Capital il Journal An Independent Newspoper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistont Publisher Published every otternoon except Sunday ot 444 Che meketa St., Solem. 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 ot all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this poper and also news published therein SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, J5e; Monthly, $1.00; One Tear. S12.00. By Mail In Oregon: Monthly, 15e; 6 Mos. 14.00: One Tear, $.00. V. 8. Outside Oregon? Monthly. $1 00: ( Mos.. $8.00: fear. $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, October 25, 1949 A Way Out for Britain The Population Rerefence bureau, a non-profit scientific educational organization for the purpose gathering, cor relating and distributing population data, not a govern ment organization, suggests in its October Bulletin a "Way Out for Britain." The Bulletin points out that Great Britain has 2'a times s many people per square mile of arable land as Europe and more than 11 times as many as the United States, more than any country in the world, except Japan, twice as many as Italy, Germany and India and a surplus popu lation of 15 millions. This surplus British population cannot be supported from combined yields of land, industry and foreign trade, and is certain to continue the chronic crisis. But if her people, it is suggested, were moved to thinly inhabited British areas such as Australia, Canada and parts of Africa, they would solve the problem and be a valuable asset to world peace. Such a migration would: 1. Better the level of living of the emigrants. 2. Help make the United Kingdom self-supporting. S. Strengthen the British Commonwealth generally. 4. Save the American people billions of dollars in capital and natural resources. 5. Help to build up friendly nations on at least three sides of She United States in case of war. The United Kingdom does not need more man power. It needs fewer consumers and more machine power and these it will gain by exporting its surplus population making pos sible fewer imports of food and raw materials for home consumption and more supports of raw materials and machine power to increase vital exports. The Bulletin admits that the migration of 15 million people will not be an easy job, but it would be cheaper to move a 140 pound person once than to move some 1400 pounds of food plus their raw materials, every year to sup port that person if he remains a Britain. Ireland is cited as an example of the benefits of mass migration which has decreased its population 50 percent and helped raise the standard of living from one of the lowest to one of the highest in Europe. Furthermore, her emigrants increased Ireland's influence throughout the world. The same result would follow in Britain. The British migration should constitute a cross-section of the population. The Royal Commission on Population in its report on June, 1949, concludes: "Weighing the advantages and disadvantages of emigration, we have no doubt that it is in the long run interests ot Great Britain and the Commonwealth as a whole to maintain the flow of emigrants from Great Britain to the other parts of the Com monwealth at as high a level as possible." The British crisis is a double one, a temporary acute "dollar" crisis caused in part by World War II and in part by over-p( pulation and a chronic crisis caused by long ternvtrends in both population growth and in diminishing production, exports and foreign assets, and unless the problem of surplus population is solved, there will be re curring emergency problems, with a "coolie" level of living. There is also the threat of communism of which hunger and unrest are basic causes. A Crusader and His Mission While the United Nations were taking stock Monday of the record on the fourth year of the world organization, Salem was learning about a suggested off-shoot of the UN. Here in Oregon's capital on a crusade to form a federal union of the western democracies was Clarence Streit (pro-, nounced like "Strite"). For 10 years Streit, foreign correspondent and student of world affairs, has been trying to interest governments and peoples in his plan which he considers the only hope of survival for the western world. His previous 10 years of covering the League of Nations for the New York Times found him grasping for, the reason for the League's failure. He dismissed the often-given rea son of lack of United States membership for the League's