1 Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publither 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 Anociated Press and Tha 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 end also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weeklv, 25c; Monthly. $1.00; One Year, S12.00. By Mall in Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos, $4-00; One Year, $8.09. 0. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos., $6.00; Year. $XZ. 4 Salem. Oregon, Saturday, February 18, 1950 k Don Quixote to the Rescue Despite sobful and soulful pleadings, no Sir Galahad searching for the holy grail has appeared to save Oregon's Dame Democracy. Neither has any gallant young Loch invar volunteered to carry her off in triumph. So William M. Josslin has consented to be drafted to play her knight in the roll of a Don Quixote to rescue the old gal as his fair Dulcinea del Toboso and chivalrously tilt the wind mills of horrendous republican chicanery. Josslin is the chairman of the democratic state central iommittee and will be remembered as a secretary of the late Governor Charles M. Martin, who gained state renown as "Pinky" because of his "crowning glory." His name then was Gosslin. Why he changed a surname that to many seemed appropriate is a mystery it's the same man but a different name. Gosslin never liked his nickname and once asked the tapitol newsmen, "Why do you call me Pinky? My hair is not red, it's golden." Then one of them replied, "All right, we'll call you Goldy if that is what you want." But they never did. Josslin has sent out a long form letter to "fellow demo crats" and the newspapers citing his long and loyal service to the democratic party for 23 years, as "a Roosevelt sup porter before Chicago, 1932, one of the original Harry Tru man men in Oregon who never faltered. I helped draft Mid now support the democratic state platform adopted by jur state committee." To many democrats however, the platform is not democratic at all but socialistic stateism. And it was FDR's influence that defeated Martin for demo iratic renomination because he jailed the labor goons in Oregon and ended their reign of terror. Josslin says in his letter that he not only served as pri vate secretary to Martin, but "as legal adviser in effect is assistant governor from 1935 to 1939 including serv ice as the governor's contact man with the state legisla ture." Which is enough to make the old general rise in his grave with a familiar "damn you Pinky" for the ene mies he tactlessly made for the governor. Josslin concludes "as a 'good soldier' I am willing to meet the challenge" and be a candidate if the democrats want him. "What would be my prospects in your county? Do you order me into battle?" He requires little urging for the political bea has already stung him, and the GOP wind mills better look out for Don Quixote, astride Sancho Panza's donkey, his party emblem. Truman Budget's Cost to Oregon Oregon Business and Tax Research has figured out the cost of the Truman federal budget for the next fiscal year. The budget totals $42.4 billion and if adopted by congress, the 1,700,000 Oregon residents would have to pungle up about $432,480,000 or approximately $254 per person, in addition to state and local taxation. This cost is over twice the $198,436,710 collected in Oregon, 1948-49, for all state miscellaneous and local property taxes. Oregon's computed share of the proposed 1951 federal budget is based on the state's contribution, on an allocated basis, to total fiscal 1949 federal tax collections, which con tribution was 1.02 percent of $40,847,609,000. Oregon's allocated share of total 1949 federal collections was $414, 826,268. The taxpayer organization explained that "allocation" of total 1949 fiscal year federal taxes included crediting each state with all employment and individual income taxes col lected therein, federal corporation taxes on basis of 1948 calendar year collections, and customs and excise and other miscellaneous federal levies on a July 1, 1948, population basis, a formula used by national tax research agencies. The Truman fiscal 1951 $42.4 billion budget did not in clude additional social security payroll "deducks" that would be required to finance the broad extension of social welfare, including socialized medicine, which would extract more millions from Oregon workers and their employers. Senator Byrd's (D., Va.), proposed $36 billion federal budget would have balanced the 1951 federal budget, stop ped the deficit financing and saved Oregon taxpayers about $56,280,000, nn amount sufficient to give, for example, each of Oregon's 23,332 old age assistance recipients, as of December, 1949, $193 a month in addition to what they then received. Economy, however, seems to have been forgotten by the administration and President Truman in his Jefferson Jackson day speech went out of his way to attack its advo cates and champion deficit spending. BYH. T. WEBSTER " " Thrill That Comes Once in a Lifetime BY CARL ANDERSON Henry r . n.. . ..'