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. 1 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, S1.00; One Tear. $12.00. By Mail in Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos.. S4.00; One Year. $8.00. V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos.. $6.00; Year, $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, June 29, 1949 The Council's Pressure Action ' Some members of Salem's city council weren't at all optimistic about getting together with the Southern Pacific company to "adjust" the girdle of tracks around the city. So the council apparently decided to put some pressure on the "Friendly Railroad." ' The result was the action Monday night when the coun cil served notice on the company that after next year it will not again extend the railroad's franchise on Union street. Also limitations were put on the company's spur franchises at Front and Division and Water and Court. The question is also raised as to the status of the fran chise on 12th street. Perhaps from this obvious display of determination on the city's part to get something done to break the rail barrier, the company will become more talkative. How ever, as the Capital Journal noted last week, in all fairness to the railroad, the company did recognize the problem the growing city faces. That, in itself, is something. After all, for years the problem has been growing more acute. To expect a settlement in one meeting or in two or three meetings is to expect the impossible. This is especially true when millions of dollars are at stake. At the same time, the council deserves no censure for the "pressure" action, although it appears a bit abrupt. By this cancellation notice on the Union street franchise, the council forces the Southern Pacific to take up immedi ately the matter of what the railroad plans to do about its girdle of steel around the city. The city wants to be co operative, but it also wants to get something going to correct the situation. Salem is well aware it needs the railroad, just as the railroad needs the city. But when a matter as vital as this reaches the point it has, both sides ought to work steadily and constructively toward some solution. The city council has served notice on the Southern Pa cific that Salem means business. The council's action shouldn't be taken to mean anything else. Putting Teeth in the Labor Law President Truman received a stinging rebuke when the senate approved by a vote of 50 to 40, a plan that he has bitterly opposed for dealing with national emergency strikes providing for both Taft-Hartley injunctions and for plant seizure by the government. This provision was written in as an amendment to the administration's new labor law to replace the Taft-Hartley act which Mr. Tru man campaigned for repeal. The national emergency amendment was sponsored by Senator Taft (R., Ohio), Senator Forrest C. Uonnell (R., Mo.), and Alexander H. Smith (R., N.J.). The senate ap proved it after first batting down three other plans for handling strikes imperiling the national health or safety. The administration bill, as drafted, would have provided neither injunctions nor seizure but would have established a 30-day cooling-off period without specific penalties for violation. On the showdown vote, 33 republicans and 17 democrats voted for injunctions and plant seizures ; 35 democrats and 5 republicans voted against it, among them Wayne Morse of Oregon. Morse, who has been very verbose in senate labor de bates and opposed injunctions and wanted control of strikes left to congress, said the amendments make the bill "so unworkable and so anti-labor that the sooner we get rid of it and take the whole issue to the polls ni 1950 the better." However, without emergency court action and seizure power, there would be no control possible of strikes endan gering public welfare and the labor bosses would be free to paralyze public welfare. A Good Appointment The appointment of Circuit Judge E. M. ("Bing") Page to be associate justice of the supreme court to succeed the late Percy R. Kelly by Governor McKny, was an excellent one and merited by his judicial service and conduct on the lower court bench. His decisions have been fair and im partial and he has the judicial temperament and tradi tional poise. Judge Page is a native of Salem and will serve until the next general election. He was graduated from Willamette university law school in 1913 but had to wait a year until his 21st birthday to be admitted to the state bar. He joined the law firm founded by Federal Judge John H. McNary and his brother, Senator Charles L. McNary, and was still a member of the firm and its successor on his appointment to the circuit bench in the new judicial dis trict of Marion county created by the 1941 legislature. Governor McKay still has to appoint a successor to Judge Page as circuit judge. There is no dearth of good mate rial or of candidates, for that matter. The judiciary, how ever, Is non-partisan, thus the executive is not limited in choice to job seeking politicians. When Li'l Abner Almost Got Married Yanks Kept in Suspense Tokyo U.R) The allied occupation breathed a collective igh of relief on learning Li'l Abner wriggled free of the bonds of matrimony. People in the United States surmounted this crisis in the life of Al Capp's popular comic strip character several