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. BY BECK Animal Life SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, 25c; Monthly, S1.00; One Year, $12.00. By Mail in Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos.. $4.00; One Tear, $8.00, S. Outside Oregon: raontniy, tl.uu; mos.. ;e.uv; rear, nr. Salem, Oregon, Friday, July 1, 1949 K Threat to Salem's Air Position Salem was startled by word from Washington, D.C., that the Civil Aeronautics board was considering cutting the city off from United Air Lines service. United Air Lines was startled, too, for that matter. The CAB had a proposal before it to substitute West Coast Airlines for United. The proposal contemplated a five-year extension in operating authority for West Coast, which is a feeder line. The air fate of Salem is involved in the extension question. West Coast asked that present service to McMinnville be iiscontinued. Service to Salem presumably would be sub itituted, instead. Whether service to Everett, Anacortes and Mt. Vernon in Washington should be discontinued would be investigated, too. The board would consider whether United Air Lines or West Coast Airlines should serve Bellingham, where both now stop. The CAB be lieves one air line service there Is enough. The aeronautics board may seek, by this hearing, to cut 3own competition and thus save subsidy money to the air lines for air mail. But in the case of the substitution of West Coast, a feeder line, for United, a major line, there Is no competition involved. West Coast has not been established yet in Salem. So the city would be the loser if United were told by the all-powerful CAB to pull up stakes here and leave the state's capital and second city to a feeder line for service. Salem has an impressive standing on United Air Lines' list of stations. And this is the case even though the city has only a second-rate listing of flights, and has been served only since 1941. Business for United here has increased 15 percent dur ing the first six months of this year over the same period af last year. When the nation's economy is starting to squeak a little now, that 15 percent increase is really some thing. Of the 71 stations served by United Air Lines over the nation, Salem stands 28th in the amount of air freight and express. In baggage, the capital holds an even better position. In any appraisal of Salem's position in relation to air line service, it would be foolish to lose sight of the future. The Willamette valley is growing as fast percentage wise as probably any other large section of the country. So, to eliminate the second city in size in that valley from transcontinental service (United) would be foolish and harmful to Salem and the valley. Also, only last year was the city's master airport plan put into effect. This plan offers the basis for a field here that will be the equal of any in a comparable size city in the United States. A new administration building with airline facilities is now on the drawing boards. Not to be ignored either is the position that McNary field assumed last year when Portland's Columbia airport was flooded and knocked out of service. Both United and Northwest Airlines moved operations here temporarily. The runways at McNary field were the only ones in the area suitable for the taking off and landing of the big DC-6s flying for United. Instead of cutting the capital from the list of stations served by United Air Lines, the CAB could encourage even better air schedules for Salem by United. If West Coast also wants to come here, that is another matter, but one not to be considered as a matter of choice; United or West Coast. The DuPonts Under Federal Fire , Attorney General Clark has filed what is described as the "most sweeping anti-trust suit in history, aimed at breaking up the nation's largest single concentration of industrial power in the nation" to force the great DuPont industrial empire to sell its alleged controlling interest in General Motors Corporation and the United States Rub ber company. The government suit, filed in the federal district court at Chicago, said that for the year 1947, the thr.ee com panies held combined assets of $4,259,000,000, made com bined sales of $5,189,000,000, and had a combined net in come, after taxes, of $429,000,000. The government asked in a civil anti-trust suit that the DuPont company be forced to sell all its stock in Gen eral Motors and that members of the DuPont family be required to sell all their