1 Capital Aournal An Independent Newspoper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher Published every ofternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St , Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want Ads, 2-2406; Society Ec'itor, 2-2409. Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press and The United freit. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use foi publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and also news publ ished therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, 25c; Monthly $1.00; One Tear. S12.00. By Mall to Oregon: Monthly. 75c; 6 Mos.. $4.00; One Year, $1.00. V. 8. Outside Oregon: Monthly. $1.00; 6 Mos.. $6.00; Year. $12. 4 Salem, Oregon. Wednesday, March 15, 1950 .The Umbrella Is Abandoned It looks like Secretary of State Acheson meant what he said last week. At that time he called for "total diplo macy" to curb Russian expansion. ' The secretary's talk today in San Francisco sounded as .it he had finally decided the do-nothing policy of the United . States in Asia was a dud. It was more than that. It was a disgrace. Acheson didn't admit the shortcomings of the .previous months in trying to be like old Chamberlain of England and carry the umbrella of appeasement. He did indicate, though, that that stuff was out, and a thing of 'the past. From now on out, Communist China and the Soviet Union shall keep their hands off the rest of Asia, "he warned. Acheson wasn't clear in what he meant when he said that the Chinese "can only bring grave trouble on them . selves ... if they are led by their new rulers into aggressive -or subversive adventures beyond their borders." He was tardy, however, in admitting that "we now face the pros pect that the communists may attempt to . . . use China as a base for probing for other weak spots which they can 'move into and exploit." - Acheson tried to appeal to the Chinese people themselves 'when he referred to them as "old friends." He assured ;them that "we fully understand that their present unhappy status within the orbit of the Soviet Union is not the re sult of any choice on their part." But in trying to say this .Soviet association had been forced on them, Acheson like .wise was overlooking the fact that Chinese leaders and -troops had defeated Chiang Kai-Shek's nationalist forces. . The Soviets used the Chinese rebels, it is true, but never theless, the Chinese communists did defeat the Chinese na tionalists all to the glee and glory of the Kremlin. ' Acheson neglected to indicate, also, what the United States intended to do if Communist China or the Soviet I Union decided to go ahead and expand into the rest of jAsia. The hands-off warning is backed with what? . Outside of these weaknesses backed by a lingering mis- - interpretation of Asiatic affairs, Acheson did show he is finally on the right track. What goes on in the Orient is ' definitely another phase of the world-wide threat of Mos cow to control the globe. Only "total diplomacy" every ' thing in the book short of a shooting war can foil that '.threat. .Now Is Not the Time " The man who knows more about the draft than anyone ' else in the nation stopped in Salem only long enough to get off the train to stretch his legs. But that was long - enough for General Hershey, selective service director, to indicate that the draft is about done for. To the young men along in their late 'teens, they may 'think that is good news. The young men would still have ' to register at the local draft boards, but they would not ''don any uniforms if Hershey's guess is correct. , But is it good news that the draft will probably die a "natural death when the legislation covering it expires June ',30th of this year? a The answer is no. If the world situation is as it appears and as Acheson is finally admitting, then what is Washington, D. C. think- ing of in saying that military forces need only be paper 'organizations? What kind of backing has President Tru 4 man or Acheson when they talk tough in world affairs? Present figures show that the army has only three divis ions anywhere near full strength. One of these divisions lis at Fort Lewis, another in North Carolina and the third cin Germany. There isn't even a full-strength armored di ? vision. When World War II ended, the nation decided not to , abandon selective service. Are world conditions any better (now than a few years ago? The answer obviously is that conditions have gotten worse. And yet this nation, finally ; realizing that it is the world leader, feels that a draft isn't necessary. That doesn't make sense. A dropping of the draft now would be an admission that either the world situation was hopeless or the United States doesn't care. Neither condition is correct. If the Pacific Northwest needs airplane watchers, the i country certainly needs enough manpower in uniform to J fill out at least a