4 Th Sfrrlo-mcm, gcdo-n, Oroco-u Mopday, Dtctnbw 22, 1853, 3 () rejjou 'OLD FASHIONED CHRISTMAS "JVo Favor Sways Us No Fear Shall Aire" From First SUtesm&a. March 2. 1151 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher Published e-ery morning. Business office 219 B. Commtrtltl St, Salem. Or, Telephone 2-2441. Entered at thi ooalofflc at Salem Ore- ae class matter aider act f conars March 2. UTS. carrier ta cities: Daily ana Sunday Dairy only Sun day only Bf audi, Baa-ay only (in advance) Anywhere In U. S. SUBSCRIPTION KATES By -sail. Dally aa San-ay (In advance) .9 1.49 per n . in sue counties , LJ per o. (Beaton. CI -dramas. T.lnn. JO week -Carton. Polk. Y !. - Pr rao- l-sewtvrre In Oreron ' . 2.75 six mo. S-OO year U 0 I. outsida Orecoo 9 IjM per mow us six ma. 10 0 year LM per maw 1.44 per mew HEMBEB OF: Associated Press Bareaa f A.-erustf t-v, t.Urt.iIM4 pr, . .r. titled usivei- to the us Aamerleae Newspaper Puk-sacra Ajaa, lae. for republication it all local news printed in (Adverrins represents Ward-Giflth Co, this newspaper). New York Chicago. Baa franc-wet Detroit). A adit Boreaa f Cireal.fi The Price of Progress The deaths of 84 men in the crash of a giant air-transport at Moses Lake, Wash., leaves the nation aghast this Christmas season. But no less appalling is the probability that it will happen again and with a larger loss of life since planes art being built to carry more and more people. With this the tenth in a terrible series of mili tary transport plane crashes, there seems to be no pattern of causes. In almost every case where machinery has been developed, safety devices have advanced, if not simultaneously, at least, eventually. Automatic block systems on rail roads make it ipossibje to overcome human error in the routing of trains, and the increasing use of such devices, it is hoped, will gradually minimize train wrecks. But whereas the limitations of speed and the development of safety equipment will keep bus and train accident statistics from sweeping into an upward curve, the opposite is true of air planes. Recent developments in the field of transport aviation leave greater possibility of mishap and a larger possible cost of human lives. The trend toward increased speed, with jet transports due in-the near future, and larger ships, such as the C-124, brings with it addi tional chances for tragedy. Our Air Force, and more especially the com mercial air lines, have called into use the most rigorous training of personnel and the maxi mum of safety devices. But just , as on the ground, people will make mistakes in the air. And whereas a mistake in a two-seater plane am cost two lives, the same mistake in a 1 15 passenger transport can cost upwards of 100. As the weight of planes increases and faster power plants are developed, the danger of the take-off and landing are bound to rise. With Increasing speed there is less time for the pilot to make a decision. And it must be borne in mind that even with the aid of automatic pilots, Instrument landing beams and radar screens, the ultimate decision still falls on a human being the pilot.. The vagaries of wind and weather also pose a problem, especially at this time of year, that automatic machinery can never solve. Nature's ways are not constant, and the decision as to what altitude to fly, whether to turn back or try to get through still ultimately falls on an individual. It is fortunate that the modern pilot has the aid of weather data and excellent -radio communications, especially in the continental United States. But if the alternatives seem perilous there is no chance in an airplane to" pull over to the side of the road and sit it out. The fact that major air disasters are a rarity is a tribute to the men who fly the planes and the men who build them. But as surely as we strive for higher speeds and larger planes, and fly in wintry weather, we run the risk of fu ture tragedies which will again be classed as 'trie world's costliest plane accident." There are risks everywhere, however, not just in the air. A nation will mourn the loss of so many men and its sympathy will go to their families. But we'll still fly. tion to arrive at the correct answer. She never knew a life other than that of a Hollywood star as she was growing up. From the time she was 3, she was the idol of America, and also the slave of her millions of fans and The movie industry. As she grew older, movie magazines doted on the theme that Shirley was being given all the advantages of a normal childhood school, parties with friends of her own age. It was emphasized that she was learning the value of money like any normal little girl. She was given a small allowance. The rest of her for tune was held in trust and administered by her parents. But she still made movie after movie. Other heavy demands on her time included sitting for magazine and publicity photographs, attend ing film openings and other publicity events. Top movie billing followed her through the years until she was grown. When she married, the fans wanted her to be blissfully happy. But uci iuc ill ic siiauuw aiiuusiicic ui uuujrnuuu SaSSH5 nad ill-equipped her lor the choosing oi