weakness and collapse. He went so far as to describe the League as stronger in some ways than the United Nations. The fault of both, as judged from his observations, was the type of organization. Both were set up as mere leagues or alliances of participating nations. Instead of an alliance, he advocates that the Atlantic pact nations form a federal union patterned after the Unit ed States union. His idea has been described by Fortune magazine "as the greatest political and economic oppor tunity in history, by comparison with which the opening of the North American continent was a modest beginning." Ten years ago Streit came out with an idea for a republic of the states of most of Europe and the North American continent. World War II brought about a modification in his plans. He then believed the most workable plan was one which would start first with the Atlantic nations. A world government would be the ultimate aim. In his fed eral Atlantic republic, he would put preservation and growth of individual freedom as the first objective. The econdary objective would be peace. It is Streit' claim that no alliance has ever worked. He points to the Articles of Confederation on which the Amer ican colonies sought to operate in their early days. That aystem was abandoned as unworkable. The federal union of the Btates into the form we know today was the solution. To him. a federal union of the Atlantic pact nations would hold this promise: The supreme power in the world. At last, a force large enough to stabilize the peace would be in existence. Trade barriers would be down among the western democracies. The markets the United States needs so badly would be offered in the new union. The dan gerous financial trend indicated by deficit spending might come to an end. Streit'i trouble in presenting this picture is for his audi ence to grasp the background and observations that have prompted him to come to his grand-scale conclusions. He mw the League of Nations falter for 10 years. He saw Mussolini come to power because the economic chaos of Italy was an ideal breeding ground for a dictator. The name was true in Germany, where Hitler came to power. He now sees danger in Great Britain's current economic troubles. His idea of federal Atlantic republic is as challenging s the times and just at difficult for the. average person to trasp. BY BECK Husbands WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND BY GUILD WSM THINK HARD THERE Sffif""'"' ww4: , R YOUR WIFE "WVA . ,! Veep Plans Visit to St. Louis Wizard of Odds But Not as Vice President By DREW PEARSON Washington Still coy about his St. Louis romance, Vice Pres ident Barkley blushingly admitted to the senate before adjourning that he "may" spend some time in Missouri Instead of heading right back to Kentucky. The question was brought up by Missouri's usually humorless Senator Forrest SIPS FOR SUPPER Surprise BY DON UPJOHN The Multnomah county court sure handed a surprise in nam ing a captain in the Portland fire department as sheriff. Now, we wonder what would happen if some time a fireman was named chief of police, or vice versa, a policeman named chief of a fire department. Wow! That is what would be known as an upset, speaking In foot- Donnell after a fellow republi can, Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon, al lured that the vice president would b e wel e o m e in his state any time even if he is a democrat. With a twin kle in his eye, Donnell broke in: "I should like to invite the vice president most graciously to vis it Missouri occasionally." "The present occupant of the chair appreciates that invitation, and in view of its sincerity, the chair may accept it," smiled Barkley. "I will say to the vice presi dent that I was quite confident Draw Pcartaa brass hats on the carpet, but it is new for a brass hat to call senators on the carpet. The man who reversed this rule is Gen eral Omar Bradley, the nation's top military commander, who scorched the senate appropria tions committee for leaking sec ret information to the press. The senators had given out fi gures from a secret intelligence report which Bradley had quot ed to the senate committee be hind closed doors namely, that Russia has 17S divisions . under arms and can boost this to 300 divisions within 90 days and to an eventual strength of 502 divi sions. This compares with a peak allied strength of 91 divi sions during the war. Bradley had also disclosed Soviet air strength at 15,000 planes. Pi ar r warns ofimu I ' T J HUNTERS StLF-INFLICTED.' 