-. . J. Lr MJ. lip LET HIM i steep until- - I amp wont- aeT-ro&eor- I'm O CLOCK TV TIJ SIX-THIRTY -TlWs . XfEV THE FIRESIDE PULPIT BY REV. GEORGE H. SWIFT Rector. St. Paul' Episcopal Church The season of Lent will commence next Wednesday. Lent should not be approached with reluctance, but welcomed. Lent, with its emphasis on temperance, meditation, and relief from the pressure of social activities should bring that "peace of mind" which is so much sought after but seldom found today. However we keep Lent, there should be a spiritual objective in mind, which takes up time, we should Giving up something more or spend every minute of that time WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Baptist Truman Preaches to Methodists; Wins Approval By DREW PEARSON Washington You have to have a card-index system these days to keep up with the accusations of certain congressmen regard ing communists in the federal government. Unfortunately the average citizen doesn't have time to keep a card index, so gets confused over harum-scarum Senator Joe Mc Carthy's recent Michigan, almost exactly the same charges are shouted by the republican senator from Wisconsin. Truman Preaches With Bible In hand, Baptist Harry Truman preached a ser mon the other day to a dozen Methodist ministers. He started off by assuring: "Well, I am not going to preach a sermon." Nevertheless he fingered through his Bible, read two chapters out of Isaiah, and upon this based his hope for the peace and happiness of the world. "You said you didn't intend to preach a sermon, but you have actually preached an excellent sermon," responded Bishop J. Ralph Magee, head of the Me thodist church in Illinois, when the president had finished. I am sure that all the gen- apologies to him for ever ques- to have Harry Truman fill their MdcKENZIE'S COLUMN Drew Pearion accusation that there were 57 card - carrying, communists i n the state de-. partment. When the senator from Wisconsin f i n ally was pinned down, he could produce not 57, but only four names of state department offi cials whom he claimed were communists. A careful scrutiny of these names is important. Of the four accused by McCarthy, one, Dr. ' Harlow Shapley, at no time worked for the state depart ment. Two, Gustavo Duran and Mrs. Mary Jane Keeney, resign ed four years ago; the fourth, John Service, was reinstated af Observance of Lent Should Be rl lL..:iJ: .IA...Ca..Ii. ter a Prolonged and careful in- 1 a" ure all the gen- rOrUDDUIlainQOTWUrjOUIS vestigation and after virtual tlemen present would be happy ' annlnpinc in him fnr irtt mine- to have Harry Truman fill their HI, t., Iw i. I.. l rrt I Cail C ff tioning his loyalty. He is now PulP' any time he could find servinc with the most anti-Rus- u Possible," added Illinois' Sen. sian of all American diplomats, Loy Henderson, U.S. dor to India. ambassa- less as a stunt is not keeplngf Lent. A man " once made a pledge to give up smoking dur ing L e nt . He kept the pledge, if and proudly in formed me o f i his feat. I con gratulated h i m on his evident r i i with spiritual exercise, such as attendance at services of wor ship and instruction, or going about doing good for others. Lent is not the time to be lazy, even though it is a time to be quiet, a time to give the nerves a rest, a time to think about our responsibilities as Christ ians, and to be more diligent in carrying them out. We should make of this Lent not a nega tive thing, and not an empty But there is even more inter esting background behind Sen ator McCarthy's charges. Some- Scott Lucas, who had introduc ed the ministers at the White House. This brought applause from the ministers. Truman went on to congratu late them for coming to Wash ington to study their govern- what the same charges were ment, and suggested that more people should visit the capital to studv what the nrpsiripnt nnrl gressman Bartel Jonkman of congress are up against. made three years ago by anoth er republican, this one, Con Michigan, just across the lake from McCarthy in Wisconsin. "Mr. Lucas is carrying a very heavy load on the hill, and it strength of char-"' Swl" thing. We should resolve, among acter, and enquired if it wasn't other things, to exercise temper terribly difficult at times to ance in those things which hcre keep his pledge. "Oh no," he tofore have had too great a said, "Whenever the pressure