4-Sec 1)-Sfafasman, Salem, Or., Sunday, July 31, 19SS mKo Fator Stvcys Ut. No Fear Shall Awe" From First Statesman. March 28, 1831 Statesman Publishing Company CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor 6c Publisher Publnhed ever morn inf. Business office 2M North Church SU Salem. Ore. Telephone 4-6811 entered at the postoffiee it Salem. Ore, as second class matter under act of Congress March i. H7. Member Associated Press The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all local news printed in tnis newspaper. -Safety in Motor-Boating Over in Seattle Judge William J. Long of the juvenile court did quite a thorough job of disciplining two 15-year-old boys for reckless operation of speed boats on Lake 'Washington. The boys in trying to "spray" a boy in another boat drove their own boats so fast and so close they ."crashed" the boat of the third boy. He found the two boys to be delinquent, put them under sentence (sus pended) to the boys' training school, ordered their boats' put in mothballs the rest of the year, and directed that they repay but of their own savings or earnings the damages due the victim." ' - " The judge made much of this point: "Two completely inexperienced and unin structed children, utterly ignorant of the laws enacted for motorboat safety, were each permitted by their parents to operate their boats on public waters . . .- they deliberately decided to interfere with the rights of their victim upon those same waters with the re sult that considerable damage was inflicted, and the lives of all those involved were Imperiled." .Since there has been a great expansion of use of small watercraft it is pertinent to pub licize the essentials of the state law in re spect to their ownership and operation. 1. All pleasure boats 16 ft. long and over must be licensed annually by the county clerk. The fee is $5 up to 20-ft. length, and an additional $1 for each additional foot in length over 20. if.; 2. Speed limit on motor boats (under 26 ft. In length) is 25 mi. per hour 'while within ; 200 ft. of dock or bathing, beach, or 10 ml per hour when within 100 ft of dock or such beach. 3. Operator shall navigate the boat "in a careful and prudent manner and at such rate of speed as not to .endanger the property of another or the life or limb of any person. . 4. In approaching or passing another boat, motor boats shall, within 100 ft. thereof be slowed to a speed that will not endanger the occupants of the other vessel. (Does not ap ply in a publicly advertised and scheduled regatta or boat race). 5. There are also certain rules for pass ing of other craft and for right of way to boats approaching a dock or wharf. "Drunk driving" is prohibited, k- 6. On certain lakes speed of motor boats Is limited to ten miles per hour. Among them are East and Paulina lakes and Elk. lake in Deschutes county; -also- Crescent lake, Davis iake, .Diamond lake. 1. On -certain lakes use of motorboats is completely banned. Among them are, in our . own area: Clear lake in Linn county, Olallie and Horseshoe lakes in Jefferson county, Breitenbush lake in Marion county . Penalty, for violation is a fine of not more than $250 or 30 days in the county jail, or both. ... , . - Such precautions relate primarily to in land waters, but Saturday's mishap on' Win chester Bay emphasizes the need for even greater care in coastal waters.? Those acquiring motorboats, or renting them at waterside docks, should know the laws and the rules of navigation. Parents should see that their minor children are in- TOAST OF THE TOWN formed thereon, and that they observe the regulations. It is very tempting to take risks in all aquatic sports, but care should be ob served not to endanger lives or property of others. The opinion of Judge Long of Seattle gives us an opportunity to offer this counsel on water safety in connection with the grow ing use of motorboats. Bridges Wins Case On its fourth attempt to dispose of Harry Bridges the government has lost its case. -'Judge Goodman in San Francisco has ruled that the government did not prove by clear and convincing evidence that Bridges had been a Communist and hence was guilty of perjury in swearing he had not been. If he had been convicted he would have been sub ject to deportation to his native Australia. This ought to end the long battle to get rid of Harry Bridges. Actually the shipowners have learned to live with him as boss of the longshoremen on this coast There is this to be said for him and his outfit, they run a clean operation, free of the crime and graft that were strangling the Port of New York. One of the weaknesses in the government case against Bridges was its reliance