Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketo St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. . Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press and The United Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use tor publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, 25c; Monthly, $1.00; One Tear, $12.00. By Mail In Oregon: Monthly. 15c; 6 Mos., $4.00; One Year, $8.00. t V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos.. $6.00; Year, $12. Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Saturday, Nov. 19, 1949 - Planning for the State for 75 Years ",1 People throughout Oregon today are seeing a proposed . expansion plan for the capitol group of buildings here in '," Salem. Pictures of the program, expected to cover needed governmental buildings for the next 75 years, are s! appearing in newspapers in the state. The thought behind the wide-spread publication of the first report of the Capitol planning commission is one that " is often overlooked. The buildings and plan will belong to - the entire state. If public opinion in all parts of Oregon Is behind the program, the weight of support will bring " about almost automatic acceptance of the plan in Salem. " Being the capital of the state, Salem has a double inter na est in the plan : First, as a city of Oregon, and second, c as the capital faced with the specific problem in relation : to development of the city itself. Such a plan as is proposed should not be called vision ary because it happens to extend as far north as D street. Since Oregon is growing so rapidly and has every reason ' to continue to grow, state functions must expand with that ,r development. Therefore, buildings will be needed to keep up with that expansion of governmental functions. If the , first 90 years of the state's growth have produced the number of state buildings present in Salem now, it seems reasonable that the growth of another 75 years as en- .- visioned in tht program, will call for probably seven more -- buildings to oe added to the capitol group. -' Another way of looking at the program is to consider ' that the city would not be faced with the zoning or layout ' problems if such a development program had been laid ' out when the capitol was first built in this city. The nation's capital, Washington, D. C, for instance, doesn't face that kind of a problem because Major L'Enfant and other founders of that city planned for the avenues, streets, parks and government buildings. The plan for Washington was drawn in 1791, when the area was open ground dotted with trees. Now is tha time for all planning groups, state, city, and - chamber of commerce, to come into general agreement on ' the capitol plans. The first joint conference of the groups "Friday left an impression that a meeting of the minds 1 on the 75-year program was likely. The only debate seems " to lie with the problem of what should be the policy for ' the "fringe" area around the proposed capitol group. That ., is the area fronting the present and future rectangle " of buildings along Winter, D, and Capitol streets. , This will be the most difficult problem to be solved. And only by constant meetings of all the planning groups can -, gome logical and practical solution be arrived at. When a -'policy for the "fringe" area is determined, then the peo ple affected and others with their eyes on that area for ' developments, will be certain of a steady policy. "' Generally speaking, the broad outline for the capitol "' buildings seems sound and a long-range service to the' people of the state and city, Baruch Shows His Usual Wisdom The Oregonian laments the announcement of "elder ' statesman" Bernard M. Baruch that he is leaving what is left of his fortune (he has been giving it away generously "for charitable purposes for years) to the promotion of "physical medicine" research and development. It com f ments : s "We are not one to look gift millions In the mouth, and Mr. , Baruch is peculiarly worthy of the gratitude the announcement of his plan will occasion. Nevertheless, the world is suffering 'from a frightful lag in the social sciences by comparison with the physical sciences and the resultant confusion threatens the 1 world's undoing." ' Webster's dictionary thus defines social sciences: '- A. The science that deals with human society or its charac- n teristic elements, as family, state, or race, and