-1 Capital A Journal An Independent Newspoper 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, Newsroom, Want 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, 25c; Monthly, $1.00; One Tear, 812.00. By Mail In Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos.. $4.00; One Year, $8.00. V. 8. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos.. $6.00; Year, $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, June 22, 1949 A Shot in the Arm Needed How's Salem's hospital development program coming along? From all indications, the answer could be this: The aver age size of the advance gifts has been good so far, but only a small percentage of the advance gifts has been made. Salem has a great interest and stake in the success of the current hospital development program. The goal of $1,100,000 will give the city what it needs to offer hos pital care to the growing community. Experience has shown that fun-raising drives like this are divided into two parts : The advance gifts phase and the public campaign. The advance gifts drive started three months ago but has resulted so far in only about 20 per cent of the expected results. One hundred pledges have been written, with each averaging $1500. E. T. Franklin, director of the hospital campaign, describes the number of these donors short at this time in the drive, but the average contribution as good. Only three weeks remain of the advance gifts drive. Then the public campaign begins. That campaign which will reach into every section of the city will start July 12 and close August 12. As one of the articles run on this page has brought out, the amount sought from each person in Salem is lower on the average than in other cities of the Pacific North west in which drives have been conducted. Salem's hoped for average contribution in the over-all campaign will be lower than in Newport, Bend, Prineville or Nyssa among communities in Oregon. That "lower" figure does not betray the real need for more adequate hospital facilities in the city. Nor does it excuse a delay in the making of contributions. Looking over the campaign as it stands now, Salem can gay that the advance gifts are good in size but slow in coming in and low in number this far along. But the goal remains the same. If a doctor were diagnosing the situation, he might say the patient is coming along all right, but a shot in the arm wouldn't hurt. The shot in the arm could be the prompt signing of advance gift pledges. Salem's stake in the drive is so great as to make the guccess of it essential for the health of the community Itself. The Federal Housing Bill The administration's federal housing bill is one of President Truman's must measures for which the Euro pean aid bill and the Atlantic Pact have been sidetracked. As approved by the house banking committee the bill calls for construction of 1,050,000 units in seven years, with a maximum cost to the federal government of $400, 000,000 a year over a 40-year period. The federal govern ment's share under the revised bill would be about $308, 000,000 annually. The bill would also provide for a $1,500,000,000 slum clearance program and a $300,000,000 program for the improvement of rural housing. The housing bill has been bitterly fought and the presi dent has repeatedly denounced the opponents as the "real estate lobby." The main arguments against the measure are that there will be less housing and housing will cost more, because private home owners won't build in com petition with the government, and that the purchase cost will be prohibitive to incomes of those who really need housing. ' As the bill comes to the house floor it provides for the construction of 810,000 public health units over a six-year period not enough to relieve the shortage incurred by years of non-building during the depression and war peri ods. Besides, housing should be left to private enterprise and should not be a federal project. Grange Purge Resented The Oregon Farm Bureau federation, a rival farm or ganization of the Oregon State Grange, takes issue with the latter for its scheduled campaign to purge 22 state legislators for voting to amend the state initiative and referendum laws, instigated by Grangemaster Morton Thompkins at the recent Marsh field convention. The proposed change was a revision requiring the signa tures of 8 percent of the legal voters of each county of the state to place an initiative bill on the ballot. The present law requires the signatures of 8 percent of the legal voters of