pgt THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregt Monday, April 27, 195S Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1 888 1 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus. Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want ,' Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. . nil Lmm Win tmyim f tiwlilil tnm ul Vht IMM IMM, Ttt AwocliUd Prtu U fxdailTflr ulltlid to th uu for publication t all atwa dlipitcbw crdiu4 to U r otbuwlM tradlwa la thlj ptivr an ... alio un ualliad thtrala. t , SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 7 Cirritr: Monthly. !.: an Uontlu, W.Mi On, Tiu. Ill.Ofc Br Utll la Hirloa, Folk. Linn. Bwton, clackamu and Yamhill CounUu: Monthly, lot; 811 Month 4. SO; On Twr, W OO. Bj Mall IlMWhlro In OTMon: Monthlr. 11.00: Sil Month ' 10.00; On, Ytar, 111.00. Br Mull Ouuidt Oraton: Monthlr, I1J au Montlu, 17 JO; On, Tor, IU.00. WHY IDAHO FIGHTS HELlfS CANYON Why does a proposed government dam at Hells Canyon spark sucn a tremendous controversy wnen asms are built on the Columbia or lower Snake river with scarcely a political ripple? , Because the upper and middle Snake river is South Idaho's river to a large extent, the life blood of its eco nomic structure. Idaho's attitude is therefore probably more important than Oregon's, although each state right ly claims a half interest in the stream at tne point wnere Hells Canyon would be built ' Why is south Idaho so much more opposed to this dam than Oregon or Washington Is or would be of any other dam that might be proposed on a river flowing through or along the boundary of either state? There are three principal reasons. , ( ;'-'--" 1. Irrigation. Other states may view a river as a scenic attraction, a source of navigation or of power. When an Idahoan views a river he sees what he calls "waste water" and looks for a way to put it on the arid land of which his state has so much. Water rights are a vital part of an Idaho farmer's land title. Any threat to them, no matter how indirect, is like the clarion call or old, "The reacoats are coming." Idaho farmers have seen government bu reaus override local land interests in California. They are aware that there will always be many more people, hence much more political Influence on the lower Colum bia than on the upper Snake, if government snouia De come an important factor in the demand for Snake river water it might pay more attention to the demands for power or navigation than for irrigation In Idaho. Efforts to placate these fears have so far been groundless. , ; 2. Idaho is a conservative state, thoroughly behind "free enterprise" as against government operations. Ore gon may imagine it is conservative, but not in the sense Idaho is. Idaho's attitude toward public power is intensi fied by the fact that it has one of the best private power companies in the United States, Idaho Power. This com pany was a pioneer in rural electrification, with farmers paying the same rates as the townsfolk. This company has trebled its generating facilities since the end of the war. Its area has never had a power shortage, unlike the government power areas farther west. And the com pany pays both state income and property taxes. So gov ernment power is opposed by most of the people of South Idaho. Hells Canyon has been viewed in part as a scheme to foist public power on a region that doesn't want it, and is bitterly resisted on this ground also. HIS LITTLE RED HELPER ' 8. This is a selfish angle, but what people are unself ish? Idahoans believe a government plant at Hells Can yon will export the bulk of its current to the west coast, including California, that it will be committed on long term contracts before Idaho needs it, that it will be denied to Idahoans later when they do need it. Idaho Power company will build the five dams it proposed one at a time as needed, paying local taxes on them and using the power to benefit Idaho and nearby Eastern Oregon. All these factors combine to make Hells Canyon "fight in' words" to the people of South Idaho, whose congres sional delegation, state administration and people res olutely oppose the government project, making it ex tremely difficult for proponents to secure congressional approval. Congressmen, accustomed to solid local back ing for government spending projects, naturally hesitate to vote half a billion dollars the representatives of the locality say is not wanted. If America is destined eventually to be completely socialized South Idaho will be one of the last islands of free enterprise in the socialistic sea, dominated by in dependent farmers. The state has no debt, lots of money in its various funds, a balanced budget, and one of the last things its 1953 legislature did was to cut the state income tax. Incidentally its governor and present political strong man is a native Oregonian and graduate of our own state university, Len Jordan. N FILIBUSTER FUTILITY Oregon's partyless Senator Wayne B. Morse has an other record to brag about, that of being the champion filibusterer in the history of congress,, to add to his laurels as the greatest of senate windbags. He spouts words like a Yellowstone geyser does water. For 22 hours and 26 minutes