Th Statesman, Salem, Ore.. Wednesday. NoTernber 23. 1949 refioti MMt oil BIGGER AND ; BIGGER, LOUDER AND LOUDER 'Va rmnnr Xtaav UM.ffia TtAT Shall j4w" Free First SUtesnaa, March tt, 1151 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CH.ART.KA A SPhAGUE, Editor and Publisher ) Entered at the peatofflce at Saleaa, Oregon, as second class matter under act of congress March S, 1171. rabushed every aaornlng. Business effiee 215 8. Commercial. Salem. Oregon. Telephone 2-244 L Senator Taft, and the Bipartisan Policy Another election whose vote will not be counted for another year appears to have been won. That U the-f eelection of Senator Robert A. Taft in Ohio. Soi busy are potential opponents backing out of the race that the effect is to af firm their own lack of confidence in defeating the man marked for political execution by Pres ident Truman, the AFL arfd the CIO. Ever since congress adjourned Senator Taft has been plug ging away, and plans to visit every one of Ohio's 88 counties before congress reconvenes. In sim ple "wagon-bed" talks to Ohio voters Taft has been discussing political questions freely and frankly and honestly. Ilia evident sincerity, overcomes his lack of political come-hither. Re ports indicate that he has made good progress in this orderly, non-sensational campaign, i And when the 81st congress reconvenes there will be Talt. With Dulles gone and Vandenberg 111 the chief proponents of the bipartisan foreign policy will b less conspicuous, though Senator Morse is one of its staunch advocates. Taft, while not an isolationist, is much more conser vative on spending programs than the adminis tration; and Taft will be the republican leader of the senate in the next session, even more so than formerly. What then will happen to the bi partisan foreign policy? Bipartisanship has been over-extolled. It is not treason to apply critical review to adminis tration policies. They are not inspired. Secre taries Hull and Marshall and Byrnes were more inclined to cooperate with the republican side than Acheson and Truman. Often the policy was announced, then republican leaders briefed on how to support it. It was not a joint product at all. . Unfortunately the opposition that has devel oped in congress to the foreign policy has usual ly been led by the most stupid and reactionary members of the congress, whose view was so narrow and provincial as to drive away public support. The Wherrys and Kerns were vocal but unconvincing, speaking too obviously out of political bias than out of profound knowledge. An intelligently led minority would put the government's foreign proposals on test. It would examine them thoroughly and critically, trying to square them with the best interest of the United States and of the world. The British party in opposition doesn't hesitate to criticise or condemn a cabinet policy, but usually it does so with a background of knowledge of foreign affairs and not merely with a purpose to em barrass the government. Unfortunately few of our members of congress are adequately equip- Foreign affaixy will continue to be a maxi mum importance, surpassing in importance many of the items of the socalled fair deal. Domestic welfare may well hinge on how skillfully our statesmen manage in the handling of our foreign relations. tended if second-class mail rates are given much of an increase, as the postoffice department recommends. Publishers have been critical of accounting methods used by the PO department, and; point out the heavy loss the department incurs through the "franking" of government mail. i Senator Douglas concedes that magazines are the chief gainers from the low second-class rates, yet there is this justification, that thereby we secure greater national understanding and unity. Also beneficiaries of present low mail rates are publications of churches, lodges, labor unions and; other organizations. fTj get back to the newspapers: there should be no "subsidy" to publishers in the mail rates. Southern Pacific Orders Freighf Cars It is hard to understand why, with car load ings over the country off as much as they have been in comparison with 1948 and 1947 why the Southern Pacific should be short of cars for hauling lumber. The dump-type coal cars idled by the recent strike are not adapted for the 'lumber haul, but other types, boxcars, gondolas, flats, are suitable. Yet these cars have been "surplus" over the country, judging by the stat istics oh car loadings. One answer may be that roads do not like to haul empties around; it took an ICC order to speed up turnover of cars to western roads. Whatever the reason the result has been dam aging to northwest lumber mills and grain ship perl. It may smooth out later and the business deferred be picked up, but shippers have become mighty impatient over this recurrence of car shortage. ; Now the SP announces it is ordering 3100 new freight cars. They will not be available for months but should help avert a similar tieup 1 11 next year. The road has invested millions in new FIBROSITIS is ono of the most rolling stock through this decade, and evidently common of disabling disorders. ' " m t ia I . . inouin u is onen spoken 01 as muscular rheumatism, this is a misnomer. It has little to do with the muscles themselves bat