Capital A Journal Things to Worry About An independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORtiE PUTNAM. Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES. Assistant Publisher Published every afternoon except Sundoy at 444 Che meketa St Salem Phones Business Newsroom, Want Ads. 2 2406. Society Editor. 2-2409 Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press and The Uvted Press. The Associated Piess is exclusively entitled to the use for publication ot all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RA1ES: Bv Carrier: Weekly. 25c; Monthly S1.00: One Tear. SI2.00 By Mall In Orefon: Monthly. 7.1c: 6 Mos.. M.00; One Vear. 18 00, U.S. Outside Oregon: Monthly II 00: 6 Mos.. 16.00: Year. S1J. 4 Salem, Oregon, Tuesday. May 3. 1949 One of the Facts of Life The time for decision is far overdue. Next Monday night the city council must arrive at final action on acceptance or rejection of the Baldock traffic plan for Salem. The mectinjj of the council at that time will be the last one before the May session of the state hiphway commission. It was the commission's chairman who, in April, gave the city until the May meeting to nflrke up its mind on whether it wanted to accept or reject the highway engineers' $7,600,000 proposal to substitute order for the traffic chaos that now holds the city in discomfort. Return to Salem of Mayor Elfstrom eliminates the last "reason for any delay in final action. There was no reason during the mayor's absence for a delay, but those who hesitated in arriving at a decision found Elfstrom's trip a handy excuse. . There has never been any doubt where the mayor stood on the Baldock plan. He has constantly been in favor of the city's accepting it, with those modifications agreeable to both the highway engineer and Salem. And Elfstrom is still of the same opinion. Lest there be any fears of untimely speed in putting into effect the four-point Baldock plan, the time-table of its possible inauguration should be reviewed. Acceptance of the traffic program by the city, followed by approval of the highway commission, would start a long-time series of moves to relieve Salem of its traffic ills. The moves to fulfill the four points of the Baldock plan would be spread over a period of a minimum of prob ably four years. So the effect would be gradual. However, unless the moves were taken as outlined by Hhe state highway engineer, the traffic confusion would "become increasingly worse in the city. Ultimately Salem would have to assume the financial responsibility of some kind of a solution to the problem. And where could such a solution better come than from the engineers, trained in highway engineering, who actually live in this city? That, in effect, is the present Baldock plan only backed by highway commission funds. r When all the facts are considered, acceptance next Mon day night of the Baldock plan is the only sane action the city council can take. It just stands to reason that a study, which has taken the highway engineers more than two years to make, will be as good a current study as can be made of the local traffic troubles. Is Salem to wait another two or three years for another ' study to be made, only to turn that one down, too, because it would come out with the same suggestions as are con tained in the present Baldock plan? Is Salem to postpone each year a decision it must make eventually if it is to find a way out of the current traffic ; confusion? i A survey of the facts shows so clearly that the , $7,600,000 state sponsored program for the city's streets 1 is the logical answer, and one Salem has wanted and , asked for. The city council has less than a week now in ' which to accept that realization as one of the facts of life. I Only One Line Drawn Two world wars underline General Bradley's statement that the nation's defense frontiers lie "in the heart of ; Europe." The Army's chief of staff reminded congress that the 1 United States could not afford to forget that the coastal borders of the country are no longer true frontiers. Lives ', lost and billions spent in World War I and World War II ; had shown so clearly that what goes on in Europe affects . this country just as vitally as does what goes on within '. the three-mile limit off the coasts. What Bradley didn't explain, however, was the frontier line in the Pacific. What have those same two wars, and the war of '08, shown as to legitimate United States interests in the Pacific? At what line do the nation's interests end? ; The west coast so often has the feeling that the Euro '. pean theater has so much of the attention of top officials in Washington that the Pacific theater is pretty much an after thought. That was the way strategy was in the past war. Attention was properly and necessarily cen tered on Europe. At the same time, however, strategy in the Pacific was definite and not haphazard. That is , not the case today. While