on ex Co mm unists. In his opinion Judge Goodman said of them: "The testimony of the former Communists was tinged and colored with discrepancies, animosities, vituperations, hates, and above all, with lengthy speeches and declarations .... which it is not unfair to say. is a disease . with which Communits are ' afflicted." That pretty well sums up the value of the testimony of most of the renegade Reds. The government has kept a stable of them and one by one they have been discredited. Harvey Matusow, an admitted double deal er, is now under indictment The memory or the credibility of Louis Budenz is not very dependable. Paul Crouch was tied in bow knots by the Alsops some time ago. Judge Goodman's comment may instruct theDe partment of Justice not to put too -much re- ; liance on the testimony which former Com munists may offer. Their very volubility puts them under suspicion. w. mm wm fif p-cf- Cf 3vk Some-of the business profits trickled to the top, too, for the first six months of 1955. General Motors reported net income of $351 million and Standard Oil of New Jersey of $344 million. Standard of California is pretty big, but its net was only $109 million for the period. President Eisenhower has approved plans for building and launching a space ship. No chance for stowaways, though, because the first ones are to be only the size of basket balls. Editorial Comment VALUES OF THE BIBLE But the 'Bible as a moral force, aside from its theological meaning, faces a formidable adver sary today. This adversary is the technics of our Western civilization, which at a thousand points, and quite impersonally, would nullify or deny the moral force of the Bible for example, a thermonuclear bomb. Therefore the Bible needs help, all the help it can get Though we master our environment with our dazzling intellects, that is not enough. Without spiritual content of which the Bible is far and away our foremost repository, the Western civilization cannot survive. No civiliza tion can endure on a mere multiplication of gadgets, on rocket flight and on touching a but ton to be comfortable. The ants and bees are . comfortable, and superbly organized to perform their allotted tasks. If with mystic sources of power we increase our energies a hundredfold, if we each get $32,000, and banish disease and find the answer to all the quiz questions if all this comes to tis while we ceast to remember or never know, the Boxcar Difficulties Blamed to Railroads By A. ROBERT SMITH Statesman Correspondent - WASHINGTON The Interstate Commerce Commission is making no bones about blaming the railroads for the current box car shortage that has plagued Pacific Northwest grain and lumber shippers this spring and threatens to become acute this fall. A special Senate subcommittee headed by Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (D-Wash.) opened an investigation of the freight car situation this past week, and im- 1 7; mediately heard, a Northwestern everage detention was 16 per member ot tne ill, uwen Liarse rent Urge New Stock Oregon's Sens. Wayne Morse and Richard L. Neuberger urged the committee to take steps vto stimulate freight car construc tion, approve charters for more intercoastal ships, provide com petitive rail service to western Oregon shippers and study the na tion's transportation needs to take into account the plight of western Oregon lumbermen who must depend on one railroad. Good Fishing Right at Home SAINT JOHN. N.B. (A All right fishermen, tie this one. Walter Hudson at nearby Grand 1 Bay landed a four-foot sturgeon weighing more than 14 pounds while sitting on his porch. His bouse is a quarter of a mile from the St John River. 1 The big fish, wet and wriggling. landed with a crash on the porch while Hudson was sitting there. He subdued it with a stick and kept it alive in a tub of water for some time, Best guess is that an ambitious eagle was the fisherman but , couldn't hang on to the lively catch ' once airborne. There were small . claw marks in the tail. haftt cixAsvr : HOUSTON. Tex. 1 L Name of a cafe here has been chaaged from "Sloppy Joe's" U "Happy Joe s". Phono -6n Subscription Rates By carries In dtlesi Daily sod Sunday $ 1 43 per mo. Daily only 1.5 per mo. Sunday only JO week By mutt, Sudsy aalyt ' (in advance) Anywhere In U. 1 M per mo. 1 75 sis mo. 1.00 year By tan. Dafly a 4 Saadayi tin advance) la Oregon I l is per mow 5.50 six mo 10-50 rut of Yakima, Wash., tag the railroads with failure to order sufficient new cars and repair damaged cars. k "Since the first week of Hay we have had a steadily increasing freight car Booert SnUUi shortace " Clarke testified, "and Southern Pacific. it is inescapable