is k V I O mm J caw . mm e WAX S I i Vi I MB Your Health Written by Dr. Herman N. Bundenaen. ftLBv isn't at the end of its spending yet. Its territory is growing and the road is hard pressed to care for all the freight business offered. Net many railroads are in such a "fortunate" plight. the lower part of the back, and around the chest. As a general rule, flbrositis is not a difficult condition to diag nose because the symptoms it causes are fairly typical. Lab- rather an Inflammation of the oratory examinations, such ; as No Subsidies to Publishers Senator Paul Douglas of Illinois chides the newspapers and magazines for demanding a bal anced budget and then accepting a "$400,000, 000 handout" through low second - class mail rates, lie-says they should give up this "subsidy" to help balance the budget. Well, here is one newspaper that says there should be no "subsidy" direct or indirect to publishers. What "subsidy" there ii is passed along to subscribers in lower rates for delivery by mail aa far aa most daily papers are concern ed. If the mailing charges were increased by the government, they would, if considerable, have to be passed along to subscribers. ! Daily newspapers generally have organized their own delivery system and that will be ex- Land Reform in Italy Communist countries like Poland and Hun gary wasted no time in dispossessing landlords and; cutting up big estates into small tracts for peasants. Italy has moved slowly to appease the land-hunger of its people. A beginning was made last! year, and now the cabinet has decided to - proyide peasants in Calabria, southernmost pro vince, with land. In the plan those owning more than 700 acres of land must relinquish the excess to the gov ernment, Some 100,000 acres of fallow land will be apportioned to 5000 peasants. A reclamation program for the province embraces the spend ing of $30,000,000 to reclaim a million acres of land. Dispossessed landowners will be compen sated for the lands they lose. Concentration of land ownership has been a source of trouble through human history. Though feudalism has generally been abolished some individuals, families or corporations get hold of more land than is good for the country. Sometimes reforms come only after violence or revolution. Italy is belatedly moving to give pea sants title to land by breaking up the huge hold ings of bid families. 1 ; : In England 22 families living in a housing development petitioned for permission to put knobs on their doors. Handlatcheshad been sub stituted to save expense. The householders don't agree that "Pappa Bevafa knows best" ! fibrous tissue which forms their sheaths and the ligaments and tendons which attach them to the bones. Fibrositis may develop Inde pendently of any other disease or it may follow other conditions, such as arthritis, the excessive use of alcohol, diabetes, tuber culosis, injuries, and a lack of thyroid secretion. It may also oc cur during the change of life. The pain produced, by the dis order may be continuous, and is usually, aggravated Toy quick movement. There maybe ach ing, tightness, muscular stiffness, and limitation of the movement of the joints. The symptomsde- blood counts, are not helpful in making the diagnosis. The form of treatment suggest : ed for this condition' consists! in the application of heat with what is known as diathermy, which produces heat deep in the tissues. Following the heat treatment, massage is utilized: first, the mas- sage ia light, while gradually much firmer pressure is used. Active exercises are also em ployed, depending upon the amount of pain which the exer cises produce. Forced stretching, is not advisable, since this may only make the condition worse and cause a recurrence of inflammation. injections under the skin of a pend to some extent on the part preparation known as neostig of the body affected. In one type, known as cephalo dynla, the tissues of the scalp are affected and may be responsible for a particular type of headache. Pressure over the upper part of the neck usually reveals tender swellings. ? Sometimes, the area on the back and the side of the neck may be affected by fibrositis, and this causes what is commonly known as wryneck. Fibrositis may also occur over the shoulders, shoulder blades mine do not shorten the course of the condition but seem to give ipeedier relief from muscle tenseness. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS J.X.: Are cysts of the Ovary dangerous? Is an operation nec essary to get rid of them. Answer Cysts of the ovary may be dangerous, depending on the size ancktype. As a general rule, the best thing is to have them removed as soon as possible by operation. (Copyright, 1940, King Features) The Safety Valve In Czechoslovakia even the gravediggerg have to qualify in the loyalty test. Maybe the bosses feel they might dig graves for the wrong people. Reds Set to Pass Judgment on Ward Br J. M. Roberts, Jr. AP Foreign Affairs Analyst Mukden broadcasts that the Chinese communists are about to pass judgment on Angus Ward. American consul general, coming after the state depart ment's appeal to world opinion In the case, suggest that the Peiping government is about reedy jto get out from under. There ia little previous ex perience by which likely