power over us. We should seek started I took a good chew of God's help in prayer, in regu tobacco." lar attendance at services of worship and meditation. We Whatever we do or do not should work out a definite plan do in our observance of Lent, for Lent, and stay with it. It is whether it be abstinence or fast- important to work at one's re ing, or doing definite things ligion. Inasmuch as we ourselves over and above what we nor- shall be the beneficiaries, we mally would do, it should be should welcome Lent, and give for the upbuilding of our souls, it a chance to bring blessings to When we give up something our souls. Stranded Not Strangled Canton, Miss., Feb. 18 VP) An ambulance sped to flooded Bear Creek, near here, to pick up a man reported "strangled." After arriving, the ambulance crew surveyed the situation and then returned to town to call a wrecker. The man was in trouble alright, but he hadn't been strangled. He was strand ed. Girl's Wrestling Tactics Pay Off Cleveland, Feb. 18 VP) A girl teenager who learned wrest ling tactics by watching television routed a street thug early today. Marion Vllt, 17, told police that when the man grappled with her, "I grabbed his index finger and bent it back hard. He let go and I punched him twice. He ran one way and I ran the other." She also credited her brother, Don, a football player for Bowling Green university, with teaching her some of the tricks. KRISS-KROSS Salem's Wanderingest Mutt? Why, Schneebles, of Course By CHRIS KOWITZ, Jr. "Bet that's our Schnceblcs," said a couple of members of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity at Willamette university after read ing about a mystery collie dog wandering about Salem's streets making friends by the dozen. No, Schneebles isn't a collie. In fact, he isn't much of any one breed . On Feb. 26, 1947, Jonkman would be difficult for me to named two of the same alleged reach my objectives without his state department officials assistance," Truman added. Keeney and Duran even At a parting shot, the presi though they were not then with dent reminded the visiting min the state department. Jonkman lsters that his primary "theme also hurled some accusations at in iife is t0 bring peace to man Joseph Panuch, then deputy as- kind." sistant secretary of state. Actu- ,. ally Panuch was the man who IngrW Baby eased out Keeney and Duran, n Capitol Hill, the big issues but Jonkman attacked him any- of the day are not always dis Way. cussed on the floor of the sen . ,. . ate, but in the senators' private As a result, Panuch sued restaurant. There, senators are Congressman Jonkman and the franker than when their words publisher of the Washington are rec0rded by a stenographer Times-Herald for libel. The suit for posterity to read, against the Times-Herald pub- . , ... lisher had to be dropped be- . But '"thf . cause of her death, but the con- today hottest topic is not Rus a, , Viui nr China, nor surplus pota- promised the suit with an offi- oe but Ingrid Bergman's Virginia's Sen. Willis Robert son is firm in the view that society must frown on Ingrid's illicit romance with Director a truce in the east-west cold war. Hard hitting British Foreign Secretary Ern est Bevin prom ptly dubbed Churchill's pro posal a political "stunt", and?. said agreemenl should be pur- -AYS I it V I Council Pays Storage Bill Redmond, Feb. 18 IP) Ted Bliss parked his automobile here Jan. 25. When he came back later that day, it was gone. Police finally found it for him. It was In storage, and had been since last month. What's more he owed the storage bill, for they had towed the car away after finding It in a no-parking zone, they said. Bliss objected he hadn't left it in a no-parking zone, and didn't Intend to pay the bill. The street-cleaning department then entered the confusion, admitting It had moved the car while cleaning streets and had forgotten to move It back. The city council paid the hill. Truman Whizzes Through Red Lights Washington, Feb. 18 (P) President Truman whissed through 20 red lights on a four-mile drive to the big demo cratic dinner the other night. It was all perfectly legal, because his car had a police and secret service escort. Traffic regulations are waived under such circumstances on the theory that a police officer carries more authority than a traffic signal. But only 24 hours earlier, Mr. Truman told a national crime conference: "I never go through red lights, despite the prerogatives attaching to the presidency." Well, They Do Walthim, Mass., Feb. 18 (U.R) A woman seeking U. S. citizenship papers did all right with the examination until she came to s question about the flag. To the query, "What files over the state house in Bos tonT" she replied: "Pigeons." 