stock in U.S. Rubber. It alleges the DuPont company owns 23 percent of the General Mo tors common stock, the rest being split up among 436,000 stockholders, and that the DuPont family (128 members), own 17 percent of the U.S. Rubber stock, the rest being split up among 14,000 stockholders. It alleges this division of stock gives the DuPonts control over the two companies. The suit charged that the E. I. DuPont De Nemours com pany, General Motors and U.S. Rubber sell their products to each other at preferential prices and in closed markets. The defendants are charged with "combining and conspir ing to violate the anti-trust laws." Past anti-trust trials showed that such proceedings usu ally wear on for month after month and will take years to bring the suit to trial and then years for the actual trial and final decision. The civil anti-trust suit against the optical manufacturers and opticians, filed in 1946, hasn't come to trial yet. Neither has the suit filed against the nation's big meat packers last year. The suit filed against the Atlantic and Pacific grocery chain, started in 1942, was not formally decided until this year. We hold no briefs for the DuPonts. They rank among the most successful industrialists in the nation and are amply able to defend themselves, but their record is a good one. They placed their enormous plants at the dis posal of the government and operated them without charge during the war, free of profiteering. But the DuPonts have accumulated a huge fortune hon estly which seems to be a crime nowadays. They have spent more money for chemical research and originated more new products, now in universal use, and created more new industries than any concern in the country. Whatever they control is managed efficiently, intelligently and economically without taint of scandal and at a profit to investors. If the government was as well managed, a Hoover report on reorganization would have been un necessary. M&WrHB FOLKS FIGURED J &2i& Mr ' W-CEM I'D KEEP THE BIRDS S fgyr&i Fjf 1 - AWAV FROM THE 4, K&XS'W FLOWERS AND THIS I .: J-r3SO BASKET WOULD KEEP . r ' S-lN stray dogs away SfSy IS WnBm rihTrvtA( that thing if) t Emm$wJ? lift-"'" WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Catholic Congressman Differs with Cardinal By DREW PEARSON Washington One congressman who has vigorously defended North Carolina's Graham Barden from the charge of "bigot" hurled at him by Cardinal Spellman is Rep. Andrew Jacobs of Indianapolis, himself a devout catholic. Jacobs, a freshman who in six months has made an outstanding record. serves " who agreed tnere was no use in Western Powers spreading their forces too thin in case of war with Russia. Real Estate Lobby Advice The real estate lobby is now instructing builders how to beat the law if investigated for hous ing frauds. A set of legal moves has been doped out by Herbert Colton, lawyer for the Nation al Association of Home Builders, Drew reanoB and published in the associa- h t. . ...( tion's monthly magazine. catholics disaeree with Cardinal . His advice' if aU else fails, is Spellman. BY GUILD Wizard of Odds on the same, ed ucation and la bor committee with Barden, where the aid-to-education bill is now bottled the late Al Smith on the separa tion of church and state, Jac- to appeal over the head of the SIPS FOR SUPPER AT LEAST 5,000 ADULTS IN THE U.S. HAVE LESS BRAIN POWER THAN AH APE. WANT TO WORK 30 YEARS FOR THE SAME EMPLOYER? ODDS ARE II.IOOTOlAoAINSTYOU. (FOR YOU, ROBERT MANOICH, VeiRTON, W.VA.) FRECKLES ? IT'S I IN 3 YOU HAVE THEM Everybody Happy BY DON UPJOHN It was a great parade today, fitting show for what promises to be one of Salem's greatest festivals. The queen and her retinue were at their best, the bands exuded inspiration every step of their way, visit or some such thing. a large hole was burned in the roof. Damage was estimated at $200. ing delegations were numerous,', Russ Bonesteele; in his 1011 Stu-. debaker, other old cars and the covered wagon along with Alice Shucking, first of the cherry queens and her p r e d e c e ssors took the story Don Upjohn The grapevine reports that Ben (Harvey) Neufeld employed at Firestone store is one of the latest additions to our FT&BA brigade and is now right at the milk toast stage with expectancy of the new ones pronto. His as sociates say that Ben claims he back not only to the start of the had 'em pulled but say that's cherry festivals but with the :ust his story. covered wagon to the start of