1 i 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 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, 5c; Monthly, $1.00; One Tear, $12.00. By Mail 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, Oregoni Wednesday, August 24, 1949 Confused Thinking of a CVA Booster C. Girard Davidson has long been telling the people of the Pacific Northwest of the "blessings" of the proposed Columbia Valley Administration. Davidson, who is assistant secretary of the interior, has also told those same people of this region that it is not for them to decide whether or not a CVA should be establish ed out here. The matter is too big for them. It is up to congress to decide if a CVA is good or bad. At the same time, however, he bounces into Portland with smiles for the coming hearings on what the people of the region think of a CVA. His position is rather confusing, isn't it? In one position, he expresses great faith in the people who will receive the "blessings" of a valley administra tion. In the next, he says those Pacific Northwesterners have no need of voting on a CVA because it is up to the paternalistic government in Washington to decide what is best for them. And then he switches into another pose and declares that a hearing should be held to get views on what residents of the region think about a CVA. By the time he gives his three different opinions, the people of the region have reason to become more leary of this ardent advocate and his government administration that would be above the states. The CVA would be a "little Washington" for this part of the country. CVA boosters object to the use of the words, "super govern ment," to describe their scheme. And, if anything, whatever Davidson says from time to time seems to confirm the conviction that what he has in mind is a little bureaucratic world out in these parts an swerable to the president. Of course, such a bureaucracy would be for the "benefit" of the people but he doesn't want those people to vote on it. A CVA would be too big a thing for them to decide. In one respect, Davidson has a point. Congress foots the bill for the huge development projects whether in this part of the nation or any other part. Thus congress should have something to say as to what is done with those pro jects. But, that is congress and not a picked triumvirate of the president ruling a CVA. This all goes back to the matter of the best way to de velop the region under our democratic form of government. And the best way still looks the way it has always looked. That is : Joint leadership of development by the people of the region with federal agencies established by congress. Davidson would still have his bureaucracy, accountable to the president, do the job. A Real Economy Move Secretary of Defense Johnson has announced a whole sale slash of civilian workers in the armed services in his drive to cut military spending. Navy installations are the hardest hit with a reduction of 76,000 ordered, the army next with 41,000, and the airforce with 12,000, in spired by a lack of funds. The program will result in an estimated saving of $200 million in the current fiscal year ending June 30, and $500 million a year thereafter. A total of 50 installations will be closed down, many others cut severely. The savings were worked out by the individual services. It will be interesting to watch the antics of congressmen who have been loudly clamoring for economy in the de fense establishment, in the effort to delay and prevent the cut-backs in their own districts and states. They are all for cost cuts in the other fellow's bailiwick, but not in their own. But there is no reason why, with a large percentage of our sea and air force scrapped or in moth balls and our army on a peace time quota, civilian workers should not be proportionately slashed. Already such senate economists as Bridges, Tobey, Brewster, Smith, Saltonstall, Lodge, Maybank, Johnston, Nolan, Downey, Martin, Meyers, Ives and Dulles of seven states have organized a "show-down" fight to thwart the cut-backs. That is one reason why we have a national debt now of $255 billions an increase of $3 billions since June 30. Now if the president and his cabinet coorate to effect a similar slash in other departments of government, a balanced budget may be in sight. The chances are dim, however, with a congressional election coming on, the "welfare" socialist state the administration objective and pork-barrel politics ruling congress. We need a few more Johnsons as well as more Byrds, of whom Mr. Truman says we already have "too many." Early Day Sheepmen A bronze plaque carrying the names of 24 so-called pio neer pure-bred sheep breeders will be dedicated in the state fair sheep barns on September 6 by Governor McKay. If this dedication is to honor only early