j Tho Strrtr""!, Salem, Oregon, Saturdcry. Jannarr 12, 19S1 e rejaonMatc6matt MUNMB IMI "No Favor Sway$ U No Fear Shall Awe" Frees Pint SUtesnun. March ZS. Ml THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A SPRAOUE, Editor and Publisher PebUsaed every moraine. Business efflee xll 8 ComsnercJ&l. Salem. Oregon. Telephone 1-2441. Catered at the postofflce at 8aJem. Oregon, aa second claaa matter under net af congress March X. 191 Truman's Press Conference , President Truman handled himself pretty well in his Thursday press conference when asked about the Eisenhower candidacy. He clererly "covered first base" by saying he would keep Ike right where he is unless the latter asks to be relieved. That will dash the hopes of Ike's boosters of getting their candidate to come home and take part in the campaigning. The Taft crowd is left free to ride the range rounding up delegates with promises that can be accepted at face value. Then the President protected his own position by saying he would oppose Ike as a Republican nominee, even though he praised him; and at the same time Truman kept mum as to his own intentions. ft is a genuine ordeal for the President to face several score nimble-witted reporters, some frankly hostile, and handle the questions they toss him. Sometimes the President, as did FDR, gets irritable; but Thursday he took on the gang on a slippery field and handled himself well. At his press conference Truman confirmed that J. Harold fcGrath would stay as attorney general and further that McGrath would direct the clean-up of wrongdoing in administrative offices. This is an unfortunate end of the burst of fervor the president showed on his return from Key West. McGrath is strictly a politician, with no zeal for reform and little energy as an administrator. His retention in the cabinet seems to be the result of the President's own pique at the .press and others, for he had made up his mind to drop McGrath. Premature publicity and fast footwork by McGrath's friends induced the President to change his mind. So McGrath stays on; but this is another sign that Harry Truman will not. He's had enough. proportion of O & C acreage at the time the lands were revested in the government. A partial distribution might be made, but it would seem better on account of these conflicts to wait for decision on whether these lands are part of O & C or not. Frank Sever, Portland attorney representing the counties, is going to Washington to do what he can to expedite this settlement; also to protect the interest of the counties in the revenues from O & C lands. Revenues From "Controverted" Lands Friday's Stateman carried a story from its Washington special correspondent, A. Robert Smith, reporting an interview with the comp troller general on distribution of certain forest revenues. These revenues were derived from sales of timber from the so-called controverted O & C lands. They are administered by the Forest Service but claimed by the Department of the Interior for O & C land administration. The revenues, amounting to over $4,500,000 are held in escrow pending settlement of the dis pute. Judge Bayly of Lane County has suggested filing a suit to decide the controversy, and pend ing (hat a distribution of at least 25 per cent which is the share received from the Forest Service (it is now 75 per cent from O & C). Comptroller General Warren is not disposed to make a distribution unless the counties agree, because seven of the 18 O 8c C counties would cot be eligible to participate under the Forest Service formula. Here are the difficulties in the way of a dis tribution in advance of determination of title to the lands: (1) The Forest Service distribution of 25 per cent must go to "schools and roads." The O & C distribution goes into the county general fund. (At present Marion County devotes three fourths of the forest service revenues to roads and one-fourth to schools). (2) The Forest Service distributes revenues only to the counties where the timber located wtts sold. The Bureau of Land Management pools all the receipts from O & C lands and dis tributes them annually to the 18 counties in the Thus-far Man-of-the-Year Now that the saga is over, we can certainly agree on suggestions that thus far in 1952 Capt. Henrik Carlsen is Man-of-the-Year. Seldom has a story caught the popular fancy as the one about the mdominable skipper of the stricken ship Flying Enterprise. And seldom has there been such widespread regret as is voiced over the failure to bring the ship to shore. But the captain still is a hero for our money. He had both courage and sense. It is not always they go together. He knew his ship like a book. If he hadn't, he would not have known at just what moment "all hope was lost. And he waited until that moment to jump into the sea. He was stubborn but of sound judgment; courageous and cool. The same can be said for Mate Dancy of the tug Turmoil who apparently was willing to go right to the end on Carlsen's calculations. The plaudits of the world aren't going to buy Carlsen's groceries, however unless by chance the movies and television take over. And so far as his company is concerned, we'd say he'd earned something else than the mere promise of a new command. Military