- .... , ' . . ' jUTfcf Ddtsrasa, Sdaa, Oregon, Tussdcrr. Iuat IS, US3 -BACKWARD AREA' DEFINITELY INTERESTED! "No Favor Sway Vs, No Fear Shall Awe Fram First Statesman, March 21. 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY i CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher " - s Published every morning. Bulness (flea IIS 8. CemmerciaL Salem. Oregon. Telephone i-244L Entered at the postoffice at Salem, Oregon, as second class matter under aet of congress Maxell 3. 1S7& Insurance Investment Thai Oregon Voter devotes one Issue each year to the Ufa insurance business in Oregon, and a huge business it is, one that shows steady S-owtH. In five years life insurance owned by regonlans increased from $983 million to $1,607 1 million. Total number of policies out standing both in ordinary life and group life, Is 738,767. These figures do not mean that one person out of two residing in the state carries life insurance, because many have more than one policy; but if statistics were available they would! undoubtedly show that a large percent- age of! families in the state have Insurance pol icies ckrried on the lives of breadwinners, - One! fact we dug out of the tables in the ; Voter was tljiis: that the ratio of losses and claims paid Has not kept pace with the increase in insurahce volume. For example back in 1933 the total insurance in force was $603 million and cjaims and death losses paid were $15, 459,014; while in 1949 the total in force had risen (to $1,607 million but the losses and claims paid were only $17,423,264. .. The ex planation is that cashing in of policies was much j heavier in 1933 during the depression; also that the age group covered since then is younger. Eventually It will work out of course, deathi will increase the payout M Insurance is one way for a person to provide security for his family; and ; long . experience proves it Is the safest security. It Is not pri marily an investment though ofteri . it proves better than many so-called investments. But jit is, junder modern laws and practices, some thing; positive and dependable. Other invest ments may be more glamorous and some way pay off handsomely but insurance, Is, 'with ex tremely rare exceptions, there ' when other things fail. The steady increase in purchase of life insurance marks a high degree of social and economic stability. remaining countries plus estimates for these are expected to show about 325,000,000 people ; residing in the western hemisphere. Dr. Calvert Dedrick, director of theU. S. census, predictJ that the number of people in Latin America will exceed those in the USA. The former art increasing at the rate of three million a year, while the U. S. population is growing at the' rate of about two million a year. For one thing , Latin America doesn't restrict immigration as does the United States. There still is a lot of room in Brazil and Argentina for instance. The term Latin America is hardly an ac curate reference to Mexico, Central America and South America. While the white immigra-; tion originally was chiefly from Spain and Portugal the native Indian stock, especially in Mexico and Central America, is really pre dominant. There was considerable negro in- ; flux on the north and east coasts of South : America and both Brazil and Argentina have ; large colonies of Italians and Germans.' Latin America is just a basket term used for want of a better one. Anyway, the new world is increasing in pop ulation, though still (and fortunately) its ; population density is far less than that of Eur ope and Asia. 1 Bail on Fish Derbies? . i s I Congressman Russell Mack has introduced a bill 'to exempt fish derbies approved by the f overfnor of a state from being rated as lotteries and fo- subject to the postoffice department's ban on use of the mails to conduct or publicize lotteries. The department has ruled that catch ing a fish is "unquestionably a matter of skill" but the size offish caught is "a matter of chance.' (What then becomes of traditional fisherman's luck?) I Mack's worries seem a bit superfluous. " We have I never observed , any Mimunition of news paper publicity about fish derbies i because of PO department activity. In fact the; department has' liberalized its ' rulings on lotteries consid erably, in the past few years, as far as news paper reporting on them goes. At any rate its enforcement of the old regulation . was. notor iously spotty. But why tolerate these mass fish kills? The major purpose is to draw crowds to special resorts. If the fishermen are successful the eatchj they take away is by no means incon siderable. Sports fishermen are forever riding commercial fishermen about conservation, but few raise any objections to these fish, derbies, yet they stop hundreds of fertile salmon from making their way upstream to gravel bars for mating to continue the life cycle of the species. Communities that have fostered these fish der bies would do well to consider some other at traction for visitors and let the fish alone, lot tery or no lottery. Grants to Aged The April report on public welfare in Oregon ! shows that average payments for 23,585 aged recipients was $53.38. If payments for medical care from general assistance funds is added the average was $56.03. Either figure is well oyer the $50 mark set In the Dunne bill, though that figure was a minimum, not an average. Payments are graded according to need. Some aged persons have limited incomes and need only small sums by way of supplement. Others have nothing and may be I1L These are cared for