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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 11, 1953)
4 Tho Statesman. Solum. Prow Saturday. April H, 18 S3 sj CDrcson G& statesman Gty Four-H OnbVorC FAIR AND warmer 'lWo Favor Sways Us No Fear Shall Awe Frem First Statesman, March ZS. 1S51 Statesman Publishing Company CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Edito and Publisher ' Published every morn ins-. Business office ZSO - " North Church St Salem. Ore Telephone S-S441. Entered at the postoMice at Salem. Ore., as second class matter under act of Congress March S. 1I7S. 3 Member Associated Press The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all local news pnmea in tt this newspaper fo 'No Vacancies' Too many "No Vacancy signs tendto jpeed a traveler through town and on into Jhe next city, one local motel operator told m-Tneeting of Chamber of Commerce leaden ahd hotel and motelmen this week, and it is Very true. ; There is nothing so discouraging to a weary motorist as a long -series of neon "No" signs. The impression is one of inhospitality; the traveler gets the idea the people here don't etre whether he gets a place to stay the night or not. Thus as the tourist season opens and Salem gets ready to play host during a busy conven tion schedule, hotelmen and motor court man agers may well consider the suggestion, ad vanced at their recent meeting, to decrease or eliminate "No Vacancy" signs. Instead, motel rijen with a "fujl house" could politely refer their potential customers to a court which has vacancies. Local hotels already perform this service to some extent. Efficient operation of such a referral serv ice would mean that some kind of central list ing would have to be arranged, so that the room - seeking motorist won't be sent on a fruitless search from motel to motel. It would n't do to have one operator tell the motorist simply that there's a vacancy "on up the road apiece." Rather, the operator could make a specific reservatiorrfor the motorist by phone. Whatever arrangement the businessmen concerned make, their idea of making visitors to Oregon's capital city feel welcome and; wanted is good. The friendly efforts of one "full" motel manager to find the customer a place will make the same affirmative impres sion that a customer gets when a store, which does not cany the requested item, courteously refers the buyer to a competitor who does. In the long run, this policy pays off in good will and better business all around. - Our sympathies go out to the budget com mittee of the city council which is straining itself to achieve a balanced budget within the six per cent limitation.. Its proposal for eliminating penny. parlrfng(making a nickel the budget is thrown under closer j scrutiny rt to see if savings in outgo can be made. v, With no desire to add to the woes of the budgeteers The Statesman hopes that they sj will not find It necessary to discontinue the ' city Four-H program. In effect now some ' four years it has shown steady growth in number of clubs and of members. The value of Four-H club work in the country long was recognized, and its extension to cities was welcomed. Projects undertaken by city clubs include several in home economics, others in gardening, forestry, woodworking, etc Car ried on under guidance they not only occupy time of youth but give them worthwhile training. This work does not compete with other youth work, but supplements it, and reaches boys and girls who might not be at tracted to other organizations. So we hope this program will not become a casualty if it possibly can be avoided. The current "open-door' policy in Moscow with visiting newspapermen permitted to talk to the Russian man-in-the-street and the mutual toasting in vodka must seem espe cially ironic to George F. Kennan, former am bassador to Moscow. Kennan was declared persona non grata and ousted by the Russians for criticizing the lack of contact between for eigners and the Russian people in the Soviet capital. Kennan now seems to be persona non grata with the Eisenhower administration for criticizing the GOPi "liberation" policies. There's irony in the loss to the nation's serv ice of this brilliant mind and informed student of the USSR. ' A wirephoto shows two little Dutch girls standing in a field of