r:( A To.hot.o1 LEGISLATORS as Seen by Murray Wade Washington mcrry-co-round apliai journal v"&&v' Farm Support Flareup May Cost Benson Job An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 .'.'. : BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus - Published every afternoon except Suhday at 444 Che meketa St., Solera Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. tan Uh4 Win Sanlaa at taa laMUM rraai aS Taa Vmtu rim Tht aiaaciatad mat la anlulralr antiuad w Uu ua for Mlutta t - all ana auaatthaa aradltaa M U or otmnrlH araa1ta4 In MUa papal ana elaa am aabUaaaa ttuma. SUBSCRIPTION RATESt T Cantarl Monthly, ll.Hi all Monti H Ml On Taar, 111 N. B? lull to Morion. Folk. lima. Bra too. OUoHmir OountUit lloatalr. Mi Six MonUia, KH; Ooa Toar, It 00. B MoU Baowhoro la Onaaa: Moothlx. SIM; ttm lioatha, ai.OOi Ona Taar, Woo. r Mill Ooulda Oroaoa: MontiUx, llJOi au afontl I7.M: Oaa Yaat. tUM. 4 Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, February 17, 19S3 . ADLAI FLINGS A FEW MORE PHRASES AjHof fiAv.anas.n AA1vaaA lift, -ffraf mninr suMrMa mine the night before the November election at a Jefferson Jackson dinner In New York Saturday night, evidencing the same clever gift for words that was so evident during the campaign! but also the same mental confusion that caused him to get so many fewer votes than it looked like he would get early in the campaign. Cii. 1. 1 t 1 J 1.4. I l victor belongs the toil," and kind when he promised to support President Eisenhower's "business administra tion." But Stevenson went on to warn against the danger of the Ike regime becoming a "a big deal" when he is obvi ously doing his best to reduce, not increase the magnitude of the federal bureaucracy that swelled to such vast pro portions through 20 years of free and easy new dealing. Then Stevenson offered a wholly unneeded and mis chievous warning against the United States becoming a "big bully" to its allies, as if there were any likelihood of this. Here he provided the Kremlin and those who do its chores in the western countries with a telling propa ganda weapon. The former governor added that "there is always the tendency to mistake the particular interest for the gen eral interest," an observation that would have had far better application to the new deal fair deal in its old age, find to an administration long and securely in the saddle than to one whose congressional majorities are so slim. Adlai Stevenson has a glib tongue and is an agile phrase maker who is pleasing to listen to. But his latest effort does not suggest the practical common sense for the Herculean task upon which Eisenhower has em barked. He will make the better critic, Ike the better doer, we believe. , WRONG USE OF FLOOD STORAGE DAMS Flood control in the Willamette valley, so long desired and now partially realized with Detroit, Fern Ridge, Dor ena and Cottage Grove dams in operation, is regarded by some, who expected to be beneficiaries, as a mixed blessing. flood control authorities are nappy to point out that Willamette valley flood control dams contained Janu ary's record rainfall and averted a flood comparable to the more disastrous in recent years. This was accom plished by impounding waters of the North Santiam, Long Tom and tributaries of the Willamette to the south ward. Following the sucession of heavy rain storms the impounded waters were gradually released. The rate of release is what farmers, county courts and xt 11 9 1 ai nnil . .1 1 i i . . i i muse nvinjf siong ine VYiimmeti are uiscuruea uoout. Heretofore floods rushed through the valley, covered the farm land briefly and then subsided. Such work as could be accomplished on fields was then delayed but a few ered with water and inaccessible. Roads in low areas likewise remain impassable for a longer period of time and subject to damage by submersion. More particularly are river banks quickly eroded by a river stage that keeps the stream running at full contained capacity for a pro longed period of time. Perhaps the answer lies in a rapid completion of the ntire Willamette Basin project thereby enabling