the United States is ahead in the cold war in ; Europe, the nation can he said to lie losing the Pacific action in that same cold war. I Why can't the nation be as explicit in defining the ; frontiers and aims of the United States in Asia as Brad ley does for Europe? As it is now, the nation's policv on Asia is so uncertain and so fluctuating as to leave ; the people confused. If a line ran be drawn in Europe, ; It also can be just as properly defined for the Pacific area. A HUSBAND'S VALIANT EFFORTS : His Use of Beer-Can Opener : Credited With Saving Wife's Life i Ithaca. N. Y., May 1 uroA 211 year-old polio victim, whose husband's valiant efforts kept her alive when her iron lung i broke down aboard a trans-continental train, arrived here ' today. ! Mrs. Shirley Palmer was admitted Immediately lo Ithaca i Reconstruction home for treatment. Doctors said she apparent I ly was none the worse for her cross-country t-ip. Mrs. Palmer s iron limn broke down near Laramie. Wvn i aboard the Union Pacific's streamliner Cily of l.o Angeles i Her husband, Robert, used a beer-ran opener tc keep the iron lung operating for eight hours until the train pulled Into , Omaha. ' Mrs. Palmer, whose husband is an art student in Los Angeles , Is B0 per cent paralysed by the disease. She is able to move only her head. ! Palmer said the respirator's pumping mechanism broke down , The respirator is equipped with an emergency handle for use ' when electric power is not available. ! But Palmer said tha handle failed to work ; "I found a beer can opener on the floor of the car." he said "and by Juggling it around got it to replace the handle." ' He squatted on the floor and worked the device for eight J hours until the train reached Omaha, Neb, at 4 a m ves i terday, he said. At Omaha, the fire department provided a new respirator i Mrs. Palmer said her husband, a wartime fighter pilot in ' Burma, was "Just wonderful." Ha said he was "Just tired." CAN'T DO MOTH 1 1 ' SHE AIN'T HAD THE SOIL "J TESTED! ),' I5U ' V':'i I 'JW, V'i',3&?i NM . '.7- irr WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Soviet Eases Pressure To Surprise of Iran By DREW PEARSON Washington Here are uncensored diplomatic slants on how tht cold war and the hot peace negotiations are going. Some are had but most are good: Russians relent This Iranian government has reported to the state department that all Russian pressure on Iran has suddenly and strangely keep Marshall Tito from patch ing up his fight with Moscow. American engineers are now es timating the costs, which may go as high as $100,000,000. BY GUILD Wizard of Odds NtXT TIME YOU oOTOAMOVIf.THE ODDS ARE 12 TO I IT U RUN BtTWEEN 80ANDI00MINUIC.5. halted. Two weeks ago the I ra n 1 a ns had prepared a for mal demand that the Unitrd Nations security council investi gate Soviet ag gression. B u t the p r e s s u rcV i j easen up ara- matically when negotiations over Berlin began, Evatt's Optimism Dr. Her- M5TV Even if rou'RE Planning to START A SMALL BUSINESS. OOPS ARE 9 TO I YOU'LL SPEND 7.000 OR MORE. Drt r.n TRUMAN ON NEW MEXICO When the president is pleas ed, his face lights up and two dimples pop into his cheeks. Thus his face gave him away the other day over prospects ot returning to old haunts in New Mexico. He was invited to slip down SIPS FOR SUPPER Canny Advice By DON UPJOHN Governor Jim Cooke, Salem high school lad who served as governor with the boys' legislature last week was left with quite a raft of bills to approve or veto as in his wisdom he saw fit. The real gover- bert Evatt, president of the Unit- ,0 Sant Fe this fall for the ed Nations general assembly, is J001" anniversary of New Mex- happier than he's ever been 'e' pioneer paper, the Santa about the future of the U. N Fe New Mexican. The fact that the Berlin oeace Truman wouldn't make any talks have taken place in the "at Promises to attend, but he U N. has thoroughly Justified recalled with a chuckle his its existence even if the organ- rly experiences in the state, ization accomplishes nothing He has visited New Mexico in else. Actually the U. N. has also 1909 and again in 1924, he re- alreariv hrnneht nesce to Pales- la'ed- Both times he had stopped tine, Pakistan, and India. Not to rummage through an old cu bad for a three-vear-old baby. r" hP "" chat with the own I STOCKS 60 DOWN 0URIN6 A YEAR RATHER THAN UP. By ODDS OF 15 TO II. AVERAGES WERE UP IN 22 OF THE LAST 52 YEARS (TMAMt A tor fat A 6000 ouesrOM. Bin COHt, ClimtHO.O.) nor. Douglas! McKay, advised! Jim that tot the job he snouia veio hi least n n e hilt So J i m turned turned to hi.' advisors. Dear U. G. Dubach of Willamette and Senators Dean Walker of Independence and Howard Belton of Clackamas 5 Lm So he was parked in the corri dor at City hall leading back to the city Jail. So Carl Charl ton, assistant chief of police, re ceived a big ovation from the jail inmates this morning as Carl marched back ipto the corridor with a mop and bucket to take care of the situation. This is "Be Kind to Animals Week,'' in cidentally. Working Up an Appetite Denver iP John Cloud. 