Capital Journal Popular People An Independent Newspaper Established 188 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, Me; Monthly, S1.00; One Yeai, $12.00. By Mall In Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos., $4.00; One Year, $8.00. V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos., $6.00; Year, $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Saturday, July 9, 1949 The New Housing Act Both houses of congress have passed the long debated and much amended multi-billion dollar administration long range housing bill and sent it to the White House where it will be promptly signed because it is the first major victory for. the president's far flung domestic program he calls the "Fair Deal." It is a major advance in federal paternalism, another socialistic "noble experiment" and let us hope will turn out better than similar New Deal ventures did. It will at last swell government payrolls, federal, state and local, which the census bureau reports reached a three-year high in April with 6,219,000 employed at a cost of f 1,875,000,000. The housing bill calls for the construction of 810,000 publicly owned dwellings in six years and rent subsidiaries running up to $400,000,000 a year for 40 years, sets up $1.5 billion slum clearance program in cities and provides for farm housing improvements to cost $325,000,000 and for temporary continuance of the government's mortagage insurance program. It authorizes $1,000,000,000 in federal loans and $500,000,000 in grants to state and local 'bodies for the program. Here is what the housing bill would do in detail accord ing to press reports : 1. Provide a five-year alum clearance program, with one third of the rost to be met by the federal government and the balance by local communities. The bill provides $1,000,000,000 in loans and $500,000,000 in grants to states and local public bodies for this program. 2. Requiries local authorities to select the low-income occu pants of the public housing units, and to set the rent at what these families cBn pay. The federal subsidies would make up the difference between the rents and the amount actually needed to pay for the housing projects. 3. Divides the $312,000,000 farm housing program into three parts. The first part provides long-term loans at not more than 4 per cent interest to owners of self-sustaining farms unable to obtain financing elsewhere. The second part sets-up a simi lar loan program, with annual federal contributions, to owners whose farms were not at the time self-sustaining. The third Npart provides loBns for minor improvements on farms that could not be made self-sustaining. 4. Sets up a research program to find cheaper ways of build ing homes. . . 5 Provides (a) a 60-day extension of temporary government authority to insure loans by private lenders up to $2,500 for repairing and remodeling existing structures; (b) a 60-day ex tension of authority to Insure mortgages for construction of small homes costing up to $5,000; and (c) a $500,000,000 in crease in the amount of mortgage insurance that the govern ment can issue for single family and multiple dwelling untis. Whether the bill will discourage private housing con struction remains to be seen, but experience has proven that better and cheaper houses can be built by unsubsidized contractors than the government builds. Anyway, it may provide beneficial competition as well as insure the poli tical support of the vast army of "gimmes." The Fight Is on to Keep United Here Salem's responsibility in the fight to keep United Air Lines service here is now definite. The city has to go to bat on its own to kill a move before the civil aeronautics board to substitute West Coast Air lines service for United. This means Salem must take an active, legal part in the coming hearing in Washington, D.C. The civil aeronautics board is in the all-powerfull posi tion of deciding the iBsue of whether Salem has proper and adequate air transport facilities here or not. The city can merely present its case, which is a good one. United can merely present the facts and figures on its operation here. Then the board decides. But the board has already put the responsibility for proof up to United Air Lines. The city was, not notified of the pending hearing. The bureau treats the matter as purely a technical aviation problem, of dollars and cents and air routes. The human element, the life and business of the people of the com munity, is brought up only incidentally or the city would have been notified of the board's hearing. If it were a question of several transcontinental airlines already serving Oregon's second city, that might be an other matter. But it is a question of a transcontinental airline being replaced by a feeder-line. And that feeder-line does not have any air freight serv ice at all. Salem has a record of air freight out of this city that is more than the equal of many cities much larger In size. To cut off air freight shipments would be to cut the heart out of a number of local enterprises. To be limited only to feeder-line service, would be to Jeopardize the growth and position of Oregon's capital. It