8- i Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publish 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: Bv Carrier: Weekly, !5c; Monthly, $1.00; One Year. $1Z.00. By Mall in Oregon: Monthly, 75cj 6 Mos.. 14.00; One Year, $8.00. V. 8. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos.. $6.00; Year, $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Saturday, October 1, 1949 A Strike Against Public Welfare Some 528,000 steel workers have shut-down the 305 plants in the coast to coast steel industry in a pension strike, which threatens an economic tailspin for the nation. Picket lines are forming across the country, following the collapse of long and protracted negotiations. It is not only the steel companies and their employes which will suffer but nearly all other industries and workers, espe cially the 500,000 steel workers in fabricating plants. Even before the strike began, however, the nation's steel mills, already had been closed by producers who saw the walkout as inevitable. Workers remained in the plants with food supplies and bedding. Picket captains set up coffee-and-doughnut kitchens. Federal mediators failed to bring "Big Steel" and the union together on the vital pension-insurance issue. The company agreed to pay the 10-cent an hour "package" pro gram but demanded worker contributions. The union stubbornly held out for the recommended "non contribu tory" program at the employers' expense. President Murray of the CIO steelworkers' union in calling the strike, proclaimed it a "just and righteous cru sade," and U. S. Steel President Fairless blamed it on Murray's "inflexible" stand in negotiations. He holds out for the principal of cooperative pensions to which both employer and employe contribute, a system in effect in many industries. President Tiuman could stop this strike against public welfare by utilizing the provisions of the Taft-Hartley labor relations law, but seeking the law's repeal under pledges to the unions, he refuses to. The emergency is just as great as it was when he used his presidential power to stop the railroad strike in 1945. A Story that History Will Retell The little news item was almost lost by most readers of Friday afternoon's paper. What it concerned was almost forgotten amid the current worries of strikes, politics, and the A-bomb. But it was a story that will never be for gotten in the history books of the United States. The story told of the last day of the great allied airlift to blockaded Berlin. Friday night the last big C-54 headed eastward to Berlin with a load of coal. It was a routine finale of what once was an endless skyway of planes bridg ing the Russian blockade. Typical of the entire airlift venture, it ended a month ahead of schedule. It was back in June, 1948, that the allies came through with the airlift idea to counter the Russian road, rail and water blockade of Berlin. The Russians were convinced 11 months later that the round-the-clock aerial answer of the western powers was effective: The Allies weren't going to be driven out of Berlin. Cost of the airlift? A quarter of a billion dollars and the lives of 70 airmen. The benefits will never be known specifically, but no one can doubt the impression that allied ingenuity, which dreamed up the airlift and then carried it through, had on the Russians and Germans. Regretably, that ingenuity and resourcefulness was lack ing too often in American foreign affairs. In Asia, for instance, the United States was faced with a vicious Red expansion. Instead of reacting to the threat as in Berlin with the airlift, the Allies threw up their hands and said the situation in the Orient was hopeless. The blockade of Berlin could have been described that way, too, if the imagination and determination of the Allies had not responded with the historic answer that is now a memory, the inspiration of the airlift. MacNaughton's Timely Warning E. B. MacNaughton, Portland banker, college president, newspaper executive, whose public service covers a multi tude of projects, and a "liberal" in politics, sternly warned the officers of the League of Oregon Cities and the Oregon Finance Officers' association at their joint convention against the dangers of inflation, the rising costs of federal government and unbalanced budgets with their deficit spending. MacNaughton strongly urged the study of the Hoover commission report on the cost of government, its effi ciency and the exertion of their influence to force its enaction by congress. He further urged: "We've Rot a great future In this state. We've got tremendous wealth, new touts (hydroelectric energy) to work with. But nil these things are going to be hurt if we don't become realistic about the cost of government. The time is close at hand, if It is not already here, when we in this country arc going to begin to feci the cost? of going to war. It is time we should. The mass of the people believe that through some financial legerdemain the government can turn dollars loose and give us a semblance nd a flush of prosperity. It it possible for the government some time to say the