Capital Adjournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 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 olso news published therein. "Modern Youth 4 Salem, Oregon, Saturday, December 17, 1949 In Unity There Is Strength American Protestants have launched another effort for church unity, a single Protestant church in the United States. This is the result of the conference just concluded at Greenwich. Conn., after months of preparation and three days of actual session. The problem of unity is still unsettled. The conference did not try to rush things, like a similar proposal in 1920 when the completed plan was wrecked by the first veto from a single chuch. So instead of an actual plan for union, "a plan for a plan" materialized. So the conference gave its name to a permanent official organization that will try to evolve a plan for unification during the next year and present it at a new conference in 1951. Seven churches with more than 14,000,000 (members) sponsored the conference, and seven other churches and the four great inter-church councils lent them moral sup port by sending observers. American Protestantism as a whole has nearly 45,000,000 members. Methodist Bishop Ivan Lee Holt of St. Louis, a veteran of the long Methodist struggle for unification, was named to lead the conference as chairman of the continuing executive committee. The permanent Conference on Union will enlist seven representative;, from each denomination. The inter church councils will have two consultants each. This will be the general executive body. Under it wi.l be another committee with two members from each of the sponsoring churches. Other churches in terested in merger may also join it. This is the group that will draw up the plan for union. Before any final action is taken, the conference will send representatives to the many Protestant denomina tions. These representatives will listen to what the indi vidual churches have to say and carry their words back to the conference on union. The unity plan faces a hard task. It was attacked dur ing the recent conference when one church group, the American Council of Christian Churches, with 1,500,000 members, called it "totalitarianism in the raw" and a "brand of socialism more enslaving than that cursing England the current disease of unio-mania." Bishop Holt iooks for rough sledding. He said: "Those of us who have participated in the conference are under no illusions. It may take a good many years before we realize the dream of creating a larger Protestant church in this country . . . but we are being led in that direction." The conference also hopes to stimulate smaller unifica tion plans already in progress, such as that of the Evan gelical and Reform churches, and the Congregational and Christian churches and the proposed merger of the Presby terian and Episcopalian churches. 'World-Shaking' Event What is the most "world-shaking" event of the first half of the 20th century ? A Harvard historian says it is the emergence of the United States as one of two dominant world powers. Professor Arthur M. Schlesinger gives this reasoning for his choice: This assumption of world responsibility is both dramatic and significant in that the U. S. was forced into this posi tion against its own wishes without experience or prepar ation." The last four words of that quotation "without experi ence or preparation" will determine what the United States docs in the next 50 years as a result of the dom inance thrust on the nation in the first 50 years. It is go ing to take a new kind of leadership within the country to assume the responsibility of the moment and of the com ing years. For instance, President Truman showed signs of realiz ing that responsibility when he made his declaration of policy toward helping countries threatened by commun ist aggression. That declaration was quickly tagged the "Truman Doctrine." Then again with the blockading of Berlin, the air-lift was an inspiration of the moment. But these spasmodic rulings for specific areas were not enough and still are not brilliant though they may be. Take a quick look around the world today for a moment. The western allies admittedly have no answer to the real threat of an East German army, backed by an iron rule of the Russians over Poland. What if Moscow offers to give back to East Germany those areas given to Poland ? What if Russian troops are withdrawn from the eastern zone in Germany? What is the answer to Russian domination of China? Or to loss to the Reds of the island of Formosa which juts into the American line of island defenses in the far Pa cific? What will the United States do if communist forces continue their advance on the Asiatic continent down into Indo-China? Or, into Burma? If any of these events come to pass, and some seem quite likely to do so. what will United States leadership offer in the way of answers ? No one in Washington can act sur prised if any of those events do happen. And yet, what will this nation do to counter such moves? If Washington has any solutions to these problems, no one back there has revealed them. But the United States can't keep its unwanted global leadership, "world-shaking" as