keeping the senate in day and night ses sions, he babbled against the bill to establish state owner ship of oil-rich coastal tidelands. It was another of Oregon's junior senator's many essays in futility, but it achieved its real purpose, publicity. It got him back on the front pages of the nation's newspa pers and enhanced his nuisance value as an Ishmael of politics. Morse and other opponents of the coastal oil bill, have the same object that all other Congressional filibusters on other subjects have, the frustration by a minority of the will of the majority and use the same tactics most of them have denounced, that the southern senators used against the "civil rights" legislation. This time the ma jority is bi-partisan, the bill carries out the execution of a presidential and party platform pledge. In the weeks of debate, no new facts or even Ideas have been presented by Morse and other opponents over the legislation that has twice passed congress, but with less than two thirds vote to override the Truman vetoes. In addition nearly all the state governors, or attorneys general, or the legislatures of the opponents of the oil quit-claims bill are on record as favoring the measure. And the supreme court majority has expressly recognized the right of congress to deal with the matters of own ership and title of the coastal oil lands. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Time Is Much More Important In One's Lifetime Than Money By JACK RUTLEDGE for VAL BOYLE Crash Victim Better ' Liberty Leslie Eugene Pe terson, 820 Boone Rd., who wu critically Injured in motorcycle-truck collision Thursday, hat regained consciousness and li reported to be improving at the General hoapltal. Emmett Hoyt Henry, 4780 Skyline Rd, who was driving the motor cycle, was killed in the accident. ' The aenlor National AAU welghtllftlng c h a mplonships and Mr. America contest will be held at Indianapolis, Ind., on June 6 and 7. New York OT The biggest problem In everybody's lite is how to spend hii time. There is an old saying that "time Is - money."' But, of course, it isn't really. It is much better than money. The Philadelphia, mint never coined anything as precious as a month ... a week ... a day ... a minute . . . or a tin gle second ... if it is a second that gives your life a golden meaning. Time is much more import ant in the economics of a life time than money. It Is like money only in that fellow only begins to realize its true value when he doesn't nave enough of it left to buy the things in life he wants with it Most people learn to spend money the' hard way through trial and error. They make mistakes by buying the wrong things at the wrong time, and experience teaches them to do better. One of the sadnesses of liv ing is that many people never acquire the skill of spending their time as well as they do their money. They feel they have more time than money, and no man ever did. You can tost away a thou sand dollars, and earn it back, and be no poorer In spirit. But one wasted hour in prideful youth cannot be reclaimed, sometimes, by many .later bit ter, wistful, wiser years. . The hole in your heart and mind gapes unclosed forever. There seems such a wealth of time before you when you start. You don't really . know whether there will be much or little, except you can be sure that when the supply begins to run out you will regret it. This is the usual story of man. Parents try hard to teach their children the value of money. But few make any con certed effort to teach them the value of time. Probably be cause they don't know how. But the heart of both prob lems is the same. You use money to collect things houses and headaches, auto mobiles and vacation trips, bank accounts and income tax receipts. You collect from time, however, only memories, sour or sweet. There should be way to teach a child early to try to spend his time collecting the right kind of memories. A good life is one that has been expended in acquiring good memories, that bloom instead of fester in the mind. If a person doei that, it makes no difference whether his life work was repairing watches or building huge FirstlOODaysofFDRand Ike Will Be Compared Court Grants Request In Stasney Petition A.. B. Toepfer objected to the amount of money award ed him in connection with pro ceedings involving the - open ing of a "gateway" across a portion of his 'property dur ing a hearing before thecoun ty court Monday. However, the court, which had followed the law in pro ceedings of this nature, de cided to grant the request of John Stasney for the roadway involved. The board of reviewers who investigated the situation in volving .131 acre of land be longing to Toepfer, .awarded him $100. In addition Stasney had to pay the expenses of the board of viewers. The men involved in the "gateway" proceedings live on Route 1 ' out of Woodburn. Stasney said Els land lay in such a position that he could not easily reach the road and asked for an access lane over Toepfer'a adjoining property. dams or bridges. All of us can't design cathedrals, and a man can be equally happy if he only carves in driftwood. We all play at the edge of a vast ocean, as a clock within us slowly ticks toward silence. The ocean is time.. Bored people with bad mem ories often say, "I wish I knew a better way to kill time." But nobody ever really killed any time. Time just keeps creep ing up on them. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Why Not Let Released POWs Confront Russians qt U.N. Washington The most Im portant move the United Na tions could make in regard to Korea would be to call the ex changed war-hero prisoners to New York to have them tell their story. Let them appear face-to-face with Ambassador Vlshinsky, the Poles, the Czechs, other Communist satellites to tell how they were treated by their Communist captors. Let them also tell how their comrades-in-arms were treated, those who died of wounds, those who starved to death, those who are still in prison camps. The important thing for Con gress to remember is that this is a United Nations war. That's why these prisoners should re port to the United Nations, not to Congress. A congressional investigation would help cer tain senators grab the bead lines and re-election; but what the United States is interested in is getting the facts across abroad as well as at home. Most of the prisoners re turning from Red camps were not Americans. They lnclud- edishe nationalities fighting in the heterogeneous, sometimes cumbersome, United Nations Army. Such an army has cer tain disadvantages. But its one great advantage is that of mob ilizing world opinion against a big nation that picks on little nations. That was the reason why the United Nations voted to go into Korea in the first place. And the return of these wounded war prisoners to face Red representatives who caused the aggression should be the next dramatic chapter in the current unpleasant but neces sary battle to defeat Commun ism and win permanent peace. POLITICS COMES FIRST Utah's affable Republican senator, Arthur Watkins, is so anxious to claim credit for someone else's legislation that BY DREW PEARSON he has jeopardized the chances of 8000 G.I-s in Korea who are in a hurry to get tneir, w lan itlzpnshio. The legislation, aimed -at speeding up naturalization for eligible G.I.s, was written by Congressman Francis Walter, a Pennsylvania Democrat. Wal ler introduced his bill last January when Pentagon offic ials told him they were wor ried about what might happen if G.I.s waiting for their citizen ship papers were captured by the Communists. Though serv ing in American uniforms they would still not be U. S. citizens. Therefore, the Reds might claim there was no legal obli gation to return such prisoners to the U.S.A. Vigorously .Walter pushed his bill, sot a unanimous vote in the House, and hoped for routine approval in the Ben ate. Senator Watkins" subcom mittee was about to okay the legislation when he caught himself. "Wait a minute," he said. "Whose measure is this?" A clerk explained that Con gressman Walter,- juemocrai, had authored the bill. "What's the matter around here?" snapped Chairman Wat kins. "This is a Republican Congress and we've got to take credit for some of the good leg islation that's passed. This is a good bill and I'm going to make sure it's a Republican bill." - With that said, Watkins stopped further discussion of the measure. The next day ne introduced the "Watkins BUT an identical word-for-word copy of the Walter bill. Watkins' action would be un important, except that now it will take months for the new measure to work its way all through the tedious legislative procedures of both the Senate and House. And it's unlikely the Congress will get around Salem 18 Years Ago - By BEN MAXWELL . APRIL 27, 1935 Oregon architects will be asked to submit plans for a new capltol to repalce the 60-year-old statehouse destroyed by fire two days ago, April 25. Meanwhile ruins of the fire gutted structure will compete with prune and cherry orch ards as a Blossom day attrac tion come Sunday. . ... All bonds and securities amounting to more than $1, 000,000 contained in the vault of the state treasurer when the capltol burned were found to be Intact when the vault was opened today. The renovated house on the courthouse lawn, demonstra tion exhibit of the federal housing administration, will be open for public inspection May 1. . State liquor store No. 1, the Salem unit, will move over the week-end from its first lo cation at 337 Court street to a new location at BS7 Court. lem fire department will serve as pallbearers for the Floyd McMullen funeral to be held at Hermiston tomorrow. Mc Mullen was the call fireman fatally injured when the capl tol burned. Capt. Billy Iwan will be in charge of the Salem group. , . - , ' Saldie Orr Dunbar, speaking on the subject of "Economic Security," told a Silverton au dience that the women's clubs of Oregon should push a state program to match the federal offer in child welfare work. Seven members of the Sa- A. P. Giannini, president and chairman of the board of the Bank of America Na tional Trust and Savings com pany, halls the end of the depression. George Dunsford, superin tendent of the capltol build ing and grounds who three times in the past 25 years saved the statehouse from de struction by fire, said today that "without a doubt" Thurs day night'f fire was incendi ary. . By JAMES