Capital A Journal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, 8037 and 3571; Want Ads, 3571; News Room, 3572; Society Editor, 3573. Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press and The United Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, 20c; Monthly, 75c; One Tear, 19.00. By Mall In Oregon: Monthly, 60c; 6 Mos., $3.00; One Year, S6.00. II. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Months, $4; Year $7.50. by BECK A Dog's Life 4 Salem, Oregon, Thursday, July 29, 1948 Proposed Change for the Worse . The mass meeting called by the labor leaders to start a movement to abolish the city manager form of govern ment and restore the old councilmanic form attended by 40 people, decided instead to launch a referendum move to substitute a commission form of government by charter amendment. The commission proposal would substitute an elected mayor and two commissioners to serve full time on a paid basis to replace seven elected aldermen and mayor who serve on an unpaid basis as executives, and em ploy a salaried city manager as administrator. The commission form is preferable to the old council manic form but it creates a division of authority that al ways spells inefficiency and discord. It combines the execu tive and administrative branches, which also spells ineffi ciency, confusion and extravagance a system that has long been discarded by large corporations and is a greater concentration of power than exists under the city manage ment and substitutes three paid city managers instead of one. It would therefore be a step backward in the city's progress besides being more costly and eliminating super vision. There are a large number of cities that have abondoned the city commission form of government and substituted the business manager form which has proved more satis factory. Where there has been no check on the city man ager when appointed by a political boss, it has in some in stances proved unsatisfactory, but in the form utilized in Salem it has proved the most satisfactory of any system yet utilized. Portland, one of the worst governed cities, is a fair ex ample of the commission form of government. There is perpetual discord in city affairs, failure to enforce the law and crime and gambling of all kinds flourish, broken only by sporadic raids on the Chinese who have no political pow er and cannot vote. Those gamblers and night club joints that have influence grow wealthy on law violations. The election of Dorothy Lee as mayor emphasized the popular attitude toward commission ruled conditions in Oregon's metropolis. Salem's city manager plan should be given a fair trial with its record of efficiency, economy and law enforce ment before a change is proposed. Bp beat it. VviW Im V J iW SIPS FOR SUPPER Friendly Bee Wanted By DON UPJOHN Does any customer have a nice docile and' amicable bee he doesn't need for a lew days? If so, he could be of great help to one of our honest, industrious and dependable citizens by loan ing same with assurances o f getting it back in good shape. Yea, our old friend, Dominie ! Swift, whose cucumber patch has so far put forth one little! cucumber about I three - quarters! of an inch long, thinks that a bee is what is is needed. The O well, Doug, one day is about like another when at the beach on a vacation. The next legis lature is going to give you a lot more confusing problems than that one. Women Neglect Cancer Interest in can,-er is at an all time high, yet a nation wide survey published in a current issue of The Woman's Home Companion under the title, "What Do You Do About Cancer?" shows that women (and one out of four between the ages of 85 and 50 die from cancer) do not use the information and treatment available to them. The magazine polled a national cross-section of its mil lions of women readers and 87 percent confessed that they never have been examined by a competent cancer special ist. Thousands of them, says the article, might have been saved if they had such periodic examination. Cancer in women, according to medical experience, is more likely than not to start in the breast or genital sys tem and "so long as we don't go to a good doctor for a breast and pelvic examination every year we are in effect driving in the dark down a hazardous road. Neither prud ery nor dread of verdict," the article adds, "should deter us in personally having periodic breast and pelvic examin ations." In some cases the women complained that their doctors were too busy or negligent to give satisfactory examinations. The article suggests that women in various communi ties to combat these negative attitudes might interest two or three physicians trained in gynecology to organize a co-operative cancer control center. However complete the medical knowledge about cancer is real progress will be made only when each woman assumes full responsibility for the