Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketo 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, I5c; Monthly, $1.00: One Tear. S12.00. By Mall in Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos.. $4.00; One Year, S8.00. TJ. S. Outside Oregon; Monthly, $1.00; 8 Mos.. $6.00; Year, $12. by BECK Extenuating Circumstances 4 Salem, Oregon, Thursday, September 1, 1949 Forces Still in Conflict The ten years since World War II started have been ten long, confused years. The span of time since that September morning . when Hitler's troops moved in on Poland has setm history's most terrible war holding all of mankind in its grip for six of those ten years. I What, hnnnpnerl durinor the terrible years of fiehtine is in the past now. But what has happened since the fight ing stopped in its major phases is determining the trend of events ahead. Realized by everyone now is the fact that the world is ! still not at peace. Stalin and Tito are shaking their armed fists at one another in the Balkans. Greece is .still torn by a civil war fostered by Moscow. China is still fighting what must seem to the Chinese an endless civil war, al though the current strife, like Greece, has the feel of the bloody directing hand of the Soviet master rulers. Korea asks for military aid to withstand the call to revolt issued by Moscow's stooges in the northern section of that Asiatic country. In Indo-China the white man is trying to hold on with French forces to at least a piece of what once was a fertile continent for imperialism. In this confused aftermath of World War II, the aver age man must shake his head in wonderment. How could the people of the world permit themselves to lose their way again toward some kind of stability in global affairs? The forces in conflict today are those that have plagued man since the most modest form of government was estab lished: Shall man keep his dignity and freedom or shall he surrender to the will of the state? In token leadership of the forces for the dignity and freedom of the Individual is the United States. In absolute command of the forces making man a slave of the state is the Soviet Union. The United States has moved hesitatingly into a role as leader of the forces of freedom and liberty. The nation still has not realized the scope of its global responsibility as leader of the forces of freedom and liberty. The nation global strategy for the democracies is too evident. The past ten years are now history. The responsibility for the next 10 years lies with United States leadership, Byrd on Johnson Economy Drive The Congressional Record contains the speech of Sena tor Harry F. Byrd (D., Va.) chairman of the joint commit tee on reduction of non-essential federal expenditures fully endorsing, as might be expected, the order of Defense Secretary Johnson slashing 135,000 civil employes off the military payroll. Byrd declares: "It is the first honest-to-goodness effort that has been made toward reduction in government per sonnel during the 10 years I have been chairman of the joint committee on reduction of nonessential federal ex penditures. It comes after a period when the number of federal civilian personnel for many months was increased at the rate of 300 employes a day." The reason for the payroll slash was the "fantastic" situation that the armed services employed 895,462 federal civilian employes as compared to 1,642,790 men in uni form, a ratio of more than one civilian to two in uniform. The reductions are "surplus and unnecessary to adequate national defense" and "a fair and equitable adjustment to requirements" that will save approximately $400,000, 000 annually. . Reports of the Byrd committee have long stressed the fact that the number of civilian employes of the federal government could be reduced by 500,000 without impair ment of government efficiency, and the Hoover report details how it can be done. If other departments follow the Johnson precedent, it can be done. Byrd concludes by asking the cooperation of congress in the economy pro gram in cutting out waste and inefficiency, asserting: "It is ominous to every straight-thinking person that in this day of high prosperity In national income we are in a period of deficit spending. We ended fiscal year 1849 with a deficit of nearly $2 bihion In the first 54 days of the current fiscal year the deficit already has reached $1.7 billion, or an average of $30 million per day, which means the federal debt already above a quarter of a trillion dollars is Increasing every day." Finale for the GAR Six union veterans of the Civil War, all centenarians, comprising all who remain alive, have closed the final en campment of the "Grand Army of the Republic" and are on their way home. The last act of the old northern sol diers was a final gesture of peace to their former enemies of the south, the five survivors of Lee's armies, the United Confederate Veterans, who will also hold their final en campment at Little Rock, Ark., on September 27. In his proposal for the final message of greeting, 108-year-old James A. Hard of Rochester, N.Y., said: "This is one United States there's no