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Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos.. $6.00; Year. $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Monday, February 20, 1950 The President's Serenity Nation-wide comment has followed the recent exclusive interview President Truman gave to Arthur Krock of the New York Times, probably because his column is not syn dicated and Mr. Truman has recently developed an antag onism to syndicated writers as well as newspapers in gen eralthus following in FDR's footsteps. The interview was disappointing in that it did nothing to clarify his posi tion on international problems, when hysteria is rampant over the atomic and hydrogen bombs, to which he has given the green light. Mr. Truman, perhaps to reassure the people, expressed his incurable optimism. He was convinced there would be no war, that the United States would get an agreement with the Russians and that "everything's going to be all right" regardless of ominous warnings. As Krock sum marized it, "A serene president sits in the White House with undiminished confidence in the triumph of human nature" and of good over evil, that he faces the future with "undiminished confidence that man's better nature ulti mately will bring abiding peace." There seems little to justify this wishful thinking espe cially as the president has many times expressed his lack of faith in Russia's Soviet government to abide by any agreements which it might make to avert the crisis, an opinion justified by its sabotage of the United Nations with its veto power and aggressive absorption of Baltic and Bal kan nations. The AIsop Brothers, syndicated columnists of the New York Herald Tribune, say that the presidential mood "can only be described as euphonia," defined in the dictionary as a psychological state consisting of a "sense of well-being and buoyancy." They hint that Truman's unexpected elec tion obviously gave him "an overriding new sense of con fidence in his own judgment." In other words, power seems to have gone to the presi dent's head, as power usually does. As Lord Action re marked in his History of Freedom, "All power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely1." Perhaps, however, it is not euphonia, but Coueism that Inspires the Truman optimism. Emile Coue was a French exponent of auto-suggestion who developed and introduced a system of psychotherapy known as Coueism that had a tremendous vogue a quarter of a century ago in this coun try. All that a sick person had to do to cure his malady Coue taught was to keep repeating from dawn to bedtime at in tervals the phrase, "Every da in every way, I'm getting better and better" and the patient cured himself. Whether it is euphonia or Coueism that inspires the Truman sunshine it is evident that he echoes Browning's "God's In his heaven, all's right with the world." McKay Should Demand an Explanation Governor McKay had no alternative but to comply with the urgent request to put into effect again the air-raid warning system. As the governor told publishers of the state Saturday, he could take one of three actions regarding the request by Secretary of Defense Johnson for the air-warning sys tem. McKay could refuse to comply with the "suggestion" by the man entrusted with looking after the nation's de fenses. The governor could ignore the "suggestion." Or McKay could agree to the proposal that has strange mean ing during these "peaceful" days. i As governor of a state which has admittedly been plac ed in the critical defense category, McKay could do nothing but go along on Johnson's "suggestion." The responsi bility for not putting into effect a warning system that must have had the approval of President Truman and must have been requested only after great consideration would be too much for the governor entrusted with the leadership and well-being of this state. This following o an air-raid warning system pattern when jet planes move faster than sound still makes little or no sense. Nor does the international situation on the surface appear to warrant this extraordinary measure at this particular time. 'The people who do not have access to top secret intelligence that comes into Washington have reason to be puzzled by this request. Furthermore, the warning system was associated with the slow, out-dated bombers of pre-World War II days. Governor McKay should demand publicly a statement by Secretary of Defense Johnson as to reasons for this strange request. If the governor is willing to follow out instruc tions from Washington, then Washington should give rea sons for the request. The United States is still supposed to be a republic in which the authority of the executive department in Wash ington is limited. And if any request of the importance and significance of the air warning system is made, then the states are entitled to a full explanation, when coopera tion is expected. This is still not a nation run by edicts from Washington. Oregon has a right to know the reason for Johnson's warning-system proposal. Bomb Aids Plowing Woodland, Cal., Feb, 20 (U.R) A Yolo county farmer Rot some unexpected help with his spring plowing yesterday when an air-force