decorations are not in order for the peacetime merchant marine, but we'd like to see some sizeable reward for a man who will stick to a ship with an 80 -degree list in the raging seas and still know when the fight is lost. New US Route Across State Want to go to Ogallala, Nebraska? Then take the new UJS. Highway 26 at Astoria or inter mediate points and it will get you there. In Ore gon the route follows the Sunset Highway to Portland, thence east over the Mt. Hood Loop and Warm Springs Highway to Madras thence through Prineville and John Day to Vale and Nyssa, and on to Ogallala. This gives national recognition to a new route across Oregon, parts of which are quite scenic, and entitles it to receive federal road funds. The designation comes as a result of the active work of Chambers of Commerce at Madras and Prineville. "Full steam ahead," says President Truman, for the business of rearming. "Full steam ahead" calls the country for the business of cleaning out the grafters. The blast the President gave out on returning from Key West seems to have been just a frizzle. President Truman played some piano selec tions from Chopin for Prime Minister Churchill. Too bad Winnie didn't bring his easel along and do a painting for HST. Now we'll have to quit a half-hour early to hear Lawson McCall "commentate" at 5:30 on KGW. He will be one of the few radiorators worth listening to. "Bursted Main Forms Lake" reads an Ore gonian headline. Grammar got "bursted" too. Democratic Candidate Possibilities Divided Between Unpoliticals, Men Truman Dislikes By STEWART and JOSEPH ALSOP WASHINGTON Shortly after taking over the Democratic Na tional Committee, Chairman Frank McKin ney frankly told President Truman that he would have to know the Pres ident's own fu ture intentions before be could plan party strategy. Tru man replied that be had not as yet reached any firm de cision about running again. meant to do disastrous, and he has publicly described him as the man he "would like to run against." As the probability of Sen. Taft 'a nomination stows leas, therefore, the President will be more inclined to follow his undoubted personal ln- but that he so within sixty days. The President added that he would pass I 3 M A I the word to the faithful at that time. The forego ing report bears every mark of gilt - edged re- uanuity. nence, if the President keeps his word, the second great uncertain factor will be removed from the political picture before the end of next month at the latest. General of the Army Dwight D. Elsenhower has announced his Republican candidacy, with effects even more electrifying tbw had been s which the chief Justice could c II nation, which Is not to run. On the other side of the equa tion, however, is the simple fact that with Gen. Eisenhower's Re publicanism now openly pro fessed, the President will have a very hard time finding any other reasonably available candidate acceptable to himself. His own preference, of course, is for Chief Justice Fred Vinson, and he has pretty certainly indi cated ' this preference to his friend of the high bench. But the chief justice, who at first seemed tempted by the opportunity tent atively offered him by the Presi dent, now appears more and more disinclined to leave the court for politics. He has said unequivocally that he will not do so, unless the President can ar range a transitional appoint ment, so thai he will not have to leap straight from the high bench to the hustings. The chief Justice's distaste for such a leap, which he re gards as contrary to the best traditions of the court, looks like betas' Impassible to. over come. At the same time, there ta not the slightest indication that the President Is arranging any transitional appointment foreseen. When President Tru man .also Teaches his decision even if he merely communicates it to the Democratic inner circle, the whole picture will begin to soma clear. The KesabUeaa saaennewera it wnien la already so ina- 4s likely ta influence the President's decision con siderably. Tor Truman Is also known 4a regard Sea, Robert A,.Taft aa the only serious candidate whose -would - be genuinely aeeept with dignity, and It Is very hard to imagine what . snch an appointment coald be. For these reasons, a Vinson candidacy is growing 'less and less likely by the day, unless perhaps the Republicans end by choosing Sen. Taft, while further revelations of corruption abso lutely blacken the Truman ad ministration. In this crisis situa tion, the chief justice might con ceivably be dragged, almost by main force, into the race. Meanwhile, the- -other poten tial Democratic candidates can be roughly divided into two classes those not available for sound political reasons, and those not personally acceptable to the President. Those not available include Vice President Alben Barkley and Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn, whose re spective ages of seventy-four and seventy would appear to rule them out; Sen. Richard Russell of Georgia, the real leader and ablest man of the Senate Demo crats, who is ruled out by the racial problem, and almost all the other more eminent senior Democrats in Congress and the country. Thooe not acceptable to the President Include, by way of contrast, almost