Friday, May 1, 195S rgt 4 Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 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. Ml ImhI Kin ftcrrlM th tultt Preu ni Tk 0ollt4 fr. Tht AuocltUd Prau U acluifrtlr tnlltlMl to tht mi for publication ol 11 sm dupttchu orxlltM to It or othirwUt Medina In mu ptivr ul tlw ntvi publUhtd Itoirtln. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Br CtrrlM! Monthlr. 11.1(1 SU Uonth, $7.eoi On Km. 115.00. Br MH1 In Uirloa, poir, Linn, Benton, citcitmw tma rimnui ujubuh; mvhw.i,. 11.60: Ono Ttir, 19.00. Br Mll Bluwhtro In Ortion: Monthlr, 01.00; S4i MontM, 10.00: On. voir, IU.M. Br WU Ouuldi Orcton: uontnlr, I1.JSI Bli Uonlni, (7.to: Ou Tet 116.00. OIL TIDELANDS FILIBUSTER FAILS Well over one million words have been spoken In the senate filibuster on the controversial tidelands oil bill, which is scheduled to come to a final vote Tuesday. The mpflsnrfi seems sure OI uasautce as every aiiicuuiuciib offered has been decisively defeated. The senate Thursday voted 69 to 22 against a proposal that the federal government retain control of. all mineral riches In the ocean beds three miles or more offshore and devote any revenue to reduction of the national debt, The bill itself gives coastal states title to offshore lands to their historical boundaries wnicn wouia De tnree miies for all states except Western Jionaa ana Texas, ineir seaward boundaries in the Gulf of Mexico would be recog nized as three leagues, 10 miles, to conform to their terms of admission to tne union. The vast outpouring of words and the claims set forth by opponents have tended to obscure the arguments. It JIBS Deen cmuueu umi. mo program" giving to three states, Louisiana, Texas and California, OU ana gas resources jii me Buuiuergeu jojiua worth between f 50 and ?auu mmon, wnicn oeiong to xne nation. Doubt has been raised war congress can consti tutionally turn the lands over to the states, though the supreme court has decided mat congress nas tne jegai power. Those in favor of the measure assert that the bill does not give the submerged lands to the coastal states as a "gift." It "restores"' property they considered right fully theirs from statehood until 1947, when the supreme court held the federal government had "paramount rights." This doctrine constitutes a threat to state control of lands under inland waters, rivers and lakes and f illed in ocean front lands. t It is also claimed that the bill's passage will help halt the trend toward over-centralization of the federal gov ernment and a recognition of state rights ; that the states are best qualified to manage the lands and their resources within their historical boundaries. COURTING IS TOUGH ENOUGH MAN WHO DIDN'T COME TO DINNER Like him or not, and there are those who don't, the junior senator has a natural affinity for the front pages, as marked in a slightly different way as that of ham for eggs, or pork for beans. This regardless of whether he is making a filibuster speech of record breaking length or merely isn't invited out for dinner, an episode which so often happens to the rest of us, with no after effects whatsoever. It is this last incident that intrigues our interest today. The Portland Chamber of Commerece gave a dinner for some of the dignitaries in Washington the other night. It was noted that the before mentioned junior senator wasn't there and questions were asked. They weren't ducked. "He was intentionally overlooked." Why? "Be cause his presence might embarrass the other guests." The host had something there. In fact it might do more. It might deprive the guests of their juiciest morsel of conversation. Asked about it, Morse retorted some thing about being, himself, above "pettiness," and let it go at that, which must be a record for him. Perhaps he was questioned when running to catch a plane or a train. We suppose there will be the usual differences of opin ion whenever Wayne Morse becomes the subject of con troversy, but for our money the Portland Chamber of Commerce, or anybody else, can invite or not invite who ever it pleases to its dinners or anything else. We suspect this F. E. P. C. business has been carried too far anyway, and we're unalterably opposed to carrying it to the point where dinner guest lists are dictated to the host. Of course, it being still a free country, in this respect at least, Morse has his rights, too, to try to spike the first piece of Portland legislation that shows up in the senate. This "calculated risk" the Portland Chamber must have been prepared to take. being WSfimwmm i a jb m :...ims mi mis mut 1 POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Does Many Things Well, Real Business Racing IKE'S BUDGETARY TROUBLES If you're one of those charts who's trvincr to hold his breath till he gets an income tax cut you'd better read the rest of this, which won't take long, and relax. For you may have quite a wait. President Eisenhower announced Thursday that al though he plans to cut appropriations for the coming fiscal year eight and a quarter billion dollars, to 