1 fl ODDS MX 44t0l A BRITON isn't making as much money net now as he did before THE WAR , WAGES VAORKEPe. OUNCES APE STOl LESS THAT OULL UIT MXIR JOB THIS YEAlc THAN THtT WEPE TWO YEAPS AGO.' m Send your "Odds" questions on any subject to "The Wizard of Odds," care of the Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. ball terms. But we underst and that the new sheriff from the fire department hasn't Schrunk from taking the job. It might be that the admir als and generals and others who LriU 1 " -"'""" dui Draaiey naa naraiy leu i i.ic nil 1 1 nmnurn that he would, when I extend- Capitol Hill before these figures HUUR MAN b rnlLUjUrntK ed the invitation, replied jjon- showed up in front-page head- nell. lines. Next day, Bradley return- "The chair would like to ed for a second appearance be- state," replied the vice presi- hind closed doors, snorted fire, dent, "that if he does accept the made certain gtatementJ invitation, it will not be in his yesterday that were highly con. capacity as vice president of the fidentiai and highly secret." he Uml States. scolded. "If I can't testify before Then he blushed just a bit. commiUee of congress and tell them confidential information JOHN L. LEWIS CHICKENS without being betrayed. I will The public has forgotten it nave to use a different ap the car trunk. I guess I was so scared I'd wrecked the car that I could have lifted almost any thing." Hubbie took one look and the J. P. Morgan-Andrew proach." at the big steel disk and suggest- Mellon interests would like to GOP Floor Leader Ken Wher- ed she take the manhole cover forget it, but they have them- ry of Nebraska winced. back to the city water works de- selves largely to blame for the "I had read a lot of that infor- Moral Outrage Oyer Football Subsidizing Seldom Heard By HAL BOYLE New York () One of the things missing from football this season is the old atmosphere of moral outrage. The two big controversies of my reportorial youth were: 1. Are wrestling matches fixed in advance? 2. Are college football players subsidised? Today these ffwi questions m partment. Encountered big handsome Rudy Calaba, the well known re altor and walked up the street nation's now serious coal and mation in other places," the Ne sted strikes. braska senator protested. "If it The incident they would like was highly confidential, it cer to forget goes back to the sum- tainly had been given out be mer of 1947 when John L. Lewis fore in other places." sat down with the biggest coal But the general went on with nn ninpri wild ... . oat uvnu ?r ivii viiv winmwi hir in whintnn n r hv with nim a minute yesterday. He ODerators in the country and was his lecture. v. n: u .w -ol. i naa t'ul,e smlrK 01 satisfaction n-)h B11,nrispri and "leased when "A lot of oeoDle felt the in- on his face and confided he'd they gave n j m a 45-cents-an- formation was highly sensation Just been to the dentist's office hour wage increase, plus welfare al and accused me of war mon- tor a tnorougn going over and fund plus aimost everything else the dentist couldn t find a soli- he asked for even including tary criticism as to the state of some nullifications of the Taft- his natural clackers. "There'll Hartw rt be no FT & BA for me while The companies which led in of the senators. been calling each other names in an attempt to gain some sort of a unification in the armed forces, may take a lesson from what has happened in Portland. Maybe they should appoint an admiral as a general in the army, a four star general as an admiral, an air force man to head the ma rines, et cetera, and the whole thing might Iron itself out. gering," blazed Bradley. "I bit terly resented being put in that position. two seem about important as the J aeDates among medieval phi losopher over how many an gels could sit on the point of a pin. Right or wrong, the sports - loving LA of time. And it also has pretty well made up its mind that col lege football players are sub sidized. The only question re maining is whether the right man gets enough. In the old davs erouDs of an. j noyed professors, indignant at l the realization the fnntball much As made more than they did, led iLA.aaaal the attack on the game. They i b.th fomented against the payment of college athletes in the form of public years ago decided that, scholarships, salaries, job sine- There wasn't another peep out yes, most rasslin' exhibitions are cures, or gift automobiles from