Capital A Journal' 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, Wont ! 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 ond also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, 25c; Monthly, (1.00; One Tear, $12.00. By Mall In Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mm., S4.00; One Year, $8.00. U. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos., $6.00; Year, $12. 4 Salem, Ore., Monday, January 2, 1950 A Vista of 50 Years A study of contrasting pictures of 1000 and 1950 of ' the blocks of government buildinjrs from the county courthouse to the state capilol point to an interestinjr fact. In the 1900 picture the blocks, including Willson park, look open. The trees around the courthouse were mere stubs. By 1950 the courthouse is still there in its square, about to be torn down by the forces of progress. The trees around it are stately and beautiful. In the post office square, a new structure has taken the place of the. old one which was moved onto the Willamette campus. In the next block going cast, the trees have grown to make Willson park f. joy to the city and a show-place for visi tors. As for the capitol site, a new, modern building now faces north toward a growing group of state buildings. The blocks, except for trees and building replacements, remained constant during that 50-year period, generally speaking. If far-sighted planners had not laid out those blocks for the government buildings so carefully in the early days of the city, no such beautiful vista of county, federal and state buildings would be our inheritance today. This beau tiful vista of buildings is praised and taken for granted now. Consider the proposed capitol group of buildings, how ever. Because the capitol planning commission wishes to continue the two-block wide grouping north from the pres ent capitol to D street, the commission is subjected to local abuse. Objectors ask how the state could ever need enough new buildings to fill the two-block area north to I) street. All it would take to fill that capitol group as planned, with a beautiful mall extending north between the build ings, would be six or seven more state buildings. That would be six or seven more besides the highway depart ment building now under construction. A look around the capilol indicates how many buildings have been constructed since 1900 50 years ago. Five have gone up: Library building (10H9), supreme court build ing (1914), state office building (1930), agricultural building (1931), public service building (1950). A sixth one is the highway building, now under construction. If five and a sixth one under way have been needed in the past 50 years, can the capitol planners be called dreamers when they ask for space for six additional state structures for the next 50 or 75 years? Especially in view of the phenomenal growth of Oregon? If the group of buildings stretching from the county courthouse to the capitol are praised for layout and beau ty, it takes little imagination to picture the beauty in a group of state buildings stretching from the capitol to I) street in the next 50 years. So that the growth of slate buildings may be protected, "the city council should act at its next Monday night meet ing to extend the capilol 7.ona to Y) street. The Half Century's Greatest There have been a number of polls by magazines, news papers and press associations on the ten commanding figures who have influenced most of the first half of the 20th century. The selections are mostly controversial as was to be expected, for contemporary humanity lacks the historical perspective necessary for such evaluation. The magazine Time has even gone further and picked Winston Churchill as "the man of the half century" out of a list of the ten obvious leaders. Its selection is already a subject of controversy. Dorothy Thompson, the columnist, writes the following protest: "Mr. Churchill is a great man. But in term of this half cen tury, he is nM a representative man. His greatness is lliat he cannot be placed in any particular century. He represents the eternal Englisp. tradition and eternal English spirit of resist ance. His style is lBth century. He appears politically as a reincarnation ot Burke militarily of Wellington, or any other specifically Bi'lish hero. "It Is not without profound significance, however, that Mr. Church was chosen the guardian of tradition; ttie preserver and conservcr; the most knightly and chivalrous figure of the ago!" Most all lists include Kranklin I'. Roosevelt and some of them Eleam r Roosevelt. The Anti-Christs. Lenin, Stalin, Hitler and Mussolini, are on most lists, probably because of their converting the world into a slaughter and charnel house and restoring slavery to Christian nations. In the realm of science