Capital 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, 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 fo. 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 Year, S12.00. By Mail in Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos., $4.00; One Year, J8.00. U. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos., $6.00; Year, $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, February 21, 1950 The Coal Strike Muddle The reluctance of the president to utilize the Taft Hartley act to end the United Mine Workers strike in the nation's coal fields is reflected in the hesitation of the courts to enforce their orders to end the strike, and the extension of time granted because of miners' defiance and the renewal of Lewis' old battle cry, "no contract, no work." There is a sharp contrast with the govern ment's decisive action in 1946 and 1948 when heavy fines for contempt of court were levied against both Lewis and his union. This time Lewis has twice ordered the miners back to the pits to comply with the court's order, but for the first time the union members refuse to obey their czar's order, whether under clandestine agreement with Lewis, is not known, but he has officially complied witn tne letter of the law. There is no law however to compel a man to work against his will, though the union can be penalized and fined for contempt, as previously. If the union does not comply with the back to work order by Friday, it will mean a hearing before Judge Keech next Monday, when the strikers will have been in contempt of court for two weeks. The order was renewed Monday until March 3. The union paid $ 2,130,000 in two fines before. Among the many court actions pending or in progress against the United Mine Workers are: 1. A pending request from the government for an 80-day anti-strike injunction under the Taft-Hartley law. 2. The government's current request for punishment of the union for cntempt of court in refusing to obey a 10-day tem porary restraining order. 3. A court order barring the union from demanding four key contract clauses (union shop, welfare fund for unionists only, a clause stating miners must work only when able and willing, and memorial period work stoppages). The national labor relations board must yet rule whether these are unfair labor practices. 4. Various other actions, including the suit of a miner for an accounting of mine welfare funds; suits by Senator Bridges (R.-N.H.) and Ezra Van Horn to declare themselves not re sponsible for any dissipation of welfare funds; a court action by Charles I. Dawson to force Lewis to recognize him as the operator member of the welfare board of trustees; and damage suits brought by operators against the union, particularly in Ohio and Kentucky, seeking to collect money from the mine union for allegedly illegal acts. For the past year Lewis has been cutting down the coal stockpiles by strikes and 8-day work weeks to improve the miners' position. With the coldest weather of winter clasping the east, the coal reserves are down to ten days supplies, rationing and brown-outs are in effect in many regions, rail transportation has been curtailed, many in dustries forced to close and the danger point reached. Meanwhile negotiations for a new contract have bogged down and a crisis reached affecting the welfare and health of the public, due to kid-glove handling of the pampered strikers. Another Framed Red Conviction Robert A. Vogeler, 39, the American businessman who pleaded guilty to sabotage and spying against the com munist government of Hungary for the United States has been sentenced to 15 years in prison. The prosecution appealed on grounds that the court had been too lenient. A British associate, Edgar Sanders, was sentenced to 13 years imprisonment. Two Hungarian co-defendants were given death sentences. Three other Hungarians were sentenced to prison terms of five to 10 years. The trial followed the usual communist pattern. The accused are never brought to trial unless a "confession" is first secured through drugs, threats, torture or threats of torture, inducements and pressure. If there is no "con fession" there is no trial and the accused "disappear" either before a firing squad or in some slave work camp never to be heard of again. Those who have escaped from prison have described the whole procedure. In Vienna Morris L. Ernst, New York attorney who was refused a visa to defend Vogeler, said the trial was "a rigged up affair." He said he counted 85 misstatements of fact in the testimony Vogeler read, and "torture or drugs apparently were used." The same procedure was followed against Sanders, just as it had been previously against Cardinal Mindszenty and against many others. Neither the American nor British ministers had been per mitted to see the accused since their arrest. Compare the communist trials of accused spies with the trials of the accused communist spies in this country, in New York, which last nine months and the defendants permitted to hire the best lawyers for their defense, who used every pettifoggy device in behalf of their clients, and after conviction by a jury, are permitted release on bail pending appeal to higher courts, from