longer a north and south tell those boys in gray we'd like to meet with them just once but we're too old to travel." And at their final camp fire the "boys in blue" sat with bowed heads as a bugler sounded taps for their departed comrades. Indianapolis was the site of the last as well as the first encampment of the GAR. It was held in November, 1866, in what was then a young and rapidly growing city. It was organized in Decatur, Illinois, in the winter of 1865-66. Its membership grew into hundreds of thousands. Although the GAR ruled as far back as 1869 that the organization should not be used for partisan political pur poses, it has naturally been a powerful factor in political calculations and the shaping of the party conduct both in nominations and elections as well as legislation, especially for "liberalizing" pensions. Pinched for Driving While Eating Seattle, Wash. (U.fi) Donald W. Issaks, 27, was held for driving while eating. Police said he was eating and drinking off a large drive In tray on the outside ot hli car while weaving through a main Intersection. . , . , , . ... ., . 7 MOM PROMlSEO TO LEAVE THE ) I I DOOR KEY UNDER THE MAT IF ( T&fflvwftTC&fr- I SHE WENT OUT. BELIEVE ME, , W Na I'LL BAWL HER OUT PLENTY t ' I XL F0R KEEPING US SITTIN6 HERE jjSf O ff IN THE HEAT... SHE'LL FEEL jS'h rP, I b.PRETTV S1 WHEN 1 6ET ) W-i-M 9 "tg! ' W?Wjt& , sHE comes...ano ekfmmA', I MERRY-GO-ROUND WHIRLS AHEAD It was two and a half years ago that the first revelations regarding General Barry Vaughan and the amazing Mr. Mara gon first were published. The inside story of White House influence now unearthed by the senate, was first told by Drew Pearson in a series of columns beginning March 17, 1947, which told-about the Maragon junkets to Europe, the perfumery brought back to cabinet wives, Maragon's demotion of a brigadier general In Rome, and various other lobbying efforts, some ot them so far still uncovered by the senate committee. BY GUILD Wizard of Odds BI66EST ODDS IN THE WORLD?-THAT THERE WOHil S EVER BE TWO PEOPLE i nMfinu ILCNIIUtL 7 FINGERPRINTS. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Anti-Monopoly Congressmen Irked by Adviser's 'Lobbying' (Ed. Note While Drew Pearson is on vacation, the Wash ington Merry-Go-Round Is being written by bis old partner, Robert S. Allen), SIPS FOR SUPPER Worse Than Disease By DON UPJOHN , Our favorite waitress who noticed our comment on the epidemic sniffling going on hereabouts this a. m. gave us what she said was a sure fire recipe for curing these colds. She said the thing to do is to eat a lot of parsley. Her explanation was that parsley is sup posed to contain oodles of vitamin A and this is understood to be the champion .(SPy f, 2. About half the require ments of iodine. 3. About one-tenth of the needed protein, calcium, mag nesium, phosphorous, vitamin A, thiamine, riboflavin and niacin. "To make a completely round ed meal from a nutritional standpoint, only additional sources of calories are needed," the service said. By ROBERT S.ALLEN Washington President Truman, who has complained repeat edly about lobbying, is due to get a similar complaint against a member of his own official family. He is John D. Clark, of the White House council of economic advisers. The former Standard Oil of Indiana official has aroused the ire ot a group of anti-monopoly congressmen They charge he has been quiet ly lobbying to restore the bas ing - point price system outlaw SUPPRESSED ECA REPORT One of the major differences between the house and senate on the deadlocked ECA appropria tion bill is continuance of the so called Marshall plan watchdog committee. The senate is in sisting on continuing the com mittee; the house is opposed. Senate demand for continu ance of the committee is based on the contention it is needed to maintain an independent check on ECA operations abroad. But while the senate has been press- 1 tsTtsS 1-. 1 ONLY 2 OF EVERY 5 ADULTS La I . CAN'T BOWL. SnrS 1 L s-, (AsmiKtwwMow I'GSPn I ODDS ARE 9 TO I THE PERSON KILLED IN A MOTORCYCLE ACCIDENT WILL BE THE OCCUPANT OF THE VEHICLE. ' Von Upjolm cold chaser away. I n case anyone doesn'l know what this parsley stuff is she recora-ljj mends, It's the green sprig which is always laid on a piece of meat at res t a u r a n t ban quets. For fur ther identification, this is the sprig which, when laid on the Our old friend Spec Keene, meat at resaurant banquets, one now living in Corvallis, is get- sers stealthily removed by t, himsef new car because about 95 per cent of the males , . . ... present and shunted to one side he had a host in his garage where it doesn't have to be ovcr 'here the other night. About eaten. We're still looking for 2 a.m., the horn of his car which some man who likes parsley, had been garaged for the night As an individual case we may started sounding off. After it be frank and come right out and had whooped it up for about say that between parsley and 30 minutes with Spec sleeping the sniffles the sniffles are pref- through it all a neighbor, who erable. We have a sneaking thought somebody in the street idea that even a porker would was having fun