Capital A Journal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Aisittant 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 tor 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, $1.00; One Year, $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, Wednesday, August 10, 1949 Still a Timely Warning On this, the 75th birthday anniversary of ex-President Herbert Hoover, belatedly now acknowledged as one ofrthe greatest Americans and foremost humanitarians of the world, it is fitting to reprint one of the best speeches he ever made. It was a warning to Americans on the "weak ening of the structure of liberty in our nation," and is even now more timely than when delivered nine years ago. The brief address was made at the national republi can convention in Philadelphia and in the excitement of the struggle ending in the nomination of Wendell Willkie and Charles L. McNary, attracted as little attention as did . Lincoln's Gettysburg speech on its delivery. Mr. Hoover cited Europe's hundred-year fight for liberty and then how Europe in less than 20 years after World War I surren dered freedom for bondage. This was not due to communism or fascism, said Mr. Hoover. ' They were the effects. Out of the vexations and dislocations came fascism in one place, communism in an other, and "social democrats" in another, really socialists, all winding the chains of bureaucratic planning that stran gled private enterprise. Liberty had been weakened be fore the dictators arouse with their appeals to prejudice and class, racial and religious animosities. In explaining the cause he said: "In every single case before the rise of totalitarian gov ernments there has been a period 'dominated by economic planners.' Each of these nations had an era under starry eyed men who believed that they could plan and force the i economic life of the people. They believed that was the way to correct abuse or to meet emergencies in systems of free enterprise. They exalted the State as the solvent of all economic problems. "These men thought they were liberals. But they also thought they could have economic dictatorship by bureauc racy and at the same time preserve free speech, orderly justice and free government. They might be called the totalitarian liberals. They were the spiritual fathers of the New Deal. "These men are not Communists or Fascists. But they mixed these ideas into free systems. It is true that Com munists and Fascists were round about. They formed pop ular fronts and gave the applause. These men shifted the relation of government to free enterprise from that of umpire to controller. Directly or indirectly they politically controlled credit, prices, production of industry, farmer and laborer. They devalued, pump-primed and deflated. They controlled private business by government competi tion, by regulation and by taxes. They met every failure with demands for more and more power and control. . . , When it was too late they discovered that every time they stretched abuse, then somehow, somewhere, men's minds became confused. At once men became fearful and hesi tant. Initiative slackened, industry slowed down produc tion. "Then came chronic unemployment and frantic govern ment spending in an effort to support the unemployed. Government debts mounted and finally government credit was undermined. Out of the miseries of their people ' there grew pressure groups business, labor, farmers, de manding relief or special privilege. Class hate poisoned cooperation." A Silver-Platter Plan Eugene is unhappy over its traffic, problem. The city to the south apparently feels that its piece-meal attempts to handle traffic there have turned out wholly inadequate. Consensus of opinion in Eugene is that the only solution is a traffic management and development plan. The Register-Guard of that city cites a comprehensive traffic study now being made in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Since the two cities are comparable, the features of the Albuquerque survey are noted. At a cost of $60,000, Albuquerque is having engineers of the National Automotive Safety Foundation of Wash ington, D.C., survey the area. The study is intended to offer a program toward which the New Mexico community can build over the next 10 or 20 years with some assurance that money spent in building will not be wasted. The Eugene newspaper comments that every city in the United States is facing the problem of modernizing to meet present and future traffic needs. Few are going about it as intelligently as Albuquerque, the Register-Guard says. So that Eugene might develop a "clean-cut" traffic plan, the paper suggests a graduated levy for a five-year con tinuing study for a functional traffic plan. How familiar the cries sound from Eugene! But, in the case of Salem, the desired traffic plan has already been offered by top-rated highway engineers: The Baldock