4-(5rC. I) Siatowan. S.cm, Orr.. Thm., Feb. IP, '50 "4V0 fcirr Sucij t'i. Xo fear SWI Aire from Tirtt Statesman. March 2X. 1K51 Statesman Publishing Company CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor & fublishci Published every morning Butinw oflice J"0 Norm Church St.. Salem. Ore, feieprion; -Sll Fnterea Hi the pontoffir at Salem, Ore., ai eernnd class matter under let of Congress March 3, !". Member Associated Press Th Am-octmrd Press l entitled exclusively to tht use lor republication ol all local news printed In thm newsoaper. lvTl"s Make Up Our Minds' The people of Salem and their city council are in the unique, enviable and difficult position of having to decide how to spend ever $30,000 upon a work of art. This is indeed an American phenomenon: That the average citizen should have this opportun ity to have a say as to a permanent orna ment or offense,, as the case may be, to a community of 50,000 souls. Before makinp its final decision, the city council has .asked the public to express its opinions' on a suitable pioneer memorial to be erected here with funds willed for that purpose by the late Carroll Moores. Exam ples of the work of six artists being con sidered ior the job are now on display at . the. Bush Museum. The Statesman has pub lished some outstanding photographs by John Ericksen of proposed pieces of sculp ture. The Bush exhibit will continue until the 26th of this month (and on Wednesdays the museum charges no admission fee). The public, thus, is being given every chance to choose a favorite. Those who were , so vocal in their negative criticism of the choice of the previous Moores Memorial Commission (the late, lamented "Venus" by Renoir), should now be equally articulate. In order to bring the matter to a head, the city council could set a deadline for receiving opinions soon after the close of the Bush Museum exhibit. Then the council should make up its mind, the artist should be commissioned and work begun. It would be most fitting to have this memorial to the pioneers finished and dedicated in time f for the state'a centennial. After the local furor (which made Salem something of a national laughingstock) over the "nekkid female" the Venus the coun cil members must know that any choice in volving a real work of art is going fo be controversial. They can take comfort and ' courage from the fact that they are not dealing "with tax money and, therefore, have more leeway to follow their best instincts. Also, councilmen and the people of Salem I alike can take counsel from the following excerpt from "Art Today," a survey by Art Professors Ray Faulkner, Edwin Ziegfeld and Gerald Hill "A work that pleases everyone immediately is not likely to be an important work of art One that is forward looking, a contribution and milestone in art is almost bound to meet with antagonism, for it must of necessity be in advance of the taste of most of the people who are to pass judgment on it. Herein lies one of the great paradoxes of community art.. It must be an expression of the community, but it must at the same time present some new and satisfying formulation of their com munity ideals, and these new formulations are likely to be the ones that arouse the most protests. This is not to say that the general public cannot like good art. That snobbish attitude is as untrue as it would be unfortunate. But every citizen in this democratic country has the right to pass judgment on all the community works of art . . . There is, there fore, a tendency for art in the community, in an attempt to please as many people as pos sible, to be dull and without spirit. Such things ... are never great. Important art of the com- " munity . . . should lead and educate, and should not be innocuous repetitions of what most people already know and think." Significantly, this book holds up Oregon's capitol as an example of good art in the community. If the city council's choice of the Moores Memorial comes as close to pleas ing art critics and the public as has the capitol, then Salem will indeed be fortuna'e in its adornment . . . (M.W.W.) C.RIN AND REAR IT By Lichty Ncwbcrg Mayor seeks Heeleetion The Juvrnilc Problem