4 book of Gene- ny. sis we are re minded that "In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return un to the ground." Some people look upon this as a curse, but Jeremy Taylor contended: Rer. oeorrn swirt The labor M Capital AJournal Section, An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor end 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: Dt Carrier: Weekly, C Monthly, $1.00; One Year. $12.00. By Mall In Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos.. $4.00; One Year, $8.00. V. 8. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos., $6.00; Year, $12. 4 Salem, OreRon, Saturday, September 10, 1949 Long Strikes Disastrous The 82-day strike of employes of the North Coast Grey hound bus lines has been called off, both the union and company having agreed to arbitrate differences. The federal mediator at Seattle announces that representatives of both sides have reached agreements on most points of difference and accepted arbitration for the remaining four or five points. The buB employes have lost 83 days of wages, the com pany has lost 83 days of operation costs, never to be re gained by the workers or the employers, but as usual the greatest losers are the people served, commuters and trav elers, who have been put to great inconvenience and extra expense. Eventually all labor disputes have to be settled by medi ation or arbitration, so what's the sense of an 83-day strike to do what could and should have been done before the strike was called, especially since employes have been rceiving the highest wages in history? As the bus strike ends, a railroad strike begins that may also continue 83 days for far greater loss to all affect ed. Some 5000 operating employes of the Missouri Pacific railroad have tied-up the 7200-mile traffic railroad system in 8 states of the central southwest, forcing the lay-off of 22,500 non-operating employes, and eventually forcing many industries to close-down, idling tens of thousands of other workers, as well as inflicting losses on the general public. The railroad carried an average of 12,000 passen gers a day. The strike seems inexcusable and unjustifiable for the four brotherhoods refused to accept the findings of a presidential fact-finding board and rejected arbitration. R. E. Davidson, assistant grand master of the Broth erhood of Locomotive Engineers, says that arbitration was rejected because "some issues are just not arbitrable." There are 282 union demands. Yet arbitration or mediation must eventually be the solution, or one side or the other go out of business, so why not arbitrate before the menace of disaster mate rializes? Meanwhile, Federal Mediation Director Cyrus S. Ching is holding conferences in New York trying to settle the long Hawaiian dock strike called by left-winger Harry Bridges, which has for months paralyzed economic and social activities in the islands and threatened starvation to the population. Never will either side recover financial losses incurred, which is probably what Bridges desires. Meanwhile, Bridges is trying, with some success, to ex tend the labor boycott on Hawaiian ships to all ports in the world to prevent unloading the ships the territorial government is loading. The strike seems a communist test of power to show what would happen to American shipping in case of a war with Russia, and so allied to the cold war against democracy. The president could have stopped some of these dis astrous strikes if he had utilized the Taft-Hartley law but he is playing politics with it instead for the 1950 elec tion. Eugene Approves One-Way Grid System When Salem was making its final decision on accepting the Baldock traffic plan, several opponents of the plan pointed to dissatisfacton in Eugene with the one-way grid system ther. In fact, at the council meeting at which the Baldock plan was finally voted, one opponent predict ed overwhelming disapproval of the Eugene system in an opinion poll being taken there. The results are now in on what Eugene thinks about the one-way system. Eighty percent voted in favor of continuing the grid system, with certain modifications. This overwhelming approval was announced Friday. Covered in the survey were the businessmen inside the downtown grid. In a simple question of whether or not the businessman favored or disapproved of the grid, the answer was 251 in favor of the grid and 64 opposed. There were many questions bringing out sentiment in favor of minor changes. Asked if they wanted to change the two main business streets back to two-way, the businessmen voted two to one against a two-way arrangement on those specific, key streets. Recently, drivers of vehicles In Eugene were asked nbout their views on the grid system there. They, too, yotd overwhelmingly in favor of the present basic plan in the same proportion as did the downtown business men. As for businessmen outside the grid system, their votes in the latest poll showed the same reaction in favor, as did their downtown associates. This favorable opinion of a traffic system designed to meet the congestion in downtown areas in growing com munities is significent because it was instigated by those protesting the grid. Some people in Snlom were so certain the vote was going to go the other way that they based their opposition to a one-way grid here on the outcome of the Eugene poll. Now that Eugene has so definitely expressed itself, the last vestige of opposition to the Baldock plan should be squelched in Salem. The state highway commission is scheduled to complete the formal agreement with Salem at the September meeting next week. Then the Baldock plan can be put in actual operation. VV COME..LOCK V-; f,'Li ii IT... THE REST V WJj Mtlj) ""( AT HIS BRAKES 'risH OF THE ROAD J MJLU: ''?zkL I SOKINSANOiSSV IS LEVEL AND QzZsSiL faCSti s-H that motor 1""h we can keep ffy& gsgrx-Fjpjway. 