the town. And the people were We doubt lf any other court not the only ones who could house in the land can have such derive excitement and glory 3ust claims as to being a patriot from the affair. What with mag- P'ace as our own Marion nificant showing of horse flesh cunty structure. It boasts of the sparrows got the bigges three gal employes who are real break they've had since the liv- live daughters of their Uncle ery stable days. Sam wno were born on tne ' Fourt of July and will celebrate Explosive Mixture their birthdays next Monday. Stayton Kids, plus matches, They are Deputy Sheriff Alma plus firecrackers added up to Johnson, Deputy County Clerk a fire in the haymow of a barn Helen Mulkey and Deputy Coun belonging to Mrs. Pauline Fery, ty Recorder Virginia Gritton. on West Washington street, Happy birthdays girls with Tuesday afternoon, calling out plenty of firecrackers and noise, the Stayton fire department. The But we bet they all spend the crackers ignited some straw and holiday at home cleaning house Music Found to Have No Effect In Cutting Down Accident Rate Portland (U.R) Music may soothe the savage beast but it won't keep you from sticking your finger in a saw. That, in effect, was the conclusion drawn after a 12-week experiment to determine whether Bach and boogie would cut down the industrial accident rate. Dr. Edmund E. Dudek, director of the bureau of testing and an associate professor of psychology at the University of Washington, reported on the music test at a "psychology" session at the western safety conference. Dudek said experiments were conducted in a plant employ ing over a thousand workers. During a 12-week period, music was played during working hours, varying the type of enter tainment and the length of the periods during which it was furnished. "From the tests, experimenters were able to draw the con clusion that music, on the average, had no significant influ ence on the accident rate," Dudek said. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN This is a Crucial Stage In the War of the Isms By DeWITT MncKtlSZIE (II Forolirn Affairs Analyst) The world-wide ideological conflict between communism and democracy, involving a life and death struggle between religion and the Red ism, is intensifying. We have reached a crucial period. warfare tacks of the communist-led re gime in Czechoslovakia on Arch bishop Bcran as a violation of the "rights of conscience and the decencies of civilization." The situation in Czechoslov akia is similar to what happened in Hungary, where Cardinal Mindszenty was charged with plotting against the republic. He was tried and condemned to life imprisonment. Send your "Odds" questions on any subject to "The Wizard of Odds," care of the Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. N. Y. Is the United States In One City, Hal Contends 4 By HAL BOYLE New York VP) Oh, I tell you, New York is a wonderful town! It must be fine or there wouldn't be so many people crowded here together to enjoy it. It's really a "As long as we have the same 'ocai right to send our children to airi "lorney also urges public schools as anyone else, sending a committee of builders we are not d i s c r i m i n a t e d ? .the D A- in advance of offer against," Congressman Jacobs advlsry mce. says in a special statement to Revolt Plans in Austria U. catholics. "And, as catholics, s- diplomats in Vienna report we do not have the rieht to a that the communists and former separate, publicly supported nazis are combining to over- nuuncnoucD school system, nor does any oth- throw the Austrian government HUUK MAN J rnlLUjUrntK er group of people have such 3ust as soon as a peace treaty right. is signed. That these two usu- "Whatever can be constitu- ally bitter opponents nazis and tionally done to aid a child will communists had made a se- win my support. However, I cret deal to merge was the first cannot and will not support any tipoff the United States had that measure that grants public fi- Russia was now willing to write nancial aid to prlVate or paro- a Peace treaty for Austria, chial schools. What Vishinsky doesn't know, "We have the right to build however, is that the U.S.A. will and maintain our churches," send American arms and am- continued the Indiana Demn- munition to Austria to make sure crat, "but not to build or main- doesn't suffer the same fate terrible place to tain them with public funds as Czechoslovakia. visit or die in, Our parochial schools are an but a grand adjunct