r l. ..? t.vMr-3 w't ' 1"M Li 1 . I -t. - lThm tortmanJ SalemV Orsw 'is . CHARr.cn a RPR AGUE. Editor and Publisher J j I Catered at the posUfflce at Salem. Oreccn. a second cUm matter wider act ef congress March S. lilt. Publlahed eTtry morning. Buataeaa efHca Hi 8j A Patriotic Thanksgiving Our unique American Thanksgiving day is a patriotic holiday second only to the Fourth of July. But it is not an occasion for spread-eagle oratory and flag-waving; rather it is a day set aside for humble stock-taking of our blessings with due consideration from whence cometh our good fortune. The originators and there were several of this tradition sought to arouse; grati tude, not just for 'material abundance, but for America and what it stands for, for the hope of liberty it held out to all the -world. j j John Adams in 1765 expressed this thought when he. said, "1 always consider the settlement of America with reverence and wonder, !s; the opening of the grand scheme and design in Pro evidence for the illumination and emancipation of the slavish part of mankind all over ; the arth." : .'President Washington proclaimed Thursday, Nov. 20, 1789, as a special day for Americans to give thanks for having at last and firmer union. Sarah Hale, editor of uodey s Lady's Book who merits credit for Lincolnf s pro clamation of the first national Thanksgiving day - during the civil war, wrote in 1859, "Wjiuld it not be a renewed pledge of love and loyalty to the Constitution of the United States if every aiate would join in Union Thanksgiving pn the 24th of November?" 1 ; Thanksgiving day is thus closely associated with the growth of patriotism in America a phenomenon Merle Eugene Curti examines in his excellent objective study. The Roots of American Tvivaltv" Columbia Press. 19481. Pul- 1 l(ur nr-iro-winnpr Curti. whose daughter of the American revolution and whose paternal ancestry is Swiss, is an eminent histo rian who believed a knowledge of the sources and nature of American patriotism may be an id to more enlightened citizenship. i ; And on this Thanksgiving day when Amer icans have more to be thankful for thin any other nation while still such modern expres sions of insecurity as the loyalty oath plague us it may be appropriate to consider what pat riotism means. . V ' ; .The seeds of American patriotism, generated in the old countries of Europe, were the 'colon lsts' faith and hopes of a new country where life promised some day to be better, Curti says. The Puritans were firmly convinced that the hand of God had guided this country from the start. A fundamental dogma in early America and today was that this country was destined to be great, wealthy, powerful nation, light of liber ty and Elysium of the common man. j But patriotism was first provincial and loyal ty to the embryo nation grew slowly. General Washington wrote in 1778, "I know the Idea of Patriotism exists, and I know it has done much In the present Contest ..." but he often de plored the weakness of national sentiment. Jef ferson and Paine campaigned vehemently i for loyalty to the collective whole. jj ' The Constitution, Curti points out, was a nec essary instrument in the process by which Amer icans did become a nation which they could love and to which they could be loyal. In due time It became an emotionally charged symbol of national unity. 1 ' There were other symbols and other factors. Devotion to native soil, the vastness and beauty ''Of our geography, were powerful forces. Heroes, from the spiritual titans of early New England to later generals and presidents were an essen tial element. The melting-pot idea a concept ef a new and superior race of people made up U.S. Seeks 1910 Europe Trade Status . a . ! . I L a. i - -- 1 SLii - m At. if i or joaen ana Stewart aui WASHINGTON, Nov. 23 I Since Secretary of State Dean Acheson and ECA Chief Paul Hoffman re-, turned from their respective, , trips to Eur ooe. it has be- come lncreas- ' ,'lngly clear that I icy in Europe ! revolves about lone magi ; word. Th 'word is finte- ! to Inquire what this word really ' means to Acheson, Hoffman and ' th other American policy-makers. A groper through the fog which more ana more t obscures American for eign policy soon discovers - that "integration is the wrong word. Tq inte grate, accord ing to thdic tionary, means "to unite or be come united so Menart Akop j morc ceu or perfect whole," which would suggest that this, country is try ing to create a United States of fXtrope overnight. In fact, what Acheson and 'Hoffman are trying to promote is nothing of the sort. The real objective, as one of the authors of the Integration project put it, is "to get back to H10 by 1932." What the United States wants is Europe whose internal trad Ung relationships are as close as possible to those which existed rbefore the first World War. i In brief, it Is now the major aim of American policy in Eur ope to eliminate currency con trols and export and Import re strictions. Ultimately what is wanted is a real economic union, with tariffs eliminated and a -W4 1 1 . , I IP w Yh'tiraAry. NoTemBor "21. 