though the cost may run much higher than $501 per month. Payments from the old age assistance funds for April amounted to $1,258,857, Multiply that by twelve, and you see what a large sum is required and Is being spent to give se curity to elderly who are in need. 1 June is dairy month, and a bit butter and egg man in California says that taxpayers could relieve themselves of the burden of supporting butter prices if every family would eat one extra slice of butter per day. That's an idea, like the one of adding an inch to each China man's shirttail to use up- the cotton surplus. And butter is good food, the most-perfect fat for the human being to consume. Alas though, "fat" Is the wrong word. That is why so many refrain from taking even an ordinary pat of butter. If the butter people could popularize plumpness in females their problem would be quickly solved. Gov. Langlie has called the Washington legislature into special session to think up ways to get more taxes to balance the state budget, already $15,000,000 In the red. The governor ascribed the deficit, which may amount to $40,000,000 by the biennium's end, to the heavy costs of public welfare which the voters brought on themselves when they voted for a special pension bill. The Tacoma Ledger calls this a "red ink session.' It will be a red hot session before the legislators find a way to balance the budget If It succeeds will not Governor Lang-: lie please pass the formula on to Washington, D. C? Hemisphere Census ! N Most of the countries of the western hemis phere are taking a head count tils year. Ar- Eentina Is skipping, Uruguay will take a census i 1951 and Cuba In 1953. "The count In the The Swiss have dropped virtually all price; controls. Swiss chocolate is out from under government controls, just when the demand will zoom as mountain-climbers unlimber to scale the Alps. Trygve Lie Heard Same Old Demands from Russians on His Recent Journey to Moscow Lebanon police force had its hands full over week end I . , ' first of all the entire three-man night force turned in their badges over a disagreement . . . then police there jailed Oscav vT" 1 . mm rtapoieon iuunpagne, ti, on a cnarge ox being . mm:m mraxicaiea ... iaie oamraay night a man walked into the station and asked to sleep there .. . . he gave his name as Willie Stone wall Jackson. ' A report from Sweet Home . say$ the town saw its first labor picket last week and is attributing it to the city's growth . . . Sweet Home won't reach the big city problem stage, though, until: (1) It d ciderto try one-way streets. (2) Its mavor w W V 97 - gets in a big argument with the city council and resigns. (3) One of its citizens raises proposal of a war memorial building ii)ltis chosen as the site of the American Legion state convention, (5) A group of citizens protest gambling machines and (6) The town moves tq switch to the manager and parking meter form of city government. Mac Dreams His Shoes Are Stolen By Henry MeLemor LONDON, England, June 12 There are many London customs which fill me with delight, and which I am only too happy to observe. I love to plop a bowler hat on my head ' and swing along the streets looking exactly - like an Ameri can who Is more accustomed to wearing a cap. I adore can tering along Rotten Row on chestnut, taking 8 Ht Jofttoh AlaAn WASHINGTON, June 12-This reporter can think of no better way to begin a summary of a long inveaugauon In Europe, than to put in print what Trygve Lie left out The ' Secretary Gen eral ot the Un ited: Nations made the long journey to Mos cow, after all, to find a way to end the cold war, Yet the r unhappy L 1 eS JonrpJi AUn j confidential re---jrr" , port to the govcrments in Lon don and Paris, unlike his report to the public, was in fact a re port of worse than failure. To dispose first of what Is least essential, but was much era (hashed by Lie, he was given at loscow a super - special per formance of the Stalin's ancient charade as an amiable, peace loving old party. The general Idea conveyed was that only ben evolent Uncle Joe was holding In check the fire-eaters of the Po litburo. It was more than hinted. In fact, that the other Soviet leaders would behave In a much more violent manner if Stalin were not there to stop them. This Is a familiar comedy, which the British leaders, like the American leaders, have often peenj played before. It meant nothing during the war and means nothing now. It is more significant indeed that Lie found Stalin in excellent health. II this la so, we cannot even hope for Soviet policy to be disrupted or diverted during the next years by an internal struggle for suc cession. . ! Second, the men of the Krem lin ' naturally assured Lie that once' Chinese communists had replaced the nationalists on the U. N. security council, the Soviet Union and her satellites would again participate fully in U. N. affairs. This formed the basis of the only concrete recommenda tion in Lie's recent public report, whic was otherwise a mere plan for a gigantic game of "Let's pre tend.' i Vij ; ; Even Lie Is not so foolish, how ever,! as to have much faith in stopping the cold war by wishing it away. He did not spend all his . time in Moscow listening to Sta lin's protestation of lenevolence and talking about "making the United Nations work." In fact, he asked Stalin and the other members of the Politburo he was permitted to meet, whether there was any practical, serious world settlement which they would agree to. - The reply, it can now be sta ted authoritatively, was to con front Lie with most