The 1955 report of the Marion County Juvenile Court and Juvenile Department doesn't offer much cheer insofar as the juvenile problem in this area is concerned, But it shows a lot of effort has gone toward .. meeting it. The 18.2 per cent increase in case ioad in 1955, over 1954. is startling in itself and considerably more so when a glance at previ ous records shows such an increase is occur ing year after year. The chunty has been more fortunate than many other places, true, but certainly the statistics give no reason for smugness even though it is accepted that in any community the ratio of delinquency increases vas population grows. Boys continue to constitute the major of fenders, though in other than traffic cases girls coming under the juvenile court or de partment showed a 32 per cent increase in 1955 and boys only 13 per cent, Dependency cases showed a slight drop, but on the debit side of juvenile behavior is the fact that 200 were 'confined to the juvenile section of the county jail an aver- ' age of 5 days each, and that of the total case load of 837 more than 30 per cent were under 14 years of age. The average age was just over 16. 1 More. than 1000 visits by juvenile depart ment staff members to homes and schools, and more than 3600 office interviews, attest to the fact that the problem is being corn batted. ' We do not subscribe to the idea that all juvenile delinquency connotes parental de- -linquency, but a lot of it does. We do hold that parental influence, training and atten tion are the most- vital factors involved and that by far the greatest proportion of our boys and girls are innately intelligent and act accordingly. -. h. we A Wcstiiiffhoupc. !R,,?S t0 PIace Atomic Kcaclor Rejects Strike Stud) Offer In Red China I To Legislature Jjlllllv ' I TOKYO upi Peinins radio said r.ir!vman u hn aitn it mu,r I Wednesday Soviet Russia would of Neberj. is seeking Republican! riTTSBl'RGH -Westinghouse ; set up I 6,500 kilowatt exnenmen nomination to the state Legislature! Electric Corp. Wednesday flatly tal atomic reactor in Red China, from his district. He said that if refused to cooperate with a fact-! The reactor will be used to traifl he is nominated and re-elected, he finding board set up by the gov-. Chinese scientists and technicians, will be a candidate for speaker ernnrs of five states -to study a 1 the broadcast said, adding: of the House. ' - 122-day strike of 44,000 workers at! jth Soviet assistance, (Corrt- 1-ayman served his first term 30 plants. m.iun rhin nlant within a short in the House at the last session. 67 IN ORGANIZATION M 0 N T R E A L ur-The Inter national Civil Aviation Organi7.a-!gatc to outsiders ... the right to ! tion. the ofiicial legislature of determine the fundamental terms the world air lanes. now has 67 na-i of the union agreement under tions in memberslip. The newest which Westinghouse must live for is ttie indocnina Kingdom o tarn-. some years ... . . . In teleerams to the Eovernors. 'neriod of time to master the Gwilym A. Price, Westinghouse world's most advanced scientific board chairman and president, as- techniques in atomic energy." serted management ''cannot del-1 bodia. b-l - ..; i , , " J lV nesu"Knous? They brought a total of only $1.. followed more picketing violence a !242 ySev(If other car5 wee re the company s Sharon, Pa., plant, fc lhei ms Mof u hnra coma 1 Art rirVat maccAri fnr , CARS SOLD NEW YORKtfi - Thirty-two automobiles that had been towed away for parking violations were sold at public auction this week. '. . . And while rarniims are high and profits are good, Snortlby, the taxpayer finds little consolation in vour remarks 'easy come, easy go'! ... Better Knglish By r. C. WILLIAMS where some 100 pickets massed for the third straight day. Police said an auto was over turned, cars were stoned and win- 1. What is wrong with this dows in the plant were broken. No sentence? "He was anxious to arrests were made and there were make i good impression, sndjno reports of anyone injured, he's been pretty successful." Mayor Michael J. Dunn, himself 2. W hat is the correct pro- a member of striking IUE local nunciation of "exquisite"? 