A rh gtatasman, !gain f braqon' thunidaT Fan 18.' ttSl i VOLGA BOATMAKT rcsoii tatesman - . "No Favor Sways Us No Fear Shall Ato From first Statesman. March 28. 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPFtAUUfei, Editor and Publisher r Wished every morning. Pnrlnr offlee tli Commercial. Salem. Oregon. Telephone 8-1441. entered at the postofflce at Salem. Oregon, u eecend elan matter under act of eongress March 8. 1878 Scuttling Wage-Price Controls? The House voted on Wednesday to scuttle wage-price controls by letting the present stat ute die on its due date, July 31st. The vote was 118 to 87 and members were not on record. The real' test will come Thursday on roll call. Ad ministration forces may muster support from absentees and when the roll is called some may not want -to be listed as voting to terminate these controls. And alter that would come con sideration of Senate and House bills by a con ference committee. It would seera. probable that in the end price-wage controls will be continu ed, perhaps until March 1st next, which was the date set in the Senate bilL If the House version stands then an early settlement of the steel strike can be foreseen. Free to raise prices the steel industry probably W?uld quickly come to terms with the unions on wages, leaving only the vexing issue of the union shop to keep them apart. It is anybody's guess what the consequence would be of abrupt abandonment of controls on prices and wages. Economic law is taking over in many areas and price ceilings are more or less historic. Pressures would immediately be re leased fdr wage boosts, especially if steelwork ers are given a substantial increase. That would stimulate price increases and might touch off more inflation. Eager as we are to see bureaucratic controls wiped out we question the wisdom of cancelling authority to impose them, at least through this critical summer. The skies are too dark to as sume that our war danger is past. lected millions of dollars, most of them hard earned; and frugal county courts stretched them to meet the county's needs. Fast the building is being gutted even of its memories. To the wrecker it is just another job, a few days of employment, a few tons of salvage. To those with sentimental attachment for the old grey structure it is sacrilege. Progress does not come without a price. The national political conventions will be held in the Stockyards Pavilion in Chicago. It is air conditioned, but it still will be a slaughterhouse for many ambitions. A Detroit judge ruled that issuing a bad check was not proof of mental unbalance. No; just of financial unbalance. Candidates are busy running against Joe Stalin again" this year, as they were two years ago. W. Averell Harriman, who visited Oregon Thursday, said in Spokane that Stalin was hop ing for a Republican victory. It must be a gama of tag for back in Washington in the campaign for P of C delegates Rep. John E. Rankin ac cussed Harriman of "running on the Commun ist platform" because he had promised to wipe out race, segregation in the public schools. The GOP presidential race has reached a point where those who want to ride on the band wagon ought to get out and push. 1 a 21 ;ing Airline Subsidies The Hoover commission strongly recommend ed divorcing airline subsidy from payment for carrying airmail. Under the old practice they were lumped together and no one could tell how much was compensation and how much was subsidy to keep the line flying. Tuesday the House interstate committee got round to ap proving a bill to separate the two, but limited this division to domestic lines. It ordered no separation on payments to U. S. lines on inter national flights. Just why the segregation was made isn't clear. There would seem to be little need for subsidy on domestic lines for they are fast becoming financially successful. The international lines may require subsidy as do ships In our merchant marine. In any event the amount of the subsidy should be tagged. It just looks as though the powerful Pan American lobby had won again. An early relocation of the Columbia River highway will eliminate the famous Rowena loops between Hood River and The Dalles. By following a water grade the new route will have 12 curves instead of 75; the distance will be cut from 7.64 miles to 5.46 miles and the rise and fall reduced from 1,398 ft. to 380 ft. The job will cost an estimated $2,188,000 but will certainly pay for itself within a few years. f. US . f I O RATHER OWE 1 f YOUSOOMILUOH ) Federal Bureau to Lift Restrictions On Lumber Buyers PORTLAND (iP)-The Bureau of Land Management will lift its re strictions on lumDer ytuyers this year in hopes of salvaging