it may be, without internal leadership to meet the re peated crises of the next 50 years. The Airplane's 47th Birthday This is the 47th birthday of the airplane and is being celebrated not only at Kitty Hawk, N.C., when Wilbur and Orvillo Wright made the first flight in a heavier-than-air, power-driven machine, but also at Dayton O. The govern ment is also celebrating the occasion by the first day sale of a commemorative six-cent air mail stamp honoring the w..;tiia of i.';if Uo,.tL- ,v,nAA n nKiibfi nb win.,, ian, nnuac t Ull Hje w as M iliup- ed by 300,000 first day covers. Though the initial sale of the stamp was denied to Day ton, its stamp collectors are guaranteeing themselves first day covers cancelled in Dayton by flying 15,000 of the stamps to Dayton from Kitty Hawk by a jet fighter flying to Kitty Hawk and back with a special letter for cancella tion, making the round trip within three hours less time than was required by the telegram announcing the first successful flight to travel from Kitty Hawk to Dayton. Aviation has come a long way since the Wrights' flimsy craft flew 120 feet in 12 seconds. This airplane has wrought a revolution in transportation, industry and war fare and almost daily faster and bigger and better air planes are announced for both commercial and war uses. It has been both a blessing and a curse to humanity but such is progress. YOU'RE WELCOME TO USE IT WHILE I fc-iMMSnfc-j- YOUR CAR IS LAID Uf DAD, BUT DON'T L :r-" FORGET TO TURN THAT SWITCH TO THE) I ' WRg&BlPw DUAL COIL AFTER YOU'VE STARTED.... fZ HEVFaWCi AND RELEASE THIS TOGGLE TO EQUALIZE) ...f'Ji , &WM THE WATER INJECTOR ON THE rJ -nilX?'?, VrrW CARBURETORS.. AND REMEMBER, THIS J; ,S . L8t' LEVER INJECTS STABILENES- , ' ICTAKE A TA'&mm: STO REDUCE PRE-IGNITION. J(55Z,' I J2f I ; 'I, , Hmff'i, i i-. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND- Jimmie Byrnes Doesn't Figure Truman's Any Caesar By DREW PEARSON Washington Accidentally this column has got mixed up In the row between President Truman and his old secretary of state, Jimmie Byrnes. Some time ago, Byrnes wrote this columnist a letter regarding the circumstances under which he resigned from the state de- partment. It In charge of internal revenue s penal division. It seemed certain from this discussion that crim inal prosecution of the above named gamblers would be rec ommended to the justice depart ment. One other official attending this conference was assistant commissioner of internal reven ue Daniel A. Bolich, who has been seen in New York in the company of the famous gamb ling king, Frankie Costello. BY-CLARE BARNES, M White Collar Zoo "i I J 5 1 Dtew Pearson THE FIRESIDE PULPIT Shut-ins Need Friends At This Time of the Year BY REV. GEORGE H. SWIFT Retof Si Paul'i episcopal etiureb John the Baptist was serving time in prison. He was behind bars, not because of his misdeeds, but because he had the courage of his convictions and spoke out against local conditions too boldly. In prison, John was discouraged. He was disheartened. He was lonely. Like so many others when who belong to a club, lodge, or they are incarcerated in jails or social group (or church) who institutions of one sort or an- may be the most popluar in his other, John had become "the for- or her) set gets into some dif ficulty which means mcarcera ;"",tion in prison or an institution. Then, like John the Baptist, he becomes the forgotten man. He looks for a visit from the old pals, the people who crowded around and made him feel im portant. Where are they now? We are approaching Christmas. It is doubly hard for shut-ins to have no attention from friends at Christmas. If any of your was tnis writ er's belief that Byrnes, who had done a great job as secretary of state, had been eased out be cause of friction and j e a lousy , which even&-,; then was evi d e n t between the two men. Jimmie Byrnes, however, con- lonHino that hp rpsienpd Tiurelv because of ill health, sent Tru- But simultaneous with the de man a carbon copy of his letter Parture of the west coast T-men MacKENZIE'S COLUMN to me. Ana iruman sent mm m ........ reply a significant letter which Los Angeles for Washington one ignored the issue of why Byrnes Harry Sackman, a certified pub resigned, and dwelt instead on lie accountant, since then in Byrnes' conversion to dixiecrat- dieted by Los Angeles county. j6m, Sackman had been in charge "I have read your Washing- of the gambling ring's books and ton and Lee speech," Mr. Tru- hurried east for the purpose of man said, and then went on to getting his gambling bosses out comment on the manner in me soup, in wasmngton ne "Don't tell me my job!" Mystery of Yugoslav Hero Solved; Deal With Tito Pends By DeWITT MacKENZIE iiP) Foreign Affairs AnaiysU The mystery of the voluntary exile in America of Ivan Mes- which Mr. Byrnes was deserting conferred with Ted Hayes for- dinlom!,Hc lick.tack-toe with an anxious Marshal Tito, has mer neaa oi tne international r . r , the political philosophy of Roos evelt and Truman. As an after thought, the president wrote at the bottom of the letter the fol lowing postscript: "I now know how Caesar felt," he said, referring to Bru tus's