Einstein, father of the disente gration of the atom, and Kreud, who originated psychia try, are on most lists of the great. Henry Kuril is given the lead in industry for his mass production plans that revolutionized production. What is surprising is the omission of the name of Wood row Wilson, champion of democracy and peace through world unity through the creation of a League of Nations, rejected after his fatal illness by America's return to an obsolete isolationism that brought on a second world war. forcing another attempt at peace by unity in the United Nations. Wilson certainly deserves to rank among the ten. The futility of contemporary efforts with their lack of perspective to select those most entitled to wear the halo of the great was well summarized by St. Paul in his epistle to the Corinthians: "For we know In part, prophesy in part. Rut when that which Is perfect Is come, then that which is in part shall be done away with. For now we see through a glass darkly, but then face ' 1o face: now 1 know in part, but then shall 1 know, even as 1 am also known." BY BECK Entertaining The Office PJsS YOU OLD RtPROBATE.MOU SIT H6P.B DAY DREAM I NG OUT THE 18808 :22Es!SSlSgSggi WINDOW WHILE YOUR HELP IN &&&i2i THE OUTER OFFICE DO ALL THE Jl l WORK. HA-HA-HA...IT BEATS ALLpK ) HOW SOME FOLKS GET BY. BLnM3 i . YOU ALWAYS WERE SLIPPERV, " W I 6VEN AS A KID AT N m 'J SCHOOL. OH, I'VE SOT) pi -,, THE OFFICE FORCE ENJOYS THE 7h WM VISIT OF THE BOSS' BOYHOOD 'TCXfli. hl PAL EVEN MORE THAN HE DOES, -JV' WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Americans Wish for Warless World; Lobbyists Still Busy By DREW PEARSON Washington As the' American people head into a new year the thing they most devoutly wish for is a war-free world. Not even Senator McKellar is going to hurl hii usual term of en dearment "Liar" in my direction when I gay that. On the other hand, many people might differ when I say that the pat- ibpskv similar note, would also tip off the Japanese foreign minister that Britain didn't really mean it. It was during the Manchurian invasion in the tragic 1930' that the seeds of war leading to Pearl Harbor were really plant ed. Once they had sprouted it was impossible to stop war. And history will show that the Brit ish must bear a part of the re sponsibility lor the war which SIPS FOR SUPPER (Editor's Note: Columnist Don Upjohn is ill today, so his "Sips for Supper" Is missing, on the page. The. Capital Journal knows his readers join In hoping for a speedy recovery.) Baby Really Brought by Stork Glentlale, Calif., Jan. 2 M" Little baby Speigner she only weighed a pound and a half Is one New Year baby who really was brought by a stork. The baby was delivered yesterday by Nurse Margaret Stork in absence of a doctor. The premature, baby, only child of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Speigner, is doing "just fine," the hospital reported today. Get a Horse! Windsor, Ont. (U.R) A runaway horse outran a police scout car, making three circuits of a block before trotting hack to his stall. The horse had broken out of his stable at a baking company. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Anglo-Egyptian Long Drawnout Differences Are Deep Seated By DeWITT MacKENZIE liyP) Foreign AHalra Analyst) Sir Henry McMahon, who has just died in London at the ace of fl7, was one of the controversial figures in the mixed and explosive affairs of the Middle East, and his passing has set your correspondent to reminiscing. Sir Henry was the first high commissioner for Egypt under the protector ate established hy Britain all the outbreak of World War I. It was during?) this period of strained Anglo Egyptian rela tions that he wrote to Sherif Hussein of Mcc-i ca the letters" which are cred- ,)eW,u had so much to do with winning the natives over. The reputa tion of this mysterious figure was so great that the British spoke of him in tones of near reverence. I recall one time in military headquarters In Cario my guide suddenly halted and said to me in a hushed voice as though we were speaking of the king of England: "See that little chap down the corridor? That's Lawrence of ited with persuading the Arabs Arabia. to join the Allies against the So it was, and this ambassador Central Powers. Since then these extraordinary was just back letters have become the center of from a desert trip, garbed in controversy because the Arabs Arab costume, to visit some of claim McMahon promised them the chieftians. It was an adven- lands, including Palestine a hire which would have cost most white men their lives. But to return to the Egyptians, the bitterness which was engend ered under the protectorate still persists. Perhaps it isn't quite nf the conflict. I saw much of so strong, but it's there all right. Sir Henry