mere timber from Western Oregon for ests. ? Normally the bureau requires timber buyers to cut the logs at a mill in the same district where the timber grew. This year if a local buyer does not purchase all the salvageable timber available, out siders will be allowed to pur chase it. Windstorms of the past two years, fires and bark beetles have killed many trees In Western Ore gon. The bureau estimite as much as a billion feet of lumber may be salvaged. The House has followed the Senate lead in tacking to the Defense Production bill an amend ment requesting the President to invoke the Taft-Hartley Law in the steel strike. We still think the gesture is directed more toward cram ming the law down Truman's throat than to settle the strike. And we still favor letting the principals to the dispute scald themselves in their own hot water without benefit of govern ment bail-out. 033JXQ The Safety Valve U. N. to Hear Plea for Germ War Inquiry UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (JPf Smofhering Jacob A. Malik under a 10 to 1 vote, the Security Coun cil decided Wednesday to consider a United States demand for an impartial investigation of Russian germ war charges. Malik, who is president of the council this month, also failed in a stubborn Russian attempt to in vite Communist Chinese and North Koreans to take part in discussion of the American proposal. He will renew that fight later. There is no indication how soon the American item will come up. The council, once its work sheet was approved, went back to de bate on Russia's appeal for the Council to recommend that all countries ratify the 1925 Geneva Protocol against germ warfare. That is expected to be sent to the Disarmament Commission for study. Then there is likely to be a WTangle over whether to hear first the American item or Russia's pro posal for reconsideration of pend ing U.N. membership applications. Gene Howe, Texas Editor Ends Own Life AMARILLO, Tex. (P) Gene Howe ended his life with a bullet Tuesday night. He was 66. His body was found in his car near here Wednesday. He was the longtime editor of the Amarillo Globe and News. Ev erybody truthful almost every body in the Texas panhandle knew him. He was the man who wrote that homey column often kidding, of ten serious called "The Tactless Texan" in the Amarillo News. And he was a one-man Cham ber of Commerce for Amarillo. His friends said that it was des pondency over his health that caused him to take his own life. PORTLAND (P) Gene Howe, the noted Amarillo editor who died Wednesday, started his newspaper career in the Pacific Northwest. He quit school in Kansas at the age of 16, and went to work on an Emmett, Idaho, newspaper op erated by his brother, Jim. He was there briefly, his father then giv ing him $50 and sending him out on his own. Howe worked for the Oregon Statesman at Salem, then at 17 was hired by The Oregonian in Portland as a cub reporter. He was here four years, before going to work on his father's newspaper in Kansas. (Continued from page 1) Wrecking the Courthouse Gaunt-eyed the shell of the old courthouse seems to leer at passersby. The good grey lady of Justice lias come down from her old pedestal which already was being crumbled beneath her. Sans windows the old edifice stands like a flesh less skull. Once the county's pride it has become a toothless derelict. Empty halls which now echo to the blows of the wreckingbar once measured the tread of of ficeholders and taxpayers, of judges and litig ants. Its courtrooms heard the pleas of eloquent attorneys, the tearful confessions of criminals, the testimony of countless witnesses, the ver dicts of juries and the solemn sentences of Judges. Over his counter the taxgatherer col- A Yale professor in an address at the Oregon School of Alcohol Studies in progress at the University of Oregon says the only sure way to determine whether a man is "under the influ ence" is by measuring the amount of alcohol in hi3 blood. He has invented an alcometer which does the trick. Now if guys would only buy and use one of these Geiger counters we might have fewer cases of drunken driving. An AP report says there is talk of a Taft MacArthur ticket coming out of the GOP con vention. Is this a trial balloon or bait for the General? To some that ticket would be adding insult to injury. All this talk about ''screening" the Commun ist prisoners in Korea. Do they use a fluorescopa or litmus paper? U. S. Ports Blocked to Communist Ships, But Order Kept Secret So 'Not to Stir People Up' byl f rr i l,mlJki.,i T JuKph Aifop By JOSEPH AND STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON A significant story is told by two allied, but In some ways