000 Emergency fund ! $ 45,000.000 Administration . $ 10,970,000 Total $1,450,000,000 . i "Other countries" to be given arms are Greece, Turkey, Korea, the Philippines, Iran. The two former have been on the receiving end for three years now, and for Greece the progress in clean ing out the communist guerrillas has been pain fully slow. It is important to note that the state depart ment does not say that this is the full invoice to cover Europe's rearmament. It is generally admitted that hs is only the first instalment. Once the program is adopted fresh reasons yrill be advanced for its continuance. The adminis tration does not make any offset in domestic ex penditures for the military establishment which In the house bill would run to nearly $16 bil lion. All this, and world rearmament too. And again we are admonished that if we fail 4p furnish the guns we'll be "letting Europe down," and getting a bad name against oiir selves again. To bolster the arms request Presi dent Truman again uses the threat of commun ist Russia, which is quite reminiscent of appeals of the kaiser and other rulers for more armam ents in pre-WW I days, against putative en emies. Congress should look this arms demand squarely in the face. Maybe it's another bad dream. Shanghai Deteriorates Fred Hampson, AP correspondent Who is stay ing on in Shanghai, writes that that great City is on" the skids economically. Shanghai grew! up a a trading port, doing business with all na tions, and operating many textile and other mills for the China trade. Now the nationalists have blockaded the port and the communists aren't disposed to do business with the foreigners end they axe the only ones who have the goods that formerly were shipped to Shanghai for sale or for manufacture. j For lack of raw cotton the mills in the Chinese city dropped production from 65 to 45 per cent of capacity. Only supplies in sight are native cotton not yet harvested. V Shanghai is a city of 6,000,000 people. It can not subsist alone. With its shipping stagnant and industry slowing down the communists are won dering what they can do. They can't put the city -on relief." Newspapers run by the reds have urged that two or three millions of the inhabitants be mov ed back into the interior. That is where the food U.S. Backs Armament, Disarmament By J. M. Roberta. Jr. AP Foreign Affair Analyst WASHINGTON, July 25-vV On the same day that President Truman was asking congress to approve the European military assistance program the American delegation at Lake Success was pressing its disarmament propo sals in the U.N. It all seemed a little confus lnf. In the first place, everybody realizes that trying to put through an agreement In the conventional arms field before getting one on atomic bombs is trying to wag the dog by the tall. The president himself said rs much only a few days ago. The immediate issue is a pro posal before the conventional armaments commission for an arms census as a preliminary to seeking a limitations agreement. The general assembly asked the commission to do it. but Russia has refused to cooperate. Manu ilsk. Soviet Ukrainian foreign minister, says it is nonsense to ask for information on shotguns and not on atomic bombs. The president said disarmament would remain in the realm of talk until an atomic agreement was reached. For once they m to be.agreed. And for once Russia' seems to be In an entirely reasonable position, if you take the situation as it is, disregard Why the Hospital; Drive? Population of area served by Salem hospitalsi . 100.000 'Beds Bornsallv Normal bed capacity of hospitals Beds jammed into hospitals as of Serious cases awaiting beds in Who might need hospitalization Present margin to care for emergencies. (Story oo i i i ; i lis produced, but the interior is already thickly (populated. 1 The allies have learned with Germany that I victory over a country may be a costly thing. The Chinese communists are finding that run Ining a city and a country may become " quite as I difficult as seizing them from their former mas hers, f Save Near Half Billion on ECA i Senator Lucas, majority leader in the senate, says the administration policy committee has agreed to accept the cut of about $420,000,000 in .the appropriation for European recovery, made by the appropriations committee. This is about 10 per cent of the total requested by ECA. There is justification for the reduction. Eu ropean nations have made real progress toward recovery, though Britain is in present difficul ties. Aid therefore should progressively decrease lest Europe become just a leaner on the USA. Then commodity prices have declined, per haps on an average of 10 per cent. This means that the dollars buy more merchandise for ship ment abroad. 