the state regardless of residence, which can easily be got, and usually is, by paid solicitors in Port land, and so does not represent the state's electorate. Marshall Swearingen, Pendleton, executive secretary of the Oregon Farm Bureau federation, blasts the grange action as "blackballing" and an attempt "to bulldoze the ehosen representatives of the people." The farm bureau, Swearingen said, actively supported the bill in question house joint resolution 7 because it was a part of the bureau's program to give voters more adequate representation on initiative matters. As often remarked in these columns the American farm er is a natural rugged individualist and votes his own convictions and resents dictation, and will remain so un less he is persuaded by federal subsidies and paternalism to surrender his initiative and so pave the way for regi mentation that ushers in a return to serfdom. Burned Up Over Wife's Career Blackpool. Eng. i William Brlndle wants his wife to quit conducting her streetcar and come on home to do the cooking. Saturday he was put on pronation because he stopped traffic along the aeafrnnt by telling his troubles to a crowd he as sembled on his wife's tramline. unday he burned up the skirt to her conductor's uniform and hid the Jacket. The wife, Violet, went to work In a green mock. Brlndle conked his own dinner and burned the peas. "I'll get Violet back home If It the last thing 1 do," Brlndle f rowled. "The trams are my career," enapped Violet "I shall go on, whatever happen." by BECK Recollections NO MODERN LUXURY LINER CAN EQUAL THE THRILL YOU GOT FROM lf., f THAT OLD RAFT WHEN MX! SET '?P'J$gf", AROUND THE WORLD. . iJ. - -2i WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND J. Edgar Hoover 'Feud' With Clark Has No Basis By DREW PEARSON Washington The 48-hour mystery over J. Edgar Hoover's resigning as head of the FBI got stirred up from two separata (ources. One was President Truman, who got highly indignant at the smearing of a lot of innocent bystanders when the FBI reports the Judith FBI reports because, if he did, every espionage agent in the United States would figure he had immunity. He would know the FBI could not produce ita reports in court to prove the government's case. gy GUILD Wizard of Odds in C o p 1 o n case were published. Truman felt that unchecked , rumors should I not have been allowed to get , Into the FBI I files, and for a I while he was all I for firing the e f f 1 cient FBI 4.1 .u t th, ster Roger Touhy had demanded The other source was J. Edgar ..... , i Hoover's public relations man. VACATIONERS SPEND LESS TIME IN RESORT CITIES NOW THAN odds Against a husband and wife MEETIN6 DEATH WTHfl Maf ClUt AVIACUT uTS? ARE 950.000 to I. (m Msm.ut UMinrii tiusunwiy,M.) Ortv PeartoD Hoover than asked if the jus tice department couldn't take "a contempt" as in the Touhy case in Chicago. There, Gang- SIPS FOR SUPPER Lou Nichols, a smart and likable Greek-American, formerly Nic- holopolous, who. protect his boss, sometimes out smarts himself. Salemire Abroad that certain FBI reports be pro duced in court, and the jus tice department had refused, in his zeal to "I" A.?;. T attorney in contempt.. Clark replied that the Touhy case was different from the 4 W A BEFORE THE WAR. MJIu.JTn ITl PRE-WAR AVcRAut . i , ., Ti- fBl S STAY VWM.I MVS; 7K, NOW IT'S 1 'rXZ KipaJB7r- AND 2 TO I YOU BY DON UPJOHN Today's mail brought us an anonymous letter signed "Your Explorer Friend," and sent from Salem, Mass., the little city on the east coast which was asked to change its name some years ago by a Salem Oregonian and got huffy about it. Our explor er friend, who we suspect is non other than Gardner Knapp on a big tour of the country writes: "While in Salem, Mass.. I thought I would do a lit- Dean Walker Please Note (Bend Bulletin) Another unneeded feature at the water carnival was the inno vation permitting vendors of soft drinks, peanuts and popcorn to cry their wares through the crowd. In other years such sales had been confined to booths lo cated at a little distance from the seats bordering the mirror pond. But in 1948 the sellers, extremely vocal, vied continu- tle research ir.to two of your ously with the pageant narrator. favorite subjects. One, store frequently ruined utterly the teeth: The store teeth here are musical background upon which mostly porcelain, buck teeth pre- the presentation was being made, dominating, and most folks carry In a moment of solemn beauty an extra set as a bit of protec- there can be