contrasting, orders recently issued a by the Ameri- can govern- X ment The first V 5 : is an order that J l . ' i vas secretly is- r" "5 sued, to take f, "f; I effect June 1. " Lvl' 4 It limits the ' jLv use of our ports and the Pana- l ma Canal Soviet and sat el lite shipping. And the limita tions are so se vere that, in effect, the major ports and the Canal have now been closed to all vessels from the Soviet sphere. The need for such an order has long been obvious. The Canal and the ports are al most certainly the weakest links in our whole defens ive system. Let the Canal be blocked, and our naval strat egy will be knocked galley west. Let the ports be put out of commission, and it will become impossible for us to supply our allies and sustain our own forces overseas. More over, the Canal can be blocked, and any of our major harbors can be rendered useless, by the explosion of a single atomic bomb, which any seemingly in nocent freighter can conceal in its hold. This danger has long been de bated in the National Security Council and elsewhere in the higher reaches of the govern ment. The question was resolved this spring, when the Coast Guard was told to safeguard the ports while the guardianship of the Canal was confided to the Navy. Enforcement of the order 4ias 'not yet been necessary, .Fince almost no Soviet or satel lite "sels nowadays cross ei- mar 1 L Stewart Al ther the Atlantic or Pacific. For the same reason, concealment of the order has been possible. And the purpose of concealment was to avoid stirring people up, here or abroad. Order number two Is more re cent and is non-secret. It in augurated the 24-hour air watch of our great urban and industrial centers. It has been much criti cized, just as the order for closing- the ports would no doubt be criticized if it conflicted with the interests, or even with the comfort, of any Urge group in this country. In the ease of this second order, what has been concealed is the real motive for it. The motive is all too simple. Six months ago, the Soviet stra tegic air force occupied its for ward bases closest to this coun try, in Kamchatka. Since then, active Soviet air reconnaissance of this countinent has been de tected on several occasions. Anyone can purchase aerial photographs of every strategic area in the United States. Hence the object of this Soviet air re connaissance is obviously to test the effectiveness of our air warninr and defensive system. None of the Soviet aircraft fly ing over Alaska and Canada has yet been Intercepted. The main proofs of their presence have been the vapor trails they left behind. Hence our air warning and defense system is quite plainly far from satisfactory. Under the circumstances, the order for continuous air watch ing was, if anything, rather be lated. But the air watch will be only party effective, because the true motive for it has been concealed. For the same reason, the civil defense program has been gutted by the Congress. Again, the purpose of this con cealment has been to avoid stirring people up. What strikes one la the histories- of these twe orders, la fact. Is the peculiar schizophre nia that is revealed. The danger hanging over us Is considered sufficiently great to Justify the rders being issued. Bat the im pulse to hide this danger from the country, the impulse to be bland and reassuring, Is also so strong that in one case the or der itself was muffed, and In the other the easy and natural ex planation of the order was put under wraps. In many other cases, this schizophrenia is producing even more unhealthy results. For ex ample, the fact has trickled through the rather misty Ger man segment of the Iron Cur tain, that the Kremlin has placed orders in East Germany for no less than 6200 microwave trans mission towers. This gigantic order will be sufficient to pro vide the whole Soviet empire with a closed microwave com munications system. The cost of completing such a system will be astronomical. The fact that such an im mense investment is being planned by the Kremlin in turn reflects the Kremlin's concern about a very vital matter namely, the ease with which all communications systems except the microwave system can now be Jammed. The jamming art was still in its infancy when the Kremlin jammers all but broke off com munications between the battle ship Missouri and the Navy De partment, on the occasion, sev eral years ago, of the Missouri's mission to the Dardanelles. The jamming art is in its infancy no longer. Our own communica tions, internal as well as trans Atlantic and trans-Pacific, are just as vulnerable as the com munications within the Soviet empire. Yet the huge outlays to give us even partially safe com munications will never be au thorized by Congress, unless the danger is frankly confessed. Con fession will stir people up. So no adequate effort to provide us with safe communications has yet been launched. It is hard not to feel that telling the truth and taking the consequences is preferable to running the many risks mt this sort. (Copyright. 