Capital AJournal An Independent Newspoper 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 also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, 25c; Monthly, $1.00; One Tear, $12.00. By Mall to Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos., $4.00; One Year, $8.00. V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; Mos.. $6.00; Year. $12. BYH. T. WEBSTER The Thrill That Comes Once in a Lifetime 4 Salem, Oregon, Saturday, January 21, 1950 No Substitute for a Substitute Again Salem's McNary field has been called on to be come a temporary airport for Portland. Iced runways had forced closing of the Portland field. As during the Columbia river flood of 1948, the local airport was used by United Air Lines as a substitute field. This is the same United Air Lines that the Civil Aeronau tics Board would order out of Salem. This is the same United Air Lines that has been called on to show why West Coast Airlines should not be substituted for it here. This emergency use of McNary field by United is one of the reasons why there should be no substitution. As the CAB will find when it holds its hearing on the Salem case sometime next month, McNary field is the only one near Portland that can serve as an emergency field when the Portland field is not usable, as in this latest instance. Every so often, the Portland airport is closed in because of fog, and Salem then acts as an alternate field. As the CAB will learn, Salem was called on during the Vanport disaster period to act as a substitute not only for United but also Northwest Airlines and the Oregon Na tional Guard. Credit for putting Salem's field in shape to be used dur ing this latest emergency goes to the local United station crew, Airport Manager Barkley and his assistant, and all groups using the field. A snow-plow worked for two days to clear runways so the field would be in shape to handle plane traffic. This handling of Portland's traffic locally certainly comes at an opportune time. This example should be ef fective, coupled with the many other arguments in Salem's case, to show the CAB the value of keeping United Air Lines service here. Averting Another Berlin Blockade Gen. Maxwell Taylor, American commandant in Berlin, has apparently averted a threatened resumption of the Berlin blockade by ordering the return to the Russians of the Soviet operated German railway administration building, seized by the German police. At least it has re lieved the existing East-West tension. Taylor stated that "the 600 office rooms are not worth the threat of a blockade. It was the intention to put this space to use for the benefit of Berlin" he said in explaining why the U.S. property control section authorized the city government to move into the empty railway headquarters. "But that the hardships the Russians sought to impose out weighed the benefit arising from occupation." The Russians had made their intention clear by impos ing restrictions on traffic, notably a slowdown in Berline elevated railway service and the stopping of some trucks operating between Berlin and West Germany, stating that they were doing so because of the seizure of the build ing in the American sector here. Soviet guards had turned back some trucks leaving Berlin and delayed others enter ing the city as in blocade times. The railway building was held by the Russians under four-power agreement giving them control over the Ber lin railways. The Russians largely had vacated the build ing after the Berlin rail strike last year. The German police took it on the contention that the hundreds of vacant offices were needed. But the Russians formally protested the use of the vacant building located in the U.S. sector and badly needed for housing space by the Berlin govern ment. Just another instance of Soviet intrantibility. A Deserved Coalition Defeat The efforts of a coalition of republicans and democrats to change the house rules to grab control of the legislative program there was deservedly defeated by a vote of 236 to 186. Its purpose was to go back to old rules permitting a committee to tie-up bills indefinitely and so kill them and its inspiration was to prevent the civil rights issue from being acted upon, again giving the rules committee life or death control of major legislation. For many years the republican party platforms have pledged the enaction of such measures and committed the party to them, consequently the republicans who joined with the southern die-hard democrats for partisan ad vantage pursued an unjustifiable course in surrendering principle to expediency to prevent action by the house. The coalition had proposed to knock out a 1949 rule allowing other committees to by-pass the rules group after 21 days. Even optimistic administration leaders had not counted on collecting more than 50 GOP votes. They actually got 64. But they lost 85 democrats. In short, the southern democratic wing of the conlition