members of the Oregon Pure-bred Sheep association, ail well and good. But, if it is intended as a tribute to the real early Oregon importers and breeders of pure-bred sheep, it is historically incorrect. The first sheep imported into Oregon were brought bv sea by the Hudson's Bay company in 1833. They were merinos. In 1842, Joseph Gale, an early settler of Washington county, brought a flock overland from California. These were Spanish merinos. The first flock to be driven across the plains was that brought by Joshua Shaw and his son, Alva, of Polk county, in 1814. In 1848, Jos. Watt brought a small band of 330 to gether with home carding machines and spindles. In 1851, Hiram Smith (active in early Oregon politics), brought the first pure-bred merinos to Oregon. In 1853, P. R. and D. P. Thompson brought a large flock across the plains. Early in 1860, R. J. Jones and S. B. Rockwell brought pure-bred American and French merinos from Addison county, Vermont. They sold a French merino buck to Jos eph Holman and J. L. Parish for $500; also four breeding ewes at $275. Other early breeders were John Minto, Ralph C. Geer and T. L. Davidson. Minto wrote an interesting account of the work of these two breeders which was published in The Orcgonian on November 11, 1863. BY BECK WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND BY GUILD Popular People THE YACHTFUL OF PEOPLE " WHO CRUISE LEISURELY UNDER HUNDREDS OF RILED MOTORIST? HAVE TO WAIT TILL THEY PASS Truman Determined to Get Wixard of odds Welfare Department Plan (Ed. Note While Drew Pearson is on vacation, the Wash ington Merry-Go-Round will be written by his old partner, Robert S. Allen). SIPS FOR SUPPER It Sizzles By DON UPJOHN Sooner or later somebody's going to have to buy the mem bers of the state board of control a set apiece of asbestos gloves. From indications they are badly needed when they are called upon to handle a certain hot potato which seems to be too hot to handle to date this is being a decision on the site of the pro posed new state By ROBERT S.ALLEN Washington Congress hasn't heard the last of government re organization plan No. 1 to set up a department of welfare. The senate's turndown has not cooled President Truman's determination to put the proposal through. He will make an other try to get approval. ' The president disclosed this this class for three years. He ia in a talk with Reps. Robert very regular in his appearance. Crosser and Wayne Hays of When he can't attend, Mrs. Ohio. They conferred with him Vaughan takes over, on government reorganization Vaughan uses themes from the plans, regular material prepared by "As long as government re- the presbyterian church for organization can be vetoed by sucn classes. He does not wear either branch of congress," said his uniform to church. Vaughan Hays, "it will be impossible to js an eider of the church, and effect economy in expenditures, popular with parishioners and "It's the old story of lobby his ciass, He enlivens his teach pressure. The lobbies go to work ing with jokes and witticisms, behind-the-scenes and kill these NOTE Vaughan has told proposals. That happened when friends that regular army anti Hoover was president and what pathy to reserve officers is one the senate did on this proposal Gf the secret influences behind was more of the same." the senate probe. Vaughan has "That's true," said Truman, ong been critical of "West "but they are not scaring me. Pointers." If the Hoover commission's mag- ... nificent report is to mean any- TIDELAND OIL thing it will have to be put into gen Joe Q'Mahoney (D-Wyo),' e ,eT ' . , , chairman of the interior affairs "T mm ontna In kppn nn spnri. , . .... . committee, has thrown a mon- I TIME TO THROW J-&35v&t & i Ss THE DENTAL .SPSt ASSOCIATION. P DID YOUR HOUSE COST 525,000 OR MORE? - IHEN li b y IU I 7UU tmrmiiv an ARCHITECT. (A tip of me beam m ADRIAN WILSON. BEVERLY HILLS.) 6IRLS, (fS A PERMANENT? THREE TO 2 IT WAS PONE AT HOME, ing plans for that purpose to key wrench into the drive to congress. Whenever one is ve- ,.,,. It.,u ,i,i iMi i steamroller through a so-called toed, 1 11 send up a revised plan . a , ,. , r compromise on the tideianct 111 IIS picut:. office building in Portland. "East side, west side, all around the town" is evi dently the theme song for this m omentous question. A p parcntly it had been all set to make the deci sion Tuesday pair the damage. Yesterday the state announced it would spend $2,000 more to trap the pigeons. TOUCHY HISTORY House rules committee consi- Ooi GpJohn One trouble with our Salem Senators has been a case of poor timing. For instance, there's this colored player Art Penning ton sent down from the Beavers to bolster a waning cause. He showed up here and on the home lot meagered out a measly scratch hit out of 14 times at afternoon when it was postponed Then the team starts on the again. The simplest maneuver aa ana ne s rainy u r n e a would probably be to drop things up knocking down fences memos of all the sites in a hat and punching the zone full of if a big enough hat could be 'holes. This has happened a lot found, and draw one out. Or f times with our local greats, the board might assign the job " they'd switch things around of Sheriff Mike Elliott what- and perform at home like they ever decision he made would no do abroad they'd pack 'em in. Hnnhf nnhnncii hio nrpsnnt flnnH stnee nf noDularitv. Not So Tough oil issue. He was supposed to sponsor "compromise" legislation in the . 