195J. New York Herald Tribune. Inc.) fighting to Korea. In late 1$50 when MacArthur wanted to carry the war into Manchuria, France and Britain moved to put on brakes Atlee, then prime min ister, flew to Washington to talk against the MacArthur plan. This time Washington did not query London or advise it; but the bombing still was confined to the territorial limits of Korea. There are two possibilities: one that the bombings may induce the Reds to settle the terms of an armistice; the other that they may precipitate a general war. We doubt if either ensues. Rus sia has always stopped "short of war." And China is accustomed to such punishment that loss of electric energy will hardly prove decisive. What the bombings will do is to lower the industrial pot ential of the enemy, serve no tice that U.N. forces still can fight if the Reds are not ready for peace, and help restore to the U.N. the initiative that has been sacrificed for the past year in hopes of a peaceful settlement. The repercussions in Britain conceivably might hurt or over throw the Churchill government. In fact that may have been the purpose of the Attlee argument, for the British are In a tense political controversy the same as are Americans. However, the re port of Lord Alexander now re turning from Korea via Wash ington may cast a different light on the subject. Alexander refer red to the U.S. -managed opera tions In Korea as a "good show" a British expression of ap proval. If he conveys this im pression to his home people opin ion there may be greatly influ enced in favor of the course which the United States has pur sued. With so much powder about, gunpowder and political TNT we must expect explosions of vary ing dimensions in various parts of the globe. MORALITY IS INDIVISIBLE To the Editor: Senators Knowland and Morse, Republicans, have issued a state ment claiming that Averill Harri man should resign his appointive position as Mutual Security Ad ministrator before he further campaigns for the Presidency. I believe the senators are right. Exactly the same principle ii involved in the current campaign of R. L Elfstrom, chairman of the State Liquor Control Com mission, for the legislature from Marion County. Does Governor McKay, Repub lican .think his fellow Republi cans, Knowland and Morse, are wrong in asking for Harriman resignation? Then, why does Mc Kay not ask for Elfstrom's res ignation? I believe morality in govern ment is indivisible, that you cant have one set of standards for Re publicans and another for Demo crats, or vice versa. Richard L. Neuberger State Senator Multnomah County. WHAT IS DEMOCRACY? To the Editor: Democracy is the product of the incessant struggle of the masses of the people. People naturally want better standards of living as conditions permit Better English Br D. C. WILLIAMS 1. What Is wrong with this sentence? "Of two evils, it is best to choose the least." 2. What is correct prouncia tion of "flaunt?" 3. Which one of these words If misspelled? Gazette, coquette, croquet, bouquette. 4. What does the word "hiber nal" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with tra that means to "to rise above or beyond?" ANSWERS 1. Say, "Of two evils, It li better to choose the lesser." 2. Preferred pronunciation is flant, a as in ah. 3. Bouquet. 4. Win try. "They sought shelter from the hibernal weather." 5. Transcend. GRIN AND BEAR IT by Lichty A KAMA 1 m wore tsxSi them to be obtained. In any Gov ernmental unit where there is poverty and discrimination of any kind in regard to living con ditions, the groups of the lowest living standard protest and try to change those conditions so they may have fuller, richer and more secure living condi tions. If the proposed change is the most satisfactory to the majority, then in time as the idea becomes prevalent, it will be adopted by the majority as the prevailing law in that governmental unit. This is the incessant struggle of the masses of the people; To change the prevailing laws as the need manifests itself for that change. The ruling group will use every means they pos sess to prevent change, including force and that is fascism. Democracy must have a grass roots social basis, it must be part of the fabric of the lives of the people and begin in every village and in every city block. Herbert Dennett 266 S. Cottage St. Your