famed stab in the back, "when he said 'et tu, Brute sweepstakes in Mexico City. ces ",y . .' u u a a ' The dynamic Mestrovic, who now is head of the department A" , ' f sculpture in Syracuse univer- sity, came down to New York In short, Mestrovic Is one oi City and we got together for a Yugoslavia's great men whose long talk in which he "told all." name is honored in every home I reported a previous conver- in the country. Tito is battling sation in this column, but he &ty Moscow for the life of was cautious and reserved then, his regime, and he needs the So should I be if I were match- support of folk like Mestrovic. ing wits with Tito. The sculptor puts it a little The Yugoslav dictator has Qi"ereni;?;' ne """" Deneve LILU inctina iimi any yci- gotten man." He needed sympath etic and under standing friends. "W here are they now?" he asked himself. "Where are the disciples? Where is the Messiah?" John sent messen g e rs to of The Guarantee Finance Com pany were seized in Los Angeles, various papers were found link ing the California gambling ring to Ted Hayes' old organization in Mexico City, including one When Mr. Byrnes replied to telegram in which the Mexican this letter, he addressd himself sweepstakes asked for $7,000. chiefly to Truman's postscript. Hayes, no longer with the XJa ovnlolnprl at KfimP lenSth MovlVon cuoondatac that he did not consider himself merly associated with' Ed Flynn, been s 6 ! n d ' " g party, but remained a devoted He is now with the federal security administration in Wash ington. When queried about the Sackman visit, Hayes stated that Sackman had conferred with him about the tax case but that he had told Sackman he could be of no assistance. supporter of its fundamental principles. Then Byrnes polished off his letter with this cracK: "I am not a Brutus, and nei ther do I consider you a Caesar." find Jesus and r. n.o,.. n. s.irt former friends are going to spend to ask him, "Art Christmas in prison or hospitals thou he that shold come, or do or institutions, visit them if you we look for another?" can. Remember them at Christ- . , mas time. Christ understood his discour- ..j was sick and , , agement. He sent this message and visi(ed me are word f Kailr in Toh n "Thn hlinrt ro. . " . . GAMBLERS EVADE TAXES In the opinion of this column ist, tax fraud and tax evasion are now more prevalent than at any time in years. This means, of course, that those who do pay their taxes have to pay more to make up for those who don't. There used to be one category Apparently Sackman other wires to pull and pulled them successfully. For the sup posedly airtight case against Ko vey, Kogus, Rockwell, and Co- bert was immediately dropped back to John: "The blind re ceive their sight, the lame walk, deep and boundless gratitude. Without discounting the value mere usee . ' The treasury has done absolute- of citizens against which the . nthia ,, It the lepers are cleansed, the deaf f an exchange o presents a treasury never pulled punches the underworld. took an income tax case to send saries to Mestro vic the most recent within a few days urg ing the sculptor to return home. Why? What does the two- fisted Tito want found with .an artis wno is oppusea to communism' In order to get the full sig nificance of Tito's move you must know Mestrovic. This striking personality is the bearded prototype of the DeWUt Mackemle sonal harm. Mestrovic does recognize that his return home would in effect be placing the stamp of approval on the com munist government and he thinks this is what Tito has in mind. This idea is supported in a dispatch from Istanbul, Turkey. An informed source there states that Tito is trying to come to terms with Yugoslav exiles to help him convince the United States and Britain that he can be trusted in his fight with Mos However, Mestrovic has no in- Only other development is Yugoslav patriot who always has tention of going home until re hear, the dead are raised up, that Los Angeles county has now indicted Kovey, Kogus, Rock- battled for liberty. Indeed, Mes- ligious and political freedoms are trovic was widely known m his restored in Yugoslavia. mong relatives, an exemplifica- and the poor have the gospel (inn . lh. m 'in , )ho rh.ut. preached to them. And blessed mas jrit one ,nto is he whomsoever shall not be hospitalSi 1 n s t i t u t i o n s, and offended in me. whereever the unfortunate may Sometimes a man or woman be. gangster Al Capone to jail, while weU and Cober As fa as the country as a patriot before he And in his mind the 0ppres. Santa's Salary Garnisheed Nashville, Tenn., Dec. 17 (U.R) The beard was the beard of Santa Claus, but the voice was that of R. A. Moser, Miss Bonnie Key said to herself in a department store. She went to a lawyer and the lawyer went to a judge. The judge signed an order garnisheeing Santa's salary, and Santa went to see Miss Key. Today he paid half the S25 judgment against him, for fail ure to pay her wages as a waitress last summer, and promised to pay the rest "soon." SIPS FOR SUPPER Cheerful Note various underworld figures have been caught in the income tax mesh after all other avenues failed. Today, however, even the underworld is safe from in