Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Aitiitont Publisher Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont Ads. 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press end The United Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and also news published therein. 4 Salem, Ore., Saturday, October 29, 1949 The Nation's Highway Problem The November issue of the magazine Fortune contains a comprehensive survey of the nation's highway system which discloses that much of the most important mileagi Is now wearing out all at once, that putting the roads back in shape will cost some $30 billion to $60 billion over the next 10 or 20 years, but the only alternative is a "crush ingly costly obsolete system." This year the United States is spending a record-breaking $1.7 billion in new highways, and thereby bringing its road network up to 1933 requirements. But to bring the system up-to-date, road building must run well beyond that amount for years to come. But where is the money coming from? This year, Fortune explains, total receipts are running about $3.5 billion from state and federal gasoline taxes, registration fees, and excise taxes on new cars, parts and tires. Expendi tures on roads and streets will come to about $3.2 billion of which only ibeut $1.7 billion will go for new construction, $1.5 billion for maintenance and administration. "To cover the greatly expanded construction program present traffic requires, the U.S. is certainly going to see more toll highways; gasoline taxes must inevitably go higher in many states." Some $35 billion have been invested in our present sys- BY BECK Such Is Life ! ' ZfiTiFW iT THAT THI TROUBLE '41EAR J-"A U'TTLB J T-wiifjjT CAR'S BRAND NEW, THEY 1 W I22ICK,'. TSL r-v 00N"r II 700 attention 1 A MOTOR...ITS VERY HtAR 4 TO IT. BUT WHEN tT 6ETS J J4 J Wnothins) paf little Old ano Should 1 '&mt2r . r futm s attention they! W&mM&l U rfemHB 6IVE IT any. C CTP J lit- &lr rTivTM6N EVENTUALLY WE I WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Steel Companies Are Divided Over Footing Pension Plans By DREW PEARSON Washington Here are some of the things that are taking placo backstage in the steel strike discussions: 1. Inside the steel companies The major companies are di vided regarding the contributory of non-contributory pension plan. Inland Steel already has good pension plan, while Jones and Laughlin, BY GUILD Wizard of Odds dercover campaign against us ually gentle Gen. Omar Brad ley. They enlisted the powerful voice of Walter Winchell, long time naval reserve officer, in a campaign against Bradley. Win cheU did his best for the navy during the war, got kicked around for his pains, but Is still loyal. Also it was considered no ac cident that Congressman John McCormack of Boston unloosed an out-of-the-blue blast at Gen eral Bradley. The Boston navy yard is about to feel the effect their contributions 01 Secretary Johnson s economy which entails com- move, and some of McCormack's constituents will lose their Jobs. Drew htrin THE FIRESIDE PULPIT Why Belong to a Church? BY REV. GEORGE H. SWIFT Rector. St Paul'a Epueopfcl Cbureb A friend of mine had often mentioned that he wanted to be come a member of the church. But not once did I ever see him in church. So the last time he talked about it, I asked him why, if he wanted to become a member of the church, he didn't attend church occasionally. together with Bethlehem, fav or a pension plan whereby labor does not contribute; for the following reasons: Only 10 cent of wo r k e r s con tinue in their employ until they reach the age of 65. When they leave before that age under a worker-contribution plan. they take with them, plicated bookkeeping. But when they do not contribute, the amount set aside for them by I s? company stays in the fund and mounts up. Thus the company, over the years, contributes less and less money. Flatly opposed to Bethlehem, Jones and Laughlin, 'and Inland, is the giant of the industry, U.S. While most authors produce tveir best works between the ages of ao mo 44,, few poets accomplish much after 55. OftYllN 11,000 AMERICANS CAN NAME EVERY STATE CAPITAlr CLWM4 A GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY (mam, iurir,aU!amfreM,mP(UiHC QUIZ SHOW I 3 HIGH SCHOOL STIIDEKTre-OMj ARE 1 IN 8 VOULL BE KILLED BY AN AUTOMOBILE BEFORE "YOUfeE 65 3X9 aS Ce7 UNDER THE DOME Michigan's congressman Les inski, the Detroit democrat who staged a sitdown strike