flood control to become entirely effective by a more gradual release of impounded water. HAMPERING THE PRESIDENT Walter Lippman, the syndicated pundit of the New York Herald-Tribune in a recent article raps the self appointed spokesmen, politicians and columnists princi pally for hampering Eisenhower's foreign policies by a "large cloud of opinion, dope, guessing, inference and attri bution which envelop them." He continues: "A great deal of bad feeling Is being generated on both sides of the Atlantic by men who are discussing not the president's policies, but what somebody has said they might or ought to be. "There Is practice, widely indulged In by politicians and Journalists, of letting it seem that they are discussing the in tentions, the purposes, even the plana of the president before he has disclosed them himself. This la an abuse of freedom of speech which Interferes seriously with the conduct of foreign policy." Even when the disclosure is accurate, Lippman points out, as to substance, the timing is essential, for a prema ture disclosure may destroy consumation of the policy, and when it is inaccurate as it usually is, the confusion created is enormous. "The effect is to create a popular expectation that canot be satisfied without undue cost and risks, and arousing popular discontent." It also de prives him of the lost power to maneuver, which Ike's purpose is to recover. Eisenhower's right is to speak for himself which too many self-appointed spokesmen are doing their best to destroy. It is fundamental and essential to the adminis tration of his office and effort to curb aggression and establish world peace. Here's an Understanding Thief Hollywood, W Police are seeking as nderstandlng thief With a gin breath. Mrs. Helen Veneman, IS, aald the man appeared at her home, put a sprlng-blada knife aialnat her and aald: "I want something to eat and some money." She asked him to he qnlet because her four small children were asleep. "I understand," he replied. 1 have children." Lacking cash she wrote him a $20 check. He raided the refrigerator, took a fifth of gin, cut the phone wires and left. Editor Tries New Quirk Hokah, Minn., (V-Editors usually provide "continued" Hnes to help readers find their way aroond newspapers when Stories are carried over to other pages. Herb Wheaton, aothor of the column "My Point of View" In the weekly Hokah Chief, Is different He starts the ecl mn en page one. Bnt at the bottom, citing the continuation, la this terse line. "Hunt for It." Hardier pursuers of his weekly prose are rewarded, this week on page three, where the column continuation la head ed, -Ton found itl" mm ' mm ValterC' GlERSBACtt- booUGtitAi'MnH Pattersons Senate seat .OoRROTHy Wallace lavotedlc weltare-fchildven., teed end handtcafjucL Murray Wade's Cartoons Here Again Appearing as dally feature in the Capital Journal during the remainder of the state legislative session will be Murray Wade'a cartoon sketches of the senators and repre sentatives and some of the attaches. With the POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER 'V'e.TrTTl "5ev fit WiVUt iN.Jack6aim Senator Y DRi ' PEARSON Washington Secretary of eign markets and declining farm Agriculture Benson doesn't Pr,cef . , , know it, but the White House la -EN80N.g -MIDDLEMEN" thinking of firing Jilm if the t MeanwhUe Urmtn farm crista gets much worse uk on His hostile attitude toward u f Agrlcultur, Benl , ?. ?!e are darerousiy man of hih teirlty but out- eenta a pound to 70 cents. iVZJJJlZJXflwte '- Hia blunt state. WtsS5 COCACHATTE $18.70; hops from $17.80 per cwt. to $16; wheat from $2.22 bushel to $2.12; corn from $1.88 bushel to $1.80; oats from 95 cents a bushel to 84 cents; cotton from 40 cents a pound to 81 cents, and butterfut from 78 ir.wuu -""""' " bounty." and his description of appease the farmers. . pr,ce iupporti "disaster in- One White House aide re- iurance" required courage but marked privately that Benson were , reversal of President ia "expendable" and may be Eisenhower's campaign promise jockeyed out of his present hot tor 100 per cent parity price seat into a less controversial jod, gunnort. Ike even went further exception of the. 1851 session, when the cartoonist was in Impaired health, Murray Wade baa sketched all Oregon legislative sessions since 1914. That's 19 regular ses sions, to say nothing of the special ones. . perhaps as an ambassador. ' Meanwhile, here are the lat est clouds on the darkening farm horizon: . 