MARLOW Washington, W On Thurs day President Elsenhower will have completed hit first 100 days in the White House. There will be comparisons between his first 100 days and those of Presidents Franklin D. Roo sevelt and Truman. But these are comparisons without real significance since the circumstances under which the three men took over the presidency were different. A true judgment of Elsenhower's 100 days may have to wait year, perhaps years. It will have to be pegged not so much on what he has done in these first 100 days but on the plans and decisions made in that period for the future. Roosevelt took over when the country was broke and be wildered. He had to act fast to prevent collapse, and he did, with one emergency measure after another. Truman' first 100 days were momentous the surrender of Germany and the disintegra tion of Japan but would have been the same no matter who sat in the White House. It was after the 100 days that Truman had to make his big decisions. Elsenhower Inherited, not world war or an enonomlc em ergency, but situations which, while they contain critical elements, were mainly static: The country was amazingly prosperous; there was a cold war with Russia; there was a hot war In Korea. All three situations had been In existence long before Eisen hower's election and none called for Instant solution or emergency handling. Rather, each had to be considered care fully. The prosperity might not last if the Eisenhower admin istration was not wise enough to do all the right things as they needed to be done, per haps one at a time, over a num ber of years. But at least with prosperity there was no crisis at home. That may explain why, in do mestic problems, Eisenhower has acted at times less like a leader and more like a partner of Congress. In foreign affairs he has followed almost rigidly a poli cy laid down by Truman. Some few changes he has made seem small now, but may be so pro found in the long run as to be the basis upon which Eisen hower's first 100 days eventu ally will be judged. He plans to back the French more fully in their war with the Communists In Indochina. Long after the Korean War is over that may be the key to blocking communist expansion in Asia. Whlls his administration is talking about reduced foreign aid and defense spending, Ei senhower has cautioned that neither this country nor its allies should relax defense ef forts simply because the Rus sians are making peaceful" sounds. , Yet the Russian peace man euver may have been a factor in persuading the Eisenhower administration it is time now to cut foreign aid and defense spending. If the Russians were acting warlike, it's certain the cut would not be proposed. OUTSTANDING . DECORATOR FABRICS Always at Fronk's You may see oil the beautiful decorator fabrics that you viewed ot Fronk's Carpet Fashion Show last week, plus many more now ot FRONK'S. All the latest shades ond patterns now being shown. Come In today for a consultation on your new drop-, eries ond slipcovers. Phone 4-6313 Open Fridays 'til 9 p.m. Other Eve-nlnrsbr Appointment (Hal ' il H tST I r-ai;Miririi f"-" mrf i rflStOFCARr 2715 South Commercial 1.11, 1LI i to passing u aw wu cession. Meanwhile hundreds ot G.I.s a Korea will be stymied in their attempt to become American, citizens. IKE'S HEALTH White House advisers are de termined to get President Els. enhower to slow down and take more trips to Augusta. They came to this conclusion as a result of his illness when speaking before the American Society of Newspaper Editors recently. The President's attack of in. digestion occurred before the speech, and, while resting in the White House, he was too weak to see hi secretary of state, who had just come back from Canada. Since the Whit House staff did not explain to Dulles the reason for his failure to get an appointment, the sec- Mtarv nf jttllte WAS fiiiit i.n set. He thought Ike was still' miffed over the newspaper bumble of the week before. -Toward the end of Ike's speech, Dr. Howard W. Snyder noticed that the President omit, ted whole paragraphs of hli speech in an effort to finish in a hurry. Hastily he sent Tom Stephens to the platform to help in case anything happened, A Stephens rushed the President to an anteroom immediately aiterwara wnere iKe stretched out in a chair, while Dr. Sny der poured some black coffee down him. . -i i - On the trip back to Augusta. the President still was not feel, ing well, but snapped back shortly thereafter. ; " CoprrUht, left , ' m i ujltett.. everyone needs protection! When it comes to fir pro tection there's no better safe guard than a policy from th Farmers' Mutual - Insurance Company of Enumclawl Sine 1898 this reliable company has been writing fir insur ance for thousands of North west homes and many times at unusual savings Ask your Mutual of EnumcW agent today about this fin fir protection. INSURANCE Carl E. F. Arndt 1020 Elecui Avenu Salem, Oregon Douglas R. Baker 416 Masonic Bldg. Salem. Oregon E. A. Onenthner 410 Masonic Bldg Salem, Oregon William D. Karr Ml North Capltol Salem, Oregon David L. Mclaon 3037 Fairgrounds Road Salem, Oregon Ronald C. Nichols 416 Masonic Bldg. Salem, Oregon Robert C. Zeller 164 South High St. Salem, Oregon t