Tag Capital Journal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINVARING, Editor end Publihr ! GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus ' Published avery afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. Van LHHi Wirt Itntot AuMtotaS mm aal If OaMas Itaia. ; . Th auoelaUd Praia U uclu.lT.lr ratlUd Ibi i w for ubllclloa 11 uii dUpiUhu endllxl to it w uuralw anoHMl tat tkl mpt w 1m am aaallalua Uunln, SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Sr CarrlM: UontbU. Il.tti en Monthi, T.Mi pin t.r. Jl JJ. Jf"1 ilk. Linn. Btatra. clemi ud Yamhill CouoIIm: Moolhlr, Wei Sti M.M: Out Ytir. WOO. Br MiU IU.wh.r. In Oimobi llkM ?w? I1.M; Oil ror. 113.00. Br Vkll CniUKl. Orwon: Iianthlr, ll.Hi Bll MooVlu, 740; On. Yr, 111.00. . ' NEWBRY'S HOSPITAL FLIP-FLOP, Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry has come up with a plan to scuttle the plan of rebuilding the old hospital building at the state hospital and instead give first priori ty to the geniatrics building in or near Portland. The rebuilding of the old hospital building was decided upon by the former board of control composed of the then Governor Douglas McKay, now secretary of the interior, Newbry and former state treasurer Walter J. Pearson. ' , All three members of the former board, at a meeting in December, more than a month following the November election, approved the plan and an observer at that meet ing was the present . Governor Paul L. Patterson. It was the opinion of the board at that time that the Portland hospital, approved by the people at the Novem ber election, was a matter that should be disposed of by the legislature and therefore did not Include the pro posed 13,000,000 hospital in its Jbuilding program. Tuesday, out of a clear iky, Newbry proposed that first priority be taken from the state hospital recon struction and given to the Portland project even though he joined with his former colleagues in approving the building program which left the geniatrics hospital to the consideration of the legislature. ' The former board adopted a long-range program under which it is proposed to rebuild the center wing of the hospital, together with a section in front of the present hospital which will be connected with the present adminis tration building. A third story would be added to this latter building under the plan and a new kitchen, bakery and refrigerating plant installed. During the 1956-57 biennium it is proposed to rebuild . the south section of the old hospital, where women are not housed. During the next biennium the north section would be rebuilt, and when the entire hospital is rebuilt patients now housed in several old buildings, which are virtually f iretraps, can be transferred into the new hospital. ' . ' Secretary of the Board Roy Mills stated at the meet ing that the increased number of elderly people requiring tiiMirtfto1i?itinn wmiM rmiMrlv fflt friA PArtlanrl faiir.it.iiT.inn And the caseload in the Salem hospital would not be reduced materially.- ..... Just what prompted Secretary of State Newbry to suddenly propose a switch in priorities? Governor Patter son was clearly taken by surprise and said that he could certainly come to no decision with the proposal thrown at him without previous notice. Rebuilding of the old hospital at the state hospital has been needed for a long time, and certainly this is no time for Newbry to throw a monkey wrench into well thought out pians In which he himself participated. The rebuilding of the old hospital building should go on as scheduled, and the board of control should urge the legislature to follow the priority program as outlined by the former board of control, despite the sudden flip flop of Secretary Newbry. , TITO'S VISIT TO LONDON One can feel the embarrassment of official Britain across 6000 miles of intervening space over the visit of Dictator Tito of Yugoslavia. To say that the Britons feel "mixed emotions" about the incident is probably putting It mildly indeed. For Tito is .not only a dictator but a communist dic tator. And not only that, but a bad one even by those standards. He has oppressed his people, purged his oppo nents, persecuted the church. Almost anything you want to say about Stalin will fit Tito, on a more modest scale, commensurate with his opportunities. , Why, then, is he welcome to a democratic country like