Flying Saucer? Ottawa, Canada Jt) Mrs. Fred Browne said she stopped and got out when she heard a clanging noise under her brand new car. The car seemed to be running all right without the big steel disk lying on the road but she decided to take it home for her husband to look at. "I just tugged and pulled," she said, ex plaining how she loaded it into you re running tne thing," said handing Lewis this bonanza Rudy. Which, we might consid- were J. P. Morgan's U.S. Steel er our biggest disappointment of corporation which owns the big the week. gest captive coal mines in the U.S.A. and the Mellon-controll- While on the FT & BA ques- ed Pittsburgh Consolidation tion we're again reminded of Coal company. Wes Ritchey, chief clerk at L&B Following their lead, smaller branch of the USNB, who is hav- al operators had to follow suit, ing them out a section a week This gift to Lewis came as a until thev are all Bnnp. Mavho shock to the rest of the industry urA- u u: i i- .i because onlv six months before. . . " aiiuu.u nave ins uuva in tnc - ' rnnferi r.ror ... . . Un. T.,min V,orf -thfnurn TOOieO. OVer. overoratt department set up a .......... tooth account for him and render erything he had into a court bat a statement everv wppk until hp 0tc nvArrlrsnrn lilro thctv of the treat the customers. (Copyrliht lllll pre-arranged entertainment, alumni. with the winner picked ahead Ex-Governor West Recalls Prank in Salem Feed Barn It was a losing battle. A los ing team can't draw the crowds to pay off the bonds on a sta dium, and a winning team can. And in many, many cases col lege presidents found they had to wink at the subsidization of athletes by coaches and wealthy alumni in order to keep their education factories solvent. The days when a moleskin hero would break a collar bone for nothing were over. Foot ball became a big business, and What's in a Name? Granby, Conn., Oct. 25 (U P) The sale of Christmas decora tions at the South Congregational church's annual fair will be handled by Miss Ever Green. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Princess Elizabeth Stirs Britain With a Rebuke By DeWITT MacKENZIE ((At forfli-D Afffttm Anftlrst) Public pronouncements by the king and other Immediate mem bers of the British Royal family ordinarily are non-controversial and are sanctioned in advance by the prime minister's office, since the monarchy is constitutional. For this reason England sat up and took notice when 22-year- old Princess By OSWALD WEST In "the days that are gone" there stood, where the Elsinor theater now stands, an old farmer's feed barn or shed completely Its single entrance, on High street, led past a small office, with bunk and stove, on the right, into a large open tie against Lewis and won. Most area where horses might be unhitched and vehicles parked. The of the nation had applauded, animals were stabled in the rear, Furthermore, only one year ear- being fed by the prprietors or over before Mother gave the it had to function like big busi- lier, the coal operators had bit- with feed brought by the pa- coat a thorough cleaning, and me nese. It had to fork over the terly criticized Secretary of the tron. Charges would vary ac- permission to wear it. Such a going price for the raw mater Interior Krug because he gave cordingly. grand and glorious feeling! lal muscle and speed. Lewis an increase of 18 cents 0n g old wet wintcr's morn- T"e years pass (1912) and, as Now the issue appears settled, exactly the same given in lng Ed Baker and T (aged ten Governor of the State, I am on The institutions that didn't other industries. Qr eleven) were nosing around my way to attend a Western want to gc into football on an Yet on top of this, Ben Fair- jn ,he wg Jned M T recall Governor's Conference at Boise, industrial basis simply had to less of U.S. Steel and George Ed,s fgth Jos Baker wa, at Idaho a saddle mare serving as drop out of competition. At the Humphrey of Pittsburgh Con- tnat tj Sheriff o Mario a means of transportation. University of - Chicago they solvation coal handed Lewis 45 Ed warnuy cloth- Rounding a mountain grade, be- ,tudy great books. Other ivory Z 'lhZS: ed, being the happy owner of tweenBurn, Ontario I met tower, still keep the turnstiles kers didn't have to contribute to the welfare fund. It all came from the employer. MIXING POLITICS, WAGES The hidden motives for this sudden surrender, it was report- an overcoat. I had never leit the glorious touch and warmth of one. As it was a little too early for the arrival of farmer pa trons, the wagon shed was prac tically empty. So, as we sur- a rancher-stockman driving a team to a light spring wagon. It was a hot July day, and his canteen in sight, I hailed him, and begged a drink of water. Granted, we then swapped """.JT u , name, and occunatinn.. f?rward who is P" clicking at the gridiron gate. The professor labor alone in his laboratory to develop the next wonder drug. But it's the young man who can throw -j . 