against the aid-to-education bill, is al ready in for re-election trouble. Walter McNary, a Wyandotte, Mich., shoe retailer, will run POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Too Old-and Sophisticated At 1 2 Years, So She's Retired He seemed very much sur prised. "It would be a little ir regular, would n't it?" ha ask- tem of streets and roads, and Fortune thus explains what ed. Before I l,..l,n,.nNi,.r. culd answer. "The normal life of a first-class highway surface is regarded as 20 to 30 years. Much of the most important mileage in the U.S. system war laid down in the twenties, and much of that Is now wearing out all at once. "After 1931, spending on the highways fell off abruptly. (Except for a period of make-work road-building in the mid thirties, comparatively little was spent on the roads until 1947). "Meantime, use of the highways expanded vastly. Since 1930 the number of vehicles on the road has increased by nearly 65 percent. (Trucking traffic has increased still more steeply; even since the war, trucking ton-mileage has almost doubled). "Cruising speeds of the lowest-priced cars have been in creased from 45 or 50 m.p.h. to 65 or 70. The road, by and larnc, has never caught up with the extra power that Detroit built into the car during the highly competitive years of the depres sion." In modernizing' our highways, engineers are not asking for a network of super-highways all over the country. The Bureau of Public roads proposes some 11,000 miles of di vided four-lane highways, mostly near or in major cities. Over the other 27,000 miles of the system, traffic does not warrant more than two good lanes. This means the re- he continued, "I thought joining a church was something like joining a lodge. You cannot at tend a lotl'ic un til you have a. aeatr swin Joined it." So I found out that this man had stayed away from church because he thought one had to belong before he could attend the services. I know of no body of Christ ians that requires the show ing of a membership card or the whispering of a password 3S a requirement of entrance to any of Its services. While participation in certain sacraments is reserved for com municants, a hearty welcome is extended to all to be present at of worship. Becoming a member of the church will then be ac complished in accordance with the requiremants of that church. If one without membership may attend the services and be building and enlargement of existing roads to bring visi- any and all services. The desire bllity essential for safe passage, curvatures, gradients, L7 s do theTg'ooT win wiuuib, ran crussingB aiiu unuge capacity up io iramc requirements. Thig will mean the conversion of a lot of two-lane mile Age into four lanes, and the relocation of short segments; widening of lanes from the old 9-foot standard to 11 and 12 feet; the widening of shoulders, and providing more turning out places and resurfacing of long distances. None of these operations should be confused with maintenance, that is surface patching, shoulder stabilization, scraping, oiling and rolling of unpaved roads, etc., which now cost (1 billion a year. Fortune concludes: "One-seventh of U.S. business lives off the highway, and all U.S. business sells to that seventh. Road con ditions enter into all business costs through their effect on freight charges, and mobility of labor and customers. The bill lor good roads will run into billions but they will be rela tively cheap billions, considering what is at stake." uplifted and inspired by them, why should it be important to become a member? A foreigner may live in the United States for a considerable time without becoming a citi zen. But if he loves the country, he will eventually want to iden tify himself with it, and assume responsibility as well as enjoy privileges. Apart from the fact that, for instance, Baptism makes one a member of some thing far beyond and above a lo cal and visible organization, be coming a member of a church lends strength to the group. The cables on the Golden Gate bridge would be useless if the individual strands in their com position were each acting alone, but bound together as they are in great cables, not only is the bridge kept safe under all stress es and strains, but the little strands themselves are saved from destruction. All people in a community, whether members of a church or not, should attend services of worship. It would not do them any harm, but is almost sure to Steel, which