token defense force. And the only way figured out to have enough manpower for such a force is S with the draft. BY H. T. WEBSTER The Unseen Audience VA - r oujt HOOT1. YA HTN w i ' " - 37W&0 An' 6V JMMGO , -THUMOEKATION au' lbapin' LIZDS.' IF YA DOM'T VJAhlTA WIND VP OM Boo-T hill YA BerreR ti That -THAR chair, pnehrro. i BY SA5SAFRASS. I 6". v euswess nr it . Sin I m tHB LUSTY, PUNG6HT LANGUAGE OF XHE RAAI&e AS NTERPReTeD BY RADIO KRISS-KROSS Hole in Concrete Causing Hole in Station's Profits By CHRIS KOWITZ.Jr. There's a hole in the concrete that's causing a hole in the profits at the Chevron filling station at Chemeketa and High streets. It's a big hole . . . took a lot of digging . . . cost a lot. What's more, the excavation won't bring in any income once the project forp: which it is be-?:- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Truman Urges Secretary Gray To Become AEC Chairman By DREW PEARSON Washington President Truman has been trying to persuade Gordon Gray, one of the best secretaries of the army the war department has seen, to remain on in Washington as chairman of the atomic energy commission. Secretary Gray had agreed to become president of the Uni versity of North . oppose his bill to his office for a heart-to-heart talk The sen ator is not angry. He is the grac ious fatherly type trying to pro tect the reporter from evil and untruth. At the height of the "conversation," the senator pulls a Bible from a desk drawer and quotes from it in support of his arguments. Kerr's "assistant lobbyist," Sen. Lj'ndon Johnson of Texas, is not as smooth a salesman. The other day, Johnson spied an op ponent in the senate restaurant and pounced on him "What do you mean," Johnson demanded, "fighting the Kerr bill?" The critic replied that he fig ured an unregulated monopoly would mean increased prices to the consumer. "Monopoly, poof!" scoffed Johnson. "Aluminum is a mon opoly. Steel is a monopoly. BY CARL ANDERSON Henry Draw Pearton ing dug is com-- pleted. The hole is there because there's a leak' in the hose which delivers free air ... a hose which pro vides service to the customer but no income to the station. 1 w.m -n I T . Ta 1 csu Cbrll Kawila, Jr. cerned. Board of control has is sued order that tunnel cannot be used by employes during lun.h and coffee periods. In answer to dozens of inquir ies regarding Don Upjohn, "Sips for Supper" columnist, we have this to report: Don, having come through a couple of opera tions in fine shape, had been re cuperating at his home for sev eral weeks. Then the other day it was discovered that "Sips" re- When the air was discovered quired an additional operation, to be leaking out, workmen be- So this writing finds our good gan digging to find the seat of friend back in the hospital, with the trouble . . . they're down our best wishes for a speedy re several feet now, and they can covery. still hear the air hissing below them . . . which means they'll Carol Lee, Laurel Herr and just have to keep digging deep- Sidney Kromer, the Leslie jun er and deeper . . . and all be- ior high trio who have won mu ciuse of a little leak in the sical honors both instrumentally free air hose. and vocally, are all honor stu- T h e operation is costing dents at the south Salem school, aplenty, considering that air ... G. Herbert Smith, president brings in no income . . . but the of Willamette university, dis- operators of the station feel that plays license number 1842 on his digging the hole will save mon- automobile. Willamette U. was ey in the long run ... if they founded in 1842 . . . Salem high hadn't dug down to repair the school's basketball team staying hose, the leak would have just at Hotel Osborne during state blown away the profits. tourney at Eugene this week . . . Salem is the only high school in Tunnel between statehouse the state which excuses its stu- and new public service building dents from classwork in order will be no "tunnel of love" as that they may attend the tourna- far as state employes are con- ment sessions. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Does Moscow Aim to Divide World in 2 Influence Zones? By DeWITT MaeKENZIE U;P) Foreign Affalra Analyst) They tell us we shouldn't look a gift horse in the mouth, but that axiom certainly doesn't apply to horse swapping. Moscow is said to be working on an amazing proposal. U. S. officials are said by James Reston, Washington correspondent of the New York Times, to believe Soviet Russia is making a effort to vention basis" is of course true in theory. Naturdlly it would work if there were "non-intervention." However, "non-intervention" is a direct contradiction of a cardinal tenet of communism. Still looking the horse in the mouth we are reminded that we have been up against this non intervention promise before. From the advent of the bolshe- vist government in 1918 until Carolina. But x n e rresiaem , has