a husband. Many of the millions who still love Shirley feel a sense of personal animosity at John Agar for "doing our girl wrong." Divorce, and her retirement from the movies opened a new life for Shirley. But in adapting; herself to her new role as Mrs. Average Citizen, - she has shown the same talent she brought to her early movies. With her new husband, Lt. Cmdr. Charles Black, she has done everything possible to avoid the spotlight. Is she happy in her new role? All evidenee points to the fact that she is content within her family circle. Like anyone who fights for the things he lives, Shirley is seeking to protect her daughter from the glare of the theatrical spotlight which once blinded her to normal living. She has withdrawn 4-year-old Linda Susan from a Washington, D. C. private school which sought to use her name to publicize a children's show. Shirley has made the choice of anonymity for herself and her child. Let the movie-struck adolescent, or the bored housewife, who sighs and dreams of Hollywood fame look to Shirley for inspiration to continue uncomplaining in their workaday lives. It took Shirley Temple many years of struggle and heartbreak to ar rive at that same happy state. 4i$ Mt0JfiF -. mm - ACODEN fiW$f ' TOL - C?&rsz&-- I 1 1 . Jr -----------iW Soviet; lepers ignore Birthday Of Joe Stalin Br EDDY GILMORE MOSCOW un Josef VLssariono- vich Stalin became 73 years old Sunday. Moscow papers made no mention of the event but gave top play to toe taun international peace awards annually made pub lic on his birthday. I have seen the Soviet leader close-up four times this year and found his appearance little chang ed from when I first saw him 11 years ago. The four occasions were on May Day, on Soviet Air Force D-y last summer, on the stage of . the Bol- shoi Theater Nov. when he sat with other Soviet laaders, and in Red Square Nov. 7 when he re viewed a parade marking the, 35th anniversary of the Bolshevik Rev olution. Stalin is known to have made at least four public appearances at Moscow theatres the past year. ine ooviei leaaer walks with a resolute stride. Three of the times I- saw him- this year he had to climb a long flight of steps. He I socialist labor." At party functions he sometimes appears in a plain tunic with the same decoration and dark trous ers. During the past week news- reel close-ups of Stalin reviewing the November parade have appear ed on television. They showed him saluting the marchers and chat ting jovially with other Soviet leaders. This is the first time since the end of the war that Stalin has attended the November celebra- I tions in Moscow. Other years he ha", been away on his annual vacation. He also remained in the Soviet capital for the 19th Congress of the Soviet Communist Party last October. (Continued from page one) Trusteeship Council which has direct contacts with the Trust territories. When our committee hears a native from Somaliland which borders on the Indian ocean we will all get out of Africa. I did not get involved in North Africa. The first (polit ical) committee wrestled with the complaints over French ad ministration in its protectorates of Tunisia and Morocco. That committee adopted rather mod erate resolutions, sponsored by the Latin American countries, rejecting resolutions offered by the Arabs and Asians who have been extremely critical of the French rule in North Africa. Skirley Chooses Anonymity Is the adulation, and money, that Hollywood stardom brings worth the sacrifices of a normal way of living? Evidently Shirley Temple thinks not. And she, perhaps more than anyone, is in a posi- Fifth Plate There is food for thought and we intend no pun in a book titled New Farm Horizon, pub lished by the Successful Farming magazine on its 50th anniversary. By 1975, it says, our population will have grown so much we will have to serve five plates of food for every four we served in 1950. Filling this fifth plate alone is estimated to require the equal of the 1950 pig crops of Iowa and Nebras ka plus the 1950 cow numbers of Oklahoma, Texas and Minnesota plus the 1950 lamb crops of Nevada, Utahj, Wyoming and Montana plus the 1950 milk production of Wisconsin, Michi gan and New York plus the egg production of California, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois and Penn sylvania. That, you'll agree, is a whopping big meal. It means we must look to the future of our farm production, which may be turning up shortages, rather than to the past, where the problem nearly always was one of surpluses. We did get away one evening to attend, as guests, the annual ladies' night of the Grolier So ciety. This is an old organiza tion .whose membership is in terested in collections, especial ly in book collecting. The meet ing was devoted to a lecture by John Mason Brown who talked on George Bernard Shaw. Some may have read the profile of Brown which appeared about two months ago in the New Yorker. He is a regular contributor to the Saturday Review and is in great demand as a lecturer. As the New Yorker article pointed out he is a hardy perennial at Town Hall and at women's clubs and other organizations. His score of repeat engagements is