1. Farm prices, now at a postwar low, are expected to fall another 5 per cent in the next few months. Yet the cost than Adlai Stevenson in this promise. Farmers claim as much right to government subsidies as the big manufacturers who get tax amortization and 'tariff protec tion, or the workingmen who re ceive retirement and welfare of marketing farm products has benefits, or the big airlines and gone up. Thus the farmer, who ahipping companies that draw got 54 cents of the housewife's oumgm suDsiaies. World's a Bleaker Place With Lee Departed dollar in 1945-46, now receives only 45 cents.' , 2. Farm exports have fallen off SO per cent in the past year, leaving the farmer's bins over loaded and adding pressure to the downward price trend. The situation is so bad that senators are considering an international food reserve to stabilize the in ternational market end ' shift food from surplus to starvation areas. 8. Farmers are so wrought up over plunging prices and Benson's remarks against sup ports that some farm-state re- The fanners complain that Benson has loaded the agricul ture department with agricultural-middlemen, not the men who till the soil but those who "farm the farmers." Tradition ally, these middlemen have fought against price supports in order to keep farm prices low and their own profits hrgh. Benson's top assistants and advisers are now so predomi nantly processors and business men that his fellow republican and chief congressional critic, Sen. Milt Young of North Da kota, remarked to him caustic ally: "So far -as I know you By HAL BOYLE New York WV-The world la kind of newspaperman every first war reporter to discover a bleaker place today for all who newspaperman sometimes yearns the importance of telling the knew Clark Lee, a war corre- to be. He put a kind of glamor story of the private at the front spondent untimely dead at 46. into the drudgery of war report- and getting his name and ad- And they will talk of him for ing, and no one like him had dress back to the folks at home. Inn a Inn a time in n-UVian mm rinum th nfka alneai Rich- He hit the beaches of Sicily and Tokyo, in Manila and Mad- ard Harding Davis. and Anzio and Normandy. He publicans were actually afraid have not appolnte(i ,ny farm ria, in fans, Honolulu ana uairo. jjui uars wrote nis xarae in wim mc in. m- " "'' j ers. For Lee had become a legend his own sweat. He was a big, troops into St. Lo, Paris, Manila, speeches. Senate agriculture To appease y0Ung, Benson even in his relatively brief life- dark-haired handsome fellow, and Tokyo, and had flown in the committee chairman George gent nis new commodity Credit time. built like Jack Dempsey, and his first B-29 raid on the Japanese Aiken of Vermont is try ing, to corporation chief John H He died quietly of a heart at- favorite wine was adventure, capital. snusn congressional critics, Is Davis around to pay a good- tack in his California home. And Few men have ever drunk deep- He made news himself by dis- pleading that the storm will wlll call However Davis New Orleans Lets I have the unreal feeling of one er of it in so short a time, i covering "Tokyo Rose," the prop- blow over. However, the lid is pr0mptly got off on the wrong r si J- f of aganaa eroaacasier, ana oy per- bdoui to Diow oir tapitoi Hill. foot bv ioCturine the senator XJU "H"h ru The plush, new Capitol Hill club, built ' as a republican refuge in the shadow of the capltol building, has stirred up a storm of pulpit-pounding. The ministers denounce it as a "drinking club." . . . The club's confidential prospectus describes what it's like Inside. "(The fa cilities) will Include a spacious lounge or meeting room, a din ing room seating about three hundred people, private dining