1 T3.. nrt.. aVnrn;n;nn ,k. deration of the arms-for-Europe .. ' . , cnteI. bill unexpectedly touched off a f.fuS rDnf,i. t-J,. i a ences with California, Texas sharp explos.on on American a)d Louisiana officialSi 0.Maho. so0ry' , ,u r, ney refused to have anything to D.!.Priii"tTa.S?.re:Re,P: do with them. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Revolt Against Moscow Spreads in Europe By DeWITT MacKENZIE Foreign Attain Analyst , The defiance of Moscow by Yugoslavia, Finland and the mod erate communists of Soviet occupied Germany gives one to pause for consideration of the significance. We shall be rash, I think, to jump to conclusions in trying to figure the potentialities of this "revolt" against Moscow, or how criticized former President Her bert Hoover for assailing admin- Hearings on the measures are scheduled to open today before a house judiciary subcommittee, headed by Rep. Francis E. Wal- Costly Birds St. Paul, Minn. (U.R) pigeons that fly around the state draw. Robert O. Achison, 30, of capital and other public build- Dallas, was helping four Pitts ings are going to cost the citi- burgh men push a stalled car zens of Minnesota $10,000 this last night when, he told the po year. The birds' droppings have lice, one of them reached for plugged up roof drains causing his hip. Ackison whipped out rain water to seep through sky- his .45. The stranger called po lights and injured plaster walls lice. Ackison was arrested for and ceilings. The last lcgisla- violating the Uniform Firearms ture appropriated $8,000 to re- act." Why the Dog Sounded So Loud OLYMPIA (U.R) Harold Skinner complained to police early this morning that a barking dog was keeping him awake. Police investigated and reported that it was Skinner's dog that was causing the disturbance. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Deuces are Wild in Canasta And so is Husband Ed By EDCREAGH (Substituting for Columnist Hal Boyle) New York, Aug. 24 (I') I was going to tell you today about how to play canasta, a card game that is having a great vogue among canasta players, but something came up and Well, why be cov about it? What came up is that my brand new canasla rule book (price $1) got r i p p e df" doci.v s laiKing aDoui canasta." And we did for one solid hour and 42 minutes. That is the others tried to teach me the game while I kept one despair ing eye on the silent and dark about melding. euces and jok- going out" and concealed." It seems there is a difference. And about blnck threes, which contain more mysteries than Poe found in the Rue Morgue. "You got the fidgets, pal?" Bill asked finally. "You act even stupider than u'sual tonight." I was about to reply cuttingly istration spending policy. "The ex-president was talking , tr. f , out of both sides of his mouth Qne o th measures ls an out. when he said we are spending d t ft w ive he ourselves into a collective states th bu,k of iheseast oil state, thundered Madden. . ,, . 5 '"r ., . ; , . reserves that the supreme court n nTnnn f h advocated ruled belong to the federal gov- $30,000,000,000 for defense and ernment he other meaure foreign aid out of a total budget . th Eovernment a better of $42,000,000,000. He talks ZVk Tt JoZ Zl the pro- economy, but he would n t cut a cee(js 59.50 cent of the military and foreign- Co,, ,, nr ji, aid expenditures " Says Mahoney. I don t con- am expenditures. . . hlu. .-(,Qf!,t Ta.t,S.a" 0lS!0r.y' Early this year, I introduced a times. I remember as iar back 4-. , , .. T Jz , , the period after World War ""J , " far Rus sia may be pre pared to go in maintaining her prestige. For example take Russia's t hreatening note to a poli tically rebelli ous and defiant Yugoslavia: Moscow lash ed out at Mar- " m"i shall Tito with the warning that Russia is prepared to take "cf- cracks in the communist struc ture. This importance is multiplied when we consider that great dis content has long been making itself evident in other satellite states Finland's bold and energetic stand, coming on top of Yugo slavia's refusal to knuckle un der, is a tough and dangerous blow to Soviet imperial ambi