Britain, to be greeted by the queen, by Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and other dignitaries with every mark of respect if not of affection? Because, whether it appears to make sense or not, Tito Is an anti-Moscow communist and therefore a most help ful ally of the west. When America and Britain began their nervous overtures our more "realistic" observers warned of a probable double cross. Tito was that kind of a guy, they pointed out, and with ample justification. But regardless of v hat kind of a guy Tito was or is, he had made a definite break with Moscow, which prob ably hates him with even more fervor than it does Churchill or Eisenhower. So he must work with us to save his own hide, and he has. He is even veering our way and against communist ideology in abandoning the collective farm scheme. . So Britain is fully justified in rolling out the carpet for one of the free world's most valuable allies, and in taking the most elaborate precautions for his safety, for Mobcow would like nothing better than to assassinate him in London. It may be hard to justify to the fastidious, but it is literally true that in a fight for one's life, which is what we are in, one can't be too choosy about his associates. In top as in low level politics, stranee bed fellows develop, Tito being Hear Chase On Conflicts Portland W The Oregon Education Association, holding its annual meeting here, Tues day urged the legislature to re verse itself and approve a state-owned educational televi sion station for Oregon. This action came on a mo tion to tell the board of trus tees to send such a resolution to the legislature. The delegates heard Stuart Chase, author and economist, tell of the causes of conflict He said such study is into one of the neglected fields of knowl edge. Conflicts can be offset, he said, by various means and he cited labor policies of Stand ard Oil of New Jersey aa one mt them: workers are treated as neither the first nor the last. human beings, the employes work as a team and there is two-way communication among tne employes. On schoolroom problems. irann u. Mclntyre ol Los An geles isaid schools can't be blamed altogether for what pupils do, because "SO percent of all children we deal with are below average that's what average means." But, he add ed, good behavior is the rule and not the exception among modern cnuaren. Classroom teachers elected as president Kvald Turner of Pendleton. FRATUM CMJB DINNER Pratum The Pratum Com munity ciud is sponsoring a Swiss steak dinner and enter tainment at the Pratum school from I to 8 p.m. Friday, March SO. Rudolph deVrles. Mrs. Tom Jones and Everett Fralzer are in charge. LEGISLATORS at Sun by Murray Wodt jW eb2l sMpbiiidti J CflP tp. Alfred H.CoRBETTy -y . Damocrat 'VA U M ALL. Wi . ; 1 lto. Sankope.,lPler, common 'iUer MV ' fjjr tyubUcan, sgjjy friends 'SLt-' POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Take a Kid to Circus Even If You Have to Borrow One By HAL New York -If you don't have a child, borrow one and take it to a circus this spring. It's a real adventure. And you'll learn a lot. Such as: 1. A child's stomach will hold more than a lady's handbag. 2. A child has a more civil ized and humane sense of en tertainment than the average grownup. Frances and I made the ex periment recently. We took our God-child. Nina, to the Polack Brothers vest-p o c k e t circus, which raises about one million dollars a year for the Shriners' fund to help crippled children. Nina is blonde and five and serious and pretty. The trip to the circus was partly to help her recover from a great sad ness that threatens to Diigm her life young her desperate inability to grow pigtails. "I know a little girl only four years old, and she's got pig tails," Nina has been saying. 'And I am half-past-live, and dent have any. I don't under stand that." The circus was in the Flush ing Armory, and when we en tered .1 hesitated, uncertain whether to stay or run. The wooden stands were packed with-hundreds of screeching, ANOTHER CABINET OFFICE (Albany Democrat-Herald) President Eisenhower's re quest of congress for the. cre ation of anotner xuu-ueagea department in the cabinet brings to mind the fact that this is the first enlargement of the presidential advisory body in 40 years. The last depart ment was added in 1913, when the department of commerce and labor, installed In the cab inet in the Theodore Roosevelt administration in 1903, was split into two departments. The new cabinet officer, if congress adopts the suggestion, will be known as the secre tary of health, education and welfare. Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby of Texas, now FSA ad ministrator, is slated to be the new secretary. She will be the second woman to hold a cabinet post; the only one to date was Frances Perkins, who was Franklin Roosevelt's sec retary of labor. Only three departments have been added since 1849, when the department of the interior was created,. , , There has long been agita tion for the raising of the pres ent so-called office of educa tion to full cabinet stature, also for a secretary of health in the cabinet. The combination is a reasonably logical one, as such matters go, and the selection of Mrs. Hobby promises an ef ficient, businesslike start for the new department. BY H. T. WEBSTER- The Unseen Audience r i wwsNT seeing j "fiAT FLYINQ SVJCf.ft RieHrorJffitrTv SCREEN I VJOUUDNT peueve ir i m l tHr-e iJA ' ' ' ImKi mi Hi Till H.ir- ... .a THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salens, Onto BOYLE crying, yowling, yammering little young hopes of tomorrow. As we threaded our way up the stands trying to avoid stepping on all but the larger children we passed a tiny lost girl walling "Mommy! Mom my!" We finally found cramped seats next to a fat, lost mother, who was calling: "Mary! Mary! Where are you?" Ever the Boy Scout, I said, "Excuse' me, ma'am. I'll get your baby." I went back, re trieved the lost girl, and put her in the lap of the fat lady, who immediately said indig nantly, "what are you doing? This isn't my Mary." "I'm Susie," said the little girl, and added accusingly: "You're not my mommy. Mom my! Mommy! Mommy!" Well, I checked Susie with the lost-and-found department and when I got back the fat lady had found her Mary, and was happily shaking her until her teeth rattled. The circus began, quieting the chaos into bedlam. In the next two hours I tried gamely to match Nina's appetite. Be tween us we consumed two bot tles of pop, two bags of pop corn, two sticks of ice-cream, a box of taffy candy, and two scones of pink spun cotton candy. "Oh, this is fun this is weal ly, weally fun," said Nina, Salem 24 Years Ago By BEN March IS, 1929 Report are in circulation that Salem high school will be suspended from participation in state interscholastic athletics for a year as the result of a "riot" staged at Willamette university Friday night follow ing the Salem-Chemawa dis trict game. . Widening of Church street north of South Mill creek will be a feature of the improve ment and beautification to go with construction of the South Church street bridge. The new concrete bridge will be 155 feet shorter than the pres ent wooden structure. , Patrons of Elkins school in Polk county have voted to close the school and transport pupils to Monmouth school next year. Elkins school is an earlier school in this locality, being the first . rural school operated for Oregon Normal training purposes. - Salem Woman's club, now with nearly 300 members, has ffi PROBABLE A COMMERCIAL?) in a MNUTt? Hexjlusee a SCOOP OF BIAHERS MT.BERCST ICE CREAM APPEAR' OH TWT SMCER.TheH A VOiCC WILL , Taste rr will betk icccream THAT FLICS AND NOT TFC cai i-re waving her cotton candy and leaving half of it in my hair and left ear.-. She loved the merry clowns and the animal acts, the trained chimpanzees, the gentle ele phants, the galloping camels, the beautiful ladles on the prancing white horse. ' But the high wire walkers and the trapeze artists made her nervous. Such acta thrill adults because a mis-step or poor timing may bring death to the performers. Nina only felt sorry for them. She could hardly bear to watch them. She gripped Fran ces and me tightly by the hand and her little palms were damp with perspiration. "I hope they don't tall," she whispered. She got her biggest laugh from a capering brown horse that came apart and disclosed two men. "Oh, I knew it was a trick," she said, bobbing her head wisely.. "I know there was somebody in it all the time. They didn't fool me." As we left, I was hiccuping biliously, but Nina said she was hungry. The man with the cot ton candy came by, and Fran ces said, "I think I'll buy. some more, and rub it in your