that it will be- Commissioner Clarke said the come even more acute during the shortage of boxcars in the North next 90 days." wtst has been temporarily over . i lM&nt come this month through di He slid the factors contribut- version of "sufficient rough cars" ing to the shortage included the the region from other areas, belvy increase in loadings, strike, J he warned that the situation in the trucking industry on the J b" fcu "P untU West Coast and I currently in New toM2$,ber- , . England, movement of old grain t.Th Senate committee ended while we ceast to remember or never know, the f-om storage by the department " "cai,us Wlin" indicating Biblical stories of suffering and faith and beauty of .ericulture and failure by what actlon m,Sht takc to help snippers and railroads to utilize and triumph which underlie our civilized being, then we are a doomed people rich and mind less, comfortable and doomed. -a-Royce Brier in San Francisco Chronicle i Columnist Finds Porcine Paradise Attitude Behind Iron Curtain Difficult to Understand By STEWART ALSOP DNEPROPETROVSK The feeling that you don't really un derstand, and never could under stand in a mil lion years, is one reason why a visit to the So viet Union is such an oddly oppressive ex perience for an American. Nowhere is the feeling so strong as on a kholkoz. or colle c t i v e itpart Almtp farm. Take, for example, the pig pen on the Stalin kholkoz near here, which this reporter has Just visited. Comrade Lepscha, the shy, eager, thin-faced vice chairman of the collective, could hardly wait to show off his new ptg pen. .. , And indeed, tt tamed eut to be a veritable regular Rita af pig-, land, a porkers paradise, every spotless tew ta her ewi spotless pen. .There were several ' pea sant girls about, actios; as soli citous pig valets, sermbbinf the pens, or washing and hrvshiag the sows aad the Utile piglets. Bnt why? Why this heavy In vestment tn effort and weman fconrs U keep pigs ia snch a slate of annatarnl cleanliness? Why was it worth It? One possible answer of course immediately suggested itself that the pig pen was a sort of porcine Potemkin village, erect ed to impress the gullible foreign visitor. But this theory could not hold water. The decision to visit the collective farm had been taken st the last minute, when it turned out to be impossible, for the usual mysterious reasons, to visit the famous Dnieprope trovsk dam. Besides, Dneprope trovsk is well off the usual route for foreigners there is not even an Intourist hotel and it ust does not seem likely that the Russians would build a beau- tifut pig pen and stock it it with beautiful pigs just in case a stray foreigner happened along. Pirt W th Tttl answer was visible, ilastead, U the almost fanatic rM & Camni Lepo- eha's eyes, as be surveyed bis gleaming pig h o n s e and Ms gleaming pigs. The porcine Rita was clearly a sort of private bob by, a personal maggot of Com rade Lepscha's. bnilt without any of the usual dreary prior calcu lations of the con-hog ratio which American farmers are forced to make. 'And another part of the answer was found in Comrade Lepscha's -carefully rehearsed lecture about the Kholkoz, which he gave in his tiny office under the inevit able picture of Stalin in an agri cultural moment According to Comrade Lepscha, there are 14, .000 acres on the Stalin kholkoz and 1400 people. , This works out, of course, to one person per ten acres. The comparable . ratio on American farming hi a, good district, is one family to 1W acres with father doing almost all the work. It was obvious to the naked eye that there were plenty of people about ea the Stalia kholkoz. Aad with plenty of people, it Is not diffi cult to keep Urge numbers of pigs unnaturally immaculate, if the local powers that be, like Comrade Lepscha, decide that keeping pigs Immaculate Is a good thing. This may explain the mystery of the immaculate pigs. But in Russia the explanation of one mystery only leads on to an other mystery. For how does this incredible system, in which there are no normal economic incentives or economic sanctions, manage to work at all? You can see that it works, after a fashion, . wtib your own eyes. To be sure, the corn looks thin, the brown cow seedy, ' and the pasturage terrible. But the wheat looks fine, : the fruit is abundant and deli cious, and the people of the Kbolkoz are certainly healthy and vigorous. Some of the people even seem happy. Take Ivan, the tractor, driver. Comrade Lep scha says that Ivan has piled up 1 record number of "norms,? the norm being the -unit of tueasurement ia the speedup system which is autfvertal ia tka Soviet .Uaiov (AaeXker mystery: how can yon