weeks go. However, the army newspaper Stars and Stripes was behind the times because the strip has to be mailed here. "Probably the most significant event In the news if the one that caused the most comment can be called the most significant was the 'dlslegalizing' of Li'l Abner's marriage to Daisy Mae Scragg," the paper said. The paper said thousands In the occupation had eyed the strip with "ever-growing anxiety" during the past week when Li'l Abner seemed doomed. Li'l Abner married Daisy Mae, but a legal technicality made ihe marriage Invalid. Escape Methods Get Jammed Arvin, Calif. (U.R) Five prisoners, Jailed on a drunkenness charge, pooled their knowledge of escape methods and began working on their cell door lock. Folic had to call a locksmith to get tin prisoners out. BY BECK Recollections IKrrteS3852 Y THERE YOU ABE,klDS. VSM -T pgiggs5feZ?yUJ SET FOB THE SUMMER. H - Wfmm!m oughta keep you nice "" JlflPlP4. AND COOL. AND YOU CAN J 'l '' HMimt&iM. LAY AWAY YOUR COMBS AND Wf' lllipiPw BRUSHES TILL NEXT FALL. v Www mmkm WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Truman Talks Plans to Fortify Nation's Economy By DREW PEARSON Washington President Truman discussed plans for fortifying the nations' economy against depression in a recent off-the-record talk with six democratic senators and congressmen. Only a meager announcement leaked out to the press, but here are the highlights of what happened. A program of "eco nomic expansion" was proposed that may affect the future of dent has been holding up ap- BY GUILD Wizard of Odds every American, President Tru man greeted the congressi o n a 1 group by say ing: "I think I am way ahead of you on this." Then he pull ed several charts out of his top, right-hand drawer showing the latest na tional statistics on prices, wages, pointments to punish southern senators and congressmen who have opposed his program. But what the White House didn't take into account is that John ton happens to be chairman of the senate post office commit tee which must pass on all post master appointments. So the South Carolinian sidled up to Senator Howard McGrath, democratic national chairman, and later to Senate Secretary Les Biffle, the president's close friend. Drawline sweetlv. John- profits and ston let it be known that he was LYf-J Drew Pearion SIPS FOR SUPPER More Moon BY DON UPJOHN A semi-anonymous customer labelling himself as Charlie" before it grows into a crisis offers the ripest suggestion yet as to ironing out the time situa tion. Instead of turning the clock ahead to effect daylight savings he urges it be production up to the end of disturbed over not getting post May, masters for South Carolina, and He admitted that the first hinted that maybe he would just symptoms of depression are be- block all appointments until ginning to show and agreed that those for his own state came the best plan is to attack any through. "mild break" in the economy Johnston aUowed time for his to stop it from spreading. remarks to pass on to the White He stressed however, that he Hou then called for an is not worried about depression pointment. when he was usher. as long as each problem is met ed into the presidenfs office, he CHANCES WERE 2 TO I SMtfB I YOU WOULD INVENT Jzl C$?- I 1939 OVER 1948. llp V4 Wac (YOUR INVENTIVE I jf25 I j WWaSglV WANT TO BE AN- li OTHER PAOEREWSKl'- ( 072 music mr VJyry CONSERVATORY ' 1 I I , STUPENTS L2rHiJL HAVE TO BEAT JEsA S2Ql22C ODDS OF 99 TO I TO -s SUCCEED ON THE 7T , PW" I concert STM' jfk -ggeasa The legislators who called on set two hours behind to bring about moon light savings "We are sure that you," he writes, "having been under the inf 1 u e n c e of L o n g f e 1 low, Tennyson and Victor Herbert, will appreciate talked about other matters. Then he mentioned casually: "I notice a lot of postmasters have been I w Don Upjohn four years of high school at Leb anon' and earned a diploma this month, complete with special graduation exercises that includ ed an address by the school prin cipal, processional and reces sional marches, took a well earned rest. His punctuality dur ing school was shattered during his first month of vacation when he "disappeared" last Tuesday, the president were Senators appointed lately, but my state james Murray or Montana, ii- hasn't gotten any. This is creat- bert Thomas of Utah, John ing a little talk.' Sparkman of Alabama, Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, Con gressman Andy Biemiller of Wouldn't the president, please. he asked, look into the matter? Scratching a note on his pad, POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Paul Revere and Sheridan A Had Nothing on Hal's Driver By HAL BOYLE New York (IP) To understand a Frenchman, all you have to do is to take a ride with him in his motor car. After five miles you will know the spirit of France better than if you had read Wisconsin and Congresswoman Truman replied: "Yes, we'll at- Helen Uahagan Douglas ot call- tend to that right away." fornia all democrats. tht ,iihmit mnnnlieht romance master, joay ciouni, repun- will dwindle and die, and un- ed. Friday morning, however less something is done to that the educated canine returned end where'll we be?" Charley home, tired and bedraggled, but waxes eloquent by declaring considerably chastened, that "some pusillanimous Port- ., 4 .. land politicians yielding