Capital A Journal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher ' Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem Phones: Business, 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, 25e; Monthly, $1.00: One Year, $12.00. By Mail in Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos., $4.00; One Year, $8.00. IT. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly. $1.00; 6 Mos.. $8.00; Year, $12, 4 Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, June 28, 1949 Johnson Should Know by Now Months ago the Capital Journal labeled as dangerous and ill-advised the arguments of William Bradford Huie in Reader's Digest. Huie would build the air force to the detriment of the other armed forces. That would court national distater. His arguments overlooked the obvious need for, the foot soldiers to move into an area and the navy to get those soldiers there atom age or not. As expected, his writings forced navy and marine corps supporters to come to the aid of the department of the navy. Huie's preachings increased the fears of those sup porters enough to force them into the open and thus harm efforts being made to bring the services together. That's why Huie's writings were ill-advised. Latest to knock effectively the idea that the next war will be won by air power alone is a flying admiral, D. V. Gallery, U. S. N. He writes in the current issue of the Saturday Evening Post : "The British can testify, from experience, as to the futility of terror bombing unless It is backed up by the ability to invade. , . ." He warns that the "Instant and devastating retaliation" plan is doubly dangerous because it has terrific appeal to the popular Imagination. "It sweeps all the unpleasant facts of war under the rug and promises easy victory without much fighting, in case war does come. It offers us a sort of sugar coated war in which the only horrors are experienced by the enemy, and which we win at the expense of comparatively few long-range bomber crews." The idea of getting something for nothing, which the Huie crowd peddles, avoids the ghastliness of war. As Admiral Gallery notes, "even from the purely cold-blooded military point of view of getting the shooting war over with as soon as possible, blasting cities does not pay on. He continues : "Such bombing has much more effect on post surrender prob lems than it does in bringing about surrender. It is a diversion of effort and may, therefore, prolong, instead of shorten, the war." He cites figures to prove his statement. The United States Strategic Bombing Survey Summary Report sup ports him this way: "The Germans were far more concerned over attacks on one or more of their basic industries and services their oil, chem ical, or steel industries or their power or transportation net works than they were over attacks on their armament indus try or the city areas." As long as Huie and other super air force advocates had such a play with their earlier statements, the navy and marine corps supporters can't be criticized for answering. Secretary of Defense Johnson ought to be convinced by now that only balanced armed services can he considered for the security of the United States. And that balance can be achieved only by cooperation on a top level among the services. Flaws In Our Educational System Wilma Morrison, school editor of The Oregonian, has an informative article in the Sunday Magazine section of the paper on "Why College Freshmen Flunk?" She thus sum marizes the existing situation: Statistics and opinions of college professors suggest entirely too many Oregon high school students are not adequately pre pared for college work. Ninety per cent of entering freshmen at University of Oregon cannot take the course in mathematics that was considerd stan dard 20 years ago. Between one fourth and one third of freshmen from the state of Oregon who enrolled at Oregon State In September got D and F grades in English, mathematics and science in their first quarter too low for graduation credit. Of Portland's 336 entering freshmen at Oregon State college last fall, 20 withdrew and 113 were in scholastic difficulties. One of the reasons is that our schools do not concentrate on the fundamentals the Three Rs being the most neglected. Educational instruction is scattered over too wide a field and frills replace essentials. The average high school student of B0 years ago was far better equipped for college than .those of today for there were fewer courses, more work and less play. There was no commercialization of sport to take the time and efforts of the student body, no social swirl to absorb their leisure. We are long on theory and short on realities