nothing more dis tion against pickpockets. I concerting, we think, than a sud could find no record of any den, raucus call of "Peanuts!" organized groups of store teeth There can be few things more wearers. Evidently the influ- offensive to the eye than the ence of your favorite paper has litter which peanut munchers not reached this far. Your other and "pop" guzzlers leave in a favorite subject, the ladies: once lovely park. There seems to be lots of 'em , in Salem, Mass., too. In obr Kea ,or Rte , serving from a distance they (50 Years Ago in Pendleton seemed most attractive. Skirts are shorter, calves are nicely There will be no fight made curved, and waists are back. m lne. SIOt mro n asKS; " You can tell your advertisers to "venreen men were inaici start selling long skirts short, ed by the grand jury have plead By fall they'll be back where .d f"'" nd rtJude Lowell . , , , fined each $20. One of the gen they belong. Your Explorer tlemen said he regretted very Friend. P.S. The only witches much the necessity of having left in Salem are cute ones. to take out the slot machines. for the reason it had netted him Interesting sidelights on Sa- $1800 in the last year, lem, Mass., in foregoing letter, Death which struck down also on human nature. A guy George Manolis so unexpectedly going 3000 miles to look at a took one of the county's widely caK beloved figures. He was so ac- , tive, so full of vigor, so always mj nv,sr,n i ;,, . mil. on the alert for civic advance Had a chance to give a little ment lhe M that he could tudy today to a photo of Gov- !0 suddenly be taken in the ernor Douglas McKay, and if he midst of his activities accentuat- wears a toupe, as suggested in ed the shock. Our particular the inquiry to B. Mike's column condolences go to young George i ti, ,-,,.,:.. Hi. i whose picture appeared in last in the Oregonian, it is an in- ii.,- ,- , ,,,,. night s issue of this paper in growing one and has taken good training as a guardsman at Fort hold of Doug's scalp. Lewis. OPEN FORUM Parking Under New Courthouse To the Editor: A great deal has been written regarding the parking problem in Salem and the latest idea to provide parking under the new Court House seems to be viewed with much favor. Since the Court House will re- locations desired, such as adja quire a large basement area for cent to the City Hall, State Of the heating plant, mechanical fice Buildings and main shop features and general storage as ping district, well as columns and walls, the Close-in parking lots, multi parking area under the immcdi- pie-storied platform parking or ate structure would be limited, underground parking all will be However ramps could be provi- costly, but if parking facilities ded on four sides of the build- are not provided for our exist ing and parking areas placed ing shops and offices, then the under the remainder of the business will move to outlying block and under the city streets, districts where parking is avail Since most of our city streets able. are a hundred feet wide, park- CARL SCHNEIDER ing areas could be provided at 1665 S. Winter St., Salem. NEED FOR HOSPITAL CARE HERE What Basis for Figure Of 200 Hospital Beds? (Editor's Note: In a few weeks the Salem hospital develop ment program will he brought before the people of the Salem area. So that questions being raised may be known by all, along with the answers, the Capital Journal Is co-operating by printing them dally. Questions may he directed to the hos pital program headquarters, 3 .IS N. High St., or may be phoned to 1-3851.) Tt urae MinVin1s whn set in mO' tion the rumor that Hoover was Coplon case in that Touhy was about to resign as a backfire making an appeal and the bur against Truman's intimation de" of proof was on him. There that it might be a good thing to j 'j the justice department have Hoover resign. rlsked .iftt!tm8 contempt- Nichols was busy as a bird a.J 100 'lne. In the Coplon dog dropping hints to newsmen on the other hand, Clark about friction between Hoover continued, the justice depart and his chief, Attorney General nt was the prosecutor, and if Tom Clark, and one editorial in ' wa held in contempt the a local Washington newspaper 3udg,ew?.uld not merely ?sses followed Nichols' conversation 100 flne. n would dismiss verbatim. the case' Nichols is the same alert busybody who shuttled back Hoover said he guessed the and forth between the FBI and attorney general was right. He Capitol Hill last summer when added that publication of the it was a good bet the