and noted that his Young King Farouk himself is job was no bod of roses. Not said to dislike the British, al- only va he involved in keep- though he was educated in Eng- ing'the Arabs in line, but Egypt land or maybe it's BECAUSE was bitter at the English be- he was educated there. Who claim which Britain denies. At a crucial moment of the war in 1916 I spent some time in Egypt, being the first for eign correspondent admitted to that country after the outbreak cause of the protectorate. I encountered a sensational ex hibition of this bitterness in an audience I had with Sultan Hus sein Kami!, first Egyptian ruler under the protectorate. The Brit- can say? The British protectorate was terminated in 1922, and Sultan Fuad assumed the title of king. However, it wasn't until 1936 that a treaty was made under which British military occupa- ish told me in advance that the lion coased and Ef yptbecame a Sultan didn't grant anyone, even Sir Henry, more than fifteen minutes at an audience. More over everybody had to kiss his hand, including Sir Henry. Well, there was no hand kiss ing, and my audience lasted an hour and a quarter. In that time His Highness gave the British a lashing which I couldn't even begin to write in my dispatch, because no censor would have passed it And what the Sultan said also voiced the views of his people. At that time the mainlenace sovereign state. The British in terest in the canal zone was rec ognized and she was accorded the right to maintain 10.000 troops and warplanes in that area. This treaty was for twenty years, but Egypt asked for a revision in 194G. Negotiations finally broke down because of Egypt's claim to sovereignty over the Sudan, which remains under Joint Anglo -Egyptian control. Britain insists that a plebiscite be held to determine what the Sudanese themselves want. So that's where the Anglo- A 10-Inch Short Cut Los Angeles, Jan. t (.-Pi Erven G. Jasmine, 52. Is Just an average size man, but this wasn't an average size opening. Trying to "lake a short cut" yesterday. Jasmine tot stuck In a 10-Inch space between two buildings. Twenty-five firemen and policemen required three hours to free Jasmine. They used 1 rope tn try and pull him up while a human chain lugged laterally and finally extricated him. Almost Lived Up to Name Yakima. Wash., Jan. 1 iT Donald was born al 12:01 a.m. New Years day Just two minutes late, It would seem. He's the on of Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Yearout of Wapato, Wash. oi goon reunions wiin ine Aran KRVptian differences stand, people was a paramount issue Meantime, as I pointed out in tor England. While Sir Henry yesterday's column about voting was doing his utmost to better King Farouk's reported love af file feeling in Egypt, Britain also fairi nis country has risen to a was straining every nerve to leading position among (he mos foster friendship with the neigh- iPm st!,tP!. nf the Middle East, boring Arab peoples. Egypt's friendship is worth much Of rour.e Ihe magic name of in the capital of any of (he ma that time was Lawrence of Ara- jor powers which have interests bia, the Briton whose diplomacy in that part of the world. Happy New Year, Fortunato Maiden. Mass., Jan. 2 i-T Twenty-four hours ago It looked like anvthing hut a happr New Y'ear for Fortunato D'Aveta, .It. He and his wife were living apart, due lo the housing shortage. He was Jobless. They had no children. Rut today things were different. D'Aveta had been promised an apartment lie had his shoe factory Job back. This good fortune resulted from the news that his wife, Ruth, 24. had given birth to triplets all girls yesterday. Commented D'Aveta: "It's lots mora than we expected." BY CLARE BARNES, JR. White Collar Zoo tern of future war can be seen long in advance, and that skill ful diplomacy plus an enlight ened public opinion can do a great deal to head it off. i mis mca, ass... Miiruv i u ii c u 111 fcr Drew PeariBB yesterday's col umn, was the subject of some later engulfed the world. e.n.i i uTn uJ nt Peasant, of course, Z . Zy , ,1 Bd m,rhaS" Probe ld wu"d' But it IT "L LnBS F S. ' Important, even though pain- favor.te author had wntten 15 fu,, ior cannot be won wJm LearVR0 WarnmK ,h3t without Profiting by past mis- And if it Is correct that the Britain m be on ,he ( iZZ f3" Pe"ple aova11 els mother great mistake-namely, would like to make the next undercutting American policy half century a warless one, then t,j i.t r-i,i. , u. ,iia.ve mia. r , jigm. ana some "They told us at the Secretarial School to try her" POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Why Doesn't Someone Invent Way to Enjoy Life Sensibly? of this history is worth review ing. Because history does re peat. Naval Lobby In 1B27, for instance. Mr. P. then a young and unsophiscated reporter, covered the Geneva And sooner sake of a few pounds sterling. (Ed. Note Another Pearson column on the diplomatic double-crossing which leads to war will follow soon.) Mail Bag Correction: A recent column or later she willed ........ bv,.,.,E,,c at wiiilii uai- iiiaj imvc umi uiiidir iu oiepnen Daager you inio vin Looiidge and Frank B. Kel- Downey of Sacramento In link- making a down logg were trying to work out a ing him with his brother, Sen. payment on a treaty between the big powers Sheridan Downey of California, five - acre plot io Keep tne mad race for naval The fact is that Stephen Downey In some lunar armament on a reasonable basis, is an able liberal; and, unlike his suburb with the At this conference it struck senatorial brother, fights for his idea you will this naive reporter as queer that convictions. retire there andfts ceriain u a. naval onicers were just received from Sidney raise chickens. conspiring with William Bald- Hyman. Washineton. D.C.. B u t w h o win Shearer, lobbyist for the big letter which reads- "I'v int wants to be the American shipbuilding compa- read your column about toys for man in 1 h e "' B" nies, to defeat the treaty. the kids of Europe, including moon? Not me and probably A story to that effect, publish- the German children. I have no not you. ed in the Washington Star, later 0ve for their parents. Some of 1 lok with a Jaundiced eye attracted the attention of the them wiped out every member on a'l the marvels promised by senate naval affairs committee of my own family in Europe' 5cicnce for the next 50 years, with the result that this report- others among them were on the This suspicion comes from an er was called before the senate, other side of the line when I acquaintance with some of the and an official investigation at th K-a:. n-.. i eerie wonders of the 20th cen- manner in Cass no and An-rin nt T aora.. tury up till now aulomooues, By HAL BOYLE New York W) "The Joneses have a country place on the moon why can't we?" That well may be the plaint of your wife In the year 2,000 if science does as well in the second half of the century at It has in the first. substantiated the better but don't. And the real task of scientific social engineer ing has hardly been touched how to make man get along with his fellow man. They have learned to jet propel bodies, but they haven't taken the first step In Jet-propelling the human spirit. . What good would It do if some laboratory Ponce de Leon found the secret of eternal life and gave it to mankind? At present, it would be only a curse. As people grew older and older they would start bit ing each other to death from sheer ennui at seeing the same old faces. The real problems of life can't be solved with chromium-plated which Bethlehem Steel. Newport wholeheartedly with the thesis airplanes, radio, television, the gadgets. What science should Mo.i.c CliinKi.iUi-n 9. r ti . meaia pnnpnntnila nn le hnw trt annuls News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock you advance in your column and h r- am enletul that something re- : P.v"' mains of your backsliding Ouak atom bomb, falsies, psychiatry, concentrate on is how to enable and vitamin pills. a man to marry the girl he wants It seems to me the Bunsen ana gei me jon ne warns ana $40,000 to upset the peace efforts er conscience so that you still burner brigade ought to stop for stay happy with both after he ... .ne u.a. government cfm advance such a thesis. Since j n.s w.is me Deginning or a i have no children nf mv own while and ask themselves, has them. "Whither are we trending?" So It should come up with a gen- pattern which has been followed an(j thus will have no oppor- 'ar their laboratory miracles eral, all-purpose, happiness and ....t..,,. k,la, wis tunitv to salvage tOVS from anv 1,ave cuauicu man iu KU maiei, iwuuucss pill, it everyuouy iook . ,i atier-onnstmas snambles, I am conducted one of the most pow- enclosing this check to h,,v new erful lobbies in the nation for a big navy regardless of need of t attach any name to the gift man on wheels and then gave to one another. smell nicer and live a bit longer, three H. and K. pills a day, di- They ve showed the world vorces would end, boredom van- how to be sanitary. They put ish and we would all look fair you think wise. You might """ """" "Ky ve I" That's the real challenge of simply say, America." him an rnanner of complicated the next 50 years for science 'ccopsrritht 105D) gadgets that should make life to invent something that will en able the human race to enjoy OPEN FORUM life in a sensiBie way. s ar it has only given toys that tire. Pensions for World War I Vets Trip, to tne moon are no aB To the Editor: Your editorial of December 27 regarding . . . wer. The space ships will be Truman's