dollar represents a pant's button." Pointing out that "you can't get rich by printing dol lars, but only by production, MacNaughton stressed that production is the only way of increasing wealth. All this is sound common sense but seems to have to be learned anew the hard way by every generation. The pur suit of the illusionary will-o-the-wisps, the chase of some thing for nothing towards Utopia still motivates a large section of th9 masses. Hollywood Opens a Dog House Hollywood wrwrhey finally got around to opening a new dug house with typical Hollywood fanfare. Even the mayor, the California attorney general, chief of police and sheriff turnrd nut. Earl Gilmore, owner of oil refineries, a midget auto racing stadium and an athletic field, was host at the affair. .Mayor Fletcher Bowron snipped a ribbon officially opening the nrw home of Gllmore's recently asqulred Scotch terrier, as the assembled dignitaries looked on. Afterward they all enjoyed a buffet dinner. The Scoltle took It all very calmly, Gilmore paid the bills. Thief Knew What He Wanted Hayton, O. Ti Somewhere In Dayton there Is a reluctant thief who knew Just how much money he needed and took It When Julian Tangeman returned to hta home, he found $136 missing from a small metal hoi In which he keeps valuables. A note left In the box read: "Will pay you back as soon as possible." 1 Tangeman said an additional $8$ Id the box was untouched. BY BECK Husbands III I DON'T CARE L H IF THEY ARE OFFERING K '5 8 V A ; SONE OVER AN HOUR i- vJ 11 .TT-rrrr o I HAD TO PITT J i i ffl"! Wfiti ANOTHER NICKEL f ) Li Wn f "fi! ( 'N THE PARKINS J-f fcrf : 'Dell i$jfefi25 THE FIRESIDE PULPIT Those Lacking Sympathy With Organized Religion Owe Debt to It BY REV. GEORGE H. SWIFT Rector 0t Paul'i Cpueopal churob San Francisco This Is being written in the civic auditorium In San Francisco where nearly ten thousand people have as sembled for the opening service of a great church convention. Delegates and visitors have come from the Philippines, Japan, China, Hawaii, Mexico, the Canal Zone, the West Indies, Liberia, Britain, Brazil, Alaska, and from every state in the union. Jews or the Old Testament Scrip- It is gratifying to find that, tures, no one today would have in this age in which so much heard of the Ten Command is said about irreligiousness and ments or the writings of the pro Godlessness, there is still a large phets. Without the organized WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND British Tried to Prevent Russ A-Bomb Announcement By DREW PEARSON Washington One significant incident which occurred at the time of the Russian atomic explosion announcement has now leaked out namely, how the British tried to prevent that an nouncement. They did not want President Truman to tell the world that the Russians now have the secret of the atom. The argument occurred on Thursday evening, September available, it was impossible for 22, Just before the president was either the coal miners or the slated to make his world-shak- American people to know this, lng statement. The prime minis- And, in the end, it is the Amerl ters of England and Canada were can coal-burning public which also supposedly ready to an- foots the bill. nounce, when suddenly the Brit' ish Embassy in Washington ask ed the state de partment for the use of a special airplane to New York. The private plane set aside for cabinet use was thereon? placed at the embassy's d 1 s - at' posal. Just why BY GUILD Wizard of Odds 3 ax. A'ri ft . I V.I J Ortw Frln Neither the miners nor the general public could know, for instance, that the pension fund has suffered from all sorts of extraneous expenditures to say nothing of $35,000 paid annually to both Senator Styles Bridges of New Hampshire and Ezra Van Horn for sitting on the board. When Lewis stopped all pay ments to miners just before the strike, it was announced that the welfare treasury had dwind led to $14,695,504. But what THE AVERAGE BABY uses to DIAPERS A WEEK (THE NEW AvERMI6E IS INCREASING SO rrn MUCH TuilN 30 YEARS THE STORE OWNERS WUO ARC OPTIMISTIC WHEN THEY START A BUSINESS HAVE k S T03 BETTER EARNING AVERAGE THAN PESSIMISTS.' tne emnassy snoum nave Lewi didn,, revegl wa ,hat for an entire airplane instead of Qut Qf fhjs remaining balance, merely buying a seat on a com mercial plane to New York was not explained. However, Roger Makin, depu ty undersecretary for British foreign affairs, who was long only a little over $1,000,000 was earmarked for pensions to re tired miners. When Senator Bridges acted as "neutral" arbitrator for the fund stationed in Washington and an in 1948i he deereed that pensions old friend of Secretary of State were not to be paid to miners Acheson, flew to New York and who retired before M lfl48 spent part of the evening argu- JMs waJ party ,0 makfi Jure ing with Acheson against making tnere wou,d bfi enQugh funds the Russian atomic announce- to pay the pensionSi partly be ment next morning. cause the ,jne on retroactive Makin's argument seemed to pension payments had to be hinge partly around the idea that drawn somewhere, the American people