7scther WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Ban on Airplane Junkets Backfired on Johnson By DREW PEARSON Washington There was a lot more than meets the eye behind the way Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson suddenly pulled In his horns about the airplane junketing of congressmen. Real fact is that If Johnson had stuck to his guns and congress had done any investigating, the executive branch of the govern ment would have been shown up for private joy-riding per- has loaned his plane to private haps more than congress. For Individuals. Johnson himself uses an army The president has a habit of plane almost every weekend to telling friends, "On, take my gy GUILD Wizard of Odds visit his home in Clarksburg, W. Va., while Secretary of the Navy Matthews uses a navy plane to fly back to his home in Omaha on weekends. That was why wise Steve Early, undersecretary of national defense, called majority leader plane," no matter where they are going. Last year, for instance, he sent his private plane across the Atlantic with Archbishop Athen agoras to Turkey, supposedly as an act of good will to the Greeks. But General Vaughan, who ar- Scott Lucas of Illinois and asked ranged the trip at the suggestion him to arrange a conference with of his two cronies, John Mara- Sen. Elmer Thomas of Okla homa, the man who had been re buffed by Johnson regarding an airplane junket for his committee. THE FIRESIDE PULPIT Nothing Without Labor But Life Can Still Be Empty BY REV. GEORGE H. SWIFT Rector 81 PkUl'a Bpljtropftl Chureb The motto of our class in high school was "Nihil sine Lahore." or "Nothing Without Labor." It was a good motto for that day. It still is for today. To help engrave these words upon our hearts and minds, our higl. school class rings bore the same inscription: "Nihil sine Lahore." In my experience, and I am sure in the experience of realize that, instead of a curse, all in our class, that Latin phrase work is a blessing, has carried a message which has We who have the privilege of rung true. going about under our own In the early chapters of the power and having a job to do, gon and William Helis, did not realize that Athcnagoras is not particularly popular in Greece and that the gesture did not benefit the U. S. A. Shortly after the war, forth right Secretary of War Bob BEEN IN A CAR ACCIDENT? ODDS ARE 5 TO I SKIDDING. t RATHER THAN ABLOW Ull 1 ' 1 I r s 15.000 NEW HOMES STAND UNSOLD IN THE U.S. - YET ODDS ARE 97 TO I A6AINST AN APARTMENT BEING VACANT. AMERICANS. ODDS ARE ONLY I IN 4 YOU PRONOUNCE WORDS THE SAME WAY AN ErttLISHMAN PRONOUNCES THEM. (Mies. TED DUNMAHt AMUVCUS, 6A.) n Hal Reminisces on Column He's Been Writing 6 Years should thank God from the depths of our hearts for the blessing of the privilege of hav ing something to do. The reason some people do not appreciate the privilege of honest labor with their hands or minds, or both, is because they do not labor with their souls. If, as Jeremy Taylor said, "Our very bed would not be so great a blessing without work, nor could men sleep so soundly, At thA ftff-thA-rArmH cAccinn which followed, Early told Sena- Patterson laid down a flat rule POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER tor Thomas that Johnson had not seen the letter written to him, that it was writ ten by an under ling, and that Johnson didn't even know a bout it. Early quite Franlrlv admit ted that there fei had been some r oipnianp tunketine bv hirwie in the government. He Patterson's ruling was reinstat- also reminded Thomas that any ed. ... investigation would bring out some equal abuse by congress- WHISPERING CAMPAIGN Drew Pearion against airplane junketing pecially against private planes with special crews for cabinet bigwigs. Patterson even ruled that he himself was not to have a private plane. It's been only three short years since that ruling was made. But, in the interim, it's become as obsolete as the use of wigs by the supreme court of the United States. The American taxpayer would be a lot better off, how ever, if By HAL BOYLE New York U.R) This is the sixth anniversary of my entrance into prison. It is a hoosegow of the mind The business of writing a daily newspaper column. The high walls and iron bars of this montal nenitentiarv don't show. But they are there in the con- Secretary Johnson had !