1 Finally the United States has developed a hole in its pocket and money is slipping through it too fast. A half billion dollars saved will go quite a ways toward keeping that hole from enlarging. v; I Romance in V Ps Life? j Now here's a tidbit in the news that offers relief from stories of crime, Russia's stubborn ness, the struggle of the Brooklyn Dodgers and the search of republicans for leaders and issues. It's just the item that Vice President Barkley, 71 and a widower, made a side trip to St. Louis to be guest of an attractive widow (age not re ported). The Veep had been to Minneapolis, but dropped down to St. Louis for the social call. Taxed with questions by reporters the nation's No. one eligible; replied: "I violated no law of legislation, society or propriety and I had a swell time." Maybe the widow was merely returning a favor she had recently been entertained at luncheon in Washington by the Vice president. But if one luncheon leads to another luncheon, what will two luncheons lead to? . . . the altar? Mr. Barkley has grown in public favor as pre viously he had in the esteem of his colleagues in the senate. A Kehtuckian, he has had to do many of the social chores of the administration, which duty he seems not to have shirked. And if in the process romance should make him stumble, that would be a choice relish for the people. All the world loves a lover, even if he is 71. Besides the widow's picture shows her to be unusually at tractive. ! That rich Burgundy red with aluminum color for trim surely sets off the Busick building on old Commercial street. What many would con sider an old-style front is thus given a striking appearance and something of an old-world flavor. It shows what can be done to brighten the scene without tearing down and tearing out in the passion for modernization. A woman at Grants Pass won first place In a southern Oregon art exhibit with the first portrait she ever painted. Judging by the re trogression of artists into "modern art" we suspect the award was merited. The Glasgow, Scotland, Sunday Post calls Its government a "do-as-you're-told" affair. In brief, "Papa knows best." ing the fact that she herself blocked atomic agreement. The arms commission is expec ted to turn the matter over to the security council next week, where Russia is expected to veto It. Then, ! it is understood, the United States will press for an airing before the general assem bly in September. Why? '! Some observers said yesterday that the United States and other anti-communist nations were pressing ; for the census under general asserhbly Instructions, that they; once considered it a possible point Of agreement with Russia on a tep which might lead to some general agreement It did fall: intq U. N. routine and there was; no obvious connection between it and the campaign for rearmament. Others took at that Russia had started the disarmament talk three years ago, that everybody agreed it was a good thing, and that now Russia could be nailed to the mast for insincerity. This business of keeping the record straight has long been a part of American policy. The United States was represented as mak ing an important concession in agreeing to lajf its conventional armament open to public view If everyone ellbe would do like wise. j But Russia f could hardly be in Salem 145 ne 125 ANYONE NONE last nigh hospitals. suddenly. page one) I j 5 t- ti" r" t,,,f"jiac 'Tears ! '"! blamed for feeling that she was asked to reveal everything, while the United States held back on the one great weapon that every body is interested in. I am not saying that the Uni ted States is consciously trying to show that Russia is insincere about disarmament at a time when such a showing would have an influence on congressional consideration of rearmament. As I said, the disarmament discus sion falls strictly within pre arranged U.N. routine. I am, thinking about the actual effect' And that U.N. issues do rise and fall in public attention ac cording to the timing of interest shown by the great powers. It is not that Russia is any more sincere about disarmament than anyone else. Nor that re armanent is not important But that the United States needs to avoid the appearance as well a; the fact of insincerity. That the coincidence of things which may be perfectly proper ; when kept separate can get you in trouble. Better English Br a a Williams 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "If this memoranda is correct either you or I are go ing." 2. What is the correct pro nunciation of "reservoir"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Arsenal, argue ment arrogance. I 4. What does the word "fu tile" mean? I- What im m word beginning with am that means "friendly? ANSWERS 1. Say, "If these memoranda are correct, either you or I mm going. . 