with the rela- tions and institutions involved in man's existence and well n being as members of an organized community sometimes synonymous with politics but more often with sociology. ,, B. One of a group of sciences, dealing with special phases of human society, as economics, sociology, politics, ethics, etc. ,. Social science has not been neglected. It is studied and f. taught in all universities and colleges and paradoxically ;.the more it is studied the more the confusion through dis (agreement over conclusions. Sometimes its study seems to be to make confusion more confounded with conflict- ing theories, so it can hardly be classed with the exact sciences. For instance a large proportion of the college professors of social science follow the social science party line of Rus rcian Soviets and have become communists or fellow trav elers, and instill their foreign ideologies into their stu dent bodies. Thus they sow the seeds of revolution against - democracy and the ideals of America. Mr. Baruch exhibited his usual wisdom when he de 'cidod to leave his fortune to the promotion of human wol- fare instead of what makes for the destruction of all that 'makes life worth living. -Worst Wave of Sex Crimes Z News dispatches bear out the claim of the FBI that the -nation's worst wave of sex crimes is under way. The up . swing in sex offenses began with the end of the war, preached an nil time high in 1947 and has continued with -only slight decline since then. Figures for the first half Zt this year show that the record of 1947 is being tied and in all probability sex crimes of 1949 will exceed those of I two years ago. There were 3725 rapes committed in urban areas in the nix months ending last June 30, and 1881 in rural sec J tions. The average in cities was 688 rape cases per 100,--000 populatijn, more than half the rate for all of 1947. " The FBI said there is a good chance the wave of sex Jcrimes will continue until the nation's criminal laws are .strengthened. Director J. Edgar Hoover long has advo Jcatod statutes that would require sex offenders, even in ; minor cases, to undergo medical and psychiatric treat Jment. If this fails, offenders would be permanently iso- lated. a Hoover blames the leniency of courts and parole boards Jacross the nation for much of the rise in sex crimes, but -also holds that parents and victims themsch'es are at Jfault. He contends the court and police boards set such j "ridiculously" low bonds and parole requirements, and .thnt offenders go virtually free to repeat their crimes, j; Imprisonment does not reform a confirmed rapist and only temporarily safeguards victims. The only cure for "this form of insanity is castration which restores sanity to perverts and a major deterrant to crime. BY BECK WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND BY GUILD Actions You Regret ''"-'k ouo host says Te lachM m CM, CLARA I KjS NEXT POOR MAS FALLEN f. ZM-a.C-L-A-R-AI fSWL ASLEEP ANO OOESN'TgC? r mffimaffi? up egsffigl hear her fhienos JSj; Marine Gen. Warton Faces . Wizard of Odds Toughest Job as L A. Chief Br DREW PEARSON (Editor's Note: The brass ring, good for one free ride on the Washington Merry-Co-Round, today goes to Ma). Gen. William A. Worton, tha ex-marine who is now cleaning up Los Angeles.) DISCRIMINATION ASAINCT CMILDBEH IN ONE OCX OUT OF FOUR. IS BCSPONSIBLE FOB SOME HOUSING 6P6CC BE INS UNOCCUPIED... Los Angeles When Negro Singer Faul Robeson came out to Los Angeles shortly after the Peekskill riots, it' was generally expected that all hell would break louse. Robeson was reported to have pic'ied this polyglot, mush roomed metropolis , of the west coast because of its crackpot communist fringe and the hope that another riot would add more holes, and went home. , fuel to the distorted flames of The Los Angeles press seems the Moscow radio. to love Sheriff Biscailuz and sel- But Just the opposite happen- dom points to the fact that it's ed. Robeson came and left Los in his bailiwick that things are THE FIRESIDE PULPIT Why Did Little Minot Rate Special Place in Magazine? BY REV. GEORGE H. SWIFT Retor St Paul'a EptMoptl Church Recently there appeared in the Saturday Evening Post a story of Minot, North Dakota. It interested me greatly, because I was Rector of the church there from 1922 and 1929. Our two youngest children were born there. I belonged to the Curling club, the Elks club, the Kiwanis club, and