.Capital A Journal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM. Editor and Publisher ' ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher l Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. 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, 15c; Monthly, f 1.00; One Tear, 112.00. By Mail In Oregon- Monthly, 75c; ( Mos.. $4.0; One Tear, IS. 00. V. 8. Outside Oregon; Monthly, 11.00; I Mom., IMP; Tear, tit. 4 Salem, Oregon, Saturday, May 14, 1949 .Final Highway Decision Looms ",- The meeting of the state highway commission that opens Monday will be one of the most important In its his ' tory for it will consider and adopt the highway program , for the next two years, after two days of regular monthly meeting to open bids and let contracts for projects already '.included in its program. On Wednesday and Thursday the commission will not only decide what part of the Baldock traffic plan for Salem will be included in the 24 months, the one-way bridges over the Willamette connecting Salem and West ' Salem, the scheduled by-pass for highway 99E to the east of the city to divert through heavy truck traffic from Sa lem streets, and the proposed one way traffic street grid, but also the proposed extension of the four-lane highway (99E) from New Era to Salem. All these proposals are vital to the future of the city and the elimination of the present auto-truck congestion now being accelerated daily. Eventually it is planned by the commission to extend the four-lane highway from Portland to Eugene with four lane stretches leading in and out of major communities. The four-lane highway is completed from Portland to Mew Era and the commission will decide on how much more can be widened the next two years. Oregon's deficient highways were recently cited by Dep uty Commissioner J. S. Bright of the public roads admin istration as one of the arresting reasons why the federal government must spend $47 billion over a 10-year period to meet the nation's existing transportation needs. The deputy commissioner told the American Road Build ers' association that surveys made in eight states disclosed that this group alone had highway deficiencies needing ' immediate correction in the amount of $6,627,000,000. Oregon's requirements, including state, and county roads ' as well as city streets total $261,627,000 to improve 7,210 . miles. The survey in Oregon was made by engineers engaged by a legislative interim committee and its report . led the legislature to increase gasoline tax and automobile registration fees in order to provide additional funds for the highway department to begin meeting the deficiencies. The interim committee recommended the alternative of 1 10-year, 15-year or 20-year programs and the legislature decided on the 15-year program and provided an increase ' in gas taxes and license fees to help finance it, which it ..is estimated will yield over $8 million for the 1949-50 , biennium. Of this amount the highway department will receive an additional $5,600,000, the remainder to be dis tributed to the cities and counties. Salem is especially interested in both the widening of " the Pacific highway and the Baldock plan, which has now been endorsed, with proposed modifications by the long-range planning commission, the city councils of both . Salem and West Salem and the Marion and Polk county - courts, and all should have delegations present at the Tuesday morning session of the highway commission, , for it is vitnl to the immediate future welfare and growth ..of the locality. . Joe Dunn's Referendum It is exceedingly unfortunate that Joe Dunn, who has constituted himself as the Moses of the deluded old people to lead them to the promised land of big pensions that nobody pays, has instituted a referendum against the old age pen sion bill passed by the legislature which provided a $50 pension per month for persons aged 65 and over as long as funds are available. The petition has been filed and . the signatures are being sought. If the requisite number of signers are secured, and the enforcement of the law delayed until November election, the present law will remain in effect and the pensioners lose guins over the old act which the new act provides. Mr. Dunn, it will be recalled, showed his ignorance of law when he drafted the initiative bill passed by the people in November which not only provided no funds for pen sion payments, but was unworkable, destructive of slate .finances, and threatened bankruptcy. Something besides , sentiment, sympathy, demngogtiery and ignorance are needed in law making. In this connection we quote from W. L. Arant of Cottage Grove in a letter to the Oregonian as reflecting the reac tion of many of our "senior citizens" : "It is painful to read of the activities of the Joe Dunne group of old people who still dream of something for nothing, a nice pension that nobody pays. Bring in that age group myself, I suppose I should join them. In these modern times we expect to get state spending without taxation, power without fuel, time without the sun, socialism without dictntion, sin without pen alty, and pensions without revenues. H seems I am Just too old-fashioned. Late political theories have not repealed the basic laws