measure with any real accuracy the nor mal output of a tractor driver or a pig tcnder?)yr At any rate, Ivan the tractor driver is one of the - two or three top earners on the farm. Ivan is a big brawny man with an enormous grin and stainless steel teeth. He proudly in vites the foreigner to visit his bouse. From the outside, it looks' precisely like every other house on the dusty, rutted Kholkoz street, and like every other house, it is surrounded by a couple of acres of care fully tended private land. (From the air, you can see the pattern of the Russian land endlessly repeated lush, heav around the little houses, giving way to huge, scraggy-looking collective fields). Ivan's wife, a big cheerful woman who has lost one eye to. trachoma, is touchingly, proud of her house. Itas three jre said: existing equipment efficiently. But -mostly he pointed to cut backs in railroad car orders and repairs last year when the nation appeared to be headed into a re cession. Yet for the entire three .year period from 1952 through 1954. Clarke said the roads junked 68,204 cars and ordered only 31,771. "The only remedy for the re curring shortages is an increase in the supply of serviceable cars," Clark told the committee. "This can be accomplished in only two wsys: 1. by the purchase of new equipment and, 2. by the repair of bad order.cars." Need for Repairs After conferring with railroad . leaders May 27, Clarke said he advised them that the ICC thought "the large number of un serviceable ' cars could not be justified by any standards and that the number should be im mediately and drastically re duced." "In all fairness to the rail roads," added Clarke, "their Curloadings last year fell off to the lowest level since 1937 and their earnings on capital invest ment, fell off to 3.8 per cent" But Clarke said he would "welcome" legislation giving the ICC power to compel the rail roads to build adequate new cars. Time Flies tiny rooms, with a front parlor which looks amazingly like a miniature of a front parlor in an old - fashioned American farmhouse. There are prim wed ding pictures on the walls, and band - crocheted antimacassars, and, as befits such a successful man as Ivan, a new radio. As he says goodbye after show ing his house, Ivan smiles his ' broadest smile, and repeats a phrase you have been hearing alt over the kholkoz: "Our greetings . to the simple peasants of Amer ica." Better than anything else, . the phrase suggests the vast gulf which separates the Soviet and the American systems. Yet somehow, mysteriously, messily, uneconomicaHy, with little comfort and no private values at all. this system works. The food comes out of the. ground, and unless all Russians are consummate actors and this reporter a complete fool, there are even Russians, like Comrade Lepscha and Ivan the' tractor driver, 'who take real pride and pleasure in this incomprehensible : way of lis. -.. (Opyrlftit tS. New York Herald Tribune. Inc.) "The ICC on numerous oc casions warned the railroads. But all we can do is try to persuade them." . Support Arguments Tne railroads see it differently, and through the Association of American Railroads they gave the committee their slant Arthur Gass, chairman of AAR's car service division, said figures that 'show a declining number of freight cars in service today don't tell the whole story. He claimed that faster service with diesel engines, centralized traffic control and new material handl ing practices have made possible increased car loadings. To support this argument Gass said in 1926 they carried 486 bil lion ton miles and in 1944 car ried ' 785 billion ton miles with 24 per cent fewer cars. Gass pinned the blame for the thortage on shippers and receiv ers of cars. He claimed that in ordinate delays were keeping cars out of service. He said shippers today are detailing 19 per cent of alt cars beyond the 45-hour period normally allowed for unloading, while last year the DU TOQUE Continued from pagt 1) Crockett's reputation as "king of the wild frontier." He was a "juvenile delinquent" rather than an intrepid hunter who got his L'ar at the age of three. He sired a parcel of children, then deserted them, hired a substitute for military service. As for the Alamo where Crockett "man aged to get himself killed" that was in fact, "the worst military blooper in American history, short of Pearl Harbor." - But what of it? Exploding the myth apparently served to spread the Crockett craze more widely. That may have its ad vantage though in speeding the process by which a popular mania burns itself out FROM STATESMAN FILES J 10 Years Ago July SI, 1S45 Pierre Laval, toe politician who had been called "the evil gen ius" of Vichy, testified. at Mar shal Petain's betrayal trial that the aged Marshall approved' his celebrated broadcast statement, "I desire a German victory." Mrs. Verne Ostrander was ap pointed by the Disabled Veterans as chairman for the sale of "forget-me-not" flowers in the fall. " The Salem chapter received 15, 000 of the flowers for local sale. Lt Cot. Archibald B. Roosevelt, last surviving son of the- late Theodore Roosevelt, and a vet eran of two wars, was retired from active service. 