B-25 dropped a bomb In a field Just off V. S. Highway 99-W between here and Davis, Calif. No one was in the field at the time and damage was limited to an eight-foot hole In the ground. Deputy sheriffs said the bombing apparently was as much of a surprise to the plane's crew as it was to observers. The bomber circled the field for 45 minutes until deputies sig nalled no damage had been done, they said. The Boy in the Car Trunk Hawthorne, Calif., Feb. 20 P) A woman called police and aid she had seen a man stuff a boy In the trunk of a car. As he drove off, she said, she copied the license number. Police traced the car to the home of Harry Scroggs. Scroggs laughed and produced the boy, Harry, Jr., 15. "The car has a rear-end rattle," said Harry, Jr. "I thought I could ride back there and find it." Parachute Brings Valentine Burbank, Calif., Feb. 20W Mrs. Joan Slater finally got wind of her Valentine. Her heart's desire a pound of Roquefort cheese was found hanging from a tree a half block from her home yes terday. That's where it landed when her husband, Jeff, flew over and parachute-dropped it from 100 feet on the 14th. She'd probably have got it toonet U It had been Hmbuf en. BYH. T.WEBSTER The Timid Soul 'PSJ)t'. ' ''' BACKACHE. I ' "imp SSfi M ' teeyntM. WO, Hw Ynt HwoM Ttil lac " i?-30- ( "HI lYSl MAI I KRISS-KROSS You Don't Have to Go to The Mountains to Climb ByCHftiSKOWITZ.Jr. An adventure in climbing, without leaving the city limits of Salem . . . Impossible? . . . No, we accomplished as much last week. Such old landmarks as the courthouse, Washington school and City hall are familiar sights to all Salemites. Most of us have been within their walls on several occasions. Far above their offices, and cor-. ridors are b e 1 fries and atticst which beckon for the curious-minded. Walking u p to the statehouse dome or the roof of the Livesay building will give you a trood view ofl the city, true " """ enough. But scaling the less ac cessible and seldom - climbed other historic buildings in the city presents a much more mem orable experience. Nearly every person who has lived or visited in Salem has heard the courthouse clock toll away on the hour and half hour. But how many have seen the mechanism of the clocks in op eration? The courthouse dome, besides supporting the Goddess of Lib erty, contains a central mechan ism for all four clocks (one on each side of dome). The same mechanism controls the striking of the clocks. A 3-foot stationary bell, hit by a mechanical ham m e r , provides the familiar "bong-bong-bong" that daily tells hundreds of people they're late for work, that it's time for lunch, or that they're away from their parking meter for over an hour, etc. Running competition with the courthouse bell at noon every day is the huge siren mounted in the dome of City hall. That siren, which can barely be seen from the street below, is about 3 feet long, with a huge horn at either end. Reaching the City hall siren requires the climbing of about 25 feet of ladder. And even then, it's a long, long way to the WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Lewis Says Coal Operators Can't Think for Themselves By DREW PEARSON Washington During one part of the recent meeting of coal op erators with John L. Lewis, Lewis challenged Bert Manley, spokesman for the far west operators: "Mr. Manley, you know you'll sign anything the Illinois op erators will sign, the Illinois operators will sign anything the Ohio mine own- ' the oath of citizenship, however, he glossed over certain things which, if discovered in the rec ord of any other less powerful person, would cause him to lose his citizenship and be deported. "For Instance, Costello did not tell the government when he took the oath as a citizen, that he had previously served a term in jail for carrying a con cealed weapon. "Even more important, a new citizen of the United States takes an oath to uphold the laws and constitution of the United States. "Yet at the very moment Frankie Costello was taking his solemn oath as an American ci tizen, he was also engaged in the largest scale violation of the Volstead act and the 18th amendment in the history of prohibition. "The 18th amendment at that Lewis said the operators J? ?ffJm tello was holding up his right hand and solemnly swearing to uphold the constitution, he was also engaged in violating it." BY CARL ANDERSON Henry L '1 Drew Pearson ers will agree to, and Ohio will follow1 Pennsylvan i a . That brings us to George Love (pre s i d e n t of the Pittsburgh Consolida t i o n Coal company). When Love signs, the whole lot of you will fall down like tenpins. "The trouble with you gentle men is you don't know how to think for yourselves. You're too easily coerced by the big bank ing interests that control you." "Speaking of coercion," acid ly shot back Love, "how about all those men on your picket lines who are keeping the mines from reopening? I guess you'd call that coercion." II, , I JUST MADE A NEWl SLIP COVER FOR-CTT THE OTTOMAN, (fZ , PI IH 1 1 "I lam- P b 1H I p "1 top of the dome. Up and up . . . story after story of vast space ... no floors . . . just supports, beams and ladders . . . you'd never imagine