several smaller groups. After having read the story of Minot in the magazine, I tried sports, its climate, or its seclu to find a reason for its getting sion in the vast treeless plains of the headlines. the Dakotas, but because I was It certainly is not because of leaving a real people who were its location it is only a col- loyal, whose hearts were warm, lection of buildings on a bleak who inspired one with their prairie. It is not because of courage, and who never gave up. the climate, which produces If they were discouraged, they blizzards in winter wind and didn't cry about it. Their hospitality was without limit. They supported their churches. , One story will help to illus trate this point. When the church budget was to be raised, we carefully pulled from the list of families to be solicited for a pledge card the name of a woman with six child ren (the youngest 8 years) whose sole income was derived from taking in washing. When she found the budget had been raised and she hadn't been asked, she broke down in It Is the spirit of Minot that copious tears. She had been left has produced and sustained a out. She couldn't understand stalwart community, as well why her "mite" was not as ac through years of drought and ceptable as other people's de privation as through Its years lars. of prosperity. You cannot eat a spirit like And that spirit Is the sum that, total of the character and moral Everyone was a part of Minot, fibre of the people, who through and. Minot was the sum total of tribulation and prosperity say, men and women with a corpor "Why Not Minot?" and kept ate sense of responsibility for their chins up and their hearts their city, their churches, and warm. the general welfare. I confess to having shed a few The best way to measure the tears as I left that almost magic character of any city is by the little city. I experienced this loyalty, the integrity, the re emotional upset as I left, not sponsibility, and the warmth of because of its sunshine, its its people. SIPS FOR SUPPER m -N. 17: IV trT WES 87. MORB ENEMY V J FOR YOU TO STAND UP THAN wide open, free and easy. Of course, there may be a reason for this love. Not long ago the sheriff threw a party at the Eastslde brewery, with a young army of newsmen present. There was also plenty Just how the sheriff could afford of bourbon and filet mignon. such a party remains a mystery, n ki . K,,c DU, nCDDUCD irri- AUi " , A I THAT YOU HANDLfe THE FAMILYS FINANCES r The Man in the Black Beret Coming to America for Visit hail storms in summer. It is not be-3 cause of a par ticularly good, sense of securi ty far m e r s ' pockets may be buldging with.- money one year, but they may be frantically neg otiating loans to , keep going the next v m Angeles without a ripple. No baseball bats were wielded. N o rocks thrown. No ova 1 1 o n awaited him.. And, most important of all, no propaganda fed the Moscow f tkr A but his objective was no mys radio. VA 1 A 11 tery. The man re-" Dr,w ,,.riT. "We've all bee in this thing sponsible for together for a long time," he this efficiency is a stocky, quiet Baid, in a little speech of wel- spoken officer who trained the com "so remember your old IrA marines for the landing at friend f.pno BicrailiiT If thirty Okinawa and who is now tack- start popping. And remember By HAL BOYLE ling the toughest job of his life. we've always been friends." New York UP) The man in the black beret is coming to Amer It is no exageration 10 say mat a few days later 200 deputy lea. Maj Gen. William Arthur Wor- sheriff badges, as big as Pepsi- It's the most famous beret in the world, and the man who ton would rather lead troops in- cia. badges, were handed out to wears it so jauntily is one of the world's most renowned war to battle than face the political tne. press. riors Field Marshal Viscount Montgomerery. morasses an pitfalls that await , . , He aITjves Monday on the ; the chief of police of Los Angel- mn ,,. r..,.i Queen Elizabeth to talk to Amer- guard military circles for his es. ,N ' n?er' wh.e" ,Gene.ral En military leaders on defense cocky swagger and brash self- yvorion kjok over me jos An- --- - -- - - ti,... m. n British and second only to Patton as a col orful personality. The slender, fastidious little soldier won his spurs as a cap tain in the first world war dur- l ing which he was twice wound ed and six times cited for gal lantry. In the second world war he learned