sets the competitive against him In the primary. Mc- pace. Nary stands strong with labor. Despite all arguments, U.S. Despite the need for economy Steel has held out against a and the full coverage given the company - contributed pension armed services row by the press plan chiefly as a matter of associations, the navy insisted on principle. It claims that labor sending small newspapers volu- should not get something for minous verbatim transcripts of nothing, that labor should con- every word the admirals said tribute at least a small part of about the air force .... yet the the pension. public relations offices of army, Possibly this view is influenc- navy and air forces are supposed In the meantime, remember. the clergy will be delighted to be given the opportunity to wel come you to the church services without a membership card or a password. Peeping Toms Still Bother Godiva Coventry, Eng. W) They've had to put a fence around Lady Godiva's statue. It's to keep the Peeping Toms away. A statue showing the lady clad only in her tresses and sit ting side saddle on a horse, was unveiled last Saturday by Mrs. Lewis Douglas, wife of the I1. S. ambassador. Almost at once crowds wanting a closer look began tramp ling over the surrounding turf. City officials put up a three foot high barricade yesterday to save the grass. Godiva rode forth in the nude, legend says, some 900 years ago to shame her husband, the lord of the town, into giving tax relief to the people. The townspeople went indoors to let the laily pass unseen. But one man looked and was struck blind. Ills errant ways gave birth to the term Peeping Tom. "The statue is proving an unexpected attraction," said one city official. Drainage and Sewage Programs for the City Salem's drainage problem may be licked next year for Borne time to come. The word "may" is used advisedly, since many factors will determine whether or not the city can go ahead with plans aimed at protecting sections from SIPS FOR SUPPER water overflow. Mayor Elfstrom has hinted at a program that will put Toiichv FOTmerS improvements, such AS rirAinnirp And pwiiirp nn n idnnnprl ' year-by-year development basis. This type of appronch is tho only logical one to meet the problem which faces Salem. Oregon's capital has put off, or been forced to put off, for one reason or another, steps to correct the drainage and sewage situation. A sewage disposal plant, for instance, was earmarked years ago with federal funds, but the war enme along and killed the project. ed by the fact that directors of U.S. Steel include heads of oti f r companies Walter Gifford, of American Tel. and Tel.; Sewell Avery, of Montgomery Ward and U.S. Gypsum; James Black, of Pacific Gas and Electric which might be affected by any pension precedent set for the steel Industry. 2. Inside the White House Presidential advisers have dis cussed with Truman the idea of invoking the Taft-Hartley act, but he is opposed for this reas on: The United Steel Workers al ready have suspended a strike for 77 days at his request prac tivally the equivalent to the 80 day suspension possible under the Taft-Hartley act. If the pres ident now invoked the T-H act, it is feared labor might refuse to obey the injunction. And if half a million men refused to obey their government, the na tion would face not only a breakdown of democracy, but reverberating ammunition would be handed to Moscow for use in every country in the world. Furthermore, the president's fact-finding board's recommen dations have been accepted by the union, though rejected by management. That is why other White House friends, including Mayor David Lawrence of Pitts burg, Jack Arvey of Chicago and Chairman Boyle of the demo cratic national committee have been urging Truman to put the bee squarely on the steel com panies. Note 1 Phil Murray, testify ing before the president's fact finding board, invited the steel executives to appear before con gress with him and urge passage of a better old-age-pension bill. They refused. Despite this, if congress had remained in ses sion and tackled the entire prob lem of old-age pensions for all old people, not merely those who belong to unions, a pattern Jury." On the program five ex perts from four to twelve years hear the problems of other child ren and suggest how to solve them to be consolidated. Newsman Burnet Hershey has been studying Truman's health, comes up with the inside story of how he keeps fit in Look mag azine this week. There is an ironic twist in the New York senate race between John Foster Dulles and ex-Governor Herbert Lehman. What most people don't know is that Dulles' law firm, Sullivan and Cromwell, have been the law- LaPI f n .