4-f.Sec !-Sra1einenV Salem, OrV Friday, Jim 17, 1 955 4' (Drefiontatesraatt flo Favor Stray Us. No ear Shall Awe" -V ma Flrtt Statesmas. March ZS, 1S51 Statesman Publishing Company CHARLES A. SPEAGUE. Ediua and Publisher PuDUsbcd every monuai. lummi offie (a ftortfl Churafl St.. Satm. Ore.. Tslagftooa 4-ali Eatered at Lb poatotfic at SJm, Or, as second class matter under act ot Conarcaa ttarea X. IMlt. Member AiscdaUd frtu The Asaoclatad Preaa la acuUeo axerusfvety to the sa tor republication at aU local news priatad ta J this BSDBPcr. Church-State Conflict in Argentina JTbe conflict between church and state in Argentina sounds like an echo from the past. Same of the historical battles of the middle ajes .and early modern period raged between kif gs and bishops. Most noteworthy was that of Henry IV of Germany who made lay appointments to several bishoprics and drew or himself excommunication by the Catholic chjirch. In January,' 1077 he stood baref&ot injthe snow doing penance for three days be fore Pope Gregory VII, who was a guest in tht castle, would grant absolution. Now word frem the Vatican is that President Peron of Argentina has been excommunicated. It re mains to be seen whether he will seek for giveness and reinstatement as a good Cath ol$ in which faith he was reared. . n Buenos Aires the riots between those loyal to the church and Peron's police and partisans which broke out when the Corpus Chfisti parade was held Sunday in defiance of ji government ban were followed by rebel airj raids on Thursday. Government spokes man claim the army and air force are loyal tolPeron, and that the air raids come from naval forces. Just what the outcome will be is pard to predict. Revolutions and counter revolution have been familiar occurrences In -La tin American countries. Usually the de cision rests with the army. As long as it re mains loyal to the regime the rebels are not likely to win. When it turns against the chief of 'state, the latter starts running for the nearest exit a seaport in the old days, an airport now. ' " jperon is a dictator, and like most dictators brooks no interference. Some, however, make thjir peace with the church. Mussolini did injtaly, and Franco in Spain and Salazar in Portugal have , done the same. In fact the lojfalty of Franco and Salazar to the church is taunch and has in turn drawn support fn$n the church. . Peron has offended the church and now proposes to repeal the con stitutional provision making the Catholic chirch official in the nation. Clergy have resisted and been subjected to police har assment. Two prelates were bundled aboard plahes and deported by the police. The trend has been toward separation of church and state and toward freedom of wor ship (save in Communist countries). Even where there are established churches a modus Vivendi has been worked out which keeps t eacn autnonry pretty much to its own sphere and allows rlShconformists to worship as they wilL Eventually some sort of truce will come to Argentina. Both church and state will sur vive. Perhaps each will grow stronger in in dependence and devotion to its own responsi bilities. Strong anti-clerical movements have arisen in Catholic countries which at times haye led to reprisals against the church, for example in France. Adjustments usually fol low and state and church continue' to func- . tioa. Multilived Pinballs Portland's pinball machines seem to have amazing powers of survival. Away back in the terms of Dorothy McCullough Lee as., mayor of Portland the commission adopted an ordinance to prohibit operation of such machines. Proprietors of the devices fought the ordinance through all the courts in the land, all the time raking in coins while the litigation dragged. Finally the U. S. Supreme Court kicked out their case, the Oregon Su preme Court passed down the mandate for putting them out of business. Even then the city police showed they had lead in their boots for they let the machines run for a week or ten days longer (until after the Rose Festival crowds had been milked). Then when they finally moved to confiscate the machines the amusement interests ran ' to court to get an injunction against their re moval. In the interval they had closed the slot, though the machines were continuing to operate. The court attack is on the basis that the machines are no longer coin-in-the-slot machines though the prohibition is not limited to slot machines. Presumably the in terests will carry this battle through the : courts, all the while raking in the shekels from the operation. What the pinball people want of course is a change at the city hall which will give a repeal of the ordinance. They got one vote when Fred Peterson was elected over Dor othy Lee. If anything should discredit them it is this brazen defiance of a city ordinance. Some way should be found to put the ma chines