dissemination and use of this knowledge. Just Plain Common Sense Reports from travelers into Washington indicate that extra attention is given toward showing special courtesy to visitors from out-of-state. It is the aim of our northern neighbor to make the traveler feel at home. If shown every consideration, that traveler will probably want to stay awhile or at least, come again. So goes the reasoning behind the drive that could be considered as a statewide application of the good neighbor policy. When Oregon was a territory and later during its early statehood, common courtesy called for open hospitality to visitors and the offering of a place at the dinner table. That was nothing but common courtesy. To have ignored these simple bits of politeness would have been to insult the passerby. Today milling masses of population seem to have for gotten the ways of the past. Washington, however, is trying to get its people to relive those days of early west ern hospitality to the traveler by encouraging the expres sion of common courtesy to the visitor. A cold analysis of such special attention to this matter finds that the pushing aside of selfish indifference pays off in bolstering an inner satisfaction and in building the lucrative tourist business. A friendly state is a pleasant state to visit. Washington has an idea that is certainly not new nor is It unusual. It is just good common sense. It really shouldn't take any statewide drive to bring about. WANTED: AN ARMY SONG Like the Marine's Hymn New York MV-The army wants a song. It can't draft one. It can't requisition one. So It's using an other system a contest. First Army headquarters said either soldiers or civilians mav submit entries. What is wanted is a song "worthy of becoming an over-all army song." All kinds of musical ditties, both published and unpublished, have been kicking around in the army for a long time now, but none of them meets the requirements. The new over-all soldiers' melody, said the army, must be 'of military character, written In a rhythm and ranje which can lastly ba u:ed for marching and singing." natch shows a wonderful growth difficulties? Anxinnslv vmin. of vines, no end of healthy look- Doug." ing blossoms, but, he thinks the one tiny cucumber isn t bring ing out of the vine all of its potentialities. What he figures is the matter is a lack of bees to pollinate those blossoms and bees as a rule don't hang around the center of town when they can find lots more Interesting things elsewhere. So if any body has a bee he can get in touch with the good reverend and maybe they can make a dicker. It might even be better If somebody was willing to part with two bees for a little while. One bee might get lonesome, even in such interesting and In structive company as the dom inie. We doubt, however, if George would go far enough to invite the bees in to play chess with him after they'd put In their day's work. It's Daytime Savings, Doug From next-governor Doug McKay resting up at Neskowin comes an appealing note marked "date unknown" which speaks for itself: "I'm terribly con fused! This morning at 11:30 I picked up my Capital Journal at the post office. On the front Our column last evening in advertently, with gross negli gence and accidental mistake as the lawyers are wont to say, referred to Ed Booth, court house custodian, as Ed Snook, a very sloppy error indeed. But having this called to our atten tion gives us pause as we won der where we ever heard that name Ed Booth before? O yes, didn't a chap named Ed Booth have something to do with Abraham Lincoln and is still supposed by some to be alive and hiding out? Doggone, may be we're on our way to a great historic discovery. Also, we'd like to call the at tention of the FBI to the fact that some of our public offi cials are using pink soap in their powdered soap dispensers. That'll sure raise an eyebrow. Broken Leg Benefits Kitten Columbus, O. PI A six-week-old kitten took an airplane ride to Kansas City mainly because it had a broken leg a couple of weeks back. Miss Kuth Ellen Gosnell found It down near Chillicothe and nursed It bark to health. Her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Gosnell of Kansas City, visited and fell in love with it. So, Ruth Kllcn put it in a box with a toy dog and sent it off, air express. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Immigrant's Grandson Becomes Henry Ford of Night Club Biz BY HAL BOYLE Philadelphia W' The 33-year-old grandson of an Italian immi grant has become a Henry Ford of the night club business in America. And Frank Palunibo built his after-dark empire here m the city of brotherly love, which is popu larly supposed to stay up after I sunset onlv on ! the day when an evening baseball game Is being played. But Palumbo created a multi million dollar yearly business on the basis that the masses have more money to spend at night clubs than the classes. "The whole secret of this bus iness is giving the people the kind of entertainment they want." said Palumbo. who owns six night clubs and restaurants In Philadelphia. llil BotI. Right now he thinks the peo ple are shopping for night club entertainment every bit as sharply as they do for their dol lar's value in food or clothing. "They no longer are Just sat isfied to ro and pay their money and listen to a band." he said. "They want more than a voice or a tune. These guys who Just play their saxophones and clari nets and turn their back to the audience are finished." Palumbo thinks the night club business, now off 100 per cent in many cities, never will en Joy again such a lucrative peri od as the war years. "Night clubs have to get back to real merchandising. The fast dollar is gone." Palumbo, a stocky, dark-haired cheerful bachelor, has made himself a civic institution here by his pleasure in giving. Friends estimate he gives away $100,000 a year. His pattern of philanthropy is based, probably, more on what gives him pleasure than on how his gifts will bring him more business. He likes sports he owns a chunk of Ike Williams, the lightweight boxing champion and gives a number of cups and trophies each year to winners of sporting events. He also takes some 45.000 children a year to the zoo, circus or a major league ball game. By giving the zoo a leopard, four, alligators, some South Am erican birds and two rhinos ha also endeared himself to the an imal loving hearts of the main line aristocracy here. And it is a crusty society you Just don't crash with a new bank roll. Palumbo has given blood transfusions as well as dollars. He is easier to hit than a radio give-away program. As whim seizes him, he passes out watch es, pen and pencil sets, cases of liquor, perfume, gold rings, bracelets, and television sets for orphanages. "I get my chief pleasure out of life In seeing people enjoy themselves." he says. His favor ite beveragt Is a soft drink. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Berlin Withdrawal Would Kill Germany Rebuilding BY DREW PEARSON Washington When Gen. Lucius Clay testified before a closed door session of the house foreign affairs committee regarding Berlin, he was asked a question about the reconstruction of Ger many. Before Clay could reply, Ambassador Robert Murphy, state department representative In ' THIS FUNNY WORLD LAI I Drrw PtirioB page it says Tuesday, July 27, 1948. On pages 2 and 3 it said Monday, July 26, 1948 and on page 4 it said Monday, July 28 the rest of the pages said Mon day, July 26. Here is my prob lem I'm at the beach without a calendar so don't know when to come home. Shall I start im mediately or can I count on your paper getting on the beam by the end of the week? Or should I write to Charlie Sprague to straighten out my Germany, Interrupted to an swer for him. U n fortunate ly, Murphy said, it was im possible to get private capital inter e s t e d in Germany, Though the banks are full of money, ev eryone in Eu rope fears that when the Unit ed Stales moves o u t of western Germany the Russians will move in, Mur phy said. That would mean the confiscation of all private prop erty. Ambassador Murphy gave this as one of the chief reasons why the United States could not leave Berlin now. "If we pull out of Berlin," Murphy told the congressmen, "people will say 'that is exactly what will happen in western Germany later.' It would under mine all confidence in us." When a German sets up a business enterprise in the Ame rican zone of Germany even today, Murphy told the con gressmen, a Russian agent is certain to come around and dis creetly warn that if he con tinues his operation he will be put down in the Soviet black book. And when American troops move out and Russia moves In, he is told that he will be liquidated. General Clay concurred with Murphy that this psychological factor was one of the biggest reasons why the United States had to stay in Berlin. To with draw would mean the end of whatever confidence the U.S.A. had built up in western Ger many. PENETRATE IRON CURTAIN General public reaction to the idea of going over the bead of the Kremlin by floating weather balloons from France and Germany over Russia with messages and gifts to the Rus sian people has been favorable. Government reaction has been reasonably favorable though slow. Both government ana private meteorological experts agree that the wind currents make the floating of such balloons en tirely feasible. In fact, the Japs floated them all the way across the Pacific to Washington and Oregon. Their balloons, however, car ried missiles of death, these would carry messages of friend ship. This columnist holds no brief for any particular means of reaching the Russian people. If any other way is better than balloons, fine. But I do main tain that as a nation we