64,400, 000,000, he cannot Bee a balanced bucket. If you've been watching the front vnae in recent davs you've doubtless noticed the new figures that are coming out, and they are uniformly lower, sometimes drastically so. And muscle as well as fat is being cut from the federal spending program. Improvement projects, such as Bonne ville, are being cut back. It isn't just a matter of turninir chair warmers out to grass. Needed work will be lost or postponed due to these determined efforts to restore order to the nation s finances. In spite of all this the president sees no budget balance lor this year. We U still have a deficit, thouirh nrobab v only a small one. A tax cut in the face of this condition? Maybe. They're still talking about one, but it isn't sound and shouldn't be made till it can be made within a bal anced budget. We've already had deficit financing too wng. New York VP) Most men spend their lives trying to learn to do one thing well. Sherman Frank "Big Red" Crise, who broke his pocket- book In the Bronx on his own account and later busted his back in Burma for Uncle Sam, doesn't lit in any simple pigeonhole. It is hard to figure something this gusty, six-footed, 250-pounder hasn't tried and done well. "I guess racing has been my real business," he said. "The things I love are speed, money and machinery. "I like playing with an engin more than anything else in the world, but you can't make money getting your fin. gers dirty, so I turned to pro moting. ' "Big Red" is one of the first two men to pioneer mid get car racing in America and at 47 is one of the key figures in the nation's 80 million dol lar a year auto racing in dustry. "Of course, It's fast and dangerous," he said, grinning. But I have promoted more than 800 races since the war and there hasn't been a driver .killed in one yet." "Big Red" has always en joyed living at full throttle. He trained as a Navy filer at Pensacola, studied banking, engineering and economics. He went Into Wall Street, made a fast buck, and got out before the 1929 boom fell apart. Then be became a speed boat, hydroplane, and airplane racer and set a few records. "In 1933 I started promot ing midget car racing in the Bronx," he recalled ruefully,' "and in two years I dropped 8168,000." But "Big Red" always teem ed to know where the green backs grow. By 1942, when he voluteered for war service, he was bossing 14 racing tracks. "They shut down the tracks in seven days," he said. "The By HAL BOYLE Navy turned me down as a flier, so I walked across the street and signed up with the Army Air Corps." As a photographic pilot, Crise flew in every war theater from Kiska to Burma, helped map Brazilian jungles, and air-scouted beaches for the African and Sicilian in vasions. While flying the Hump in 1945 he ran out of gas, parachuted and broke three vertebra. It took 12 days for the rescue party to get him back to his base. "1 walked the lirst nine days," he said, "but I couldn't stay on my feet the last three. During , a 17-week recovery period in a hospital near Miami, while awaiting dis- Dean to Head Pacific U. Next Few Months Forest Grove VP) The act ing head of Pacific university for the next few months will be Edwin T. Ingles, education professor and former vice pre sident. He was named acting dean Thursday, a new position on this campus. He will hold that position until a successor Is named to Dr. Walter Gleribach, who Wednesday submitted his resig nation as president, effective Aug. 31. State Commission to Select Licensees Portland VP) The City Coun cil hire Is going to leave it up to the State Liquor Commis sion where to put the 140 to ISO licenses for liquor by the drink in Portland. The council made that clear Thursday by approving anoth er 62 applicants. That pushed the total npproved to 136 with many more still to go. The state agency eventually will have to cut the list to 140 or ISO. Pumper Won't Fit, So They'll Build Station Dunkirk, N. Y. U.K Con struction was expected to get underway soon on a new fire station which had been under consideration for some time. The Fire Department Just purchased a new pumper and it won't fit in tht old firthouie. Commerce Budget Cut Of 22 Pet. Proposed Washington VP) An aggre gate cut of 22 per cent in ap propriations for the State, Commerce and Justice Depart ments was recommended to the House yesterday by its appro priations committee. The biggest cut was for the State Department, for which the committee recommended $102,744,787. That Is $48,403, 803 less than former President Truman asked. Would Give Agencies Their Cash Quarterly Washington VP) Rep. Weich- el (R.