republicans FBI Papers in court was now were going to win in November. wat over the dam, but he He seemed almost as much at wou.ld b,eu dead opposed to pro home in the office of Congress- duclne tne toP dcu man Parnell Thomas, chairman ment- of the un-American activities clark sa'd he heartily agreed, committee, as the congressman and that if the judge ruled this himself. (Thomas is now under report nad to be Published, then indictment in a kickback scan- he would aPPeal to a higher dalj court and if overruled there, Nichols also was chummy en he wou.ld mov 'to di,snYss with GOP Senator Ferguson of hpeBJaS! mM then Judge ... . , v,it, 4h Reeves has ruled that this top- Michigan, a bitter foe of the document was not to be justice department. In fact, Lou produced ) was credited with slipping Fer- guson the Elizabeth Bentley spy f conversation was corn data, and was so active that Ple,ely cord,al throughout, as some capitol observers were un- h4avevbe?", " atln betW6en j , t ..... Hoover and Clark ever since kind enough to say Lou was cark became Uo al PlBh'SCBrds to become c h.ef While Hoover has metimes of the FBI once the republicans differed with other attor took officethough this observ- generali he and clark have been er has never detected anything close friendg ever since Ciark but strict devotion to his FBI was assistant attorney general in chief. charge of the criminal division. Contrary to reports of trouble Here two important factg between Hoover and Attorney io keep mind in the FBI. c General Clark, Hoover never lon case furore. sent a letter threatening resig- j Xhe FBI ' builds its files nation, and here is what actu- somewhat like a newspaper ally happened between the two man builds his files. A piece of men: information comes in from one Clark telephoned Hoover aft- source which means nothing, er Dr. Edward U. Condon of the Then something comes in from bureau of standards had asked another source, and perhaps for an FBI apology. Jokingly, from a third source, which tak Clark called Hoover "Dr. Con- en separately mean nothing, don." Hoover laughed. But put together, they begin to Clark then asked how many tell a story. Therefore, the FBI confidential agents he had lost is duty bound to keep uncheck as a result of making public the ed rumors in its files. FBI reports in the Coplon case. 2- However, these unchecked Hoover said he had lost about rumors should not be made pub 12, and that the one that was "c. any more than a newspaper most important was inside the man can afford to publish ru Russian embassy. mors without checking for ac- Th .iinrav m h curacy. Unfortunately, however, had been talking to Acting Sec- P1"" unchecked FBI reports retary of State Webb, who said Send your "Odds" questions on any subject to "The Wizard of Odds," care of the Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN What Big Four Ministers y Agreed to -or Didn't By DeWITT MocKcrtZIE (UP) Foreign Affair Anamtl The month-old big four foreign ministers' council meeting in Paris finally has ground to a weary close, having recorded some achievement, although it has done little to make the halls of ; the pink palace echo with sat- " isfaction. east. There is nq guarantee that Small wonder that an Ameri- this tug of war will cease. can spokesman- wasn't optimis tic in evaluating the results. One of the confere n c e ' s chief accomp lishments, as I see it, has been to e m p h a size again the con f 1 i c t between the two blocs ' western democ- Dwm Maekeiul The council announced agree ment in principle on an Aus trian independence treaty. This has been hanging fire largely because of two issues Moscow's reparations demands from the little country, and Yu goslavia's claim of territory from the Austrian province of Caranthia. Russia has been sup porting this claim. The council agreed that Aus tria's frontiers will remain rf,cy ,a.nd totalitarian bolshevism. wnat they were on January lf It s difficult to find common ground on vital issues. 1938, which means that Yugo slavia's claim has been thrown nut Ruccio ie avnantati in uriiV,. The principal object of the draw ner support to that cUim conference to establish econo- Yugoslavia won't get repara- mic and political unity for Ger- tions but may ..seize retain or mar?uy?aS.n ig , liquidate Austrian property" in The best that could be done Yugoslav territory. Austria will by the four statesmen Vishin- pay Russia $150,ooo,000 in rep sky of Russia, Bevin of Britain, aration3 Schuman of France and Ache- Tnat hat has been d to ion of America was to agree in principie. it remains to be on a modus Vivendi" under seen whether it will be what ul- which dismembered Germany timately is signed, sealed and will continue to be adminis- delivered. Agreement, in prin- lerea Dy ine opposing Diocs. oiple have had uncomfortable A?