might be noted that Salem has grown since the days when United Air Lines was authorized to start operations here in 1940 from 30,000 to over 52,000 in population nine years later. If that growth is indicative of poor business judgment on the part of United in coming here, then the theory of business has certainly changed. Salem has an excellent case to be made before the board, as the Capital Journal has repeatedly pointed out in the past 10 days. That case should be carefully worked out and then presented to .the board by the city. Representative Walter Norblad publicly opened the fight for Salem in Washington Friday with his protest to the CAB against dropping United service here. His alertness to the threat against the city's interests can be followed by Salem's protest through legal channels, with presenta tion later at the board hearing. Sh-h-h! A Mystery Man in White Washington UP) A man quietly cat down at one of the gates to the White Bouse Thursday night and put a lone white hood over his head. An officer on duty there asked what he wanted. "Sh-h-hsn" said the man. Through a hole In the hood, he puffed on a cigarette. Through another he took an occasional look at his watch. On his hip he carried a long sheathed knife, which he didn't at tempt to draw. For a while he sat there peacefully. Soon city police took him away. There was no Immediate explanation of the performance. WOW. LOOK AT ".y EAWj ALL THE BAGGAGE... ff yTHEY RE THE Mi THEY'VE GOT ENOUGH X JOE BRENNANS 1 KM STUFF TO STAY FOR M ,v I FROM SAN DIEGO B SIX MONTHS' riu'! jr' YOU SPOSE 1 ,S M' I THEY'RE MOVING 1 ' gggjjJj (HERE PERMANENTLY? If Wkkm ssJnkLM 4 - i 'J HAD SEEN THAT k-vJppBBV Wg "S ' I LOAD OF LU6GAGE Ffe. t J&JT f HMI FIRST. THEY A Off ' WmU&fcul RIGHT A wouldnT have mgiilmaim 0N 1 1 GREETED THEM Wlp t'fe THE AXLE' WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Senator Bull Gets Curt Treatment in Capitol By DREW PEARSON Washington Gregarious, white-thatched Congressman Bill Whitt(ngton of Mississippi is in a strategic spot as chairman of the public works committee, to see that his state is not left behind when federal funds are ladled out for water conservation, rivers and harbors, and flood control. Mississippi ranks eighth in get ting these improvements. However, the congressman is to standard British custom, the a strong believer in economy party went to bed, leaving calls BY GUILD Wizard of Odds for other states. When Washing ton, which ranks 16th, and Oregon, 18th, and are partly arid, request water - control funds, they get nowhere with Whittin g t o n . When Charles Hodde, speaker of the Washing ton house of representatives, testified for the proposed Co- MS Drew Fesrioa for 6:30 a.m. But about 3 a.m. the irrepres sible Barkley got up, telephon ed Congressman Welling's room and in a broad English accent announced: "The carriage a waits without." Hastily, Welling dressed, couldn't find his shoes, but rush ed down five flights of stairs of the swank Savoy hotel in stock ing feet to ask the sleepy night clerk to find his shoes and mean while to hold the carriage. The joke furnished London much merriment and even Wei- THE FIRESIDE PULPIT Human Being Impressed By Evidence of Great Power BY REV. GEORGE H. SWIFT fUctor. flt Paul's EplacoPii Churcb We are deeply impressed by the 'things which have stood the test of time. The giant Redwoods are awe-inspiring because they have outlived several hundred generations and are still living. Many of these trees were over ' a century old when Christ was considering the enormous force teaching in Galilee, and are still and power of the Almighty God standing. We can almost lean up on them in a comfortable as- s u r a n c e that they will never leave us or for sake us for they have stood for so long against fire, flood, drought and dis ease and still But the Christian conception of God is that he is not only the wielder of infinite power through endless time, but that he is a Father God, a father of all humanity who loves and cares and murtures his children. We believe that he hears our prayers. The Psalmist was very comforting when he wrote about the omnipresence of the merci ful God in these words: "If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there: if I make my bed in hell, lumbia valley authority in the ling enjoyed it. To this day, normwest, wniuingion inter- when Barkley and Marvin J jnes, rupted constantly. Randall or Welling meet, their "We know what you're here greeting is: "The carriage awaits for," he said, "more federal mo- without." ney. Why can't your state un- dertake the necessary develop- z don,t know whether Ed me , c x Prichard, the so-called "Wonder Testimony by Oregon S t a t e B o the New Deal is ilt Senator Vernon Bull met similar ol ballot stuffing down in Ken. rebuffs. Whittington is a mill- tuck or not But t do know tant foe of the Columbia valley what Prich was guilty o in authority though 35 Mississippi Washington during the war and counties benefit from the similar the reason he got cussed out Tennessee valley authority. So, even more than 1 he had stuffed as Bull took the stand, Whitting- Fallot