to the Let's hope that these showers machinations of material mind- will shower themselves out by ed money mad mongers have re- tomorrow when the neighbor ccntly inaugurated moonlight hood officially becomes Cherry wasting time which in turn has land. Summer has lingered long been foisted on the state at large, enough in the lap of spring. In this cloud covered land it is moonlight not daylight that should be saved in the clear sum mer months or love will lose its way." That old duck back in Chica go who is accused ol laKing flock of women over the coun try for a couple of million bucks in his philanderings may be an We feel quite inclined to agree errant Romeo but nevertheless .., , a ,Li j 1UUI he had to have a lot of help with Charley. All this daylight f rom the other si(Je of the fence savings business is an impious We venture to guess that as he delusion. However, as to his himself posed as a millionaire idea that romance may dwindle the girls thought they were do- at first blush we'd agree with him. Except for the fact that about the time daylight savings went into effect the couples be gan swarming in at the county clerk's office, piling over the ing a bit of own behalf. "taking" on their More Ladders Needed Pendleton (If) A since 1932 fell off democrat ladder, counters and jostling and push- smashcd two ribs, and changed ing each other In a scramble to his polltics here last night. Joe get licenses. Maybe they've all Bean lne victim, said he'd even just been sun struck. pay for a portrait of Thomas E. , ,, , , , Dewey. How come politics mix Pedantic Pooch Plays Truant with rib brcaking? Bea waa Lebanon "Freddie," the hanging a picture of President punctual pooch who attended Truman. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Inside Story of Relations With China May be Told By DeWITT MacKkNZIE tllft Porelsn Affair Analyst) Secretary of State Acheson says the complete inside story of American relations with China may be told soon. It should be a best seller. This state ment was moreR or less coinci dent with two i striking devel opments in the U.S. senate. In one case several senators took the floor to criticize the American poli cy toward Na-1 tionnlist China. In the other, 21 senators (15 re- Hewitt Mackrnila en the general attitude that it wouldn't recognize any commu nist regime so long as a responsi ble Nationalist government ex isted. The U.S.A. wasn't going to do anything to contribute to the Nationalist collapse. Well and good, but what con stitutes a "responsible govern ment?" What responsibilities must it meet in order to clas sify? How much of the country must the Natonnlist control to be "responsible"? At what publicans and 6 democrats) sent stage of control would the corn- President Truman a letter ask- munist become "responsible"? ing for assurances that the Unit- Thcrli of course there arise, ed States wouldn t recognize the the rc1.hot question of whether communist regime but would the United stateSi in conflict continue to support the nation- with communism the world over, ahst government. , should recognize a Chinese com- munist government at all. Observers figure that this sen- Those queries need official atorial reaction may speed pub- answer, since anything short of liration of the report. However, that is pure specualtion. it's clear that any detailed dis- cussion of the American govern- T ., ment's feeling about China In the past the international might be a decidedly delicate Practce frequently has been to mttPr grant recognition to a govern- After all, it will be passing ment whcn U,was 8 Kin8 con strange if the state department fern really in control of the hasn't some poignant criticisms territory it represented. Such to make of Chinese Nationalist recognition didn t in itself mean inefficiency. That wouldn't be an endorsement of the govern of much comfort or aid to a nient or an expression of ap government fighting for its life Proval- It merely meant that the against communism. government was in fact a going Naturally, t h e paramount concern, that is, it was a "de questions involved are those tacto government, raised in the senatorial letter Actually, in the past many whether America shall con- governments have been given tinue to support the Nationalist such recognition when they government and whether she didn't meet with the full ap shall refuse to recognize a com- proval of the granters. munist government. Why then the recognition? Satisfactory answers call for Because envoys couldn't be sent much more detail than is im- to the new government with plied in the general phrasing out recognition, and the country of the questions. withholding recognition would thus be handicapped in securing Thus far Washington has tak- vital Information. At the top of the five-point "economic expansion" program they urged on Truman was pro motion of private investment and production by offering FHA-type loans to build plants. Private ente r p r 1 s e , they agreed, is the key to a healthy economy. The legislators also recom mended: 1. A national advisory board, combining the business, labor, agriculture and consumer com mittees that now exist separate ly; 2. Measures to deal directly with serious unemployment wherever and whenever it de velops: 3. Long-range planning for public works and resource de velopment; 4. Voluntary adjustments in purchasing