out of business and then let litigation proceeed. Commissioner Earl wants to amend the law to prevent any escape but that might start a fresh line of lawsuits. Most every lawn is getting the ministry of a power mower these days including that at (he state prison grounds. Labor saving has eaught up with the pen inmates. ber growing capacity. Big 4 Conference May Not Be 'At Summit' ' ?: Unless Party Boss Khrushchev Comes f By. CHARLES M. McCANN taftee" Press Staff Carrespaadent ItMooks as if the Big Four meet ing 4o be held ia Geneva wiQ not be a "conference at the summit" Premier Nikolai A. Bulganin, as the bead of tht Soviet f overnment wil; lead the Russian delegation officially. As of sow, however, it is un certain whether Nikita Khrushchev, the .first secretary of the Commu nist 'Party, will even be there. If. Bulganin goes to Geneva with out 'Khrushchev it will be a meet ing of heads of government all right but it will not be the "con ference at the summit" which has so long been discussed. If, there is any real "summit' In the Kremlin right now which is somewhat doubtful it is Khrush ehet. . Russia has accented the Allied .proposal for a four-day meeting July: l through July 21 inclusive. Itu.not proposed that the heads f the four governments shall J- J. u w maaye any uewaions on wuria pruo lems. They are to hold an exchange ef vtews and define issues oa whkh the Big Four foreign ministers will negotiate afterward. But Bulganin is unlikely to be abl even to engage in any author itative "exchange of views" unless Khrtishchev is at his elbow. When Khrushchev and Bulganin went to Belgrade to see President . Tito' of Yugoslavia, Khrushchev went out of his way to show he war the head man on the Russian i aid There is no real comparison, of course, between the Belgrade and Geneva meetings. The' Soviet leaders went to Bel grade to see a man who was not only head of his government but leafier of his own Communist Par at Il; looked men, however, as If Khrushchev certainly would be tht real No. 1 delegate at any Big Four conference not officially but actually. , But Khrushchev won himself lot M bad publicity in Belgrade by his lack of tact and his loose talk. That made It seem questionable whether he would attend the Big Few meeting even as the towtr If Khrushchev does not go to Geneva, presumably Bulganin will have to refer back to Moscow for instructions whenever he is con fronted by any unexpected develop ment; A lot of time could be lost ia that way in a meeting of limited duration. Western diplomats have no dis position to belittle Bulganin. He is a man of great ability, with a friendly manner. He is 60 years old. lie is reeognizeable at once, in his pictures, by his goatee. He Time Flies: 'rem The Statesman Filet "10 Years Ago . . June 17, 1945 Salem was formally on record favoring the city acquisition of the remaining 43 acres of Bush pasture at a cost of $125,000. The Bush pasture project car ried in six wards and lost in one number 5, in North Salem. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower brought "the greatest moment in his life" his homecoming, to an official dose in a press con ference and denied with utmost vigor that he had any idea of going into politics. The National Battery com pany of St Paul, Minn., obtain ed an option on four acres of property adjoining tht SJ. tracks in West Salem and con templated the construction of a new manufacturing unit. 25 Years Ago June 17, 1931 Miss Josephine Albert and Wendell Robinson, winners of ' tht Atwater-Kent audition con test recently held, were to com pete in the state contest at Portland in the fall. FLOWERS THAT BLOOM IN THE SPRING, TRA LA! 'Operation Alert' The President and cabinet members and , top government officials departed from Washington Wednesday and set up shop in secluded places as an experiment of main taining fovernment operations in the event of bombing. They didn't take, along their secretaries (female), so must have taken along some card decks to set up a few poker games when the business of operating away from home base got dull. Once the evacuation of the . national cap ital was real. That was when the British seized Washington and burned public build ings. The Madisons escaped to Virginia, but Dolly Madison, wife of the president, took with her a Gilbert Sturt oortrait of George Washington. General Early's men pot dose to Wahingtn during the Civil War. but after the government clerks were mobilized to man trenches hurriedly thrown up the Confederate raid was driven back. We hope this practice run will not have to be repeated under i genuine threat: but for the moment the big battle Is, as it has been most of the" time, to Veen the termites from boring from within and eating away the substance of the country. ( loves me, $Vfr fen s yvyiiViV iniwJf te$w ml-- mm i Dt?hTTTTO)IIiXr1 Mrs. Smith' - v Enters Plea Of Innocent PORTLAND Ul Mrs. Marjorie Smith. 