7949 ATo favor Stoayi Us. po Tear Shall Awm rroosTlrst SUtesnMA. Hint ZS. 1U1 IE STATESMAN PU0LISHINC COMPANY Ccmmerclal. Salem, of the best elements of the Old World j took hold. ; M The eagle, borrowed from the Romans, be came a symbol, although Ben Franklin (with a wink, no doubt) argued that "in truth, the Tur key is, in comparison, a much more respectable bird, and withal a true original native of Amer- ica." Old Glory, The Star-Spangled Banner, the Liberty Bell and Un'cle Sam won the affections arid loyalty of the people gradually. I Noah Webster promoted American English; Theodore Roosevelt fostered theidea of organic nationalism; later years brought conflicting loy alties: anarchists like Emma Goldman, human itarians like, John Dewey, individualists like Thorstein Veblen, America Fijsters, the Ku Klux Klan, the Know-Nothing and the One Worlders. j j - That, through the years and through the test ings,: American patriotism could survive despite and be enriched by such apparently incompat ible concepts of loyalty is perhaps one of the characteristics of our democracy we can be most thankful for. On this Day of Thanksgiving, it is well to remember tfyat, as Curti concludes his book: j i j 1 "Conflicting conceptions of patriotism will ' continue to flourish. The older, j humanitarian, individualistic and liberty-loving patriotism is tenacious and it seems unlikely that it Will in the near future be supplanted by the more in tegral, exclusive and chauvinistic! type." But he asks and it is a question to consider thought fully "What comfort and assurance will there b for those who hold that the nation can sur vive in an interdependent world only through the development of a wider patriotism, a loyal ty to many kind in any and every nation?" achievedia new j mother iwas a i Firemen's Ball ' Salem firemen are staging a the recently renovated Crystal have ben working hard to make this ) event a success and the advance ticket! sale insures a good crowd. Proceeds go to help finance the state convention association which June. , South Dakota's legislature hai tried to put a crimp in carpetbag farming. An out-of-state person who leases land in the state for farming must get a license and pay the county 2 per cent of his gross income. It is aimed at the get-rich-quick operators who see a chance for a cleanup on a rising grain market. They take everything out and put nothing back in the land and pre viously could escape local taxes by selling' their grain and moving equipment out right after har vestand maybe they didn't own any equip ment, 1 ? Fraternity alumni sounded offj at the U. of O. homecoming last week end over the university's program which will require freshmen to live in dormitories no moving out to fjjat houses when pledged. Some temperate voices were heard however and no adverse, action Iwas' taken. The "Greeks" will have to go along with the univer sity regulation. They'll survive even j if they have no freshmen to do the house chores. I It's about time for reporters to write the clos ing sentence: "And so we leave Vice President and Mrs. Barkley honeymooning at Sea Island, Ga." The Russians claim to have invented the para chute, back in 191 1. They should guess again. Jacques Garnerin made a successful drop from a balloon by parachute in 1797J central bank ihA System and a common curreficyi created. But all concerned agree that for the foreseeable future; this real "in tegration'' is ho i mare than a dis&nt dream.! : This apparertly rather modest but in fact enormously difficult project! for turning the clock back to happier days is envisag ed as taking folace in a series of stages. In I the first stage, there would be ' three separate groups of "integrated" states France and Italy, -Belgium, Hol land and Luxembourg, and the three : Scandinavian countries. The first fivej countries would then be Joined, to form "Frita lux." The Scandinavians would therr probably be brought into Fritalux. And! fiialiy, Western Germany would be added, to make one i big, relatively free trading area in Western Europe. Britain (to the great relief of the British leaders) is not being pressed to become an ac tive participant in? this Acheson ,Hoffman project. But while they were in Eurdpe Acheson ; and Hoffman politely but firmly urged British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin and Chancellor of the Exchequer j Sir Stafford Cripps to givei the scheme "en couragement and I support." Be vin and Cripps rather reluctant ly agreed. Thejchief British con tribution is expected to be firm military and political commit ments jj to France, to balance French fears Of a revived Ger many.! ; i " i H i i ! in i ' f I' ' Since this project' now clearly has first priority. In American foreign policy;' it ! ia deeply im portant to ask! not only what it is expected to accomplish but Also what it is not expected to accomplish. Its authors believe that in the long rUn the very long run integration'' will ' strengthen ( the economies of Western Europe, and make the continent less dependent on the United Ststes.1 A; more immediately- important political objec tive is to tie the rapidly reviv ing western