com munist, action can be Judged. . But such as there Is suggests a final violent propaganda attack on Ward, followed by his re lease nder orders to leave the country. ThU hag been the usual ac - tlon In the communist sphere In the case of nationals of west ern countries. The Chinese communists, who undoubtedly will have the ad vice of professional or Moscow trained theorists,' may be moved to act quickly rather than await the mobilization of world diplo matic pressure which the United States has asked. An early end to the1 Ward case would relieve Russia and four of her satellines from having to stand up and be counted one way or another on the question of international treatment of governmental rep resentatives. One can only speculate wheth er there Is any connection at all between communist moves in the Ward case and Poland's an-, ffsuncement on Monday that she wrtl support the Pelping re gime's bid for a place in the United Nations. The same is true of Russia's attitude in the light of the Gubitchev case and the; court 'charges against Amtorr officials in the U. S. for nc registering as foreign agents. The Chinese communists, how ever, would seem to have a f a -greater interest ,in diplomatic . . recognition, which ia being with held at least until the Ward case la settled, than in a "single facet of propaganda against the "for eign devils,"' however strongly it presents the government as the protector! of the-little man. I What would happen if the Chinese communists do hot re lease Ward is a matter- which Washington has not yet faced. As a matter of fact, the possible effect on oriental minds : of the appeal to 30 nations to' help the great United States In the Ward case is not too happy to con template. The state department just wasn't able to find a better alternative. The idea of j block ading an almost totally ! inland regime with warships was con sidered entirelyi futile. If the communists were by some quirk of stubbornness to decide to keep Ward In; prison they would have American offi cials in a really tough spot Vice Finds "Customers" To the Editor: Reviewing the recent disturb ances in Salem over the morals charges I am moved to comment that trouble of this type stems not so much from lack of regu lations, or poor law enforce ment, as it does from the fact that there ' arc ' too many cus tomers. The gambling racket, whether it is the "one armed bandit" in the cellar, or the gilded casino of our neighboring state to the southeastward, could never flourish if so many of our citizens were not willing, nay, eager, to patronize it. The boot legger and thai dope pedler are in the same category, and neith er could operate successfully without a goodly number of cus tomers. Even the affable confi dence man would be out of a job if there were not so many people who still think that they can get something for nothing. Wherever there is a pent-up demand some enterprising indi vidual will engage to furnish a supply, no matter how great the risk, and in the long run the only sound solution for prob lems of this kind is the main tenance of a conscientious citi zenry. t E. Whealdon Rt. 2, Turner. GRIN AND "U5AR IT Literary Guidepost Bv Lichty By W. G. Regers' CHRISTINA ROSSETTI: A PORTRAIT WITH BACK GROUND, by Marya Zaturen ska (Macmiltan; $4): Apparently it will be a long time before the last word is said aboUt the Pre-Raphaelites, either as a movement, or school, or as individuals, j Identified today mostly with art, they were not In fact very good painters, thdugh their works have been popular. But as individuals they are juicy subjects for biography. Fcr Vic torian England, their sexual standards were : relaxed, i Their complex I little group constantly strained at the seams. J Their most dramatic personage, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, was a; ready made hero for a book, thanks to his good looks, i hist likableness, his touches of the ghoulish, his addiction to drugs, end his rela tions With Elizabeth Siddal, beautiful and probably j chaste, and Fanny Cornforth, beautiful and probably not. f ! The individual least helpful to the biographer is Dante Gab riel's younger sister Christina. She was too busy all her life being at poet and an . Anglican churchwoman to furnish the purple land the scarlet on which lurid biographies prosper. To be sure, two men loved her, John Collinson and Charles Bag ot Cayley, and she loved them, but she did not marry, and out of these innocent "affairs" came, not gossip and scandal, but some of England's finer poetry. Born in 1830, died in 1894, Christina led a grubby existence worried about money. Was un woldly in dress, friend of the poor, believer in individual im mortality, foe of vivisection, censor of her friends and their writings. Among her most mem orable poems are "Goblin Mar ket," "The Prince's : Progress" and the "Monna Innominata" sonnets. i Miss Zaturenska occasionally troubles the reader with unnec cessary repetition; if we learn once, we learn several times that Browning thought Dante Gab riel's poems were trifles, that Watts-Dun ton was obsessed with a desire to cultivate the literary great, that Alexander Macmillan was a "poetry-loving publisher." But despite unpromising ma terial, she sets Christina; firmly in the