617, asked Gov. Leader to "assign 3. Which one of these words ' at least four uniformed state police-1 is misspelled? Recommend, con- men to constant patrol of the J rfptpnH sunirintrnr! rpnrimanH : Sharnnnlant " 4 W hat does the word "Ion-1 Dunn thus joined Sheriff Richard gevity" mean? Knowles and City Police Chief S. What is a word beginning William Stuart in asking the gov with ad that means "to make Tenor for state police aid. the sale. the two -man fact-finding board named last Sunday by Gov. George M. Leader of Pennsylvania. Leader had the support of Govs. Averill Harriman, New York; Al raham Ribicoff, Connecticut; Ro bert Meynor. .New Jersey: and William Marland, West Virginia. (Continued from page 1) Red-ruled Romania apparently subscribes in part, at least, to the old saying that the pen is mightier than the sword. It puts typewriters in the class of concealed weapons a license is required to "manufacture, re pair, hold, transmit or acquire" one. Won der how about ball-point pens. ing. It reminded me of October, 1941, when 1 visited the San Fran cisco Presidio and saw a group of naval vessels heading out through the Golden Gate to destiny. Time Flies FROM STATESMAN FILES There, is no refund for motorists who for got Monday and fed Salem's parking meters unnecessarily ('twas Lincoln's birthday, by the way). But if their memories last long enough they can still save a bit on Feb. 22. Parking places are free on Washington's birthday, too. . : " Editorial Comment FIFTY YEARS AT THE PIANO Fifty years is a long time for a man to be play ing the piano or, for that matter, doing anything else. It was half a century ago that Artur Rubinstein made his debut in America, a boy of seventeen with a reputation as a piano wizard. Today Mr. Rubenstein is no longer seventeen, but his reputation for pianistic virtuosity is unimpaired, and even enhanced. Right now he is taking the occasion to present as unusual succession of five concerts within two weeks, during which he will play no fewer than seventeen concertos, as many as four a night. Mr. Rubinstein declines to de scribe this event as an anniversary celebration; perhaps he is just flexing his pianistic muscles at the age of sixty-seven to show that rare pianists, like rare wines, improve with age. John Ledyard who later inter ested Thomas Jefferson in West ern exploration, an Interest that bore. fruit in the Lewis and Clark expedition. Another man serving unlor Pftnlf KM William Rlierh sailing -master, later commander msmmmmmmmmmmm of the "Bounty Whose mutiny produced history, literature and a movie. A- A number of Hawaiians sailed with these white ships. One, Alto, saved Capt. Robert Gray from , an Indian attack by his warning, the time Gray was wintering at Clayoquot Sound, 1791-2. Others entered service with traders in the Northwest. Our name, "Owy hee," derives from Hawaii. The American Board sent mission aries to Hawaii before they sent Whitman and Spalding to the Northwest and there was com munication between these out posts. The first printing press was Brought from Hawaii to Lap wai, Idaho, by Rev. Henry Spald ing. ' Decline of the fur- trade, advent of steamships, broke the former frequent connection between , the. Northwest and Hawaii. Our ship ping to the Orient took the north erly Great Circle route. Only cargo vessels made trips to Ha waii. Tourists had to go to Sao Francisco to sail on the Matson boats. Came the airplane and direct flights from Seattle and Portland, and fugitives from Northwest clouds and winter Tain started winging their way hither. Their number will irttrease, (or the boom in winter travel is bound to grow. impure 7 ANSWERS 1. Say, "He was eager to make a good impression, and he's been very successful." 2. Accett first syllable, not the The mayor, a Democrat, said he felt the "situation is reaching a point where the men are in a nasty mood. Our own police have been worked pretty hard a lot of over time and not much sleep. We need second. 3. Condescend. 4. Length help.' of life. "The longevity of the, The striking AFL-CIO Interna human race is increasing."