rooms, reading rooms, barber shop and bar cafe," says the prospectus. "In addition, there Will be about SO double bed rooms, some for transients and some for members who may wish to rent them by the year. Furnishings and equipment are to be the best and the cuisine and service, while not elaborate, will be the finest obtainable with prices as low as possible." . . . Those getting the worst roasting from the preachers are the senators on the club's board of governors Homer Ferguso of Michigan, Everett Dlrksen of Illinois, Frank Carlson of Kan sas and Hugh Butler of Nebras ka . . . The proprietors are now trying to raise $400,000 to build a republican national headquar ters next to the club . . . Each state has been assigned a quota to raise, will be rewarded by having its shield on the corner stone. (CoprrUht, IMS) who steDS out the front door of Clark was that rare breed his home on a sunny morning reporter who not only covers aonally seeking out and accept and sees on the lawn a giant news he creates it. He made ing the surrender of Col. Joseph tree he loved, felled in the night a name for himself reporting Meisinger, "The Butcher of War by a sudden wind. the doomed stand of General saw," who later was hanged for Clark Lee was an Ernest Hem- MacArthurs' legions on Bataan his war crimes, ingway hero in the flesh, the and Correeidor. and was the For all his boldness and cour- FARM2R PAYS MORE ' What has the farmers espe cially tiled is that their costs are creeping up at the same time foot by lecturing the senator that he shouldn't be criticizing New Orleans, W) The aim Benson but helping him. mering kettle of revelry in the "We are aU part of the same "City That Care Forgot" boils team," Davis pleaded. over today as Rex, Lord of Mis- Abruotly Young reported that rule, reigns over New Orleans. Hundreds of thousands will Salem 42 Years Ago r sum. ooianess ana cour- -'- '"'"'.."Z he intended to keen on crltlei KsmsKSK t&&ssx rssz FArS paia in ioi ior wnai is . r . vf . ni. V . , .v known as the "farm-food mar- fa"ne e rter. Thousands of these merry- ket basket." Of this, the farm- Note: Translated into commo- makers will be dressed as . 4 ! i no 4hn nvm HMAaatnn AlAiima Tvlfataa afkt II Bat flan. to help him out. er got $360 and the handlers, "1C 7"slu" r"T ' w iicp uuu vut. ....... ' tttA rinsf vpor hoi hnmntvl host nmr anti othp mitlanriiiih char this sensitive quality processors, ana cusmoutors got r.,--V ."'"n Z"t: ness about him, an endless un derstanding of the other fellow's problems and a quick willingness Tl - that made him a close friend of $362 an even split. One year eatUe from 27'30 Per to men as diverse as Ernie Pyle By BEN MAXWELL , February 17, 1911 appropriation for $1250 has been An appeal has been made In PP" y house. 4Vla laatrt si cat !) tnm mnrA VlnmanA aa v tgieinviuc vi auus uuiliuiiv , , , . , - liiv 14 as0 wifvi a? v. wta amiuv ab a7 w treatment for patients at the uurauy u si w,. .m and Hemingway. It waa state asylum for the insane. meanf committee of Jhe senate an pair pyie and Clark made When the speaker finished his reported the .Carson bill during the Italian campaign speech he was presented with appropriating $ 1 5 0, 0 0 C r for aomething Uke seeing a fox ter a handsome box of cut flowers, grounds and another building rlor rJdmg ta . jeep wlth . , , , east of the capltol to house the black bear ' supreme court, the state library After the war Clark became a leave san mT for cZ, . . . free lance' wrote fine biog" not only is getting less for what leave San Diego for Cedros . . . raphy of General MacArthur, and he sells, but is paying more for tJTinr:: !.lall5 feftlLly , toured the world with w'h't he buys P z . v . . . j, ryr C T ogauiav uuuuii a-yi- nawauan princess wue, 1,111- Spanish goldindicated by charts cent . cigars after George Wash- uokalani Kawananakoa, better i ., 08 ,, n e i J lngton and Abraham Lincoln, known as "Baby." They were a (Manila galleons bounded for a a a great team ."'