25 Years Ago July 31, 193 James H. Compton, Jr., 15, of Wichita, Kansas, was the first of the 49 contestants to arrive at West Orange, N. J., for the sec ond annual Edison scholarship competition for boys from all parts of the country. James was the youngest of the entrants. The Silverton American Legion - junior league baseball team cap tured the state championship at Portland by defeating the Port land nine, 7 to 1 in a ten inning game. Roy Cannon of Portland was elected president of the State ' Association of County School Su perintendents, at the closing ses sion of their annual conference held in Salem. 40 Years Ago ' July 31, 1115 P. F. Garnett ex-secretary of the Oregon Industrial Accident commission, announced that he was leaying for New York City where he would be in charge of ' all matters relating to the work men's compensation for the U. S. Casualty company. Carl Guiott Pendleton, a mu sician, was enjoying the recov ery of his sight in one eye after a period of complete blindness lasting 15 years. His sight re turned while be was out for a walk. Mrs. Johanna Jaskoski aid daughter Don arrived in Salem Those who have read the other articles in the number may see in the Crockett myth the ex planation for the loss of privacy which Faulkner, Nobel prize winning novelist of Mississippi complains of. Faulkner is sore distressed because he isn't left alone, because journalists hunt him out to do a biographical I sketch of him. He inflates his ' own love of privacy into the' "American Dream" in which this was a ''sanctuary on earth for individual man," where his most precious possession, his privacy, would not be invaded. The trouble with Faulkner is that he equates his own tastes or idosyncrasies with those of other Americans, past or present. Few folk immigrated to the United States to find seclusion, unless they were fugitives from justice. They wanted freedom all right, but not in the dosage that Faulkner demands for himself. He may find his counterpart however in Henry Thoreau, whoi pioneered in civil disobedience! and went to jail rather than pay a poll tax. The bloodhounds of the free press and of government may 1 be ruthless in tracking down their prey, and the results at times embarrass ail who love the genteel life (Lindbergh was a victim of public curioisty). But usually papers and magazines have harder work to keep the space grabbers and publicity seekers out of their hair than to track down the recluse and Comer him for a potboiler article. ! Davy Crockett was just the op posite of William Faulkner. He (with the aid of some uniden tified ghost, says Harper's) be came something of a hack writer. whose favorite theme was thei exploits of Davy Crockett Faulk ner doesn't get much sympathy from the editor of "Personal and Otherwise" who says that Faulk ner will never succeed in con vincing historians of the virtue of privacy: "Because they hold' that pri vacy is their enemy and that vulgar curiosity is history's chief ally. The gossips, the Peeping Toms who took notes, the pry ing, inconsiderate reporters have provided most of trie flesh and color on our record of the past James BosweU was just such a fellow. He invaded the privacy of Dr. Samuel Johnson, abusing his confidence outrageously and the result is one of the great .historical documents of all time. If BosweU had behaved like a gentleman, all we would have today is a shadowy -Johnson legend." But if you think Harper's Edi tor Fischer was hard on Davy Crockett yor should read what he has to say about American women, in his "Personal and Otherwise" column in August la V. 8 outside Oregon - S 1.4Spermo. for a visit from Jamestown, North Dakota. Mrs. Jaskoski is the mother of Frank Jaskoski, . fore man of The Statesman job office. Mesa nor Aeart Bnrean of Circulation Bnrean of Ademaiar AN PA Orefea Newspaper Fablishers Assodatio- ASwraslng tpresenta-Tesi Ward-Griffttb Co., West HaUtday Co, Mew Torn. CMcaco San rrandsco Defect HELPS SET WCUD IECCU J, Earl Cook local agent for State Farm Mutual, helped his company hold world leadership ia the, auto insuaancc field far the 1 3th stmigbt year. 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