4-Th T.i! -iiigu' Sclan Oregon,' Tuiday. June 13," 1S3I " : " wciTr r t inn " 'GRIN'-AND1EZAR; IT I Miss Irumani- liu antDli in . i i i i r PWNM Mil , . - ' r i f I tfo Facor Strays Vs.'No Fear Shall Atce. Itw Flnt SUtesman,' Mrt4'2S, 1851 ' THE STATES3IAN PUBLISHING C03IPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher Published every momiifr. Buiaoi fflee 215 8." Cwnncrtltl, Salem, Oreran. Telephone Z-244L Entered at the pstofflee at Salem, Oregon, as second class matter under act of congress March S, 1171. Blooded in Battle For a realistic description of just how the infantryman engages in battle one should read the article "I Send Your Son into Battle" by Lt. Col. Melvin Russell Blair in the current Saturday,. Evening Post. It not only relates the procedures. followed by which units are moved forward to the front lines and then go over the and want to be remembered. Re brought sci entific forestry and silviculture to Oregon State, trained hundreds of young men who now are at work in various phases of forestry, public and private. Such was the regard in which "Pea vy'a ; boys" held him that they .erected a cabin for him at the Peavy Arboretum north of Coryallis. Appropriately the arboretum bears hii '.name; and what better memorial could one top, but tells of the emotions that surge through ; thian growing trees which will perpetuate uviti a mum m w ivuuii w5 the forests of the northwest: first tim TTi author pnlistpd as a nrivatpJ- i .- 1 1 - crvAfi (hrrniph lht' cprnnH wrrtr1 mar and in 8 i' .-.Hit the Korean fighting, rising through the ranks to his present grade of lieutenant colonel, j The basic fighting unit, Blair reports, is the batallion which breaks down into companies and platoons and squads.,: Supplementing the three-rifle, companies are a heavy weapons com- pany, a platoon of five tanks, and sometimes an engineers' company. . .-. ; j - Battle planning is done behind the lines, and I each batallion is given specific objectives. The batallion commander must direct the actual I - fighting, coordinate with supporting air and artillery, and make reports to regimental head- I quarters. r Orders for the advance are given usually J after artillery duels in which our artillery tries f to pulverize the enemy position and the enemy f drops mortar bursts and' shells on our own f lines. This is the soldier's christening in combat, f Aid and Economy i :Oregon Business and Tax Research has fig lured that Oregon's share of the proposed $8.5 billion; foreign aid program would be $83,000,000 I or $54, per capita. That is a lot of money, about three tfmes the 1951 public welfare cost in the j state.' The OBotTR bulletin quotes its president, I R. D. Barker, executive of the Hood River apple growers' association, as pointing out that "this I huge cost of foreign-country pump-priming is almost as much as the federal government spent for all purposes ... in 1940." Barker urges that I cut at least 10 per cent off "non-essential" fed- eral expenditures. j It is not quite clear whether Barker wants to leave the foreign aid program standing and shave the heads of the: home bureaucrats a little closer; or cut foreign aid too. We are sure he. is aware of the fact that considerable of this for- A "' f V- ' Jim Of Mint Crop Celov,' Averase Is required hard study to know' foreign affairs, comrade students . . Wrp'f to be unrelenting toe of VU.S. way of life isnt easy.1 CIO Threatens Stabilization ! Strike Again i CWs a lull inthe friendly barrage and the J eign comes back to the USA. It has helped order goes for infantrymen to take off. Quoting Blair: - s "But go with your boy, Johnny; If you will. ! The great barrage tearing the air over his head -I ha 5 shaken him a little, for he's never on earth ; t beard such noise. His hands are wet and a little 1 i shaky. He pats his grenades to see that they are I hung securely, he checks his. rifle and looks to j his bayonet.