would be However of tne to(a, $104 too alarmed and panic-stricken. n00 nafri , nf ,h fnnri nnnleiis rt f rpn. raontntlue people in most if not all, relig ious bodies who are defenders of the faith, who maintain found ations and who. have the vision and courage to ' produce pro-1 grams for con- 0for ,, tinued e x pan- sion. early Church of Christendom, the gospels in the New Testa ment, the Sermon on the Mount, or the incomparable Epistles of Saint Paul would be unknown today. Without organized religion, there would be no religious ed ucation, no services of worship. There would be no Christian spirit to promote movements for world relief, there would be no organized charities, no organ ized efforts to spread the mes sage of the love of Christ. In fact, excepting a possible One British counter-idea was that the news of Russia's posses sion of the atom secret should be leaked instead to a news paper. This would give the American public a less sudden since April 1948, less than one third, or $30,360,000, has gone to pensions. The rest was over spent, most of it on laudable en terprises, but nevertheless with a wanton abandon certain to friends who at this stage ob viously must come from the I imagine his sensations are something like those of your correspon rfC i "Ima 1 realization that Russia had the dep,ete the und gnd risk ,he DomD- entire pension plan There nad also Deen some op position to the announcement For instance, disability pay ments and assistance to widows '"" alone cost $64,206,071. Death on the ground that we could bet- be,;,, to widows and depend ter watch, the Russians if they ents cost $s 546 853 medical QlQ nOl KIIUW wc iviicw men There are people who tell us with an air of self-satisfaction Individual here and there, there that they themselves are deeply would be no belief In God here religious, have faith in God and in the world today, live by the Golden Rule, but as . far as organized religion is con- .... . , cerned they have no sympathy The man who believes in God with it and will have no dealings but has no use foe the church is with it. not aware that he owes the little This is ,of course, an alibi religion he may have to men and secret. The British shared in this view. However, the British argu ments got nowhere. President care and hospital services cost $4,761,071. While these were worth-while projects, neither the public nor the coal miners has any way which sounds hollow, is hollow, women with the love of God in and hetrnvs the shallow think ing of those who use it. their hearts, banded together in a common purpose. That purpose Organized religion of one kind Is to spread the teachings of or another has preserved and Christ, to preserve and pass on handed down through the ages to millions the scriptures they the precious teachings which ,"av ,had f'nd,e' (own ' . .to defend the faith, to maintain are the foundation stones of foundationg) and to give of their religion today. Without organiz- means to extend the kingdom ed religion, the religion of the of God among men. Truman had made up his m.nd ( knowing just wnat th were categorically that the American or how tney were administered. people were entitled to know. NOTE John L. Lewis was what had happened and no one warned at th(j stgrt that the en. could have deterred him. ,ire welfare fund would be Je0. That was why when the cab- pardized, including pensions if inet met next morning he stated he went in for too lavish spend- "I have decided to make the fol- ing. But there is reason to be- lowlng announcement." He did lieve he was not at all averse to not ask the cabinet for advice the depletion of his welfare fund as to whether he should make in order to give him an excuse it. for coming back for more. Out the Same Door, But- Baltimore (P)-i-"Go out the same door," advised Judge J. Howard Murray as he gave another chance to a young couple In his court with marital troubles. They did. They left the courtroom together. Outside, the husband left his wife and walked away with another girl. SIPS FOR SUPPER Just a Whisper By DON UPJOHN It may be just a faint rustling whisper coming on a southern breeze from Lane county way but if it follows all precedent it could well grow into a rumble or a roar. For didn't Jim Aiken's football team of the University of Oregon lose a game last night? And isn't this the unpardonable sin in the eyes and minds of the university alum- . ni? Of course the fact is this is the first out of 14 straight games that the team has slipped up in confer ence play but we await with interest to see what difference this will make In the minds of he will not be able to go hunt ing this year. His last deer hunt was with his brother Benjamin, now deceased, in the fall of 1947 when they accompanied Mr. and Mrs. George Ashmon to the game area near Bend. Don CpJnn C. F. Reilly, "the Watkins man," broke a record yesterday. When he got some of his com pany's 1950 calendars he walked way across town to see that we th. ronch-thirstv alumni. If they got the first one, and Incident- happen to lose' another maybe ally to get us our first 1950 cal Jim had