the tower was so tall until you start climbing those ladders. From the top step of the top ladder, one can peer all the way down through the maze of beams and rafters to the third floor. If more space is ever needed at City hall, they certainly have it. Hundreds of Salem citizens are alumni of old Washington school near the Capitol Shopping Center. We spent six studious years there ourselves, but never got around to going all the way to the top of the knowledge edi fice until last week. The Washington school belfry is now loaded with pigeons and evidence of pigeons. A few ini tials, obviously carved there by boys and girls of many years ago, are still clearly visible . . . also the old hygiene chart which teachers once used to preach the evils of tobacco . . . and an artistically-carved ornament which has been sitting there since 1887 without falling adherent to a paint job . . . age of ornament and lack of paint indicates it was probably intended to be put on the building in '87, but in stead was laid in the belfry and hasn't been moved since. Unfortunately, public tours of the tops of these old buildings would be too hazardous, and will have to, for the greater part, be left to the mice and pi geons. . . . Even all that wasn't enough for us. On a trip to the coast over the week-end, we weren't satisfied until we'd climbed the mast of the "Cap tain Ludvig," the largest boat we could find. would have to meet two "condi tions" before he would consid er a new contract: 1. All law suits against him by operators who are demanding damages for their strike losses would have to . be dropped; 2. Any operators Name on Iour Bi who held back payments into Dynamic Georgia Neese Clark, the miners pension-welfare fund treasurer of the United States, during the strike must pay up faced her first closed-door gril- pronto. ling from a group of males when Lewis somberly read the list sne appeared before the house of lawsuits against him, running appropriations committee, into millions of dollars. "Georgia Neese Clark is a "I trust that you gentlemen Pretty name," remarked young will see to it that these suits are ReP Gordon Canfield of New dismissed," he served notice. "The United Mine Workers' lawyers will await your pleas ure. As for those deadbeat oper ators who have held back their honorable obligations to the Jersey. "And it looks good on the paper currency of the United States. I am glad to greet you as the new treasurer. "Your predecessor (the late W. A. Julian) always indulged Ed, the Squirt Man, Hopes Coin Idea Doesn't Fizzle By HARMAN W. NICHOLS Washington, Feb. 20 (U.PJ Edward Walsh Mehren, president of the Squirt Company, hopes his idea doesn't fizzle. At any rate, Ed has the assurance of at least one senator that it will get a hearing. Squirt is a soft drink. Ed's idea has to do with money 2',i and 7 V-i cent coins which he : thinks the government ought to ence.' A big percentage of the mint to "save the public be- goods we buy is paid for with tween five and eight million small change coins which are dollars a year." convenient for the buyer and the Sen. Sheridan Downey, (D merchant to handle. Cal.,) said he had requested the "As a result, the pricing of senate banking and currency many popular commodities is committee to hold hearings on based more on convenience than several bills for intermediate on the actual value of the com coinage sometime in March. modities." Mehren, a handsome, strap- Ed looks at it a little deeper, pling fellow who used to be a even. football player, hopes the start If we were to eliminate the of the hearings will come around nickel, dime and quarter and March 15th the day we give use only pennies for all sales Uncle Sam his income tax dues, under half a dollar, many prices "It would point up the issue," would be changed immediately, he said. The people would see to that. Most prices, by popular demand, Ed really gets to fist-pound- would have to be in odd penny Ing when he starts talking about amounts, rather in five, 10 or his pet subject which is the 15-cent amounts in order to sell, odd-sized coin. "This," Ed says, "would elim- "If these coins are added to inate the general business tend our minor coinage, they will ency to over-price items in order mark a significant advance in items in order to use convenient enabling Americans to buy more coins." goods with current consumer in- come," he said. The Squirt man already has "Thus," he said, "American coin names ready for Secretary business could price goods close of Treasury John Wesley Snyder, to value and diminish over- in case the congress approves charges based on convenience." the proposed coins. The Squirt man is hepped on A 2 Mi cent coin would be the matter of convenience. He called the "Ben" after the thrifty maintains that it cost us around Benjamin Franklin. The IVi cent $55 a head a year because we piece would be the "Link," for have no in-between small coins. "Honest Abe" Lincoln. Ed goes on and on if you He even goes farther than that, let him about the convenience "The biggest chief in Ameri- of having tokens for the trans can business today," the busi- portation systems with a half ness man said, "is ... an ap. cent