reckless spending. I wish to call attention to the fact crowded, the driver will be ar that always before pensions have been provided for veterans at guing with the passengers and the foreign policy of their gov ernment. It was only last fall that this lobby was sat upon once again by Secretary of Defense John son and Secretary of the Navy Matthews. And the lesson to be drawn from it is that you can't have U.S. foreign policy dic tated by those concerned with profits from the steel business. That's one wav wars are made. WhnWas the Liar? In 1934, Mrs. P's favorite au thor also disclosed on "The Laboratory of War." how Secretary of Stale Henry L. Slimsnn anil &.i.rol,r,. w-.. Patrick J. Hurley had rowed MARION COUNTY RECOLLECTIONS during the Hoover administra tion over an embargo on arms to South America. This also il lustrated how wars are some times made. Stimson, who did more to pre vent war than any U.S. states man in years, urged congress to pass a law blocking arms sales to the belligerent nations of Bol- 45 years. Us unfortunate veterans of World War I have failed to be pro- chanter vided ,or at 88 year"' 640 Mill St., Salem How Marion County Looked In Handbook for 1860-61 the voyage will be no more exciting than a subway ride to Brooklyn. Alas, castle In Spain don't have central heating and the moon up close isn't the moon anymore It's just some more real estate. No, sir, science is going to have to quit annoying innocent microbes and start eradicating the bad germs of the mind. The need isn't for more new and strange vehicles to cause more traffic jams In the world but for something that will By OSWALD WEST (ficttrnor mt Ortren from 1911 t 1915) (From Bancroft's Hand-Book) "This county occupies the heart of the Willamette valley and, get the world out of the jam ivia and Paraguay. But Hurley in point of population and agricultural wealth, is second to no it's in. and his army chiefs lobbied se- county in the state. Give us a Thomas A. Edison, cretly in the halls of congress "Its area is about 2500 square miles, and includes a large body of the human heart, boys, and against passage. 0f well-timbered land at the base of the Cascades, and an ex- let the moon alone. Faced with publication of the tensive tract of the finest and facts, Hurley stormed: "Pearson improved farming land on the is a cowardly liar." But when pacific coast. calico Betore the senate muni tions committee on March 13, 1935, Hurley admitted, under "The large and mature orch ards in this section yield a sup- oath and under stiff cross-ex- cnor -uamy 01 "uu, wnicn amination, that he had opposed bears an enviable reputation be- the arms embargo to South ynd ,he boundaries of the state, America. apd ' exported in large quan- Again you can't have the mil- tities. itary secretly lobbying against "Salem, the capital of the those charged with the conduct state, is a flourishing town, of our foreign policy if we are pleasantly situated on the right to prevent war. bank of the Willamette, and con British Louble-Cross tains a good school and some But it isn't always the milit- important manufacturing inter ary who do the double-crossing, ests." home of the most vital diplo matic negotiations in recent his- "County Seat Salem 45 tory have been tragically double- miles from Portland. crossed by our supposed good Third Judicial District Hon. friends, the British. Reuben P. Boise. Judge Circuit In 1334-35, this column car- Court. ried a scries of stories tracing District Attorney J. G. Wil son, Salem. Senators Hon. E. F. Colby and Hon. John W. Grim. Representatives Hons. Crandall, Robert Newell, stop by step how the British were secretly encouraging the Japanese at exactly the same time our state department was desperately trying to block the Jap invasion of Manchuria. The column also predicted that Harding,' and Samuel Parker! mniiir ill MVP J l lie Urt.cllie,e in Manrhnri u-rttiM 1nai-t in lha invasion of all China bv the Jap non salary' $600' war lords. Three vears later County Clerk N. this happened. What the British actually did was to agree officially with the United States that the Japanese cent army must oe stopped in -Man churia and that the Japanese . government must be given the severest condemnation by the SuPt- Schools B. F. Bonham, League of Nations. But when $300. U. S. Ambassador Cameron "Attorneys W. M. Barnam, Forbes would call at the Jap- B. F. Bonham. C. P. Crandall, anese foreign office with a J. C. Cartwright, L. F. Grover, scorching note of protest. Sir B. F. Harding. Geo. K. Shiel J. Miles Lampson. British Charge S. Smith, C. N. Terry, Salem; d'Aifaires, though delivering a and J. H. Lasater, Silverton. County Judge Milton Shan- T. Caton, fees. Sheriff George A. Edes. fees. Treasurer J. H. Moores, per- Surveyor Walter Forward, " i'