3 just plain dogf But Schneebles! has passed forr everything fronii Hungarian wolfr,.' nouncl to uoDer- man Pincer. Schneebles id a mascot of thrl Phi Deltas atl WU . . . and nol other dog in Sa- Chrii Fowiu. Jr. lem gets around One of our noble readers writes in to say that our favor ite newspaper carried an ad say ing that Fulton Lewis, Jr., would be heard at 9:15 p.m. on a cer tain evening. Actually David Rose came on at 9:15. . . . Maybe whoever wrote the advertising copy was just trying to prove that a Rose by any other name sounds just as sweet. Man at policemen's ball Thurs- more than he. Keeping up with day attempts to peddle tickets Schneebles is about as hard as to another dance. Cops irritated, keeping up with the latest trends but can't say much because they in women's necklines. had pestered everybody they met Schneebles spent the other for daJ's attempting to sell night at the Senator hotel . . . tickets to their ball. Neverthe a few days prior to that, he less, cops got last laugh. While showed up at the only non-com- en route home later that evening, pulsory chapel held at Willam- man who was trying to sell tick ette. cts at dance is pinched for drunk- He has followed many a Bear- e" driving, cat halfback down the center of the football field, and is liable Display in Hogg Brothers win to come bouncing into a class- dow at 115 South Commercial room or library at any time, street exhibits refrigerator and When Schnceblcs gets bored cook stove with doors opening with school activities, he simply and closing. Window attracts goes for a walk . . . and how he much attention from passers-by. can show up at Vista and Lana Interest centers on one item avenues at the same time we'll the refrigerator light. By care never know. ful observation from certain an The wandering collie we re- gle, light can be seen to shut off ported the other day, however, as door closes. At least 50 per is not Schneebles. cent of those viewing display Schneebles is a he. Collie is comment, "Well, the little light a she. Maybe the two are meet- does turn off after all, doesn't ing at some secret rendezvous, it?" cial abject apology which stat- """J cd: "it was not my intention to accuse you of lying or of any other improper conduct in con nection with vour duties as de puty assistant secretary of state "ODeno itossenini ana tne ma- during your tenure of office." irtiy agreed. Privately, how- The congressman also paid Pan- ever senators sympathize with uch's court costs and, incident- Miss Bergman's right to live her ally, was defeated for re-elec- own life- tion. "I guess they must have fallen . ....... . crazy in love," mused Texas' But no, after both the voters elderly Sen- Tom Conally over and Mr. Panuch took care of the his bcan soup republican congressman from (coprriiht i50 POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Columnist FindsCustomers Are Always Finding Fault By HAL BOYLE New York VP) Writing a column for the newspapers is getting to be downright perilous. Our windy Mount Olympus is under siege. The readers are fighting back. It used to be a columnist didn't know where his next chunk of caviar was coming from. Now' he doesn't know whence the next brick is going to be flung at him. But he feels sure there won't be a hamburger tied to it. Latest case in point is actress Joan Bennett's valentine gift of a d e o d o r ized skunk to colum nist Hedda Hop per, who her ald's happenings I n H o 1 lywood Taking this ges ture as a criti cism of her lit erary efforts, the lady columnist gave the woods pussy to a cat-fancier, murmur ing on the "great affinity be tween cats and skunks." Personally, if anyone shipped me a sanitary skunk I'd have kept him and put him to work. I'd tie him to my desk to scare away press agents. Often these disparaging presents sent to a columnist by his riled readers can be used to further his car eer. Once a stranger sent me a red dish blue glass ,eye, and I have found it highly useful. When the receptionist phones in to say, "There's a man out here mad at something you wrote," I tell her, "Show him in." Then I quickly tape the glass eye on to the middle of my forehead. When I look up and say, "Yes, what is it, fellows?" the man takes one gander, wipes his face with his handkerchief and walks away. He feels, I hope, that any one with three eyes can't be blamed too much for anything he does. What wories me about the Hollywood skunk valentine epi side is that it sets a bad prece dent. What if I unknowingly wrote something that peeved John D. Rockefeller, Jr.? I might open my door some morning and find a whole herd of white elephants tied to it. This would be hard to explain to my apartment