really astounding; but con sidering the fluency of his speech, his wit and his wisdom it is not surprising. As was most fitting in the Grolier assembly hall, the cases on the walls were filled with GBS material, books, original letters (some to Mrs. Pat Campbell and Ellen Terry), playbills, first editions of his plays, etc With Communist China's re jection of the UN resolution on Korea the Assembly is press ing to wind up its remaining business. It 'plans now to ad journ Dec. 23rd with a return date for February. I am sure, however, that my presence at the adjourned session will not be required. Literary Guidepost Yugoslavia's Vehement Denunciation of ie Not Calculated to Gain Tito friends By W. G. ROGERS AUDUBON'S BUTTERFLIES, MOTHS AND OTHER STUDIES, compiled- and edited by Alice Ford (Studio-Crowell; $5.75) From 1721 to 1824, when the Audubon was in his mid-thirties, and in want, he did some 15 pages of sketches of butterflies, moths and so on, and left them to a friend in Pittsburgh, Mrs. Charles Basham. From a decen dant of hers they were acquired 10 years ago by Mrs. Kirby Chambers, and they are repro duced in this book for the first time. This fact gives .this book a special value which the text alone would not confer; the pictures themselves are good, if not incontestably great, Audubon. Popi By WILLIAM L. RYAN Al Fereiga News Analyst . Yugoslavia's angry blast at the Vatican the other day will do Pre mier Marshall Tito no particular good. Ia fact, it more likely will do him harm. The Yugoslav Communists dram atized their anger at the appoint ment of Archbishop Stepinac to the College of Cardinals, and in doing o called the West's attention to the kind of , Allies the Yugoslav Communists are. At best, they are Allies who must be watched carefully. At worst, tney still represent a threat to the West. Should "Tito be overthrown, the party very Likely would go back into the Moscow fold, at a tremend ous cost to Western defenses. And it should be remembered there is a large number of .Yugoslav Com- rrmnists who would gladly return to Stalin. What Tito and his foreign mini ster., in their blasts at Rome, have done is to call attention sharply to the strains under which the Yu- gaalav Communist Party has been struggling throughout these four years in which, they were placed outside the pale by the Stalinist parties. i There are frequent trials in Yu goslavia ox Communists found to have been working for the Conain jform. Soma of them have been dia , covered in extremeley high places, where they bad been beyond sus picion until the slips which be trayed them. Western aources ia Belgrade ha estimated that perhaps a quarter rnlllion Yugoslav Commu- nists might be willing and eager to return to Moscow's family tomor row if the opportunity arose. Tito has had luck in rooting out many of these enemies, and his coldly efficient secret police are constantly on the job. For this rea son Tito retains the whip hand, but at the cost of constant strain. On top of this strain comes his conflict with the church. The Yu goslav Communist press frequent ly complains about party members who show up at church services, go to mass regularly and even hold down jobs helping the church. The Serbian orthodox church, representing about half Yugoslav ia's 16 million population, still has a strong hold on the people, and in the north, particularly in Slovenia and Croatia, there are large close ly knit bodies of Roman Catholics fiercely loyal to their religion. The Catholics represent about a third of the population. To Tito and his party, the church represents reaction. At the same time, within the party itself, there are other forces which represent to Tito's regime a still more dan gerous reaction. There are symptoms of the same disease which has afflicted the So viet Communist Party and brought about a crackdown from Moscow. The party in many Instances is going soft, Many who are mem bers came into the party after the war, looking upon menbership "not as anything revolutionary, but as a means of living better than their neighbors, i Such party members tend to get CURRIER AND IVES' AMERI CA, edited by Colin Simkin (Crown; $10) Eighty plates in color, a help ful introduction and notes, and a general design and binding in good taste serve to make this a conservative, to avoid chances in protecting the status quo and hold ing on to what they have. And while the party loses Its militancy, Stalin's agents infil trate probably at a fairly fast rate. GRIN AND REAP IT despite all the vigilance of Tito's 1X1 111 OCt I I police. So there is danger for Tito on all sides. In this light, his attack on the Vatican begins to look suspi ciously like a case of frayed nerves. --L-a&-Sg3-? Better. English By D. C. WDLIAM3 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "I can't seem to un derstand this problem; it's mighty difgcult,' 2. What is the correct pronun ciation of "oppugn"? - 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Glossery, nursery, ef frontery, dysentery. 4. What does the word "ad-n-onish" mean? i 5. What is a word beginning with v that means "easily roll ing or turning"?" .j ANSWERS 1. Say, "1 seem unable to un derstand this problem; ifs very (or, exceedingly) difficult." 