THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, BUtm, Orefon Friday, Mtreh 10, 195S Capital jtaJournal An Independent NewspopwrEsrobllshed 1681 1 ' ' BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher' , . GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus : ; Published every ofttrnoon except Sunday of 444 Che ' . meketa St., Solem. Phonei: Business. Newsroom, Wont ; Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. fell Uutf wire etntw t Atmltut rm ea tU MM Mat ' Th AuocUUd PrM It euleiltflr aaUUet U MM wt lir waU44ll at . eli tin HUpatchM ereelUa MUM MkwvtM MM Is tale rM art elie un vubliiha taenia. SUISCRIPTION RATISt r Cerrtor: Wonthlr, ll.Ni an KeBtki, W Mi Om TMr, IUM. r IfeU la aferlaa. Polk, Linn, Butoa, Clialugue UK YMtaUl OeuaUait llaeUUr, Mu tt MoalM. tmi out Tr, w oo. Br Min uitm la onioa: mutely. i: au amine, mm: om rr, ii j. w. Br wu oauiai Oman afaatair, si-Mi au afaatai, IM: OB, TW, VtO.OO, WEST GERMANY JOINS THE WEST ' The West German bundestag, which correspond to the U. S. house of representatives and the British house of commons, has just approved two treaties under whicn that government is to arm and furnish 600,000 men to a two million member international army for the defense of western Europe. ' The votes were 224 to 165 and 226 to 164, which will appear somewhat close to Americans but which are hailed as decisive over there. They represent a triumph for West Germany's elderly chancellor, Konrad Adenauer, who insisted upon ratification and finally carried it over the most formidable opposition. Against ratification were all the communists, many of the socialists, former Nazis who want no cooperation with the countries that beat Germany in the war, and the cynical "neutralists" who want to do nothing, like their numerous counterparts in France, thinking that if you ignore a crisis it will go away and let you alone. There have been times in recent months when it looked like Adenauer would lose and that West Germany would .refuse to help defend western Europe, but he held dog gedly to his course and has now been vindicated by a favorable vote. Whether the death of Stalin and the truculent attitude promptly shown by the new dictator influenced the Ger man vote cannot be known to a certainty, but it probably did. Anything that would indicate greater danger of Russian attack would make a naturally virile people like -the German react positively rather than negatively as ; the French might. , Two questions remain: Whether the upper house of the German parliament will follow the lead of the usually dominant lower, and whether a threatened court fight over the constitutionality of the vote will seriously delay the armament project. But the project is over its highest nurdie and its luiiiument now appears extremely prob able. ,' - ... -.! .'. . This could well be the turning point In European rearm ament France has been holding back, but faced with a new German army anyway the French are likely to go along.- Otherwise they will sink into a minor position in Europe. If both France and Germany arm the west will I; toon acquire enough strength to make a Russian attack considerably less attractive and more dangerous than : now. Maybe within a few years Europe can defend itself : and the American troops can come home. LEGISLATORS as Seen by Murray Wade PQQR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER "iwuwvwww mm vac TJerPat DOOLEY Ikutnomaj democrat Pfc-filEONDAVlS Legislative Many 'Years far r&ir V US1 MU .Cl 1111 CI I J UN UltW Ctmc Warl fief Morlnl) Rep. obertJ. TEW'ARD Raws Jumpers and Other hovseShow fitcck WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Eisenhower Finally Tipped' Balance for Loan to Brazil Y DREW PEARSON. SPRING OFFICIALLY ARRIVES i Promptly at 2:01 p.m. Friday, winter officially d parted and spring returned. Winter's reign lasted since ). me winter scoistice on December 21, and spring came with the vernal equinox when the sun poked its way over the .equator, ana moved northward from the southern hemi aphere. The last hours of winter saw a whirling blizzard in the high California Sierras, and about 300 motorist were "reported stranded on the two main mountain passes, Donner and Echo Summits. ' i Winds up to 80 miles an hour whipped the new storm into towering drifts, and a new storm was believed mov ing southward from the Gulf of Alaska. Only in the central plains did spring announce its arrival with a warm kiss as southerly breezes swept the prairie from Canada to Mexico. But the weather man warns of another cold spell for the middle west. The dying winter was one of the mildest on record in many areas, including the Pacific northwest, especially in Oregon. The coldest day in Salem was November 28 when the thermometer dropped to 15 above, the next coldest 24 above on February 24 and March 1. Most of the time the thermometer hovered around the freezing point, 82 above. This area escaped snow and sleet and dreaded "silver thaw." Many of the rose bushes and other deciduous shrubs still retain their last year's foliage,' in spite of frost, while