of economics, nor will they ever. "He who expects to eat bread without the sweat of his own brow may conceivably be excusable In age and Infirmity; but when he expects to do it without the sweat of someone else's brow, he is the victim of pure hallucination. "The legislature and tha governor acted wifely, and a refcr ' endum petition filed by the old people would be very regret table." STORIES IN LIFE Ducks Almost Wreck Plane Anchorage, Alaaka, May 14 (UX A Jet pilot covered with blood and feathers landed his fighter plana aafely today after smashing through a flora of ducks while traveling 000 miles per hour. First Lieut. Kelsey Wynns, Oklahoma City, Okla., said ha was traveling In formation when auddenly a terrifi ex plosion atunned him momentarily. When he came to, he said, "I was covered with blood and 'I started to ball out." He said he noticed, however, tha engint was still working. "I dropped the wing tanks and headed back lo Elmendorf," Kelsey said. After landing, an eiamlnatlon of the plana ahowed that a duck had made a hole In the windshield the also of a man's loot Tha eoekpll was covtred with blood and feathers. Another duck had struck the plane's fusalaga making a 10-Inch hole. A third hit the right wing, smashing the gun camera. Mechanics cleaned 10 pounds of meat and feathers out of tha plane. Kelsey, except for being shaksa, was uninjured. BY BECK Actions for Regret P WHAT THI ., THINKING IP IT WERE J iiWA IDEA? we're mounted on a as fc lit' -mr TPN0t out ea tank and had the X m fj HERE AT MIDNIGHT lJ WOOD GAS LETTERED V UM WITHOUT ANV6AS.W ACROSS IT, HOW ffl.ml AND YOU 6IT V MUCH IT RESEMBLES N . tW THERE OAZINS ) THAT LAST GASOLINE HEI mtmk. at ths moon. J. I pump i wanted Jyfir: $(& jap THE FIRESIDE PULPIT Peoples Souls Differ Thus Response to Religion Varies By REV. GEORGE H. SWIFT I Retft at Pagi', Spwnoai Church The Almighty God seems to have taken particular pains to make countless billions of people and things without duplication. As far as people are concerned, not even are their fingerprints alike. It is little won-,.. .,. der then that no two people ever think ex actly alike, or react to situa 1 1 o n s exactly . . g alike. A friend re cently expressed surprise that two equally In-' telligent people an. Own swift accepted very different religions, i noiea inai the people he referred to didn t follow the same groove in poll- tics or profession either. They didn't belong to the same lodges or social sets, and one was mar- rled to a blonde and the other to a brunette. One would think that men whose apparent intelligence, education, training, and experi- ence would enable them to see equally the course of justice (men like the Justices of the United States aupreme court) would never render split de- clslons. But they do render such decisions, sometimes one vote determining the issue. In the matter of religion, intellectual of comparable magnitude throughout the world differ widely in their thinking. Even If religion wer purely an in- tellectual affair It would be a SIPS FOR SUPPER Relief QZ1 By DON UPJOHN Always striving to please we're planning on a couple of weeks' vacation starting Monday for the benefit of the customers more than us This should be quite an alleviation during the hot weath er. Thus they can become adjusted to the new daylight savings regime without interference. . The City Police Chief (Independence Enterprise) Lesel Reed, local police of ficer was called Monday morn ing to Third and A streets where he picked up two stray cows. The cows were' taken to the po lice station and after a time the owner found. ,w The cows need ed milking but Reed was unable to find someone to milk them. In Re Matter of Tin-e Following letter from Fred A. Williams, local attorney, to County Judee Grant Murphy and members of the county court Is self-explanatory: "I take great pleasure ln complimenting you upon your stand on the question of 'standard time.' I don't know that it makes any particular dif ference to others than the tax payers and the laboring men what time the state employes and 'daylight savings fiends' get up or go tq bed so long as the latter does not Interfere with business normalcy. However, when It comes to disturbing the state, legal and statutory 'set-up' Freckles Has His Doghouse Denver U Freckles had his doghouse all to himself today. His roomer of the last two weeks, eight-year-old Georgo Raspberry, was In the custody of state humane officers who hope to Iron out his domestic troubles. Little George, an anusually alert and bright Negro boy, told officers that he had run away from home oceans "I was anabl to get along with my stepfather." The youth aald ho alept la the doghouse with "Freckles," a browa and whit apoted terrier, when the weather was nice. When It rained, as It has been doing In Denver for the past four days, a broke Into a nearby attic. He at at the home of boy friends. Tonng Raspberry was arrested yesterday and taken to the Juvcnll hems. Officials want to make sure that when the boy does go homo h Isn't la the dog house with his parents. "l'v just keen playing around since 1 left home," Georg aald. "I didn't mind sleeping with Freckle because h llktd m and kept m warm," long and tedious process, II