Capital A "Journal - Actions You Regret An Independent Newspaper Established 1 888 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. 4 Salem, Oregon, Friday, June 24, 1949 Rail Meeting Was Not Discouraging Southern Pacific officials did meet with city planners Tuesday night to discuss the railroad track barriers around Salem's central area. The "Friendly Railroad" did offer only little encouragement toward helping to lift the track barrier. But the point not to be dismissed with a discouraging shrug was that two high rail officials did come to discuss the matter with the local parties. The railroad admitted, in effect, that the problem of tracks blocking free traffic flow could exist and the company would listen to the city's ideas on what to do about it, and promised preliminary co operation on solution. Since both parties are in agreement on the presence of the problem, there remains hope that some kind of a work able solution can be reached. The railroad admitted it had no money to spend on any line relocation, for every city it serves is making similar demands. The city, for that matter, hasn't any money to make a real impression on the problem, either. But that doesn't mean that a solution can't be figured between the railroad and the city. Nor does it mean that, with a mutu ally agreed upon plan, moneys cannot be put aside for the specific plan in mind to "remove" the train barriers on the downtown streets. Tuesday night's meeting was the first one that has taken up the particular problem with both sides repre sented. To have expected the Southern Pacific company to have agreed to- a several million dollar shifting of the railroad tracks was to have expected the impossible. The company no more could have agreed to that at the time than could the city, which would have to get authoriza tion for a bond issue from the people. After all, no big plan, such as must be envisioned for this particular problem, can be worked out in one meeting. Salem knows that the Southern Pacific will consider, to cautious extent, any reasonable solution. The railroad made it clear it would listen to a solution where the cost could be justified economically. In other words, the South ern Pacific wanted to avoid spending any money which couldn't be defended as a sound investment for the com pany. A legitimate return would have to be expected for stockholders. That attitude on the part of the company was to have been expected. A sales program will be needed to sell the Southern Pacific on the advisability of whatever program is agreed to. In any event, the way is clear now for both the company and the city to throw suggestions into the discussion. The suggestions, for the greater part, will have come from the city. From continued meetings, how ever, some solution should be able to be found that could be made to be satisfactory to both. Instead of being discouraging, the first meeting was actually heartening. The railroad agreed to have its en gineers check on proposals the city will advance to lift the rail barrier. Salem can realize it is up to the city to pre sent a feasible program to break out of the encircling girdle of steel. Disgusting Politics Cloud Real Issue So much confusion is being caused by the current hear ings in Washington on the proposed Columbia Valley Ad ministration that the point of the dispute is being lost. Walter Pearson tried to tell the hearing that Doug Mc Kay, the governor of the state, wasn't speaking for the state when McKay opposed a CVA for the region. But Pearson, state treasurer, informed the committee that he (for some unexplained reason) was speaking for the peo ple in favoring a CVA. It made no difference that previously one of the authors of the bill to create the valley administration had opposed holding elections in the Pacific Northwest to determine how the same people Pearson was talking about felt on the matter. Nor did it seem to matter that the nation's governors meeting in Colorado rejected the principle of a CVA. Of course, the governors were elected by the people of the respective states, the same people Pearson claimed were ignored by such opposition to a valley authority. In this political smear campaign that has arisen in the Washington hearings on a CVA, there is only one point that can be brought up : Would a CVA develop a region better than existing government agencies ? Ignored by CVA backers is the real fear of a regional government that was answerable only to Washington. Also ignored is the fact that representatives of the people in congress can get money for their own areas better than any super government. Also ignored is the probability of a series of regional agencies, such as the CVA, gradually taking over the various parts of the country itself. Also ignored is the fact that these CVAs can exist only by build ing huge bureaucratic regimes that become uncontrolled. Regretably, the politics of the controversy have tried to make the question of a CVA merely a choice between public power and private power. Those who, in good faith, oppose a CVA are criticized ridiculously as being in the grip of the power trust. That is just as ridiculous as say ing that those who favor the CVA are lackeys of Mort Tomkins and his grange, who are ardent advocates of the regional agency. The choice of a CVA still is what it was months ago: Can the Pacific Northwest handle the direction of its own development, with the help of existing