boxes ton asked if he had testified be- Prich was'the right-hand man fore the senate. Bull replied that to Fred vinsoni now chief jus. ,)??.... ,m , , , tice, during those grim and hec- Whittington: (To clerk record- tic war days wnen labor wanted ing testimony) "This is off the to raise wages manufacturers TCrJ JThea VfT ?ull) wanted to raise prices, the house Good then we 11 get rid of you wife couidn.t get enough of fast. Are you in favor of this hardly anything, and when all proposed CVA legislation? groups took their grumbling out Bull: Yes, sir, I am. I believe on tne office o economic stabil- inai me people oi me norm- ization -"" YOU COULD REAP TWICE AS rv FAST IF you PRACTICED QUICK A Jf y READING METHODS, SAY ODDS . , t T IT'S I IN 5 THAT A MONARCH WILL f V I g' HAVE SOME INSANITY.. 4j X fcf -J HISTORY SHOWS 200 fgf , (17 IfftRV INSANE MONARCHSjCp J Y ' "llMC liS- W jT&y FORESTS I fl $Z7 ARE BEING CUT r) JPSfi-'Jffir ggg&r 50 FASTER THAN Y . Cfs3P THEY ARE GROWING. A , P?erS" (THANKS FOR THIS ASSIST, JS. "UMlSgJl6&-, RONAID FRANK NORTH, CHIPKWA MS.H'IS) V When we are contemplating n n..... Rwtfl stand firmly rooted and majestically reaching t,enoid thou art there also, for the sky. Wow mucn more can we lean upon and trust in the ..Avlnottmtf ninf BPtlnn flf fltl Eternal God who "before the the God of endless Eternity and mountains were brought forth limitless power, we should re or ever the earth and the world member with great satisfaction were made" art God from ever- and gratitude that this same God lasting. reaches down to every living ' soul as an earthly father would We are likewise impressed by gather his children about him. evidence of tremendous power. That even if we get ourselves I once stood by the Dry Falls of mixed up in hell, behold, he will the Grand Coulee. Geologists tell be there also, just as an earthly us .that these gigantic falls ceas- father would be If his children ed their thundering roar long were in trouble. The Psalmist before Niagara Falls came into wrote: "Like as a father pitieth being. Today they stand dry and his children, so the Lord pitieth silent. They were once capable them that fear him." He also of producing power greater than wrote: (Psalm 23) "Yea, though the energy generated by all the I walk through the valley of the falls and dams producing power shadow of death, I will fear no in our country today. Yet, all evil, for thou art with me, thy this power is infinitesimal when rod and staff they comfort me." UP NOT DOWN FUR THER Women's Necklines Soon to Go Back 'Where They Belong' Hollywood (IP) A Hollywood designer says women's neck lines soon will be back where they belong "at the neck instead of the naval." "Paris fashions are tending to destroy the morale and morals of the American woman," fashion designer Helen Rose told a newsman. "Indecency is never smart fashion, you know. The well groomed woman prefers to be on the best dressed, not the best undressed fashion lists." The naughty French bathing suit and the deep plunge neck line, said Miss Rose, make American women look like chorus girls from the Folies bergere. Miss Rose, who designs clothes for June Allyson, Kathryn Grayson, Elisabeth Taylor, Esther Williams and other actresses, says the new French influence is merely a passing fad "Because we are, basically, a moral race. Women are going to realize once again that concealment is more intriguing to a male than revealment." That's what Miss Rose said. west- Whittington: (Irritably) "Yes, yes, we've heard all that. Now give us your reasons one, two, three." NOTE Whittington's curt treatment of these witnesses off idal record. Is chan-man, he r'ew?d-.mAs L" I VZL has complete censorship over J?"1" ""'". Vinson, the economic stabil izer, was a rock of Gibraltar in that battle. But his right bower and frequent punching bag was Ed Prichard. In fact, Prich prob ably got cussed out even more than Vinson, because Vinson was testimony, can revise or delete his own remarks. chiefly Prich. In Washington, it s frequently virc KDrcmcxto.,., .,..r the ghost writers and the admin- n, istrative assistants who have to Here is one story which Vice do a lot of the dirty work and President Alben Barkley does- who get the brickbats with none 1. 1 ieii, bui wnicn nis menas o the credit. Prich was in that tell on him. category. Weighing 300 pounds, It goes back to World War I , Hkrh, fmm v, when Barkley, then a member army for physical reasons, but of the house of representatives performed a far more useful ser from Kentucky, was touring the vice for his country holding the allied battle fronts with a group price line in Washington, of congressmen. The party in- if the country had followed eluded Rep. Marvin Jones of Vinson's and his urging and Texas, now chief justice of the kept prices and wages where U.S. court of claims; Rep. they were, we would not now Charles H. Randall of California, be suffering the uncertainty of Rep. Martin Welling of Utah, recession. and Barkley himself. So, if Prich, in a fantastic Arriving in London, the con- flight of political melodrama, gressional committee found it- did stuff a ballot box, the public self booked by the U.S. Embassy should know about it and act ac for a trip into the British coun- cordingly. However, the public tryside early the next morning, should also know that there So, placing their shoes outside were some qualities on the other the door to be shined according side of the ledger. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Anti-American Incidents Due to Envy and Prejudice -j By JAMES D. WHITE (SubAtltutim for DeWitt MacKenzle, AP Foreign New Analrit) The anti-American incidents reported from Shanghai occur In . a communist setting, but are not necessarily the direct work of the Reds. The police who beat up a The Reds said this showed that young. American vice-consul are Nanking was a "puppet of Amer- , '. the same ones who served before ican imperialism." The weaker Shanghai went Red. They might Nanking grew the better this "r have done the same sort of thing argument sounded to a lot of before, if they had though they Chinese. j( could get away with It. They Their resentment of foreigners have no love for Americans, but focused more and more on A- considerable envy and prejudice, mericans, with the Reds helping . The point is that they now at every turn, think these things may do them The Reds have chosen this some good. This is because the course partly because they are Reds have been filling the air communists, but also because with anti-American statements they occupy a certain strategic for purposes considerably bigger position in world politics, than Shanghai. ... Envy and prejudice against First of all, the communist " the foreigner, always present in formula has worked in their China, are coming to the sur- case. " face just as they did when Mao Tze-Tung, the Red chair- ."- Chaing Kai-Shek triumphed in mani shows not the slightest 1927 and after V-J Day. The dif- 3ign of going back on it now. In- ' ference between now and then stead he has said, again and is this: ' again, that his China stands firmly with Russia in the cold Chiang needed help from a- war and will fight for her it broad more urgently than the it gets hot. Reds do now and so his Nanking Mao is being more than just a government could not allow such good communist in this. He is , incidents to continue. The Reds looking at the world power pic might be able to stop them now, ture. but are not likely to because His China, as a communist their need for immediate help is power, will enjoy some bargain by no means so urgent. ing power with Russia. Russia Meanwhile such things can be cannot ignore this because China expected to continue. A great is too big to be contained to many Chinese need little urging mere Titoism. China will enjoy - to let the foreigner who has bargaining power with the west been around more than a cen- because of trade and the hope . . tury, living far better than most that she may never be quite aa of them could hope to know Red, or quite the same Red, as that he is tolerated at best and Russia. unwelcome at the worst. As a non-Communist power, The Reds have capitalized up- China would have no bargaining on this because as the Nanking power to speak of with Russia, ' government grew weaker in the and no more with the west than , civil war, it became more de- Chiang Kai-Shek had. pendent upon American aid or As history has shown, that the prespect thereof. was not enough. Elbow Benders' Lament in Jingle D Cl m. . r r chicaeo w-jinTie. nn.. mil. , 0010 statement ot ract SIPS FOR SUPPER Um-Good By DON UPJOHN We should have worn a mackintosh and bib to work today. Before us are about 55 postcards from about 55 kids telling in 55 different ways how much they like watermelon. The cards iren't to us, but . nidi. w j! Dob Upjohn Yesterday the thermometer went almost up to the point where the girls probably began considering getting their fur coats out of storage. It's begin ning to feel like another today as we write with the echo of watermelon shushing in our ears. Maybe they could compromise this year by wearing shorts with fur around the edges we were about to say bottom, but maybe that wouldn't be so good. are sent to Bish op's store here and loaned by Ralph Cooley, manager. The store each year sends a load of watermelons to the boys' camp at Silver Falls under super vision of Gus Mnnre for a real . 1 A tin. walnrmltlnn nangup " Notice a local jewelry store is feed and this year each one of advertl8ing pocket watches with the kids took occasion to write an alarm attachment which is in his thanks on a postcard. A our idea of one of the greatest samule from Billy Van Dalta advances made by civilization in ..m . . ..... ti.. years. That's the ideal sort of a says, "That watermelon was the iime Qne tha( c(m fee car best I ever had. I have never ried right on the perstm and before in my life tasted water- thus avoid all the necessity of melon like that." So, as we this troublesome idea of having read on down through the stack to undress when one retires for of cards it's easy to see why the night. Armed with such a we were sorry we hadn't come contrivance all that will be equipped with a rain coat and necessary when one is overpow- a bib. The more