got up to in- nuzzle it out of the trough. vestigate. But there was no 1 01 S .. car out in front so he looked Health in Six Swallows around out bac'k and smelled Washington VP) Six oysteri sHoke. Soon he saw smoke corn day will help keep the doctor ing from Spec's garage. He away. The word comes from called the fire department and the fish and wildlife service. In the firemen shoved the burning its annual announcement herald- car out of the garage before it ing the start of the R-months damaged anything but the car. oyster season, the agency said A short in the horn connection an average serving of six oys- had touched it off. Spec never ters will supply: used to sleep that sound when 1. More than the daily re- he had to worry about his Wil- quirements of iron and copper, lamette football team. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Hitler Turned Out to Be A Messy Paperhanger By HAL BOYLE ' New York, Sept. 1 (P It is ten years ago to-ay since Adolph Hitler plunged the world into its first trillion-dollar war. No paperhanger in history ever messed up a place more. Remember? Millions of people heard the broadcast of the fateful speech to t n e ncicnsiag in which Hitler told the German people their troops had marched Into M It gave a shiv ery feeling The fiery emotion alism of the lit tle man seeped through his al ien tongue into FN issue on earth and never set tled. War didn't even dent the glob al population. Wars never do that so well as a good long plague. It is a tremendous tribute to the imperishable vitality and optimism of the human race that it has gone on having children like mad. There are some 2,300, 000.000 people in the world. the hearts of listeners in many ZTJ' 1? 7!.180'- - J V. Ylll 111 lUICHtd The hall in which he spoke " than ever, was hung with scnilrt banners, Here more people are eating for red is the color of war. And higher, living better, earning the hall shook with bursts of more, than at any period in our massed applause as if led by history. And America is still a invisible cheerleaders. little startled at the realization It was like something out of il has replaced the British em- the middle ages. Dlre as the biggest single factor for world order. Exactly 2,074 days later the That carries the privileges of returns from Adolph's speech greater responsibilities a n d, were i inevitably, higher taxes. That His Reich and many other Price f bein 'he big countries were in ruins. Some , , 22.060,000 men, women and chil dren had been killed, including vhat did the war teach us? Fuehrer Hitler and his arch- chiefly, it taught us a buddy, Benito Mussolini, who sense of geography and that's ended the war hanging by his important. Places like Bastogne heels besides his mistress, dead Kasserine Gap, Tokyo, Paris, and bleeding. Some 34,400,000 London, Liege, and Berlin don't had been wounded. scem 50 strange and far now. It wa, the biggest Jackpot of Milllo,n' came home with memo all time for Brother Mar,. He ' what PP e lk and had rung up $1,118,991,463,084 how ,hey 1,ve in tor'8n Plac on his cash register and about There is a steel skyscraper $230,900,000,000 i n property growing up now beside Man damage. This doesn't even in- hattan's east river, the first elude the cost in money and building in the United Nations damage ot the long war in Chi- new home. For the question is na, which is still In flower. longer whether any particu- The United States picked up lar nation can get along in the the biggest part of the check world, but whether all nations $330,030,463,084 and it is still ean Set along in the world to picking up the checks. gcther. Whether they do or not, it is What docs it all add up to? doubtful whether war in itself. Well, the Germans are still even in the radio-active atomic sorting bricks from tjie rubble of cn lon destroy anything their cities, and' will be for durable and stubborn as man years. They are bystanders now. kind. But the chief issue raised by For nothing yet has ever been Hitler is still undecided free- able to keep people from having dom from tyranny, the eldest hope and children. ed by the Su- Bobrt S. Allen prene Court. Chief complainers are Reps. thl, t, ,t Wright Patman, D , Tex., and tee has been withholding a high John Carroll, D., Colo., who ly revealing report on French were largely instrumental In attitude toward ECA. nutting through the house re- , ,. . cently the bill-barring business , Rnea.s0" 'or h.e PP"ssion lat on enacted I in ply congress. But, whatever the Their contention is that it is with the house for another $350 - futile for . them to seek to 000 to continue functi0ning. strengthen the governments ... hand against' monopoly when a . member of the White House Hasic theme of the -report is staff is opposing them. They tha' very "le effort is being want the President to muzzle made inform the French peo- clark Pie what the U.S. is doing for ... ' ... ... 1 them under the Marshall plan His position on this issue is As a of thI fajlure cunous' the report, "this enormous op Last summer, he vigorously eration, which is costing the backed the federal trade com- United States so much money; mission when a committee head- js viewed with hostility ed by Sen. Homer Capehart, R., .Thi. fff ,. 