- He tries to remember what he's Is been told. What was it the sergeant said about hand signals, smoke signals? Where does the I left hand go when you lunge with the bayonet?; ; f He's watching his squad leader, who has a ; 1 walkie-talkie strapped to his back. Suddenly : the squad leader jumps out of his hole. Ho ; ! waves his arm forward. He yells something. ; f He turns and starts down the forward slope. ; And before he knows it, your Johnny is out i $ t Mo wing him, his hands sweating, his heart- f pounding in his throat. He feels a strange ex- I citemenL Here it is, he thinks to himself. I'm In action at last . . . i f So he is, and we hope he comes through that I first engagement all right. A few more of them and he becomes "blooded. H learns from ex- perience how to take care of himself, howi to I punbh his enemy, liow to stand the sickening i sights of, battle. , V Stiff physical training, close simulation j of f eombat, night bivouacs, river crossings, deploy-!? men t in varied terrain all these are part; of If training needed to prepare youth for waging war. The test, both for officers and men, comes i in the fighting itself. The great battle is just a I series of minor engagements platoons fighting 1 over a machinegun nest or a point of rock or a-"' company trying to hold a bridgehead. The sum( of results of the platoon fights is the outcome of the battle. . ' I j i finance the export of Oregon wheat and Hood River fruit and Oregon ; lumber. ; We should and must economize on our spend ing, and the foreign aid recommendations of the preident are not sacrosanct, either. ' But the economizing should be done intelligently, and not by blind ordering of reductions of 10 per cent in personnel by rider . to appropriation bills as was voted recently by the senate. We have to. remember too that price inflation has affected government costs as well as private. Leadership of the CIO JSS: -LZSL Divorce decree grant. .plaintifJ the stabilization coneress enacts troh law than it Is now consider- ----- curred by children. Reva Mahan vs Ray E. Maban: Divorce .decree, grants plaintiff custody of minor child and $40 ! The state highway commission on its spring tour ran into the usual run of community "de mands" for road improvements. Astoria and points along the lower Columbia highway are getting impatient to have the kinks taken out of that old (now much too old) highway. In southern Oregon the heat was on for making 99 four-lane from Central Point; to Ashland. At Roseburg they viewed alternates for routing the Pacific highway through or around the city and looked over possible relocation north toward Cottage Grove. They found out, what they already knew, that the $45,000,000, in bond money will .not do all the Jobs for which the need is urgent. . ''- l . inr. - This ; threat came from Emfl Rieve, chairman of the CIO's com mittee on economic policy and a member of the wage rtabuzauon i monthly support. board. i . Iva Draner vs Chauncev Draper Rieve spoke out as the senate I und United States National Bank bezan debate on new controls of Portland: Complaint for di- legislation. with senator Douglas I vorce alleging cruel and inhuman (D-Iu) sparking a drive to save tne i treatment seeks custody oi minor administration's board powers to child, $30 monthly support, $1,200 roll back prices. ,. . : lump sum alimony, ownership of The CIO leader, who heads the furniture, auto and other personal Textile . Workers union, told - a property. Ju"y " propwy, nnnfirpnr would refuse asks that bank be restrained from to be a party to the stabilization allowing defendant to withdraw nron-am unless controils len&ia-1 A three-judge court in Charleston, S. C, ruled two to one against petitioners seeking to end the system of segregated schools in the state. This gives a "breather','. for, continued segrega tion, but the case will be appealed to the fed eral supreme court. The Charleston -court did order: provision of education ; of equal quality for blacks as well as whites. Give negroes edu cation and economic opportunity .and the dis parity which now is used to justify segregation will fade away. ' . ! ; ",' . . "Doctor of Public Service" J A few years ago the writer