not an altogether Impossible one, to convert people to one religion, whether that religion be Juda- Ism, Shlntoism, Buddhism, Mo- hammedianism, Christianity, or line UI II1C ninny uuiris. uut religion is much more than an intellectual matter. Religion Is more than a matter of the mind. It is a matter of the soul. It Is not merely a matter of knowl edge. It Is a matter of faith. Because peopie', souls, like thdr m,ndSi are dlfferent( thejr response to lhe things of the oul gre different, Tni, ta why ,e worshlp God ln vari0us f Thij variety of worship probably isn.t a, bad we sometimes think, for God him- Kit seems to love variety, in that he has made so many countiess billions of unlike things. Anyway, even a human being wouldn't want everyone ele t0 bow to him in the same manner, or address him in exact- jy the same words. It is well to remember, while we props- gate our own faith, that people qulte as intelligent, as educated, and ai experienced as we are may ngve a conception of God which Is as genuine to them as ours is to us; and, because of their sincerity, as pleasing to God. with a city ordinance it Is some thing different Sometimes it occurs to me that the retirement age of state employes should not depend upon years but upon the state of their dotage. Further than that affiant 'sayeth not.' Congratulations on your stand for stable government." (Copy to Hon. David O'Hara, slatehouse, Salem, Oregon.) tncky 11 Pittsburgh W) Robert John son whose name counts up to 13 letters, was arrested, charged with drunkenness and lodged in cell 13. His was the 13th case In police court yesterday, which was Friday the 13th Police Magistrate W. H. M. McDiarmid studied the evidence and an nounced: "Case dismissed." Those letters, of course, add up to 13. Chicago W Are you super stitious, or do you think super stition Is a lot of bunk? Well, the National Safety Council made a survey to find out how superstitious people are about Friday the 13th. It was the only day-by-day check ever made by the council on motor vehicle deaths. The result? Friday the 13th was 17 percent safer than the two Frldaya preceding and the two Fridays after that date. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND FDR, Jr. Has Tammany Boys Worried Over Tuesday Vote By DREW PEARSON Washington Tammany politlcos who have kibitzed the Man hattan rallies of Franklin D, Roosevelt, Jr., are definitely wor ried. They have been forced to admit the kid has Inherited the old man's charm. In fact, they are beginning to wonder if he may not run off with the election to the late Con gre limn Sol Bloom's seat when the votes are counted next Tuesday. Here is the sort of thing that happens when "Junior" as Tammany calls him stumps Manhat- tan's mid-town twentieth dis- trict: A lady with a baby, after Franklin passed, cried in ecstacy to the child, "he saw you; he himself, the white Mouse an spoke to you! My child, he spoke nounced that Clay would be re to you!" lieved on May 15. Clay's friends A crowd of thousand nd advisers immediately start Negroes and Puerto Ricans, on ed some backstage wire-pulling Columbus avenue, crowded to keep the general In office, but around his sound truck and kept when Truman makes up his him answering questions for an mind. It usually stays made up. hour. NOTE Just a few days prior A wounded sailor who served to this, Richardson Bronson of on the same destroyer with the decartelization branch, young Roosevelt, called from a severely criticized in the Fergu crowd: "I want to see my old son report, was telling friends "exec" elected!" not to worry about the Ferguson A Puerto Rican woman, as a report because his friend, former meeting broke up, cried: "I pray Undersecretary of the Army he gets elected; he's our hero!" William Draper, had put the At the end of a day of this "tlx" In at Washington. Appar sort of campaigning. Franklin ently Mr. Draper, of the For implored liberal party worker restal Wall Street banking firm, Mrs. Benjamin Pollack, his law didn'4 have the fi fixed secure partner's wife, "listen, you got to do something to protect me from the women!" Real fact was that Senator Byrd of Virginia wasn't the only Inside fact about Gen. Lucius solon blasted by President Tru Clay's retirement as U. S. mill- man when he visited with off i tary governor of Germany was cials of the American veterans that he didn't want to be retir- committee the other day. ed at this time at all. Truman About Mississippi's turbulent forced his hand. John Rankin, Truman said: "I Clay had been sending mes-.can understand him personally, sages to Chief of Staff Omar but as a legislator the unfortu Bradley, complaining that he nate gentleman baffles me." was tired and ill and wanted to Indiana and Missouri were come home. But close friends "about even," Truman averred, say the general had expected ln having the "worst" represen Bradley to urge him to stay on. tation In the U. S. senate. Asked He wanted to see the new Ger- whether he would choose In man republic finally set up. So diana's Senators Capehart and Clay got the shock of his life Jenner, both republicans, or when, alighting from a train in Missouri's Senators Donnell and Germany on May 3, he was In- Kern, also republicans, the pres