'u . ind. tried to browbeat the agen- jgfc in t nceVlt cy into approving basing-po.nt meddlesome presumptuous fVTC mSVSi SCh6me 0f the Umte1 State held the FTC in its refusal. use France tg our own ends . Four months later, the Su- Tv, -- , preme Court ruled against m," tna the Standard Oil of Indiana in an arffsha 1 P?an can.nt succeed as ..x A ni long as this attitude prevails, anti - trust case brought by a (Tfr . yicvtt"3 group of Michigan small-busi- report thah "p a'n wuf h si cTar-k, S vete'd 'Jt" fif , . , i i stay of four years and cost the his attitude Since then, he has u s taxpayer $15;ootn been quietly pressuring for re- , h p p storation of the bas.ng-point sys- being realized jn Europe em" ... "To the extent that the Mar- NATIVE D.P.'S tna11 plan ails of achievement Senator Pat McCarran, D., of "f als V 1952. America's Nev., is not only vehemently op- Pr.oblem. from being over, posed to foreign D.P.'s, but ap- wlU have ust beun- We will pears bent on making displaced ?e up Wnst a France which persons out of a group of native "as never understood the Mar Americans. fna11 Pjan. or. that America was That is the charge made in 8od faith offering to under agalnst him by the Pyramid wnte recovery and the con Lake Paiute tribe in his home l"?"4 protection against corn state. munism." ... A resolution adopted by the tribal council charges that a bill . The report severely criti- introduced by McCarran would cizes the French government and turn over valuable reservation French press for not publiclz- land to white cattlemen. The in8 the work of the Marshall interior department has de- Plan- nounced the measure, and the "They left the Job of explaln- Supreme Court has upheld the ing American efforts to succor tribe's claims. France," the report says, "to the McCarran's bill would cir- biggest, one of the richest and cumvent that decision. the most effective publicity or- NOTi; Despite his intransi- ganizations in the world, the gent opposition to liberalizing communist party, the obstructive displaced persons "That party has not missed law, McCarran sought to obtain bet to deride, malign and falsify special permission to bring in the Marshall plan with every several hundred basque sheep- segment of the French popula- herders for Nevadans. tion. The French administra- tors of the Marshall plan have INTELLIGENCE CHIEF not begun to match these hostile Alfred McCormack, wartime operations." Pentagon intelligence c o 1 0 n e 1 o-v,. , ,1. , , j, and New York attorney, has the v TneKrePrt slates leading ir,!H, i-oi, . .T.., i..lii" t j French newspapers bluntly de- Send your "Odds" questions on any subject to "The Wizard of Odds," care of the Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. WARNING ON SLASH IN FUNDS Today's Marines Carry Four Times Old Fire Power (Editor's Note Veteran War Correspondent Robert C. Mil- ler, who landed on Guadalcanal with the first U. 8. Marines, has just completed a tour of duty with the same outfit on peacetime maneuvers in California. (He found the present day Marine the "world's deadliest killer" with each squad of men carrying four times the fire power It did on Guadalcanal.) of the central intelligence agen cy. clare they cannot "afford to be pro-American because it would OeWItt MnekeDilt has applied a jm D Ti-ii 1 Lt i-uai uieui cii uuiaiiuil. CIA" chic?"! anxbus T hoYd ""j? l " on to the job and has been doing jV'!L? some wire-pulling for that. But Yr,!,Per.vf . ?l he has a spotty record, and the M. k.." .u". President wants to try a civilian In this key post, Marshall plan's objectives that all the non-communist French Latest CIA bust was the re- Pr?:bL"?d; cent Syrian army coup that de- "The parties in the French posed the late Marshal Zaim "l unaense any CIA was caught flatfooted on lnfurmatl.n Pf aI""nIe" the that uvk-u on are convinced that the end out- McCormack was brought into P 1 1 ' c a 1 differences, army G-2 by Former Sectary T SLgnl at "UCh of War Stimson. McCormack C had no previous military serv- "mti ice, and has been practicing cor- "J.?' CnSe' poration law since 1946. ,uences' (CoprIltM m Luigi Doesn't Want to Tie This San Francisco U.R A gist of wind caught Luirl Flag lirllo's tie, as he started across a Market street Intersection It flipped and hooked onto the door handle of a passing panel delivery truck. Flagliello was dragged across the Intersection before the driver became aware of his protesting passenger. Flagliello, 65, who will recover from bruises and scrapes, said he was considering giving up wearing ties. 7oVe Prize to Rent Warehouse Methuen, Mass. U.B Julius Zurwell, who won- $29,000 in prises on a radio quiz program, said the- toughest problem he had was finding suitable froien locker space for the 108 dozen cases of frosen foods Included In Mi winnings. - By" ROBERT C. MILLER Camp Pendleton, Calif., Sept. 1 U.R) New and secret infantry weapons today make the American Marine the world's deadliest killer. And after extensive maneuvers here at Camp Pendleton, twice wounded Major General