plan. And the study is the result of years and years of observation like the one in Albuquerque. But what reception does a plan that Albuquerque was forced to pay $(i0.000 for, get in Oregon's capital? The months of haggling over whether or not the Baldock plan should be adopted look silly when Albuquerque's and Eugene's efforts are considered. Perhaps, if Salem had ben forced to shell out $0)0,000, it would grab at the Bal dock plan. But since the city had the traffic plan offered it on a silver platter, it didn't appreciate what has been given it. And, besides that, the plan is backed by millions in state highway commission funds to do the job outlined. So far, Salem has missed the true value of the Baldock plan. But it now appears that the city council will actu ally take definite steps next Monday night to come to a written agreement with the highway commission to go ahead with the Baldock plan. The silver-platter traffic plan for Salem is what other cities, like Eugene and Albuquerque, spend thousands of dollars and years trying to get. Surely, the city council now realizes that fact and will so vote next Monday night. Anything Can Happen in Alaska Petersburg, Alaska, Aug. M After 50 years In Alaska, Bartender Jim Brcnnan says he is seldom surprised by any of the "strange happenings under the midnight sun." But Brennan reflected frank amazement at the discovery of a plumber's crew after he couldn't get water from the faucet. (Brennan explained that the stuff is necessary even In a bar.) The crew discovered a six-inch trout firmly wedged in tht water pipe. BY BECK Life's Little Lessons TUAT WUAT lA TAIISIklA '-".1 GOT THE SPRINKLER GOING IT DOESNT MEAN YOU'RE Xi V-W.VgaSip!? n lite' TF'X IT DOESNT MEAN YOU RE ,KV:::jFP .W'M q'fft) WATERING THE LAWN. Z&&ZKKkm? 'lLNO WONDER MY WATER J SBthVAiiC.t 'J,)IP jfM. BILLS ARE HtGH.rsOa WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Pearson, a Husband, Too, Leaves for Vacation By DREW PEARSON Washington Maybe I shouldn't admit it, but I've been having Increasing trouble with my wife lately. Usually she is the easiest person in the world to get along with but not in August. Every summer she labors under the delusion that Washington is not cool in August and that I can write a column just as well from some other BY GUILD . Wizard of Odds part of the U. S. A. She even jolts my self esteem by in sinuating that the world would get along just as well if no I column was I written at all I for a while. In vain do I argue that some one has to keep an eye on the lobbyists and the legislators. It does no good. i i I Drew Pesrion I have always felt that the country would have been much better off if he had continued in office; for General Marshall, fine and sincere as he was, had to unlearn the military habits of a lifetime which was not easy. Thus, for a year or more the nation marked time when it should have been marching for ward on the road to peace. WILL CLARK BE LIBERAL? Some republican senators, plus certain newspapers, have been panning Tom Clark, the attorney general. They claim The five-percenters could run he is a politician, a hack lawyer off with the U. S. treasury and and no addition to the supreme Mrs. P. just wouldn't worry court. ' IN DICE, ODDS ARE 111! 5" At 36 TO I A6AINST YOUR ilfM (F ff) ROLLING A DOUBLE SIX. f:5w; if li THE HOUSE ulVES YOU 30 JuA Jiff L t SIPS FOR SUPPER Wrong Way Per Cent. By DON UPJOHN It seems some of the boys back in Washington have been making fat on a basis of 5 per cent, according to various news dispatches. And such dough apparently comes from money invested in war and savings bonds which pay off to the inves tor on a basis of only about 3 per cent. That does n't seem quite fair to have it si phon off at the other end faster than it does at home but the boys are a little smarter back there and work evidently. Don UnJohD at it harder, Termites Tossed In The county court has received a postcard from a chap up Mo lalla way who writes, "I was told you want some cedar piling. I would like to get a list of what you want. Also if you'll take wormy knots and other worm signs. Cedar is scarce but worms don't seem to be." about it if the thermometer was above 80. In vain, also, do I scan the weather reports and gloat over the fact that it's been 97 in New York, 96 in Philadelphia, 99 in Nebraska and only 95 in record of battling for the little Washington. Washington, I guy. argue, is a much cooler place. When Tom first became at- But it makes no difference. torney general, critics said he "We don't have to go to New wouldn't have the nerve to go York, Philadelphia or Nebras- after the big monopolies. Thur- I think they're wrong. Tom Clark has his faults, and some eccentricities. He looks like a politician, he talks like a politi cian, but when the chips are down he's a tough, gd-through fighter, with a pretty consistent DETECTIVES. BY ODDS OF 9 TO 1. 