of our religion, estab- NAVY LOBBY town to live in. lirhed for educational use in- One top navy man has finally For here the stead of using public schools, seen fit to take on the arrogant poor man has solely for the sake of the child's navy league He is Undersec- courage, and religious training. retary of the Navy Dan Kimball, fights for his "The issue is clear. Either who has written a strong letter rights. He's as you keep parochial schools and to Frank Hecht, the navy lea- good as a mil maintain them or take public gue's president, urging him to 1 i o n a i r e any funds and convert them into pipe down. doV and he'll public schools, and they will Kimball pointed out that Sec- stay up all night then no longer serve the reli- retary Johnson's actions in or- t tell Von whv. gious purpose for which they dering two battleships converted v rirh nr Door vou're lust American. Because here people were established." into flattops made a great deal another number here, and some- are really working toward the of sense to the navy. For it will ,;, nioacant tn wnnder kind of democracy the rest of Congressman Barden of North now have two more flattops in wnether you're 8 675 341 or the country reads about in high irnlina luKnm f',)i4irtol C-tnll a v... i half ".l- V.nn . 1 1 i ; i i acnuui civics uuuks. There are only a few cities in the world that are really cities London for courage, Paris for loveliness, Calcutta for misery, Dal Boyle You have to belong to it it can never belong to you. This is a man's town, and it's cut for size. It has outgrown every body who ever lived in it and it's still growing. And the people who live in it are growing, too. The fat voiced tourists come here and look around and shake their heads and leave again, saying, "After all, New York City isn't America." But New York City is Amer ica, and there is no town more Carolina, whom Cardinal Spell- a year and a half rather than mavDe j 435 768 man hoc atfaolraH !o a nniat uait fnr .iinDi.nni.,iM. mliint. 1 J ' (Copyrlcht 1949) man has attacked, is a quiet, wait for a supercarrier which hard - working, middle-of-the- might take over five years, roader who is viewed in con- Kimball has asked Hecht to gress as anything but a bigot, apologize to Secretary Johnson Actually, he agrees with Cardi- for his criticism. It will be in- nal Spellman on many things, teresting to see if Hecht follows especially on the point that the this advice. the Federal Government should not control education. Barden is a man of deep, fighting convictions, and one of these is that we must raise our public-school standards. "I happen to be a Presbyter ian," says Barden. "But I don't believe it's the duty of the gov ernment to provide money for Presbyterian schools any more Who cares? There is one thing sure: You can never be Mr. Num ber One. Because nobody is big Shanghai for sin, Rome for heal- enough to be really important '"8 ana nurt, Atnens lor Diue on this $24 island. skies, Cairo for gold and in trigue, Naples for a merry heart and a dirty face, Berlin, the tomb and womb and anvil of war, Moscow for mockery of human rights, and Washington, where every man who has been elected twice can hope for a marble monument. And. of pourse. there arA Washington, July 1 UP) President Truman owes his elevation jmaiiPr ritie with a hrpaHth nf than for the private schools of to the Presidency to a "rather casual action" by the late President mind say Philadelphia, say St. j.-mun..u uuxvk uu louis, say Baltimore, say xvew velt's secretary for 17 years. - - 7" Orleans, say San Francisco, the She said Mr. Roosevelt cas- you to re-type this letter and to .. .!. .,. ' ually agreed to switch Mr Tru- switch these names , so it will BostQn only 6pla6C6 j k'ow CLOSE SHAVE TOLD BY SECRETARY Truman's Listing in '44 By FDR Counted in Vote Methodists, Catholics, Quakers, Episcopalians or any other faith." Barden was a battler for bet ter education long before he mans name ahead of that of "ad -Ha rry Truman or Bill where nobody hollers against came to congress in 1934. As a member of the North Carolina supreme tourt justice wiiuam oumua tunnnura. . ... O. Douglas for the 1944 vice- "The reason for the switch m.' They are all old cities, each esiaeniiai nomination. aj ,JBU"uo marker! hv an nntirtne hitfntrv The current Ladies' Home man first it mplied that ; he was 1nJV J. legislature he lert the fieht for presidential nomination. was obvious. By naming Tru the improvement of both white and colored schools. The fact ... i r ha ni.afaii.nW nhninA nf H& rr- journal prints excerpts irom Ei.mni h an ir,Hi,M,,0i that Noorn .hnnit.K.r. ore Miss Tullv's storv. shortly to Went Ihe convention took it ... .. . - ..... : 1 . . - ' - .. 