and discipline. And the students "don't know how to study." Although we have palatial school buildings, playgrounds, well paid teachers, they scatter their energies over a wider field, and are not getting the results attained under a sim pler system. We refuse to recognize the fact that not all youth can absorb a high school or college education and we waste time and money in forcing them to try. In bygone times, before the days of compulsion, those unfitted by nature were permitted to quit and work out their own salvation. Even the writer of the article quotes "the present broad ening the enrollment base to include all levels of intelli gence and accomplishment rather than the comparatively selective student bodies of years ago," which complicates the problem. Stinky Has Kittens 'Rather Often' Seattle VP) Stinky, a shaggy, black and very friendly eat, has given birth to 288 kittens in the past 10 years. ' And If that isn't a record, the somewhat bewildered Paul Mayovsky family says It doesn't eare to contemplate a record holder. Stinky joined the family In 1939 and they tried to get rid ef her. Bnt the "tidal wave" set In first. Her last seven arrived a week aro, with one dying. Telling about the eat, 16-year-old Jerry Mayovsky, In a masterpiece of understatement, commented: "The strange thing about her is that she has kittens rather often." Who Has $20 Long Enuf to Count Portland W) Have you been noticing too many chimneys on yuur $20 bills lately? Other people have, reported Frank J. Kenney, agent in charge of the U. S. secret service here. He said the $20 bill designed by the government last November has caused icores of Inquiries from people who think It's counterfeit. Even bankers have asker, he said. The new bill shows the White House as It Is today: With few ehlmiMjri and the balcony. The old biU had two chimneys. BY BECK A "-'-' I KNOW PA HAS A MOUNTED ) eJ,-II I FISH ,N HIS xt aurr IT WAS M3ieJZFllZ&9, CfcEANEOAND 5TUFFED FIRST NO &'MmmMzl WONDER YOUR clothes smelled paS' 1 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Joint Chiefs of Staff Cautious on Arms Aid y DREW PEARSON WashingtonThe state department's Dr. Philip Jessup, trail ing homeward after the failure of the Big Four conference in Paris, was reflecting on the high hopes which preceded that con ference. , Jessup had been in on the discussions with Gromyko before the conference. BY GUILD SIPS FOR SUPPER Local Boy t BY DON UPJOHN Governor Douglas McKay's appointment of Circuit Judge E. M. Page of Marion county to the supreme bench to succeed the late Justice Percy M. Kelly will be bailed with pleasure by the thou sands of friends and he remembered May 3 particu larly. That was the day when the final Rus sian note was delivered to him in New York, the day all the world wondered what was in that note Would the Russians say yes or no? The note reached Jessup's of f ice, No. 2 Park Avenue, in the Draw Ptsnaa sentations I have ever heard," said the congressman. "No ques tions are necessary." The witness could not see the congressman. She was blind. She had come to urge govern ment funds for research into diseases causing blindness, which is increasing every year, with little being done to find out why. Every year 20,000 are stricken with polio, whereas 30,000 lose their vision. ' Miss Wiesenfeld's story began three years ago when she found ed the National Council to Com- mornintf. and he knew it was bat Blindness with a capital of the fatal document that would eight dollars and no office. Now tell whether the blockade of she is the "Joan of Arc" of the Berlin was to be lifted. He blind end near-blind people all knew it was the climax of his over the country. BECOMING J UN- V AUTHOR V k HAD 20 rt ODDS FOR SUCCESS IN ANY AUTOMOBILE BUSINESS ARE A TRIFLE OVER EVEN THIS YE AR-THAT'SSU6HTLY BETTER THAN THE GENERAL BUSINESS SUCCESS RATE. tBiSTOFIua. johhmxksom, cvuam.cu.) IF YOU BOUaHT FRUIT TODAY. ODDS ARE I IN 5 IT WAS BANANAS -I CITRUS FRUITS ARE MOST POPULAR. AGAINST A BOOK A'CIASSIC LESS HA' YEARS WRITING EX- PERIENCE, SAY EXPERTS. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER of both the men as a good ap- pointment. j T. n i h uuuijc xagc lias made a splendid record on the circuit bench fs and his consti tuency has re turned him to the post with o u t opposition which is the best evidence of what they think of him as a jurist. That he is a very human chap may be evi denced by the fact that his ac quaintances call him "Max," his friends and associates still don't hesitate to address him 7 Gvifl ) j bers case back east the allega tion has been made that some years ago Mr. Hiss accepted a rug from Mr. Chambers. The case is beginning to look slight ly rugged, as it were. weeks of secret negotiation and hidden meetings with Malik and Gromyko. But nobody in his office could read Russian . . . frantic search for a translator . . . an hour passed . . . Jessup hid the sec ret document under his desk blotter . . . another hour passed . . . headlines in the press: "No reply from Moscow." Finally, after three hours a translator. Jessup hurried to Among the things she told the congressmen: "There are 260,000 blind in this country . . . Relief and Welfare for them costs the government $30,000, 000 in a single year. Yet only $400,000 is spent annually for research into the reasons for t0SlJlXSl Merriwell after he left Yale? From 'Boola Boola' to Plenty of Moola Moola By HAL BOYLE ' New York VP) Ever wonder what happened to good old Frank A Jump Ahead "An eastern college professor i1, "Tt vTVt, , , a ..v .h.t m,tin. .,,m Via his desk- tok the fatal docu- taught in school. He seems to fading vision, the doctors must sit helplessly by doing nothing. "But I have never lost faith in the heart of America," con cluded Miss Wiesenfeld. "It is too late to help me, but there's still time to save the sight of DOO (JaJaDB of Old Eli's sons have done right well by themselves. ment from under the blotter, .tln t,-m t .., .i-v,. t Yes, sir, the hv. nvorwwi 4h t,M and said: Here, translate this thousands of Americans who are lads who stayed it is already an active course rcharactern?diovfl " gradually going blind' nV "P iU "'S' I in our best coeducational character dlme novel! without knowing it." Quarter of a ".1S'''. WuldL". t.h.er'.,J.e LATE RECOMMENDATION CAPITAL NEWS CAPSm.FS staging "Boola, ninny ui me piuicssurs suit I- , ,Z. ' t - - l n ciently advanced in the art to The ioin chiefs ' "taff held THREE SENATORIAL . f . teach the present day student one of tneir most significant SCALPS President Truman f'eeP Iale now crop anything they don't know meetings last week with Sec- has ordered the Democratic Na- because they already. But the professors relary 01 ueiense Liouis A John- tionai committee to get the " ' " . sun. auuiuo ui uuee repuuiiuall sen- " ti -i i. l:,.. atnrs ot th novt wtir.n t a The class of 1924 has done all in his boyhood in Salem and Wo nnto that ih. nh.m.u. u. j . rnstl Taft of nMn n,,th- ct right for itself. In fact, I have which has clung to him. Where fans nln in nail n h v, . m .... u. JSJ Taft - Hartw- TTir-kminnnor nf come to the conclusion, and how he got it we don't sisters the holiday week-end. so, the heads of the army, navy Iowa for smearing the atomic studying some statistics corn know, but it seems a natural The girls will probably be glad and air force told him that they energy commission, and Don- P"ed '0f the classes 25th re form of address when he isn't to have- such a nice bunch of seriously question the advisabil- nel1 of Missouri because H.S.T. ".nlon hls yfar' a,t..on.e of ,the tiunn.ru wiin uie ancuiy 01 me yisitors. itv of sending laree amounts of doesn't reiisn u.u.F. senators f's"0 y- " "" hTl.h -II,,. 1, 11 J " " - 1 , , , " "ovc isuua arms to Europe under the North Irom nls me state iuea me guvernur s selection ot "c wain iu weituuie iiiio our Atlantic pact. a successor to judge rage win r 1 DA junior league f aui He seems to have been lost in the crush of years, but a number "Bing," the name he acquired might learn something. be equally good. We happen to Harvey, Jr., editor of the Hul- cautiou, i makinff thiir .tat. conference convinced Secretary v, .k.i.. -.in , v N.ur. Dni i. 1 -., .u tauuous in maKing tneir state- .!,.. , ,. i j u ment, pointed out that they were told by grapevine and he is a and .maybe. not the youngest making no recommendation, deep student, a most meticulous nber but a right important that the final decision was up practitioner ana a man of strong n went to tne dentist to the state department MESSENGER - BOY VISHIN- university the year ualvin t-ool- SKY The foreign minister's idge'was elected president The class of 1924 produced only one clergyman, one cor oner, one librarian, one radio broadcaster, one newspaperman and one man willing to describe himself as a philanthropist. But it turned out 16 bankers, 31 educators, 22 insurance men, 37 lawyers, 22 investment brok ers, 22 physicians and 68 manu facturers. Today 149 men own all or part of their businesses, 54 own no part. Six are board chair men, 34 are company presidents, 44 are vice presidents, 36 are after Parners and at least 30 are full uwneis, jive men jibvv aureauy retired. , A total of only 626 children of both sexes was reported by nin 1 u !SJ8 haveoka integrity, an opinion in which we think everybody will coin cide when the name is revealed, expecting to lose a tooth and he lost tour instead. It seems na Nevertheless, from a military its own graduates for its future crop of freshmen. Only two men had as manv a iv rhll- Acheson of one thing: Molotov These highly secret figures dren. Forty-two had none. is stm boss of Russia s foreign were smuggled to me by a n- Some 194 men thought the policy, not Vishinsky. The Paris bald friend who sent them here, country was in for more infla conference took twice as long as hidden in an old pumpkin, via tion, 90 thought prosperity it should, because Vishirfsky an intermediarv The man trav- would continue. 