come tax prosecution provided they know the right people. Here is a case in point. Most notorious gambling net work in southern California op erates under the name of The Guarantee Finance Company of Los Angeles, which serves not only as a respectable cover, but loans money to bookies and acts as a payoff center. Recently Los Angeles coun ty indicted 12 members of this cover agency. Prior to this in dictment, however, the federal government through conscien tious internal revenue agents on U. S. treasury is concerned how- acnievea tame as a sculptor, m sion is symbolized by the case of ever, no effort has been made token o whlch he was thrown Archbishop Alojzijc Stephanie, to proceed with criminal pros- into Prlson bV Hitler's minions head Df the Roman Catholic ecution aJter tne Nazi invasion of Yugo- church in Yugoslavia, who in (Copyriiht 1819) slavia during the world war. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER The More Hal's Wife Recalled Deeper He Got in Doghouse By DON UPJOHN Today we got a letter from our plumber. It came in one of his regular business envelopes and we all know what a letter from a plumber means when it comes along in one of his regular business envelopes. But as a rule these come along right after the first of the month. Naturally we thought he might be a little hard pressed for Christmas cash Y and was rushing (f them out a little parlv. But. anv- way, with the (ft Tf usual trepida- V,J V, tion suffered on opening of letter from the plumb er we tore this one open and was greeted by one of the hap piest surprises of the season It was just a letter of Christ here where Joe comes from. mm Yesterday New York made a 30 per cent saving on its water use by everybody refraining V'i from taking a bath. It shows i that fhp hitr town is still as nrn- Don llplohn I that the big town is still as pro vincial as those in the outlands and that the other 70 per cent of the folk still take their baths on Saturday night like all good Americans have been doing since the days of the bath in the wash tub in the kitchen. What New York needs is half a dozen mas greeting and wishing us mornings like we had here to- well for the new year. That is day. probably one of the high spots Our Chris Kowitz, Jr.. was out of the Christmas season and we carlv tnls Bnd sl,cceeded in plan to put this letter well up putting over another typical on the tree with a star attach- chris Kowitz, Jr., stunt. He ed to it, maybe. We hope the was waiking along High street one we get New Years will be and happened to glance up at the the same. courthouse clock. As he was ; " . . looking at it he saw the hand The Oregonlan tins morning move. and then it sloppcd. In its sporting section referred promptlv a fcw minut before to "Portland's Joe Kahut. That 6 a m ,Tve neard abou( ,he was when he won. Yesterday, gllv lv cn,URh to sl when there was some doubt as clock ., sald chris and now to whether he d bowl over his j believe it." San Francisco challenger he was referred to as "Woodburn's Joe State Treasurer Pearson pick Kahut." If Joe should happen cd a bad time to distribute his to punch his way to the cham- million dollar checks which pionship some day, as we oil caused such a furore. They'd hope, Portland will grab him sure come in handy in the holi for fair but we all know up day season right now. Hap Hazzard Was Haphazard Los Angeles, Dec. 17 (fT William B. (Hap) Haizard was In jail today on suspicion of burglary. Police accused him of entering a cocktail lounge after hours via a skylight, drinking three bottles of beer, wrestling an hour with the cash register trying to open same, drinking three more bottles of beer, finally lugging cash register out side and hiding it. During all this he failed to notice he had dropped his wallet, with his Identification, officeri said. A haphazard job, they called it. By HAL BOYLE New York, W) Frances shook me awake this morning and said: "All right, Rover, you don't have to try to hide from life to day. I've got an idea for you to write about. It's a nice easy idea, too." I controlled my enthusiasm, all." There had been a certain wife- "Then vou must not be able the west coast had caught four ly tone in her voice a tone she to count over nine!" oi tnese Dig-lime gamoiers in uses on oays wnen i am sume- e fartner sj,e got jn of tax fraud. band. Governor Warren's forthright "What's your big idea, dear?' California crime commission was I asked responsible for the original clue. "Isn't it about The crime commission had seiz- this time of ed some of the gamblers' books year that people and turned them over to the T- like you write men. one of those so- Before doing so. however, the called funny California crime commission pieces about specifically asked the U. S. New Year reso treasury whether it would be lutions?" she willing to cooperate in cleaning said, up the California gambling rack- I couldn't see et, and got an affirmative an- what was com- swer. ing tut I could Accordingly. T-men Dan E. in it ,itn't eood. Goodykoontz, internal revenue "Well, it's a week or two early intelligence agent for San Fran- for that," I said, "and besides I rtnrii FCllfllAA pi.nn DnInu tj 1 ,i .