.m!65?5 8nd 1811 The Dimick e8ht hour biU But Clark found it hard to get passed this way and were some- was defeated by the house thU down to peacetime routine. He lUf. tlHl. P.'J! n.rS afternoon by an overwhelming missed the robust hardships and p"i."nf y vote- excitement of war-the thrill of i-icnuinquej. a a gambling his life to get. "The, ... m Major Ely, venerable and Big Story." An army Of 500 I. W. W. nlonHion ' .ltnn urilnnl.iL r'lnr-V hiJ tha ottrlhuta 4V,st (Industrial Workers of the arms of the house is diligent stamps the champion the ability surplus food in an international World) recruited from hobo about enforcing some ruling of to show his best in an emer- wearing house and distribute it camps throughout the Northwest the legislature. But he it not gency. He never was meant for to countries under the shadow of are headed for Fresno, Call- indifferent to the charms of the the humdrum life. I doubt if he famine and starvation. Coun fornla, where they Intend, to gentler sex. Major Ely has a pair yearned for an old age pension. We Putting food into the re wage a fight against a city ordl- of giajseg wlth especiaUy strong Perhaps it is as well that, lerve, wuW draw out raw ma nance forbidding free speech. ,,. that bring the object of after Dassine throush so many terials, such as Iron and oil. his vision right up close. He dangers on so many battlefields, Construction of the Dallas- wears them exclusively when he should be surprised by death Falls City railroad has breathed looking at the ladies. on the quiet shores of the Pacific a new life into West Salem. a a a Ocean he loved so much and Factories are now being built, Salem Woolen Mill store in a always returned to. The same later, however 1952 the same "farm-food market basket" cost the consumers $739, an in crease of $17, while the farmer's take was down $20 to $340. The middlemen's - charges, on the other hand, were up $37 to $399. In other words, the farmer One basic cause Of tumbling farm prices is the drastic drop off in agricultural exports, par ticularly wheat and cotton. To counteract this, a group of sena tors) led by Montana democrat Jim Murray, are studying a pro posal to establish an interna tional food reserve. The idea would be to collect BY H. T. WEBSTER Life's Darkest Moment an electric power and light plant front page (Capital Journal) is under construction, an eletric advertisement offers the dis- power and light plant is under tingulshed Dutchess trouser for construction, a lumber yard has men in worsted and cassimeres, been established' and there is all in latest weaves and patterns, talk of another bridge across the from $2.50 to $5 a pair. Willamette (built last year) t m the foot of Ferry street. West Salem now has a population of near 600. a a a A legislative bill for the sup port of the McLoughlln home at Oregon City and carrying an ocean washes the island where his buddy, Ernie Pyle, now lies at rest, home from the wars, too. Murray argues that the world problem is not overproduction but under-production; that our fellow men are starving in some countries while food stacks up at home. He also claims that an international food reserve would stop the shrinking for- 'iiSA iSSla j say; 1 WIU.6ST sMatr!iP;S L6T ifs ooe hum r J 5?2&2j2i i-oo6- cxrpocs He Hs'2 5 ftJ-gsrriA, 1 oers all The fxcrobc LjW .i6 CALL CADWELL Oil Company PHONE 27431 Fuel Oil, Diesel Oil So good it's guaranteed for 10 years my. It Blfeict vtstn jos a- .. - .. a . a -a. - - . . - and .riifcta far Mtamttcafty wfaUi aktf when y&t ckp pen In pocket Far (raster rkk sUaus uh King. if, want leak, wont ameac, nl stain, went transfer. BaaSf Psia Danes Csatrel and pocket-dip wluaee ellinliaHe need fcc bothenocne eap. aasMHost. Isnafrt-Praoi ahlaaa ataal and Tm 1 notd 1 MffsiW hy A MaMMaWaataVwi W OaVff SmsWch MaWMMC V NEEDHAM'S Stationery .- Office Supplies 465 State St. Phone 2248S - -"i v'i,...' rPI lb Serving Salem ond Vicinity os Funeral Directors for 25 Years Convenient location, S. Commer cial street; bus line; direct route to cemeteries no cross traffic. New modern building seating up to 300. Services within your means. lru T. Oola Oraea S. CwaaB Virgil T. Golden Co. 60S S. Commercial St. FUNERAL SERVICE Phone 4-2257