daffodils. This is stand ard spring-time stuff except that the picture looks more like the Willamette Valley than like our idea of Holland in bulb-flower sea son. The young ladies are wearing "peddle pushers." We always thought Holland snisses wore those colorful wide skirts and white winged Dutch hats when tip-toeing ; through the tulips! There are some American cus toms and costumes we wish would not be exported. The closing of the State theater here "due to a film shortage and competition from tele vision" is bad news for movie-goers who look ed to the State for re-showing of fine pic tures which were missed on their first run in the city or quality "art" films and foreign films which evidently didn't have the box office appeal to rate showings at the larger movie-houses. Officials said the State may re open this summer when the transient harvest workers swell the local movie-going popula tion. Supposedly "the hop-pickers don't have TV sets. But it may be they too are saving their money to buy video and won't be going to shows, either! , ,' . ...... Corvallis will not succumb to the lures of Demon Rum by licensing any liquor-by-the-drink places under the new law. But Philo math, a few miles to the West, will. Philomath used to be so pious a town that separate churches of the same denomination flourish ed. Now it will serve as Corvallis' drinking place. The Board of Control has given the new warden authority to hire 10 additional guards. This makes one wonder if part of the previous trouble at the prison was due to lack of guards, and if Warden O'Malley had asked for more. Presumably they are needed or they would not have been hired, but that's a lot of guards to hire at one institution at. one sitting. ' j Governor Earl Warren has been designated by President Eisenhower as one of the Amer ican official party to represent him at the inauguration of Queen Elizabeth II on June 6th. He is directed to be there by May 30th "at the latest." Whether that is to be sure of a seat in the hall or to learn his cues we do not know. Mrs. Warren is going too; and if they take their three daughters, Nina, Vir ginia and Dorothy, England will see a very fine sample of the American family. Central Oregon Community college at Bend is offering some unique extension courses, one on juvenile delinquency and an other on alcohol studies. After old college requirements in Greek and Latin this is go ing modern with a vengeance. - Even if peace does come in Korea we'll have to keep troops there a long time, says President Eisenhower. In brief, none of this getting the boys home by Christmas. U. S. Has Much to Lose, or Gain, if Russians Take Lead in Solving Germany's Problems Br JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOF WASHINGTON The next tar get of the Soviet peace offensive is almost centainly Germany. On this point. West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and his advisers see eye to eye with the leading American offi cials. Both the Americans and the Germans are so convin- i ced that a new ; -. asawvu a I Germany is ? inevitable that rlthis prospect. lJ W- and what to ' fMdo about it. f tchief subject Vi. aiJAlUUS U19" cussions since Adenauer FT- 'PPaj?-;-S i JoM-pk Alsp 4 came to Wash r " inRton. The sense of anxiety is con veyed by one official's remarks: "I keep wondering if the Russ ians are going to ask for a con ference on Germany this after noon at 2 o'clock or maybe at 3." Some advisers 1 are urging president Els- I enhower and Secretary of j State Dulles boldly to seize the initiative,! perhaps them- selves propos ing a confer ence on a Ger man peace in free elec-llta!;URi tions and a united Germany. The American leaders are cer tainly considering some such course, and they have certainly discussed the matter with Chan cellor Adenauer. Yet the issue is In doubt, partly because the whole problem has produced a curious schizophrenic reaction 1 In the State Department. The prospect of renewed negotia tions with the Russians about Germany fill some officials with something very like panic Others, while recognizing the grave dangers involved, believe that It is just possible that a time of great 'opportunity is at t?nnd ''. I V -S I The paale Is understandable. Even a seemlagly serious effer 'by the Soviets to neretiate a reasonable German