of the same old demands long ago made fa miliar by Molotov and Vishinsky at many International conferen ces, j ; Significantly, ' particular em-, phasis was placed on the Soviet demand for a German settle ment, that were last put forward at the Paris conference to end the Berlin blockade. The de tails of the demands, made at Paris --the establishment of a "democratic (L e. Communist-' controlled) government, and so on - - need not be set down here. It Is enough to say that there was just one meaning In the' Paris demands, and in the less precise demands made to Lie. The meaning ot these demands a high-spirited time out now and then to fall off. It thrills me to row on the Ser pentine, furl my own umbrella, book a shooting lodge, and at tend a session at Old Bailey's. But I must admit that there are several London customs which bring me great unhappi ness, and which I am doing my best not to observe. Chief among these native rit uals is the business of having tea, especially high tea, at about five in the afternoon. As all the world knows, an Englishman would rather be caught cheating at cards, or firing into a gold fish bowl with a double-barreled Purdey shotgun, than not be seated at a tea table between the hours of four and five in the afternoon. And they consider anyone not thus seated as a heathen who wears rings in his nose and binds his feet This stuffing of oneself late In the afternoon throws the Ameri can stomach completely off schedule, the American stomach being accustomed to being taken to the dinner table around seven in the evening, ready and rarin' to go. Upholstered by innumerable cups of tea and all sorts of sand wiches and pastries, the Ameri can visitor to London finds him- is that the Kremlin win only be satisfied with concessions per mitting the early capture of Ger many by the Soviet Union. The capture of Germany, of course, would In turn lead to the even tual Russian capture of all of western Europe. In short what the Kremlin insists upon in Eu- '" GRIN AND BEAR IT jniuutii, sue hi ic iuuvwcu uj infinitely more terrible conse quences. This fact must be weighed, furthermore, with the complementary fact of the Soviet drive for Asia. ' This brief, second-hand, but authoritative summary of what Lie told the Paris and London governments is worth setting down for just one reason. As Secretary General of the United Nations Lie has, after alL been decidedly sympathetic to the So viets. He went to Moscow at the height of a Kremlin "peace of fensive, with every communist party and communist front in Europe bellowing for "peace" day and night If the Kremlin Inten ded to make proposals for an honorable and practical world settlement to any one at all. Lie' should have been that man. Instead, Soviet imperialism proved to be as strong as ever, and piecemeal surrender was suggested as the right way for the western world to make peace with Moscow. The U. N. Secre tary General, who 4ioes not like to put hard facts in blunt langu age, will no doubt dislike and may probably deny this descrip tion of his experience. But if Lie's statements In Paris and Iiondon are to be trusted, the bleak truth remains. After Lie's Journey, we know, better than ever, exactly where we stand. (CoprrisM. USO. Mew York Herald TtUksm lac) self completely unable to eat at his accustomed hour. He shies away from meat and potatoes and Brussels sprouts and broiled halibut, and says to himself that the tea he had will hold him until breakfast This is not true, just; about the time all the restaurants are closing, and only the fish and chip dens are open, he gets word from the vicinity of his belt line that it is chow time. But there Is no chow to be had unless he has been foresighted enough to lay in a supply of biscuits, tof fees, crumpets and kippers. And even these delicacies, as fine as they are, are not noted for their tick-to-the-rib qualities. Another custom, which Is not limited to London, but is preva lant all over Europe, is that of placing one's shoes outside one's bedroom door before retiring, so that "boots" can pick them up and shine them during the night I have followed this custom for years, but I must make my self stop, else I'll go crazy with worry and lack of sleep. Maybe It's a throwback to the days when I didn't have but one pair of shoes, and would have had to go barefooted If anything happened to them, but whatever it is, I worry all night for fear they'll be stolen. About five er six times a night I dream someone is making off with my shoes. This wakes me up, and nothing will satisfy me but a trip to the door. Matter of fact, looking out the door doesn't help much, because If they aren't there I don't know whether they've been stolen or whether "boots has them. So I have to call "boots,' with the result that "boots' and I are awake practic ally all night My prowling around always wakes up Jean, and she begs me to please get into the habit of sleeping in my shoes. Says she knows it doesn't look very ele gant, but the devil with the ele gancy If it will let her sleep. The fact that not more than one pair of shoes are stolen from in front of hotel doors In Eng land during a year, gives me no peace of mind. So, starting tonight, here Is one man sure to die with his ' boots on. (Dlttrtbuted by McNaught Syndicate Inc.) About Your . . Newspaper . by Lichty "N fox tail on it . . . fenders Intact ... bo fancy exhaust pipes . , I should think ren'd be ashamed te ask U use the family carl , Chapter It THE COMICS By Wendell Webb Comics long ago came to be a vital part of a daily