better begin to look 'nd" against all comers, which around to see if he has misplaced ne ma. we giancea tnrough his trunk keys since coming from Nevada. A brief survey same and see that next year Fri day the lath falls first in Jan- made among Saturday morning uary and then in October, two quarterbacks this a.m. brought oi mem Deing supplied ior me the Indication that the alumni 'er- think Oregon was beaten be cause of bad breaks. OSC alum- They Never Miss nl think that Oregon was Just Eugene ofl It took some snuffed out by a better team. ,lethlng, but the mail went There It is in a nutshell. through. A letter addressed "Keneth Martin, lives by his Getting Old, Maybe neighbor, has one leg," turned Lebanon James W. Smith, up at the Eugene post office now three months past his 107th Friday. Carriers were queried, birthday, is in general good One of them recognized the health, but is regretful that, on name and description. The let account of trouble with his feet, ter was delivered. Traffic Cop Is Too Efficient Montgomery, Ala. Traffic Cop Roland L. Banvlll wrote out a parking ticket and left It under the windshield wiper of a car. When railed on to pay off In police tourt, he explained! "It was a new car and I didn't recognise my license number." "BOMB" EXPLODES With doors bolted and shades drawn, the senate-house atomic energy committee got an ad vance report that Russia had ex ploded an atomic bomb. The legislators listened with long, solemn faces to the an nouncement from Chairman Brien McMahon of Connecticut. "This is information of trans cendent importance." McMahon declared, dramatically. He add ed that It was also the most momentous news "Since Hiro shima." Then he read excerpts from a speech by Soviet Foreign min ister Vishinsky, in which the Soviet spokesman used the words, "Reeking vengeance." "That's the key to the whole thing vengeance," broke in Senator Vandenberg, shaking a finger gravely. Senator Gene Millikln of Col orado warned against hysteria, and Atomic Energy Commission er Sumner Pike then gave his ideas. Then, as if a practical joke from on high, the room was rocked by a resounding noise. The legislators jumped in their seats, then broke into laughter. What they had heard was the beginning of a thunderstorm, breaking over the Capitol dome. "There goes your Russian at om c bomb," quipped Millikin. The tension was eased. MINERS' WELFARE Fl'ND What very few people in cluding the miners realize a bout John L. Lewis's welfare fund is that the pension part of the fund was never exhausted. Coal miners saw red and struck when Lewis announced that payments would stop be cause the coal operators had not been contributing to the welfare fund. But what they didn't know was that: 1. Only three or four coat operators In the entire United States had stopped contributing. 2. The pension part of the fund was not overdrawn and could have continued paying pensions. However, since no public ac counting of the welfare fund is SENATOR CAIN FEINTS Tough, waterfront-bred Nick Bez, Alaskan fishing-fleet czar, and a good friend of President Truman's, recently threatened to punch Washington's trouble shooting Senator Harry Cain in the nose the next time they met. But after all the hubbub in the the papers, the reporters missed out when the two men finally came face to face the other day in the' men's room of the May flower hotel. Bez spotted Cain coming in, and whirled around to meet him. "Are you Harry Cain?" de manded Bez, with eyes snapping and jaw thrust forward. "Sure, and who are you?" shot back Cain. "I am Nick Bez," announced the fishing-fleet king. The senator from Washington, a former paratrooper, quietly shifted his brief case from his right to his left hand. "Glad to see you," he mum bled. But Bez brushed the greeting aside. He was sore because Cain had once charged that Bez be longed to a Communist-front orgainzation. That was the rea son for the threat against Cain's nose. "Why did you call me a Com munist?" snapped Bez. "If you had read your news papers, you would know that I never called you a Communist," Cain retorted. He explained that he had simply read from the justice department's list of Communist-front organizations. "Will you apologize and with draw what you said?" Bez per sisted. "I said only what was said by the justice department." Cain ex plained again. "If you can get the justice department to make a correction, I will be very pleas ed to make the change on the floor of the senate. Isn't that fair enough? You don't want me to apologize for something I never said." "I guess that's fair enough," Bez agreed. Then he added, om inously: "You know, I was aw fully mad at vou." Cain smiled and walked out His nose still intact. iCoprrimt I'M) MacKENZIE'S COLUij Tito Forms Qm Brand Of Communism in Yugoslavia By DeWlTMacKENZIE roMliil"" Anit Russia's arbrupt cancellation' her treaty of friendship with Yugoslavia, thereby setting aW example which her satellites may be expected to follow, tfher tightens the banishment of Marshal Tito from the Bolshetit fold. The Yugoslav dictator nowl decidedly on his own until he makes newuaaMM has been carrying on hostile ac tivity against the Soviet Union. Yugoslavia also has friendship and mutual aid pacts with Al bania, Bulgaria, Czechoslova- Hungary, Poland and Ro ma, In the natural course of events, all these neighbors also Sp, yl will cancel their treaties. ft. m J urnii u - : , in h. p i t 0,BI" M"'tii alt this lies in the real reason JD- .H u t. v for the break between Russia Z th? hhiW ? r g0t C8Kg Yugoslavia which came into hll " Germ,anba'lhe !" in a big way in June, rage of high-power shells. 