! tional Union of Electrical Workers 5. Adulterate. ihad pledged full cooperation with At the Surfrider Hotel where we had reservations, we found Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Needham and Mrs. Scott Page who came over a few v v m mm m m mri .WW W il f'A V ;y : I ..... As a citizen as well as a musician, Artur Rubin-, weeks ago. They had just returned si cm nas long ieen an aaornmem io mis country. He has helped spread the gospel of his art not only by his- performances but by his engaging personality. After fifty years, Mr. Rubinstein is demonstrat ing that he can still bring ebullience as well as exaltation to music; he has lost neither the zest nor the freshness that has always marked his approach. Many a youthful piano student may well look with envy upon this master of the keyboard, who still finds in his music inexhaustible enjoy ment. (New York Herald Tribune). Massachusetts Governor to Become Serious Candidate for GOP Nomination if Ike Says 'No' - Koinmiiuii ana mi- portant political land financial I ( I backing. And most iLrJof the Republican By JOSEPH AND STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON - If President Eisenhower withdraws, Governor Christian A. Herter of Massachu setts, w HI become most serious candidate for tht Republican no in flation. Herter will have S i professional o r - I - ganization and im jm.UrmMni the Remibl Jo-pj Up professionals be lieve that he will have at the least a sporting chance of winning the nomination from such other more obvious candidates as Vice President Richard Nixon and Senator Wil liam Knowland. - Indeed, the Her ter talk among Republicans is be ginning to be a meaningful politi cal phenomenon, rather like the talk about Adlai . Stevenson among Democrats in the very early days when Steven- M,wrt A Up son was also little known nationally. There are several reasons why Herter is being taken more and more seriously as a possible sub stitute candidate. He has impor tant qualifications, having served ably In both the domestic and foreign policy fields. He is a proven vote getter. He has, at one admirer put it, "a sort of presidential araell." ' He bat also been an all-out Eisenhower man from the very first, and finally, be la the only presently visible alternative can dld.U ta whom the amorphous but powerful group of men who er( largely responsible far President Eisenhower's comina ' Alios could agree. Vice - President Nlioa It not. turk a mai, If President Eisen hower withdraws and (irmly en dories Nixon as his successor there will be, ( course, no really serious opposition to Nixon from the Eisenhower men. Otherwise, there certainly wUl be. Indeed there is already consid erable underground opposition to Nixon for the second place. This opposition Is partly on personal grounds. It also derives partly from the conviction that Nixon, who has acted as a sort of poli tical lightning rod for the Admin istration, would be a drag on the ticket. V Already President Elsenhower has been strongly urged to drop Nixon and replace bim with Her ter If the President runs again. One arger was Cliff Roberts, banker and golf-playing friend of the President's. Roberts Is (or was tsntil a very reront mild heart attack) a part-time member of the so railed "Commodore Regency" of Elsenhower political strategists. Roberts had a lengthy report on Herter's qualifications pre , pared, undoubtedly with the know ledge of other members of the regency. On the basis of this re port Roberts tried to persuade the President that Herter was better qualified for second place than Nixon. The President was non committal. But for about a week, according tq those, who should, know, he thought about the mat ter seriously. Again according to those who should know, the Idea ef replac ing Klxon with Herter bus been nthcr niWjrNdismissed, although, et course, 11 might be revived agala If the President decides U run. The Idea was dismissed part ly because the President genuinely droiret tbe Vice-President, and partly because of tht damaging political ImpliraUees. But a major argument was alto used effee tlTely by Nixon's friends against Herter (hut fact that Herter was bora la Paris. Herter's Paris birth Is, indeed. the greatest single obstacle to a Herter candidacy. Since he