tions in Europe. Both these nations are essen tial to the Red structure, not fective measures" (measures only politically but militarily, unspecified) to protect the for they are strategically locat- rights of Russian 'citizens in Yu goslavia. ed. Of course, Russia could take . . . . n . nan, mo .vccti. x U111UUUI.CU a Pittsburgh W 'Pears like Tna,,nan aoipn saDam, 6iU thgt woul(J provide federal these here Pittsburgh cops got The no admiration for a Texan's fast down the mid die, my wifef went to bed with a sick headache, t h r Larscns don love us a n more, got telev ve us a n I f 3 TV set. ore. and I vrRrCT 'k They told me 1 it to buy n ytmttirj And about wild d levision set. jf I crs. Ald about "1 This soirj J jflLJ "SinS out conceal sequence bega at break fast 1 Inst Friday. My wife looked at me over the top of her newspaper, wait ed for permission to speak, and inquired: "Why don't we learn to piny cannstn?' "Why should wo?" I asked when I noticed that my fistful jovially. My moulh, however, was filled at the time with yo curt (a milk food favored by yogurt enters) and my wife un derstood me to sny: "Why, cer tainly." So Friday night found me opening the Canasta rule book with all the enthusiasm of a boy confronted by "Elementary Al of cards included some match ing kings, queens and nines. "Hey," I said, "I can what-d-ya-call it. I can meld." Edith glared. "It's a rule of this game," she informed me chillingly, "that you say, 'part ner, may I go out?' " I looked at my wife. I looked at the TV set. Something inside .h .1-- ... . ..., me snapped. Five seconds Inter I clapped T P',",("e 1 $aid' ming' may the book shut. 1 g. ui? ' J , ....., . , And I made the door before c can t do it. I said, grin- s)lc cm,id answer, ning. "Canasta takes two decks and we've only got that old one Well, the rule book was torn we keep around in case a gypsy in half when I got home, rather fortune leller should drop in." iate. And the bottle of head- My wife took it very well, too ache tabicts Was missing from we the medicine chest so I knew my "All right," she said. "Cards wife was feeling poorly I did- can wait. We'll drop in on the n't disturb her. I slept on the Larscns instead. I know you studio couch, don't like them, but " "I was thinking," I said at "I don't dislike them," I ob- breakfast, "that you're right jected. "It's just that I can't about our needing a television stand them. But they do have a set. I could order it through television set. At least I can Bill's firm as a sort of peace of- watch the fights." fcring." ' She smiled and then started to Bill and Edith Larscn prac- laugh and everything was all tically kissed us. right. Except that I can't as I "Goody," Edith slid, "now we had planned, tell you today all can ploy that new game every- about how to play canasta. T ...1 u. pwatitwii wii umv uui. j, wild me aciiiic uicb wcic m, . , iii.t: ' . . . 4h ,,, . ., . The chances of legislation on raised by those who fought to this issue are i-emote at thiwu- keep us out of the League of f'n lssue are remote at tnls ses Nations. If congress had not lis- ' tened to those men, there might FLASHES not have been a World War II." Thpn nnintimr nt Ttpn .Tnhn The h o u s e ways and means Davis Lodge (R-Conn), Sabath committee clamped a tight sec added, "there sits the grandson recv ban on the names of the of the man who led the fight three members who voted against the league Senator against the social security liber Henry Cabot Lodge." alization bill. They are Reps. For a moment, Lodge sat in Carl Curtis (R-Neb), Noah Ma stunned silence. Then, white 50n (R-IU) and John Byrnes with anger, he jumped to his (R-Wis). feet and shouted, "the record President Truman, was miff will prove who is right." ed when Sen. Arthur Watkins "I just gave you the record," (R-Utah), rushed through the retorted Sabath. $70,000,000 measure for the We- ber basin reclamation project SUNDAY SCHOOL , without debate. "That's a very The "5-percenter" uproar has big bill to be passed by unani had no effect on Maj. Gen. Har- mous consent," the president ry Vaughan as a Sunday-school told Sen. Elbert Thomas and teacher. Rep. Walter Granger of Utah. He has continued to conduct Former Sen. John Sherman his regular class of high-school Cooper, liberal Kentucky repub boys every Sunday morning at lican, will address a United Mine the Westminster Presbyterian Workers meeting from three church across the Potomac in states on Labor day. Cooper was Alexandria, Va. Usual attend- one of the few republicans who ance is 10 to 12 students. opposed the Taft-Hartley act. Vaughan has been conducting icopyritht mti Man Regains Lost Sight Tells of Thrill of Seeing Again Hopkinton, Mass. (U.R) A 63-year-old masseur who suddenly regained his vision after having been blind 18 years, said his first