37 foresaw r- couldn't make even the most eled on a coach car of the New cession and 177 a degression. On Note that in the Hiss-Cham- ing each other out. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Once Before Great Britain Cut Value of Her Money By DeWITT MaeKkNZIE (UP) Foreign Affair Analyst) It's not surprising that Britain's economic crisis should have given rise to discussion on both sides of the Atlantic as to whether devaluation of the pound sterling would ease the situation. Under Eng- insieau. n seems na- viewnolnt fhnv nnniH Tint inrfitv ' """ even me lumi eied on a coacn car or tne new cession and il l a depression, on ture had been too bountiful with the exnense of ,rmL 2 Fn minor decision without sending York, New Haven and Hart- the other hand 161 thought the him and the teeth were crowd- divisions Th!v , , to Moscow for instructions, ford railway to avoid detection, outlook of their own business . j v: , -- vrnen iwoiotov was ioreign mm pressed doubt as to what would ister he haQ much more author. become of these arms in the 1 l - .,r . . 11V. , TV" European . COMMUNIZING " "ivaueu. tfflHUPnt ir,i Via loarr,orf The statistics show that 25 was good, 125 believed It was years after leaving Yale's ivory fair and only 10 poor. Yale fniuai hA nje Iioua nn nimrotfa men are self -reliant. Thev be- ASIA In- earned income of $17,210 and lieve in themselves. an average income from all the last election 82.7 per S 22.5i' ported they vod ?o senators who heard about the Comintern agents to Siam to set joint chiefs of staff recommend- up a base in Bangkok to win ation was: "Why tell us so late? over southeast Asia. The Rus Without arms the North At- sian aeents arrived with nrint. Thomas E. Dewey, 6.7 per cent backed Truman, 2 per cent Wal- The boys have turned out to m,. ' cenl on, single income was a tidy $400 000, Z ,, p oecomes an empty mg presses, paper supplies, and e good, steady nusoanos. J.ney t the matter of hobbies 61 Shell. short-wavp radio Thpv swn rarrv an Dvcrniro nf In .,U Ihu. nvafiMW imII ifl i.u Mr to me and said: "You ought to go down and get an interview with Morgan about the gold standard." (Mr, land's managed (cont rolled) currency, the pound now is pegged at about $4.03. It also,' has a fixed val ue in relation to the curren cies of other countries. The point in lowering the value of the pound would be to encourage foreigners to increase their, purchases in Britain. It works like this: Say the value of the pound in U.S. money were reduced from $4.03 to $3.03. Then obviously the American would save a dollar on every pound transaction he made, whether it be for a pair of gloves or for food. That would be a drawing card for mistic word from the sphinx of York NOTE 2 While details were have their own air force pri- life insurance enough to cheer not discussed at the above meet- vate planes for the use of the any prospective widow. Some ing it's understood that the nub Russian diplomats. The Red 71 per cent have one or more of the problem is tanks. The U.S. agents are concentrating their servants and only 7.1 per cent army could send rifles, machine fire on the whole southeast Asia have wives who work outside guns, some artillery with no loss, perimeter, all the way to Manila, the home. But it has no tanks to spare. European military, especially the French, point out that a ing, 15 music, 15 hunting, 14 skiing, 13 photography, 12 bridge, and 2 find their relaxa tion in Boy Scout work. Wonder what Frank Merri well's doing? O.WIU Haoktnila tourists ano jixeiy wouia in- tne nouse oi Morgan was crease exports. credited with having much to do However, this would cut two. with steading International re ways for England. While she action. would be selling more goods, she would have to pay more for necessary imports, say from America, with her devalued pound, Britain is such a heavy Importer that her increased ex penditure for imports might more than offset her gam sales. So Britain thus far has turned thumbs down on any idea of de valuation. Back