applied that Mit J . ff w :? nonorary aegree to ur. veorge w. "eavy, who if ) , aner his retirement a3 dean of the school of j A friend just backjfrom Alaska reports that forestry and as president of Oregon State col-;! he saw at Point Barrow Eskimo boys wearing lege, became busy in various fields of public;; Hopalong Cassidy, outfits, complete with two service. He was for two years president of the guns, and Eskimo girls with parkas, nylon hose, Oregon Chest, was district governor of Rotary tonis and lipstick. Civilization has come to the clubs and at the time of his death was serving j Arctic! j tots second term as mayor of Corvallis. Truly i ! ; he earned the title of "doctor of public service.' But it will be as dean of the forestry school J that George Peavy will be remembered best ! If the war in Korea should end look out for the democratic slogan In the 1952 campaign: "He got us out of war." - - . Yugoslav Leaders Know the Kremlin, and They Offer Sincere j Warning to West World By Joseph Alsop BELGRADE, June 25 The re markable group of men who run this country have had a spec il sort of training ? denied to most . other statesmen, s As pre-war So viet - agents, as iront fighters in Spain, as mem bers of the com munist u n der- ground in the old Yugoslavia, 4 friends and almost equals of the Kremlm r - - la the honeymoon days after the war, they learned to know Stalin and the Soviet politburo at first hand. In the circumstances, there f fore, their analysis of Soviet tac , tics and intentions deserves a very special sort of attention. What these Yugoslav leaders have to say and they talk both brilliantly and freely nowadays, .with none of the old constraints is a grave warning to the whole Western world. - The warning is all" the more arresting because It represents a decided change of heart. In May of last year, when: this reporter was last in Belgrade, these Yugo slav leaders were still reluctant t believe that Stalin had utterly abandoned the methods of Karl Marx for those of Adolf Hitler. At that time, Marshal Tito him self argued that the Soviets would never move without the supoort of the broad masses." and argued that there wa3 no need for the west to rebuild Its de fenses, because there was no present danger of a Soviet resort to naked force. Old faiths Indeed die hard. ' The Krfan aggression was of course the; event that killed this last remnant of Yugoslav faith in the Kremlin and its purposes. During the summer's bitter drought, .. the mounting alarm here was expressed In a total dedication! of ) the state to the defense effort which the battered national economy could ill af ford. And, when the November disaster on the Yalu river looked like being . the prelude to total defeat of f the United Nations' forces in Korea, the ; Yugoslavs expected the Kremlin to press its advantage with a Chinese attack on Indo-China in the late win ter and a satellite invasion of this country in the spring. -', There are many reasons to be lieve that these Yugoslav expec tations were correct, and that if events had substantiated Gen. Mac-Arthur's prediction of in evitable withdrawal from Korea, Stalin would indeed have moved at once to destroy the Western position for good and all. For tunately, a different outcome in Korea confronted the Kremlin with a different world situation. In the opinion of their former Yugoslav co-workers, the Soviet rulers have now recoiled to seek a better chance. i 1 : ; Hence, for ?the present, the Kremlin is mainly seeking to di vide and thus to. paralyze the western alliance. Such is the, opinion of every important man In the government here includ ing Marshal Tito, who has re portedly warned against the dan ger from his convalescent refuge at BrionL This Soviet effort, which is of course Intended to open the way to a Kremlin tri umph in Europe and Asia, is also expected here to continue through the summer and fall. Here i tfce r-ason In turn whv the Yugoslav leaders are so wide ly quoted, in London for exam pie, as "not fearing war." They are asked whether they expect