federal depart ments? Or must the region admit the task is beyond the intelligence of its leaders and people, so, therefore, the "brains" of Washington must handle the helpjess ones in the Pacific Northwest? The Capital . urnal is still of the opinion, despite the dis gusting politics uf the Washington hearing, that the people of the region have the brains and desire to develop the region themselves. Existing federal agencies will be called on a they are needed to help. Anything Con Happen in LA. Los Angeles (AWThey say anything can happen here . . . Ten-year-old Harvey Bronsteln sobbingly told police a man tepped p to him aa he waa playing, snatched off hit (lames, Jtepped back a pace and asked "How many fingers am I koldlng up?" "Two," answered Harvey, correctly. "You don't need glasses," the man retorted, ground Har y glasses under hiv heel and stalked away. WE HAD A SWELL TIME, DAVE. I THANKS FOR TAKING US OUT ON ) YOUR CRUISER.. WE'VE GOT TO A XTV "UN ALONG 00 WE'LL BE - ( WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Sen. Morse Out to Stop Tyding's Steamroller Tactics By DREW PEARSON Washington Oregon's wrathy Republican Wayne Morse has served notice that he will block every bill Chairman Millard Tyd ings of Maryland tries to steamroller through the senate armed services committee. Morse issued his warning privately after rowing with Tydings publicly over whether the na- BY GUILD Wizard of Odds vy should re port to congress its disposal of surplus proper ty. This is now required by 1 a w, but Ty dings wants to repeal the law and let the navy dispose of prop erty without any public report. LYtJ Ore Pckrsao ning to descend on Secretary of Defense Johnson to demand the ousting of Paul Griffith, former commander of the American Le gion, from the defense depart ment. Those who know Grif fith and his chair-warming ac tivities, agree wth the congress men. Rootin' - Tootin' Congressman John Rankin of Mississippi has really dug into the history books to sound the alarm about spies. Warning the congress about SIPS FOR SUPPER If You Don't Know BY DON UPJOHN Quite a to-do is being made over the alleged fact that some meat company in Portland has been dishing out horsemeat as members without a fair vote, hamburger meat and in various restaurants customers who thought they were get- Morse obiected on the eround communism, Rankin recalled that congress should not give up that Benjamin Franklin's secre its check on the military. But tary, a subversive named Ban in committee Tydings overruled croft, had slipped government him. secrets to the British during the However, the Oregon senator Revolutionary War. is going to have the last laugh. Jack McCloy, now U.S. gov For he can block most of Ty- ernor of Germany, was picked dings' bills on the senate floor, and virtually appointed by Sec and he has served notice that retary of State Acheson. They hfi will do so whenever the will work well together. chairman tries to jam legislation Gen. Harry Vaughn, the pres- MODCL RAILROAD HOBBYISTS NUMBER 100,000- WITH A TOTAL INVESIHtNl ur 110,000,000. I EVER HAD A TRIPLE YOLK LjwnN 7 I If EG6? YOU BEAT ODDS OF IStmStt A I 0VER5OO.000 TO I . (YOUR vSfiSS' flhfeji V ODDS. LOUIS J.HCNISIN, lINM l M PITTSBURGH, PA.) M If LETHASNpSS,8yOODSOF57T043. 1 S I QO MORE WORK ON THE TYPEWRITER. ting hamburg ers got horse burgers instead We have not heard that any of the customers didn't like the horseburgers or suffered any ill effects from eat ing same. Some of t h e earliest of the visitors he never did find out he was chawing on good, clean white rabbit meat all the time. In fact we never even heard of one of the worms In an Ore gon cherry hurting anybody, as long as the recipient of same didn't know it was in the cherry. English Humor London, June 24 VP) What kind of a joke gives a preacher oon Dphn a reai belly laugh? This one to Oregon such as Messrs Lewis m3d n' '(ncl.udln thfe and Clark and later Mr. Wil- Archbishop of Canterbury guf- son T. Hunt and his personally faw toJ. three full minutes today conducted tour of this great but af'cr to d the a"nua then virgin country, made no C1hurch of E"f and assembly of bones about horse meat if they clergymen and laymen: A wom- could find any. In fact, for a buBht a d,n bw fr ,. ' ,, ,u' , her dog. The clerk asked if she time, as we remember the story, there were some of these men who grabbed It with great rel- wanted the word "dog" painted on it. "No thanks," said the h,mt f if nrf who,, that wolc "u mc down the throats of committee ident's military aide, is now sniping at Defense Secretary Johnson despite the fact that BOTH SIDES ON HOUSING he, Vaughn, urged Johnson's ap- G.O.P. Representative Jesse pointment. Wolcott of Michigan, who leads Chiang Kai - Shek's brothers the house fight against the pub- in-law, T.V. Soong and H. H. lie housing bill, would like to Kung, reputed to head the rich forget all about it, but he once est families in the world, are strongly espoused what he now looking for a good public rela opposes. tions man. They want him to Back in August 1937, Con- sell the American people, on gressman Wolcott was an out- shipping silver to pay Chinese spoken champion of the Wag- troops. . ner-Steagall housing act, which .IM AMpD, also provided for slum clear- i;11! AMERICA ance and low-cost public hous- FACES SLUMP ing the same program which The continued downward the Michigan republican now trend of prices on the U.S. raw calls "socialistic " materials and commodites mar- During the 1937 debate Wol- kets is making things tough for cott declared: "I believe that the good-neighbor policy the need for decent, respectable throughout Latin America, and sanitary housing for the The recent 7-cent drop in the underprivileged has been prov- price of copper alone struck a ed beyond the preadventure of 10 ",e "a""n?f eY Send your "Odds" questions on any subject to "The Wizard of Odds," care of the Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. OPEN FORUM Mutual Interests of Farm, Labor To the Eidtor: Your June 18 editorial entitled "Grange Leaders l Inaugurate a Purge" contained the following: "One of (State Grange Master) Tompkin's fixed illusions is that . i..