was registered at the American con sulate, most lawyers agree that Herter is "natural born," as the Constitution requires. But as long as the matter remains unsettled, a cloud of doubt will hang over the Herter candidacy. The doubt can only be finally dissipated by the Supreme Court. AO sorts of ways of getting the Supreme Court to make a ruling well before (he Republican con vention have beea considered. The most hopeful precedent cited Is, oddly enough, that of the Prog ressive Party, which got a Sup-' reme Court ruling In 1948 oa Henry Wallace's eligibility to go on the Illinois ballot within three weeks of requesting the decision. The fact that the Paris birth problem is already being consid ered so carefully suggests how serious the Herter candidacy is or how serious it could become, If the President withdraws, His supporters have been promised powerful financial and organiza tional backing in New York. Mas sachusetts, and elsewhere. Herter has announced that he will not run again for Governor, which re moves one complication. And he has a significantly full speaking schedule the invitation to his forthcoming speech at Washing ton's National Press Club bore the Interesting heading "IF IKE - STEPS OUT, HE COULD STEP IN." Evea "If Ike steps tut," Herter hat, tf course, a long way to go. He la little known nationally, and Massachusetts Is no longer the convenient Jumping off plnce (or the Presidency It once was. Yet, conditional and hedged about with obstacles as It Is, tht Herter can dldacy Is Interesting, Just because It It so hard It think of aayont - else ta whom tht Elsenhower forces could agree. - (Coprnrht ISte, Mow York Uorsld Tribune Inc.) from a tour of the outer islands. We are, however, "displaced per sons" refugees from the full up Surfrider put temporarily, and upgraded, in the Royal Hawai ian, both Matson-owned. The hotels front along famed Waikiki beach, and at the back is Kalakaua Avenue lined with shops catering to tourists. Bathers and sun worshippers line the beach. Tropical costumes abound, but the "figures" are more for the delight of the cartoonist than the sculptor. We saw the vanguard of the expedition for maneuvers on lwo Jima set out from Pearl Harbor, sailing into the west, this morn- nffiMiamai' Safety Valve I'RGES IMMUNIZATION To the Editor: Today's front page story telling of the death of two people with the dread disease of diphtheria should serve as a reflashing of the danger signal to all people generally, and certainly to this county area. Only a few months ago the Marion County Public Health De partment just decided to stop administering the general immun ization shots for diphtheria, small-1 pox, whooping cough and tetanus in our public schools. This has been a long-standing public service to the school child ren and was probably one of the most worth while of those ren ered by the department. Certainly it was one deeply appreciated and whose benefits had been well shared. The broad coverage it afforded had ottered a security and attained results that had fur nished living evidence of its ef fectiveness. The natural and broad grouping of school children had made possible a most con venient and economical adminis tration of the plan. To have school immunization " services slopped and the money used for other purposes was a distinct shock to the parents of this county. In fairness, perhaps under any method some fatalities will occur, but that is a pathetic excuse for not doing the best we can. Must we .lose a few lives occasionally to get this service voluntarily returned or must we experience the tragedy o( an epidemic to around public opinion to the place where they will insist upon an accounting of the services of a public department? , M Harley Libby, Salem, Ore, 10 Years Ago Feb. 16, 1946 In a ceremony rivaling in glit ter, pomp and pageantry his brilliant coronation seven years ago. Pope Pius XII placed the symbolic red hat on the heads of 28 new cardinals he created re cently. The ancient rite was wit nessed by 20,000. The home of Mrs. Douglas Mc Kay was the scene for the tea of Oregon. State Mothers club. The tea honored charter members of the club and new mothers of the new students. John Fenner, new alumni secretary, wai guest speaker. Racing was secured for Santa Anita as grooms agreed to con tinue their duties and track of ficials boosted all purses $200 to virtually break the back of a horsemen's strike which threat ened to cancel the lush meeting, including the $100,000 derby. 