delivered its top strength, but their republican support didn't come through. The FEPC bill, backed by both republican and demo cratic national parties, was the issue. Now it may be voted upon next Monday under the 21-day rule the coalition Bought to repeal. Probably the filibuster will again be resorted to by the southern democrats and all legislation be delayed, but eventually there will be a vote on it and settle the issue. Hunter Shoots Duck Banded By Him 75 Years Before Modesto, Calif., Jan. 21 (T) What, sir, is the life expec tancy of a duck provided It avoids hunters' guns? And just how far does it fly? The surprising answers in the case history of one adult male sprig were given today by Egbert Jones, Modesto dis trict duck bander. At the Newman Duck club on Oct. 1, 1933, Jones banded this particular bird. On Sept. 22, 1948, In Ugashlk, Alaska, 3,750 air miles away, John V. Struck killed the same pintail. Struck noticed the band number. He sent it to the U.S. biological survey. In due time, the survey established the number bad been put on the duck by Jones. Jones, who bad banded hundreds of ducks, says this Sprig is the oldest by far of which he has a record. And it was the longest Interval between banding and killing. Jones estimated the duck was at the ripe old age of 18 by the time It got into the way of the Alaska hunter's shotgun. Being a Bit Optimistic Pasco, Wash., Jan. 21 (U.R) At a time when most residents were thinking about snow shovels, the city council today was studying bids on two power grass mowers. READING IHS FORBIDDCN DIME HOEL WHILE LISTENING FOR TFte APPROACHING Foovsreps of Tfic cnsof C l 1WB. N H4 Ml ! hi 'PROACHINeV i It WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND 'Corniest Note Ever Sent by President' on China Trouble By DREW PEARSON Washington History sometimes repeats, though with re verse angles. It was just a little over 100 years ago that the United States was also having trouble with China not with the communists but with his imperial majesty, the emperor. The trouble then, somewhat as today, was over the exclusion of Ame r i c a n BY CLARE BARNES, JR. White Collar Zoo THE FIRESIDE PULPIT Everything We Have or Use Is Really Only Loaned to Us BY REV. GEORGE H. SWIFT Rector, St. Paul's Episcopal church Most, if not all, of the things we use, are lent to us by a benev olent God. This is true too of our privileges and our opportunities as well as being true of the material things we seem to possess. Even our time is not our own. When we lose or waste time, we are being reckless with something which does not belong to us. Good fripnHs lend us books in the hope that we shall enjoy them and profit by reading them. It Ire quently hap pens that w c get the notion the books be 1 o n g to us, i f!fi:i! ""S others property and persons and the things lent to them by God himself. When we accept the things God lends to us (and what things has he not lent to us?) we are privileged to get every thing we can out of them to make us healthy, even wealthy and wise. We should then be prepared to return them unim paired to the great Lender of ail. All this may seem like a small when, as a mat- act. Georse H. Swilt ter of fact, they are only lent to us. What is borrowed should be matter without great signifi- treasured while in our posses- cance, but the great wars, with sion with even greater consider- au their horror, were started atlon than if it were our own. by men who hadn't learned to respect the property or persons I like the story in the Book of of others. Who knows, maybe Kings about a man who was cut- the criminal tendencies of these ting down a tree on a river bank, men began when they failed to A kind neighbor had lent him appreciate the importance of re his ax with which to do the job. turning books lent to them by As he worked, the axe-head fell others. into the deep river. The man's When we contribute to a great terrible distress over the loss of cause like religion or one of its the tool loaned to him is record- offspring, we may indicate our ed in Scripture, "Alas!" he cried, understanding of God's role as "it was borrowed." lender by saying, "All things This would be a happier world come of thee, O Lord, and of if people had more regard for thine own we have given thee." Doubly Sorry for Stealing Hull, England, Jan. 21 VP) Seaman James Pearson is doubly sorry. He was fined 3 ($8.40) yesterday for stealing a four-and-a-half gallon beer barrel. He told the policeman who arrested him: "I made a horrible mistake. It was empty." MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Finland Re-elects President in Defiance of Commie Campaign By EDWIN SHANKE (For DeWttt MacKenrie, AP Foreign AMslrs Analyst) London The re-election of President Juho Kusti Paasikivi, Finland's oldest active statesman, demonstrates again the almost defiant, stubborn independence of the hardy Finns a nation of 4,000,000 living in