- h-ain ernwine higher and stuck to his original guns or if str0nger with the years. Smith, a U. S. senator from Writing a newspaper column Maine, now writes a column, do is one of the oddest occupations do a number of congressmen, in our screwball civilization. To be a columnist, it isn't Tn vianA a lowvpp a doctor, necessarv to be able either to mpn. The armv he said, even had Without mpaninir in iho cm .n ndortairpr vnn have to eo think or to write. You can hire requests from congressmen call- touched off a whispering cam- to school. But there is no college ghosts to do those chores for ing for airplane rides home on paingn against Senator Elbert for columnists anymore than you. the pretext of official business. Thomas, Utah democrat, back In there is for astrologers. But if you do it yourself, It Is Therefore, proposed the un- his home state no nQ standard hard worki and the loneliest dersecretary of defense, bom It was caused by a routine t mtalifiratinn. no trainine for industry on earth. For brain sides should call it quits. And in check which the FBI made on the future, he said, the air forces n delegates appointed by Presi- the bizarre business. and sweat of our brows is far "r .be from being a curse, that without ''. " ' k" 7w it our very bed would not be so ' i. idt i . , t -i . dissatisfied people are without great a blessing. If it were not . 7 - i.u. ,,.,. i,v,- benefit of the exercise of their would take the word of any con gressman, when he wanted a plane, that it was for official business. Senator Thomas was delight ed. A few days before, he had called for a report on every dent Truman to represent the United States at an International Conference at Geneva, Switzer land. As head of the delegation, Thomas was investigated along Unlh nil IVlA nfliaK JolaitBta. But for some reason, an FBI Pewitt MacKen agent called upon a republican Drew Pearson started as a JinlAm.fin W A porter. Walter Winchcll began i n vaudeville. was a for- zie SEl Plane-used by the White -j S wok LZr cX. And the republican promptly ? inet member. But now he accep- sPread .tne .word. that Thomas ed Early's compromise and call- u"d investigation by the Z T,f m. nrnhA the implication being that t i fh for labor, men could neither eat so much, nor relish it so suu f c"1, " " ,hs' .,Ti , , eration of the soul that all else pleasantly, nor sleep so soundly, , , . . . h. J h.aithf.,1 . ,Af,,l takes on meaning and purpose nor be so healthful, so useful, so strong, so patient, so noble, nor so untempted." and appreciation. "Nihil sine Lahore.' Nothing But one of the great problems can be accomplished without In any economy is to provide labor, it is true, but even with work for every man. whether he labor, life will find an emptiness be an executive, professional, and a meaninglessness if it has as they please artisian, or plck-and-shovel man. not the spiritual clement to in It is when the right or ability spire and encourage and give to work is taken away that men purpose to what is done. U7 crt m.O Ihino ain.Ftai So in tne tuiure n iooks Actually, it was nothing but a both the executive branch and routine check. congress can Junket preuy mucn children have only one parent the frontal lobe. Some people have tht Idea that writing a daily column Is a glamorous career, and a lead pipe cinch. But those who have done it know better. The late Don Marquis called it "digging a daily grave". Asked if ha found his task diffficult, Red Smitfe, celebrated sports col umnist of the New York Herald ! Tribune, said: "No, you just sit down at your typewriter, open . you veins and bleed." ADVICE NOT LIMITED TO REAL ESTATE Don't Under-rate a Woman Portland, Ore. W) Never underestimate the power, or the versatility, of a woman especially when she's looking for real estate. Mrs. R. B. Butler, Tulsa, Okla., president of the women's council of the National Association of Real Estate boards, told the Oregon Realtors convention that 90 per cent of real estate purchases are made or influenced by women. Mrs. Butler said her survey of 3,000 housewives showed that women wanted these things In a home. No celling lights In the bedroom "because a woman looks 10 years younger when the light doesn't shine in her face." A tool cabinet in the garage "so my husband will stay home more." Double garages not necessarily for two cars, but for more storage space. SIPS FOR SUPPER The man who originally start ed junketing in army planes was Secretary of War Patrick J. Hurley back in the Hoover ad ministration. At that time it was a democratic congress which protested. Especially when Hurley, fly ing to a meeting of Indiana edi tors, made an emergency land ing and smashed up his plane, democratic congressmen howled to high heaven. They didn't mind the possible loss of a republican secretary of war, but they did object to the loss of a $72,000 plane. Since then the cost of airplane Many loyal citizens are check ed by the FBI every day as a routine precaution before they are hired by the government. (CopyrlKht 1948) Thomas R',k wre sports wrutrra. Eleanor Roose velt was a moth er and magazine ' ' editor, Billy Rose a showman How do you get a Job writing and song writer. a column? Will Rogers, Bob Hope and Some people ask for It and Milton Berle turned to column- it just happens to others. It just ing after successful careers as happened to me. comedians. Margaret Chase MacKENZIE'S COLUMN British Economic Ills Go Back to Before World War I By DoWITT MacKENZIE ion Foreign Affalrn Anelrst) The cure for England's economic Illness is a matter of guess work, but there need be no doubt as to the basic cause of the malady, for