52 a construction worker, said he county, to discuss the matter of fas'.of 29 days yestcr- the proper bill to veto. They T s;t"- had no trouble coming up with J1' The Rood Lord one. It was a measure which heard by prayers and made me ... .... himrsrv " PlnuH tnlH rpnnrlers would have required an moior "-'' "- - car drivers 55 years old or over to take an examination as Austrian Jitters - trian government - The Aus is alarmed the late J. S. Candelario. One prize item Candelario showed off was a trunk which early New and author Mexican of "Ben because the Hungarian army hg sM had bclongcd to Lcw nas oeguil uuikiimk Luntitnc yaace boxes along the Austrian bor- overno'r der. Huge floodlights and bar- f, t i i : i -1 L. JIUT. DPG-WirC UdlllLdUtrB inu nic wir ing installed opposite Austria with pillboxes every 100 yards. All this has the Austrians in the Jitters. Arms to Europe The joint chiefs of staff have notified President Truman that the army has 9.286 surplus tanks and 7, 000.000 tons of ammunition it Truman recalled how Cande lario had told him with a broad wink: "If I sell that one, it will be the ninth one I have sold." Chuckling so that his dim ples shewed, the president also recalled another of Candelario ! cracks. It seems he used to ex hibit a small skull which he ntn;mAJ ...... Ikt nf K'nnUnn can ship to western Europe un- 0nce f doubting woman cus; He said he made daily visits to to the Nazarene church during the der the Atlantic pact. That's enough to equip 25 armored divisions. 'American Plant In Yugoslavia Yugoslavia has begun secret tomer had asked whether tht skull wasn't too small to have been Napoleon's. "Well, that was his skull when he was a boy," the presi- guessed it. The advisers are all clud wi resume his regular " eating habits slowly, he said Who's Fare Is Red Now? Portland W Mayor Dorothy McCullough Lee who Is op- negotiations with an American detlt quoted the old curio keep- period he abstained from food company to build a steel plant er's repiy. in Jugoslavia, ine siaie ni-pan- Truman explained he had re ment has given its blessings to turned to Santa Fe in 1B24 to the deal upon recommendations npp erect monument to pio from the American embassy. neer mothers, which is looking for ways to (Copiumt and will not eat a full-sized meal until next week Spurred on by an Item in our posed to gambling here-can't .d tZ SHAPELY CHASSIS IS LAST play in Newport's raffle. The Newport Chamber of Commerce Joe Felton decided he'd better try filling one of the beautiful returned a ticket sold to the 'umam Pen .R1Yen ".Dy lne Portland mayor bv a crab festi- Elks PPreciation of his serv val delegation. The group ex- lces' So he unscrewed the top plained it was sent back so Mrs. " ,same nd ?und .pl"nf" Lee would not be embarrassed 'ticking up. He inserted the in the event she would win on Pfn P'nt n ink bWe and her ticket. plunged. Disappointed at get- ting no results he yanked out Some of the boys on the police the plunger and plunged again force picked up a stray dog last but this time over some papers night, a very fine dog with a on his desk. The pen is still nice leash and somebody's pet empty, we hear. Second Surprise for 'Bob' Charleston, W. Va. "P' A quartet of Siamese kittens Siamese like in twins, that is has been born to a five-year-old cat misnamed Bob. Bob's owner, Mrs. Freda Cole, said mother and kittens, which are joined together by their stomachs, apparently are doing nicely. This Is the second surprise Rob has given the Coles. The first was about four years ago when what they thought was a tomcat gave birth to her first litter. 10 Things a Girl Needs To Become Movie Star By VIRGINIA MacPHERSON Hollywood (U.P A director who's been turning stage-struck kids into world-famous movie queens for almost 30 years named 10 things today a girl needs to be a star and a shapely chassis ami S7t MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Princes' Glory on Way Out By DeWITT MacKENZIE (i4f ForrMin Affairs Ammo India Is happy over the historic agreement which permits her to become a republic and Ft ill remain a member of the British Commonwealth of Nations without acknowledging the sover- "f P-sM rnni.m. ukiK h.... nn niac in this atomic age of ours. Still one can understand the feelings of potentates, some of whom were links in bejeweled dynas ties reaching back many hund reds of years. The story of the princes forms one of the striking pages of history. The pomp and splen dor surrounding them had to be seen to be believed. I saw much of it at one time or another, for I was a guest in was last on his list. Curves'll get you whistles at Hollywood and Vine, said Director- Produc er Clarence Brown. But they won't get your name on any of those $.i000- a- week sav checks. "The first thing you need, he said, "is intelligence. A girl has to be briRht to be an actress. If she ever gets to the top, she has to be brilliant." Next came an "interesting" face crewmen, etc. The more they like you the more they help you to success. And if you're tem peramental, well . . . lights have been known to fall on actresses' heads , . . accidentally . . 