apricots, plums and some peaches are in bloom and the leaf buds on the maple, oak and other trees are swell ing. Camellias were late in blooming but are on their way out. Wild flowers are in delayed flowering. Spring seems here, with perhaps some setbacks as winter lingers in the lap of spring, as "Night's eandlei are burned out and jocund day ' Standi tiptoe on the mlitjr mountain top." A WELL DESERVED "OSCAR" It is hard for the layman to understand the thenrlea on which film "Oscars" are awarded but the honoring of one of moviedom's founding fathers Cecil B. DeMille, whose "Greatest Show on Earth" became his first Oscar winner in 40 years of epic making was well deserved. It is one of the few times Hollywood has honored one of its greats while he was still living to appreciate it. It was therefore the only surprise of the evening. The 72-year-old movie pioneer was the big star of the silver jubilee Academy Awards Thursday night and was wildly cheered by the film colony audience as for the first time the ceremony was carried by television to mil lions of people, most of whom were delighted with the ver dict pronouncing the "Greatest Show" the best picture of 1952. De Mille, whose 70 pictures previously had won only in box offices, admitted being the most surprised of them all. "High Noon" was the favorite and its win was expected. Among the spectacular productions created by De Mille which have won high public favor duriing his long career are: The Ten Commandments; The Volga Boatman; The King of Kings; The Sign of the Cross; Cleopatra; The Crusades; The Plainsman; The Buccaneer; Union Pacific; Northwest Mounted Police; Reap the Wildwind; Story of Dr. Wassell; Unconquered; Samson and Delilah ond other photoplays. Only the late D. W. Griffiths had produced more spec stacular pictures but Hollywood let him go to his grave unhonored by the Academy despite the success of his pro ductions which included The Birth of a Nation; Intoler ance; Hearts of the World; Way Down East; Broken Blossom, Orphans of the Storm and America. Washington Some will-o'. the-wisp, sleight-of-hand diplo macy reminiscent of Truman days took place backstage be fore the Eisenhower adminis tration granted the recent $300,000,000 loan to Brazil. The diplomat didn't know It, but it was Ike himself, not the state department, who finally OKd the loan. And the man who deftly secured Ike's OK was Fortune Publisher C. D. Jackson, now head of psycho logical warfare. ' The inside story indicates the difficulty of forming a defiiv ite policy on foreign loans, es. pecially to Latin America. Sec retary of State Pullet an. nounced some time .ago that the republicans would push the good-neighbor policy.. But at the same time he himself al most reneged on the Brazilian loan, and in a conversation with suave Brazilian Ambas sador Walter Moreira Salles, the new secretary of. state made this rather undiplomatic remark: "Don't forget, Mr. Ambassa dor," Dulles said, "the republi can! are in control now. We're not democrats. We don't buy friendship." "And . Brazil's ' friendship," snapped the' ambassador, "is not for sale." . DOWN ON BRAZIL Earlier the ambassador had met with something of a re buff from Undersecretary of ute Treasury Randolph Burgess when he called to discuss the loan. '' "My boss doesn't like Brazil very much," Burgess stated bluntly, and went on to tell how the M. A. Hanna company of which Secretary of the Treasury George Humphrey was long the president, had been negotiating for the man ganese concession- in the terri tory of Amapa, North of the Amazon, when suddenly it found, that Bethlehem Steel got the concession Instead, Undersecretary Burgess, for merly of the National City Bank, a company which nego tiated a sour loan of f 100,000, 000 to Peru in the 1920's, was one of the chief opponents of the current loan to Brazil. Fin ally he proposed that Brazil take one-third or $100,000, 000 Instead -of $300,000,000. Simultaneously. Ass i s t a n t Secretary of State Linder lec tured the Brazilians about not letting American oil companies operate in Brazil. "What does Brazil mean." he asked, "by blocking oil exploi tation and then turning round and importing $280,1)00,000 worth of oil a year? You'll never be solvent." When the result of these ne gotiations was cabled back to Brazil, it hit the front pages with a bang. "U. S. Abandons Brazil!" flared the headlines. Other papers talked of Yankee imperialism wanting oil in re turn for a loan. It was at this point the am bassador called on Secretary Dulles, held an hour-long ies slon teminding him that Ar- gentlna no friend of the USA had received a healthy loan, that Brazil had come into two world Wars on the aide of the United States while Argentina flirted with the enemy. The ambassador's potent appeal par- iiauy converted Dulles. But in the end. Nelson Rocke feller, who knows Latin-Amer ican problems better than any one else around Washington, put the facta before C. D. Jack son Inside the White House, and Jackson got them to Elsenhow er. Overnight, the President acted where his secretary of state and secretary of the treas ury had delayed. The full loan to Brazil was OK'd. INSIDE RUSSIA U. S. diplomats and Intelli gence experts have worked out some theories on why the new Kremlin has been shoot log down and bulldozing U.S. British planes, but so far no definite plan has been evolved as to what we should do about it. Probable reasons behind the Red brazenness are: 1. To create the Impression Inside Russia that the Soviet is being attacked: must defend itself from the outside world 2. To Impress the satellite countries where the Kremlin is weakest that the new Kremlin is afraid of nothing, would deal ruthlessly with sat ellite revolt. 