mild sentences of Imprisonment. A Chance to Beautify the Station The other day the Southern Pacific announced modestly that a few minor repairs would be made in the Salem station. There would be some redecorating, too. There was nothing elaborate about these spring clean up plans. But from them came an idea. The "Friendly Railroad" was asked if it would be agreeable to a joint venture to beautify the ample grounds around the station. The SP indicated it would on a limited scale. So now Salem can join with the .Southern Pacific in putting in some trees and shrubs to offer a softened effect to the station which welcomes travelers to this city. Salem interests would supply the trees and shrubs. The railroad would look after the watering. The investment in this project would not be large, but the effect of trees and shrubs typical of the valley would tend to beautify a nice-looking station that appears lonesome now in its surroundings. Perhaps some of the nurseries in the area would donate trees and shrubs for the project. Perhaps the garden clubs in the city could join forces to care for the planting for the first few years to insure a good start for the trees and shrubs. The result would be a simply, but pleasantly, land scaped station that would give a more friendly reception to train travelers coming to Salemt BY BECK Recollections , ( 60 ALONQ, MRS. HOCMAN. TAKE ALL THE TIME ) Hl.l VOU NEED FOR. SHOPPING. MERTON WILL BE ( 'TpSm NiMy 6LAD TO LOOK AFTER YOUR BABY FOR YOU. J I JM WHAT'S THE WORLD f. y L I 'l$i"i?f i "fl.as- BEFORE BABY SITTNS BECAME A BUSINESS. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Military Chief s Give Grave Picture of Red Military Plans By DREW PEARSON Washington Around the giant Pentagon building, just across the Potomac, winds a labyrinth of beautiful boulevards built during the war at considerable cost to American taxpayers. The other day in Richmond, Va., the two builders of these boulevards, McKenzie Davison and W. J. "Doc" Hardy, walked Into court and wun tneir narrowing report into increasing appropriations. But, perhaps because of Johnson's stern eye, the military men mads little positive comment. BY CARL ANDERSON Henry pleaded "no contest" to four of six counts ac cusing them of defrauding the government of $217,806 in tax es the same gove r n m e n t which paid them handsome ly on war contracts. Behind this virtual m Drew Pihhd KRISS-KROSS Oh Well, if Business Was So Good, He Could Afford It By CHRIS KOWITZ, Jr. Attorney Fred A. Williams was a busy man yesterday . , . too busy to get away from his desk long enough to feed a hungry parking meter by his car. As a client was leaving law office, Williams handed the client a nickel and asked him to kindly insert it in parking meter. Williams gave. plea of guilty lies a long story, dating back to October 1948, in which this column exposed Hardy and Davison, not only for income- tav ejasinrf htlt fnr nnlitipal wirenulline. concealment, and fense Johnson broke in and sug- dodeine. When this column nub- gested that the chiefs of staff Gen. Gruenther brushed aside questions about increased mili tary needs by warning: "Don't ask me. I am liable to be biased." Once he quipped: "As Senator Wherry has said, military people would fortify the moon." Gruenther also warned that we must not bleed ourselves by over-spending, that some people are too concerned about secur ity and not enough about econo my. Finally, Secretary of De- lished the story on Oct. 19, 1948, it was so sensational that some papers refused to print it. The two road contractors had should join Gen. Gruenther in answering some of the questions. One by one, General Bradley, Army Chief of Staff Collins, and marip nut. false invoices, written Chief of Naval Operations Sher- checks to other contractors, who man agreed that economy comes client a good: description o f car, and toldi him approxi mately wneii't vehicle was!?' parked. Fred doffed his worries About a half hour later hej went tn his par If t A . 1 Chris Kowlti, Jr. by Public Utilities commission has been offered for rent to Marion county. PUC will soon move to new public service building, and county will need temporary quarters for its of fices while old courthouse is being torn down and new edifice being constructed . . . March edition of National Geographic mag contains final article writ ten by the late General H. H. (Hap) Arnold. The general then cashed the checks them selves, and generally falsified. Yet for eight months after this column's expose, they argued, pleaded, and haggled with pati ent justice department attorneys. Finally, last July the case was tV"80 by qulckIy con' f t the its aHnmev in centrating our forces. Richmond for pr o s e c u t i o n , where, however, it dragged. And nrst. jonnson Beamed like a schoolteacher whose pupils are reciting the correct answers. Bradley reported that our oc cupation troops are in areas where they are strategically use ful, and assured that we could UMBRELLAS l T '51 UMBRELLAS 1 . . . the meter was red and one of those fa- scribed the article shortly before miliar little yellow slips was un- his death . . . Only one student der windshield swipe. finished with an "A" average at Now