formed that his retirement had ident retorted cheerfully: been officially announced by "Oh, my own state always the White House. comes first with me." What actually happened was AVC Chairman Gilbert Har this. President Truman just rison asked the president wheth happens to have been one of er he would "go back to the the senate crusaders against people" if congress ditched most cartels and monopolies. In fact? of his legislative program. It was his expose of Germany's "Well, I hope I won't have I. G. Farben and its conspiracy to," Truman replied. "That's to control rubber and synthetic up to congress." Oregon's Muny R.R. Hos Wreck Prinevllle, Ore. (U.R) The city of Prineville railroad, Ore gon's only municipally-owned railway, had Its first wreck In the memory of its oldest employes last night. Five cars became detached from a switch engine on a grade near a lumber mill, rolled downhill and collided with four cars standing on the main line. Three cars were derailed and one toppled over, almost blocking a main Prineville street. Workmen were clearing the line today. No one was Injured. The railroad began operations in 1918. It runs westward 19 miles from Prinevllle to Prineville junction, where it con nects with the Central Oregon line. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Moscow Advocates Collaboration By OeWITT MacKENZIE (OP) rortlf Adtlra Antlyit) The Moscow radio which of course speaks with' the voice of the Kremlin broadcasts that collaboration between the American and the Russian economic systems is both possible and desirable. That's a high ly impor tant statement, whether you re gard it with sus picion or with hope. It's par ticularly inter esting, coming as it does al most on the eve of the Big Fourj conference set DaWIU Sftckensl for May 23 I see no quarrel with the thesis that American and Rus sian economic systems might collaborate, despite the ideologi cal clash between th two na tions. Communistic and democratic nations have similar economic needs. They must b fed. clothed and housed, and life otherwise must b mad worth while. Surely th-y should be able to engage In economic oper atlons menu. This to meet these require- r'.'v.M!" "".'i! tntliCtt with the truism that democracy and- communism cannot m i x Ideologically. They are oil and water. However, when we say that in , uuicung ccununiii systems might collaborate we must add a proviso. Such eol- laboration calls for a sntrit of amity. And it calls for non-ln- lerierrnce in eacn ouir a in- temal affairs. This touches a difficulty which frequently has put a strain on Russo-Amerlcan rela tions ever since the establish ment of th Soviet government Washington refused to recogniz W"m 1 "! gasoline with Standard Oil of New Jersey which first shot the Truman war investigating com mittee Into the headlines. On April 29, therefore, th president read the report of fed eral trade commissioner. Gar land Ferguson, on the U. S. army's failure under Clay to dis band I. G. Farben and other nasi cartels. Calling ln an aide. Truman said: "Now Is the time to get rid of that top sergeant in Ger- many." , Three days later, and much to the dismay of the general the new Russian state until 1933 because of Moscow's persistent efforts to spread communism in the United States by means of propaganda and the employ ment of Red agents. Britain, who recognized th Soviet ln 1924, encountered sim ilar communist activities and mad frequent raids on the Rus sian trade company's headquar ters in London. Finally London broke off relations in 1927 and didn't resume them again until 1929. When President Franklin D Roosevelt recognized the Soviet Union it was with th specific understanding that all Russian communist propaganda should ? ln America. However, ac- uvuies ox ine cominiem (gen eral staff for world revolution) continued to cause so much heat in foreign countries that in 194? Russia "abolished" that body, " eIU wwaroa ner am. since in war 'inv comin- Comintern, and th world revo- lution goes on. Canada has un covered her big spy ring with ramifications reaching into the United States and Britain, and convicted a number of agents. Tne united states nas had a constant procession of Invest!, gitlons and prosecutions lnvolv- i-- AMi.n ......... c testimony brought out Is enough to curl your haid. Well now. It doesn't take mnMi Imagination to see that then harrowing conditions would have to be altered before there could be hearty collaboration, economic or otherwise, be- twee a Russia and America. BY GUILD Wizard of Odds I IF YOUR WEIGHT IS 10 ABOVE ) J ,, NORMAL, VOU HAVE TO BEAT J w TV? WfR' fi EmR u i it r&.uwm TEEN A6C (SIRLSeY ODDS OF 8 TO I, WANT TO BECOME HOUSE WIVES WHEN THE. FINISH SCHOOL. (CLiUOIA BARRlT, Mmili'OllS, Mm, WAWP THIS ASWlk) r-VVV POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Difficulty Encountered in Balancing Expense Accounts By HAL BOYLE New York f) It is night out and cold rain is falling. And the darkness outside is matched by an equal darkness In my mind. Before me on our antique wal nut desk (Grand Rapids, Circa, 1938) is spread a paper of doom. It is covered figures of finan cial disaster. Across Amer ica at this mo ment, in homes ind hotel rooms, Drobablv 100.000 fellow