2. Pronounce rez-er-vwor, e as in er. accent first syllable. 3. Argument 4. Use less. "It was a futile struggle." 5. Amicable. Over Terrain In Portugal V . By Henry MeLemere LISBON, PORTUGAL, July 28 - (Special) If you come to Lisbon and take a taxi be sure to look andi see if the driver's name is Manuel Pimento. If it is, don't waste a recond. Jump out, run or hide; in fact, do anything but ride with Sen hor Pimento. Lisbon taxi drivers have long enjoyed the reputation of being the wildest, the most daredevil ish, in all the world. And I am sure that the little button that Manuel wears in his la pel is in recog nition of h i a being the fast est and most reckless of them all. 'A 1U x 0 MeLeoMre i We learned about Manuel by accident Por tuguese friends offered to take us for a ride to Sintra and a visit to the Pena Palace, in the mountains back of Lisbon. We were delighted to accept the in vitation, because we had heard that the Pena Palace was one of the absolute "musts" for a visitor to Lisbon. They picked us up in a taxi they had engaged for the after noon, and Manuel Pimento was the owner and driver of the middle-aged Plymouth, within 30 seconds after leaving the hotel Jean and I knew that we should never have come. By a process which I am sure they would like to know about in Detroit, Manuel started the car at 40 miles per hour, careened around the flower beds in front of the hotel on a wheel and a half, and headed for the mountains. Manuel had absolutely no re spect for l curves, crossings, people, animals, or other motor vehicles. He put the accelerator to the floorboard, and kept it there. Scenery was just a blur, and we had to clutch one anoth er to keep from being thrown to the floor. Once out of Lisbon, our haz ards increased. We began pass ing through villages whose nar row, winding streets afforded scarcely enough room for two cars to pass. Our friends didn't seem to mind at all. They chatted and smoked and generally behaved as if they didn't know that they were headed for the last round up. In fact, there was a glint in Joacquin's eyes when he yell ed above the screeching of the tires on a particularly sharp turn, "This is VERY dangerous. This road wasn't built for cars at all, but only for small car riages." When he got high up, going around hairpin turns, with a sheer drop of thousands of feet on the right-hand side of the road, which Manuel hugged, it was just too much for Jean. She asked one of our friends to ask Manuel to please, please slow down. This was a mistake, because when the message was relayed to Senhor Pimento he took both hands off the wheel, turned his head, and blurted a lot of Por tuguese. When it was translated to us, we learned : that this was what he had said: There was no need for us to worry or to be nervous, and no need for him to slow down, be cause he, Manuel Pimento, had a one-year-old baby boy at home, and he, Manuel Pimento, intend ed to live to bring him up. ; n I didn't say anything, but I am willing to bet that Junior Pim ento will spend a great part of his life paying hospital bills for his old man. t All I can tell you about the Pena Palace is that I would like to spend the rest of my life there, not only because it : is like a castle out of a fairy tale, but because while I was walking about it I was out of Manuel's car. I remember nothing of the mad plunge down the mountain. I just shut; my eyes and listen ed to my hair grow gray. So remember the name Man uel Pimento. McNuht Syndicate. Inc. GRIN AND BEAR IT II mVfm i I say the Sevater is aananfied be chalina of tads tsrvestlcatiag eeaasantee ... he's atterly lacking la ihewxaaashiB . . ) rUNCrArrLu PUjIINCOj srf .rjiii mmw' H 'J Literary Guidepost By W. G. Rogers AMERICANS BETRAYED! POLITICS AND THE JAP ANESE EVACUATION, by Morten Grodzlns (University ef Chicago Press; 5) The military decision to evac uate the 110,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry from the Pac ific coast in 1942, says this au thor, an assistant professor at the U. of Chicago, "was predicat ed on a racist philosophy, nur tured by regional pressures, and eventually justified by false hood." Investigating what the Civil Liberties Union called "the worst single wholesale