are doing almost nothing to get behind the Iron Curtain and show the Russian people that we are not what the Moscow propagandists say we are. Until we have some brake on the Kremlin to prevent it from declaring war overnight, there will always be danger of war. That brake must be the Russian people. Anyway here is a cross sec tion of mail showing how the American people feel about it. Arthur B. Borden, Borden Mills, Inc., New York Thanks for your open letter to Secre tary for Air Symington re in formation to Russian people. Having had the honor of serv ing under General LeMay both in India and Guam believe his boys could really do the job you suggest. The Borden Mills, Inc., of 90 Worth street, New York City, would like to make a cloth contribution. Mrs. Herman H. Hardison, Bat Cave, N.C. At last here is a powerful suggestion of how we may perhaps prevent an other war. Showing our strength, but. with that strength getting to the Russian people with messages containing facts about our country, and letting them know of our latent friend ship. Emerson Rupert, consultant, Bradenton. Fla. I agree hear tily with your Ideas on reach ing the Russian people direct ly. Your current suggestion can be followed up with a dynamic program to sell peace, democ racy and freedom to all men. We've got to exert every pos sible effort to avoid war. Edward Nielsen, Cozad, Neb. Your letter to Stuart Syming ton is best suggestion for peace I have yet heard. I am sure if the Russian people understand us, they Would not fight us. If I can help you in any way, I will! H. A. Smith. 228 S.W. 5th Ave.. Miami, Fla. A good big crowd of us have Just finished reading your piece in Tuesday night's "Miami Herald" and It's a corker. If our fellows have got enough guts, they will pronto supply thos "fre" gifu from those swell firms that offered them, load those planes and do exactly as you described. Robert B. Flanders, North At tleboro, Mass. Very rarely do I feel as much moved as I was by your recent column in the form of an open letter to Secre tary Symington. You might just possibly be interested in the fact that I read it in Joe Mar tin's own newspaper the North Attleboro Chronicle. It is most heartwarming to have it publ cized that the so-called "war monger industrialists" are will ing to be so generous for the cause of peace. Keep pounding on that theme. Arnold J. Nelson, Washing ton, D. C. I have been reading newspaper columns for years, but yours today, suggesting us ing our B-29's to carry leaflets to the Russian people so im pressed me that I am writing my first letter to a columnist. L. R. Dillingham, Portland, Ore. Your suggestion relative to the friendship balloons is a grand idea, especially if they were carrying such articles as you mention. It's these simple, convincing things that reach the hearts of most people. The gen eral tendency of all peoples is friendliness. M. S. Rackett, Richmond, Va. This letter is being written simply to say that I approve most heartily of the line you are taking. Far from thinking you are "a terrible bore on the sub ject," I for one thrill with en thusiasm when you come out with these admirably construc tive ideas. (Copyright 1948) WHAT IT MEANS: . sjL VL UTS - - -A MeNtucht Syndicate, "No, no mine is a gray tweed" " MacKENZIE'S COLUMN The U.N. Can't Function 1 Until Cold War Is Settled By DeWITT MacKENZIE Ai ForeigD Aflsir Aoalyit) The working committee of the United Nations commission for conventional armaments (those apart from atomic weapons) finally has decided that armaments can't be reduced and con trolled until. the big powers agree on a U. N police force, atomic energy is leashed and peace treaties are made with Germany and Japan. - In short, this momentous question, which is the crux of the effort to tkll DeWltl MicKetizli enforce world The High Cost of Illiteracy BY ROBERT E. GEIGER Washington VPj Would you know what to do if you saw a sign that said "Explosives Keep Away"? Or "Poison For External Use Only"? Sen. Harley M. Kilgore (D., W. Va.) says the census reveals that slightly over 10,000,000 Americans one out of every seven adults wouldn't know. He calls them "sheer or near il literates." He proposed $130,000,000 fed eral aid to help such people learn to read and write. His bill died, but educators say it is sure to come up again. What is an illiterate? Vhere do these 10,000,000 il literates live? Kilgore says the answers to these questions are so amazing the situation can only be de scribed as a rational disgrace. First, he describes illiterates as persons without the equiva lent of a fourth grade education. They can't read or, if they can, they can't understand what they read sufficiently well to func tion as citizens. Second, he says many of these people probably the majority of them don't live far out in the sticks, where an education is hard to come by. And the majority are