in 1931, during the great depression, England faced an other crisis which forced her in effect to devalue the pound, and she did it by the sensational move of going off the gold standard long her financial Rock of Gibraltar. That was on September 21, Morgan was then in Lnnrinn modern armv without, tanks is with headquarters in the Mor- like an army with pitchforks, gan bank). It couldn't last a week against Well, Morgan received me the Red army's Stalin tanks like a long lost brother. He considered the most powerful in played the perfect host, and we the world. Russia has eight tank talked at length about the gold divisions between the Vistula standard, . Oder Rivers alone. I told him the situation was- NOTE 3 The Joint chiefs of precarious and I , thought he staff include Army Chief Gen. should make a statement. Fin- Omar Bradley, Navy Chief Adm. ally he agreed. Louis Denfeld, and Air Chief Morgan's statement, which Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg. described the British govern- ment's action as "a hopeful and BLIND JOAN OF ARC not a discouraging" event swept "There will be no questions," into front pages throughout said Chairman Percy Priest of America, and of course raced Tennessee when pretty, 28-year-around the world. This opti- old Mildred Wiesenfeld of New finished testimony last nrHCffl 0BUY week before a congressional sub committee. "You have made one of the finest and best-documented pre- W. THATS bit red-faced Question of Timing Tarboro, N. C, (U.R) Attorney I. D. Thorpe, was unnappy with the human clock today. Thorpe was auestioninir Joe Bullock, a Nesro witness, con. in cerning a traffic accident. 'How long was it after the bus passed you before you heard the crash?" Thorpe asked. "About half a minute," said Bullock. "How are you so positive It was half a minute?" "I just know," "Let me time you," suggested Thorpe slyly. "I'm going to hold my watch and I want you to tell me when half a minute elapses." "Now," said Bullock after exactly 30 seconds. ' "Hmmm," said Thorpe. "Let's do it again." Bullock gazed blandly Into space for precisely 30 seconds and said, "now." That did it. Thorpe gave up, felling rather sheepish. He wish- So the difference! $ why Mm New York Fashion Academy udgd Ford the "Fashion Car of the Year.1 See tho Kixury of Boa and 1h rich Interior fa brio. See tho "Sofa-Wide" seats. They offer you more hip and shoulder rooa than any other car ta Fofd'i field. Pool tho clrffctreiKol FmI how FenTi "Mask Action" Brakes stop yov 35 osier. Foal bumps db appear With "Hydro-CoT Springs. And feat that surging "Equa-Poba" Power. Only Ford I lb fUd offers you a lOO-honapower V-a anoina. Onh Ford In Its field offers you your choke of V-t or Sisu the memorable day on which the ed he hadn'4 t,houKht " up. whole financial world was shaken. Governments nnr big business the globe around were In a cold sweat, while they waited for some sign vof the trend. It was my fortune to be As sociated Press chief of bureau in London at time, and I decided to consult the American ambas sador General Charles G. (Hell and Maria) Dawes, former vice president and one of the world's financial experts. I found him in conference with the late Thomas Cochran, a partner in the banking firm of J. P. Mor gan. The general Invited me "to get in on this," and I did. After bit, Cochran turned Some time later, too late to do anything but blush, Thorpe glanced toward the rear of the courtroom Facing the witness stand was a large clock with a sweep second hand. An Auto, Not a Kiss, for Grandma Kansas City VP) The bandits had a kiss for grandmother. But grandmother 59-year-old Mrs. Sadie Crosner would rather have her automobile back. Her story, as told to police, was that a young man stepped into the ear as she stopped for a traffic light while driving home late Saturday night. He flourished a gun, forced her to drive to another Inter section where another young man got into the car. She was then ordered to drive oat into the country where the two holdup men rifled her purse of betwen $1 and 118, forced her to get out of the ear and then drove away with the auto mobile. Before leaving, however, she said one of them "gave me a motherly little kiss on the cheek and told me: 'You remind me of my mother.' " , Save) Mi dlffaronceJ WWa at con so Ms buy you so much corf And you sove up to 10 on got, too . .i up to 25 with Ford's new Ooardriva. Sea for yoarsolt outer tor a rid and you! order your Ford today. owiiii i in lAt ttw wheef . . . try till mv FORD 'FEEL Sfnr Ford letter's VALLEY MOTOR CO. Center Street ot North Liberty Salem AWAKDD TBI FASHI0I ACADEMY GOLD MEDAL AS THE "FASHION CAR Of THE TEAi" I)