peace trea ty eenld threw the Western al liance Into an nnroar. It eonld bring the already falterinf Ea ropean army project to a dead halt. It eonld persvade the Ger mans that only the Americans stood in the way mt a nnlted Germany. If a German peace treaty should actually be negotiated, more-over, the basis of West ern strategy will be twisted out of shape. The Soviets will cer tainly demand the withdrawal of all occupation troops as a condition of agreement. This is, at least in German eyes, by no means too high a price to pay for Germany unity. But where else on the continent, fearful officials ask, can American troops be stationed? And how can the West be sure that a sovereign Germany will not ul timately ally itself with the Soviet Union? Tet seme of the balder policy makers hold that saeh fears are irrational. It is almost incon ceivable, they say, that the Sov iets are really serious abont a German peace treaty. If the Soviets are merely planning a wrecking operation, they say, It is easy enough to find this eat. And if the Soviets are really ready to get oat of East Ger many, then we are wen on the way to winning the eold war. These bolder spirits point to certain clear tests of Soviet in tentions. There will be no Ger man peace treaty without an Austrian peace treaty this is already agreed among the Western allies. With both trea ties signed, the Soviets would be ' legally obliged to withdraw allv Russian troops back to the So viet borders and the Western powers would demand absolute proof that this obligation had been fulfilled. Another test is the eastern territory taken from Germany by Poland. Can the Soviets wrench this, territory from their Polish satellite, and turn it over to Poland's ancient enemy, while Soviet troops were being, withdrawn from Poland? 1 Perhaps the hardest test of all are the free all-German elections which are the West's first condition for a German settlement. Many experienced officials believe that the Soviets win ostensibly agree; to free elections. Bat eaa they really de set Unless all observers are dead wren. Coaunaalsm weald be overwhelmingly repudiated la East Germany, la the first free election Communism ever faced. Thus the last fig leaf would be stripped from the world Communist saevement. Add such sacrifices as the loss of the German uranium mines and the forward Soviet bases In Europe. Add the risk that a united, strongly anti -Communist Germany would turn to the West, whatever might be writ- March newsletter . . . clip and send . . . Col. James R. Luper, 38, former Salemite, killed in AF crash at Omaha . . . Charles Drury Stayton, grandson of founder of Stayton, dies March 4 . . . McMinnville weekly News Reg ister goes daily . . . Sheriff confiscates 35 slot machines in a Silverton warehouse . . . Meier & Frank store of Portland announces plans to build a big branch store in Salem in mid-1954 on block where old Salem high school building now stands (N. High and Marion) . . . Gunman gets big haul from Salem Safeway Store ... Trapplst monks to build monastery near Lafayette west of Newberg . . . Three Lablsh firm partners corner onion market but end up with little mere than tears la their eyes . . . Mt. Aagel bank daylight robbed of SiS.aae by 17-year-old Hermiston youth, nabbed ooupla hears later near BfUI City . . . OPS oelllnrs ceno and coffee in Salem (sad elsewhere) percolates to 95 cents per pound (Java see it fall?) . . . Echo High wins state basket ball B tourney in Salem (boats Elfin), Jefferson Bich takes third . . . First local basketball on TV la this area seen dar ing NCAA rerional playoffs at Corvallis . . Am. Legion Post t plans . to sell post building and grounds- (-3 ' aeres) cm 9. Commercial St. to : somebody no body knows whoixuW. Salem fathers plan to rexone entire dtybrings wails of aiioiish'from lots of residents, praise from others . . . Liquor-by-drink in Oregon passed into law ... New St. Joseph's Catholic Church dedicated with im pressive program and large crowds . . . Plans readied to de velop city park on Willamette River bank in West Salem be tween Center St. and railroad bridges boat docks to go in there soon and park to be open for picnickers this summer . . . Salem and Dallas Highs go to state basketball A tourney but both eliminated. WU juniors win fresh glee for third