1 CO vo . BU ani tar' BO W: B w ei M eo i u d Uli bsi U K' eh' - ui et t ai Capital jJournal An IrxJependent Newspoper Estoblishtd 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published very ofternoon except. Sundoy ot 444 Ch meketo St., Salem. Phone: Business, Newsroom, Wont Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. T tuoium Stmi It mhuHnlr aidi!s h tbt ih lir mnulM at au am ttmUhM andnat la M m MlmwlM araato la that nm aa In am aamiais ihawa. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Br Canton lleathtr, tl.asi an ateaUu. aisoi Oct Ttr. Ill N. mU la Ifartoa. Polk, Una, Brofam, cuauu Caaatlw: MoatMr, loci SU Miailhi, M H; Oil Tur, MM. Sr Mall Buwbtra U OrMoa: Moalalr, Ilea; au UraUu, M.Ms Obi Yar, 111 M. a taU OatoMa Orataai ataaialr, UMt au MoaUu, SIM; On law, SM.0. 4 Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, March 4, 1953 STALIN'S FATAL ILLNESS Moscow radio has announced that Premier Josef Stalin on the night of March 2 had a sudden brain hemorrhage affecting vital areas of the brain, which has developed a paralysis of the right leg and arm with loss of conscious ness and speech. His condition remains serious, with con siderable disturbance of breathing and high blood pressure and temperature. ' Stalin's grave illness bears a close resemblance to the malady that killed his Dredecessor. V. L Lenin, in 1924, Lenin suffered hardening of the brain arteries which, as in Stalin's case, paralyzed his right arm and leg and im paired his speech. But his illness was a lingering one that lasted two years. Early in 1922 doctors told Lenin, founds and guiding spirit of Soviet communism, that he had cerebral sclerosis. They ordered him to cease daily work. In December of 1922 Lenin began to lose his power of speech and became ' paralyzed on his right side. He died January 21, 1924, at Gorky, near Moscow. It is the opinion in Washington and has been for some time that Stalin near death is more dangerous than Stalin alive and in good health, because of the inevitable struggle ' for power in the politburo, which may result in World War III. Stalin has had unlimited power, whether he left a political will and testament is unknown, and there is no likelihood that it would be respected if he did, by those left out. He has had final say in the course of the cold war. It was Stalin who ordered the ruthless seizure of Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and all the other satellite states which today Russia exploits behind the iron curtain. And it was Stalin who sent the North Korean communists invad ing South Korea in June, 1950, and ordered the Red Chinese intervention in the Korean war. It was after Yalta that Stalin suffered his first heaqt attack and sometime after that his first stroke. In later years, his left side was slightly paralyzed. Stalin was firm in the belief that western capitalism must eventually destroy itself, without the use of Russian troops. He practiced propaganda and infiltration, utiliz ing local communists directed from Moscow, to bring about the enslavement of free nations, with global warfare the last resort, but the dream of world conquest was his inspir ation. The three who ruled with Stalin on the Council of Min isters and Central committee most prominently mentioned as possible heirs are Vyacheslav Molotov, George Malenkov and Laurenti Berria, head of the Russian secret police and in charge of slave labor. None of the big three apparently have any use for the others and all have echoed the Stalin ist Hate America campaign. Under new leadership Russia might abandon the theories of communist world conquest and subside into its own sphere but developments of the sucession will have to be awaited and the "Sword of Damocles ' still hangs over the West . LEGISLATORS as Seen by Murray Wade mwmm EJI!LLLbw7 II HIP M iBVafafrT 1 1 II II I HUM If I I Hf f RepEdR- CAROttELL rorme.r frtauor f Sweet Home fas the Pitch on yote-getting Sen.PhiliW. -Hitchcock. Oho ef the Senate's top orators'. : WW. TUP. G.RuJseu. fetfinsl' Ottvivoaff POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER 25-Year-Old Now Rated Vital Factor in the Business World By HAL BOYLE REJECTING THE RED BARTER OFFER Churchill took a lofty ground in rejecting a communist hint that the Reds would be willing to release a British busi ness man, Edgar Sanders, whom they were detaining in Hungary to face spy charges, if the British would free one Lee Meng, Chinese girl guerrilla chief under sentence of death in Malaya. Churchill pointed out that justice must not be compro mised by such a deal, but must take its