-. in , lorf i:. the interest of industrial workers Many issues In the last legis and farmers are the same whereas lature (including the defense of their interests conflict, and he seeks the initiative and referendum a common front politically," rf annrnval of the tax nrneram which statement, confined to and approval of tne tax program some economic conflict, is true, introduced by Rep Thomas and but which overlooks, the wide myself ) had joint farm-labor ap area of agreement within which Proval- am not saying that one the two groups work shoulder n cal1 Jf necessarily an index to shoulder, often effecting their f a man's fitness or unfitness accomplishments through the rePfren' the peple; but 1 process of the Initiative f b,mlt at circumstances are In 1947 I headed the State dal'y making more manifest the Anti-Sales Tax committee, spon- "eu 1UI. a tu nrH w tat nrniUtinn and agriculture, and that this j ...v. n of the AF of L, CIO, Grange and Farmers Union all working to gether successfully and in close harmony. unity in action is taking place. CARL H. FRANCIS, State' Representative, Yamhill County. can't read." of a hunk of it and when that was gone proceeded to eat dog meat or anything else they could Teacher Loyalty lay their teeth to and made no Vinita Howard, 563 Court complaints about same. They street, recently graduated from didn't have any very high class the University of Oregon and at horses or dogs either in those her graduation she had a real days as far as their eatibility admirer. Vinita went to grade was concerned. But apparently school back in Elsie, Neb., and these days it isn't the fact that was a top flight student. She it's horse meat that causes an- did so well in fact that her noyance, it's knowing It's horse teacher, Mrs. Lucretia Hopper, meat that causes folks to stick asked if she could be present up their noses. We once knew when Vinita graduated from a chap who said he'd rather die college. And Mrs. Hopper kept than to eat a rabbit. Yet one her word, coming way out to evening he thought he had a Oregon to see her protege grad- chlcken dinner he pronounced uate. A never-to-be-forgotten the best he had ever eaten, and tribute. Free Oil Unappreciated Long Beach, Calif., (P) Signal Hill's first gas blow in recent years may be good news to oil men, but owners of about 20 new automobiles say it's a sticky mess. A General Petroleum well 1U a gut pocket at 10,000 feet yesterday and oil spewed over the countryside for 10 min utes. Police said several cars' wcr sp!.ttercd. It was the first sign of gas deposits in the Desoto sand level, and oil men took it as an Indication there might be heavy-flowing oil beneath. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER World a Graveyard to Chas. Knight By HAL BOYLE New York () Tired of eating the same old things? Want a new flavor thrill? Then why not try some tasty marrow from a woolly mammoth aged for 10,000 saurs has convinced him mod ern man doesn't have too much to brag about, "Ancestral man has existed for perhaps a million years," said Knight, "but he didn't as sume his present manlike shape until the C'ro-magnon man of Europe, some 30,000 years ago. "And the Cro-magnon was just a good man as we are, men tally and physically. The Cro magnons averaged 5 feet 9 in ches tall, but some were 6 feet onomy of Chile, Peru and Mexi co. On June 15, the Anaconda Copper Co.'s two subsidiaries in Chile announced an immediate doubt." In fact, Wolcott was so con cerned about the need for ade- nimfji nnhlin tinucintf anH cliim ninmnra in 1037 that ho nriud one-third cut in operations. colleagues who were opposed .. The cacao (cocoa bean) situa to the bill to go home and "read "on also is creating alarm, and the Bible" before casting their ven near-panic. Despite con- iiuueu strung aemana lor mis product in the U.S., its whole sale market price has slumped 16 per cent in the past month. In Geneva, Jos E. Sandoval, HOSPITAL FUND DRIVE Present Salem General Hospital Building Set for .Future Use votes. . LIFTING LITLE CURTAIN Debated backstage during the closing days of the Paris con- years in na ure's northern icebox? You'll never forget it. Charles R. Knight has reme m b e r e d the sensation fnr 25 vpnrs He is an artist j famous for his ploneeri n g paintings of pre historic life. "About a quarter of a century 3 or' 4 inches. ago the American museum of "You could bring a Cro-mag-Natural Histor.y got some bones non to New York City today and flesh from a woolly mam- and after you had shown him moth, trapped in the Alaskan a few wonders, he'd be able to Ice perhaps 10,000 years be- get along all right." fore," he recalled. He'd be able to appreciate "We were curious