6ET INFORMATION Cttoser FROM "TIPS" ANP "SQUEALS" ka," Mrs. P. replies. "There are other places in the U.S.A. be sides New York, Philadelphia or Nebraska. Also, there's Canada." Obviously I can't win. I The Open Door Policy London VP) When Nii Kwa bena Bonne III, tribal chieftain from British West Africa's Gold Coast, heard about Britain's na tional health scheme he decided it was an opportunity not to be overlooked, he arrived in Lon- At Albany last night a com mittee of sports writers and oth ers passed out the awards for American Legion baseball to the best pitcher, best first baseman, etc. When they got around to who was the best catcher on the four teams eight names were passed on and the committee de cided there wasn't any catcher good enough for an award. These lads stand up as backstops all the season and have the stuffing knocked out of them by man Arnold's trust-busting, they said, would come to a dead halt. But Tom fooled 'em. He has brought twice as many anti trust cases as any other attorney general including the case to should have known this from break up the Du Pont empire, previous summers. But there is one of the toughest ever to come nothing more unwise than a out f the justice department, stubborn husband, so I resorted When Tom Clark was a stu to delaying tactics. dent at the University of Texas I got out the railroad and air- he roomed with a Jewish boy. nlained plane timetables and left them And because his roommate Morse is bet in a conspicuous place in the wasn't invited to join a fratern- ter known for living room. It did no good. ity, Tom also refused to join a his skill at the Mrs. P. wanted a date, the ex- fraternity, and did not do so type writer Send your "Odds" questions on any subject to "The Wizard of Odds," care of the Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER 'One Man's Family' Autho Has 20 Years to Credit By HAL BOYLE New York VP) Carlton E. Morse is a pleasant, balding man of 48 who bakes his own bread. He also eats steak and potatoes for breakfast seven days a week and be lieves he makes the best apple pie in America. "It's an ap ple pie with pears in it and a little dash of rum," he ex act date, the hour, the name of until after his roommate had however, than his skill with the sary." the first broadcast of the pro gram still play their original roles. Members of the live cast have had a total of 22 children during the 18 years. Morse and gram is really an idealization his wife, Patricia, are childless "The program is really an idealization of my husband's owe family," said Mrs. Morse. "Hii father and mother are a wonder ful couple. They just celebrated their golden wedding anniver- the hotel, the time of the train's departure. I event told her that Bob Allen was busy and wasn't ready yet to take over the column. She didn't swallow that one either. finished college and could not skillet. Since 1929 he has turned be embarrassed. out 20.000,000 words of radio And when Tom Clark helped drama. organize the Federal Bar asso- Morse rises every morning ai 6:30 and cooks breakfast. Bj asso- seven he is at his tvDewriter ciation, he shocked some of his His most durable oreaawinner Re fa a swjt writer B 9;3( he has finished his stint foi don last night from Accra, capi tal of the Gold Coast, where he fast pitching and take a chance maintains a 56-room castle. To- on busted thumbs and fingers day he told reporters: "I under- and aj"eiet d?on the oveted , , - .. . , ,., , . award. Sounds like a scaly way stand I can obtain health treat- to promot6 baseball interest ment free here, and spectacles, among the youngsters. At least too." Bonne explained he had a they were good enough to scrap stomach ailment and had been it out all summer. in poor health since he was op- ' erated on in 1944. The chief Out at the hobo camps they came to the right place. Under scare up a concoction that's the British health plan visitors called Mulligan stew. And an as well as residents are eligible other one stirred up at the ball for free medical care. park. FAITH IN FUTURE LIFE Survey Shows Belief In Life After Death eollpaeues hv riomsinriino thnt has been One Man s ramiiy If you don't need a vacation Negro attorneys be admitted to JIEJLT. the then General Vaughan does," membership. for 18 continuous years. H takes him two mornings U was her comeback. "I'm almost Tom has been under a fire of Morse believes this is a record write the weekly program, an beginning to feel sorry for him." criticism from his old friends in jor this type 0f dramatic serial, his mythical family has growi So this is to announce that Texas for championing civil lib- e program tells the trials, s0 large he needs a chart now having reached the end of ray erties. But he has never flinch- tribulations, and victories of an to keep the relations straight, domestic rope, this will be the ed either as an