power. Truman said he couldn't en dorse the program without stu dying the details, but remarked: "You are my kind of folks." Their kind of thinking, he added, had always coincided with his own. It had been his belief and policy to ease off inflation con trols gradually and give the eco nomy a chance to adjust Itself. But the GOP-controlled 80th congress scrapped all controls at once, let prices and profits soar unchecked: then, as a last straw, passed a "rich man's" tax bill. "That was no time for a rich man's tax bill when profits were at their highest," Truman shook his head. The Inevitable result was "economic dislocation," the pre sident declared. From such diz zy heights, it would only be na tural for prices, profits, wages and production to come crash ing down. Therefore, he said, the government must throw roadblocks in the way to prevent stampeding the economy into depression. If the public doesn't get panicky, Truman added, there is no danger of depression. DIXIECRAT POSTMASTERS South Carolina's wily Senator Olin Johnston reversed the ta bles on President Truman the other day and applied some sly counter-pressure to get postmas ters appointed in his state. . It is no secret that the presi- MERRY-GO-ROUND A group of Iowa editors held a private confab between meet ings of the Des Moines democra tic farm meeting. They agreed Senator Hickenlooper is making a bad impression among the home folks, because of his reck less attacks upon Atomic Ener gy Chief David Lilienthal. General Eisenhower's strange opposition to federal aid to edu cation is attributed to the influ ence of Ike's good friend, Tom Watson of International Business Machines. Ike's opposition has also convinced a lot of educators that the general was right when he once indicated that he knows a lot more about war than the peacetime needs of the nation. Secretary of State Acheson and Under-Secretary Webb are shopping around for summer cottages not far from the spot where the Wright brothers flew their first airplane at Kitty Hawk, N.C. Veterans of Foreign Wars chiefs are going to be plenty miffed at President Truman if he doesn't attend their annual convention in Miami in late Au gust. Truman turned down an invitation to last year's VFW meeting on the ground he might be criticized for making a poli tical talk to the vets during the campaign, but despite this he at tended the American Legion convention. ACHESON REPORTS One important point that did n't leak out of Secretary Ache son's hush-hush report to the senate foreign relations commit tee was regarding his smooth re lations between the western powers. Acheson reported that the British and French were more reasonable over the question of German economic and political rehabilitation than ever before. Earlier the French had been adamant against building up Germany, but at Paris, both Bri tain and France seemed more worried about Germany as a commercial competitor than as a military force, Acheson report ed. They were willing to go much farther in rebuilding German production, provided that tight control over military develop ment was guaranteed. (Copyright 1948) hundred his tories. You will never again sell the French short, or believe they are through as a nation. For the Frenchman has! not let the ma chine age take Hal Boyle like a maddening waterbug. Our drive- drove like a French man making love or painting a picture with lip, passion, artistic frenzy. We grazed the handlebars of bicycles, and they peeled off to the right. We skinned the paint off motor cars coming at us, and they sheered off to the left. "Anybody got a can opener let's bail out," someone screamed. romance out of nis jue. nis moior car isn i jusi Then we got caught in a an instrument to get him some- of traffic jamJ Elsewhere in where efficiently. Its a four- ,ho W,H wll th.re . traf. wheeled adventure a vehicle fic jam, the vehicles come to a that lets him play highway chess t,'u0it aW , fin nn l.n.. 1 6 u ..., at uu itiucs ait jivu.. Not on the road to Paris. The I learned all I want to learn bieeer the lam the faster It about the dauntless character of moves. Everybody gears up and the French the other day in a hundreds of cars going in op- rlde from Caen to Paris. posite directions thread through My fellow passengers were each other in shifting, weaving two ex-jeepmates from the war honking masses at 60 miles an days George Hicks of the Na- hour, tional Broadcasting company, and Jack Thompson, the Chica- ..gtopi Halt! Slow down!" we go Tribune's bearded military yelled The drlver turned grln. expert. ned cjrcied a truck and picked Our voiture was a new tiny Up speed. He wanted the Amer- model Renault. In a Detroit leans to have a good time, factory it might be stepped on After the tnird traffic jam j as an oversized cockroach But found lf mumbiing a codi. litlea"' whlh 'e11 or cil to my will. Hicks was mur $800 to $900 and get 50 miles muring what j took to be a to a gallon of gas, are popular prayr Thompson's beard was wrae' , , turning a silent blue. We three shoehorned in with By some miracle we reached the driver but had some trouble Versailles, on the outskirts of closing the door. It kept re- PariSi M suddenly as it had bounding from Jacks beard. erupted in frenzy, traffic slow Finally he managed to twist d down to gentle SO-mil.