the shadow of the Red colossus. Despite a communist pressure campaign, the Finns chose once more to place their independ- ence in the tired but capa- of again being kept out of the blc hands of a man who help- government, although they reg ed build the little republic af- istered some election gains, ter the first world war as its ... first prime minister. A lively little woman 46 Though almost 80, he still years of age is the soul of the is the dominating personality in communist party in Finland. Finnish politics. "The old man She is Hertta Kuusinen, in the (presidential) palace" known to Finns as "Finland's talks the Russian language and Red Cross" and one of the most understands Russian ways. He watched persons in the country, sees the need for good relations Daughter of Otto Wille Kuusin with a big neighbor, but with- en, a power in the Soviet union out sacrificing treasured liber- as president of the Karelian re tics, public, she shuttles frequently between Helsinki and Moscow. iru,,i, (i, ritini vmr nf Many Finnish politicians believe Finland's independence he was he the PiPne for Moscow's the man the Finns most fre quently chose to deal with the Russians. He began nis political 1CT 1 Drew Pearson Chinese and the Americans will trade, there should be rules, so that they shall not break your laws nor our laws. Our Minis ter, Caleb Cushing, is authoriz ed to make a treaty to regulate trade. Let it be just. Let there be no unfair advantage on ei ther side. "Let the people trade not only at Canton, but also at Amoy, Ning-Po, Shang-Hai, Fu-Chow, ana all such other places as may offer profitable exchanges both business from' Chinese trade, British, as to- '4 day, were get- ' ting the inside track. As a - result, President John I Tyler sent what Maury Maver ick describes as "t h e corniest note ever signed by a president" to the Emperor of China urging to China and the United States, him to open his ports to the provided they do not break United States. your laws nor our laws. Carrying the note to the em- "We shall not take the part peror was Special Ambassador of evil-doers. We shall , not up Caleb Cushing, with explicit in- hold them that break your laws, structions from Daniel Webster, Therefore, we doubt not that then secretary of state, "to se- you will be pleased that our cure the entry of American messenger of peace, with this ships and cargoes into these letter in his hand, shall come ports on terms as favorable as to Pekin, and there deliver it; those enjoyed by British mer- and that your great officers chants." will, by your order, make a Not foreseeing that China treaty with him to regulate af someday would undergo vast po- fairs of trade so that nothing litical changes, Daniel Webster may happen to disturb the peace made this observation in his let- between China and America, ter to Ambassador Cushing: "Let the treaty be signed by "It cannot be foreseen how your own imperial hand. It shall ! rapidly or how slowly a people be signed by mine, by the au of such peculiar habits as the thority of our great council, the Chinese, and apparently so te- senate. naciously attached to their ha- "And so may your health be bits, may adopt the sentiments, good, and may peace reign, ideas and customs of other na- "Your good friend, tions." "John Tyler." "We're taking up a collection for one of the girls she's gettin' married." POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Scheme to Pay January Bills Flops; Wife Comes to Rescue By HAL BOYLE New York (AT Bills! Billsl Bills! The January mail is full of them. So is our house and so Is yours, I'll bet. After the first of the year it's payoff time for Santa Claui, and the bills flood in like the Galveston tidal wave. It is the sea- orders to the Finnish commun ists. When the so-called popular . rnini hut hiftiH front of communists and radi- to conservatism and now is re- cal social.sts suffered a heavy garded above party politics with- setback in the December 1947 out party affiliation. communal elections, Hertta ap- , . peared at the president s annual - He commands Russian respect. ba , black ve,vet dress pre Wh.le he knows what the Rus- sident Paasikivl teased her and sians want, he knows, too, what she Jokedi rm me everyone his people want the right to wiu th,nk 1m m mourning... live in freedom, free to deal ... with west or east. Lateri the p0puiar front re- That may be a reason for cciVed further setbacks. Hert- communism desires to see him &-s communist husband Yrjo out of the way. Their eventual Leino, from whom she now is aim is to tie Finland tightly divorced, was swept out of the into the Russian bloc of satel- key office of minister of inter- lites. And if ever there was a ior. Reports from Helsinki indi cate that when the new prcsi- Little did Webster realize that China someday would de sert her traditional isolation for the violent political philosophy of Karl Marx. At that