citizens I fM B KIWI are staring at similar disheart- sold Ned eight apples at th ening documents. ' rate of three for a quarter, how aj v. , ,v,. v much would he have If Jim And they have the same prob- djd b , t lem I do. They are filling ou wha, Jft have expense accounts. And what ,f , how to lm t they are trying to do is to rec- 8ccounts And the teher oncle lifelong principles of hon- M to be yelIow Kld WeU esty with a selfish desire to stay th retlred conlidence man. out of bankruptcy. The object is to break even. But how can , The should also be taught you? two standards of honesty. On . ' , . . , , would hold in all general deal- I have just come back from fcI,ow mn a trip. And where did the oth , more elastic standard, money go? For the life of me wou,d hold , accountlng, y01 I can't figure t out. I must , , d , ,",; have been throwing it away with , . ,. . , both hands and kicking it away ny men avoid losing with my feet. Yet I don't re- "jeir own money in filling out member renting any dance swindle sheets I recall bands, buying Brooklyn bridge, the day we hit the beaches of or bathing in champagne. A'rica with assault troops. That . v i v night we all slept ln a roadside Nor do I recall having been . robbed, except in the informal , , . x ways customary in an advanced By dawn's early light next state of civilization. But I can't morning I espied a newsreel account on paper for much more comrade sitting on a rock and than half the money I drew for yPn out hU expense account the trip i,t opening Item said: "Hotel n '..! ,j room for first night in Africa All roving newspapermen and .. traveling salesmen have the There was a man to r- same trouble. Who started this member. OPEN FORUM Pick Flaws With Pension Law Passed by Legislature To the Editor In your editorial of May 10 you say "Governor McKay is to be commended for signing the old age pension law passed by the legislature." I don't believe many of the " voters who passed the people's surgical, nursing and all of pension bill by a sizable major- which seems quite dubious as ity at the last election, will agree that also depends on whether with you. After watching the sufficient funds are available, maneuvering of the legislature As I see it the law simply to knock out that bill, I am not amends the law under which th surprised" ' that the governor public welfare commission Is signed the substitute bill which now working, by putting som was seemingly sponsored by the teeth Into it; Viz. by giving th public welfare commission, and state a prior claim on the estates seems to have been a partisan of old age beneficiaries, and, by measure. a companion law providing that The people's bill was declared children of parents eligible for unworkable, presumably be- relief shall contribute to their cause no provision was made for support if they are financially financing it. If a sales tax had able to do so. been incorporated in the meas- The attorney general states use - there would have been no that a prior claim does not con hue and cry about bankrupting stitute a lien, but anybody the state, as the consumers knows that such a claim may be would pay the pensions. In the come a lien ln short order If de state of Washington a pension sired. law financed by a sales tax has As to children supporting - been in force for a number of their parents; Who is going to years, and people seem to have check on their ability to do so, overcome their dislike of a and who is going to enforce the sales tax, and the old people are law? In my opinion It will be as happy. I know some of them, difficult as enforcing the anti The legislative bill is work- gambling law which everyone able because it promises no knows about; Passing the buck specific amount of pension, but from state to counties and vice will pay $50 a month if suffi- versa. clent money Is available. It also E. F. WALDEN, provides for medical, dental, 3845 Portland Road. GARBAGE CAN IN ODD PLACE Pranksters Give Graduate Manager Perplexing Problem , Pullman, Wash., May 14 (" Graduate Manager Robert Brum blay of Washington State college had two problems: 1. How did pranksters get a garbage can on top of a 100-foot campus flagpole? 2. How could be get it down? He solved the second problem neatly while a crowd of students stood by with such helpful comment as "Go climb 'er. Bob. Brumblay taped a stick to the pole rope, ran It to th top of pole, and crowded the can off its high perch. He still doesn't have the answer to the first question. STORIES IN LIFE Thieves Take No. 5 Green Detroit 0JjnSomeone tt Bgn,Ber fTt grMB ,t the Warren Valley Golf club. Th thieves expertly cut and rolled up lis squar feet of expensive bent grass around the cup. They left th kola. J Investigators agreed it was record divot YOUR CAR RADIO IS PROBABLY IH WORK ING CONDITION -ODDS ARE JUST 9 TO I IT IS. , ' nonsense about calling an ex pense account a "swindle sheet?" Tha difficulty Is ln keeping It from swindling you. With ma the point of no return starts when I sit down to fill out an expense account. Why don't schools prepare a youth for life as it must be liv ed? I remember frittering away my time in arithmetic on prob lems like: "If John sold Jasper four apples for ten cents each and