3. To impress the -outside world that while the new Kremlin is willing to negotiate it's not afraid of anyone. .Chief danger in all this is .'that a weak and uncertain Kremlin may blunder into war. Malenkov probably does n't want war, first because he doesn't entirely control the Red army, second because he doesn't control the secret po lice. But a dictator who isn't sure of himself, and who re lies on airplane incidents, can always "incident" himself into war. On the other hand, the fluid condition inside Russia pre. sents a golden opportunity for tne united States to pry open some diplomatic doors, later widen them. If we don't move now, then our only alternative is to prepare for war later. So far we're not moving. MERRY-GO-ROUND Quoth the London Times' John Miller when he heard Ike planned to send thrice married Fleur Cowtes, wife of Look publisher Mike Cowles, as special ambassador to Queen Elizabeth's coronation: "Who does he think is getting crown ed the Duchess of Windsor?" (Divorced women are not pre sented at the court of St. James's.) . . , Foreign Minister. Molotov has a brother-in-law living In Connecticut, . Sam Carp, who doesn't share his ideas and does a pretty good business running a filling sta tion . . . Egyptian Ambassador Abdul Rahim, who was ap pointed by King Farouk, is be ing replaced by Ahmed Hus sein, representing strong-man Nagulb ... Tip to the RFS: Take a good look at the pro posed loan to financing mining of iron ore at Cedartown, Ga. Old-time . ore people say they've got ore piled up on the ground . . . Congressional friends of Bob Tatt aren't against GOP Charlman Wesley Roberts as much as they are Dallas Auxiliary Dallas Initiation of nine new members was held Wed nesday by the auxiliary of Dallas No. 320$, Veterans of Foreign Wars. New members came from Dallas, Independ' ence, and valsetz. Initiated were: Mrs. Thomas Franklin, Mrs. Richard Ben son, Mrs. Lillian Frink, all of Dallas; Mrs. Elaine Rogers, Mrs. Barbara New, Mrs. Donna Jean Agard, and Mrs. Mary E. Turenne, all of Independence; and Mrs. Lillian Cheney, of Valsetz. Following the initiation cere monies there were refresh ments and a social hour during which greetings were extended to all those who had become new members during 1982 and 1803. Mrs. Gary Hanson. Mrs, Ray Carlson and Mrs. Eva Lar son were in charge of refresh ments. The meeting was brought to an end with a silver drill, the proceeds of which were con tributed to the Oregon Cottage Fund. . . . - Guests from Valsetz and In dependence were present for the initiation. New York Iff) Should worn en who have stayed married to the same husband 25 years get a medal? "In Industry a man who works for the same firm 25 years gets a pin to wear in hi lapel,' a wife complained to me recently. "But who rout ed him out of bed every morn ing end got him to his Job on time all through those years? His wife. "And what 1 her reward? Nothing! Nobody ever thinks of honoring ber with a pin or medal." This does seem- unfair. A lady with a quarter century of matrimonial seniority toaay has had to ateer her child bus- By HAL IOYLI band through troubled waters indeed a great depression, two and a half world , wars, and a big Inflation. She certainly deserves some Kind of recognition for long and valorous service on the homefront All she often gets now is a tired orchid and din nr out at beefsteak Joe's neiihborhood -diner. That Is hardly enough. Well, how about a pin or medal then? I surveyed a num. ber of married couples on this point, and regret to say I found nothing but aisagreemem. The wives, by and large, were against the idea of wear ing the same pin, medal or Salem 14 Years Ago By BIN MAXWELL No 'Equal Rights' for This College Student Los Angeles w.RJ One of the men student , at Los Angeles Metropolitan junior college balked at joining an "equal rights" movement started by the 40 other male students on the campus where there are 700 women. "I can't understand those guys," he said. "I like being outnumbered." ADLAI VISITS FORMOSA Taipeh.Formosa W) Adlal Stevenson and President Chi ang Kal-Chek of Nationalist China conferred 42 minutes Friday shortly after the 10S2 U. S. Democratic presidential nominee arrived on his world tour.. against his close friend, Barak Mattlngly, wealthy St. Louis political boss. It was Matting ly who started the steam-roller for Dewey at Philadelphia in 1948. Recently he's been an unofficial patronage adviser to Herbert Brownell . . . Taftltes refer to Wes Roberts as "Mr, Peanuts." (Oopnltht, 1HI) APPLIANCE REPAIR CaU aa for prempt and expert wark an aU appliances Mayei Appliance Repair Phone 4-5S11 1SS Stale bU ato Matter the day. ate satatter Hie Hm t MMeltartaWBtace.. p you Nats oni snvKi Wl WILL AMSWIX YOUft CAU 3 Funeral Service Since 1171 keM MISS Church et Ferry SAUM, OtlOON March 20, 1939 Governor Charles A. Sprsgue has named the following per sons to the Willamette Basin commission created by the leg islature to cooperate with the federal government in con struction of the proposed $B6V 000,000 Willamette Valley pro- eet: Claude Buchanan, Corval- lis; O. D. Eby, Oregon City and Elmo B. Chase, Eugene. a . a Don Upohn, Capital Jour nal's Sips for Supper, mentions in his column for today that "the legislature did pass a law providing standards of purity for fortified wine. Only grade A canned beat may now . be used." An autolst driving on newly completed Monitor - Silverton road struck a lame horse that had wandered onto the high way and the- animal died on the road. The driver could not remove the animal and drove on to Silverton for help. Mean while a car occupied by Frank Lanham and his brother, Lloyd, came along and struck the dead horse. Both of the Lanhams were seriously injured and their car almost completely wrecked. - a a Frances Sparks of Silverton is winner of the Willamette valley drum majorette cham pionship contest sponsored by Salem Elks. a ' a a This evening Aldermen Da vid O'Hara and Ross Goodman will Introduce a resolution for council consideration whereby the city will purchase a small amount of privately owned land between Madison and Erlckson streets to allow open ing of McCoy avenue. ' Governor Charles A. Sprague praises the recently adjourned legislature because "no wild laws were enacted, no burden some taxes imposed." a a . a : Increased use In commercial fertilizer has recently been no ticed in Marlon county follow ing distribution of 90 tons of four per cent treble phosphate sponsored by the AAA farm program. . . a a a . Silas Galser, superintendent of Salem schools and a college friend of William O. Douglas, nominated by President Roo sevelt for the United States Su preme court, praises the nom inee as a "superior person. He is western In his point of view and not a radical In any way." a a a Salem high school students today paraded through down town Salem in celebrating the victory of their basketball team, winners of the state title championship. a . a a . ,s Antiques saved from : de struction when the state capi tol burned have been placed in the new statehouse in accord ance with plan of Mrs. C. C. Geer, state chairman of : the D.A.R. committee in charge of the project. DOERFLER NAMED TO FCC Washington () John C. Doerfler of West AlKs, Wis., was nominated by President Eisenhower Friday to be a member of the Federal Com munications Commission for an unexepired term running until July 1, 1954. medallion,, even If it were set with dlsmonds and who au "We should all look like po. llcemen wearing the tame badge," one said "women would not go for that at all." Td rather have a ' caik. bonus," said another. "The men are welcome to their 2S-yesr pins. Nothing would look bet ter to me on my 25th wedding anniversary than some nice fresh cash I could call my very own." . . "In any case, it oughtn't te be a pin," sighed a third, "it ought ot be a slave bracelet if anything.", . , Surprisingly, most husbanrt. I consulted were heartily in favflf tt u mHT fii aa . . jeer wives. The only reservation they made was that the cost naturally, should be borni either by their employer the government. - "My wife gives me pin money," said one henpecked Henry, "but not diamond pla money." 4 Ail tne nusbands were In. terested in the design ot the proposed : housewives' medal. Here are a few they suggested: 1. "A brass shield decorated with 25 silver teardrops to show the lady has given the best tears of her life." 2. "Patience on a monu. ment." 3. "The figure of a woman rising triumphant from a shat tered paycheck." 4. "It ought to be lust a Ion silver needle with the figure 25 on it standing for all the year my wife has been giving me a Dig neeaie." ... a 6. "An angel with a halo over her. head and a broken vacuum cleaner in her hanrii As you can see. any husband who gave his wife a medal with any of these weird designs on it would probably soon be pay ing alimony. One husband had a counter proposal. ' "If they give medals to 25- year wives they ought to give tnem to 25-year husbands, too," he said. "The wear and tear is equal on both parties. "And I know the design I want on my medal a mouse on a treadmill." Guess we'd better drop the whole Idea. Dangerous Trees A SPECIALTY Tops Trimmed and Removed Insured . .'. Ph. 36628 mmy ' buys this Dodge MORI LOAD SPACI High-side body available on H ton pick-up ha 44.18 cu.-ft. ca pacity to top of tailgate biggeot of any comparable wheelbaw truck. BIGGIST SIAT AND WINDSHIILD Room for 8 husky man in the wideet saat of any popular 1 truck. 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