all the promis ing new men who have recent ly come up in the party Sen ators Paul Doug-las of Illinois and Estes Kefauver af Ten- neasee are two obvious ex amples. Ta be sure, if Truman decides not to run again, he may ' have a very hard time stemming the party tide to ward one of these likely win ners. And although Paul Doug las has denied any Presiden tial ambitions In language close to Gen. Sherman's, the Democratic leaders who want a winner will then be knocking an bis door. Over-all, in short, the Presi dent must either run again or pretend to run again until he has engineered the nomination of some dark horse he happens to like, such as Sen. Robert Kerr of Oklahoma or run the risk of see ing a men he does not like win the . Democratic nomination. It will be a hard choice for the President, complicated as it is by uncertainty about the probable character of the opposition. One must add that this hard choice for the President is also a hard fact for the country; for the shortage of inspiring politi cal leaders with national stand ing has now grown more alarm ing .than any other single feature of the national scene. (Copyright. 1SS2. New Ttorfcr Hers Id Tribtrn Inc. ts President's Message Gets British Praise By J. M. ROBERTS JR. Associated Press News Analyst It's an old truism that the way things look depend on where you are standing. In the United States, President Truman's State of the Union message was received, Judging from the weight of comment I have seen and heard as something less than masterful. His assessment of 1951 as a year of great gains has been widely questioned, and the mes sage in general seemed uninspir ing. In Britain, however, the report seems to have been well received. The Manchester Guardian, tag-. , ged as liberal, even compared it with Prime Minister Churchill's Christmas broadcast in grimness and uncompromising devotion to the tasks of world affairs. rf D aw njrj Salem School Board was minding its P's and Q's the other night when it decided to name the proposed new East Salem school plain "Hoover School." Not "Herbert Hoover," mind you, but just plain "Hoover." This, the board rea soned, would help it out of the jackpot if any anti-Herbert Hoover citizens should object to naming the school after the former president. After all, the school could have been named after a vacuum cleaner. Anyway, while Christmas street decorations are going down displays of garden seeds are going up in local store windows. Makes a fel low feel so Springy he's almost ready to take off his gloves and unfasten the top button on And a High Street sports shop already Is win- "Mr. Truman's steadfastness may help us to brace ourselves for the equally stern message which the Chancellor of the Ex chequer is preparing for the re assembly of Parliament," the pa per said. The News Chronicle of London, also tagged liberal, looked at the domestic rather than the interna tional angles of the address and decided that the President was steering "well left of center," but that, because of political" reasons, bis social program. will never be fully carried out "though there is no real economic reason why it should not be. The American eco nomy is so strong that it could carry the enormous burden of armament without reducing the standard of living of its people ." A lot of the President's advis ers have also been saying the same thing about America's eco nomic strength but the Defense Production Administration al ready is ordering cuts in consum er production, just the same. There are non-economic argu ments against the President on this subject, too. The London Daily Herald, La bor, thinks the idea known over here as "Point Four" is the thing. "Much depends on how seriously Congress takes Mr. Truman's re quest for more economic aid to Asia's poorest peoples. Many mil lions will turn to Communism in their despair unless the West his overcoat . dow-adlng a Christmas lay-away plan for 1952 Tuletide. Ladd's Market on South 12th Street has its own plan for helping the March of Dimes. On Jan. 25-26 a 2 per cent credit will be allowed on all purchases. And the credit will be turned over to the MOD . . . Another unique way to produce dimes for the March of Dimes turned up at KSLM offices . . . There the boos decided the familiar radio term "spot announcement" was undignified and Just plain old ugly. So, with the consent of the station per sonnel, ho decreed that a dime should go Into the kitty for the Mareh any time someone slipped up and used that spotty old phrase Instead of the more polished and proper "commercial in sertion' of plain "announcement.' . . . Comes to hand a product put out by the State of Kentucky designed to balance that state's budget although old Kaintuck puts out another product designed to throw most people off bal ance. The budget-balancing deal, though, Is the winter issue of an official magazine published by the Commonwealth of Ken tucky. Not only is it chock-full of articles about Bluegrass pro ducts (including Rosemary "I sing the way I feel" Clooney) but it is loaded with big, juicy ads which must supply enough re venue to offset all that money people lose on the horses down there, aaggsagssss does more to help them." SS3 The Independent London Times said "it was an awesome pic ture that Mr. Truman sketched of industrial America armed and arming, of a huge machine mov ing towards its greatest speed and momentum." Then it adds slyly: "To steer it well will call for highest wisdom, and sober coun sel to the helmsman will be the duty of America's friends and allies," chief of whom, of course, are the British for whom the Times seeks to speak. . inn ""in i yiiniwiifc . I GRIN AND BEAR IT by Lichty v "Yoa'd think the income tax people would adopt tha practice af giving yoo coffee and -doughnuts alter okleediug you ..