uerman economy i'C ' v jh ; . v i, Oregon. Telephana 2-Z44L ball tonight, at Gardens. They of fire chiefs' is scheduled : and firemen's or Salem next firmly into that i of the conti nent, and thus prevent Germany from turning again against the west. w . , ; These are highly commendable aims. But it is Inecessary to ex amine the otheJ side of the coin. In Europe, two facts stand out like large, sorej sinister thumbs. The first is the! imminent threat of British financial collapse, which has by j no means been removed by devaluation of the Kund, and which would surely followed by a general eco nomic collapse jail over the con tinent. . proTeV. ?h.nnTfu;ohn. scheme were whole-heartedly ac cepted and put into operation immediately, nd appreciable eco nomic benefits would accrue for a number of years. Thus the pro ject will NOT 4eai With a situa tion which threatens to knock the underpinings right out from under American foreign policy. The second fact which stands out in Europe i is that Western Europe is still virtually defense less in the fae of the Soviet Union's massive rearmament ef fort. Again, the1 integration pro ject will NOTj affect the reel balance of military power, which is rapidly swinging in favor of the Soviet Union. In one of ichekov's minor short stories there appears the character of a Russian land owner who planned vast im provements on his i property, while the roof of his house was falling about jhis head. Free trade on the continent, leading ultimately to aj real continental economic and political union, would certainly be a i vast im provement, and a thoroughly worthy ultima tie aim of Ameri can 'policy. But there is a per fectly obvious danger that "in tegration" will jbe accepted as a magical and marvellously inex pensive substitute tor a real pol icy, capable of preventing the non-communist! world from cav ing in, like the Russian landown er's roof. ; St. IMS. J Tribune Inc.) 3b hfef -1 r 111 i T ; ! ,i . :: i : f I . i CRT 0330000 RJCD0DOES (Continued from page 1.) socialized medicine so we can get free toupes and false teeth. We have more leisure time than any other industrial nation which we use in driving like mad to get some place where we have no real business. We are the richest nation on earth, yet we are worried stiff lest we have a depression. We are the most powerful na tion on earth, but frightened over the Russian bogey without and the communist infiltration within. Yes, Americans are dissatis fied, nervous, intemperate: Burn ing up their energies often in useless projects. So-o-o, the first they ought to do when they go to church today or next Sunday is to crave fore giveness of the Almighty, fore giveness for they- selfishness, their avarice, their self-pride and arrogance, their Phariseeism And then, with proper humility thank the Lord for all the bless ings they as Americans enjoy. Better English BrlXC. Williams 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "It is very handy to live near the city." 2. What is the correct pronun ciation of "abyss"? 3. Which one of these words is mispelled? Peninsula, pinnacle, parashute, prairie. 4. What does the word "buoy-' ant" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with exc that means "abnormal growth or increase"? ANSWERS 1. It is better to say, "It is very convenient to live near the city." 2. Pronounce a-bis, a unstressed, ias in it, accent second syllable. . Parachute. 4. Light-hearted. "His cheeks are rosy, his steps buoyant." 9. Excrescence. GRIN AND BEAR "One tiling to be thankful for U get OUT eg f fPK The Safety Valve ! i REAPING THE WHIRLWIND To the editor: i i . So now the various states are considering enacting laws mak ing it a most serious offense to commit "in the hews" j crimes against children, crimes against which even the most primitive savages would need no legisla tion. The old adage of "reaping the whirlwind" is being realized by our "sexy" sowing of the wind. Look on most any news stand, or pick up one of the numerous cheap editions of books with sensational titles and open it at random, and ten chances to one you will find racy enough material to satisfy the most lust ful mind. We thrdw every pos sible inducement for wrong con duct Into the paths! of our youths (and older "youths") and then wonder what is happening. The overplaying of sex on the screen certainly is not without; effect, either. But, cheer jup: When our gun-toting kids exchange the toy pistol for real ones, there should be even more excitement than now. j . ; 1 Si J. Harms ! 379 N. Cottage Salem, Ore. COL. CHURCH SCOLDS PLAN FOE CAPITOL GROUP To The Editor: j The starry-eyed, planners seem to have forgotten that they are supposed to be planning! a state capitol; not a park. The capitol should be the state's business headquarters not merely something j to be gazed at from afar. It should be acces sible and compact for the bene fit of those who have business there and have to, pay for it in taxes, but there is no chance tor this now as the self-declared ex perts have already scattered it all over 40 acres so that anyone having business in more than one state department will have to take a day off, and walk a mile or two hither and yon, hunting for the place he wants. There is already ja closed area six blocks long running east and west, and the present plan is to make another of the same size running north and south. With these and the proposed one-way street system it will be a tor tuous feat to get from one side IT By Lichty yen never have to Stand in Bne mevie. 