proper course in Malaya, or presumably anywhere else in the British realm, and that Sanders was being held without cause in Hungary, though this will have no bearing on what the Reds decide to do about him. While probably not so Intended the Churchill stand im- plies a criticism of U.S. policy in the Vogeler case. Here we made a somewhat comparable deal to secure the free dom of one of our own citizens, a sten we have not reneatsul in the Oatis case, possibly because too high a price was de- manuea. we would have more respect for Churchill's ringing words, whether we agreed with them or not. were it not for British conduct in China. Britain ships goods into China every aay, including military supplies that help China kill British soldiers in Korea. This deplorable attitude con trasts so sharply with the high moral line Churchill is cur rently taking aa to recall the old saying: "What you are peaks so loudly I can't hear what you say." SUPPORT YOUR RED CROSS DRIVE We say "your" Red Cross drive because this is axaetlv what it is. Much of the money stays in Marion county to finance the Red Cross work here though a portion of it goes into the treasure chest of "the greatest mother in the world, to finance her deeds of mercy wherever the need arises, as it does and always will. The local program, of which the blood bank is possibly the best known at present, but actually onlv one TihAsp. hould particularly Impress potential contributors, for it u natural to consider tne needs at home more urgent than uose iar away. Unfortunately our local Red Cross record has not been good. For three straight years we have failed to meet our quota. Surpluses previously created by generous giving are exhausted. The local Red Cross is now "on its own," Its backlog spent, its activities limited strictly to what the people give. So it is up to us if we want the Red Cross program con tinued, ana ox course we oo. so give generously. Br HAL BOYLE New York VP) Every field has its elder statesman. In American politics today it Bernard Baruch. In baseball for many years it was Connie Mack. In the American business world it is the 25-year man, The 25-year-man is the wheel- horse of. office and factory, a vi tal link between the oldest mem ber of the board of directors and the newest office boy. Time was when the man who celebrated his 25th anniversary on the job did so with a glum feeling of wasted youth. The best he could hope for was a pat on his faithful back, and the worst was a look in his boss s eye that said, "H-mm, maybe I'd better start looking around for a younger man." Today the 25-year man is a kind of hero of business, a sym bol of achievement. Many firms now periodically take out full page ads bragging to the public about the number of such vet erans they have on the payroll. For example: 'You don't have to worry when your little girl plays with Acme tlddlywlnks. Yes, Acme tlddlywinks are completely sale. Four out of five craftsmen in Acme's giant tlddlywinks plant have spent 25 or more years on the lob. That sells experience, Acme craftsmen know better than to leave any sharp edges on our tlddlywinks, because their own grandchildren play wltn them, too." The present vslue placed on years of service hss made the 25-year man a vital figure in Industry, and he is now recog nized asamorale factor. The trend is toward rewarding him with something more substantial than a form letter of appreciation. Take a typical ease in the Acme tlddlywlnks works. Old Joe Ten-thumbs, a quarter cen tury to the day from the morn ing he punched his first time clock, goes to work feeling a nit sorry for himself. He still feels that way when suddenly the noon lunch whistle blows two minutes early. A group of grinning fellow work ers surround dazed Joe and break into "Fo He's a Jolly Good Fellow." The boss then steps up and fastens into his lapel the Acme firm's 25-year pin a huge tid dlywink emblazoned with the figure "25" and with Joe's name on the back of It. Joe is led in for a lunch with the firm's officials but is too ex- cited inside to eat much. "With out men like you, Joe, we'd be out of business," the president says, and hands him a bonus check of $25 a buck for esch year "and lust a token, of course." Joe is then told to take the rest of the day off, and he trudges home blinded by the re alization that all these years he hss meant something. His wife msy say, "They could have given you a trip to Europe." The other men on the vast tld dlywinks assembly line may kid him, "with that pin and a dime you can get a bus ride." And it may be true even that in Joe's own esse his 