-Ohio) proposes that money appropriated by Con gress be given to government agencies on a quarterly basis. He told the House yesterday his plan would halt much of the abuses, misspending and waste of the taxpayers' mon ey." IKE'S NIECE CROWNED Winchester, Va. (U.B Miss Kathryn Eisenhower, a 19- year-old niece of President Elsenhower, was crowned Queen Shenandoah yesterday at this area's annual Apple Blossom Festival. charge, he had a yacht basin built. Today "Big Red" owns the yacht basin, a spark plug business, a 65-foot yacht, auto racing tracks at Al'entown, Pa., and Washington, D. C, and other oddments. He has logged more than 15,000 miles in the air, but "no longer will take a plane up, and prefers to drive his $10,000 Jaguar sports car. "I can fly any airplane in the world except jets," he said. "But I stopped flying more than a year ago. Just scared stiff. Quit cold. Lost too many friends over the 26 years I flew. "Now I'm an old man who likes to live quietly in the country and take It easy In a 145-mile-an-hour sports car. And I'm getting so cautious I've only had It up to 120." "Big Red" has two pro motional dreams left. Next June he plans to pit 25 Ameri can stock cars against 25 foreign cars in a 200-mile race in a closed mile dirt track at the Langhorne Speed way near Philadeipna. I think the foreign sports car boys are turning into stuf fed shirts," he said. "I'd like to see what they can do against Detroit stock models in a real race." The other dream of "Big Red" is to build a non-profit "museum of speed" at Day. tona Beach, in which record breaking vehicles of all kinds can be permanently exhibited. For this purpose he bought the late Sir Malsolm Campbells famous five-ton "Bluebird' racer. "I also want to put In the museum an engine that will run forever," he said. " It never has been done but it can be." "Big Red" says the museum will be his last promotion, and hopes it will stand as a monu ment to the love of his furious life speeding men and machinery. Salem 20 Y 'ears Ago By BEN MAXWELL Mar I, 1933 Pleasant View, Summit Hill and Cloverdale school districts south of Salem have voted to consolidate. The new district will become No. 144, Appointment of Alonzo L, Stlner as head football coach for Oregon State college for 1934 has been confirmed at meeting of the state board of higher education In Fortiana. Tax levies in Salem for 1933 have been reduced from 47.2 to 41.8, a reduction of 5.5 mills Less than a half Inch of rain fell over Salem during April and that establishes a record dryness for the month since the weather bureau started ob serving here 41 years ago. A rattle snake, approxl mately 30 inches in length and with five rattlers and a button, was killed on a rocky ledge near Mehama the other day by E. R. Henningsen of Jefferson. With several millions of dol lars of additional federal emer gency relief money' practical ly assured prospects are bright er for Oregon highway con struction at a pace not anticipated. Closing time at the federal treasury today is zero hour for the return of hoarded gold. Those who fall to heed the or der may be punished by a $10,000 fine or 10 years in prison. Secretary Woodln says persistent hoarders will be prosecuted. State board of control meet ing Wednesday will pass upon salaries to determine that they have been reduced five to 30 percent based upon salary scales for December 81, 1930. A. A. Geer of Salem was In Silverton on Saturday for the purpose of gathering his torical material on the Indian fight along the Abiqua in the vicinity of Indian Bluff. He Interested in establishing a public park there and erecting monument to commemorate the heroes of this pioneer Bat tle of the Abiqua. (This skirm ish occurred March 5, 6, 1848. In the two-day affray the Klamaths lost 10 braves and had one wounded. One.white, James Stanley, was struck in the breast with an arrow and received thereby a painful wound. He was the only cas ualty among the settlers. Ban croft, the historian who wrote less than 40 years after the event, spoke of the encounter as a disgraceful rear guard ac tion in which a squaw was wounded and the real maraud ers either escaped or were nev er present. REALLY TOLD HIS STORY San Francisco (U.R) A wit ness In federal court yesterday described so graphically the back injuries for which John Stephens is suing the Southern Pacific Railroad for $100,000 that a woman juror fainted. Big Concerns Trying to Take Gov't's Bomb Fuse Program BY DREW PEARSON w..t.t-.'n.wnd all the i fuses. When others failed, furor over tha dismissal of Dr, Allen V. Astln as head of the bureau of standards are some interesting maneuvers hltnerio unknown to the puDiic, These ouiet tactics center around the bureau's vital de velopment work on fuses for bombs, shells and guided mis sies. For years several large corporations have been anxious to take over the bureau's luse program. Naturally, If a private company gets in on the ground floor In designing fuses, it would be in the best position to get subsequent multimillion' dollar fuse-production con' tracts. As far back as March 2, lit tle more than a month after Sinclair Weeks was sworn in as secretary of commerce and as boss of the bureau of stand a r d s, Moorehead Patterson, president of the American Ma chine and Foundry Co., paid a visit to the bureau of standards, As head of the huge A.M.