4u. ViUr . ,V ,k', veyed the premises, our eyes l" o,,oh .ioht nf mall hllie- gray overcoat hanging on a nail, driven high on a side-wall Says he. man, above "You are the one all others, that I the debt on the field house. This hero in pigskin not only Elizabeth, heir ess to the throne, made a public address in which she gave the coun try a good trouncing fo r lax morals. She was spea king at a moth er's union meet ing and her re marks were aimed primarily at divorce, which has increased heavily since the outbreak of land. the late war. "When we see around us the havoc which has been wrought, above all, among the children, bv the breakup of homes," said Lewis in return would line up labor for Tom Dewey and against Truman; and (2) The steel industry was able to pass the increased cost on to the con sumer. In brief, Truman had kicked Lewis in the teeth; now father of the thought) that it had been left by some transient show how they could stroke his outfit, and would never be call ed for. so, nnoing a poie, we But the effect of this bonanza succeeded in lifting the coat to Lewis still is reverberating from its resting place. It was, .. . nlltn jnttuctrv thA nf pnurse. a little dustv. but in wife of , i' 1U j . nt aluminum iiiuusu;, auu inc kuuu icait, anu a p- So a good-sized tempest has been brewed in the British tea- powerful republicans wanted to pot. One of the highly interesting maJle: aspects of this development, as I see it, rests in the fact that Mrs. Geoffry Fisher, the Archbiship of Canterbury. presided over the meeting at which the Princess spoke. Therefore, it strikes me that Elizabeth must have had not only the approval of Prime Min ister Attlee's office but that of the head of the Church of Eng- banked furnaces of the steel in- God, how good it felt! dustry. The Mellon's Aluminum Proud and warm I headed for corporation would not be shut home. The story, as told, by a strike today, had not their shocked my mother. She sent Pittsburgh consolidation played me back to the feed shed, with politics with Lewis two years ago. Nor would General Motors and Chrysler be up against tough pension demands today. For their gift to Lewis set a have been wanting to see and P8"" the stadium he fills the talk to." Enquiring as to what barrooms which tune in on the ,n. nn .;. v. ..u r . flame bv television. A miiltitiirip "-"f - spring I served on a jury that m worners in otner nelds from a wagon bed or seat. mnvirted a hpen h.rripr rhr. sports manufacturers to the fel- We argued (the wish being ed wjtn stealing an overcoat low who P'nts the goal posts from a feed barn. He is now epena upon mm. In big cities serving time in your peniten- ne even supports scores of tiary. I have been ashamed of bokies who take bets on the myself ever since." score. "It's quite evident that you should be. Tell me the story. Football used to be a season The first overcoat I ever wore I ,1 industry, like the Santa Claus lifted from a feed barn and here Industry. It has become an all 1 ,nl.GoV4.ern0v " th State" ye round thing. Spring train This sheepherder came to ing is of rising importance, and town with his earnings in his the earnest coach beats the bush pockets. He proceeded to spend and the tavwav. lnnlrimr in. liquor at our town autumn material. Th aearrh for talent, too, has become a coat on arm, to inquire as to its owner, or probably owner. them for taverns and became loaded to the guards also dead broke, pattern which every other labor been hanging there Neither the proprietor nor his The night was cold but, in his stable hands could afford en- drunken condition, he couldn't lightenment. iney competitive science. Naturally the players them- T I... , . . , uMiiiii wiin.il cvi-iy uiueri luui nificance' l6"der had ' duP?icate- nd now id it had recau where ne had parked hi, wives put a price on their serv quue overcoat. Being without the Well, there are those in in- this makes Murray to it impossible for take anything less r a . , , . , . ... 