Pre-Raphaelite environ ment, and makes poet and per son one. ; HWIIH ll . ; : "When we threw eff the cruel Capitalistic shackles . . . de we get te keep the liberal penslen plana. Comrade Chairman T" A and P Grad Mac Defends Alma Mater By Henry McLemore : DAYTONA BEACH, Nov. 22 As to whether the government is prosecuting or persecuting the A & P grocery chain is some thing for the courts to decide, but as an alum nus of this chain I feel im pelled to say a few words in defense of my alma mater I won my varsity apron as a clerk for this chain at an ear ly age, and I never pass one of its stores without feeling as I imagine a Grot on or an Andover graduate ' does when he strolls by one of his old school build ings. I shall never forget the first customer I waited on. I was about fourteen then, and work ed Friday afternoons and Satur days. A woman came in and asked for a bottle of ketchup, which was on a shelf out of my reach- I picked up the device with which boxes of cereal and the like are lifted from top shelves, and grabbed a bottle of ketchup with it It held onto the ketchup just long enough to get It directly abov the woman's head and then dropped it. Either the customer's head was too hard, or the bottle was poor ly made, because the bottle broke on contact and the lady suddenly took on the appearance of a mammoth shrimp cocktail. I ex pected to be fired but I wasn't. But I drew a punishment from the manager. From then on out it would be my job on Saturday nights to dress the windows after closing, and closing time in those days was eleven o'clock. It didn't take me long to be , come the world's fastest and worst window dresser. At first I went to a great deal of pains, stacking up canned goods in fan cy pyramids, and decorating them with streamers of crepe paper ribbon. But that sort of window dres sing was tiresome and took a long time. Within three Saturday nights I had devised a window which, to this day, cannot be excelled for unattractiveness and minimum, of labor involved. It consisted of two or three dozen, brooms and mops propped up by stacks of boxes of corn flakes. Once in a while, just to show I wasn't in a rut, I would scatter bars of laundry soap about. When I was a senior in high school I still was working for the store, which meant I couldn't get out on Saturday nights. At the time this nearly broke my heart because I was madly in love with ! a girl, and I used to cry among my brooms, mops, and corn flakes at the thought of her be ing out at Saturday night dances with my deadly rival. He finally won her for his own, and I saw them a few years ago for the first time since they had been married. One look at her and I felt like dropping to my knees and thanking Heaven that the A & P had given me a job which disrupted my courtship. She had a face like a Saturday Special, and my former rival looked as downtrodden as a Henry Wallace supporter. It would be nice if I were able to make this a real Horatio Al ger tale, with me moving from junior clerk to manager, and finally fhangipg my name to Hartford and owning the whole shebang. But the truth is I was fired. I ate so much of the store's, goods for free that there came a day when my apron would no longer fit me, and I had to go- (Distributed by McNauht Syndicate. Inc.) 3331 Hospitals Use (Continued from page 1.) Grand Coulee was authorized. Later it was assigned to . the reclamation bureau. Now the dam is built, generators are go ing into the northside power house, works for the irrigation of a million acres of land are under construction; and Rufus Woods, who nursed the infant idea, now rejoices over the sta ture it has attained. Woods is a great traveler. Just how many trips he has made to Alaska, to Europe and other parts of the world must tax his own memory. He was ih Ger many before and then shortly after the war. He visited Rus sia. Such are his insatiable cur iosity and his engaging manner that he gets behind official fa cades to see just how the peo ple live in the countries he visits. He packs a well-filled notebook out of which comes material for articles he writes in his news paper when he isn't using his space to plug for power de velopment, the Wenatchee ap ple, mineral exploitation, etc. The Wenatchee World Is largely a product of the bound less energies of Rufus Woods. (Without blushing the World terms itself the greatest paper in the world for cities under 15,000). Wenatchee was a raw town scattered among the gran ite boulders along the Great Northern when he went there, over 40 years ago, a railway promoted townsite. Irrigation, good soil and sunshine encour aged planting of apple orchards whose produce became famous. Now production is more diversi fied but the apple still is king in the valley. Woods took the fledgling World, peddled it per sonally all over his part of the state, until it had the distinc tion of having more subscribers than the city had population. Woods is a republican but definitely nonpartisan when it comes to western development He sees in the progressive city of Wenatchee, in its great apple packing and storing plants, in Grand Coulee dam and irriga tion works the fulfillment of many dreams; but I doubt not he is still dreaming and still laboring to bring his dreams to pass. Hollywood on