1 ' JTS alc re&r, evrt suspecr ) j fHffifW cor of town to the other in any di rection. Of course the new plan to split Summer street into two narrow streets with a mall be tween them is hopefully design- ed to prevent people west of Summer street from getting to the big new retail center on Capitol between Center and Union. I don't believe it will work. Unaesthetic people have sug gested consideration of parking needs, but this seems to crassly! business-like for the planners,! who envision only far-flung vistas with marble sepulchers a furlong apart on each side. The pracUcal thing is to pave those "malls" and use them for park ing, which would make it un necessary for the state board of control to buy several high-! priced blocks somewhere over yonder for that purpose, as is now proposed. j A. M. CHURCH ! Hollywood on Parade t- By Gene Handsaker HOLLYWOOD Bing Crosby's next, "Top o the Morning," is a lightly tripping fantasy until it stumbles over its whimsy and gets serious. Crosby fans who've been waiting for a really corking Crosby movie will have to wait a while longer. Bing plays an American insurance-company investigator who goes to Ireland to recover the sto len Blarney Stone. Posing as an oil painter near Blarney Castle, he's presently locked up as a suspect himself. The incompetent local cop, Barry Fitzgerald, and his assistant, Hume Cronyn, re lease Bing because he sings pret tily and is Irish, too. Still sleuthing about, Bing falls in love with Barry's beautiful daughter, Anna Blyth. She falls for Bing because he fulfills a lo cal soothsayer's predictions re garding Ann's lover: The lining of his coat is green. His voice comes from strange places (a dic tating machine), etc. But the Blarney Stone's ab sence from the ledge where tour ists kiss it is visiting Strang mis fortunes upon the countryside. Finally, in some hard-to-follow runnings about a dark forest, the thief is exposed. He seems more pitiable than despicable. The Groaner's singing is. as us. ual, the best thing about his pic ture though his material is rou tine. Next is the sensitive beauty of Miss Blyth, whose toothy smile is one of the prettiest on the screen. Fitzgerald nabs some scenes and sympathetic laughs as the bungling cop. A village dance is lively. Unfortunately, that's more than you can say for the last part of the scrips. And some of the brogue is unintelligible. : "Slattery's Hurricane" is a pretty exciting movie about navy Yankee Cafe' 319 North Comml Thanksgiving special onniin Baked Chlclcen Roost Duck Roost Turkey Friod Chicken Fried Rabbit NOT DINNER OVER Trinuninas with very order 12 other items to pick from. Lou & Shorty Proof of Bird 'Literary Is in Eating, Not Carving By Deary MeLemere DAYTONA BEACH, Fla, Nov. 23 This is written for men who dont know how to carve a turkey but who will have to make a stab at It on this Thanksgiving day. The message comes from the heart because it is written by a man whose car ving ability is limited to carv ing his name or initials on pub lic monuments. A man who can't stand at the end of a table and slice a turkey after the approved fashion is considered a pariah by society. He is ranked right along with railroad station "mashers" and blackguards who cheat at par ches! ' Why society takes this attitude has long baffled roe, and many is the hour I have spent locked in my study trying to figure out the reason for it- It cant be be cause turkey carving is a sign of success for you can search "Who's Who" or "Burke's Peer age" without finding the name of a man who is known simply as a great carver. Carvers in stone and wood, yes, but that's a dif ferent thing. The world would never have heard of Michelan gelo if the Italian had confined his carving to turkeys or ducks and never dabbled in marble. Neither can it be because carving a turkey is a sign of a complete gentleman. I doubt if there is anyone reading this who couldn't name a fine carver who couldn't be trusted with a coun terfeit bilL Some of the most thorough-going rascals of my acquaintance' can separate the wings from the withers of a tur key with consummate ease, and slice off portions so thin they could be stand-ins for tissue paper. But there is no denying that the world in general feels non carvers are failures in life. Every time I am forced to try to carve a fowl of any kind in the pres ence of my mother she looks as grief-stricken as if she had just received word that the governor had refused a reprieve and that I was off for the gallows. I wish I had a penny for every time she has told me that I was the only male member of the family on either side who wasn't a beautiful carver. She imply will not appreciate the fact that I have saved upwards of 543 precious hours