enforcement American family Henry Bar- His listeners take the Bar last column to be foisted on a officer or as an educator for ,.,r rPtird stockbroker, his hour family very seriously. not ana neipiess puoiic unui uivii uuerues. ms ireeaom September. train, bringing the declaration The best reporter in Washing- of independence and other prico- ton, Bob Allen, has been kind less papers to the American enough to take over until then, people, will go down in history as one of the most constructive Before I close the season's moves ever made to educate the score, however, there are a nation on civil liberties. couple of points I would like to Ana tew people wilt ever tive characters, and I'm in the since then he has kept hii set straight. If anything should know how long and hard he third generation of the family." characters alive and talking nappen to me 1 wouia not want wornea to organize mat train. He is proud that six ot the Thev grow older as ordinan wife, Fanny, and their off- "iour years ago I killed os spring. It has gone on so long one of the characters in an aut it makes "Abie's Irish Rose" and accident," Morse said, ''sinc "Oklahoma" seem like one- death must come to every fam- night stand tent shows. ny. But hundreds of peopI "When I started there were wrote in and protested. Som only seven characters," said said they would never listen t Morse. "Now there are 18 ac- the program again. not, seven of every 10 Minne- of life after death. a state-wide survey by the Min- Minneapolis (U.B Scientific or sotans believe there is some form A United Press report inspired neapolis Tribune Minnesota poll. The report described attempts by Duke university to establish a scientific basis for a soul that lives on. benevolence, nearness to God a thrilling feeling." More than three-fourths of those believing in a soul also believe people will be rewarded or punished according to the life they lead on earth. Sixteen per cent say it isn't so and seven per cent have no opinion. In Durham, N.C., a Duke uni versity psychologist, Dr. J. B. Rhine, points to evidence which "strongly favors the possibility that there is something about human personality" which might survive after death. Some 70 per cent of those polled in Minnesota say they be lieve the soul docs live on; 21 per cent indicate disbelief; and nine per cent have no opinion. Ideas of just what life after death might be are predomin antly pleasant, with explana tions such as: "It's peaceful no pain, no jealousy, no worries"; "A place of perfect cleanliness and beau ty"; "Your soul goes to Purga tory and then to Heaven"; "It would be akin to a feeling of MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Chiang's Blockade Forces Reds to Russian Trade By JAMES. D. WHITE (Stltutltlltlni for DfWIll Mc Ki-lillr, AP Foiflsn Nfr Antlnl) Chiang Kai-Shek's strategic device for blockading Red Chinese ports is working. That is, it is not winning the civil war or preventing its loss, for free China is crumbling industrial and consumer goods which China needs to rebuild. But since the blockade by sea and air went into effect after the fall of Shanghai, shipping the wrong impression to prevail about certain people. For instance, I have been pretty rough on some of the White House hangers-on who influence President Truman. But while I deplore the choice of these White House cronies, I continue to applaud most of Truman's legislative program. The president is sincere, hon est, diligent, sometimes vindic tive, frequently impulsive, and not always efficient. But his tory will show that 90 per cent of the time he has been fighting for the little fellow and that's a lot more than can be said of some presidents. The great tragedy is that he harms his own program and the common folks he is trying to help by his stubborn loyalty to certain cronies. (Copyright, 1949) seven actors who appeared on people do, and one of his big- .-. Best problems came when all hii Harmony in the Rush Hour Chicago VP) Lines of automobiles were snarled In a rush hour jam at the edge of the loop. Impatient drivers kept blow ing their horns. The traffic cop at the corner was almost but not quite at wit's end. He blew his whistle, raised his hands a la Toscanini and bellowed above the din: "Let's try it again. All together now in the key of C." characters were married. "There was a little slum there," he admitted, "until th children grew up, and createj some new love interest. "My wife is the best critic o) my writing. She can tell whei I'm off the track better thai anybody." COLD FACTS ON NEW EXPORT Glacial Ice Fascinates By Its 'Lasting' Quality Juneau, Alaska (U.R) Juneau's new industry is climbing as high as a mastodon's eye "Million-year-old" glacier ice is being exported. It takes time for the stuff to melt in highballs. The cold facts are that several years ago a chunk, chipped from Alaska's Mendenhall