Health SUNGLASSES are usually not dark enough to give adequate protection. Research has shown that the darker the glasses, the better they protect the eyes from the ill effects of sunlight. It is said that if the eyes of a person wearing sunglasses can be seen by a person looking through the lenses, then the lenses are not dark enough. If a person exposes himself to too much bright sunlight with out the protection of dark glass es, the retina of the eye loses some of its sensitivity. This is the part of the eye that receives the light impulses, and therefore the sharpness of vision is im paired. The effect is usually notice able right after the eyes have been exposed too long. The per son's adaption to the dark may be slow for days or even weeks afterward, and may be an im portant cause of both industrial and automobile accidents. According to the same re searches, neither the ultra-violet nor infra-red rays from the sun are the cause of this type of blindness. Both light and dark glasses absorb these rays ade quately. Too great amounts of visible solar radiation light are thus responsible for the dam age to the eyesight. a Many times, after exposure to sunlight, vision is reduced by one-half its normal value, and even more. Thus, night driving, after a day at the beach without sunglasses, can be very danger ous. The loss is mainly in dark adaptation to vision, and night vision is extremely retarded. It thus seems advisable to avoid excessive exposure of the eyes to sunlight, and to wear dark sunglasses to minimize the effects of solar radiation on the eyes. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS F.G.: What causes the blood to thicken and is there any help for it? Answer: There is no such thing as thickening of the the blood. There is a disorder, known as polycythemia, in which the red cells become greater in number. An examination of the blood will determine whether or not this condition is present. (Copyright, 1952. King Features) Cool Weather Aids Farmers PORTLAND fP)-Rain damaged some strawberries, but the accom panying cool weather of the past week proved of great benefit to growers. The weekly farm crop report from the Department of Agricul ture and the Weather Bureau said Wednesday that it enabled grow ers to extend the picking period. The harvest is now past its peak, but picking will continue another two "weeks. The weather was beneficial for most crops, the report said, adding that Western Oregon might get sunshine Thursday and Friday, to be followed by week-end showers. TZTJ33J t.r.t t Mrs. Michaud Convicted of Q Reno Robbery CARSON CITY. Nev. (P) A petite French divorcee was con victed Wednesday of complicity in the $1,500,000 residential burglary of millionaire LaVere Redfield. A federal court jury of eight men and four women swiftly de cided that Mrs. Jeanne D'Arc Mi chaud, 36, was "guilty as charged" of transporting $147,000 of the stolen property across state lines. She displayed no emotion. The penalty could be as much as five to 10 years in federal pris on. Federal Judge Roger Foley re ferred the case to the probation officer for a report June 30. Sen tencing was delayed until then. The Jury deliberated only la hours. 0 0 a Stoo bed breath n Sw seconds... for hours! 2 Phon 4-3333 To rad obowt CMofopfcyW "No htr.'f own daodoront" in READR'S DIGEST. Now try fhh tpodoNy fern. lotad CMoropnyH toblot Ihot (tops bod bf in mcoao'i, for hovrs. STOPPERS ot good. U. at froquonMy a do irod. In handy pocfc.t or pun.-MX. ochogo of 12. Only 25 cont. 9m mmlm mt mil.. 0 D 0 D D 0 Q a a 3 lekUlt 25 a D 0 a o b3 . rM (to crwt -cm mmt tonrt "I am pledred to build an invincible national defense and end spending ... to reveal my methods gentlemen, weald be a breach of security l..." BOMBER MOTORS LIMA, O. (INS) A modern super-bomber may carry as many as 250 electric motors, according to Westinghouse engineers. These range in size from tiny gyro motors weighing less than a pound, to 50 pound motors driving compressors. Generators on such a bomber can furnish enough . power to light a village of 120 homes. ESTATE SALE Approximately 15 acre- walnut orchard, northwest of Kelzer School. Pioneer Trust Company Pioneer Trust Bide;. Ph. 3-3136 For Details FACTS SALEM FEDERAL SAVINGS Five important facts which make Saving at Salem Federal worthwhile. 1. CONVENIENT LOCATION 560 State Street 2. RATE 2 Semi -Annually 3. SAFETY Insured to $10,000.09 4. WITHDRAWAL nfe.. 5. OPEN SAVINGS ACCOUNTS Not Terms Certificates CONVENIENCE Salem Federal is located at 560 State St aeraea from the Courthouse. We can open year new account In S minutes! 1 (TlPL ISALEM rCPlRAl SAVINGS ' lOAr7 6 State fttfeet ielts- Oreeea tttaee .24 1