time, however, the Chinese were really stony heartedexcept to nations with navies as large as the British. Therefore, President Tyler's letter to the emperor got no where. However, Tyler tried hard, and here is the jewel which he penned on July 12, 1843: "I, John Tyler, president of the United States of America which states are: Maine, New Hampshire, Massa chusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Ver mont, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Mary land, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Ken tucky, Tennessee, Ohio, Louis iana, Indiana, Mississippi, Illin ois, Alabama, Missouri, Arkan sas and Michigan send you this letter of peace and friendship, signed by my own hand. "1 hope your health is good. China is a great empire, extend ing over a great part of the world. The Chinese are numer ous. You have millions and mil lions of subjects. The twenty six United States are as large as China, though our people are not so numerous. "The rising sun looks upon the great mountains and great rivers of China. When he sets, he looks upon rivers and moun tains equally large in the Unit ed States. Our territories are di vided from your dominions only by the sea. Leaving the mouth of one of our great rivers, and going constantly toward the set ting sun, we sail to Japan and to the Yellow sea. "Now, i my words are, that the governments of two such great countries should be at peace. It is proper, and accord ing to the will of heaven, that they should respect each other, and act wisely. I therefore send to your court Caleb Cushing, one of the wise and learned men of this country. On his first arrival in China, he will inquire for your health He has the strict orders to go to your great city of Pekin, and there to de liver this letter. He will have with him secretaries and inter preters. "The Chinese love to trade with our people, and to sell them tea and silk, for which our people pay silver, and some times other articles. But if the Daniel Webster, in his in structions to Ambassador Cush ing, carefully cautioned him not to kowtow to the emperor. "The Chinese are apt to speak of persons coming into the em pire as tribute bearers to the emperors," Webster cautioned. "This idea has been fostered perhaps by the costly parade of embassies of England. "All ideas of this kind, should they arise, must be immediately met by a declaration, not made ostentatiously, that you are no tribute bearer: that your gov ernment pays tribute to no one, and accepts tribute from no one. "It cannot be wrong for you to make known," Webster con tinued, "that the United States, once a country subject to Eng land, threw off that subjection years ago, asserted its indepen dence, sword in hand, estab lished that independence after a seven years' war, and now meets England upon equal terms upon the ocean and upon the land. ... "The remoteness of the Unit ed States from China, and s.ill more the fact that they have no colonial possessions in her neighborhood, will naturally lead to the indulgence of a less suspicious and more friendly feeling than may have been en tertained towards England, even before the late war between England and China. "It cannot be doubted that the immense power of England in India must be regarded by the Chinese government with dis satisfaction, if not with some de gree of alarm. You will take care to show strongly how free the Chinese government may well be from all jealousy aris ing from such causes toward the United States. "Finally, you will signify, in decided terms and a positive manner, that the government of the United States would find it impossible to remain on terms of friendship and regard with the emperor, if greater priv ileges or commercial facilities should be allowed to the sub jects of any other government than should be granted to ci tizens of the United States. "I am, sir, very respectfully, your obedient servant, "DANIEL WEBSTER." Today, 107 years later, we're right back where we started from the British trading in China and the United States closing up its consulates. (Copyrliht 1950) son when the average man re alizes the old truth that in this life money alone is not enough. At least the mo ney he has han dy isn't. And he lives in dread of the install ment collector. A friend of usual the amount on the bills totaled more than the amount in the bank. "Why don't I write out a check for each bill," I thought, "and then put the checks in the wrong envelopes. Each guy will think I meant to pay him. It will be April by the time the whole business is straightened out, and by then I'll be solvent." So I addressed all the enve lopes and wrote all the checks. mine is a case in point. Passing and laid out the checks and en- his home the other night, I de- velopes in two rows. Then I cided to drop in an see his new went into the reading room to television set. finish a serial. I knocked half a dozen times . but there was no