denomination. And so on peeling thing called "convent- and so on. welfare fund, they had better in a little saltv laneuaffe. " con. repay their indebtedness if they tinued the New Jersey repub expect us to meet with them in lican. "While we do not expect good faith." that of you, we do hope that you will have one pet aversion Frankie Costello that he had namely, to an en Some of New York's high- ormous public debt." powered publicity experts have Mrs. Clark replied that she been touting a Hollywood actor's would do her best to emulate recent attempt to have Frankie Julian regarding this aversion. Costello deported. Here is what Note When Mrs. Clark was this columnist said about Costel- divorced, her husband wanted lo on July 21, 1947, alumost her to take back her maiden three years ago. name But Mrs clark said she The kingpin of American had used the name for some gamblers, once the biggest liquor years and didn-t want to change racketeer m the country Frank He yielded gracefully. So when Costello, cou d be deported from the first greenback was issued the United States if anyone real- bearing her name, Mrs. Clark ly,Z S V?"81 about sent it to her friendly ex-hus-Frank.e Costello migrated band wlth a notation ..clark m Ita(yarU!5d95a"d t a bad t hve on boS? 1 at"rah2d Uncle Sam's currency." 1925. At the time Costello took (copjrtoht isso POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Ives, Ballad Singer, Wants To Run a Real Fun City By HAL BOYLE New York VP) Anybody got a used tovAi for sale cheap? Burl Ives, the big, bearded ballad singer, is in the market for a second-hand small town, in good condition, if it has a moun tain or two around it and the price is right. He'd like it for a purpose to see if he can build a community where Amen of any kind, his parents right away want to put him in the entertainment business." Burl said if he couldn't afford to buy a town he'd start out with a dude ranch, one "without any phoney atmosphere." He hasn't decided what to name his village yet, but it definitely won't be "Culture City." "I hate that word culture," ' Ives said, making a face through overflowing his whiskers. "It started as an MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Life in Trenches During First World War Not Filled with Joy By DeWITT MacKENZIE UP Foreign Affair Analyst) ' Warning that when World War III breaks we shall have to scurry into the bowels of the earth for security isn't so strange after all. It will be history repeating itself on a bigger scale. Those who can remember World War I will recall that millions of soldiers. on both sides, r lived under ground during much of the four years. When the fighting finally ( became rela-s tively stationary after the early t rushes, the op-! posing front-line defenses were elaborately fitted out with fine furniture and Persian rugs. It had electric lights, electric fan and electric heat. Incidentally, on the lawn was a trench with a parapet along which the Kaiser used to strut and pose in the midst of "shot and shell," while movie cameras ground out the story of his hero ism for the folks back home. But tn epr. hark tn the real trenches: great trenches in the undereround "village" which ran more or less parallel previously mentioned I encoun to each other, sometimes only tered one of the odd stories of a few yards apart and sometimes the war. It was the experience widely separated. Naturally the 01 a y0Ung English captain who troops manning these trenches related it to me. The main char had to have places in which to acter was Adolph the Rat, "live." So great chambers were though Captain Bob's batman dug down into the earth at the (personal attendant), who was back of the trenches. an eager collector of cast-off clothing, also played a memor- - Of course these underground able role. abodes were pretty awful. They Captain Bob had a lot of book were muddy and damp and, in keeping to do, and he perform wmter bitterly cold. And they ed tnis work on a deai table in were infested with trench-rats. a small room lighted oniy by a Still, those holes in the ground candle in the neck of a were home. bottle that stood on the table. In some places the under- Soon after he was asigned to this ground chambers were extended job he had an unexpected visi until whole villages were made, tor a huge trench-rat which I recall one which even had a sniffed about for food and final railway with little push cars, ly, quite unafraid, climbed up This was the scene of the ad- on the table and continued his venture of Adolph the Rat (no hunt, relation to Hitler), of which more anon. The most famous trench was ,1. ui.jMki. i;nn ; i, across France southward from fte with va! apia"n- Captain Bob provided some biscuit crumbs which Adolph began a beautiful friendship which brought Adolph as the cans can have! some real down to - e a r t h fun again. "People don't have real fun anymore not honest - to - God fun," complain-: ed "the way farin' stranger,' as he sat in ; slippered ease comfortably an overstuffed chair in the Hotel honest to God word, but it has Plaza. lost its strength. It is already 'I'd like to build a place where !?!nk tea' and has a curse on tllV nnillH fun anrl An