the lesson of defeat as a major general in the retreat from Dunkerque, and the lesson "V , .rt Zi 7f,,n7n; measures for fortress Europe, confidence. These same qi Hi, job is probably typical ST''SrlSS r at 62 thatf of that faced by the modern, ov- newspapers. He hadn't learned is Monty s 3obf,-TJ He was the r Patton, ergrown, big American cny tne trick of passing out fjiet as supreme com-f whicn is now trying 10 prevent mjgnon, bourbon and deputy manner hi : the new wave of sex crimes, sheriff badges. Western Europ robberies and degeneracy that The ex-marine corps general Pean Alliance has engulfed every big city in jeads a lonely life, but it's be- to erect 13 de the wake of war. ginning to pay dividends. Every tense against When General Worton took night after supper he makes a Russia. office late last summer, just aurprise inspection of a police . Wna.'' "e about everything under the sun station. Every day he is getting like' this "ner happened at once. Mickey Co- better morale, more loyalty, and ' E1 Alamein?" hen, much-publicized sultan of more work from his men. Many Well, he's the me uiiuciwunu, nau or me lm nngcira ponce lorce - --; ... nf viclnr nt VI Alamein shot at. Worton's predecessor as are now ex-veterans and, though 'ai sold,er ahve- and "f" lo glt M.-hTln chief of police had just been in- green, take their work seriously oescrioe as a "" rv ''''7J'i dieted though later acquitted. Worton's greatest problem is tw0 ides- yan, .;h rth And a raft of dictaphone record- the fact that under civil ser- " lw S7J1 ings taken from a microphone vice rules he can hold office '' legendary Monty. Wi to over command hidden in Mickey Cohen's house only four months. This rule was grinning, reckless apostle of Jne '"J? a" made headlines in the Los An- adopted to keep politics out of he Principle of attack. And i by the Germans Mont- gele. papers. the police force. But now the "re's the Monty of fact, a " "5S3 ""T Indicative of the easy going politicians and the mobsters are cautious careful planner re luc- hUeuta-Bt general, then lethargy of the los Angeles po- falling back on it to keep off ake the offensive unless wy"t "'.w digging-the lice force was, first, the fact that their neck, for more than , ctoo practically guaranteed GJmZa7oinX'ti these dictaphone recordings had temporary period the greatest m advance. far " he told his troops been laying in a police lieuten- cleanup servant Us Angeles has ,. ? "u , F r . , His "desert rats" sto ant's garage for months. And, second, the fact that the record ings were sold to various under world leaders before they. were MacKENZIE'S COLUMN shown to tne new cniei oi po ever seen. Copyr!7ht 1049) lice. By DeWITT MocKENZIE ((f) Porettn Aftilr Antlnu There's more than appears on the surface in the British Overpass Needed By DON UPJOHN The state capitol zoning commission's map of its proposal for the capitol development looks nice from the air but it seems to have certain drawbacks for the folks in town who'll have to live with it. Willson park and the capitol grounds along with the university already cut off the north and south ends of town In fact, Los Angeles generally was so uninterested in its own police graft that Dick Hyer of the San Francisco Chronicle stole the story right from under the noses of the Los Angeles newspapers. And for some days, T rt AnffalM nniwri wen fran. tically rewriting the San Fran- socialist government's sensational compromise with the conserva cisco Chronicle stories in order tives whereby nationalization of the great steel industry will to report what was going on tn be delayed until after the next general election. thru7? 0W1Vr . . This steel project was top item In the nationalization program nuaiucutioi anQ me OQVem- the Los Angeles police force ment had been j anxious to achieve it be fore facing the m and a box of shredded wheat. She was just going good when they found her and made her tection. desist., one an other except by a roundabout route and under the p r o p o s ed capitol z o ning plan It'll take a guide pretty near to route anybody from east to west or vice versa. Of nonrsp Ihp ivrv. pic w h o live -" Saver hir will ffot hspH to it after Note from a mother who wrote awhile but the visitors will have us some lme bacl complaining to wander around like in one abou la ' stP signs at 17th may also be typical of what is happening in other American cities. When he tried to fire the Vot.r a era in head of his detective force, he Their sudden found that he couldn't. The de- backflop means, tective chief was protected by aJ conservative civil service. And If charges eader Winston were preferred against him, Churchill point, those charges were heard by a out that the board of fellow police officers eiectjon wjj be whose watchward was self-pro- aimost . ref- ligious, Montgomery is widely Hi "desert rats" stopped the disliked in his own nation's old German attack, then defeated Kommei at ti Alamein. over night little Monty became the empire's greatest hero. Method ically he chased the nazi Africa corps 1,400 miles-to a German version of Dunkerque on Cape Bonn in Tunisia. Montgomery also led his eighth army in the Sicilian campaign and in Italy. Later he met and defeated Rommel again as com mander of allied ground forces in the invasion of Normandy. A German tank commader said of him: "He is a hard man and ruth less in gaining his objective." Monty also had as his axiom before attack: "Let's tidy up British Socialist Government Stakes Life on Compromise the socialist leaders and is cred ited with being a shrewd Doliti- the battlefield." That was his cian. What he is angling for ap- way ' saying, "Let", be sure pears to be the big middle-class we're ready." vote of the nation, and so are the His genius for winning the conservatives, for thi, is the heart of British common soldier now unpredictable element in was exemplified by a number of the forthcoming general elec- reforms he instituted In his post tion. war army. That middle-class vote rcpre- "Why shouldn't the soldier sents the balance of power. And read in bed if he wants to?" said the middle-class will know ex- Monty. "I always do." actly what it is voting for. If it Monty is reported to have told Some Consolation (Independence Enterprise) West Salem is now a city of the past. It is now a part of the city of Salem. However, it is still a part of Polk county. . In brief, Los Angeles had gone nafinnallTlnff .tool to such extremes with civil ser- ' vice that a "police union," as ........ . tightly controlled as if it had . Naturally this development iJL, nr.anw.rf hv John L. has inspired the thought among Lewis, had developed. erendum" on the proposition of votes "yes," it will ensure a con- Churchill once that he was 100 tinuation of the sweeping social- per cent fit because he neither 1st program. smoked nor drank. The pudgy This, of course, means that so- prime minister's reply: cialism will be on trial for iU "I smoke, I - drink, and I'm life in England. 200 per cent fit!" of the old fashioned mazes. May be an overpass could be con and Center streets. "Some time back," she writes, "you printed structcd over the whole thing f Plca 1 made 'or safety at this to solve the difficulty. intersection before some bad ac- cldent occurred. And what do Worrying about your Thanks- vou know- yesterday the city put . . . , , in stop signs and now it is a giving dinner? Then consider four.wPav ,top. My, how some the case of Big Burma, an ele- of those Center street speedsters phant with Mills Brothers cir- were surprised to see officers cus, which back In Clrcleville, waving them down to remind Ohio, in the early hours yes- hem that the stop signs mean , . , . . , , exactly what they say and that terday morning broke loose in ,he!,e motorists are not tn such winter quarters and made her a rush as they think. Now life way to the cookhouse truck and should be a little more peaceful took on an early holiday feed in this part with the slowing all on her own. She ate 100 lbs. down. Thanks again to you and of potatoes, 25 lbs. of onions, your wonderful column. From 20 loaves of bread, 10 lbs. of the mother who wrote you be pancake flour, eight candy bars fore." , OPEN FORUM His Ticket Had Expired Columbus, Ga. U.B A. P. Shepperson was glad to get back to the South, even It it cost him extra. The grocer bought a round trip ticket to Adelanto, Calif., In 1902. He "liked it so much" he didn't return to Georgia untH 1949, by which time the stub had long since expired. Shepperson sent it to the railroad company as a 47-year-old souvenir. Should Pardoned Bank Robber Run for Governor of a State? By OSWALD WEST GTtrr H Oram Irai Itll la Ull . The efforts of our so-called Democratic leaders to settle on Season of Thanksgiving To the Editor: This Is the season of Thanksgiving. It has always seemed to me that gratitude Is at the heart of all true religion and any personal maturity. Thus I thought that I would drop you this brief line to say "thank you I like your paper." When I think of some things that are apparent on the national and world scene and am inclin- ed to get discouraged, then I am 'or them, and my own feeling helped If I look about me and turns from anxiety to hope, think of the lives of people CHESTER W HAMBLIN whom I know. I believe God is First Presbyterian church, working In them, I thank God Salem, Oregon some observers that It represents one of those patriotic gestures Chief Worton's job has been which John Bull characterizes difficult not only because Los aj J "1"" n et' " that is Angeles filled up during the war-ood sportsmanship and a demo wlth a motley migration of mid- a '? W'"'"""' leav the west war workers, pension-hunt- deE slon T'6-,, ing oldsters and migrant Mexl- " ma2 indeed be all of that, cans, but also because large sec- aPd we don:t need to rob 14 'ita tions of the city are not under when we suggest that his control. considerably more Is involved ,.-. m j ,.. I believe Prime Minister Att- Hollywood, Beverly Hills. Pas. 1 has made this gesture mainly MARION COUNTY RECOLLECTIONS adena, and half a dozen of the . ' " other cities that nudge Los An- his party can control a majority geles and really make up Its of ne voters metropolitan area, operate their He aPPfntly was confident own police forces. On top of this ,,ew "th ag0 lnat he couId Los Angeles county has 3.000 wln- But lne economic crisis police of its own. and it is in hl become so complicated and the county rather than the city uncertain that public sentiment ,. sn.,thrn r.HMmi. Mmh. today can t be accurately gaug ing really flourishes. d-. "d the conservative pros- , man who most ,ikely wouId , ,he, t . ,andidat. Kingpin of Los Angeles county "P m., 'or governor, reminds me of a gubernatorial contest tn the state is colorful Sheriff Eugene Bis- o w t"nd "? government of Oklahoma some years ago. cailuz who seem, to get no more fr'J.1 Jennings, a good Democrat, but a better bank and train excited about an occasional gang 7. " f robber, captured, convicted, and shooting than about the gam- ,K We nad '"'f6! to take ver stowed away in a federal peni- I wrote him that hi ouestion bling that attracts crowds along he steel lndustry before en er- Uni for , term of was reX e for the ciUzeM Sunset strip. "ther general election gained favor with pre,ldent of hli titZ Xt, I After the hoodlums spattered ""e"-t ' ,hre '1 Theodore Roosevelt, who grant- would say that: "1 had known the front of Sherry's with shot- 'mP.rf,an u,',pgr' him a pardon. of governors who had held down gun slugs in an effort to bump nd " ' contr o ve rs a l o ne. we Returning to his home state, executive chairs that were big- off Mickey Cohen. Sheriff Bis- have dec ded to submit the ma - Jennlngs engaged i the prac- ger crooks than anyone who had cailuz decided to recnact t h e to your Judgment. You shall tice of Uw dabbled tn politics ever held up bank or a train crime with all witnesses pres- dec'de whether you want Pro- ,na did some writing for the in Oklahoma." Therefore 1 ent. So. accompanied by news- ceed with the Program Mean- movies. And. when the state's could see no harm in his taking men and photographers, the "mt- Parliament will have ap- general election roiled around, a shot at the governors office, sheriff arrived with his retinue, proved the measure authorizing decided to throw his hat in the . . . . , . , . But no witnesses. nationalization if you want it.' gubernatorial ring. Many resi- , If ne m'ght giye my After a lot of waiting, hem- ' denU of his state-in view of If"6..'0 th pr""' toId him' ming and hawing, the sheriff A little bird (an English spar- his record looked upon his can- remarked: "Well, they must row, to be exact) has whispered didacy as the height of impro- It was then that the newspap- ' have been tired, or maybe they to me that Deputy Prime Minis- priety. So, he wrote to mc (then ers of that state took time out went to the fights tonight." ter Herbert Morrison probably governor of our state) asking to put me to my place. It is Whereupon he had his picture inspired this move. "if 1 could see anything wrong needless to say that Al lost out taken, pointing at the bullet He is a powerful figure among In his entering the list." in the democratic primaries.