-an his head. Someone outside hour crawl, quickly slammed the door. And ' .. , we were off. " was then we discovered our , , , driver was boiling mad. By There has been no ride like esture nd Phrase u it since Paul Revere rode to now why', seed spread the alarm and Sheridan had ?weed, lnthia path galloped to Winchester, 15 miles "" " was angry because he hadn t away. It turned out our driver was not iiist a chauffeur. He was Bar- SALEM HOSPITAL FUND DRIVE Reasons Why Hospitalization Costs so Much for Patient QUESTION: Why does hospitalization cost so much? It seems that hospitals charge enough to do their own remodeling, re equipping and construction. ' ANSWER: Hospital costs have the hospital is shorter, the aver always been expensive when ase daily cost is much higher, compared with the daily wage The new drugs and intraven of a man who has some member ous feedings are of compara of his family in the hospital. tively recent use and they are The cost today compared with more expensive than the older the cost ten years ago is ap- method of treatment. In many proximately doubled. But 70 cases, however, the expense for of the hospital budget is for the shorter stay of five days is the payroll of the working staff no more than the former stay and that has more than doubled of ten days. in some departments. Indus- mZ JL,V, Principle, non-profit hospitals chinery to make up for shorter ' . . ,r .. day's work, but it takes the "," ""' "i ' Tu ' " ". . 2 T. As a. matter of policy and . TJ .jjiVi. cover the actual cost of opera w X h. Vtll tion. It is a 24-hour service of have to be paid to make up. for ,i, i. j k-u 4, .jj;,inn.i !T ... three shifts with meals and bath done'by'red ST ' b ?"d ' " ens, often several changes, The ambulatory method of watchful care, special diets, rub treating patients today gets them bing backs, carrying bed pans, out of the hospital in shorter administering medicines and time The first two or three giving treatments, keeping rec days have always been the ex- ords and waiting on the public, pensive days. Those are the There is no money left for days for surgery, deliveries, capital account. That must be heavy laboratory work, X-Rays, furnished out of the earnings of and drugs. Since the stay In those able to work. tients . more than enough tj crashed head on into the truck to punish it. nev Olrifield and Sir Malcolm A Frenchman would rather Campbell. He was D'Artagnan Set into an accident if justice is carrying a message for the on his side than to avoid an ac- queen. He was Roland, blowing cident and feel he had not in- his horn at Roncesvalles. And s'sted upon his rights," he said when huge trucks bore down on wlth dignity, us, he was "Papa" Joffre, the That is all anyone needs to Rock of the Marne. know about the French spirit. Down the road our little car He'll hold on to it even if it sped at 100 kilometers an hour lands him in a ditch, MIGRANTS FROM SIBERIA First American Lived in Calif. 40,000 Years Ago? By PAUL F. ELLIS New York (U.R) An anthropologist has offered evidence that the first American man lived 40,000 or more years ago in Call- A fornia. ' ' Furthermore, according to Dr. "suggests that man, possessing George F. Carter, of Johns Hop- the mano and by inference us kins university, Baltimore, the ing the metate to grind wild early American probably was a seeds, eating shell fish, and pos descendant of a cultured tribe sessed, so far as is now known, of migrants who came to North of only simple stone flakes, lived America from Siberia during an at La Jolla something like 40,-inter-glacial period. 000 years ago. Dr. Carter based his conclu- "If the hearths found in deep sions on a study of soil deposits er strata are indeed evidence of near La Jolla, Cal., where he man, then human occupancy of already had found a mano, a this area extends back through stone believed used to grind the Wisconsin period." The so grain. He also told of the dis- called Wisconsin period is an in- co very of hearths, shells from ter-glacial time in the pelisto seafoods and stone flakes pro- cene age. duced by man. Reporting in the transactions Dr. Carter said that the evl of the New York Academy of dence obtained so far does "not Sciences, Dr. Carter said it suggest a people with any traces could be estimated that soil of of a cultural suitable to glacial an alluvian fan, similar to a Arctic climate survival," and delta, off La Jolla was deposit- that "one might argue that the ed during the pleistocene glacial La Jolla people are survivors of age probably at a time when higher culture." the ice had moved north of Cali- He said that early Califor fornia. nians, however, might have ... crossed the Bering Strait "at a Dr. Carter's observation time when the climate was places man in what is now the markedly warmer than at pres United States at a much earlier ent and when the great con age than the folsom man, who tinental ice masses did not ex is believed to have lived here 1st." probably 15,000 to 20,000 years Therefore, he believes that ago. man entered America during the The only evidence of the fol- last inter-glacial period, which som man was the discovery of is at variance with the ideas of a crude arrow-head in the skele- many other anthropologists whofi ton of a buffalo near Folsom, have insisted that man in Amer-y1 N.M. ica is a comparatively "new ar- "The evidence so far," he said, rival" say 10,000 years or so.