it is deep-seated and had its inception long ago. The fact is that Britain is suffering from an inherent weakness which was bound to result in an economic upheaval in due course. What happened is that two In 1943 the Associated Press decided it wanted a warfront column about the troops. It ask ed one reporter to do it, and this wise man said, "No, thanks." Someone then happened to re- . call I was in Sicily. And a mes sage came. "Boyle, start writing a column." I did. Although the war ended four years ago, no one thought to revoke the order. So I am still at it. That is a funny thing about columns and comic strips. They go on forever like Tarzan of the Apes. The danger in columnlng it construction has so increased world wars have so speeded up en in Manchester from raw cot- that it is likely to give a man that the smash-up of the big events that this crisis has de- ton bought in the United States the idea he is an expert on transports which carry the cab- veloped before its time. This and other cotton producing coun- everything from cattle breeding inei wouio. oe nearer i,uuu,uuu. Knowledge won t De oi mucn tries. to flagpole sitting, its Since then also, Pat Hurley's assistance to the doctors who New Ink Slinger By DON UPJOHN Note that the state is soon to have a new Ink slinger who's planning on doing a scries, as he says. He won't be quite the same type as Bob Case, Ernie Haycox, et al, but plans to be pretty vitriolic and punch a mean typewriter key as it were. We haven't heard yet whether he plans to write under his nom de plume of or will . , and at the time indicated it had ideas of airplane junkets have n't changed, and the war depart ment still has a $30,000 bill which it's been trying to collect from the state department for the use of a special army plane when he was ambassador to China and insisted on a private plane to carry him home. now are holding the economic Suffice It to hark back to the beginning of this century. Brit ain was at the peak of her imper ial greatness, boasting an empire upon which the, "Mike' sign his stuff as Marion L e R oy but from what little short squibs and es says he has turn ed loose on the public so far no doubt he will bo a shining suc cess as there's no question at all but what his Don tfplnnn its stamp program for the year all laid out. This created quite a sensation below the Mason and Dixon line where the Confeder ate Veterans, southern organiza tion similar to the GAR, didn't like to be slighted. Protests be gan to flood Washington. So now comes word that on Sep tember 29 there'll be a stamp for the Confederate Veterans. The postoflice backbone weak- Since then, other cabinet of ficers though democrats have caught up with Hurley. For instance, the war depart ment sent the interior depart ment a $16,000 bill for the per- factory chlm interior Krug to Japan, carrying Krug's father and his personal physician. Dr. Roy L. Sexton, who, because of Krug's health, frequently accompanies him. The army felt that since Krug had made this something of a family earlier ventures in the field of ened, then snapped. prose have had plenty of read ers, in Multnomah county, at any We can Imagine an Oregon occupa- The length of time this phen- tlonal hazards are chair soref omenon could last HAnAndpd nf and nunditrv. clinic in Washington, but it will COurfe. nn hour Inns it fnnlr fnr. A UMlA hahv nil In th rlffht have to be taken into consider- eign countries to develop their spot will heal the chair sores, tion. own resources. There was nn And but there is no cure except death In sight when World War I broke for the columnist who acquires and changed the picture. the disease of taking himself Overnight Britain found her- too seriously, self so occupied with making war that she no longer could act as Columnists, like president, merchant to foreign countries. get man.y letters and small gift Later along came the Hitler- from the people. If they write ian catastrophe which reduced that they like blackcherrlei. ,much of the world to a state someone is sure to send them a of economic chaos. Britian was D0X' But " tney mention they again hard hit. are 'ond ' ,ea breezes, no one ever airmails them a yacht. , , . , , But It's the sentiment that This columnist isn t one of COUnts. So, even though my those who think England's great- halr lt fa3t vanishing, I am ness has run its course. With help grateful for the fellow who sent from her friends she will weath- me a bottle of beer shampoo, er the present economic hurrl- u tasted fine, and my goddaugh- cane- ter thought it was cute the way Britain still has great colonial I burped soap bubbles for three possessions, many of which are davs. has And right now I want to thank sun the reader who mailed me a sun never set. Her economic status was as the Rock of Gib r a 1 1 a r. The smoke from heri neys wrote a cross the skies the proud claim that her manu factures encir cled the world. Her banks extended their op Aratinn into far lands. Llovds deal, the interior oepanmeni or insurance covered the globe like potentially rich. She still Krug should foot the bill. , blanket. British capital Invest- an empire on which the DvWItt Mickenil State Fair without a lot of the features around there now but rate. So far his stuff has sclntu- . , ., ;, . . come