glacier, steadily. But, by cutting the Rods off from normal foreign trade via the sea, Chiang is driving them more firmly into the arms of Soviet Russia than ever before. Some time ago I wrote a column about the differences between President Truman and ex-Secretary of State Byrnes in which I reported that Mr. Tru man had become irked at Mr Byrnes just a week or so before he resigned, and that Byrnes' resignation, which he himself had planned for some time, had been hastened by that irritation. Mr. Byrnes has now written limbs over huge me that the latter part of this publicity purposes, column was incorrect and that Mr. Truman was not irked. I regret this error, and am glad to make the correction. I should like further to repeat what I have written before, that In his spare time Morse col lects old silver and vintagi wines. Food is his'hobby. Wher he and his wife came here t prepare "One Man's Family" foi television presentation this fall they brought along their owi pots and pans. Morse has two bottles of 180! Napoleon brandy in his wes' coast home. He doesn't know iust what to do with the bottles AlocVane 4V.a ina KAnn,,a .... . . - - fWn tn a lars New York .. " wnicn cost $iou apiece. CKv cocktail Dartv " "as Deen lomPresseQ lor 50 "I keep them in & safe," h( "l ... many centuries, has less air in said. "Maybe if there's an oc- Its snow-melting quality was it and therefore doesn't melt so casion big enough I'd like t heralded from coast to coast fast. open one to celebrate. But thi Since, tons of it have been used To prove itj a 108.ton chunk other one I don't think I'd evei from San Francisco to Holly- was put on display alongside a want to open." wood and down the eastern sea- pjece of ordinary commercial "But they're evaporating,' Doard- ice, the same weight. The com- smiled Mrs. Morse. Some of it has been shipped mercial hunk of ice melted in "Yes," sighed her. husbandJ to warm Hawaii, where hula 56 hours, the glacier ice taking "About two teaspoonsful everj ' girls were asked to drape their 65 hours and three minutes. ten years." chunks for Pieces of the glacier ice have been freighted down from here to the States for door prizes and gags. It's no novelty here. They've been using it for years at local Tho nrni nr rmrr,,-! iroH has been greatly curtailed. Fac- betwren Red China and the west torics laeked raw materials. The is fading jobless increased. The current slipped. With Shanghai dying on their The Reds realized what white hands as a great port, the Reds elephants they had fallen heir are planning an organized evac- to in places like Shanghai and nation of the city's surplus pop- Tientsin. Without a large vol- ulation and plan to reduce it ume of foreign trade they mean eventually to about half its pros- nothing but trouble, ent swollen population of six million people. This has forced a drastic shift The Reds could be expected to in the Reds' economic policy, align themselves politically with It appears to have speeded up Moscow, but economically the their political polarization. At cards were stacked at first in first their idea seemed to be to favor of considerable trade with buy abroad from anyone that the west. This trade, everyone would treat them on what they felt sure, would be largely on considered equal terms. Red terms, but still was alluring Now the talk is of getting enough that many foreign busi- along on what China can pro- nessmen planned to stay on and riuce herself, plus what Soviet give it a whirl. Russia can supply. The fact was and still is that This greatly limits the pros Soviet Russia cannot be expect- pect for business of any kind in d to supply the vast range of China, and meant hard time. in my opinion Jimmie Byrnes bars despite "ice worms." The resigned just when he was strik- tall story is the favorite of ing his real stride as a great sourdoughs whenever they meet secretary of state. up with a chichako. Shore Patrol Has No Room For Dogs, Massey Learns Seattle () Seaman Sam Massey was determined to get his Alaskan dog out of the canine "brig." He did. But he landed in the brig himself. The dog landed back in the city pound. The navy man told police he had brought the half-husky, half-collie from Alaska. He left it with a friend here because he was heading for his Brooklyn, N. Y., home on a 60-day leave. The friend abandoned Happy (that's the dog's name). The humane society picked up the pooch and put him in the pound. Massey was unhappy. Police picked him up after the night watchman's wife re ported seeing him inside the pound, boosting Happy onto a roof and over the lenre. "I love that dog and the dog loves me," Massey told officers. The night watchman's wife agreed that both of them acted that way. But they were parted again today. Navy officials reported Massey was in custody of the shore patrol, which doesn't have accommodations for dogs. Arden ICECREAM . 7e ?Vut4 ?ctte&t