4i i. j n. less ireeuum, tuu. as ail white and appear in dook iorm, unaer tne ". ,t, old DfWIII MackenxU The troubles of unhappy Hun- The is particularly tense in cen tral and west ern Europe, where Moscow is striking fier cely at anti Red elements in an effort to con solidate the So viet gains. However, the tempo also is swelling rapidly in the West Democracies, which finally have gary continue. admitted that communism isn't Her Rcd ieadcr Matvas Rak- susccptible to compromise. osii few davs ag0 stated in The Orient is torn with strife Prague that 200,000 Hungarian n which communism is heavily communjst party members have involved. ( becn cxpclled in a purge of "spies and provacateurs." Rak- The tensest drama is being si added that he is waging a staged in Czechoslovakia. "campaign of destruction with There the communist govern- an iron hand" against dissidents ment, charging the Catholic still in the party. church with subversive activi- Other satellite countries are ties, is striking hard. Catholic having their religious troubles, informants say the government including Romania, Bulgaria has seized virtually all church and Poland. That's not strange consistories in the country, in view of Moscow's edict that Many priests reportedly have there shall be no interference been arrested. Archbishop Jo- with the campaign of anti-reli- scf Beran is virtually a prisoner gious propaganda. Yugoslavia, In his palace in Prague. of course, has been placed on ti.. ...kkt.k.r. k j Russia's black list for failure to The archbishop has managed , . to get a message to Czechoslov- while ii hi. u ,i. i a nnn nnn r-oikii ... While all this is going on in akia s , 9,000,000 Catholics say- , .,;, -,,(Ji.. . ,. inn k4 tk k.,. ., the satellite countries, a less ing that the hour of trial may , u be at hand and that if necessary f?"sa ' f"tr'vpeH hs they "must be prepared to fol- 8 Camed n by tiT tmCart,vrsd"Path ' " CoSSTh.. lost ground nan martyrs. ,n elcclions in Italyi rrance tne The country s protestant min- Netherlands and Belgium. And onty is reported preparing to recently Britain's ruling Social support its traditional antagon- jst party ordered its member lst the Roman Catholic church snip 0f more than 5,000,000 to in the letter's fight for sur- purg ltselI of any fellow travel-v'va'- ing with communists. Fourteen U.S. Secretary of State Dean communist or communist front Acheson has denounced tht at- groups wer blacklisted. nnw nairl the came ae that mnnev io HivirieH imnnrti. title "Stories and Anecdotes mated. ally between Negro and white About F.D.R My Boss." "By that narrow margin and school buildings and transporta- rather casual action did one tion is due in part to Barden's Miss Tully, who s now sec- man rather than another, per- untiring efforts. retary of the Roosevelt Memor- haps one policy rather than an- "I am wrone about as often ial Foundation, savs Mr. Roose- other, eventually arrive at the as the next fellow," says the velt wanted Henry Wallace as head of the American govern- mf.n us s . , tremendous North Carolina congressman, a running mate again in 1944 ment in April of 1945." . vlU?E' .AenJas lon8 dream "But I trv to he alwavt sincere. hLrH hL cL Pushed lnto a few square miles My constitutents don't blame me times. But he was told by Rob- This is one of many anecdotes if I make a mistake once in ert Hannegan and others that Miss Tully relates. Here are a awhile. However, if they ever the convention would not take few others: find me wrong and insincere at the then vice president. Of the men who once opposed tne same time, i expect tnem Mr. Roosevelt suggested Doug- F.D.R. for public office. Thomas Wrap them all together and you'll almost have New York but not quite. For there is nothing as tre mendous as this tremendous of struggle and grope, where pepole move like moles under ground and hope in terms of towers, i Never a day dawns here but to get after me plenty and las, but Hannegan, then national E. Dewey and Herbert Hoover my s.p t "els .taller on the rightly so." way to work from seeing the Empire State building shoulder the morning mist, comforting thor- as a Ialry tale in an hour of And never an evening sun sinks down without my spirit wearying from the sight of some Democratic