by not knowing the proper stance and swing when confronted by roasted birds from which the feathers have been removed. I urge all men who can't carve not to be ashamed of it. So many are, you know. They have let the world get them down. What they should do is look down on men who have wasted so much time and energy perfecting a fairly useless art A great carver is no more necessary to the world than a great unicyclist, say, or a man who can blow 103 smoke rings with one puff of a cigar. All right to have around, to be sure, but not really vital. The proof of the turkey is in the eating, not the carving. (Distributed by McNaught Syndicate. lac.) fliers who hunt down hurricanes at sea so Florida coastal residents can be forewarned. Richard Wid mark, a nice guy in "Down to the Sea in Ships," is a heel again. He has his own private hurricane of emotion with Linda Darnell as the storm center. Unfortunately, she is married to a navy hurri cane hunter, John Russell. Patiently standing by is Ver onica Lake, who loves Widmark though he treats ber meanly. I'd like to pick a quarrel with the scripters in Miss Lake's case. The story, at one point, lands her in the hospital. You wonder why. Turns out she's a dope addict. though the studio didn't want to say so because "the navy lent a lot of support in making the pic ture." So you're given a flash of an unintelligible medical-diagnosis card and left guessing. There's a lot of hair-raising flying through storms, though and enough emotional conflict to keep you interested. iiiraM3aiLBacBKSKB&ne 1 ybfl ' Days t : S I (C itoShP 'fi Ml I Jewelers Silversmiths 3 41 Guidepost JOHN i RUSKIN: THE ! POR TRAIT OF A PROPIOrrfby: Peter Quennell (Viking; $4-75) ' Ruskin was a genius. We Aal-; Ixe it when we read som4 : of his books about art, and it has been proclaimed eagerly by nutty competent critics. Anyway! he said so himself. And the ques tion about geniuses which arous es universal interest is, What have they got that we haven't?1 From ) the outside looking in, from the seat in the audience looking j up, from the sidewalk watching the parade, we; regard ; the genius, crowned, be medalled and deafened by cheers, as the lucklestj man in the world. But the price he pays, whether He Is Van Gogh, Gauguin, Strindoerg, Poe, Whitman, Proust or Ruikih, Is often infinitely great, and: what hefs got that we haterf't is i something we wouldn't for the world "have. f ? In Ruskin's case, that was fiey-' er made so clear as in this bibg- i raphy which probes to Unc om-: fortable I depths the writerfs dora-; plex, baffled and thwarted ciar-: acter. Aside from his oVerrsU-1 . mation of Pre-Raphaelites fahd; under -estimation of Whistler paid, ! Mviaif sssa yai kiai uudlvl fevIT JjP I tion of the artist's role, he Was a man who, figuratively, neverf left his parents' home, and, literally,! never established a home of his : own. j j M i His father and mother: ta tight him the facta of life but no( the meaning. His mother accomban-i led him to Oxford; father j and i mother accompanied hint Hon,' trips abroad; and whea tffie Gray nuirried him, she found she, had ma rried all three, and! in deed all three went along on the honeymoon. John Ruskiri want ed it that way. Effie did foot,' and years after she. had Iefthim for Mirtais, she went to Ros La Touche'4 mother with a warding which opened that good wonjian's eyes, and must open our tfiser eyes still wider. i j I The repeated, and shoctng, failures in his personal life Were the reverse of the character which could write so evocatively of some of this world's dearest treasures. Quoting Jowettj : as charging that Ruskin j "never rubbed his mind against others,: Quennell finds in "the absence of this sjalutary friction" Sthe plana tion for "the majority! of Ruskin's! Intellectual shortcom ings, and not a few of his tnis-! fortunes! in the sphere of lova and friendship. Salvation Army leutenant to; I j Move to Seattle Lt- Barbara Somervell, statJfched with the Salem Salvation! Army for the past year, has received orders to report to Seattli a; an assistant in SA headquarters there, it was announced Wednesday f CapL R. B. Lesher, Salem ad jutant, said no replacement has been assigned. Miss Somervell Will deliver farewell message Su iday to the junior group at 6 p.m. and to the adult at 7:30 pjn. Younji GOP Cihl Meeting Friday A special meeting of Mlrlon County Young Republican club to select delegates and consider poli cies for the coming state conven tion wllli be at 7:30 p.m. Friday In the courthouse. President jSara Hall announced Wednesday. 1; The state , conclave will ;bel De cember 9 to 11 at West Lfnfli Christian Scientist Service Today! A special Thanksgiving : setvic will be held by the First ChUrch of Christ,j Scientist, in the church at Liberty and Chemeketa stitets at 11 a.m. today. j A nursery for children lis pro vided during service. The service is public. I iif, f i Estate Said Bids are now being re-; ceived for real property M 1347 Fir st. Phono 34134 for eMails. l ' Pioneer Trust Co 1, Adm. D. B. N. Estate ef Era-. ma H. Boeklla. ee'd. Ple eer Tnast Bldf Salein. Oregon. i n hi i