11UI1.V 111 HllvilllIlK 1CSB the Princess, "we can have no formed places who believe that from v s stec, lhan Lewj, . j v. l. j ; i CnDlanrl i A . . . 1 .. while and would likely not be prjce 0f , bed, he headed for a called for; that I had better take feed barn and its hay. Passing it along. inis. iiuwcvci, m ices. And, by and large, the public now appears to see that as okay. It is part of the Amer ican theory that a guv with r.NKinim m rraay lor a moral tt q cti and religious revival. Obviously, if Lewis' miners They feel that the country don't have to contribute to a won't overcome its economic welfare fund. Phil Murrav's "I do not think you can per- troubles or regain its old status steel workers aren't going to form any finer service than to until there has been a tightening contribute. But the boys in Wall Street didn t look ahead far enough when they rushed doubt that divorce and separa tion are responsible for some of the darkest evils in our society today. help maintain the Christian doc- up of morality. The whole outlandish enter prise may be slightly immoral In nrrtr In linrfartlanJ 4UI- new point, one must know that J1"0''" thpir mi"c agreement the country is posessed of a very ' " ,"" "".' , , strong national conscience. It's the sort of thing which swept GEN- BRADLEY FLARES It s nothing new for a congres sional committee to call the trine that the relationship of the husband and wife is a perma nent one. not to be lightly brok en because of difficulties or quarrels." Edward off his throne when he This speech bv the niece of Insisted on marrying Mrs. Simp of King Edward VII. who son. abandoned the throne to marry I myself have encountered an American divorcee, was the striking examples of powerful sharpest delivered by royalty moral and spiritual convictions in recent years. in various part of the British It had the surprising effect lsles. nf bringing a rebuke from the In many places you find an Marriage Law Reform Commit- austerity which sustains such tee which broke the tradition- beliefs as the one that the epic al attitude toward royal utter- withdrawl of the British forces ances by challenging her state- from the sands of Dunkerque ment that divorces lead to many at the outset of the great war of Britain's social evils. was the result of miracle. the hangout of th. caretaker lcan ..",eorv ,hat. . W with not satisfy Mother. She made me who at the moment was absent, mem ,0 Pet,c"e ' dP to travel iron nouse 10 nuuj he spotted an overcoat hanging -""' (tnere were noi so many mcni, on the wall. He lifted it, and with coat over my arm, thus carried it to the hav mow for showing the garment, and seek- a cover. It snowed in the night. ln Pretending to adhere to its ing information as to its owner- ,nd the morning was cold. The "niateur standing, while opera ship. Every time I opened a overcoat fit, so he took it along. tlnB on principle of profes front gate (installed to keep out Then came his arrest and later sional efficiency, but the peo town cows) I would offer up his conviction. That's the story!" Ple "ke It all but the profes a prayer asking that the rest- "Well, brother, when I get ,tr'- dent might be without knowl- back home I wil, gran, him , You couldn't break up college edge as to its ownership and the pardon, and send you a copy for footbal today with an anti-trust Lord never failed to answer my , souvenir. We feed barn boys suit. The fans woudn't stand prayer! mUst stand together. for It. The winter, however, was half Judge Interested in Peddler's Varei Milwaukee, Wis. U.R) A street peddler, charged with oper ating minus a license, appeared before Judge Robert Cannon. Cannon was delighted as Alvln Wolff, 24, Dorchester, Mass., demonstrated a mechanical penguin In tuxedo and two red-and-wbite clowns. "Say. my children would like those," the Judge said. "How Ruch are they?" Wolff aald they were IS cents each. "This will give you i start to get tut ( town," said the judgt, handing ever the nonejr. Vha' Happen to the Insides? lnglewood. Calif, i1. Police Capt Robert Collins relumed home from work, tried to flick on his television set but it didn't work. The Insides of the set were missing. He called police head quarters and immediately lieutenants, sergeants and just plain eop began an all-night city wide search for a TV burglar. Not a clue was found. The captain himself called off the search Sunday. Embar rassed, he told fellow officers that he had sent the set's chassis aut Is the repair shop. And than forgot about U. (