straight year . . . Marine PFC Lloyd Pinner, Zi. Sales, killed In action In Ko rea March It . . . Big alumina plant north of Salem sold by government to Lawrence Harvey, same gay whose going to epea a TV station In Salem next fall . . . Howard Fltsgerald, Dallas Bey Scout, gets scouting geld lifesaver medal for sav ing two brothers la home fire at Valseta last Sept. . . . Bar bara Paulsen, Woodbum, wins Statesman - KSLM spelling contest . . . Salem High reports it expects its best baseball team ever this year . . . Salem TMCA regional BB champs go to national T tournament at High Point, N.C but lose early. Hugh Fisher, 80, former Marion County assessor, dies . . . Mr. and Mrs. James Scott (he worked at Oregon Pulp St Paper for past 25 years) both burn to death in house fire . . . Secy, of State Earl Newbry proposes a vets bonus for Korean vets . . . Howard V. Morgan, 76, father of state democratic leader, dies at Dallas . . . At end of month Salem Senators baseball team open spring training at Calistoga, Calif n with 0330000 (Continued from page one) and as it helps or hurts econo mies of foreign countries is one of the most difficult ones the administration must face. The recent sharp slump in exports of farm products wheat, cotton, rice, corn results in accumula tion of surpluses here which the government takes over un der loan agreements with pro ducers. At the same tme the government erects barriers against imports of dairy products to furnish protection to the presently embarrassed dairy industry; and this hurts those countries like New Zealand, the Netherlands, Denmark where such products are a very im portant part of their export trade. Ia his message to Congress President Eisenhower posed the issue clearly when he said: "This problem embraces the - need to develop through co-operative action among the free nations, a strong and self-supporting economic system capable of providing both the military strength to deter aggression and the rising productivity that can improve uvuig standards." A solution will not be found in glib phrases like "Trade, not aid." Nor will it be found In rigid adherence to ancient doe- ma either of free trade or high protection. In fact it will be hard to find any solution which will not hurt some even though its overall effect is good. The approach of President Eisen hower is the proper one. He isn't shooting from the hip; he is waiting until the targets are clear and the means for hitting uiem sorted out. Better this than trying some quickie cure tasBnususssjnsojn Salem Enters Sp eech Finals Five Salem High School stu dents and a Dallas girl gained finals rounds in competition Fri day at opening day of the an nual Oregon High School Speech Tournament at Corvallis, the As sociated Press reported. . t In the finals today will be Ron ald Anderson, discussion; George Matter and Karen Johnson, ex temporaneous; Carol -Warren, poetry;- William Cook and An derson, radio speaking: Matter, serious reading. The Dallas High girl. Da B artel. Is ia the poetry finals, r Tlnalists were not yet determ ined In after-dinner speaking, in which Salem's Louise Owens and James Cowgill are entrants. De bating also will be concluded to day. In all contests some 150 top speech students from 37 Ore- f on high schools are taking part. First Aidmen Treat'Three uries Ini 1 Three' Salem youngsters were two for head cuts and one for drinking a bottle of ant poison. None was seriously hurt Two - year - old Rose Sigman, till th St, apparently suffered no m exxects alter drinking a bottle of ant poison in her home about 7:13 Friday night IHrst aldmn tnnmTMA stomach and a doctor was called. wuo scour Robert Havelka, t, of 1005 N. Winter St, sustained a one-inch h nn Vila ti-at he fell from a small cart loaded wun ooxes about 4 pjn. First aidmen dressed the wound and advised his scoutmaster to take him to a doctor for stitches. Six-year-old Mike Carter, 1870 N. Church St. was treated for a cut over his eye after bo fall while playing shortly before 1 p.m. , , ' "I Saved this ea the Trade-la I Made at Trader Louie's. See Us First far the Finest! Oa The Great New 1878 Lana Are. Til AD ED LOUIE TV Fhens 3-1351 Open Monday and Friday Eysnlngs SUNDAY'S BROADCASTS Pacific Standard time ' SUlecydest KSLsf UN, KOCO 14M, KODf Sit, KOW S2S, KSX list, KOA ltM rsfl