violation of civil rights of American citizens in our history,'" he found deep-seated prejudice and irrelevant polit ical and economic purposes com bining with the patriotic spirit to establish "concentration camps" in which native-born Americans were confined against their will. It's a dark warning for the rest of us native-born, he declares. He can discover no i record whatsoever of Japanese-American sabotage at Pearl Harbor, and none on the mainland up to the time of evacuation; the FBI hunted and raided in vain for proof of subversive activities. The "military necessity" argu ments used In behalf of evacua tion were almost equally effec tive against Germans and Ital ians, he says, yet they were not ousted. The book opens with a re view of anti-Japansese sentiment in the West in pre-war decades. Some six weeks after Pearl Har bor, this sentiment became vocal again, was expressed by politi cians, labor, growers, veterans, was organized. In Washington the Justice Department opposed evacuation, and claimed it could n't manage the job anyway; ex pecting the Army couldn't either, it left the problem to the Army. To its surprise, the Army decided it could, and did. An uninformed Congress passed a low; which was signed by President Roose velt without Cabinet discussion and approved by a Supreme By Lichty Your health As a rule, warts are about as harmless as it is possible for a disorder to be. Except when lo cated on the soles of the feet, they do not cause pain. If they were not so disfiguring, it is doubtful if many would seek medical aid in getting rid of them. While a number of methods of treating warts have been sug gested, none has proven satis factory In all cases. One wart can be removed by the electric needle, but where a whole crop of these unsightly growths is present as is often the case with children, this method is not sat isfactory. For this reason, there have been many attempts to get rid of warts by using preparations which can be given by mouth. These include magnesium, sul fate, arsenic, and mercury prep arations. Varying success has ac companied the attempts to treat warts through injections, into a muscle, of preparations of bis muth. Recently, a number of patients with warts were treated by giv ing them a substance known as sodium bismuth triglycollamate by mouth. The preparation was given in tablet form after meals. The dose varied, depending upon the number of warts. Of 14 patients treated, eight were completely cured, four showed improvement and, in two cases, there was no lmprovment. In two other instances, the treatment had to be stopped be cause the patients could not tol erate the drug. However, in one of these, the warts disappeared entirely two weeks after treat ment was stopped and, in the other, there was a great deal of improvement at the time the drug was stopped. It would seem that this form of treatment, of giving bismuth preperation by mouth, is excel lent in some cases, and is worthy of a thorough trial, particularly in those cases where the patient has a large number of warts. Warts may be located on the Court much less vigilant, says Grodzins, than usual. The people who pushed the law through never took the trouble to get all the facts, the author charges ... he himself spent three years on the coast and in Washington collecting this abundant material. He calls the whole business a shabby ab dication of civilian to military, and a fearsome and ominous fail ure of democratic processes. SS2Si&u STERLING IS SO Here are three easy ways to have your own Sterling: Boy a piece or a place setting at a time. Many school girls, brides and business girls start their sets with a single piece or place set ting, adding place settings, half-dozeni, serving pieces as they like. Register your patera so that gift-minded friends can help you out. Gifts of Sterling are always in good taste for birthdays, Christmas, anniversaries and other occasions, and if your pattern is recorded it is a matter - - of convenience for everyone concerned. . Use a convenient budget plan. Many girls end . women want their silver at once. A small down payment, with the balance paid in easy installments, makes possible the immediate delivery of the pieces and place settings you need. Written by Dr. Herman N. Boo dense n. MJX hands, where they may be in jured and result in bleeding. These warts should, of course, be eliminated as quickly as possible. When warts are present it is always a good plan to consult a skin specialist for treatment. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS L.R.: What causes furring of the tongue? Answer: This condition may be due to wasting of the lining membrane of the tongue. It might be due to infection of the tongue, "n many cases, there Is no evidence of any abnormality found. It would b- well to have an examination made by a physi cian to determine the cause of the trouble in your case. (Copyrlfht. 14. Ktn Features) Boy Wounded While Playing With Revolver BEAVERTON, July 28 -P-Ten-year-old Dorman McGann was wounded in the face and back today when a .38 caliber revolver a playmate was holding discharg ed accidentally. 1 Washington County Deputy Sheriff S. A. Nosack reported the youngster was at the nearby home of Donald Lee White. The white boy was showing his friend the revolver and snapping the trig ger, the deputy said. The bullet was removed by Dr. Herbert Mason who said the boy probably will recover. Arnold Asks Trust Laws Cover Unions WASHINGTON, July 28 -W)-Thurman Arnold, former "New Deal" trust-buster, today urged congress to bring labor unions un der the federal anti-trust laws. "It is a very dangerous thing," he said, "to permit unions to mo nopolize the labor supply without any curbs whatsoever.' Arnold testified as a witness be fore the senate banking committee, which is investigating the coal in dustry and the tactics of John L Lewis' United Mine Workers union. Meet Yovr Friends at T - ED GOOES (Continued from page one) of trucks weighed. Sdfflerp fig ures are for each yea front W44 to 1148. Taking the yars it ihe two extremes one finds thar the number of violations in 1944 was 4441 and in 1948 was 8681, al though the total n u m bar of trucks weighed dropped I from 187,471 to 166,584. The percent age of violations to number weighed dropped from! 187,471 to 166,584. The percentage of, vio lations to number weighed stead ily increased, as follows: 1944, 2.37 per cent; 1945, 3.37 peri cent; 1946, 4.75 per cent; 1947, 5.07 per cent; 1948, 5.21 per cent jFines and court costs collected likewise mounted by steady steps (from $74,961 in 1944 to 236,18S in 1948. ' -v II For 1948 the average weight of all legal loads weighed wa 53, 487 lbs, and the average Weight of all illegal loads Was 68,908. The indication of the patter fig ure is that the violations were not just marginal but: really ex cessive. - I j The system seems I to be ef ficient; but It has not succeeded in educating truckers to obey the law. The worst violators are log truckers. Many of them are in dependent operators! who get paid on the quantity of logs they deliver at the pond or siding. So they are under the constant temptation to pile on 111 the logs they think they can? haul and get by with. Sometimes they hide out in the woods till they think the weighmaster has closed up his scales. Stiffler could tell many tales of ruses I pulled to violate the load law;: with im punity. - ; The consequence is hot merely an infraction of the lw but the progressive destruction of high ways and structures. ; One over load may not do much damage. But let the pounding continue day after day and thj surfacing is worn down and! the! base broken up. Bridges finally be come unsafe. J At various times logging In terests have sought Changes in the law or modification pf its enforcement. Some are honest In their intent Others simply' want to escape any penalties. Exper ience has demonstrated the nec essity of load control and; these statistics prove the need foi- con tinued strict (or even stricter) enforcement f 1 Loaded Truck Rams House ASTORIA, July 26 -UP)i Uno Olson, 30, was killed today (when his heavily loaded truck went out of control on a hill and crashed down the grade into i house. The truck tore off I corner of the home of Dr. Frank Fowler, and came to a halt. Mrs. Fowler, upstairs at the 1 1 me, said it "sounded like an explosion . . . I thought it was another earth quake." The truck's brakes I apparently failed. I I The St Joe river ijn Idaho Is the highest navigable river In the world. j Mr. L, C Canary, well known hearing aid authority, assisted by Mrs. FJta Shepard will demonstrate several new j dis coveries of special Interest to all with impaired hearing. Among items . of interest! are the new Phantomold which eliminates the button in the ear, and the noise suppressor vj-hich effectively solves th problem of hearing in noisy places; To day BELTONE is fitting nore difficult cases than ever before. 'i i We carry batteries for ALL alds j Salcn Belions Office Thnrsday-Friday July Zl-tl t- JAMES N. TAFT & ASSOCIATES 228 Oregon Building; EASY TO OWK Livesley BaOdlag Telephone 2 -till J f State mmd Liberty I '..m m mm mt . llM l cam I fXElD.