an attack; they reply that there Is no "immediate" danger: and their questioners, who long to hear! only what is pleasant, hast ily pass on to another topic In the same fashion, when the Yugo slav chief of staff. Gen. Koca Popovic, flatly told the American joint chiefs that he expected war. his warning was -rather lightly dismissed as mere exaggeration fox the occasion. " Ih fact, however, there Is no doubt at all that Gen. Popovic snd one important group of the ES2SESS2 x ugosiav zeaaersmp seriously be- Public Records CIKCUIT COUXT William E. Moses vs Luella Moses: ComplaIntt for divorce al leging cruel and 'inhuman treat- WASHINGTON. June 2IHAV mf! f'' " today I t r nmK i MarVel Lamb vs C R. Lamb: program unless stronger con- custody of two minor children, and $100 monthly, support, with de- tion before both houses of con t A 1 J F gress is . unpruvcu. j box. Married April 11, 1949, at Duchesne, Utah., Alvin T. Pettit vs Sara Elizabeth ne aaaea uiai uw cuius v-'" I t;- :,,; iet. r, nis;n4;ff. t a V-a tnA wamm nAcitinm t. I . . The program now before con gres, Rieve declared, insures noth- motion. State vs Abe Smith: Charge of P" . :"7A . .7 11. :Z " rape dismissed upon district at uig exepi we pron o torney's motion; defendant waived :- . ' i .. . w By IiDJe L. Madsea I Turn Editor, The Statesman Although the 17. S. department of agrieultur has reported that Oregon Is taking the lead in pep permint acreage this for the first time on record, there Is no guaran tee that Oregon will -top other states in production. v ; Stand and vitality of Oregon peppermint fields are below aver age this year. Late freezes followed by a cool dry spring have been un favorable ' to peppermint, growth in the Willamette valley. Some fields which had been listed in Oregon's big acreage this year were taken j out and planted . to other crops In late spring. Aphids have been reportet "bad" in -number of fields, However, ! the USDA report shows that the peppermint acreage in the United States for harvest this year is -four per cent smaller than last year but seven per. cent above the. 19 year average. The USDA crop reporting .service es timates 44,300 acres, for 1951 com pared to 4a,200 acres harvested last year and the 1940-49 average of 41,300 acres. The parity ceiling on peppermint oil at mid-May was $7.30 a pound. At the count early this spring. Oregon had '14,700 acres of pep permint, which is 100 acres more than the 1950 total but almost twice as much as average. Wash ington shows more increase for. 1950 than any other state. Present estimates show 1,000 acres in that state. But while 6,000 seems low compared to Oregon's 14,700 aetes, this is still 900 . acres more than Washington had On 1950.. Michi gan's acreage is expected to be slightly larger than. that at last year. Michigan at one time topped all other states in peppermint pro duction in the nation but lias now dropped to third place. The 3,100 ! acre drop In Indiana more than offsets the increase- in other statesi But in spite of the large drop in acreage this year, Indiana still maintains its place as second to Oregon in peppermint acreage. Indiana expects to total 13,400 acres this year. i . i . ELECTRICITY USEX.S GROW i - : Average number of electricity consumers In Oregon' Increased from 421,913 in April, 1950. to 436.803 in April, 1951, or 3.53 per cent,. Publk Utilities Commis sioner George H. Flagg reported Monday. j , ."..-. v oiriimiitm, . ' " PARIS, June 25-(rVMargaret Truman waved good-bye to Paris from a window of the Home ex press and called Ur the platform crowd: '"Thanks- r million:" 1 ; "She lias chic,"? smiled an elder ly ' French 1 'woman - who waved back. .' Before the train was due to leave, the president's daughter was asked what she liked most during her week's stay in Paris. She smiled and said: , ; "Why, just everything." Then she added sternly: "But no inter view, please," and turned away. For her traveling outfit she chose a blue, slim dress, a small white hat with . a tiny eye-veil worn well back on her head, and white gauntlet