25-year pin msy represent the triumph ot endur ance over inability. It makes no difference. Joe Ten-thumbs is ever afterward of higher stature, a person of more Importance. He. is an elder statesman, the other workers pay him a grudging respect, and his opinions are valued, even if he sometimes makes himself a nuis ance with them. If a new hired hand complains, "There's a dead mouse in the water cooler," the boss replies, How could there be?" But if old 25-yesr-msn Joe ssys It, the boss answers, "Well, Joe, we'll have to see sbout that I guess." They hsve to listen to Joe he's got experience behind him. And Joe himself secretly has a new gosl. He looks forward to his fiftieth snnlversary on the job. He wsnts to become the first man In the plant to win a 2 5 -year pin with an oak leaf cluster. Salem 38 Years Ago ' By BEN MAXWELL Grants Pass Company Gets Loan from RFC Wsshlngton (UA A 150,000 loan has been approved by the reconstruction finsnce corpor ation for the Marks Lumber company of Grants Pass, Ore. The loan will enable the firm . to Increase production of rough, green pine. The RFC said half the loan would be used for pur chase of timber and half for wee-king capital. Far East Trade Meet 'Complete Success' Manila CV-Thirty seven na tlons Wednesdsy ended the sec ond U. N. Asian and Far East Trade Promotion Conference and delegates called it a "complete success. Chsirmsn Cornell Balmaceda ot the Philippines said the 10-day meeting "will stand out as one of the most widely attended and successful world conferences ever held for the promotion of international eomxnaro. ' Mareh 4. 115 Harry P. Mlnto, Salem, has been named warden ot the pen itentiary to succeed B. K. Law- ion. Mlnto. now in the east studying prison methods in var lous states, will assume his new duties Msy 1. a Frank Davey Is now prison bookkeeper and bertillon expert replacing T. R. Wilson, resigned to become sn assistant In the of fice of Internal revenue collec tor. First definite step toward cre ating a flax industry for the pen itentiary and tne Willamette valley was taken by the board of control today when the pur chase of 600 bushels of superior flax seed was authorized. This amount, together with 100 bush els available here, will be suf ficient to seed sbout 350 seres. The board Is now msklng an ef fort to obtain acreage within a radius of five miles from the penitentiary. ' a Rev. Walter T. Sumner, new ly consecrated bishop of Oregon, will begin his first round of dio cesan visitations at Salem's St. Paul's Episcopal church next Sunday. Occupants of the Pstton block will soon hsve new store fronts snd better lights. But this ac complishment will necessitate removal of the old, wooden marquee erected with the build ing in 1869 and beneath which thousands of Salem folks sought shelter in bad weather. Mrs. Isaac Lee Patterson, at a Portland meeting held yester day, was chosen stste regent for the Oregon Daughters ot the American Revolution. After serving the Evangelicsl assooiaUoa as a place of wor ship for 48 years, the old church st the corner of Liberty and Center street will soon be dis mantled. The lot wss bought by members of the association in 1864 and two years later the present church on the corner was erected. A new, modern edifice will replace the present church. "Hitting the hay" Is a realistic experience at the state indus trial school for girls. Matron Hopkins' report ststes that many of the girls sleep on pallets of hay In rooms and corridors. She has been authorized to purchase proper bedding to relieve pres ent conditions. a I. G. McDanlel, assistant man ager of the Commercial club, has been appointed secretary of the social service center. Sweet Brisr club composed of residents of Wsllsce road dis trict were entertained yester day st the horn ot Mrs. Jsmes Imlsh. Counterfeit Half Dollars Passed Here The appearance of counter feit half dollars In town this week prompted Chief of Police Clyde Warren today to request that merchants be on the lookout for the fake coins. If sny are spotted, a descrip tion of the coin pssser should be noted and the police noti fied immediately, he said. Two ot the coins were re ported passed In a local tavern Police Department Adds Two Officers The city police department added two new officers this week to replace two men who resigned recently, Chief Clyde A. Warren announced. The new men are Frank Per- low, Jr., 25, 1125 South 19th street, and William Vanderhoof, 25, 1040 Spruce street. Both are World War II veterans. Perlow is a navy veteran and .was re cently employed as a guard at the state penitentiary. Vander