chairman, express- "were the only ones toward ed doubt that Douglas could whom he expressed any per BRITISH BUSINESS CRISIS command sufficient strength, sonal resentment. He often re- Paul Hoffman, the Marshall and proposed his fellow Mis- ferred to Landon as a plan administrator, held a se- sourian, then Senator Truman, oughly nice man,' while for cret conference with top gov- The president finally agreed Wendell Willkie he came to have ernment officials last week to to accept either of the two, and, a genuine affection." report on the British financial at crisis. . lofter tn that effert hilt naming much for rards. when he nlavor) Ugliness that dwells here, too, Britain, according to Hoff- Douglas first just before the he preferred a complicated m men and buildings, man. had bungled its way into convention met in Chicago. game with two decks called . oh' but they're growing bet- a first-class recession that may . . "spider." ter the men and the buildings lead all Europe into a depres- En route to the Pacific coat "Interestingly enough," she and the city they make "P- sion and wreck the Marshall and Hawaii and Alaska, the prc-s- says, "the president favored the Here. if you have a prejudice, Plan. ident stopped in Chicago and institution of a national lottery yu have to keep it silent. Be- Hoffman was especially bitter Hannegan boarded the train and for charitable ends, and pointed cause if yu say u "t loud, about Britain's trade deal with had a "lengthy palaver with the to the success of this practice the other fellow will haul you iitM'iuiii, suu iv 19 lypiutti ul boss. in Ireland. mm cuuri, aim uie juage win the way Britain has refused to M'jss Tuiiv savs Hanneiran The nresident was never mueh f'ne you and make you feel practice what it preaches. He intimated that if Britain doesn't show more signs of co operation he may cut off Mar shall plan aid if congress doesn't beat him to it. Tom Finletter, head of the ECA mission to Britain, was present at this briefing, and agreed that Britain would have to take drastic action in a hurry to keep from going bankrupt and dragging all Europe under with it. This is something the Rus sians have becn praying for ever since the cold war started. CAPITAL NEWS CAPSULES Defending the Pacific The joint chiefs of staff have devel came out of the president's sit- of a drinker, but he "made a ashamed. ting room bearing the letter, ritual of the cocktail hour. His Some day there won't be even came up to her and said: favorites were martinis and a silent prejudice left here, and the sea winds will wash over a clean city, all the way from Staten Island to the Bronx. New York is opportunity. They put the Statue of Lib erty in the right place, and more and more the old girl feels she belongs here. She still holds her lamp before the gold en door, and the door is New "Grace, the president wants old-fashioneds." BUILDING HOSPITAL FACILITIES IN CITY Groups Can Make Subscriptions To Salem Hospital Development QUESTION: Can a social club, a fraternity, a garden club, a labor organization, or other groups make a subscription to the York City, where all who en- Salem Hospital Development program? ter find home and welcome ANSWER: In this kind of a program, many subscriptions are and the equal chance that all made by organizations which often designate the service de- men ask. partment to which they want their money applied. With women's clubs the nurseries and oped an important plan for the children's beds are most popular. defense of the Pacific. They Jne lunaamemai principle must are writing off large sections be kept in mind, however, in of this vast area as impossible making a group subscription, to defend and will concentrate The money pledged should be on holding Japan, India, Burma, treasury money which the group Java, the Hawaiian Islands and acquired for such purposes. It the Philippines. is not supposed to take the place The plan was approved after of personal subscriptions which a number of meetings with top all good citizens will make to the British and French military men program. Never Mind Four Cents Change Portland (IP) Mrs. Oscar Johnson, Seneca, told the hospital her 16-month-oId son had swallowed a nickel. Several days later hospital attendants said all they had been able to get out of him was a penny. Never mind the other four cents, Mrs. Johnson replied Saturday as she took her son away. She guessed it was her mistake, and the penny wai the only coin involved in the first place.