answer. Puz- When I emerged, the desk was zled, I went to a drugstore and bare. Frances came in a few phoned him. moments later. "Oh, was that you knocking?" "I had to mail a letter, so I he said in great relief. "Come mailed your checks, too, dear," on back, rap twice so we'll she said. know it's you and we'll let you "Of course, you put the Right in." checks in the Right envelopes?" When I entered I found the I moaned, whole family grouped around "Oh, yes, I didn't make any the video screen eating sand- mistake, dear." wiches. I asked, "why all the Not much! It was June by the mystery," and my friend said: time that mess was straightened "I couldn't make the January out. By then we had given our payment on the television set, patronage to another bank it and we're not answering the seemed a good idea. And Fran door for fear it's the installment ces, once and for all, had agreed man coming to take the set back, to take over our finances. If I can hold' out to February, That, men, is the only way to I'll be all right." be sure your bills are paid and to enjoy a life free of financial How well do I remember cares. Let your wife handle the when I used to be in this pitiful money. Wives are like canaries, plight a January fugitive from which can be just as happy with financial woes. This was in the a thimble full of birdseed as a days when I used to handle the barrel full. Women don't com- money in the family. plain half as much about how Giving me a checkbook and little you earn if they control telling me to spend carefully was the purse. like giving Hitler an army and It has worked out wonderfully telling him not to waste it. in my household. Let Frances Soon the bill collectors beat crease her brow over how to on my door so often they asked meet January bills. She'll find me to put a pad on it to save a way. Dollar worries? I don't their knuckles. have 'em. January, then as now, was the Don't have any dollars either, worst month. Once I hit on a Every system has a flaw, solution that seemed fine. As That's the one in mine. When Love Is Not in Love Savannah, Ga., Jan. 21 ff) Mattie L Love has filed suit for a divorce. She claims her husband. Natural Love, deserted her. CapitalJpurnal moral bulwark against Russian pressure, it is Paasikevi. The Russian not demanding dential term begins March 1, surrender of 300 alleged Rus- and the present soclalist-demo- sian "war criminals" and charg- crat minority government re- lng Finland with a breach of signs, a coalition of conserva- her peace treaty in the midst tives, progressives and social of the presidential campaign democrats will take place. These was regarded as an open pres- are the parties which supported sure move in support of the Paasikivi. The communists are Finnish communists. expected to be excluded for a The outcome of the election second time, undoubtedly will drive Fin- That's not likely to sit well land's communists to a new with the Kremlin and further wave of agitation especially pressure moves are almost cer- because they face the prospect tain to follow. Army Private Spends Pay Supporting Two War Orphans Tokyo, Jan. 21 VP) As a private in the U.S. army. Earl S. Whitney, 21, doesn't make much money. So it was understandable when he took a night job in a service club to earn extra change. His real reason for taking the extra Job came to light today. Whitney, a southern California lad, has been supporting two month. He has not asked help war orphans, a Chinese and a from any other source for his Japanese, for nearly three philanthropy, years. Asked why he spends from Whitney's charity was reveal- $75 to $100 a month of his ed when he asked for a two-day meager pay on the orphans, pass from first cavalry maneuv- Whitney replied: . ers. Questioned by army author- "It makes me feel badly to ities as to why he wanted the see all the little kids hungry, pass. Whitney said he wanted I wouldn't want to see my bro- to visit the Chinese mission to thers and sisters like that." straighten out some papers on Whitney's home is at San Ga- his ward, Fan Tung, 13. briel, Calif. Then the whole story came Whitney calls the Chinese out. Jimmy and the Japanese Mick- ey. Since coming here nearly Both boys lived until recent three years ago, Whitney has ly in i room attached to the fed, educated, maintained and Church of Christ in the Tokyo clothed Fan Tung and Hiraya- suburb of Zoshigaya, but Mick ma Tyokichi, 16. Both were ey, who teached a Sunday school orphaned by the war, class in the church, now has His army pay is $111.90 a quarters elsewhere. 1 Because It was mid winter, a Hew York laboratory feared It would ban to delay a scientific test for lack of tbs files needed for It. A Want Ad quickly solved the problem, however. A boy read er brought in six dozen files. To till his needs uie av erage American or Can adian uses $2 worth of Want Ads a year. Yoor Ad Will Get Results, Too. Dial Result Number 2-2406