not foreign born, but native Americans. He gives these figures: 4,200, 000 are white people, born in this country; 3,200.000 are for eign born whites; 2,700.000 are Negroes. He says one-tenth of the 10.000,000 live in New York, 462,000 in Illinois and 385,000 in California. Louisiana has a higher per centage of illiterates among its total population than any other state. Kilgore estimates the number at 36 percent. Iowa has the lowest, 4.1 percent. There are three times as many illiterates in the country as col lege graduates, Kilgore adds. He says this weakens democracy because many of these people cannot read the words "free dom" or "peace." Communists are aware of this situation and take full advant age of it by using only the simplest types of propaganda or by making personal contacts, the senator says. He proposed that $5,000,000 aid be given the states in 1949 to teach people to read, write, speak and understand the Eng lish language, to perform ele mentary arithmetical computa tions and to understand the basic features of U.S. government. He would appropriate $10,000,000 for the teaching program in 1950, and then $15,000,000 a year until 1957, decreasing to $5,000,000 in 1958-59. By that time, he believes, illiteracy would be eliminated in the Unit ed States. One difficulty is that illiteracy apparently hasn't been accur ately defined. Most authorities agree that the 10,000,000 estimate may be wide of the true mark, one way or the other. Until 1940 the U.S. census bureau counted il literates merely by asking peo ple if they could read and write in any language. If they could not, they were classified as il literate. 4 In 1940 the census classified people by their degree of educa tion number of years they at tended school. This is the origin of the estimate that there are 10,000,000 people without the equivalent of a fourth grade education. During the war the army used the fourth grade as the dividing line between literacy and Illit eracy. This was based on the wartime experience of the army. It found that as a general rule people with less than a fourth grade education couldn't read or obey the simplest sort of orders. Army officials say 350,000 soldiers between 21 and 45 had to "make their mark" with an X because they couldn't write their own names. peace, is being temporarily shelved. The committee's explanation strikes us as being a bit of dip lomatic shadow boxing because the blunt fact is that the United Nations can't function as a peace controlling agency until the cold war between. Russia and the democracies has been settled. Presumably, this problem of enforcing peace will come up in the U. N. again and then again and again. But it never can be solved un til the issue of world revolu tion for the spread of commun ism has been dealt with. A British viewpoint of the fundamental difference between Russia and the 'went ii- summed' up by the weekly publication "Time and Tide," and I quote it because is represents the con sensus of many objective ob servers: "The issue is whether Russia means to carry on with or aban don her plans for the destruc tion of the democracies. If she will abandon them, there Is no issue between Russia and thei west which cannot be peacefully , solved. "The argument as to whether Russia wants war is beside the point. "In all probability she does not want it now. From Russia's point of view a 'shooting war' is not to be undertaken until the process of internal erosion in the democracies has reached the point where only the very slightest push from without would be necessary to topple over the whole structure." That's the story. The battle of Berlin, and the innumerable other cold hostili ties, all hinge on Bolshevism's efforts to communize the world. We shall get an easement of the German imbroglio, and the hundred and one other difficul ties encircling the globe, if and when the Russians decide that they have carried their aggres sion about as far as they can for the present. Let us not fool ourselves in to thinking that we can have peace while communism ii reaching for power in all coun-tries--not least in America. Irish Colleen-or Hound Dogs San Fernando, Cal. (U.R)Bert Stone, a powerhouse foreman who admits only to a coy "past 40," said today that the mayor of Dublin is helping him find a "well-built Irish girl" to wed. Stone, who has been married and divorced, said he wrote the r mayor more as a joke than anything else. "But I didn't know he would put an ad in the paper," Stone said. The letter outlined Stone's ideal as "up to 30 years of age, short, well-built, but not too slender." Of his own qualifications, Stone said he had a "little money in the bank, a car and a good house," but he added: "I'm not a wealthy man." The letter didn't mention Stone's other tangible assets a pack of hound dogs which he's counting on for company if he doesn't get the Irish colleen.