34. accused of Dlottin the bomb death of her Jiusband, attor ney Kermith Smith, 4, in April, pleaded innocent in circuit court Thursday. , Her plea previously had been delayed as her attorneys attacked a grand jury first-degree murder indictment against her. J u d e e Charles W. Redding overruled their demurrer. Also under indictment is Victor Laurence Wolf. 45, who is accused of Dlantinff the fatal homh in Smith's car. 'Wolf has said he planted the bomb out of love for Mrs. Smith, and blamed her for hatching the plot. The trial is expected in the Sep tember term of court. No date jet has been set. (Continued from page L) Showing Off Our Trees That was a splendid idea of the Oretton Junior Chamber, of Commerce to send a crors section of a huee Orecon Douglas fir log on a tour of the East. This paper had a picture of it be'"? viewed in Rockefeller Cen ter, New York City, the other morninp. The truck has taken it on to Washington where i has attracted more attention. It will be" shown at Richmond and aeain at Charlotte; N. C , and finally at Atlanta, Ga., during the national Jaycee convention. Few people in the East and South Ret out to the Pacific Northwest or to California where the bit; trees grow. It will give them quite a thrill to see a tree which sorouted from seed hundreds of years aeo. The Jay cee expedition conducted by Gerry Rucker of Portland and Wayne McCall of Cottage Grove is an original idea that really will ac quaint folk in other parts of the nation with Oregon's chief resource, its timber and tim- started out as a Communist organ izer way back in 1917. He became an able government administrator. In World War II be became a polit ical marshal in the armed forces. He succeeded Georgi M. Malenkov as premier last Feb. 8. The trouble with the situation id the Kremlin now is that Khrush chev has succeeded Josef Stalin as Communist leader and Bulganin has succeeded him as premier. There is no longer any real summit 50 per cent and will be given only to farmers who do not ex ceed their acreage allotments. It is not an "easy choice to make. Acceptance means a price guarantee of 76 per cent of parity but wheat production , only on a little over 60 per cent of former acreage. I Rejection and growing wheat on all one's acres means taking the market price, whatever -that may be, but surely considerably under the government support figure. The root of the wheat prob lem is trying to square eco nomics with politics and so ciology. American (and Cana dian, for that matter) growers have been raising more wheat than they can dispose of at what they regard as compensa tory prices. Our government has stepped in to temper eco nomic law at the expense of the general treasury. The justifi cation was that such an import ant segment of agriculture as wheat growing (and that of five other basic crops) Should not be allowed to go to ruin by the harsh price-fixing of the mar ketplace. Parity was invoked during New Deal days when farmers (as well as others) were in the trough! of the de pression. It was kept alive even through war years: when de mand took prices above parity, and was continued after the war - Secretary Brannan did not apply acreage controls to limit production. Recovery fol lowing the war resulted in marked increase in world pro duction of wheat and other foods. American production re mained around a billion bush els a year. Surpluses in govern ment hands mounted until now the wheat in storage runs around a billion bushels, well over a year's requirements for food and seed and! normal ex port The crop this year will add to the surplus, in spite of the heavy cut in acreage and in spite of very adverse weather in the Southwest plains coun try. The June crop forecast is for 845.213,000 bushels of wheat, which compares with 969,781,000 for 1954 and a ten year average of 1,154,073,000. bu. This reduced amount is con siderably in excess of normal requirements for the United States, so the prospect is for some addition to wheat stores. on stocks no yet taken over $7.3 billion. Its losses and ex penses for the first nine months of the fiscal year amounted to $507 million. Storage costs aloae run to about $1 million a day. Strenuous efforts have been made to get rid of the surplus stocks. The law prevents their sale on the domestic market for less than 5 per cent above cur rent support prices plus reason able carrying charges. That means there is no sale there. Some commodities such as but ter, cheese, have been used on school lunch programs or made as grants to welfare institu tions. There is authority for disposing of sift-pluses to for eign countries, but that draws severe criticism from friendly governments. If we dump our wheat other exporting coun tries complain that we are in juring their economy. Last fall it was