Fred is trying to figure Pacific TJ. for the recently-com-out whether his client has a pleted semester. That compares short memory or is unable to to 27 "A" students at Willamette, distinguish a coupe from a se- . . . Twenty-nine women, no dan. men observed at Woolworth's lunch counter at noon yesterday. "Xmas trees for sale" reads . . . More signs of spring: A few a sign north of Salem. Nothing convertibles venturing out with like buying early . . . Man tops down, sneezed so hard during high school fraternity case in circuit court yesterday that his belt Naming of certain roads in snapped in two . . . The 30-odd outskirts of Salem is presenting high school students who sat in quite a problem for city and on the frat case did so in spite county officials. Roads in ques of warning from school authorl- tion are public roads not owned ties that they would be given by the county. Law is clear on failing grades for so doing . . . changing of road names within Don't let all the "Stromboli" that circle, but law makes no publicity mislead you. Only provision for naming new roads thing hot about the movie is the in the area. Some roads have volcano eruption therein . . . laid around for five or six years The portion of the Busick's now waiting for someone to market building at Commercial name them. The question is and Marion streets now occupied . . . who'll do the naming? I kit it was not until after this col umn, on Oct. 21, 1949, again re viewed the lengthy delay that the tax-evading road builders finally were indicted. Perhaps the gravest briefing given to congressional leaders since V-J day took place at the Pentagon building last week. The substance of the closed-door session was that Russia must be preparing for aggressive war. The briefing was given by Lt. Gen. Alfred Gruenther on be half of the joint chiefs of staff to members of both the senate and house appropriations com mittees and armed services com mittees. This harmony over economy was finally shattered, however, when Air Force Chief of Staff Vandenberg was asked about the air force's needs. "Before Russia had the ato mic bomb, the air force took the position that it needed 70 groups," replied Vandenberg cooly. "There is no reason to change that position now that Russia has the bomb." The talk about economy was so unanimous, however, that it to achieve some- MacKENZIE'S COLUMN NoAbandoningof Cold War Unless It's in Interest of Reds By DeWITT MacKENZIE (W Foreign Affair Anftlt Current demands that the western powers make fresh efforts to achieve agreement with Russia, and thus avoid a possible atomic war, give rise immediately to the vital question of what the demands are based on. Is this idea premised on some concrete development or practical proposal which might appeal to Moscow? Or is it merely the re sult of wishful thinking an idealistic effort disturbed Senator Knowland of thing which California. Though he usually ,,,? t k economy, he finally nmt,uha u preaches broke in: 'I want to know what right- minded! we should spend in the judgment D.0Die' " of the military people, regard- it's vi cJ is another war. That would look like an exhibition of weakness and could do untold damage to the cause of peace. I like the realistic way U.S. Secretary of State Dean Ache son dealt with this problem in his policy statement of February 8. He summed the situation up by declaring that four years of experience "have brought us the realization" that progress to- vital that uuna. we can.t , a DroDer evalu 11115 polnt De cleBrea UV ueiuie wara peace simpiy ny marung Gen. Gruenther was cautious fin if ih nu K T 1 further steps are taken. This is agreements with the Russians is hie ctato ont onnfinorl him. "?U " "le m"ary IS gOing tO , , , ... , , ... , . tell us what we can afford." ""- . "re ""vl" v ' Gen. Vandenberg however experience that there's not ment is realistic and adjust poli- remaiiied the only definite dis- tne sl'Shtest use in going to Mos- cies when compelled by facts to senting voice to the general note cow and caUinS tor peace simply do so. As he pointed out: of economy. because peace is good or because y0u can't argue with a river (Copyright 1950) someDony win get nuri li mere Miss Bivalve of 1950' Portland, Feb. 21 VP) Oregon spawned a new threat today to the clam-consuming championship of the west a 147 pound woman, whose potentialities are unmeasured. She won the Oregon championship and the title "Miss Bivalve of 1950" by gulping down 181 little neck clams at one sitting. Her nearest competitor, a 235-pound man, put away 167. The titlist, Mary Jean Hlne, a radio copy writer, then went to another table and ate a clam dinner. She will represent Oregon in a clam-eating contest in Seattle next Saturday. And this Is warning to Seattleites to start digging clams now. Miss Hine deprecated her achievement here, remarking that in New England, where she used to live, she had eaten more than 200 at a sitting. No one knows how many she might have eaten here. They ran out of clams just as she was going good. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Insects Are Laughing at Us By HAL BOYLE NewYork W) Sayings of a curbstone Socrates: The difference between love in a crowded cottage and love in a mansion is three children and five bathrooms. Mirrors have caused more self-improvement than colleges. A pessimist looks at life through the other fellow's ulcers. Two scales are all a man can trust these days and neither gives him the answer he wants. Trying to do selfish people a favor is like peeling grapes for apes except that you get skin ned. Sir William Osier once said, "Alcohol is the milk of old age." The nip replaces the nipple. A cynic usually leads a gray life because he is color blind to worn dollar bills were discussing thelrj careers. "Have you noticed," said one, "the way the value of people has fallen off in our lifetime?" Unreq u 1 1 e d love never made the average wo- 1 11 Li 7, in his statements, confined him self largely to a discussion of Soviet armed strength, let the congressmen draw their own conclusions. After listening to the report, however, Congressmen Engel of Michigan, Sikes of Florida and Cannon of Missouri spoke out that Russia could have only one purpose in building such a pow erful arsenal: to wage war. Here are some of the main facts presented by Gen. Gruen ther facts which Moscow al ready knows since there is no particular secret about our arm ed strength. Russia, he said, is spending 18 percent of her na tional wealth on arms, which is triple what the United States is spending. Even taking our top budget figure of $15,500,000,000 which includes stockpiling the United Stated is investing on ly 6 percent of her wealth in de fense. Russia has 40,000 tanks. This includes the best heavy tank in the world the Joe Stalin Mark III. In contrast, the U.S. army has only 7000 tanks, none of them heavy. In the air, Russia has 17,000 planes, including 300 heavy bombers of the B-29 type. Meanwhile Soviet factories are working feverishly to build a strategic air force. Production of long-range bombers and jet fighters has been stepped up. To challenge our navy, the Russians have 280 submarines of the latest, speediest German make. Most worrisome, however, is a new Russian torpedo, pilot ed by an electronic brain that seeks out its own target. This ingenious torpedo can locate a ship eight miles away. Despite all this firepower, the backbone of Soviet military might is still her manpower, Gen. Gruenther stressed. Russia can muster over 500 divisions at the drop of a bomb. it is going to flow. You can dam it up, you can put it to useful purposes, you can deflect it, but you can't argue with it." The secretary illustrated by pointing out that we have tried ineffectually for years to get an Austrian treaty. We have made progress toward getting a Ger man treaty. We can't even get a forum with Moscow to discuss treaty with Japan. Therefore Aeheson rejected all suggestions for new Ameri can peace appeals to Russia. He declared the American policy to be "to build situations which will extend the area of possible agreement, that is, to create strength instead of weakness which exists in many quarters." In short, he based Uncle Sam's antl - communist strategy on a policy of power. ' That declaration was made less than a fortnight ago, and the situation certainly hasn't changed since then. What the Western World has to recognize is that Russia is waging her cold war under a concrete plan. It was worked out lone ago and is Even the pain of a toothache, cancer patient . Around the aimed at communizing the world, a sDrained ankle, or a burn can clock, the pain even if it is of Th,,. f nhir, -i be as intense or more intense low intensitygoes on. At the lowed to stand j tn , .1 Ti . . .1 ! same limp the natient la ornw. . . . . . . J limn tdiicci Irani, sub mc 111 . . - ... w. sity of the pain is not what ing weaker and his attitude matters so much, according to toward pain makes him feel the doctors. even worse. In cancer pain, which usually . ... .... I. f lnw infensitv the nain ner. Doctors treating a patient in sists and the patient has a far Prowl Car on Prowl Somewhere Lebanon, Feb. 21 After being overdue for more than a month on delivery, Lebanon's new Ford police car arrived by train In Albany Friday, but unloading was delayed until Monday, and now it is missing. When crews went to the depot ' Monday morning, the freight car that held it was gone. Presumably some train during the week-end hooked onto the supposedly empty car, and Southern Pacific officials could only guess where it might be. . Tracers were dispatched immediately, but up to late after noon Monday no results had been obtained. Last week' the department's other prowl car was badly wrecked when a night patrolman fell asleep at the wheel, ramming a parked panel truck and seriously crippling the police car. Pain Caused by Fatal Cancer Not So Severe as in Childbirth By PAUL F. ELLIS (United PreM Aolenca Editor) Manchester, N. H Feb. 21 (U.PJ A person dying of cancer such as Dr. Hermann N. Sander's patient suffers intense pain, but it is not the worst pain that the human body can suffer. Childbirth, for instance, is the worst pain of all, the doctors say. different attitude toward pain ease than if he were recovering from ne ,pfln: In most' cases' the paln a sprained ankle. 