gloves. She had a short mink cape across her shoul ders and carried m bright red woolen coat on her arm. r ana mausiry. ' . inriirttnont inif nlparfoH milt tn AFL. CIO and various unafffll- rharpe f contributing .to delin- ated unions walked out of I the I cuencv of a minor, sent to state ...a . L I - I - staouizauon program eariy wis hospital for 30 day's observation. rear in a dispute over wage con-1 n Marrf TtMhtel v Keith Rst trois ana general economic poi- Bechtel: Divorce decree to plain icies. l ney return ea to tneir posu tiff. on wage and other boards after iNarirr Kindred vs Glen D. Kind weeks of bickering two months red: Divorce decree grants plain- iaier. ; i tiff custody of minor child and Rieve said the United Labor $100 monthly support. Policy committee, representing the I George W. ; and Laura Maude AFL and railroad unions as well I Maurer vs Alfred and Dorothy as the CIO. would meet early next I Burgoyne: Complaint seeks fore month and that the CIO would I closure of alleged agreement for recommend that labor again pull sale of property by : plaintiffs to-l out of the stabilization program defendants. not I i Gilbert Patten application: De cree denies writ of habeas corpus and awards custody of two minor children to Mary A. Patten. and -4-eoloeoa-dderdYau ! Lois M. Madden vs Hiram Bern ard Madden: Divorce decree to plaintiff confirms property settle ment agreement, reserves to court I authority to provide for custody OLDSriOBILE bociet -r Facfsry Delivery stP. classified 7 Take vacatlea that pots you on top. of the world! 'Midst gorgeous lowering peaks of the Canadian Rockies, enjoy the unsurpassed beauty and service of sumptuous Banff and dream perfect Lake Louise. Play golf "a mile high," enjoy riding, ashing, hiking, tennis, swlm auag. Relax over bod renowned for.us excellence. A MMhw ym'U smr ffgf Make reser vations with your local agent or ' Saeeway 2044 . Auto 7reck' THE DALLES, June 25-WVAa, automobile plunged off a highway and into .Butler canyon, 90 miles south of.! here yesterday, killing an mi ant ana seriously injuring the mother. 1 r Irene, an 18-month-old daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. David -Win nler of Wamic, was: killed . In stantly. The mother suffered m fractured pelvis. ' . f Six other occupants' of the car escaped with minor injuries when the- vehicle plunged 60 - feet off highway 3. j 1 M i I f Bert's the perfect partner foe y ""g wrhint the Crane Lanndrette. i See this sparkliac beantv. ta. Uy. Mad of exciusiT Crana Davmday, k has a saaooch, wkka orface that is rndd-rtsittamt, hit ' to dan. Fearares Ududf saold. d4n washboard and soap dish and Crane DUl-tt controls. 36 a 25 in. and 42 s 33 in. riATUIII anient w a- bSsWeS aSa4ssWa94nS f - . Ckiala 4 Mrlaaton I flw4i,lllllni part waa ii iMia The most complete display of laundry trays. Twelve differ ent models to suit every pur pose, with prices ranging from S1X25 to siio.00. : . ;-, , . . 8 t . . - i Ph. $-4141 ! ? ,- . - I275N. CmX in event the congress does strengthen the contrals law. Vandalism at Willamette UJ Three youngsters who went on of minftr child. a cup and bed breaking spree at i I WUlamette university were being PROBATE COURT sought Monday by city police. Frank S. Healy estate: Final de- Description of the trio, all about cree. f . , 10 years old, was turned over to t Kathryn M. Stryker estate: police by Gus Schwalen, superin- Hearing on final account set July tendent of buildings at the school. 30. i ! Coffee cups and coffee makers Orlan H. Thomas estate: Ap- were smashed at waller hall. Beds praised at $1,900. i were broken down, presumably Shirley Ann and Jean Marie by jumping on them, 'at Lausanne I Holt guardianship: Evelyn Holt hall' Boy Admits 4 Burglaries appointed guardian, authorized to accept compromise offer from Ace Flying Service, Inc., of monthly payment of $21 to each child to age of 18 years in full settlement of alleged claim in death of fa ther, Richard Holt. Earl W. Gibbens estate: Final order. Rose J. McLaughlin estate: final r order. C W. Hoyer estate: Final. hear ing set July 30. i Austin Reed estatet: Final count approved. 