- T oilman D nttA fn. many years. Usually, the lawyer P0'"' where, th,f v,i hi. n problems don't Tito will pay off the United States for helping Yugoslavia win a seat on the security coun cil by a Yugoslav peace treaty with the royalist Greek govern ment. (Copyrliht mi) By HAL BOYLE New York. WT After giving the best years of her life to radio, Peggy Bruder has to give up her microphone Job because of old age. "I don't feel too old to go on, but I guess they know best," she said mournfully. ' " Peggy is 12 temporarily forced retirement "An old woman," she said. "I For a child trying to be clever realize that." is rarely as funny as a child who For three years Peggy has is spontaneous. Or as Jack Bar been a star panelist on WOR's ry, program moderator, put it; network program, "Juvenile "We depend for laughs and pace on me uii-uic-tuii aiiswcu What those five-year-olds ina broadcast. of the kids. At 12 a child begins to get a little sophisticated." Sunday Peggy will make her you wouldn't be-I lleve, said Peg gy, a blue-eyed girl with long blonde curls. "It gets to the seem serious only comical. We try to make the audience laugh if we can think of a clever answer." And that is the key to I .-.'.jWik. Bsl Burto MacKENZIE'S COLUMN See Signs of Spiritual Revival in Many Lands By D.WITT MacKENZIE UAt PoreliD AffAlrj Analyst) - Russia soldiers at Helmstedt, in the Soviet occupied zone of Germany, refused to let a truckload of Bibles proceed to Berlin. "That's propaganda material," explained the Red officer in charge. And, of course, he was quite right about the "propaganda" angle. The Bi ble la the great est piece of pro motion ever de veloped. That is pre cisely why the who are battling reli gion as the dope of the masses, are un and f r i g h t e n i ng poultry. Two in- Th other asnert tn the problem hna hppn that uteris stances reported .... . . . ... . . . . . Inst week Inld of wnicn nave been taken in tne past nave not been adequate fnrrmvjVrs 1Par. SV-fiy in view of the tremendous growth here. Three years ago ing bullets whiz- I BY DON UPJOHN A column in the current issue of the Silverton Appeal-Tribune reports that "many rural residents are finding it increasingly dif ficult to maintain a complacent attitude during the hunting sea son. Hunters with dogs in numerous instances are reportedly tramping over private property without permission, stampeding lives lock xious t o pre- vent distribution of the world's most widely read volume. Hit lerian nazism maintained the same attitude. thp Piitan Af f U rl who belong to unions, a pattern , . might have been worked out for "''""'j1 wa' "w- the nation. After that sne has nothing to look forward to but adolescence, high school, college, an acting career, matrimony, motherhood and children, middle age, grand motherhood, some more old age and then the final curtain. That's all there is left when you're already 12. Miss Bruder, who is a star student in the 8th grade, isn't too dismayed at the road ahead. i ' r ,! ; n i,n- U ,nn derful to me," she said, just to prove she held no hard feelings her because the show must now go on without her. "It's taught me to face an audience and to ad lib. I no longer have stage fright. "Now I want to go on and be a dramatic actress. I love it, and I've been studying for it. I , think I'd rather be in the movieta every girl looks forward tof that. But right now I believe ' television Is the right thing to be in. "Sometimes I do my home work watching television." Her mother said, "Dear, we have to take life as it comes." "Yes," said Peggy, smoothing her green frock, "but I know planation of why half a dozen what I want. My heart is set on religious books had climbed to being an actress. I'll just settle the top of the non-fiction best- down and be a wife" she look selling lists in the United States, ed despondent at that dreary William R. Barbour, presi- thought "if I can't be an act dent of the Fleming H. Revell ress." company, book publishers since 1870, asked experts in the field to answer the query. The consensus was that this call for religious books indicated a large scale "return to religion" in the United States. "People are taking religious thinking and the whole concept of religion a little more serious ly these days," said C. D. Jones of the Albin & Don-Cokesbury Press. She won't face the future ex actly penniless. "I've been getting a $50 gov ernment bond each week," she said. "I put them all in the bank. I've got a pretty big bank ac count." And then she said how much she'd miss the excitement of her radio job. It's awful to be old and soph isticated all at once. some drainage stops were taken in north Salem. A com parison of that section of the city three years ago and to day gives an idea of how out-of-date three-year-old plans can be in the face of rnpid expansion. So the only logical way to approach the problem is the way the city manager and mayor have outlined. That administration in facing problems like airport development and the hunters wouldn't have to and the others which call for long-range programs. aides could find the key. At length the janitor brought lad ders to let the wedding party climb over the partition. As the bride descended the ladder a chorus of courthouse workers sang, "Here Comes the Bride." the well- a group of "Frosty" Olson, known florist, has little plaster figures in his Court street window, each wearing a Willamette sweater and probab zing over head while at work gathering w a 1 nuts and filberts in their or chards." This Hiffirii!tv miltht hp saiisfnrtorilv adjusted if the placed there In honor of home- takes a long-range view of the drainage and sewage pro!)- fanners would he considerate coming at the grand old school, lems. The sensible procedures would seem to be a year- ""' 'e their vacation, ..'J,. by-year program with tentative allocation of possible hlintjn(, scason. That way they Players they should be able to funds. That procedure has been followed by the new city would keep from getting shot ,CRre ,hp competition off the iii-iu wiwimii even naving io fuss around about not tramping nvrr onrHrns nr shnotinff the If the drainage program is to be successful, a special poultry. No doubt if the farm bond issue for it will have to be submitted to the voters in ers would agree to such a plan the May election to provide adequate finances. Ry then, ".r'io tn'ke" the interceptor sewer should he completed. The line will out ,rom hunting to do the empty into the river until the sewage disposal plant is chores and everybody would built. Present plans call for the sewage disposal plant to hBve h'n-cxceptthe livestock, be constructed as soon as the interceptor sewer line is Love and Locksmiths Again Albuquerque, m M. w wai ter B. Rogers and his bride-to Note 2 Though U.S. Steel re fused to go for noncontributory pensions now, it was the same U.S. Steel company which gave a noncontributory welfare fund to John L. Lewis and the coal miners in 1947. This precedent given to Lewis sets a goal which Phil Murray and other union leaders now have to equal. PENTAGON MERRY-GO-ROUND Ironic twist of fate: The navy is now bitter at Adm. Louis Den field even though he went all out for them before congress. Other admirals felt his blast was too late, that he had played foot ing orders, and presumably his own conscience as well, if he is a loyal communist. Still I have a notion he was wasting his energy. I don't be lieve you can kill religiou that way any more than old King Ca nute could make the tide recede at his command. Pretty Surroundings for Eating Philadelphia (P) A Philadelphia restaurant has removed its suggestion box for customers after a two-day trial. The reason: Of 35 notes deposited In the box the first day, 34 suggested prettier waitresses. On the second day, 38 of 40 made the same recommendation. Not one suggestion mentioned the food being served. As a matter of fact, religion ( Is doing all right for Itself. There are many signs of mor al and spiritual revival ious parts of our war-: world. This column called indicatio'hatreligtous reviva! LlYGS L'lfQ Of Q COflf eflf G( COW may be boiling up in England. There is a widesDread feelina Pullman, Wash., Oct. 29 IIP) Don't talk about goldfish to Peep- sie with the army and air force in Britain that the country won't hole Bossie, a local cow with built-in video. Compared with her, NO SECLUSION FOR HER idc,S Bossie, With Built-in Television completed. Funds have already been provided, in a re cent election, for the plant itself. So indications at this time point toward a big forward Ktep next year in meeting the aggravating and long-standing drainage and sewage problem in the