housemanager, as he doesn't even allow eagles or small dogs in the place. From now on no columnist can feel safe from the "indig nant subscriber." The world is full of animals from teetles to buffaloes, and the columnist who wittingly or unwittingly offends his readers may shortly find his home has become an annex to the zoo. It is easy to say, "Well, don't write things that annoy people." But just try writing a column yourself and see how many days you can go without making someone angry. Anything you write can stir up reader wrath, even if you Just say, "etaoin shrdlu, etaoin shrdlu," They get the idea you don't like foreign ers. My lifelong policy has been to attack nothing but poison snakes and sin. But when I did criticize poison snakes in a freindly way recently, a natur alist wrote back: "Who are you to pick on poison snakes? The average poison snake destroys more vermin than you do, ape face!" There you are. Still intend to attack sin one of these days. But sure as sin itself somebody'll write back and demand, "What are you trying to do ruin my business?" Suggested Big Three Meeting Brings Varied Views and Ideas By DeWITT MacKENZIE ilPI Foreign Affair Analret) That hardy perennial the call for a meeting of Russia, Britain and America in the interests of peace-n-is again in bloom and is being viewed with mixed emotions. None other than Britain's Winston Churchill raised this ques tion during a speech in his general election campaign. He sug gested a big three meeting on the "highest level" to try for open to international negotia agreement on atomic control and tion for control of atomic wea pons, and he hinted that he still had in mind a possible special peace mission to Russia at some future time. Only last week Secretary ot State Acheson in a sensational pronouncement of foreign policy, rejected all suggestions for new American peace appeals to Rus sia. Instead he based U. S. anti communist strategy squarely on a policy of power. ....... i. 'i nn wprpTnrv niv nn pvnpr- sued through the lence had brought realization atomic coramuuee i. c u,..u hlt progress towards peace nations. A prop o s of Bevin s simply by making agreements charge, observers noted that if wUh Rusgia ,s jmpossible- How- Churchill's conservative party ever the soviet government is should be returned to power he realistic and adlusts lts poHcies would in natural course be wh(m compelled by facts t0 do prime minister again As head of SQ go American baslc pollcy is. government he would be in pos- To build situations whlch . ition to initiate such a parley wM exten(J the area Qf possibIe and this thought might attract agreement, that is, to create votes now. strength instead of weakness Howevei, others besides which existsin many quarters." Churchill are advocating action. Newspapers on both sides of the Moscow has given no sign that Atlantic are editorializing vigor- !t desires to call off its cold ously pro and con. n the contrary the evi- There is of course no disagree- dence indicates that the Soviet ment over the desirability of Umon " 8ln8 a11 out ' ts reaching East-West agreement, drive to spread communism. And However, there's a vast diver- what else can we expect, with gence of views as to whether a Russia holding her gains in east meeting of the big three would frn Europe and making sweep be useful or,, indeed, whether in advances in the Asiatic thea it even would be wise to try tr?j .... , . ... to arrange one. Presumably Marshal Stalin President Iruman at his news would receive a peace mission conference yesterday threw cold courteously in Moscow and water on the idea of a Big would enter discussion with it. Three meeting abroad. He re- f ut th"e no reason to to iterated that he doesn't intend to hevf, tha' such a conference go outside the United States to would achieve peace, meet with Stalin or any other ,n the contrary, many close chief of state observers believe that Russia Replying to a question wheth- would interpret Such a move by er he thought the time had come the western powers as an act to see Stalin, the president said o aPPesement. he did not. Any mve which might be In- terpreted as appeasement at However, the president said this juncture might easily be he would be glad to see anyone disastrous. However, this fact who wants to come to Washing- shouldn't prevent our taking ad ton to consult him. He declared vantage of every legitimate the American door is always opening to achieve peace. Of All Times! Baltimore, Feb. 18 (U.R) Ralph Fleming who was aux iously waiting for his wife to have a baby at the hospital, stepped outside for a breath of fresh air and was promptly robbed of $45. 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