as to what television as well as the next it would taste like, so we tried cliff dweller, some of the marrow. It tasted Knight is convinced that man exactly like rancid grease." kind's biggest defeat is his fail Nobody asked for a second ure to develop spiritually, helping. Knight feels he was "With all our advantages, we luckier than some Russian sci- haven't advanced spiritually, as entists who dined on the flesh spiritually we are better than of another woolly mammoth we can and should and must," caught long ago In the Siberian he said. I don't think that deep freeze. spiritually we are better than "They got awful sick," he Cro-magnon. , "'d- "Confucius, Christ, Moham- mcri these and other messiahs All the world's a graveyard have told us a thousand times to this 74-year-old artist, who what to do. We know what to perhaps as much as any one do but we don't do it. man has helped the past come "I don't know what to make come alive. of modern man. He throws Since 1894 he has specialized away his possibilities. He is a in painting prehistoric men and ' deliberate fool the worst kind animals, and he was the first to of a fool." do so scientifically based on reconstructed fossils. But Knight thinks there Is His large scale murals hang little use for man to trust that In a dozen well-known natural nature will bail him out of the history museums across the trouble he is getting himself in country, and his work was col- to. lecled by such nature lovers as "He will destroy himself un the late J. P. Morgan, Governor less he returns to more spiritu Pinchot of Pennsylvania, and al ways. He's a goner. Historian Charles A. Beard. His "Nature never helped any ani fifth book, "Prehistoric Man," mal rut of a hole. She won't soon will be published. help man out either. And he has His 55-year study of the earth problems just like any other u it was in the days of the dino- animal." ference was a point which may ?h'ef Cuban delegate to the 32nd revolutionize U.S. policy toward international labor conference, iron curtain countries. It was: askfd fr an immediate investi Should the U.S.A. create a Bation of conditions in the world "Little Marshall Plan" for the sugar industry. Cuba, he said, satellite countries? ' ls facing black disaster as a re Two schools of thought exist of uniuft. artifically cre among American diplomats. ?ted competition, designed to Both agree that Europe badly v "un German Ruhr must have mar kets in Bulgaria, Hungary, Rou mania and other satellite coun tries. However, one diplomatic school opposes economic aid to any iron curtain country. Such aid, they argued, is only an in direct way of helping Russia. The other school argues that aid to Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, etc., would win over the people of these countries already resentful of Soviet rule. This group is prepared to take the calculated risk of help ing Russia in order to persuade the satellites to break away from Russia, However, it was economic unrest inside Yugoslavia that helped induce Tito to pull up his iron curtain. Therefore the No.l school argues that our best policy is to let the satellites stew in their own economic juice until they really realize how tough life behind the iron curtain really is. NOTE Despite Foreign Min ister Vishinsky's smiles at Paris, Russia still has 172 fully trained divisions of the Red army, plus 180 reserve divisions which can be mobilized in sixty days. PERLE'S PARTIES Mrs. Perle Mesta, ex-republican oil heiress from Oklahoma whose loyalty to Harry Truman has made her U.S. minister to Luxembourg, threw a party for Defense Secretary Louie John son the other day. But the guest list looked as if Mrs. Mesta was specializing on Pan American Airways. It included Sam Pryor, G.O.P. national committeeman for Con necticut and vice president of Pan American; Ben Sonnenberg, astute public relations counsel for Pan Am, and Senator Brew ster of Maine, considered Pan Am's best senatorial friend. Louie Johnson, himself, of course, used to be counsel for Pan American, which has re ceived more favors from Uncle Sam than any other airline in history. After the party was over one guest said it reminded him of the late Louis Wiley's temark after being kissed and decorated by Marshal Foch. "It wasn't the most thrilling kiss I ever had," said the late business manager of the New York Times, "but I guess it was the most important." NOTE Mrs. Mesta is now reading books on the steel in dustry. For Luxembourg, her new post, is the center of the European steel cartel. QUESTION: If you construct of 200 beds what will become hospital building? ANSWER: The present build ing is of A grade construction material, fire - proofed, and should stand for centuries. It is not large enough nor adapted to proper segregation of patients or for time-saving service so necessary in a general hospital serving acutely ill patients. The building ls quite usable for special types of patients and can be arranged for that purpose. a new building with capacity of the present Salem General The Oregon state board ol he-ilth is urging this service and says the Salem area needs 303 beds for special patients thai should not be taken to genera hospitals. The fact that this buildini would be available for special patients should add favorably t Salem's request for federal aid in the construction of the new general hospital building. 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