1 was . arrested lor 'three nouse prowlings, the boy told police. lieve that Yugoslavia will be at tacked next spring, when the So viet effort to split the west has . run iits course and the satellite rearmament has been completed. A second group, a shade more hopeful, merely regards war as probable. And the men here who see the future in the rosiest col ors content themselves with say ing, that war is decidedly possi ble. These conflicts of emphasis for they are hardly more than this, have in turn been reconciled by a formula that the astute For eign Minister, Edward KardelJ, Is reported to have offered the Yugoslav central committee. "We cannot tell what may hap pen," he is quoted as having said, "but at least the situation is such that it would be a criminal betrayal of our country not to prepare for an attack with all 'urgency." The reasoning behind this Yugoslav analysis must wait un til another report. Meanwhile the ; Western leaders will dis regard at their peril the warning that this analysis implies. i (Copyright. 19SU New York Herald Tribune tnc . Better English; An 11 -year-old boys, who ad mitted burglaries of four homes to Salem police, was turned over to juvenile authorities lor action Monday. Police said the youngster told of getting $50 in one burglary.- In others he said he took nothing. As j MARRIAGE LICENSE a former resident of Woodburn, he APPLICATIONS Gerald B. Cooper, 33, mechanic, and Celia L Robins, 31, housewife. both of Rainier. . George O. Favflle. 24, finish tender, 4750 Delight st- and Mari lyn Joanne Thompson, 18, typist, 1172 Park avc both of Salem, 1. What is wrong -Witt? uus i i sentence? "She is the loveliest DISTRICT COURT cirl that I ever knew." I I Theodore Hobby, M5 S. 12th st. 2. What is the correct pro- cnargea wim oDwmung money oj nundation of "rivulet"? i false pretenses, continued to June 3. Which one of these words 26 for plea, new in lieu oi si,uuu t missioned? Meritorious, melo-1 bail. -t rirnma mpnppcriM millennium. I t A! Deri rari e w l a, ciwu. ' I. . - . 1 , t . L ?1 . . . f 4. What does the word "expe- cnargeo wiin anvmg wnue muuu- dient" (adjective) mean? I I cated, conunuea to June zb tor 5. What is a word berinnins- plea, i Held in lieu or 350 ban; with def that means "eamressinx charge of being intoxicated on a - courteous regard for ' another! public nignway oismissea. wishes"? - r t I. ' - Ai,nuw s I , v tin v TI l 1. Say. -that I have e v e r ' ZZZ?TZ TZZ kin 5 Pranounrc the a I "iviiJ wli"c Trnr. in .n!Treent fir no operator's license, fined total In use, not as in ap, accent first . .Jr , A mMmAA JfUdOie. ACiiscric . xl i vlrw1 frn- uava a v v-a. n aavvimw r vvw w or proper under the circumstan ces. "It is expedient that we go away." 5. DeferentiaL Know thyself mens this, that you get acquainted with what you know, ants what you can do. one year. Vernon LeRoy Christensen, 1625 S. Cottage st, reckless driv ing fined $35. Howard Elmer Price, 1335 Yew st, following too close causing acci dent, fined $7.50. I The Golden Gate Bridge In San Francisco was completeed in 1937, mm only with tho j Oj AUTOMATIC WASH El I r i Sa .mCATOI'SUlI "-" . JJ tsus rtoeta Oaw I KTT. lTSfWO-TO-MVi CLOTHS tkWVT. arcwSTRT. 'n 1 ' With thn Waatlnghonan Laundromat, yoo just aet the dials and washday's work is done! The Laundromat washes, tripie-riniw. damp driea clothes, cienna itself; shuts off without your touch ing it And the Laundromat'a Weigh-to-Savn Door and Water Saver not only aavn you work, but money, too, by telling yea the right amount of soap and hot water to one. re VUS cist c:i FuOOii oifKm , - mrtaim WASHSM O . Askn " - . J . w Diffar- 'P o 9 Z tn- Tea " TU Tt SOS -teaa saew- !- caroc. lUnsrt suR0n- LA UND SO MAT ki a Tra4a Mark as.U,S.raa.OC ONIY- 299.95 oxomat Sen ..Boy o Proof! Enjoy Today . . . Tska 15 Months to Pay . - ' i liberal Trade-in Allowance Open Friday Niflntf Til 9 P JA. yeater Appliance col i ; 375 Chemekefa St, Fhone 3-4311 Meande i It has a channel span of 4200 feet