hoof wss recently discharged from the army. Their appointments will be temporary until they pass city rcivil service exams and serve their probation period. Richard Boehringer and Wil liam A. Marker were the two men who resigned recently. Marker is returning to Oregon State College to complete his requirements for a degree be fore entering the service. Wholesale Food Prices Again Hiked New York VP) Wholessle food prices, as measured by the Dun & Bradstreet food index. registered their fourth succes sive advance this week. The Index climbed to $6.28, highest level so far this year, from $6.21 in the preceding week, but was well below the $6.56 recorded in the compar able week a year ago. Previous high for this year was $6 25 on January 13. The low was $6.13 on February- 8. The index represents the to tal cost at wholesale of one pound each of 81 foods In gen eral use. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Young Bob Has His Father's Courage, Plus More Stability BY DXIW PEARSON Washington For 46 years there wss a member or me ia Follette family in the United States senste. And for even longer there has been a La Fol lette in Wsshlngton. In a way there suu is. up in the csDltol, where every state is tierm It ted to plsce two of its most cherished heroes, stands the statue ot the elder Bob La Follette. Actually the elder Bob -sits, sits and muses, and looks out on the stream of tour ists which flock by him in such numbers that the tip of his bronze shoe is worn shiny where thousands of admirers touch his feet If that statute were able to think, or if the elder Bob is able to look down and known that his eldest son, nsmed for him, took his own life the other dsy, he should not be too harsh cn r.lm, In a wsy. It wss through thinking of his father that young Bob took his own life. He felt he had let old Bob down. Actually he hadn't. Follow lng in the footsteps of a man as brilliant and meteoric as the elder Bob, a man who had run for president, had come so close to building up a third party, had held the state of Wisconsin and much of the northwest in the hollow of his hand, wss a dif ficult thing to do. But in the opinion of his fel low senators, young Bob had all the courage of the old man, with more stability. COMMUNISTS VOTED FOR MCCARTHY He put across the LaFollette Monroney bill for the reorgani zation of congress. He bucked the National Association of Man ufacturers in a long expose of civil liberties lnfrsctions, show ed how they covertly spent money to influence the press, how they even secretly subsi dized commentator - columnist George Sokolsky. He exposed the murders of coal operators in Harlan county, Ky., he was the top presiding officer of the sen ate, snd he dared buck FDR on lifting the arms embsrgo when he, like his father, feared we would drift into war. - But having fought big busi ness Just as vigorously as his father, and sometimes more' ef fectively, young Bob accumulat ed enemies powerful enemies. And they concentrated every thing they had to defeat him in 1946. The NAM poured in money, and left-wing labor poured in votes. It's an ironic twist of fate that the 5,396-vote margin by which Bob La Fol lette was defeated came from the communist party, which went all-out against him. And the man they voted for and who defeated Bob welcom ed their support. "They have a right to vote, haven't they?" Joseph R. McCarthy told news men. HUMDRUM LAW PRACTICE After young Bob's detest, he wss considered for various fed eral Jobs, such as TV A adminis trator, but finally ended up practicing law. He was on the board of directors of Sears, Roe buck, and he represented the United Fruit company. But it was pretty humdrum stuff com pared with the days when he wss battling things out in the senate. Young Bob used to get a little depressed about it. He used to come and lunch in the Mayflow er hotel, all by himself, lust sit ting and thinking thinking now he'd let his father down. Especially he used to think of the days when his father had helped mske Wisconsin one ot the great forward-looking, pro gressive states ot the union, and hunting that might lesd to fas cism. Attending the 25th wedding snnlversary of his old friend, Sen. Lister Hill of Alabama, young Bob spoke sadly of Uis, told how he never should have let McCarthy beat him, how he had let his father down. And, troubled with a severe heart condition, he went up to the capltol building where his father once made his longest speech In history, where he him self hsd served as a page boy, where he had presided over many a session of tho august, sometimes unruly senate. And