proposed that we export some of our rice surplus to non- s Communist Asiatic countries. That brought immediate pro test from Burma, a rice-exporting country, one of whose of ficials called it the "kiss of ' death" to Burma. So long as huge accumula tions of wheat and other crops remain in storage, they over hang the market and prevent a price rise. It looks as though it would take years, barring the unwanted outbreak of war, to work them into consumption. Meantime we have not been re ducing but Increasing the wheat surplus. (Benson's butter deal has worked out better, with considerable working off of stocks). Northwest wheat growers have proposed a two-price sys tem on wheat marketing. I will discuss that and other wheat surplus problems tomorrow. Safety Awards Go to Airlines CHICAGO CT) The national safety council announced Thnre. day 39 U. S. air lines have won tne council s aviation safety award. The award is for going through 1954 without a rassenser or rrew fatality in air accidents. They included West Coast Air lines. Northwest Airlines. Pan American World Airways and Unit ed Airlines. Better English By D. C Williams Airline Travel Aids Surprif ej NORFOLK, Va. WV-Capt Eu gene Carlson, U. S. Coast Guard (ret) paid a surprise visit to his son, Lt Eugene Carlson Jr.. ia San Francisco. He found his son's apartment locked but learned from a friend that his son and family had departed four days earlier for Norfolk. ' , , Captain Carlson boarded a com-, mercial airliner and greeted his son upon the lieutenant's arrival in Norfolk. i. Illegitimate Births Increase in Chicago CHICAGO (UP) Illegitimate births are on the increase in Chi cago, according to the Illinois state public health director, Dr. Roland R. Cross.: j Cross said, that -of 86.680 babies born in Chicago in 1954. 7,133. or 8.2 per cent were Illegitimate In 1953 the', illegitimacy; rate "was, 7.8 per cent. It was 7 per cent in 1952 and 6.4 per cent in 1951. t! Dr. O.K. Sagenf of the state health department said one reason for the high Dlegitimacy rate ia Chicago is that pregnant unmar ried women often go to a large city to avoid notice. The real problem is dispose of the crop surpluses. As of March 3 1st last tne Commodity Credit Corporation had a total investment in stocks and loanss Last Major Bid On The Dalles Dam Due July 11 ' PORTLAND OP) Bids will be called about July H by Army Engineers for the last major con struction work on The Dalles Dam. The work, estimated at 10 million dollars, includes a closure dam to make possible closure of the river, access railroad spurs, miscellane ous roads, fills and grading, re moval of Union Pacific and SP&S railroad overpasses, cofferdams, and salvage of equipment from The Dalles-Celilo canal and locks. The bids will be opened Sept. 12. Willamette valley motion pic ture, to be filmed here. An nouncement of the members of the cast for the valley picture, The Purple Flood," was nade. at the close of the American. Legion-Dagmar Pictures film frolic. ' For the first time in history, Salem school board had a wom an member, citizens giving Mrs. Roy Keene the second highest vote in the annual school elec tion. Dr. H. H. Olinger, incum bent received the highest indi vidual vote. 40 Years Ago . June 17. 1915 More than , five million feet of Oregon spruce clears were sent to nations of Europe with in the last three months for use in making military aeroplanes, according to records of the lum ber association. Robert Lansing, counsellor of the department of state, suc ceeded Secretary William J. Bryan (recently resigned) in charge of diplomatic affairs of the United States. Mr. Lansing was born in Watertown, N. GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty in 1864. t Ben Olcott Secretary of State Three Salem women, Maye and custodian of" the capitol MarintUi, Myrtla Lynch and ' grounds had four cluster lights Martha Jean Dixon, were given placed along 12th street by tht & leadlBl relet la tht first ' Supreme Court bull dins. . . Ik b . mm Revolution in Argentina Long Expected By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst Students of Latin-American af fairs have been wondering for years just when Argentina would "blow." First they thought it would come when Dictator Peron revolutionized the country's economy, clamping down on the wealthy cattle breed ers, planters, business men and industrialists. He has alwavs made his Ditch to- labor, taking advantage of discon tent over low wages, which he or. dered raised, and of anti-clerical ism among the workers. But with the aid of his late wife Evita, who created numerous government-financed foundations and the like to aid the working class, he beat off the counterattack of what he called the oligarchy'. The clincher came when he proclaimed a government monopoly for ex ports. Under-this plan, he' fixed prices for the nation's