explained to "ii? uray inai xne atomic commis- cinn harllv nowlc - .. a chairman who n has both public and congression al confi d e n c e plus ability as an administra tor, and has urg ed him to delay his return to North Carolina for at least one year. Gray, one of the most popular secretaries in the history of the army, is a North Carolina law yer and publisher ho entered the army as a buck private in World War II. CHEAPER BABY OIL Wnnsp wav and rnpanc ripmn- prats riwidpd at a xvrpt mcotino Automobile production is mon- last week that the fairest form- P"zed by a lew companies, ula for excise tax reduction Natural gas doesn't have that would be an across-the-board klnd ol a monopoly. There are cut on all excise taxes of about many independent producers." 50 per cent. But what the senator from Some of the more oppressive ga s'ricn Texas did not reveal is taxes on baby oils etc. may ,hat ln 1947 ten Producers sold be cut more or eliminated en- abou' -h-t f the gas used tirely. However, the 50 per cent by e P'Pell"es by the five reduction average will prevail in southwestern gas states, most cases. , ine so-canea independents whom Johnson referred to in clude companies controlled by Standard Oil of N. J., Standard Oil of Ind., Sinclair Oil Corp., Socony-Vacuum and Phillips. How much money some of them are making is shown by the return on common stock and surplus after taxes in 1948 by the four top producers Phillips Petroleum, 18.7 per cent; the Chicago Corp., a subsidiary of Cities Service, 22.6 per cent; Re public Natural Gas Co , 24.12 per cent; and Humble Oil Sc Refin ing, a subsidiary of Standard Oil of N. J., 27.7 per cent. NOTE Senator Kerr owns an estimated 5100,000,000 in natural gas reserves and has an annual sale' C sale? aL HAT5' A mdivo Complexity of the committee's job was illustrated by Rep. John Dingell of Michigan when he in quired if talcum powder should be given a high-priority reduc tion like baby oil. Several colleagues protested that talcum powder was in a dif ferent category from baby oil, since it was used by men as well as babies. "Well, that's because the old man moved in on the baby's" can," explained Dingell amid grins. "Originally, talcum powder was for babies. But now the baby uses it for one extremity, while daddy applies it to the other, after shaving." POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER f The Ten Top Cavedwellers For Underground Noah's Ark By HAL BOYLE j New York MV-If America were destroyed by atomic bomb ing, what ten living beings should be saved? This question has been posed by Lester Dill, owner of the Meramec caverns at Stanton, Mo. Dill recently asked the reconstruction finance corporation a million i for dollar loan to UUI.I.I HI I II.J1 Hal Bo?l new arrange a deal with America to divide the world into spheres of in fluence. Under this two-world a r-rangemcnt, western influ ?nce in the sat ellite s t a t p s would be min- D,m" """" C2AS I Thugs Missed Out on Schooling Cumberland, Mr., March 15 (Pi A couple of burglars either can't read or like to pull a job the hard way. They broke Into a safe here yesterday, after hacking at the handle and finally removing the pins from the safe's door hinges. The loot was a razor and 20 cents. On the side of the battered safe the company had painted: "No money Inside." And beneath thai the combination. Full House in This Schoolroom Chicago, March IS lf Teacher Alvlna Rarkstrom of the Sutherland public school frequently believes she Is seeing double when she looks at her classroom of pupils in grade 2R. She has a poker full house three or a kind and a pair. They are girl triplets and twin boys. The triplets, Karen, Elisabeth and Diane Qti 1st. will he 1 years old April 3. The identical twins, William M. and James M. Owen, were 7 years old March 10. Tough Record to Live Up to Prince Rupert, B. C, March 15 (CP) Leonard Anderson of Los Angeles found his record of birth here but It's a tough record to live up to. It's pretty obvious to Leonard that one of the statistics is off, but he can't get a document to prove It. That's the part that says he was horn 28 years ago a girl. The doctor doesn't want to go back on his original state ment and Leonard hasn't seen his parents for 22 years. Geography Got Mixed Up Oceanslde, Calif., March 15 (U.n Ernest A. Taylor, superin tendent of streets for this southern California City, Is a baffled man today. Although the city has never had a measurable amount of snowfall, a Chicago manufacturing firm high on enthusiasm but low on geography has flooded him with literature ai-. aerting Oceanslda should own a nowplow. i.i.zeu or eliminated, ine west- 10,o lh ,n:,.j ern nations would adopt a hands- fastl rcfused , recognize tne off policy for the whole com- ror, DnvPnmn, whi,h , munist world, including China strainjng cvcry n'erve to get its and Yugoslavia, and do most of their business with the satellites through Moscow. Red officialdom has been em phasizing "that the worlds of capitalism and communism can live In peace on a non-intervention basis." world revolution under way. Britain, for instance, was con stantly fighting the Russian agents who were doing their ut most to overthrow the British government. Finally in 1933 Soviet foreign . commissar Maxim Litvinoff Well that's horse-swapping came to Washington and made on an unprecedented scale. glowing promises of good be- We get a better idea of just havior to F. D. R. There would how big a deal it is when we ne no red propaganda in the check up on how much of the United States; Moscow would world has been brought under reform. Red domination.