hair. You have no idea how distin guished you look with a touch of pink at your temples." At the door, Nina paused and looked back wistfully at the wonderland we were leav ing. ! "Thank you for bringing me, Hal and Francie," she said, po litely. "It was weal nice weally nice. Can we come again tomorrow?" MAXWELL admitted 26 - new since September. members T. M. Hicks has started con struction of a modern, one story garage building on the west side of Commercial street between Center and Marion streets. Salem Automobile company will occupy the new, $20,000 structure. Virginia Cleaver' Bacon, new Oregon state librarian, has ar rived here from Portland and will immediately assume her duties. , i . ChemeKetans will make a six mile hike to Calapooyia burials' mounds near Tangent, south of Albany, next Sunday. They will leave Salem by bus and travel to a point on the Calapooyia river where the hike starts. a - Medford won the state in terscholastic basketball cham pionship Saturday night from Astoria with a score of 35 to 14. Norwegian CALCIUM NITRATE Now Available in Any Amount VALLEY FARM STORE 3MS Silverton Rd. ' WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Super Carriers Subject of ! Behind the Scenes Struggle BY DREW Washington The j o 1 n t chiefs of staff are sitting most of this week in a difficult has sle over the $4,250,000,000 budget cut handed them out of the blue by Secretary of De fense Wilson. The most import ant and immediate saving they can accomplish will also be the most controversial super air plane carriers. The question of carriers has created storms in congress and helped bring the resignation of one defense secretary Louey Johnson. - Nevertheless, it re mains a fact that the defense budget cannot be cut by trim- mine down every item a little bit: it must be cut by drastical ly trimming the. least-needed weapons of defense a lot All the secret studies show that the supercarrier is in this category. Not only is it least needed, but many military ex perts consider it a liability. It takes too many other vessels to protect it. This was the report of the British Joint chiefs of staff following NATO naval maneuves in the Baltic. Though the report was held up in Europe by the office of Vice Adm. Arthur D. Davis, it can be revealed that the British claimed it would be "suicidal" to throw naval aircraft against Russia's superior land based planes, and that carriers are needed "mainly to protect ship ping." On top of this, the U. S. navy has suppressed vitally import ant facts about the poor show ing of carrier planes in Korea. By stamping all embarrassing statistics "top secret," the navy has been able to conceal the facts 'not only from the public but from congress, and perhaps even from Secretary Wilson's budget pruners. THE AIR SCORE IN KOREA However, this column, after deleting details which might aid the enemy, is now able to re port the score on navy planes vs. air force planes from the Korean outbreak until Jan. 1, 1953 1. Slightly under 75 per cent of our combat aircraft were land-based. Yet these land- Portland Boy Becomes 14th Traffic Victim Portland VP) Four-year-old Frank Jachetta, the city's 14th traffic victim this year, died in a hospital Tuesday. , He was injured Monday night when struck by a car as he crossed an intersection with his grandfather. The grand father suffered a broken leg, FOR EARLIER PASTURE! LOWER FEED COSTS! Apply Horwegian CALCIUM NITRATE ...NOW! Early pasture and more of it means rower feed costs and more profit to you. CALCIUM NITRATE goes right to work to promote pasture growth in eold, wet weather! It doesn't need to be converted by soil bacteria; it's in the form your pasture grasses need and use ... Nitrate! By applying CALCIUM NITRATE now, y0l the Jump on cold weather . . . start your pasture gras. .rowing right way. CALCIUM NITRATE contains 20 water-soluble calcium . . improves soil and leaves no acid residue in your soil. ... ' ' Readily available . . . Easy to apply! SEE YOUR FERTILIZER DEALER - TODAY! QUED aatOM based planes flew 83 per cent . .t- ...... i r,lv missions. OX U1W uw v- , m.. un..inina 9!i ner cent of A II l cm ..' - the planes based on carriers flew only n per cem w. missions. -i Th tiaw's few land-based planes did not measure up to the air force, ui au ui tuiuu i nn lanrt. the HIW U1BI1CB WW- ' , , - operated 4 per cent. Yet it flew only one-tentn oi i per " the missions. The air force, with less than 60 per cent of the land-based planes, new o per cent of the missions. The ma rines, with 12 per cent, flew 15 per cent of the missions. The remaining 18 per cent were flown by our U. N. allies. 