25 Years Ago Jeb. 1(. 1931 Wholesale paroling of convicts1 in the Oregon State Penitentiary, as a means of eliminating the requirement for additional facil ities, was suggested at a meeting of the ways and means commit tee. Senator Spaulding, said he was advised "that there are 250 prisoners in the penitentiary who ought to bt released." r From San Francisco, Uncle Sam's wards of the Pacific, a million fur seals valued at more than $23,000,000, are leaving the warm waters of the south on theif annual migration to their Alaskan breeding grounds. W. M. Ball, Corvallis photo-1 grapher, visited the state legis-j lature. Mr. Ball's photograph of I. L. Patterson won highest award in the salon of the Pacific coast photographer at San Francisco several years ago. 4 40 Years Ago ! Feb. 1, 1U Elizabeth Cornelius is a candi date for school superintendent of Marion county at the forthcoming primaries. She is a native Ore gonian. Her grandfather made himself famous in the fight and victory to save the capital of the state for Salem. , i .,7 , -; t V f A Man's as Good as his EYES! , Youngsters think it's a man's Ideas that keep him young, but tht stcrtt is in his "outlook"! Thai includes being able lo enjoy hSe evening paper and recognizing old fritnds , on she strtet. If yo can't do bom wim east ond . joynotot, perhaps a poir of BIFOCALS will hotp yoe. . OPTOMETRIST Convenient Terms 422 Court St. Phont 3-3091 J. Earl Cook 26N.HlghSt Phone 4-2215 "You Get Low Cost Broad Coverage Auto Insurance Pro tection for Y'our Dol lar .. . with SUte Farm. "I have tkawn many wtoiMkik driven Haw to aava moitay tha itafa Farm . way. Jut fiva aao tfca opportunity to nrovo to ' yauNttia nianay lavlrif dvantafM of tha nit qua aWarant ItiiMranca ptao ianaaroe' by Stata far." State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. Bloomington, Illinois The fiftieth wedding anniver sary of Mr. and Mrs. A.B. Hudel son will be held next week, when the members of the Grand Army of the Republic and women s Re lief Corps will attend in a body. Councilman Hudelson served two years with the civil war with Company B, Indiana volunteers. The House of Commons passed new votes of credit to the amount of forty-two million pounds. This is expected to carry the war to the end of May. riiuri 4-6S11 Subscription Hates By rarrlar la cltlri: Daily and Sunday I 1.4S per mo. Dally only .. 1.23 per mo. Sunday only .10 week By mall Suaday oolyi (in advance! Anywhert In U.S. I .58 per mo. -j glx m0i 1 00 year By Mall. Dally aid Sunday! tin advanrel la Orefon I 1 10 per mo. I so aix mo. 10 SO vear In US outtlde Oregon S 1 49 per mo SSenker A edit Hurra of t'lrmlaiino Burraa or Advtnulni AKPA ' - Or non Newipapee rvolUhert AtaerlaUoa Advertising RepreteatatlTOSl WaroXSrl'mh Co. Weal Molliday Co. New Vera Chlraio - Sao rnaclaro Detroit - -, i. lite totiy i . ..' : T f- r'.i; . ft ULAJ f;mnryoun floors ict coid? AM YOU CONFINED fO Oflf OR TWO lOOMSf AtE YOU CEHINGS OVERHEATED? ARE YOU WASTING FUEL ON SOOT AND SMOKE ' IS. YOUR HEAT GOINO Uf THE CHIMNEYf IS TOUR 'WEI Bill TOO MIGHT ' ; " . frW if tot I tatrt aetfor hWf wwrtt keof tit cbiauMf taW tt ft coitiaf fordof yet ft If n it I or I reeeu S'tofer hut 9 feofrof Wiaf flmt sWrb tittasiVt toifoflofioei Sitgler is a rtvolutionary method of WARM FLOOR HEATING in very room I JlJSjf S) 0 0VSJSSSBSJS3 e o o RVf VBBjs)SJ pltJB; QRfft9 fSJSJBjItJfQ " -J 4 iE I III rr fyrwcitB bat ':Ywfft)M ' mr r""' i,,Mt ' 9uffi$'Wtj "rt,y' lrt,,,,Hti"i ft ;' ' : i waa t thi torn o tmi ch noct wo?" i V . PSM... - ' ''.ilsw aiaalsBBBBVBMBBBtW I owrottAfic All IIEATEH OrvlS YOU WARM COZY PlOOtSI UTS YOU UVf IN EVERY ROOMI ENDS OVERHEATED QIUNOI NO MOM MESSY CLEANINO JOISI STOPS HEAT WASTE U THI CM1MNEYI SAVES U TO SOX IN Will As Little As 1 0 Down on Approved Credit BAKDWAR THE MARSHALL-WELLS STORE 2043 N. Capitol St. fhon J-AR77: