Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1883 ' GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press and The United Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and also news published therein. 4 Salem, Oregon, Thursday, Dec. 15, 1949 The Bill of Rights December 13, 1791, 158 years ago. the ten amendments to the United States Constitution, known as the Bill of Eights were ratified and declared in force. Th Constitution, as originally adopted, made slight provision for the guaranty to the individual of a sphere of liberty not to be encroached upon by the federal gov ernment. To remedy this defect, the first congress after its adoption, passed and submitted to the states for rati fication a series of ten amendments. The ratification by the states was speedy, because with out the the promise of their passage, the states would not have ratified the original Constitution. These amend ments are still in force though nibbled at constantly by both state legislatures and congress itself and have usually been upheld by the supreme court's interpretations, safe guarding personal liberty. The Bill of Rights originated in England in its first form by the Magna Charta forced by the barons from King John at Kunnymede in 1215. Because of usurpations of the Stuarts the "Declaration of Rights" was presented by both houses of parliament to the Prince and Princess of Orange in 1689. After declaring the late King James II to have done various acts contrary to the laws of the realm, and to have adbdicated the government, the Bill of Rights pro ceeds to enact in detail the declaration as to the rights and liberties of the English people. It was laid down that the crown had no power to suspend or dispense with the ordinary laws, or form judicial courts or levy money without parliamentary sanction. Freedom of election, speech, petition, etc., were guaranteed along with other provisions copied in our own Bill of Rights. The act recognized William and Mary as the joint hold ers of the crown, but with the administration of the government during their lives in William alone and regu lated the subsequent succession, to all of which William and Mary agreed. So the Bill of Rights prevailed among the American Colonies, who considered themselves British citizens, and its violations by King George listed in the Declaration of Independence was the cause of the American revolution and the formation of our goverment. But the British Socialist regime pays little attention to the rights of the people in its program of bureaucratic regimentation and nationalization and violates many of its guarantees. The American Bill of Rights reads as follows : Article I Freedom of Religion, Etc. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances. Article II Right to Bear Arms. A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. Article III Soldiers Not to Be Quartered in Private Houses. Mo soldier shall, in time of peace, be quartered in any house without the consent of the owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law. Article IV Unreasonable Search Forbidden. The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and ffeota, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated; and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable oauso, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly de scribing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. Article V Rights of Accused In Criminal Proceedings. No person shall be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous crime unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia when in actual service in time of war or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be com pelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself; nor be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use with out just compensation. Article VI Right of Accused in Criminal Proceedings to Trial by Jury and Compulsory Process. In all criminal prose cutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the stale and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor; and to have the assistance of counsel for his defense. Article VII Trial by Jury in Civil Case. In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dol lars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise reexamined in any court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law. Article VIII Bail Punishment. Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted. Article IX Rights Retained. The enumeration in the con stitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people. Article X Powers Reserved. The powers not delegated to the Unitd States by the constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people. Why Was the Hearing Held in Portland? In Portland last Thursday there was a hearing on an application by Safeway Stores to sell milk in Salem. The hearing turned into a battle between Dairy Cooperative association, Oregon's biggest milk firm, and the giant grocery chain. Safeway claimed it already had the right to enter the Salem market. The case was heard before Thomas L. Ohlsen, state milk administrator. So the decision is in his hands. Leaving aside the legal aspects of the application, Salem has cause to wonder why the case was heard in Portland. After all, it is a matter which affects Salem and not Portland. The probable answer would be that the office of the state milk administrator is in Portland. But why should the administrator of a state agency have his headquarters in Portland any more than should tho governor or the adjutant general of the state guard? It goes back to that question which repeatedly keeps coming up. Is Salem the actual capital of Oregon or can state officials, who want to, establish offices in Portland or some other city of their choosing? The constitution of the state of Oregon is specific on where public institutions shall be established: In the seat of government, which happens to be Salem and not Port land. So why does the state milk administrator have head quarters in Portland? The same question can be asked of the state highway commission meetings and several other state administrative units like these. BY BECK Parental Problems I'VB EARNED TWISTY-SIX (Vli10? tX Akin Mill CAin i'tOfi FOU MY CHRISTMAS PUNO SO EAR, Vl VOU'D DOUBLE THE DAD. I OCT SIX DOLLARS TOR MUCINS 1 AMOUNT OF CHRISTMAS WREATHS. .TWO COLLARS FOR SELLIN6-I MONEY HE EARNED. HOLLY.. AND 1 SOLD MY OLD BIKE m 1 1 . TOR FIFTEEN DOLLARS AND THE "I r I Sf -JVl S' I I JUNKMAN SAVE ME EISHT C I Vy I 'MPJB I DOLLARS FOR OUR OLO LAWN-) J0Wl,f0 tA V ) MOWER AND I SOT FIVE V Mf hi MORE "T WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Snyder, Eccles Are Asked To Quit 'Public Squabbling7 By DREW PEARSON Washington The Inflation row between Secretary of the Treas ury Snyder and federal reserve dynamo Marriner Eccles attract ed headlines a few days ago. But when the two men met behind the closed doors of a senate committee, the final results of the feud were hushed up. BY CLARE BARNES, JR. White Collar Zoo It was Snyder who, p e r h a ps knowing he wo u 1 d be no match for the shrewd and ex perie need Ec cles, insisted on a close d-door I meeting. How ever, here is what happened. Present at the 1 senate s e s s ion was Tom McCabe, popular, easy going federal reserve chairman iv Drew Peanott rican ambassador to Finland, will be the next U.S. envoy to Pakistan. The navy has just developed the world's most powerful air plane engine. It will outfly even the fastest Russian jet. A long-suppressed feud be tween Secretary of Defense Johnson and Atomic Energy Chairman David Lilicnthal is about to break into the open. The real estate lobby has a new device for killing rent con trols. It is fixing up a list of va cant apartments in overcrowded who agrees with Snyder on most Washington exclusively for con- things, and who pleaded with both Eccles and Snyder to cease their "public squabbling" be cause of repercussions on busi ness and the stock market. SIPS FOR SUPPER Mild Stuff By DON UPJOHN A dispatch over the teletypes of one of the great press associa tions coming into the building of our favorite paper tells of an incident in Berkeley, Calif., where stomach pumps had to be used on members of a family of five after they had eaten meat fried in weed killer, to a 10-months old boy who swallowed a can of nquia glue, to a two- S year -old who drank paint f fhinn.r and last. but not least, a three - year - old $ who guzzled a half pint of k e r osene. At first blush, when one considers that all of this happened in one ing residents of the south side upset with nightly forays on clotheslines and bedroom win dows. Though such pilfering has also been reported in other areas, he is confining most of his operations to sections along South Second street and South Main. Many women, preferring to keep their losses private, con fided in neighbors rather than day in one town, the whole thing police. The section has in the might be considered newswor- past been plagued by "peep thy. But, on the other hand, when we look back over the . years and remember some of the lr has been seen by residents, stuff that was guzzled by the but always manages to make local boys around here during his escape before police can ar- the prohibition era, the whole rive Berkeley yarn falls flat. What ' they took down there was about jjow we've had a report from like an ice cream soda in com- one f the customers that his parison. Why they used a stom- family is going even further ach pump on one of the local wth a novel change for Christ boys once to extract some of mas giving than even that of that dry era mixture and dog- drawing names from the hat. He goned if they didn't have to says there are four folks in his send the stomach pump to the family and they've decided each hospital. ne WU buj; h,is ow" gift and hang it on the tree. This seems nu., Th, to have some good points in its Discriminating Thief favor-at least they'll all get Lebanon A "silk pantie wnat they want and even ex thief and window peeper is keep- changes will be unnecessary. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER With Little Nina Going Away, Hal Wonders About Santa By HAL BOYLE New York W) There isn't a darn thing Santa Claus can throw by way this Christmas. For all I care the old boy can get stuck in a chimney In Des Moines. I'm not bothering to hang up my sock, because there isn't a thing in Saint Nick's bag of tricks I can use. The one thlnj "When you're through phoning your boy friend. Miss Smith, I want you to take some letters, if you don't mind." MacKENZIE'S COLUMN It's High Time That America And England Got Acquainted By DeWITT MacKENZIE Foreign Aflltri Analyst) These days of clashing political ideologies have a tendency to breed doubts and suspicions even between old and tried interna- on their lobbying payroll, and national friends. personal dispute between Secre- prior to November 1948 he was We had a rather startling indication of this recently when Lord iaiy oiiyuur aim myseii, mil u s expected 10 exit, aiier ine elec- strabolgi, laborite member of the British House of Lords, declar not that at all," Eccles declared, tions. . . , joV,, .. . , "It's a question of deep funda mental policy that affects the Eccles shot back that stock market reaction to his dispute with Snyder was far outweiphed by the future economic and fi nancial welfare of the nation. It would be better to have a show down now, public or otherwise, he said, rather than wait until inflation hits us. "The press has made this a gressmen who want to rent just to show there's no housing shortage. AIRLINE LOBBYIST You've got to hand it to Pan American Airways for being ver satile when it comes to lobbying. All during the 80th republican congress they depended on GOP Senator Brewster of Maine and Sam Pryor. former GOP com mitteeman from Connecticut, to do their lobbying. In fact, only one democrat, Carroll Cone, was future welfare of every man, woman and child in the United States. The federal reserve sys tem cannot adequately carry out its obligation to control infla tionary trends while the treas ury continues to borrow at fix ed, low interest charges." The interest rate (now aver aging about 2.2 percent on long and short-term government se- Immediately after the elec tions, however, Carroll Cone, democrat, went up in value to Pan American, and he may now become a vice president. But in addition, Clark Clif ford, soon to leave the White House for the law-lobbying bust ed in a debate . on defense that there were Am erican hotheads who were talk ing quite glibly of using atomic power to divert the gulf stream ness, will become the brightest if England went m m unistic. England owes her temperate climate to the star in Pan Am's lobbying army. NOTE Pan American has just put across a neat piece of l u l- innnVinff With the eivil o.rnn,n. higher, Eccles contended, to dis- board, by which it gets one u" , ?a"V . . courage dumping of government fot ln the door on the route to bonds by banks, insurance com- Rome. This route belongs to panies and other big purchasers. TWA. But Pan Am used the ex Also, it should be more flexible, cuse of carrying Holy Year pil he argued, so the federal reserve Srims. and CAB gave it a spe board could use it as a lever to clal route to Rome. It will be it leaves us with the uncomfor table thought that this is an ex traordinary viewpoint to be held by any citizen of an ally who has been through two world wars with us. England doesn't show sighs of going communis tic, and, even If she did, we shouldn't try to do her in with atomic bombs. Speaking rather louder than words are our deeds in trying presumably to help Britain overcome her DeWIH Maekentl might become an Arctic country crisis and get on her feet. But what Is the basis for such outlandish ideas as the Gulf- It strikes me that the answer I'd like even Santa Claus can't give. 1 want him to make time stand still and keep a girl I know from growing older."? away. The girl Is U fl LA All RyU happy, happy year too good to go on, I guess. The other weekend her fath er and mother, George and Hel en Camp Palmer, a young news paper couple, got an assignment to go to Italy. They will be gone for three years. Nina doesn't know Rome from Rochester, but she has been told she is going to take a trip on a big boat. And she is so excited that she is beginning to lose interest in Jack and Jill. Whenever she if the stream were turned away. Well of course, the scientists promptly tossed this idea out stream nightmare? xne winaow as nonsense, it wouiu tatte mure man aiumic it, interestine to see whether ih power to shift the Gulf stream, ,, .. ,,, , u route is surrendered after Holy e7en u anybody wanted to shift other aj we as th should, . , ,. , . . though from first-hand observa- So much for that scare, but ,, f h(h ,, , iu ...ai.j years I believe America knows England better than England knows us. And I could be wrong about that. The British school system pri or to the second world war did n't teach much about the United States. American history ceased with the revolution. Since the outbreak of the war some schools have given more atten tion to the United States. Unfortunately this study has been greatly hampered by the shortage of news print which has resulted in skeleton news papers. There hasn't been room for much more than mention of the major events. True, England has been get ting educated through America's movies. A. large section of the British public has the idea that two-gun cowboys still shoot from the hip in the wild and wooly west. And the ways of gangsterism are amazing. Naturally the reason for this lack of acquaintance is the great distance separating our the low interest the eovernment ,jjj . c (a Th-v "I'm f it,: lw0 countries, and the cost of TIT.. .1 i ......... prevent either an overexpansion or a tightening of bank credit. Interest rates on government securities naturally i n f 1 u e nee the rate on commercial loans, Eccles pointed out, and there fore the quantity of such credit which the reserve system is expected to control. "Well, the treasury has obli gations, also," argued Snyder. "Let the interest rate go up on government bonds and there will be a howl from farmers and other groups, who will then have to pay higher financing charges on private loans and mortgages." Turning to Senator Douglas of Illinois, chairman of the meeting, Snyder remarked that rongress was chiefly responsible for inflation trends. "Inflation originates in the congress," he commented tartly. "If congress votes to appropri ate great sums of money and then doesn't increase taxes to balance this spending, you are making inflation. You can't build up big deficits without taking risks." The treasury chief added that Year is over. (Copyright 1949) Little Thing Like Bulldozer Missing Salem, N. H Dec. 15 (IP) The mystery of the missing bulldozer is solved. It wasn't missing at all it was hiding. Contractor Paul Garabetlian left the $14,000 machine at a building site Monday night. Warm, rainy weather caused the frozen ground to thaw. The next day the bulldozer was gone. A long search ended last night when someone spied the machine's tall exhaust pipe sticking out of an eight-foot puddle. A twelve-man crew using three pumps and a tractor pulled the bulldozer out. Does Child's Hopeless Prayer Put Lump in Santa s Throat? By ARTHUR EVERETT New York, Dec; 15 Pi Ever wonder if Santa Claus gets a lump in his throat at some little child's hopeless prayer? So does Postmaster Albert Goldman. The lumps come fast for him these days. He's eavesdropping on Santa. Goldman has nearly 5,000 let- self: was paying on its bond It's comparatively easy lectins i ji.-: u ........ ui- m..m1 tit.. .1 i i .1.1.. vla - iiriu men wav eratn vcm w 111a iiiiacu. jviv inumer ann nannv n . .. .... represented that much of a sav- nnnfti in kw uavt :nmo(hinrt . ,;iu 4u:- Ior ine anion 10 Set to the con- ino in tho iovn,nr hainDri , . ... . " wl " tment, or lor the American to East river she says: There's Nina's boat. Tell mi half past two her name is Nina, and every derful. Even her nose run. ln a , tuf toot on ,h nice way. MMr rnnspienrA hernllse she isn't mine, except to borrow on Recently, while her parents an hour s lend-lease arrange- were shopping, I took her on a ment with her parents two or farewell visit to the Central three times a week. That is my Park zoo. She said goodbye to Drivileee as godfather. ,he monkeys, wanted to climb ing to the taxpayer and helped York City. to oaiance xne Duogei. nowever, Eccles shot back that it did no thing of the kind, but was a rob- Datni..4A.l...Dn.,l nnlin.. 4 1. n , tually cct the taxpayers 'more ,W te " to Santa' in the long run. Low interest rates on govern ment bonds often lead to dump ing by big investors, who prefer to reinvest their money in less secure, but more profitable com legs, iviy motner cries every . u r. j. .. T t-.ij u , t. . i, nieht becai.se mv rfarfrf,, I. f J"' V" America, a p;ryer"when there's 'nobody working. We have nc-Tteam in IZrpZLm' " .! "t?:!.!U Z" ee6, aX, "A p,i "I"" So we need persona, contact. vm, ot.mm..l,!-a"d tnat win come in due course. just kids, either, There's a laugh in some of them for Goldman. Svpn-vear-nld Harrv frnm the Bronx wants a shrunken years' mummy's head for unristmas. warm' "u,,,elmn lo KeeP us Meantime, we have to fall back ' on present communications and Roberta, nine, is planning her improve them, first Christmas at home in two . So she wrote: I was sick in I was chatting with an EnB- the hospital lishman the other day on the mercia'l loans, he explained. Thinks it might help him when wi,n Plio- W'U you send me subject and asked him what he When first I saw her, she was in and pet the tigers, jeered at just a moist, bald-headed ball of , . .v , . . , Protoplasm that smelled of milk 0. in' 'he wa'?r' But most f and made small noises like a a11 she, 'oved the P'f0"' puppy. She stubbornly refused " "mf ha"dd PMked to make babv talk and disdained peanuts from her hand' men we bought a Danoon ana the English language altogether until she was ready to use com plete sentences. One day the phone rang and as her parents leaped to answer it she looked up from her play pen and said gravely: "I'll get it. I'll get it." Since the federal reserve system he becomes a magician. He is required by law to buy up the promises "I won't bring it to bonds dumped on the open mar- school." ket. this further increases na- And Nancy over in Brooklyn tional bank reserves against ioves horses. She asked for a which more inflationary money female gelding "All black." is then issued. But oniy male horses are gelded. The amount of money the treasury is saving now by its