5 An instinctive and an acquired knowledge of stage craft; "You have to know what good acting is and then find out how to do it yourself." 6 The ability to take instruc tions. "I call it a sDecial kind vir.mt. M.rPher. o Rcnju5 Tne producer and director know what they want, and you won't get anywhere act ing temperamental." 7 An ability to wear clothes well. 8 A feeling for people. "No great artist in any line ever be- eignty king-emperor. That is, the articulate por tions of India's three hundred millions as a whole are pleased, w w v e r, p.; . ire a few yf A its which IJjf OfHIll M.rKfHtl. However, I in re are element are bound tn be rccrrttiil. Out standing among them are the ,he paiac , ,ome of the grPIlt hundreds of princes who have maharajahs. and attended one lost their thrones since India viceregal function in New Delhi was grunted independence near- which fajrlv blaIed with mil. ly two years ago, and now see lions of donars worth of gems u.r -"rrini oi me lsi lie wnn worn by forty 0f Inrfjg , princes. tne imperial phst. "glories" of the 'Not beautiful, necessarily," comes reat without a superb Brown added. "Many actresses instinct and love for just plain have turned up with gorgeous humanity." faces and never hit the public 9a good memory. fancy. I am a gentleman. I ... will not name names. But there loAnd, wa-a-ay down at are a lot of beautiful mugs in the bottom, comes what most the movies that belong to nice sweater girls figure's the best girls who'll never be top stars and only way to crash the glit- "By interesting. I mean a lace tering never-never land of Hol that reflects feeling. lywood. "Third you have to be in- "Yes. you need a svelte fig dustrious. There's no easy way ure." Brown admits. "You to the top in the movies. You notice I don't say sexy. Most of have to work until you drop in the really top stars are too slim your tracks. If you're lazy to be sweater girls. Thats not some other actress will beat you very important in this business to the good roles every time." anyway. Those were the top three. But "And don't you go getting any the next seven. Brown said, ideas I say that just because I've were important, too. got gray hair. I may have been making movies for 35 years 4 A good dispositnn. "This but I'm not too old to notice a may sound -peculiar, but movie sweater girl now and then, making involves a lot of "But I just look. I don't hire other actors, writers, directors, 'em." . . ' Back in 1918 I was for a fortnight the guest of the late Since India gained her free- Mah,r,jah of Gwalier. one of dom. the native principalis ,he most powfrfui of the prin. and their rulers have rome un- c der control of the New Delhi w wer, chatting one dav government. about tne reiationship between Kven the Niiam of Hydera- the princes and the British gnv- bad. reputed to be the world's ernment, and he emphasized the richest man and the sovereign importance of the position of of the greatest state in India, the king-emperor In the minds has had lo bow to the new era. of the rulers. The fate of the big state ot "Let me put It this way," Kalimir alone remains unset- said his highness. "The princes tied pending a plebiscite among are five shillings in the pound the people to see whether they for the government and fifteen prefer In Join Hindu India or shillings in the pound for his the neighboring Moslem do- majesty." (You get the point minion of Pakistan. when you figure that there are It is well that theae princes twenty shillings In an English should go, for they are anarrh- pound sterling.) Medical Student Gets Lesson Morgantown. W. Va. ii Richard Tihor, first-year medical student at West Virginia university, la learning his obstetrics the hard way. He delivered his own son yesterday. Tabor had called a doctor and arranged for a hospital room. Rut when he returned, the hahy was on Its war and he com pleted the delivery. His wife and haby got tn the hospital 10 minutes later. Both ara "doing fins." ON WAY TO OREGON Family of Nine Gets Help After Goods. Truck Burn San Rafael, Calif. i4 Marin county was a hard place to leave behind for a family of nine now bound for Oregon. B. F. Cordova. 