taking one last look at the sta tue of his father, th image which so msny visitors hsd reverently touched, young Bob went home, phoned his wife, and Joined his father. What Washington is buzzing about: Secretary of Defense Wilson's lavish lsyout ten bedrooms and ten baths at the Ward man Park hotel. "Bugeye" Barker, the un American activities investigator who took the rap for Congress man Velde's mistake about Mrs. Agnes Meyer. Budget Director Joe Dodge, who is so suspicious of secre taries that be opens all his own mall. The suggestion that Pentagon menus should list the calories as well as the price ot esch dish to help overweight officers re duce. The White House's austere backstage business manager. Roger Steffan, who instituted the new, no-smoking, no-Iolter-lng rules. Senstor McCarthy's secret in vestigation of Supreme Court Justice Tom Clark. MERRY-GO-ROUND Congressman Pat Sutton .has been whispering around Tennes see that he will try to unseat Senator Kefauver next year. Sutton seems to think the voters hsve forgotten how he pulled wires to fix a famous tax fraud involving his fsther-ln-law . . . The Communist Daily Worker has quietly purged its veteran Washington correspondent, Rob Hall. He's been replaced by a new party-liner, named Harrv Raymond . . . The senate foreign relations committee Is investi gating the bad propaganda ef fect of certain Hollywood movies. Worst example is "The Desert Rat," which glorified Nazi Field Marshal Rommel. However, the state department has surveyed sll Its embassies' PLEADS FOR RED CROSS Gov. Paul L. Patterson urged Tuesday that everyone give generously to the Red Cross "to represent humanity in action to how today the man who repre- wnrrevw nein u need- sented it In th ivnato hari minrt. ed. led a reiim ot terror and ultrh. sir. ana Mrs. M. J. yt' are now conducting- a a.rtJ meetings at Centrsl LutM u oervices sre held 7:45 each night, ai.. o'clock next Sunday bjJ MILITARY kii - ---. ri l II AND VETERAN i Wednesday, March 4 Adlr.inlstnUve meetliur r Thursday, March S ORC iWM Bit XJKJLl slrvi Organised Naval Rutn.Ll division at Naval and Hansi iOa Reserve training center. Battery o. rand AAA. AW J talion, at Quo nut huu 1 Company D. 162nd inr.n, . P mem. Oregon Nstlon.i n.."l Salem armory. "Open Hon nonor worm war I vetenu Vf tnhll Invito 'iUi M Friday, March S Seabee reserves, at v..v.....l line Corps Reserve trslntniajal Saturday. Bandar. Man i ... Naval Air Reserve miT .1 not t kv.i ii. - -. . .wulif, Helllesen In Korea Fmm Korea has come km J a former Salem Army and Air J Uesen, to serving there mth tfcTJ corps. Th9 colonel, on 1948. is a veteran r wuvl n with 40 months spent in xJ3 As a reservist he active duty in 1841. ami ,.. zl vwvjr rcr &U1CC. EtUK&i was at Command and Grawal Sua school at Port Leavenworth, jr., before leaving for the US Prior to that he wu uh,JT.; Sixth Army Headquarters, Pmidit in ami r I MUCldCO, laill. and reports to the senators that American movies have done frl more good than harm in aid ning mends for -us aboard , congressman Velde will itr Hearings on communlsti Hollywood the end of Mutt Velde's committee has slmir slapped subpoenas on tl wit nesses . . . Velde is so Jltttn over the criticism he's been Ki ting from the clergjr that be'i even dodging the press cora it the hope people will forget hi blunders . . . Frederick-Billlne Lee of Woodstock. Vt.. mil deputy administrator of CAA,i slated to be new CAA admlniiJ trator ... (CoprrUhl. itsi) BV H. T, WEBSTER The Unseen Audience gjj B I B Z7 J HAS NO TV AERIAL. TtAT ' ve ne towns ecceNme 1 "its. ne tpuetK ASA BOY AT HORSeKADtSh OH I ma rANCAKcS AND DlONT IIKC TO, 50WF PEOPLE 1IN- HE HAS BOOKS M rS HOUSE. BUT THATS PROBABLY MALICIOUS No Wage Increase Says General Electric New York (T A spokesman for the General Electric com pany, says GE has given the CIO International Union of Electricsl Workers "ro Indlcs tion that sny wsge adjustment wss contemplated at this time." The statement came- st the end of Tueidsy's opening ses sion ot wage talks. The IUE sought an increase of 21 cents an hour and other benefits for its 71,000 workers In 60 of GE's plants In the nation. The union ssys GE production workers now aversge $1.83 an hour for straight time. V.. wnrrever ne'J a neea- sented it in the senate had start-1 I .. a.. v, I ed." led a reign of terror and witch-1 " " W " V ' j i .-"A I - ,' - ' r- ' - i -.1 V"TTv J 51 f; j. 1 Q,U fWim 1 hi ' fin e Jin?v?i7fP1 I Can fro II v lecaiA In sJAW ..,.. e-i al. u y ttsest a a. . w . . . --- -...ww in. tt, i. a.vjhvr wv. mwn i iv AK T otters implt Mrfcina imci " " ' v. IP