- . . !1 f olnnff w -' ' ' Wlwri ,mi,ti auuutei in- haven t any maicimt tellegence agent, and Walter M. that line." Campbell of the chief counsel's "I'll save you a trip to the office in San Francisco, got busy puolic library," said Frances. "I The evidence they assembled ap- think I have all the material you peared conclusive. need." ' she left the room. When she in lain, ihe Guarantee Fin- came back she was thumbing 1946 was convicted by a people's court of sponsoring4 an organiz ation of terrorists and was sen tenced to 16 years in prison where he is now. This case stir red the whole civilized world at the time. Stepinac and Mestrovic have been great friends for years. So strong is the bond between these two that the sculptor is making the release of the archbishop a requisite of compliance with Tito's pressing invitations to re turn home. Mestrovic speaks firmly, though without heat, re garding the situation. "I have no prejudice against Tito," he told me, "Nor do I her wish to harm the interests of mv memory book the deeper I got country which commands my in the doghouse. love and loyalty as much as "And you promised to eat and Tito's. My sole intention is to drink less, and " illustrate the case of a just man "Didn't I go on the wagon six and the errors of people's courts, times?" "Hovever, the freedim of con- "Didn't you fall off seven science and the, respect of hu times?" man dignity, which the people "Didn't I go on a diet four claim, do not exist at present, times?" My sympathies are withTitoeven' "Yes you lost a total of 35 now when he has taken a stand pounds in four tries and gain- against Moscow in defense of ed 40. At that rate you'll weigh the independence of the coun 208 pounds by the end of 1969." try." I put the catalog of broken So the next move is up to vows in my pocket after break- Marshal Tito the release of fast. Archbishop Stepanic. Picture of Ruth Aberle To the editor: The rescue of the little girl from Kelso, Wash., was an event which deeply touched the hearts of all good Ameri- s cans. In these troublesome days of worry and strife the world over, it is truly wonderful to know that a human soul Is of such ImnAnna 4Kot hlmHr, nf men kalA ttnna t,r,4 rn,,aVi ... uu.jja.iy naiea m ns m- small notec-ooK in wiim., tneir long search to a success- . T : J 7 come-tax return $248,000 paid time to time she chronicles the fuJ cnd faith appeared in the photo- to "Lopez," and another $108,- hits runs and errors (all mine) ' graph published on the front 000 paid to "special." No further n our marital life. 4KBut ,?Uch 85 ,W i , page of the Capital JournBl on explanation of these huge ex- -TYke your head out of the he girl's own pluck and learn- Friday, December 16th. penditures was given, but it ap- blankets," she said. "Let's look J heT mhJr tw 11 AbVe the head y0Ung peared from treasury investiga- a the record, Rover." must f,lwayf "member that she Ruth.s mother is what looked tion that $108,000 was paid to "Pan I have an aspirin first?" " wc" ? "'ue like the sign of the cross, a sym- runncrs, and that the $248,000 to "Take two You'll need 'em!" "Lopez" was probably paid for She opened the notebook, police protection. "On last Jan. 1st it says here The gambling company's 1947 you promished to get home for income-tax return was some- dinner on time every night in what similar, with $247,000 paid 1949. Do you know how many to "Lopez" and $109,000 paid times you've been late?" to "special." "Maybe 25 times?" After preparing what they "No. 138 times. wno looKea tor ner neia tneir hoi nf the salvation faith- GRETA ASH And a startling proof of that 1960 Market St., Salem. Married Women in State Jobs ,Io the Editor: The . . . married women in state positions whose husbands earn two, three or more hundred dollars a month should all be ousted, that newcomers in Oregon might J. THOMAS Route 7, Salem Praise for Fire Department considered an airtight case, the It says here also that we have one member in the family working west coast T-men came to Wash- would dine out at a different ington where they recommended restaurant at least once every the prosecution of Marvin Ko- week. How many do you think vey, Albert Kogus, Harry Rock- we've been to." well and Phil Cobert. the chief "Oh, 27 certainly." partners of The Guarantee Fin- "No, just six-unless you want To the Editor We wish to publicly thank the Salem fire de- ance Company. to count that hotdog you bought partment for their promptness in answering our call and the ef- In Washington, a treasury con- me in the orange room at Ned- ficiency in, which they handled the fire at our bowling alleys, ference took place between the icks." The damage in our pin room was held to a minimum and the three west coast T-men, togeth- "You also promised we'd see care the firemen exercised even prevented smoke damage up- cr the Charles Oliphant, general a new play or movie. What do stairs to the alleys counsel of internal revenue: W. you think the total boxscore is The Salem fire department isa credit to the city of Salem. H Woolf. head of the inteli- on that?" CAPITOL BOWLING ALLEYS gence unit; and Riley Campbell, "So many I can't recall them Milton Haxtwell, Manager