-? - (Continued From Page One) fallen short of a fair return, would the commissioner have authorized higher rates now to enable tha company to recoup the deficiency? if a company Is held strictly to a maximum earning power with no protection against adversity it will be tempted to increase expendi tures so as to absorb such excess, and that is bad business. When the commisiioner deter mines rates the company ought not be penalized if through effi ciency and promotion it succeeds in outrunning the estimates. If the overrun is excessive the com missioner can move to reduce rates. Determining telephone rates is a difficult task because of the com plications involved, notably in tha corporate structure of the Bell system and the interrelations of the component corporations. The facts have been pretty well threshed out in preceding hearings and are familiar to the department staff whose opinion, as the new commissioner states, is reflected in his order. At any rata it can be said that the increase allowed is a modest one, and no one can truthfully say that the consumer interest, has been neglected. The company's earnings should continue to grow because tha territory it serves is growing and because it should realize more from its huge post war investment as time .goes on. But of course it must earn more to keep pace with inflation and to attract the flow of capital neces sary to keep up with the demand for more facilities for communi- Literary Guideposf j By W. O. ROGERS , A CHRISTMAS BOOK: AN ANTHOLOGY FOR MOD ERNS, compiled and arrang ed by D. B. Wyndham Lewis and G. C. Heseltine (Dent Dutton; $3.50) Sir Roger de Coverley said, we are reminded here, that it was "very well that Christmas should fall out In the middle of Winter . when the poor People would suffer very much from their Poverty and Cold, if they had not good Chear, warm Fires and Christmas Gambols to sup port them." We are all poor enough at least to enjoy the Chear and Gambols provided bountifully by' this book . . . first issued 25 years ago and now, because it is so popular, prettily printed again for, we hope, another 25 years. It is not the usual collection; its virtue is that it is not new, but old, and as quaint as some of the carols in it, and as flavorsome as the mulled ale or sack posset it tells how to concoct. It quotes Henri Murger, ClaudeL Thack eray, Milton, Tennyson, Malory, Shakespeare . . . "Twelfth Night," of course. It tells us how good Per Gynt 2i freed a farmer from a pest ol Trolls; how Villon stole on; tha holiday in 1458; how the witches danced in Salem in 1692, how a little girl "did a very good day's work" on Dec. 25, 1771, hi Bos ton; how Field - Marsha I Lord French ordered his troops Irt tha trenches to stop singing carols in 1914. This is the season of gifts, so Martial need not have; been .apologetic for what he gave his friend Quintlanus: "I hav gent you nothing but my homely lit tie books." And it has always been "followed by a day of reck oning: The Christmas bills run up by Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, for his Countess, or by his Coun tess for her Thomas, for cloth, furs, silver and tallow amounted, in 1314-15, to about 1,200 pounds. There's a dismal prophetla note, too, in a Christmas time pronouncement in 1875 from tha Massachusetts Colony, which had "a longing Desire the Indian Wars might be ended; and we presumed ere this, that the Pow ers of Perswasion or Force would have made a happy Chan ge, -by altering the Mjnds, or re straining the Malice, or our Hea then Foes." Your Health By Herman N. Bundesen, M.D. Drug addiction has been much in the news the last few months. Reports of school-age children in danger of becoming addicts should make everyone recognize the great danger to society from this habit. There is need for more people to learn the underlying causes of this serious disorder, and also the ways to cure it. Why do people become addicts? The underlying reason almost al ways has to do with a personal ity problem. Usually, people who become . addicted are the pleasure-seeking type, or else they have psychoneurosis personali ties. It is extremely rare to find an addict who is an emotionally normal, mature person. It is a strange fact about ad diction that persons who learn about drugs and begin their use through associating with addicts are much more likely to become addicts themselves than are per sons who receive the drugs from a doctor to relieve pain. Addic tion is something like a conta gious disease, usually spreading from person to person. There is another danger, too the use of one drug commonly leads to others. Thus, most ma rijuana addicts eventually be come addicted to