another year it's going to chine politic,,' 'would be lyr- to visualize a state nts and so on. It seems tne ... . rtl iVm i tu- office. Her announcement of I Some People Steal Anything Philadelphia, Sept. 10 W It seems aoma people will steal anything. Pollre report the theft of a ear with no foot pedals and with special hand levers on the steering wheel. It belongs to Lawrence J. Kltterman, 27-year-old navy vet eran from Newport News, Va. Kltterman, who is partially paralyzed, lost the use of his right leg at Bougainville. Hauler Pays Three-Year 'Debt' Jollet, III. uThree years ago. when Chris Hall did some hauling for the highway department, it was discovered he was overpaid. State auditors ordered county officials to get a refund. The county officers were willing to forget the matter but state officials said it had to be collected. At last, Holl has paid the county clerk the one-cent he owed. writings he propose arc to all 1 , ii t.. 1 ....... Ui. aarlL . , , uT ... .;.. her retirement with the coming est efforts had some ear marks ... , B V . VJ ui v. u i of the new year was sort of a about them wh ch wou d have heU gee Indicated he might have done (ural (q m, eu nt hpr gs right smart in the field of fic tion. The interior department final- ed heavily abroad, creating never sets and, with develop- glass eye recently. ly scraped some money out of more "invisible revenues" for ment, it will represent a mighty It was just my color reddish its budget and paid the air England. force. blue. force, though In the end it was . Howevri there was a weak- the taxpayer, not the interior ,n ,nij mighty structure. OPEN FORUM department, who lost out. England in herself wasn't self- yjrcl ryjKum In addition, Secretary of the sufficient. Apart from coal she D.l.'f' n I--- VJ Treasury Snyder has his own had little mineral wealth. She rellOn TO IXeep KJlU V.0U7T tlOUSe coast guard plane, a giant C-54, couldn't begin to feed herself, To the Editor: How manv of the people of Salem and Marlon with a special crew assigned because she didn't have the acres, county have seen the beautiful miniature Marion county court- it was to see the agricultural building, the grandstand or any - Note a nudist colony is being of the other long-standing per planned in the neighborhood of manent adjuncts of the big show. Philomath and not far from Cor- f:lla ha' overcome a million d, -vallis. In fact, it is being ear- J'culties. straightened out a mil marked for the site of the Amor- 10n tnnKlcs. listened to the lean Sunbathe rs association. lnn""" of !;0U","M holsan,d which is planning a convention exhibitors and others and has al here for 1953. This, at least. w" come through with a smile, should assure a big upswing in We don 1 know wht can possl the male enrollment at the state b'v compensate her in the quiet college come another school ' retirement for the hectic life yMr she s led since Joining up with the fair nearly 35 years ago. As Speaking of political pressure, a trouble shooter she deserves Last month the postofficc depart- a string of blue ribbons that ment issued a postage stamp hnn- would stretch around Lone Oak or ing the veterans of the GAR track at least twice. merely to carry him wherever and so had to import a major he wants to go. portion of her foodstuffs She Then there is Secretary of lacked most of the raw materials Commerce Sawyer who has a special civil aeronautics plane assigned to him, which he uses to fly back home to Cincinnati on weekends. And Secretary of the navy Matthews, in addition to using a special plane for week ends In Omaha, took a recent for her manufacturers. house in the art building at the state fair? When you look at it with its lighted Christmas tree, you realize anew what a beautiful treasure the city of Salem has within Its borders. However, as a prophet Is never without honor save in his own course, but why should we not How then did Britian achieve land, so is this beautiful building preserve our present building at her industrial greatness? in our country. Architects from a museum? Future generation! The answer: By . the very distant places come to study this will be glad If people are now simple expedient of importing building. Travelers who know wise enough to realize Its worth raw materials from undeveloped beautiful buildings in many and save the building, countries, fabricatini the mater- lands have stopped here and it h., .i... ..... Junket to Honolulu, carrying his 8ls, and then selling the manu- bought pictures of it because of .i . . , , . entire family along for a ten- factured products back to those its beauty. the petition for keeping the day outing in Delightful Hawaii, countries. It does seem too bad that peo- buiIdin8 which Miss Renska She sold steel to America and pie here want to destroy it. Swartz has In the art building, many other nations. Britain If we do not wake up, lt will do not fall to do so when you woolen goods were world fam- soon be only a memory as our visit the fair, ous. India's millions clothed former state house now is. A BESSIE R. SHINN ' themselves in cotton goods wov- new courthouse is needed, of 2580 Hazel Ave., Salem Another point which would have come out if Senator Thom as had insisted on his investi gation is tin way Mr. Truman y