1948 That was henythe Mo.: uTdTrs'taXblft dhaTa tSJrSSkSTSt friendly encouragement. . The cause of that expulsion Thus far the only kindly won wa Tlto' refusal to surrender Tito has received from his oil Jugoslavia's national sovereign comrades is contained in an ar ty to control of Moscow. He tide published by "The Litei maintained that his country's In ary Gazette" in Moscow ternal affairs concerned her The Gazette says history sooi lone' and that he would ac is going to offer him a choice-ceDt n0 dictation, "either rat poison, like Hitlei In other words, he was pur or a soaped rope, like Mussc tuing nationalism in building linl." The article adds ths his communist state, whereas "there is good reason for th Russia's whole effort is centered Belgrade dwarf to go crazy." in international communism un- Moscow accuses Tito of linder which every country would ing up with "foreign imperialii take Its orders from Moscow, tic circles." Specifically Russii This means Tito has inaugur charges that the Budapest treassted a new brand of communism on trial of former Hungariaifor his state. And that, of course, Foreign Minister Laszlo Rajkit a turn of events which is of sentenced to death last Saturvast Importance to the western day, disclosed that Yugoslaviinations. Spilled: Million Qlons of Water La Grande, Ore., (U.RV Poh sought someone who spilled a million gallons of water. The water came from a sen 0f mysteriously opened fire hydrants. The reservoir's water levekhich had been built after a period of drought dropped tt feet. What's Happened Wild West? Bojeman, Mont. (IP) Who s this is the wild west? Wyatt Haskell, Three Forkitancher, was fined $25 on a charge his horses roamed thejghways. Fred Doney, 60, is charged t Great Falls with letting a horse run loose. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOHER Hunters Go tthe Woods; Deer Go to th City By HAUOYLE u ,LnIe,l N- M"1 Ciim that ol Louisiana Purchase exposition held out in St. Louis. Mo., way bc in 1904! Here 43 years later it's a cuing a scarcity of wild deer in the central Adirondack mountaj. So says Gerald Kenwell, 62, Je best woodsman hereabouts. mis ia nis rea- sonlna: Some of our 0niHp want not f to the St. Louis fair. They saw some beavers on exhibition I Looked real cute, so thev brought a pair back and turned them loose. Then somebody put out some more. Tit k The old guide puts much of ie blame on "The cussed con rvation rules." The state now as a two-week open season on eaver and otter, but Kenwell unks it ought to pay a bounty r trapping the pests. And a jounty on bobcats, too. i "There's more of them arminrl ow." he said. "And as for beari M Ut-why there's ten times as many ow as there were .40 years zo. The old bear hunters are one and the bears have their OPffV FORUM Reaction to Court House Design To the Editor: Fifty words to the Editor leaves little for sane argument as to the impossibility of the design of the new county "warehouse" to tie in with the rest of the capitol group buildings. Already those who dislike it are accused of "moss-backism." Beau ty and dignity are sacrificed for tunctionalism. LARRY BOUL1ER, 690 Ratclift Dr., Salem. Protected for years by a clos- av." ed hunting season and with few Some bruins raided his hunt natural enemies to catch them, ig camp this summer, smashed the beavers multiplied like rab- irough a window and ate every bits. And now, Kenwell says,,jng that wasn't in cans, thev've got nature out of balance. "The beaver is the death of "The thing to protect is tht the woods," he said. "They've , ing that has value," said Ken dammed up the streams and ell, "Not the thing that cauiea flooded the natural winter quar- smage." ters for the deer, leaving the "i figure that for every deer deer nothing to eat. ,0t In the hills, hunters spend "And thev're destroying the 200. So it's the deer that hai trout, too. The trout can't get due not the beavers, otter and past the dams to spawn, and the ibcats." water in the ponds heat up in Kenwell thinks the deer the sun. and the trout can't stand ould return to the woods if that either.'' ,e -conservation fellows" would end about $65,000 a year to Kenwell holds that the otter, ock their winter quarters with also increasing rapidly, is an ,0d a fraction of the amount equal threat to the fisherman'! )ortsmen spend for hunting fun censes alone. 'An otter catches and eati it would also help the deer about two pounds of fish a day. ld trout both." the old woods and fifty of them will get rid of an a(ided. "if they turned every a lot of fine trout." JSsed beaver into a hat."