Parade More Blood i i Than Donated Marion county hospitals have been using slightly more blood than has been collected by; the current Red Cross bloodgfvinf program, Red Cross officials! said here Tuesday. j ij . Since citizens of this county began donating blood to j the bloodmobile last March a total of 999 pints was collected up to November 1. During that I time hospitals here used 1,001 pints, j The blood was donated, ai pint at a time, in 14 visits of the blood mobile to Salem, St. Paul, Wood burn ,and Silverton. Hospitals us ing the blood included Salem General and Salem Memorial, Oregon state hospital and the' state tuberculosis hospital and Sflver ton hospital. j Red! Cross workers recruit; don ors, process and deliver the blood to hospitals. Then it becomes available free of charge to - any one needing it "We need to build up a reserve blood bank for this area in! case of an emergency, said Susan Faherty, director of the local Red Cross. She said that American Legion's Capital post 9 here! soon would become the first post to recruit Its members enmasse for a visit of the blood unit in! Jan uary, j Next visit of the bloodmobile to Salem , will be December II and to Stayton on December; 2. HOLLYWOOD If George something - or - other happens to read this, Janet Leigh wants him to know she's mighty grateful for the photograph he took of her. It shows a wonderful, healthy, radiant, wholesome smile sur rounded by delicate, pretty fea tures and wind-tossed hair. One lock curls down carelessly over her forehead. Janet's wearing an Army jacket borrowed from the boy who was then her husband, against the freezing cold. The picture was taken by Geor ! ge, part owner of the Sugar Bowl Ski lodge, about 170 miles north of San Francisco, in the High Sierras. Janet regrets that she forgets his last name. Norma She arer saw the photo in the lodge album three years ago and said, "She has a fascinating face." Miss Shearer took the photo back to Hollywood and, as a result of it, Janet got into the movies. She has been starred in nine pictures. Including "Little Wom en" and the unreleased "Forsy the Saga" and "The Red Dan ube." Previously she hadn't a lick ' of dramatic experience unless you ; count twirling the baton to a na ; tional drum-majorette champion ship. That was at the Sciots' con vention In Sacramento when she was nine. Janet wishes she could i give the picture-taking George a million dollars. Her buddy, million-dollar- ca reer hasn't spoiled her. The no velty and excitement have worn off, and she has become more se , rious about her work. The movie ; camera has never scared her be- cause she's always doing some : thing in front of it But still " cameras bother her. Janet is 21, brown-haired, and chattery. Her father is "an in : surance underwriter, sort of," as Janet bubblingly explains it At ; the resort where she was discov ered, he was "the auditor you know, the business, sort of, part .of It.' Her mother was the re ceptionlist you know, the reser i vations." Janet was born Jeanette Helen ; Morrison. Van Johnson suggested ' her movie monicker. She grew up WU Grad Has Story in Newj ! World News j I Hopes and disappointments Ia Japanese student finds in Amer ica are related by Yvonne Mozee, 1945 graduate of Willamette! uni versity, in a recent article in "New World News," j The article, "In Search- Of America," describes a Japanese boy's experiences after arriving in this; country. A feature is the boy's meeting with Don Libby Of Albany, a former special inves tigator with the U. S. army Of occupation in Japan. Libby now is working with the Oxford Group of Moral Re-irma-ment which publishes the ?'NW World News" from its headquar ters in Los Angeles. j f Miss Mozee credits Dr. Egbert S. Oliver of Willamette univer sity's English department j with much of her literary training. J I Miller Firm Bid Low o I Move Trailer Houses I i i F. B. Miller and company, Sa lem. Tuesday submitted a low bid' of $4,500 for moving 24 trailer houses with sheds from Dorena dam to Detroit dam. ! I The bid was the lowest of eight submitted to army engineers Ih Portland. Government estimate for the Job was $3,843. j leader, she lives In an apartment here with her parents? f Her hobby Is "readingthe on ly thing I have time for." Does she ever wish for more time te relax? "No, I'm learning an the time. It's net an uhappy rush; it's a good rush; a fulfillment."; Thinking back over the last in credible three years, Janet saya: "It's all so exciting in the most wonderful way you could use that word." i i Better English! By D. C. Wliliama lv What Is wrong with this sentence? "Keep me posted; and I will be back In a few day.H f 2. What is the correct pronun ciation of "bouqueVT ? S. Which one of these words is misspelled? Receive, acheivl, perceive, bereave. 4. What does the word 'para gon" mean? I 3. What Is a word beginning with to that means "clojudedf not clear or translucent"? j ANSWERS S 1. Say, "Keep me infahnet, and I shall return in a; few days." 2. Pronounce boo-ka, as in too. a as in cake, accent second syllable. 3. Achieve. 4. A model or pattern; a type of ex cellence or perfection. "She was a paragon of chaste woman hood." 4. Turbid. i I iVf; 27 1 5 ! 1 Wi m Day. ' i Jewelers Silversmiths j 1 State at liberty I