month of seeing was the most exciting of his life. "It's been like living all over again," said Edward R. Ray. "Everything is so colorful and amazing the automobiles, the women's dresses and my daughter and grandchildren. It's a new lease on life." Ray became blind in 1931 after a 35-year period of deteriora tion of his left eye. He lost the right eye in a childhood acci dent. Then suddenly the film covering his left eye cleared away. He said the years of blindness had done him some good, de spite the things he missed. "My philosophy is quite different because I have had hours of meditation during the darkness," he said. "That has be come a habit now, and I can stay apart from the turmoil of mod ern life." FARMER ENTERS SQUABBLE OVER CLOTHES Joy of Summer Woolies Offered the British King Des Moines, la., Aug. 24 (U.R) An Iowa farmer offered today to send the British king an old suit of his long-handled underwear "so he can know the joy of real comfort." The farmer, who asked to be unnamed so his gift to royalty would be anonymous, stepped into a squabble between two newspaper columnists, an Iowan and an Englishman, over the year around," he said. "Tried wearing apparel and habits of cotton once but it irritated me. their respective countrymen. I gave it up pretty quick. Patty Johnson, woman's page ..Now x wear regular-weight editor of the Waterloo, la. Dai y undies all winter and si , Courier, had written, slightly shave ,he uzz oit ,cm wilh shocked that "Scotsmen who corn knie for wear ln summer wear kilts wear nothing at all Those were the type he o. underneath them.' fered to send , his majesty John Walter, New York cor- his last ,ummer's woolies with respondent for the London Daily tnc fuzz shaVed off. . Mirror, retaliated that Iowa . . ,. ,. . . farmers wear long underwear. " ,h "ng wore them Jusl He seemed to think it was sign one day. he said, "I know he'd they were sissies. never go without 'em again. The Iowa farmer who got Into They'd be just the thing for the act today is 31. He operates those clammy English winters, a 240-acre corn-and-hog farm I wore them over there during not far from here. the war and they were just the "I wear wool underwear all ticket." A portion of the British miana over cy iorce, out. sucn press immediately said this f mov,eu assuredly would result sounded like the worst threat of in another World War. indirection. Thus we see Red leaders in Finland precipitating a wave of strikes which the Hel- war since Hitler's blasts in '39. However, informed British dip lomatic officials, who are watch- n& th eitimtinn plncalu ...il the dispute wasn't likely to lead slnkl government says represent to war. They figured Moscow a maneuver towards revolution wanted Yugoslavia to think she and the establishment of a Red was threatened with ntfnrk- icGmK:' Washington believes the bol- Well, this column doesn't like because oI Finnish resistancei whereas Russia was bluffing. thP Iprm "hlllffinf," no annlie either to Russia or Yugoslavia. Wliat must be uallv st,ag?e'- . , ing for Moscow is the astonish- J?. J IV'-whe",the .gods f ing move in the Soviet zone of war are playing at ten-pins with Grmany bv German commun- H mlte 8nd hand"Bren- ts who hate Russia. ades, there s always the possi- These Germans have formed a c.n, T6XP ' new party which, like that of Still, as I see it, there's noth- Marshal Tito, represents nation-' ng to justify the belief either alistic communism that refuses that Russia intends to make war to recognize the sovereignty of (which would mean world war) Moscow. Not only that, but this at this juncture or that valiant new party promptly sent Tito but comparatively small Yugo- a message pledging him support slavia is prepared to undertake in his fight against "imperialist the role of giant-killer. bolshevism." The real importance of the Will this revolt against Mos current developments lies in the cow's dictation spread in east fact that they represent open em Europe; that is possible and, defiance in Russia's own sphere I believe, even probable in due of influence. . They represent course. HISTORIC MEDICAL HIGHLIGHTS No. 48. -AT THE EDGE OF AN ERA- TIME and the progress it moy bring will pro vide an answer to a question the whole world is asking . . . will the constructive potentiali ties of atomic fission out weight its destructive ones? It is known, however, that the medical advances from recently acquired knowledge of the atom will be important . . . possibly pro viding a cure at last for such old enemies of man as cancer, polio and TB. Madame Curie's discovery of radium brought a great advance to medicine. The new knowledge and "know-how" may bring advances of equal importance. thf ouisrNjTm coNti OW t COMMIKM Hm 3 HIJ HlDICAl ClNTtt HUNCH iim siiai mm yra dJjCw ..... lhat operate .