- So Washington extended for- Sovlet Russia, plus its satel- mal recognition and the reds lites and China comprise started their drive to convert roughly one-third of the globe's America, population, and about one-fourth ' . . . of its land area. . Still, while we have to look Some of this, of course, Russia the horse in the mouth, the situ- Is in the process of trying to di- ation isn't without hope, gest, and China is included in Secretary of State Acheson in- that category. However, those dicated that the other day in figures don't include the com- his call for "total diplomacy" munist supporters and fifth-col- to win the cold war with com- umnists who are working in non- munism. By this he meant an communist countries. all-out effort, short of shooting. Looking the Russian horse in to halt Russian expansion. Hav- the mouth we get the idea that ing made the call he added: Moscow has overrun about all "When we have reached the the territory it can handle con- unity and determination on the veniently at this time The Mus- part of the free nations when covitcs would De glad to see the we have eliminated all of the cold war eased off a bit while areas of weakness we will be they consolidate their gains and able to evolve working agree- get organized for another offen- ments with the Russians." sive in due course. That, I take it. is a tacit warn- The assertion that "the worlds ing not to try any horse deals of capitalism and communism until we know the animal is can live in peace on a non-inter- right. MIT.l.irtVArRE IflRRVlST Busiest lobbyist on Capitol Hill gross income. ' $12 000,000. these days is genial Sen. Bob TYDINGS FOR PRESIDENT Kerr, the Oklahoma oil million- a strange Romeo has shown aire, who is trying to sell a bill up under the White House bal- costing American consumers an cony singing love songs. He is estimated $506,000,000 a year, dapper Sen. Millard Tydings of Kerr's bill would exempt most Maryland, who used to make sar- of the nation's natural-gas sales castic slurs against the admin- irom federal regulation. , istration but now devotes his Kerr has some disarming tech- tongue to the Truman cause, niques. He selects a senator for Behind this quiet reformation, whom he has done a favor, and however, Tydings is playing a in his pleasant, easy drawl, con- cagey political game to get his fides: 'Ah'd like to tell you about own foot in the White House, my bill. Lots of false propa- By posing as a loyal adminis- ganda being passed out about it. tration supporter, he hopes to This talk about raising gas rates, sip his hat into the 1952 presi- now. That's absurd! Why, the dential ring, producers are governed by 10- The shrewd Maryland senator to 20-year contracts." iet the cat out of the bag the When senators say they can- other day by disclosing his am- not support his bill. Kerr amia- bition to close friends. He ad- bly requests: "Ah'd appreciate it mitted going along with the ad- as a personal favor then, if you ministration, in part so he can you won't fight it." move into Truman's shoes in case The senator from Oklahoma is Truman doesn't run again. Tyd- all the more effective because ings even indicated he would he has sometimes fought on the like Sen. Paul Douglas of Illinois consumers' side of the fence, as a running mate, namely in the Montana public- if Truman decides to run for power scrap. Now he is sidling another term, however, Tydings up to senators he helped then js ready to lower his sights to and begging their neutrality. the vice presidency. He is con- fident 73-year-old Vice President Another Kerr lobbying tech- Barkley won't run again, nique is to invite newsmen who , (copyright ibsoi She's Headed East Spokane, Wash., March 15 (U.R Quo Vadis Davis, Spokane nurse whose first name means "Where are you going?" an nounced her engagement to James J. East. FOREST SOCIAL REGISTER Only Best Families of Trees Should Read This Story By WILLIAM WARREN Well, what do you know! Trees have family trees, too. The state forestry department came up this week with a new tab to add to the list of such tags as "yield tax," "sustained yield," "intensive utilization," 'economic maturity" (there's nothing more callow than an adolescent tree), "annual increment" and forest drain." (A tree transform his 26 - mile long cave into an Ozark atom re fuge. Whether he is really look ing for a loan or just more tour ists it is hard to say. But he also asked a group of writers to nominate 10 Amer icans who, in the event of na tional disaster, should be given top priority as tenants of his modern underground Noah's ark. Picking the fortunate or un fortunate ten is quite a parlor game. I ended up by picking two lists. Dill himself isn't on either as who, forced to live in a cave, wants to be dunned by a land lord? I bypassed all politicians, too, to get rid of the tax prob lem, once and for all. My first list is purely selfish: 1. My wife, Frances. 