Mtsacyeles KODf Mid, KSX ftU (Miter's note: The Stateassan paanahes In tees faith the pros rasas aaS Usees as prevMee oy-the raale staUeaa,,fct became rume the fftpuu are change wttheet eoncaslea. this aewsscper .eaaaet ke respeastkla fee the accuracy herein.) , . , ttoum tat t:U 7 KSLM - I aeco . SttlH Church ef Air ureh af Air Church, Home IChurch, Homo I Sun. Music Coacertaau l concert Kan , I Guest Star IMUHt a IChurch of Air Church ot Ai (Sua. Music lucre's te Vets 8 KSLM first Bapttea first Bapttst IBeehteOee iBaekteOed KOCO OecWrUht News I Cent. Lutheran Cent Lutheran KOAB Waffle Club Waffle Chib IChrisUaa Hour Christian Hour KOIM Tabernacle TabernaeJe (News " lav te uiraai KOW Sun. Music Sun. Music I Sun. Musle Sun. 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New Santiam Hospital at Stayton dedicated . . . Biggest news comes on last day of month when State Prison Warden Vir gil O'Malley is fired by State Board of Control because a survey showed the prison was out of hand. Clarence T. Glad den, a retired federal pen warden, brought in temporarily to get things "straightened out" ... ' ul-1Z..r GRIN AND REAR IT that certainly haunts the Krem- By Lichty nn as much as the rear of a pro-Soviet Germany haunts the West. These are some of the reasons why Eisenhower and Dulles are being advised to adopt a bold aggressive policy. Whatever the final decision, ft already seems likely that the new Administration Is te he faced with s difficult sad ehal lengtng; time when, as: ene of ficial remarked, "we've get te reshuffle the whole deck and start ever again." Painful as It was, the Korean war simplified matters for the last Adminis tration. As lone as the ajrsTess loa ia Korea continued, direct East-West contact was ; ruled out. Korea thas acted as a sort ef shield behind which the effort to strengthen the West eeuld go on. It is new ulte probably the Kremlin's iateatlea te remove the shield. If so, it will be most; danger ous for the Western powers to remain frozen in position. Here it is worth recalling a remark which Berlin's brave i Mayor, Ernst Reuter, made some time ago to one of the' reporters. He pointed to a map of divided Germany on the wall of his z office. "No one with i a sense of history,-. Reuter said !can : believe that Germany will stay divided very much longer. In national policy, it is best to be on the side of history. -(Copyright. 133. New York Kerala .Tribune Xac4 , 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "There were less than forty apples in the box, and she cut each of them in half." 2. What is the correct pro nunciation of "scion"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Furlough, fur long, fulcrum, fullsome. 4. What does the word "con vivial" mean? 5. What is a word begin ning with bl that means "a lov er of books"? ANSWERS 1. Say, "There were fewer than forty apples in the box, and she cut each of them in halves." 2. Pronounce si-un, i as In sigh, u as in rust un stressed. 3. Fulsome. 4. Char acterized by eating and drink ing in jovial fellowship. "I un derstand that it is to be a fest ive and convivial occasion." S. Bibliophile. SLATE KX-WAKDEN EUGENE (AVOregon's former prison warden, Virgil O'Malley, is scheduled to speak here Satur day night at the annual banquet of the Oregon Young Democratic Club?. r- banquet is part of a sts -ention which opened 3 ... So I thought rd consolidate an : . Just have the finance debts with year plan ; heaadmg ; C2 PAY LS7C."3f n-OESSPUSl RSSSXTQI ', i&nrcs aids TMtfi oscat aooeut ricrrb Oplicd Co. 444 State Stt i , Faeao S-H2S KSLM UnnySoes IMusle iaydoBeatty lOrde Beany KOCO Salem Agenda (Salem Agenda Musle Music KOAB Sua. Serenade jSun, Serenade Sua. Serenade Sun. 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Craig I I Story Teller Catholic Hour Faith our Time Allistalr Cooke IChurch of Air 4n. Rererte DBdwy. Beet -l?atheHe ftouv Concert Hour 1 1 KSLM Slleat KOCO t'ft ISUeat m Bdwy. Beat IMel Baldwin news mgnuMpicny councu KOW KBX Concert Kr. Concert Br. I Slleat i ? I Bandstand ' (City CouneU Concert Hr, . fSllent (Bandstand (City Council tCoaoert Hr. Givan with Purchatt of NW Piano at Regular j Piano Prico : This Offer Good for a : ; Limited Timo Only THS fINIST INSTlUMINTf MONIY CAN IUT AN3 OrrtXZD AT TWO FOR THI lKICI Of ONH 470 M. CapHel Phone 14371