- A.mT,?-atV?esman said habit of blowing up, and so we of this that "it didn't solve any- shal, wait and see what h thing. It merely stated guiding .. h 4k !., rtrinfinlaae ' . ' as an accomplished fact. have been made the basis for he was sure the Russians knew government servants in Under this agreement the Big Four would reopen and encour age trade between east and west If this agreement does work Germany. The Russians promise out as scheduled, it will be not to impose blockade condi- agreeable to the western pow tions on Berlin again. ers. A face value, that looks good, One reason is that the Rus- but its real value depends on sians will have to withdraw whether it can be made to work, their troops from Austria when The establishment of political the treaty is signed, and economic unity of Germany Another is that if the Soviet is essential to the rehabilitation does drop its support of Yugo- and peace of Europe. However, slav claims this may drive Mar- this very importance of the shal Tito who is feuding with reich has made it the object of Moscow into the western a tug-of-war between west and sphere of influence. they were being watched. loyalty tests in which the ac- ,. . . . . tuseu is nui even uemuiieu 10 Clark went on to say that he fano fho n,untH simply could not drop the Cop lon case rather than produce the (Copyright lilt) Tidiness Can Cause Trouble Oklahoma City OP) Mrs. Sylvia Edmondson doesn't like those nasty chalk marks policemen put on her nice clean tires. So she rubbed one off with her hankie. It landed her in police court when traffic officer C. O. Williams caught her at her clean-up chores. "She was very sarcastic when I asked if she knew she was violating the parking ordinance," said officer Willanu. "So I charged her with disorderly conduct, too." Then Mrs. Edmondson, a 42-year-old switchboard opera tor, explained how she likes to keep her automobile sweet and clean. "This is not an easy question," said police Judge James Demopolis. He fined her $3 for obstructing an officer and suspended it. QUESTION: What is the justification for saying that the Salem community needs 200 more general hospital beds and equipment? ANSWER: The Oregon State Board of Health made a survey of Oregon In 1P47, and. on that basis of accepted standards of tion Prevailed in this eommu need, said Salem should have niy. 1R4 additional general hospital It is reasonable to assume that beds. the people in Salem communl- Many people who should have ty are at least an average of good had hospital care could not get American communities. It is on suitable rooms and have fought this amnimptinn and upon the out their illness at home or, be- fact that one person In eight cause to acute, they took beds has a hospital experience every In the halls when necessary. twelve months if adequate hos- There is no way of knowing pital beds are available that the Just who all the people are who Federal and State authorities needed hospitalization but who say that Salem needs 184 addl could not get it as they needed tlonal general hoapital beds, it, but there Is I way of forming If Salem hospitals had still a dependable opinion of how fewer beds, still more people many should have had hospllali- would have to fight their ill lation and who would have had nesses out at home regardless of hospital cart if proper condi- consequence. Wouldn't you rather drink Four Roses? Reduced in price! $395 I $25 45 QUART PINT Fins (lendMj Whiskey. 90.5 oroof. Ki (rain fiiutrM pints. Ffinkfoft Distills Corp., N.T.C. rovx, n HISTORIC MEDICAL HIGHLIGHTS No. 39 . -CARRIER OF DEATH. YELLOW FEVER . . . even the name of this disease inspired dread before 1900. But this was an eventful year in history, for Dr. Walter Reed and hit associates proved beyond a doubt that Yellow Fever was contracted and spread through the bite of a certain type of mosquito. When mosquito abatement and protection measures were adopted as a result of these investigations, Yellow Fever was com pletely eliminated. The final victory was won In 1931, after long years of work to isolate the virus and to develop on immunising vaccina. 1X1 OUISfMfMT COIN!' COOT I COMMtOM ,1J: MttlCtt CfNttf HiNCH SUO IIIU Ittllt Am H0 'fiat opentt Mom