3 ff 4 cause the cancer h involved a nervous center, such this Red drive, excepting un- surmountable obstacles. The plan has been adapted to con ditions over which Russia had no immediate control, but it al- paueiit in ., i . i , .. the terminal or final-stages of ZZ.lC. ! I"??1 lm straight line when those condi tions finally had been met. Hi! BojU The supreme example of this as the spinal cord or the brain. Soviet policy was the part Bus- Experts who have made many The cancer may have spread to sia played as an ally of the studies in measurement of pain many such nervous centers, Western powers against the Hit Throughout the briefings, Sec- polnt out tnat a mother knows thereby causing pain throughout lerian forces. That took her ' retary of Defense Johnson took she wiu undergo pain to bring the body. far off her direct course of a back seat and let military , .inj , the world, and that Powerful drues are adminis- world revolution hut oh. ,.- her attitude toward the pain is tered in attempts to stop pain, cepted the inevitable. She may one of reconciliation. She Morphine is the most commonly even have profited by it. In knows it is necessary and ac- used, although in recent years any event, the point we want to cepts it. ' there have been numerous other make is that once the world war pain-killers that have proved was over, the Red shir, iwnna UtlTiZ out that a t00thache Paln can et"iCient MhaU thenewsub- a ""to its old course, heao soviet sirengtn was, ana wnue ., . stances are either derivatives or 1n etraiirht n,.i O 1.U411111U- meir ily. spokesmen talk. At one point, however, he broke in only to be slapped down by Congressman Sheppard of California. Sheppard wanted to know able as sitting on a wet rock at livin- a picnic. " God believed what tomb- Woeful waist makes for woe- stones said, he'd have a crowded ful diet. heaven. Fear is only climate without Young love is ecstatic; old love a change of season. is serene. And middle-aged love Tell me your dreams and I'll is middle-aged love. explain your nightmares. Second childhood wouldn't be If museums collected people so dreadful if it would just grow instead of things the world hair on a bald head. would be less cluttered up with Nothing gets less thanks out museum pieces. of life than a diaper or does A man who beats his wife more good. probably never had a chance to Most women must have lost spank his mother as a child. their girlhood in a drug store Remember way back when the way they keep trying to find people used to marry for a rea- it again at cosmetics counters. son instead of a season? What is prayer? It Is the vo- Nothing keeps Its youth like cabulary of hope in the stunned envy. language of loss. Temperance is man's com- The insects must be laughing promise between temptation and at mankind. We developed DDT hardening of the arteries. for them but saved the hydro- A wife and his bathroom gen bomb for ourselves. how reliable the information on fift.rlnt Blwntffti lime an4 tirhlle a civilian exoert s Irving to be extremely intense, but a per- "ances are eiuier derivatives or ing , , Z -J !L( K ,. son knows that the pain won't members of the morphine fam- nsm. explain that the iron curtain is drawing tighter, Johnson tried to brush aside the question. "It we can't get an answer," snapped Sheppard, "we may as well go home." The secretary of defense sub sided. Some senators and congress men feared the military chiefs son lying at death's door in were trying to scare congress hospital bed. Particularly, We can't overcome those facts cow is to ask ourselves whether it will serve Red interests to which is an integral part of the commu nist drive to spread communism. Marshal Stalin and his cap- go on forever and that some thing can be done to stop it. by wishful or pious thinking. An athlete many times plays e new Pa wiu a paintui injurea raw or . lng . approach to Mos- leg, Knowing mai ne wiu re- --- " ' J " kv. the nianrlltji of the cheer, phine all trade names for vari- , .. ations of morohine derivatives " "rve " ti.u. ...!... i , , can on tne cold war, USaUlUCicui ' effoMiv. than .hin. ilc.W Some cancer doctors also pre scribe the inlection of alrnhnl in the veins of the patient teins undoubtedly would debate Others have prescribed brain the subject courteously with operations, known as pre-frontal representatives from the West, lobotomy and topectomy, that But we may be dead certain do not necessarily kill the pain, there can be no lasting agree- To the Editor: Just a few words of thanks and appreciation but remove the patient's power ment unless that agreement to (he paper carriers. We take the Capital Journal and Oregonlan. to feel the pain. A combination should foster communist in Through the snow, ice and mud, our paper always came. of codeine and morphine with terests. We live in the suburban area. When going got too tough to aspirin also is being used in That's an unpleasant conclu use their bikes, the boys walked. some cases. sion to be forced into. However, I think they all did a wonderful job. Too much of any of the drugs we shall save ourselves trouble MRS. W. J. SITTON, often will cause death an'd the and disappointment if we face 210 S. Elm a Ave. end of the pain. the facts squarely. OPEN FORUM Thanks to Newspaperboys