&F. Co.. and a good friend of Sec retary Weeks, Mr. Patterson was given a warm reception. "I understand," said Patter son, "that this whole research and development program on fuses will soon be taken away from the bureau. I want you all to know my company will be happy to pick up the pieces, In addition," he told the startl ed scientists, "I'm. ready to move the whole operation, in eluding personnel, to my Bos ton plant." This was well before Sinclair Weeks fired Dr. Astln It was also the first inkling the scientists had that the na tion's vital fuse program was to be put on the auction block. In fact, they were skeptical about Patterson s prediction and went ahead with their work. Patterson, however, was so sure of his information that, before leaving Washington, he made attractive financial offers to several key scientists. Pens and Fuses The following week, Fred K, Powell, Jr., vice president of American Machine and Foun dry, arrived in Washington, Powell went so far as to tell Pentagon and commerce de partment officials that his com pany was ready to absorb the whole fuse program "on a moment's notice." Then, on March 25, Secretary Weeks wrote a confidential let ter to defense boss Charlie Wil son urging the Pentagon to re move the fuse program from Weeks' own bureau of stand ards. Weeks' letter to Wilson was disguised in official double talk, but its meaning was clear. He wrote: "I bring this (fuse program) to your attention in case you wish to delegate someone to check these expenditures and, perhaps, suggest an examina tion and even a re-valuation of the research program." At first this got no favorable response from the defense de partment. Armed services knew the amazing job the bu reau of standards had done on bu- reau scientists had developed tne proximity iuse a u r I n g World War II, the fuse which explodes when It approaches its target, and which causes the amazing guided mlssle to steer a course toward Its target. . In fact, army-navy experts wrote a confidential memo to Secretary of Defense Wilson warning against danger to tha guided-missle program if Dj, Astin was not reinstated. Later, however, Secretary 0f Commerce Weeks got his way His colleague, Secretary of De fense Wilson, has now issued instructions to curtail further military research funds for the bureau of standards. Note: Assistant Secretary nt Commerce Shaeffer, the foun tain pen manufacturer, told friends that one of the first things he would do in Washing. ion was snane up ine Dureau of standards. He claimed thev hH been unfair in testing one of hit pens. Headlines and Footnotes Comptroller General Lindu. Wsrren has ordered his ac. counting sleuths to audit the huge "mail payments" the goV. ernment is ladling out to ths airlines. It was a similar invi. tigation that led to reform of the maritime commission . , It's a neat trick if he can do 'it but Congressman Miller of Ne. braska has promised to make daylight saving time retro active for the nation's capital. In other words, D. C. residents can turn their clocks ahead nour Deginning last Sunday. This proposal was made in all seriousness Dy Miller, after Congressman Bender of Ohio urged jiuick action on the light saving bill . . . "I sup pose we might try to make it retroactive," offered Miller . . . The Chinese Communists are quietly withdrawing a full div ision from the Korean front Captured prisoners say it Is on its way back to China. This may be evidence that the latest Chi nese truce bid is genuine. Senator Chavez of New Mexico is flat on his back tt the Bethseda Naval hospital. Friends say he was driven there by worry over Pat Hur ley's unrelenting campaign against him in New Mexico . . . Karl Schlotterbeck is chief counsel of the. house ways and means subcomlmttee now try ing to sabotage social security. In his spare, time, he also serves as a special consultant to the new secretary of wel fare, Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby, who is supposed to look out for social security . . . Com munists are trying to plant the rumor that the three atomic explosions in Russia were mis fiers and that Russia still doesn't have the atomic bomb. However, our top atomic sci entists have been able to de termine from the evidence that the Russian explosions wen too efficient to have been mis fires . . . The Russians don't miss a public meeting where anything of military signifl-1 (uonunuea on rage s, column ii TAPPING THE POWER RESOURCES OF ! vll ?fc- . BEAUTIFUL NORTH UMRQUA VlVFR 60WJC, 1 "Ifsr . ifff'i5 BUILDINS 8 HYDROELECTRIC PLANTS. 1 9 WW ttCLYDE GREEK CONSTRUCTION CO. OP JmSLmt' 0SBUR& KEEPS RHT-0F-WAV LOGGING, ZSSy.ffjS & EARING AND EARTHWORK ON 6CHE0Uli S5 "SB-Ur-l WITH A FLEET OP 100 CATERPILLAR r Tmyi '" EQUIPMENT. HEf?E IS ONE Of HIS CAT Ms ilfe S!3SsklPJ?sj.' "T8SBR0CKP0ZEB PIONEERING- TU, V5Xe5 53 MR THE FISH CREEK AOUEPOCT. Ill' i tSUir INSET 16 W.CLYDE GREEN, 5 MlyC' SAYS 235S Sllvirlon Hi Q 6 I JiS WEIGHING 7,000 LBi WITH A BLADE LITNTh OP r fytM 11-41;, THE HEAVY PVTVflSR 19 THE TOUGHEST v MEMBEt? OF A COMPLETE LINE Of CATEBPILI NTERSTATE iRACrOK BU,LT cabls-contkollep and hydraulic mcK.?mic I M'vyrv. 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