morphine or heroin. Some types of drugs, when first used, create a feeling of ease and comfort in the individual. They have the effect of reducing emotional tension, as the nerves are falsely rested. Worries van ish, and the individual taking the drug can dream and put off tha time of decision until tomorrow. Many addicts have a feeling that drugs increase their effi ciency. Actually, addicting drugs decrease mental efficiency, and do not increase courage or physi cal prowess. What happens when morphine is suddenly withdrawn from tha addict? Eight to fourteen hours after his last dose of morphine he becomes restless and tosses in his sleep. Then his eyes begin to water, his nose "runs," he; per spires and yawns excessively. Goose pimples appear, and tha Eupils of his eyes dilate. VHis reathing is heavy, and his blood sugar is lowered. The person be comes increasingly restless Snd, In some cases, the arms, legs, and feet twitch almost constantly Ha has severe muscle cramps, pack ache, and generalized aches throughout the. body. These severe symptoms even tually pass off, but not before five to seven days after the last dose of morphine. Withdrawal of barbiturates brings somewhat similar symptoms, and in serious cases may endanger life Jeven more than morphine. ;: Morphine and other addicting drugs can cause a complete Orien tal and physical demoralization. Their effects are so serious that treatment is rarely successful un less it Is under the direction of specialists in a hospital TheFed eral Government supports two such hospitals which specialize in curing addiction, one atiLex Ington, Kentucky, and the other at Ft. Worth, Texas. s Modern treatment avoids tha severe symptoms described above. It withdraws the addicting drug slowly by substituting less harmful drugs. The other import ant part of the program is men tal and psychiatric treatment for the personality difficulty which is at the bottom of the drug habit. ;. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS E. M.: Win any special diet help mental illness? Answer: There is no definite evidence that diet will have any special effect on a mental dis order. ? Congressional Quiz Q Is there any formal move ment to draft Gen. Eisenhower for the presidency? A Yes. A "Draft Ike" cam paign formally got underway Nov. 29 when a national head quarters for the Eisenhower-for-President movement was opened in Topeka, Kan., under the di rection of former Sen. Harry Darhy (R-Kan.) and others. Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (R Mass.) became Eisenhower's campaign manager Nov. 17 and the Washington office, under di- Bettor English By D. C. WILLIAM 8 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "He hasn't worked any for the last three weeks." 2. What is the correct pronun ciation of "preface"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Itinerary, irasci ble, idiosyncracy, ignoramus. 4. What does the word "actu ate" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with as that means "to exile, banish, exclude"? ANSWERS 1. Omit any. and say, "for the past three weeks." 2. Pronounce pref-as, e as -in let (not as in me), a as in aee unstressed. 3. Idiosyncrasy. 4. To put into ac tion; move to action. "He was actuated by a desire to succeed." 5. Ostracize. rection of Sen. Frank Carlson (R-Kan.), opened Dec. 22. Q Have any Cammunlst groups registered under the In ternal Security Act? A No, according to the Jus tice Department. The Internal Security law, enacted Sept. 22, 1950, requires the registration of what it defines as "Communist action" and "Communist-front" organizations. Q Why doesn't the Justice Department prosecute the Com munists for not registering? - A It cannot do that until the Subversive Activities Control Broad determines if a given or ganization comes under the Act and so must register. Hearings have been in progress since April 23, 1951, on the Justice Depart ment's application for ah order requiring the Communist Party, USA, to register. f f Q Why should it take so long to determine that the Communist Party is Communist? ; A The Justice Department, which wants to prove the CP is a "Communist-action" group, must convince the board that, among other things, the party's way is paid and its policies are direct ed by the world Communist movement, that its operations are . secret and that its leaders subor dinate allegiance to the U5. to allegiance to world communism. The board's decision is subject ta Supreme Court review. .: Q I hear Churchill's going ta talk ta Congress. When? i A Vice President Barkley an nounced Dec. 21 that British Prime Minister Winston Church ill will address a joint session of Congress "about Jan. 17." 1 S : . I am tha light of the world. Jesus Christ HOLLYWOOD Watch Repair Shop Watch and dock Repairing LEO J. MIUEX PHONE 2-2116 20S7 N. Capitol St. ' Salem. Oregon Mevj. .Peal ira ,pples;j Jonathan, Delicious, , Winter Bananas and Newtons Nons) batter for 001109, cooking,' baking or preserves. From extra largo to small - for aa litrlo as 75c par box, bast buy in town. Special Sate Jan. 5th and 6th. Como early, bring your own box. i- 791 Edgewatar Street West Salem r (Puritan Cider Works Building) on Salem-Dallas Road BUY APPLES FOB SCHOOL LUNCHES' f . 1