products lower than those of world markets and the government pocketed the difference Argentina had ruffled the fpnthl ers of the United States during the war with a soft attitude toward Nazi Germany, and followed through after the war with a simi lar attitude toward Communist Russia. There were times when an open break appeared imminent About this time evidence becan to appear that Peron was working on a grandiose scheme to take both Dolitical and economic hpppmnnv over all South America, or at least those countries which were close neighbors of Argentina and not tied so tightly to the United States. Then he lost the great anneal Evita had for the public through her death. Predictions that he wouldn't last long after that were rife. His opponents were encouraged to attempt the organization of a new political party, closely akin to the heavily Catholic Christian Democratic parties of EUrope, but with distinct socialist tinges. The Communists, although Peron pre tends to despise them as of no im portance in Argentina, attempted to infiltrate this movement, though not welcomed by Catholic ele ments. The dispute with the church it self, resulting , in deportation of its chief prelates from Buenos Aires, in Peron's excommunication from the church, and the military revolt which began Thursday, apparently grew out of Peron's rage at the at tempt to form the new party, al though no formal connection be tween it and the church itself has been established. First reports of the upheaval were too vague to give any insight on the actual forces at work. The keystone is the army which ap parently is remaining loyal to Peron. 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "I emptied out the contents of the basket, but wasn't able to find the missing co- -'t nowhere." 2. What is the correct pro nu ,-iation of "myrrh"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Metaphor, men tholated, mendacious, metalic. 4. What does the word "vest ige" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with lnd that means "to secure against loss"? ANSWERS 1. Omit "out" and "no where." 2. Pronounce as though spelled mur, u as in far. 3. Met allic. 4. A trace, mark, or vis ible sign left by something lost, perished, or no longer existent "The judge said that the crim inal had lost the last vestige of decency." 5. Indemnify. Tm Hard of Hearing ... . Few Know ThatI Wear a Hearing Aid in My Hair " ' jjal. 1 " JP .2 And why ahould mnyont know? Why ahout to the houattopa that yon'ra deaf? Now tbare's no more need to dis play the long, uneifhtly cord of deaf na becauaa Maico haa made it poa aible to bear dearly and there's no visible evidence of a hearing instru ment aaywbart. The Maico Transist Ear tucks ia your hair inconspicuous and out of the way. For Information or FREE Demonstration Call Salem 2-0702 or Write FLOYD BENNETT ' Box $28 Salem Phone 4-6M1 Subscription Rates By carrier la cities: , Daily and Sunday I 1 43 per ma Daily only M per ma Sunday only jft week By mall Santay enlyi ' in advance) Anywhere in U t -taper mo. 1.71 tlx mo 00 rear - '. By malt Daily and Snaaayi i in advanoe) la Oregon . t 1 le per mo 1 1 30 six mo 10 JO year ta O. 8 outside Orecon t 1.45 per mo Meaiker Aodit Bureau ef Circulation Bureau of Adverttsinc ANPA Oregon Newspaper ' Publishers Associates Advertising cprea.ataitTest Ward-Grtfnta Co.. West Bolliday Ca.. Now fork CBJear San Francises . 0ratt ACORNS FROM THE I' b KW WITH OCt MltNE I've told you about our new chef. I've raved about his specialty. a delicious Fried Chicken Dinner at just $1 JO per plate. ' - ' - I know youll be a fried chicken regular after one mouth watering meal . . " . , ,' - ' X? y So see you soon in the Oak Room. ' .1 But dont forget your oi4 favor ites either our incomparable charcoal-broiled steaks and roasts! T , r" .I? Remember-in Solem-it't th HOTEL MARION Phone 3-4123 Every normal working day more ! than 1,000,000 tons of revenue-earning freight is carried on British railways by 20,000 freight trains. This is a substantial increase over prewar records. So AppeiatmeBt Necessary for EzamlnatloB - 4f - ; y PUM J PAY FOR YOUR DENTAL PLATES WHILE VVIARING THEM Ask About the New Transparent 7 Palate Dental Plates Today Wear Your New Plates immediately After Teeth Are Extracted PAY IY WEEK OR MONTH Plates Repairtd While You Wait 125 N. Liberty St. Salem, Ore. Ye aWt Imm year ewtpenay w kara. . rear Weruuce taaiaWKas. v r fair lacar asun H fit I tftaat Udm fcrrf ..." BUY future security on the INSTALLMENT PLAN with a savings account AH savings accounts opened this month with an 'uiitial deposit ef $200.00 or more will receive on year's us ef a safe deposit box without charge. This bank can be a one stop station for all your banking needs. PLENTY OF PARKING TlW Bonk of Personal Service " Htntl IrOIII INIIUMCI COIOOtATIOH CITUftClI aid CHEMEKZT A