2. Pronounce o-pun, e as in odd, a as in Bsc, accent second syllable. 3. Glossary. 4. To reprove gent ly, but seriously. "He was ad-rnori-thed for his failure to taring the necessary papers with him." 9. Voluble. worthwhile collection. Pictures of the home, the farm, the family, hunting, fishing, racing, boating, skating, of east and west, of winted and summer, of country and city, add up to a consider able part of 19th century Amer ica. The book will look well on your library table top, and it's the shape if it, too. BIBLE AND CHRISTIANTY, in 1,000 Pictures and Text, intro duction by Albert Schweitzer, by the editors of Year (Year; $7.95) This story-with-picture. and picture-with-story account, fill ing almost 200 pages, tells of the Old Testament and the New, the establishment of various churches and sects, missions, Bible socie ties. YMCA, Red Cross, and then of other religions in other parts of the world: Mohammedan, Hindu, Buddhist and so on. Ifs a sort of big glorified Sunday school magazine for grewn-ups, with the pictorial emphasis on story rather than art, and the text more about action than theology. Truman Drifts Jacqueline Auriol Tops Flight Record IfirPJ I rnfinS Marseille, France un - Jac- v v P quehne Auriol, daughter - in - law of the French president, bettered WASHINGTON UP) President her own woman's record Sunday Truman told troops in Korea Sat- ,or flyin' over closed 100-kilome- urday the ramparts you watch ier -ij muer course witn an are the bulwarks behind which average time of 534.375 miles an "your countrymen and millions of bour. other people are free to celebrate rs Auriol s flight beat the rec- Christmas in a spirit of peace and onl of 511.360 miles. an hour which ffood will." she set in May. 1951. She flew a The President's special yuletide "Mistral" jet fighter of the French message to Gen. Mark Clark, com- nationalized aircraft industry, pow mander in chief of the Far East, ered "y Nene-Hispano Suiza- mo- directed to members of the Ameri- wr- A."e previous recoro naa Deen can armed forces and United N- Kl wun " J" vampire. tions comrades, added: "Your sacrifice is great. In our hearts there is a special place for you truj Christmas. In our thoughts ! mere is a special prayer." GuppieSTcacli FactsbfLife NEW HAVEN. Conn. (J A Yale pathologist suggested Sunday that a guppy is better than the birds, bees and flowers when lt comes to explaining the facts of tue. Dr. Leon Whitney, also a noted veterinarian, bases this conclusion on his recently completed study of me immodest Midget Fish." and it'll appear soon in a book devoted exclusively to the lowly little gup- py. Thousands cf youngsters learn their first facts of life from their tank of guppies, stated Dr. whit ney. With this in mind, he has tried to make the book valuable for In quiring youngsters, as well as adults. Dr. Whitney claims thai mora guppies are kept by millions of fanciers than any other ironical fish, yet less is known about them. than their popularity warrants,, Formosa Official TAIPEH. Formosa LP Gov. K. C. Wu was painfully burned Sat urday as ho dedicated new, blast furnace at Sitze, near Taipeh. When Wu threw a kerosene- soaked rag into the furnace to start it in operation, a tongue of flame shot out. It singed his left eyebrow and the hair from the left side of his head, and his hand was burned so that he still wore bandages today. This was the third anniversary of his becoming governor of For mosa. .."- i i A - m w 11 H ft 1 i I ft . . ..-" Nsm SAN FOJ CISCO - - Repairs Made On Yorkmar PORTLAND UP) Workmen Sun day were making temporary re pairs to sprung bottom plates on the freighter Yorkmar. The ship was drydocked here Saturday for repairs of damage done when the ship went aground Dec. 8 at Grays Harbor, Wash. It was pulled free 10 days later. Capt. T. F. Sheehan of the Cal- mar Lino reported that the ship i may be able to leave Portland Thursday for Grays Harbor where a cargo of lumber for the East Coast is to be picked up. Perma nent repairs are to be made at Baltimore, Md., ho said.- by Lichty U.S., Spain to Sign PactiT Soon WASHINGTON UP) Diplomatic officials said Saturday night the United States and Spain soon will sign three agreements covering American development and use of naval and air bases on Spanish territory. The pacts cover military aid. economic aid and military facill- toes. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE OPEN MONDAY and TUESDAY 9:30 A.JVL f to 9:00 P.M. St doit 9o Tfjor toSau i 0 A ZJrom IfllS I i film OH '"'mi HittN f,m" itifink Mm nh iMMMiiMJlil Syvi, R 15 n f i OLDEST PAPER NEWPORT, RX (INS) The weekly "Newport Mercury," start ed in 175ft hv JlmM SVanlrltn I. the oldest newspaper in America. Salam's Tallest Building 390 State Street "Tea aeea ajrytUa of a dictraeted U f!,V J5BJ A wm . - ... -- i. a- .7 1 J , -J l timimmfiitm& iti Q?ias.ai ftWlif'Mf ) ! " i COAMLES W. CLAGGRV tSXT. ESTABLISHED 1891 'A SINCERE SERVICE AVAILABLE TO ALL" fHONI 91 73 " ! '- ' Oat of Tewa Calls at Our JExpenso AJLLLNG LOT AVAILABLE - 17. T. RIGD0N CO., Funeral Directors 299 H. COTTAGI AT CHIMIXETA r