city. Literature Tricked by Fate Wctasklwln, Alt., Orl. 29 J( The hoard of trade apolo gised today that literature It prepa'ed In advance for use during fir prevention week was lost In a fire. make a kickoff. It's the Climate Again Monmouth Harvey Young has a peach tree which harvests its fruit In late October. He picked seven boxes from the tree this year, completing the work Monday. Some of them still are a bit green. Asked what the name of the variety it is. he said It Is a seedling. Twelve years ago he dug a pit In which to be bought their marriage license deposit peach pits and like ref- yesterday afternoon and asked use. From this pit sprang the justice of Peace Oscar Walton peach plant which, now a tree, to marry them at once. Walton produced the seven boxes this led them and the witnesses into year. At that, he says he pulled Countv Clerk Ramona Mon- off many in the late summer fish in a bowl live a life of seclusion. For two years people have been snooping through a hole in her stomach to see what goes on Inside a cow. Only In the winter does this veterinary school spec- imen get any privacy. In the ly sheds the plug about April, cold months she wears a rubber depending on the weather, plug in her side to keep the Some 200 students have had a drafts out. squint at Bossle's insides as they Dr. Ernest C. Stone, chairman tudied the rumen of a cow, of the department of veterinary what asses and other products to unification. What happened had in New York with Madame physiology and pharmacology "re lormea in mis Iirsi oi me was that Sherman was appoint- Chiang Kai-Shek, wife of t Washington State college, cut an aigestive processes 01 me in the privacy of the joint chiefs of staff. Navy lobbyists pulled wires to get Adm. William H. Blandy appointed In Denfeld's shoes as chief of naval operations. Adm. Forrest Sherman isn't overcome its economic troubles or regain its old status as a world power until there has been a spiritual awakening. There also has been a post-war resurgence of religion in Hol land and other continental coun- popular with his co-admirals, tries. Thev figure he was the first to Then recently this column re drili a hole In the dike that led ported a conversation which I ed by Secretary Forrestal to sit China's nationalist generalissi- down with Gen. Lauris Norstad mo. We were discussing China's of the air force and work out rehabilitation and she said: unification. Result was the milk- "That can be achieved only and-water unification bill of through moral and spiritual 197. now considerably growth." strengthened. Brother admirals "You believe that moral and never forgave Sherman for this spiritual change will come to . . . . Admiral Sherman was top China?" I asked, and she re- war planner on Admiral Ni- pnen: the eight by three inch peephole in the cow's rumen (stomach four-stomach animal. The hole is located high on m,mw nnoi tu.'o vpam nn her side, in the hollow of the .! stnripnu eonlrf et first- "ank behind the ribs. toya's private office. He shut the door to keep out noise. When the ceremony was over. Walton discovered the door was locked. Neither the county clerk nor her because they hung too heavy to develop well. Harvey says this October peach comes nearest to possessing the characteristics of th Muir. mitz's staff in the Pacific. Is a brilliant strategist, fought for airplane carriers when other ad mirals were still fighting for battleships. While the navy's friends in congress are pleading for peace, the navy is still waging an un- "Yes. It is coming." But we don't have to go to Europe or Asia to find this fer ment working. We see it right here In the western hemisphere. One of my AP colleagues, John L. Springer, sought an ex- get a hand view of a cow's inner life. Despite her public interior, Bossie. age eight, is a normal, contented cow, Dr Stone said. She eats well, and last spring, gave birth to a very healthy calf. as that of any well-cared-for 111 llLZ Wilh ' TJ,"dS She also serves In the re search of Dr. Paul Klavano, as sistant professor of veterinary physiology and pharmacology, who is studying the effects of drugs on the rumen. Dr. Stone admitted Bossie is bovine, he said When It's warm she doesn't in her stomach. A couple of other veterinary schools also use this "live specimen" method of need any cover for the cavity, teaching students about the di but in the winter it is plugged gestive progresses of a cow, he up to keep her warm. She usual- said. I