H the things they want a cre ative place, "It would be an place rather than an outside-in place. By that I mean I'd want Just how he'll find time to develop his project, Burl doesn't .. know. Last year he gave 131 con-inside-out , j ".. , ... . mances, made 75 radio and tele- DeoDle to eet the snirit of havine V""" ihiV .nwtninn,.;. f. aeews 01 note engagements, ap- their entertainment come from inside rather than from outside themselves." Burl, who earns more sing ing folk-songs than Beethoven peared in one movie and three plays, recorded 20 folk songs, learned to fly an airplane and finished the first draft of his second book, "Capra Corner." This would keep the average did writing symphonies, explain- fat man thin. But Burl not only ed he thought people had less gained weight on the scheduli fun nowadays because "they are expressed at instead of express ing themselves. "And that ain't good for the soul. he found time to indulge in his hobbies, sailing, photography and amateur painting; "I travel so much about the only thing I can paint is the view "I always ask for an outside room." His other pleasures are good food, good beer, good cigars "Radios, movies, television, from hotel windows," he said. sporting events they re all good, but they don't allow peo ple to give out with their own talent." So he'd like to create a com munity where they could come, and good talk. either to live or spend a vaca- "All I need to get fun is to tion, and develop their talents, have something to do that gets They'd sing folk songs them- me excited and they keep corn solves, learn square dances ing along. I get a lot of fun "they're ten times more fun than out of living." ballroom dancing" and paint, Right now he is engaged in make pottery, do leather work, his annual diet to cut his weaving or any other type of Weight from about 300 down to handicraft. 240. When friends warn him "The big need today is self- his present pace will kill him, expression just for the fun of Burl says: it," he said. "The trouble is now "Well, nothing shortens life if a kid doee show a little talent more than living." Lens to the Aisne. This was , 1 r i ....... supposed to be impregnable """" until British, American! Cana- dugout everydav dians and Australians smashed Finally came a time when the through it in 1918. captain was busy and didn't This line was fitted in many notice his pal. Adolph climbed places with elaborate rooms. Of- on the table and shuffled about ficers' quarters were so comfy until he overturned the bottle that some occupants used to en- with he lighted candle, tertain their lady friends there. The candle dropped out and fell down into an open box of The most elaborate bomb very lights, a sort of Roman shelter I ever saw was that built candle of various colors used for for Field Marshal Von Hinden- signalling. The very lights start burg deep under the lawn of his ed to explode, and before you headquarters at Spa, Belgium, could say Jack Robinson the This concrete refuge, which was small room was filled with balls reached by a long tunnel from of fire whizzing in every direc the house, was a large room, tion. British Will Be in Washington In Few Months After Dollars By JAMES E. ROPER (United Press staff Correspondent) Washington, Feb. 20 (U.R) The Britsih and their dollai prob lems will be back in Washington before many more months. This may cost the United States more than last fall's round of dollar talks. At that time, the United States, Canada and Great Britain attacked "fringe" issues. The "fringe" program, plus " " devaluation of the pound sterl- balances. Great Britain now ing, has helped ease Britain's owes commonwealth countries dollar shortage but not enough, about $9,000,00,000 worth of de Both American and British valued pounds for services re sources agree on that. They also ceived during the war. agree that more dollar talks will These countries have been be needed urgently as soon as usln8 the sterling balances to domestic politics in Britian and buy goods that Britain otherwise the United States allow. mlsht sell for cash. British officials can not act . Th Bhr.itistn whe" thev me until after the British vote ? .Was hnf on- w!" wan h! Thursday, and a new govern- Umte.d Stae? do somDet ment-either laborite or con- eye thij, drain on British servative-is formed. Then Produ5t,on- Thev . w'" ar8ue American officials will start get' that they cannot cut off the flow ting skittish because of this fall's lthf ?ds. to Indi' OT ln" congressional elections. f''"-.e' Z ... , the standard of living there and One reason is that the British inviting communists to take may want another loan $2,000,- over 000 000 to $4,000 000,000. Or the British exports to the United British may seek direct aid for states SpUrted BIter the pound the sterling area a kind of was devalued in September. Brl- Marshall plan under some other tain als0 has improved its dol- name- lar reserve, but they still are The British and Americans about 15 per cent below what will have to wrestle with Bri- the British call a "safe" level.i tain's biggest' single dollar prob- And the effects of devaluation V lem the so - called "sterling shot-in-the-arm are wearing off.