newspaper, and they remain so even if some of the strips can hardly be re garded as comical. How does your newspaper ob tain Its comics? There are scores of syndi cates, large and small, which have comics for sale. Your enwspaper takes Ita choice, al though at times that choice is limited by territorial rights some other newspaper might already have purchased. It is also limited by cost no newspaper In the world can buy all the comics that are available. Nor could It find space for all of them. Some newspapers buy from one syndicate. Others take the best comics from several syndi cates. Most syndicates are in the east v The original drawing of a com ic strip artist first is made Into an engraving at the syndicate headquarters. It would be pos sible for every newspaper to be sent an engraving of each comic strip, but the cost would be pro hibitive. Metal is expensive and the postage to mail it would be sky-high. So, when an engraving Is made of a comic, the syndicate makes hundreds of mats from the one engraving. The mats comprise heavy cardboard placed en the engraving and pus under tremendous pres sure. The mat, when It Is lift ed off the engraving after such pressure, has all the impres- i Vern Gilmore, city playground director, says his staff try ing to figure a way to include square dance classes in play ground program this summer . . . big demand for old-time swingeroos from city's adults . . . but no funds provided by city for such activity . . . one tentative plan, says Gilmore, is to use tennis courts at Olinger and Leslie parks and at west Salem school for the classes . . . with a caller and everything ... if so, this would be first time done here . . . square-dancing as part of the city play programs owly moving west from mid west (not vice versa) ... hit Salt Lake City, Utah, last summer. If ready, Gilmore says he will use Bush pasture play area this summer for picnics ... if possible may build ball diamond on it. - While their bosses are throtuiny conventions all over , the land this summer the Oregon State Janitors' association slated convention in Klamath Falls this month ... list of their discussion items does not include such boring prob temi as ine wetjare siaie, rise ana jau oj me American dollar, production costs, business regulations and industrial ; economics . . . janitors' big problems are things like gum on the floor, over-full waste baskets, faded lawns, leaky radi ators, stuck doors, employes .who return 10 minutes after the building is closed for something they forgot, lipstick smudges on the telephones, faulty elevators and open win dows. , , m a m . " . Local police halted a driver other day with void license plates . . . cited man to appear in court on the 13th of month . . . "No," says the driver, "not the 13th. I've had enough bad luck. No money, no job, wife expecting, wrecked car, evicted from house. Better make it the 12th or 14th." The Safety Valve ABOLISH ZONING THEN? To the Editor: In regards your comments on my last letter published by you in Saturday's Statesman, most cities did grow in the way that "just comes naturally. Picture our fair city today if the idea expounded by you had been followed from the first in ception of zoning in the city. All original residential district would still be residential, and business would be confined to the original business district With each expansion of the city; If there ever were an expansion; a new business district would have to be included in it, making a very peculiar and inconvenient arrangement of the city. It is common gossip there is a faction who wish to restrict the growth of Salem except in , a manner which will make it a city beautiful as a setting for our state capitoL We all like a beau tiful city and are proud of the state capitol, but though beauty Is a feast for the eyes it is in- Ions and Indentations from the engraving Itself. Each newspaper using that particular comic then is sent one of the mats. When the newspa per receives the mat, the mat Is put Into a fiat form and hot. lead poured over it When the lead hardens, it then is in the comparative form as the origin al engraving and can be used to print from. The mats are Inex pensive to make and light to - mail. deed a poor nourishment for the body. . Forty some thousand of us are financially interested in Salem and its growth. The state can not and is not expected to sup port us. I for one would like to see Salem grow in the way that comes naturally. Loyd B. McCain 985 Academy St Better English By D. C. Williaa 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "He claimed that he knew nothing of the theft." 2. What is the correct pronun ciation of "amphitheater"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Niggerd, nickelod eon, nicotine, Nipponese. 4. What does the word fim plicit" mean? ' 5. What is a word beginning with Imp that means Incapable of being entered or passed hrough"? ANSWERS -1. Say, "He declared (stated or maintained) that he knew noth ing of the theft" 2. Pronounce am-fi-the-a-ter, principal accent on either first syllable or the Niggard. 4. Unreserved; unques- tioning: complete. "He demanded Implicit obedience." 6. Impene trable. , . . An amateur owning a radio sta tion must have both an operator's and a station license, but he must have an operator's license before he can obtain one for his station. Salem Cherry land IaX LrJ LI OF LT UU THURSPAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY State Fairgrounds SEAT SALE AT 390 State Dial 4-2223 lip iilV'i It'iZt it i" 1 Ai I- . ffiv-J