2. Me. 3. Gypsy Rose Lee. ' 4. Thomas Hart Benton, the artist. 5. Tallullah Bankhead. 6. Burl Ives, the guitar twanging folk singer. 7. A good bartender. 8. A psychiatrist. 9. Oswald Jacoby, the card expert. 10. Any two-year-old child. With a group like this you could have fun indefinitely. Ja coby would teach me how to play Canasta. I'd learn to dance with Miss Lee, and Miss Bank head and Benton are f wo of the most entertaining talkers alive. The reason for including the bartender and psychiatrist is simple. One would listen to my troubles and the other would explain my nightmares. There would be no need for a chef, as Frances loves to cook and does it wonderfully well. Why the child? Well, when ev erybody got bored, they could just watch the child play and feel better. Grownups usually can stand each other better when there's a child around. But caves are damp and give me a sore throat, and Frances has claustrophobia. We really wouldn't want to be among the ten last refugees in a world de stroyed. So I picked a second list of Americans. It has six animals and four humans on it: A cow and a bull, a married team of horses, two happily wedded dogs, a young minister and his wife and a young farm boy and his best girl. These ten could found a new civilization, and whether it would turn out better or worse than the one it replaced no one can tell. One of the four humans, how ever, ought to be able to play the violin. Any world would be dull without music. 'A Game With No Winners Los Angeles, March 15 (IP) John S. Rayes and Oscar S. Aguire, both 19, played the game but lost. The two are held today on suspicion of grand theft merchan dise. Officer J. M. Jordan said he saw them remove two wheel discs from a car and then drive away. "It's like a game," Rayes told the officer. Somebody takes two from me so I take two from somebody else." The "somebody else" in this case happened to be Officer Jordan. The discs were taken off his private car. Foresters in their research believe they have found that by taking seed from only the best or superior trees, and by taking into consideration their location and climate, it will be possible eventually to improve the qual ity of Oregon's forests. More aristocratic firs and pines. More spruced up spruce. It may be possible also to in crease resistance of the trees to disease. With the aid of research, it may b possible some day, Lyon said, to grow trees that will pro duce knotless boards. The forest products labora tory at Oregon State college has discovered how to make bees- lng the best seed ln their wheat way without bees from Doug- and other farm crops because las fir bark. The forest depart good seed means bigger crops ment suggests that maybe the and more money in your jeans product should be called bark come harvest time." wax. At any rate this wax is no Foresters have taken a cue worse than its bark, from the farmers and are using Tannin from fir bark in suf- shouldn't be a drip). The new tab is "Forest Ge netics." Homer Lyon, reforestation di rector for the state forester's of fice here, explained today that the application of forest genetics means the useof tree seed from the best tree strains in localities most, adaptable to that particu lar seed. (If your name is Cabot or Lodge, naturally Boston is the locality). In some instances, seed from an isolated or specially selected tree is used. Said Lyon: "Speci fic and accurate seed selection is the key to forest genetics. Lyons explains it this way: Farmers know all about us- ALL THE CHARM Of Ay OLD-FASHIOIS'ED XOSEGAt . . , CAPTURED IX EXQVISITE CHI4. only "certified" tree seed their reforestation projects. In gathering certified seed, ficicnt quantities to keep the drills of the petroleum industry in good shape and cure enough said Lyon, special attention is leather for our favorite oxfords. given to elevation, sou types, is also expected from the con form of parent trees, local cli- verted multi-million dollar mate and other factors. plant at Springfield, Or. Exclusive in Salem . ROYAL DOULTON 5 Piece Place Setting, $15.25 LENOX - WEDGWOOD D , JEWELERS - SILVERSMITHS 390 State Street Livetley Bldg. Dial 4-2223 J