Graves Erskine declared that his fa mous First Marine Division was ready to "fight anybody, any- ample of American guts and de where, at' anytime." - termination against overwhelm- But the scarred general warn- ing odds; it would have been a ed that any congressional slash Jap slaughter." of marine appropriations to ... build bombers "would castrate Upstairs, the marines are sup- the corps." ported by rocket-firing, bomb- The veteran U.S. First Marine carrying fighters whose reserve Division, with which I landed P'lots repeatedly laid explosives on Guadalcanal during World on infantry requested targets War II as a United press car cor- less than 90 seconds after a plea respondent, had equipment al- 'or help. ready crated and tabled for port These multipurpose vought , of embarkation. corsairs pack the wallop of a The marines are the only de- cruiser battery, carry 1500 . fense unit in America today Pounds of bombs and double the, , organized for immediate action, strafing fire of the tiny bomb- , , , less grummans which were . thrown into the Guadalcanal On the ground, marine com- , . panies are walking arsenals, Dreacn , . carrying sufficient fire power to Behind the infantry today is blast or sear their way through marine artillery whose battery the strongest known defenses. commanders face loss of com- Each squad carries four times mand if unable to place a bar- the rifle and automatic weapons rage within two hundred yards it did on Guadalcanal, and its of friendly positions and court four - man fire teams do the martial for short bursts, previous work of twelve. The Pendleton maneuvers At Tech. Sgt. Paul A. Hodge, emphasized atomic warfare, us- a Solomons veteran of Knox- ing Geiger counters and special ville Tenn., explained: "If we washing and decontamination had today's weapons on the equipment unheard of during 'Canal, that campaign never the division's first anti-axis at- would have been a historic ex- tack seven years ago. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Trouble Behind Iron Curtain Points to Cold War Crisis By DeWITT MacKENZIE ((P) Foreign Attain Analratl Fast moving events are highlighting the disclosure In Wash ington that Russia's grip on lis eastern European satellites is re- : liably reported to be badly shaken by the fight wtih Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia. . ' Treading on each others heels have come these significant ' developmen t s : (1) Czecho- prison and ten were acquitted. The government said the leader was Dr. Jaroslav Borkovec, de scribed as brother of a former chief of the criminal investiga ton section of the Prague polce, The official report charged, that rebels were under direction of "a certain western imperial ist power" and that a copy of their plan of action was deposit ed with a western embassy in Prague. This western power was not named. Could Moscow have America or Britain in mind? ... As discussed in yesterday's column, these reports of dis content and disaffection among Slovakia's com munist govern ment has an nounced that it smashed a large armed revolt by c 0 n s p 1 r ators who tried to capture Prague and establish an anti - Soviet regime. (2) Yugoslavia formally for a loan of $25,000,- 000 from the export - import bank, an American government agency. Tito needs quick cash with which to buy American machinery for his country's cop ner. lead and zinc mines. Wash ington officials expect mm 10 uie saieimes is expecxea 10 nave get the loan. He also has re- an important place in the forth- ceived permission to buy a three coming meeting in Washington million dollar steel mill from among Secretary of State Ache- an American concern. son, Brtish Foreign Secretary (3) Moscow has sent another Bevin and French Foreign Min- hot note its eighth to Yugo- lster Schuman. slavia, charging that the Tito Observers are looking for government is working "only these diplomats to review the on instructions of its western strategy of the cold war with masters." Russia in the light of the de- ... velopments and devise new Of these developments, by far mr to counter the Kremlin JhrSLi"f.?"t:,.0fUrS1eJ One dramatic new move al- 19 jcvumnuiioij ttu lit Czechoslovakia. ready has been made In allow ing Tltn tn Vitiv tha v4 ssl mill This in itself would be enough which will be Important in to rock the foundations of the strengthening his military poten- Red Eastern European empire, tial for defense. The probabil- It is doubly dangerous since ity of a loan or loans, fits into lt is coupled with Tito's polit- this picture, cal revolt, disaffection in other A signficant aspect of this satellite states and the defiance situation is that disaffection of little Finland which Moscow often is like an avalanche in the is trying to force within the So- way it gathers weight as it pro vet zone of domination. gresses. Who knows but that the Czech communist authorities defiance of Finland and of Tito moved fast in exacting punish- may have encouraged the Czech- . men. Six accused were con- oslovak revolt? demned to death in secret trials, This looks like a crucial mo an unspecified number went to ment in the cold war. M