3. The navy has assigned seven carriers to the Korean war, yet the average number of carriers actually on duty has been less than four. The others have been ferrying back and fnrth nr tied nn at Pacific bases for repairs. Even the four car riers in the battle zone mum interrupt flight operations about half the time in order to take on supplies and make snip board repairs. 4. One-fourth of the navy's I'.nmhit anrtlei" have been re stricted to circling over the xarrlen nrotectlve cover. In other words, the navy's seven carriers assigned to tne .orean hpon in the battle zone only half the time, have kept their planes on aecic nau of this time, then nave sem nnlv three fourths of their planes against the enemy. The balance have been usea to pro tect the carriers. ' 5. Of the 615 MIG fighters shot down over Korea, the navy has tinorori nnlv seven. This is no reflection on navy pilots ho are actually Detter trainee, than air force pilots. The real rMnn that the naw has in ferior planes, and has ordered its pilots to avoid tangling wiui the MIGs. 6. When the build-up of Rus sian nlanes behind the Yalu became a genuine menace about a year ago, tne three services were asked what they would do in esse of a communist air attack on South Korea. The navy replied that this "could well result in redeployment southward meaning in non military language a navy withdrawal, this wan t mean rha naw'a rarrier task force would run for cover out of fear, but the blunt truth is that they are vulnerable to an air blitz. ' -' ., COST 7 TIMES GREATER TOhnf fnttlrM these fanta even rnore shocking is that a carrier Q t3 CUED ( Wodnsaday, Alar en is, 1953 force costs seven times more money, takes nine times more manpower and uses up 18 times more fuel than an equivalent group oi air zorce Dombers. This comparison, incidentally, takes into account the air force base with all it facilities and defenses. Not even the most economy, minded experts, however, ar arguing that carriers should be abolished. Small carriers are vitally needed to hunt down and destroy enemy submarines. - The navy has acknowledged that its. primary mission la to keep the sea, lanes open and guard our coast against subma. rines. Despite this, the navy gave up eight other vessels, in. eluding .three anti-submarine and three anti-mine vessels, in order to build the second super-carrier. Not only are the supercarriers too big to fight submarines economically, but they can't even squeeze through the Panama or Suez canals. This means they must take the long way around South Amer ica and Africa to get from ocean to ocean. - ? The navy has frankly adver tised its supercarriers as float ing air bases to launch offen sive strikes against an enemy, Inside fact, however, is that all Russia's strategic targets have 0 been moved deep inland out of range of the navy's longest range bombers. The navy couldn't get close enough to hit the nearest important target, Moscow, except by sending bombers on one-way suicide missions, with no thought of re turning. Carrier planes, of tourse, could blast the minor, coastal targets, but Secretary of De fense Wilson's experts question whether this is worth the tre mendous cost of the supercar riers. In order to sell congress and the public on the supercarriers, the navy has spread the propa ganda that its carriers are not tied down to land bases. At the same time, the navy has taken care to classify as "top secret" a list of 26 carrier bases in the Mediterranean area alone. These 26 bases no not include the navy's regular fleet anchor ages in the Mediterranean, nor . a duplicate' string of NATO . bases, nor the vast network of navy bases in the Pacific. Carrier planes actually land and take off from the 26 bases, which are scattered throughout North Africa, Spain, Portugal, Italy and Turkey. Huge sup plies of aviation gas, ammuni tion andv spare parts are also kept on hand at the navy bases for its carrier forces. If the carriers are not tied down to these bases, as the navy claims,: Wilson's aides see no reason why all 26 can't be abolished. (Coprrllht, lMI) -r u OSLO I I f