we read the cred by slumber Is merely to more the old mouth began to fall on the bed, clothes and all, water and but for superhuman and drop off to sleep secure in effort would have been dripping the knowledge that one will be down over the old chin. We'd aroused on time without having liked to have peeked in on that to hop out of bed to shut the watermelon feed. We bet the pesky thing off. The same will sound of the falls was drowned go for afternoon naps, or even out in the glorious inhalation of convenient periods of the work- those there watermelons by ing day when a guy might want those half a hundred or more to tear off a few winks with the kids. Just making like Shush boss's back turned. Yea, by backwards or an ingrowing gum, this hootnanny has almost shush, as it were. GoshI endless possibilities. Chicago m Jingle, jingle, little jar Now we wonder where you are. So goes the lament of the Elbow Bender Regulars. They're steady customers at the Cycle Inn tavern. They tossed their loose pennies Into a jar on the bar for almost a year. The coins piled up until there were about 8,000 of them. The Regulars figured it would be filled in a few more days. Then they'd have a free beer party. But there will be no party. A thief walked off with the PASS HAT FOR PRI NEVILLE FAMILY Strange Series of Events , May End in Act of Kindness Frinev'ille (IP) An unlikely series of events destroyed a deaf mute couple's new automobile Thursday, but Prineville may see that the couple gets another. It started when Mr. and Mrs. , the match on the pavement, the Jessie C. Wright, John Day, deaf truck burst into flames, mutes and parents of six chil- The fire spread to the service dren, parked here. They were station and to the Wrights' car. en route home from Portland The Wrights' car and the tank with a car they had just bought. were destroyed. The service sta- It was loaded with boxes of new tion suffered $2,000 damage, clothing for the children. The Wrights did not have in- An oil truck parked nearby to surance, but a tavern owner, Joe make a delivery to a service sta- Drew, began passing the hat. tion. Then a man, afflicted with Prineville residents are chipping palsy, stopped by the truck to in, and the Wrights may get a light a cigarette. He scratched new car out of it. CAPITAL CARTOON Boston (U.R) Sign In a Water street barber shop: "We need your head to ran our business." POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Some Advantages Found in Vacation Underground By HAL BOYLE New York (IP) An unconscious hero of our times is Ray Em mert of Zanesville, Ohio. This 40-year-old ex-soldier solved his personal unemployment problem by having himself buried alive in a coffin six feet underground. For weeks thou sands of curious people thronged to his temporary grave and drop ped coins into a contribution box for the privl- ged, collected his financial trib lege of staring down through a 10-inch observation tunnel at Emmert's placid countenance, Met LiMi Bml BojU What could be better? No : worrisome sunburn, no vexing mosquitoes, no hotel bills, no sore muscles. R This relaxing fad of being buried alive might well sweep - the cduntry except for one thing:., . Every man has an uneasy feeling that, once he was six feet underground, his relatives and friends might decide he wasn't worth the trouble of dig- ging up. Overheard on a bus: "Women are just natural showoffs. Why do you think A?ter 45" days Emmert emer- TS f k ged, collected his fanancial trib- and let their hair grow long7 SHE HAD THE RIGHT OF WAY AND TOOK IT COURTESY PREVENTS ACCIDENTS ute, and claimed a new "buried -7 - 1I II J XT1- flklnf Anm- HUVC ICVU1U. lilB ViJAtx vuiii- plaint was that he got "tired of looking at nothing but faces." The whole-experience typifies What can a man believe any- . more? The corset industry snvi A- . the desire of twentieth century merican women buy 3,500,000 man 10 escape irom oppressive "lalsies a year. reality. And it may set a pattern And, as if that weren't bad ? for the man of the future. enough, Manhattan butcher " There Is no reason why every ,hops are now using rubber par man shouldn't, from time to sley in their display cases. .-, time, follow Emmert's example. All he needs to "get away from The late Don Marquis, one it all" is a shovel, a cheap pine of the best loved writers of hil coffin and a friend to cover time, once did a stint in Holly him up. wood. But the film company'! The milk man could lower method of work made him " him a fresh bottle of milk every nervous six weeks to do a . morning, and the delivery boy script, when a month of idle- from the delicatessen could drop ness while his agent turned up him a ham sandwich or a hard- another job. boiled egg once or twice a day. Marquis fled back to New It would be a wonderful way to York. Later a friend, seeking -. spend a restful vacation right his help on a script, called and 1 in your own back yard. And you said: ( wouldn't have to go through that "You want to make som annual argument with your wife money?" over whether to go to the moun- "How much will it cost me?"1 tains or the seashore. asked Marquis causiously. "? s