52. grandfather of the family headed for Harlan. C)re., summed it up with "folks around here have been mighty good." Last Thursday the family lost Send your "Odds" questions on any subject to "Tha Wizzard of Odds," care of the Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon Her Bannister Slides Are Over Scranton, Fa. "P Florence E. Dolph, who celebrated her last two birthdays by sliding down the bannister In her home, died Sunday 18 days before her 102nd birthday. Born May 19, 1847, in Dickson City, Pa., Miss Dolph moved to California in 1902, lived there 44 years and then returned to Scranton. The bannister slides last year and In 1947 were, Miss Dolph said, to demonstrate her good health and agility. Her health continued good until recently. She was the oldest alumna of Lewisburg seminary now Bucknell university. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Noise: Silence Out Loud By HAL New York Pi Sh-h-h-hhhhhf Let no bird call. Don't make a Abatement week. Now is the time for all good men to c r e e- p about their tasks on little cat feet. Anybody who makes an un necessary sound in the next sev en days is cer tainly" no 100 per cent Amer ican. Americans cooperate. The signal for anti-noise week was given by a strong, silent many in Albany Gov. Tom E. Dewey He didn't make a speech about it. That wouldn't have been right. No. The governor issued a muffled statement instead. He said excessive noises were "one of the hidden drawbacks of our civilization."" , And he urged the cit.zenry to organize noise abatement groups. Presumably, just to set an ex ample, the discussion meetings of such groups are conducted by semaphore. Anti-noise week started off with a bang. Both congress and the United Nations were in session, thinking out loud as usual In the sports world, perhaps the outstanding observer of Noise Abatement week has been Leo Durocher of the New York Giants, known in exuberant moments as "The Lip." For days he has rivaled the clam. But what he hasn't been saying must be a mouthful. Maybe a choked mouthful. There is some uncertainty in the public mind as to how to celebrate Noise Abatement week. This arises naturally from the widespread confusion over just what noise is and what it isn't. Noise basically can be de fined as a sound made by some one else that annoys you. The trouble is that if you try to shut the other fellow up you are likely to get into an argument. Then you both make strange sounds that become noise to a third party. The only person who can avoid noise is a hermit who lives in the woods and can read without moving his lips. But sometimes even a hermit can't escape from his own noise. He BOYLE Quiet, please. Quiet! sound. This is National Noise finds he is talking to himself just when he wants to sit still and think. He gets in the bad habit of being quiet out loud. One of the difficulties of Noise Abatement week this year is that it is running into some pretty stiff competition. This also happens to be National Boys and Girls week, National Fam ily week, American Camp week, and National Baby week. Yes, and your favorite cafe teria feels free to serve any old noisy soup it wants because it is National Restaurant week. And anybody who wants to grind a knife sharp has a right to. For it is National Cutlery week. It is even impossible to have quiet around the house. Sure 'nough, it's Spring Cleaning week, too. You can't even beat your dog for howling at night. This ia Be Kind to Animals week. Of course, there is some pre cedent for having Anti-Noise week now. It was in this period four years ago that the biggest noise in history abated the sec ond World War in Europe. If you're disillusioned about Anti-Noise week, there is (mall comfort ahead. For it's National Hearing week, and National Raisin week and they merge into National Frozen Food week. Oh, yes, It's National Golf week. And, yes again, it is also National Packing week. Do you ever feel like you're in a package? out we aren't alone," Cordova said. A plumber's helper, he had all their worldly goods when "orn ior lour or .i.. ....!. i .i.i-i. .u- five weeks In Los Angeles The ine iruck in wnicn thev were moving burned. They thought they were destitute. But a garage owner towed in the burned wreckage of truck free of charge. Then a motel owner acroni family decided to move to Ore gon when a relative, Mrs Joe Brra. Harlan, Ore., wrote there (hf were lumber mill Jobs opening nun iiirusiiig nvaiiauir. With his son-n-law, Hugh Rhoden, Cordova put their last modated the family for a total $2oo in an old model truck and charge of $7. And Saturday. the combined families set out. citizens who preferred to remain Tht,y 0, far , s, Rafa,. ..,....,.. un- wnrn a defective battery term- lucky family with S500 In cash in()i artrd the fjre, u.r, .rurs 10 replace the n.w .ruckand with new hope they drove out of and the original. "This , thing happened to us here yesterday bound among strangers, but wt found ward. north- Hear Eva I fiallienne's Favorite Story Travels n Marro Polo" KSLM Prntmd by PORTLAND GENERAl ELECTRIC COMPANY and gmt thw 4 times as fast.,. end your bust dollar buy It whan you fly mm SAM FRANCISCO 'a hours 105 ANGELES 6 flours And "ML THf MST" Airport Terminal Coll SoI.it, J. 2455 Or, im an vfhtrlr.a' trjf .(