fixed, low interest rates, is only a pittance compared with the future cost of inflation if Sny- hailed a cab home. On the way she turned to me with a lum inous smile and said: "Hal, I sleepy." And she stretched out com fortably on the seat, put her feet in my lap, and dozed off. All It.. iU. T 1.nt It was In this way we learned ,. .."t j t a .. for sure that Nina was . genius. , . ; this 'way for . long Until then we were just going on ,ime,.i blind faith. Now she is a flaxen- ' ... der continues his present policy, whisky." Charlie wrote out his own my is ill Christmas list, then added: "Grampy wants a bottle of doll and carriage and please thought would help solve the don't forget my friends I left problem. behind in the hospital ..." He said that a return to norm- From Kent, England, came al size newspapers in England Janice's nine - year - old scrawl: w.Vld neIP immensely by pro- "Plees dont foget me this yer vidin8 space for adequate news I dont spec you got my (letter) coverage. The motion pictures last yer as I didnt get my pres- and tne radio are vital mediums. ents like I asced you my mum- More interpretive news writing Eccles warned. haired, sturdy-legged child with a mind and vocabulary of her own. bhe is a Kind cnuti, ana There was so much I had to tell her all about Cinderella MERRY-GO-ROUND George Craig, first World chocolati war ii vei io command ine Am erican Legion, had four years active combat service, and is really fighting in peace for the democratic ideals we had in war. Courageous Congressman An dy Biemillcr of Wisconsin de- Laughs? Sure, but tears, too. The kids from Germany, France and England who write There's adults too. Alphonse: and more factual novels are needed. To illustrate his argument my Santa Claus to f"end told me about a waiter Wrote 76-year-old he knows in a London restau rant, mis waiter was reading up If vnn u nin. n-j : n America, and one of his fav- to Santa at New York, ask for I would like very much to have . . "oul" " 01 nB Mohicans. He thinks of America partly in terms of this thriller of days long gone. This waiter's viewpoint isn't so unusual. It's not so many years ago that I found many Britons who thought Indians the big sorrow of her life is that and ,he ,hree trs and the lit- Jack fell down and broke his e wh Put his im&er in crown while going up the hill ,he dke and saved Holland. But with Jill to fetch a pail of now somebody in Italy will tell Water 'lcr a" these fine stories, and Every night she wants to hear Probably get them all mixed up this nursery adventure again, m 'he telling', and as soon as Jack falls down Three days after Christmas she tells her father: she'll be gone, leaving me a "You get doctor. Make him godfather in absentia. When I well." see her again she'll be almost six and greet me with a polite I am And all this year grown older I have been grow- How ran I believe in Santa ing younger, and it has been 1 Claus this year? food. In their some warm covering for my bed world, for a long time, toys have and some food for the holiday, had a low priority. and if you could spare it a pair Louis, a Manhattan seven- ot stockings for my daughter, year-old, knows Santa "can do who has sacrificed her life try anything." So he wrote: lnS to care for me ... " "Please bring me my mother. Goldman has 3.600 toys set still roamed the plains near Chl- serves credit for taking Judge shc went out and left three oI a'read-v 10 ke care of the Cago, and that Chicago was only Armstrong's "bonus-f or bigotry" us with my father. He is going neediest cases. Postal employes a short ride from New York. to put us in a nome ana my - ".... ... , me And here in America one en- baby brother is sick. I like toys Public always helps, too. . countered some pretty queer but I like my mother best ..." But. he wonders, what can ideas about England, too. Then there's Barbara, whose 'ou do for Louis, who only It s time America and Eng childish scrawl read: wants his mother back? land got acquainted. "My dady is in the army and foundation off of the govern ment's tax-exempt list. U.S. Ambassador James Cle ment Dunn, now in Rome, is angling for the highly prized post of ambassador to the court of St. James. Sen. Pat McCarran now thinks he is AWOL for three months. My mother's allotment check her standby storyteller. "Burm Giorno" Instead of "Hi, 1 this year as Nina has Hal!" he is almost as important as the will stop and we will not have president. When McCarran re- any Christmas. ... We can use turned to Washington last week, a blanket, as we don't have the entire staff of the senate ju- enough . . . last year you for- diciary committee was lined up got us." waiting to greet him like a re- turning potentate. And seven - year - old Sophie,. Avra M. Warren, now Ame- who won t ask anything for her- From First Grade to Seventh In But Four Months' Time Port Huron, Mich., Dec. nj.B John Poroynoff, 21-year-old Bulgarian refuge, was placed in first grade fo'ir months ago because he didn't know a word of English. Today's he's a seventh grader, having skipped all the grades in between. He was a college student in Bulgaria before be ing drafted into the army. Hii parent! still are overseas. i