o.M j THE CAPITAL, jouknal. saiem. oreron t - i i .1 . urnfiurn onifMA FRANKENSTEIN cwiMfTniM MtKf-o- ' iva your I A iAWeV- v . svv if UV5S f raft - ffix mi ip. i ill Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD AAAINWARING, 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 Uesei Wlra Bervlet 1 ha Sesaelalel rrui mat Tha Dnlte Km The Associated Press is eieluilvelr entitled to the use for publication ol all am dtanatehea credited to U or otherwise credited In this pair and alio news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: B Carrier: Monthly. It.lSI an Months, 17.J0: Out Taar. 116.00. Br Mall la M"Jo. Polk. Linn. Benton, Clackamas and Yamhill counties: Monthll. loe; Bli Months, I4.W1 Ona Tear, W OO. 8 MsU Elsewhere In Oregon: Montnlr. 11.00; BU Monthe, ' W.OO: Ona rear. 113.00. Br Mall Outside Oreton: Monthly, HJSi Sli Uontha. S7.W; One Ter. in (Kl FRANZEN SHOULD BE RETAINED Tt. "Tt Seems to Me" column in the Statesman, for mer Governor Charles A. Sprague says that "Mayor Al LniicVa in Rettino- the otaire for Retting rid ol Uty Man ager J. L. Franzen," and the only reason advanced is that Mr. Franzen is 68 years of Age, with the inference that he is too old to function efficiently despite his ex cellent record. Mr. Sprague continues: "The device is to hire an 'assistant city manager' for a term of months; and then have Franzen 'resign' to take some lesser job that would be made for him. No item is in the budget for assistant manager, but it would be inserted before the final adoption of the budget. The mayor has to get four councilmen to go along with him on the deal, and has been busy trying to line them up. "Once rid of Frazen, with a compliant new manager then the heads of administrative departments could be fired. The mayor is reported to have wanted the heads of some of them, but could not persuade the city manager, who alone has the authority, to perform the rite of execution. These department heads are Clyde Warren, police chief; Ellsworth Smith, fire chief; Harold Davis, city engineer; AlMundt, city recorder; John Green, water bureau manager." Mayor Loucks had given the same information to mem- - . .. v 11. mm j . 1 -it i 1 i bers of the Capital journal siaii, dui witn xne stipulation that it was "off the record" and not to be published until released by him. Evidently no such pledge was exacted of the Statesman. , . The real reason is the mayor's itch for power, to make him the "IT" in city government as mayors were before the city manager form of government was adopted, when waste, inefficiency and councilmanic favoritism ruled the city. Moreover Mr. Loucks original backers for his first . term were those who opposed the city manager form and atill oppose it for its efficiency. The real objection to Mr. Franzen is that he is a com. Detent engineer, thoroughly versed in municipal affairs, instead of a loquatious back-slapping and baby-kissing peanut politician, all things to all men and easy to in fluence. vHe has an excellent record and national recog nition as a competent city manager. , Franzen's work here speaks for itself. The city streets are kept clean. The sewerage system and disposal plant have been completed as has another city water reservoir, the merger of Salem and West Salem and additional suburbs satisfactorily adjusted, and police, fire and other departments reorganized and brought up-to-date. The plot to remove an efficient official and return to the waste and confusion formerly existing should be nip ped in the bud for the future welfare of this growing city which as the capital of Oregon has outgrown the lethargy of the hick town. A competent, conscientious and honest regime should be retained. G. P. Ex-Conaressman Qualifies For $2160 Pension for $14 BY DREW PEARSON ' aw,.nrtn The records SENATOKlAii vur POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER GOOD NEWS FROM MALAYA 1 Southeast Asia is a vital spot in the war between the free and slave worlds, point of greatest immediate danger of an irremovable disaster to the former, And curiously, there is good news from Malaya, where a fierce war has been waged by communist outlaw bands against the British and their native allies ever since the end of World War II. It appears that this war at least is being won. Col. Arthur E. Young, London commissioner of police, who has had charge of police reorganization in Malaya for the past 15 months, brought this word to the United States while en route home a few days ago. . Young said the outlaw bands now number fewer than 6000 altogether, for the first time since the war began and that they are being steadily reduced by the Malayan army and police who are now pursuing them back into tltcir jungle hideouts. One effective measure against the outlaws has been the placing of small forts in the jungles and supplying them by helicopters. Jungle inhabitants are now less fearful of the outlaws and are giving the authorities bet ter cooperation. Tin and rubber production is now little effected by the war, for the first time. It was badly crippled and the major part of the output threatened with destruction. Here is a war whose losses and vexations have rivaled those of the more highly publicized Korean conflict. If it can be won the west will have scored a major triumph against the communists, for scarcely any threatened re gion is more vital to our side than Malaya. LET'S GET THE REST OF IT NOW Nearly half of the $5500 needed to save the Marion County Blood Bank is now available, thanks nrincioallv to the enterprise shown by Radio Station KGAE. whose all day show Saturday produced $2554.25 in cash and pledges assuming the payment of the pledges, and there should be little loss there. Now it is up to the rest of the community to pitch in Magnolia, Ark., Big Town Now, Stops to Celebrate Magnolia, Ark. VP) Ameri ca is growing up. Its period of raw-boned youth is over. A symbol of this was the centennial celebration held last week by this community, typi cal of the mushrooming small cities of the south and southwest. Towns, like men, take a pleasure in pausing now and then for a glance back a look ahead. - Magnolians, immense ly proud of their town, were pleased to find that at the age of 100 it was suffering Us most acute growing pains. It was settled a century ago by pioneers who came afoot, in wagons, and on horseback from Georgia and South Caro lina. A young lady who liked Magnolia trees gave the ham let its name. ' In 1860 it had a population of 344, including 66 slaves and three professional gamblers. It had only about 1,000 people in 1900. The prospects were it would remain indefinitely dreaming in its quiet dust, its chief claim to fame the fact that a major general of the Confederate Army slept in its cemetery. , But in the last quarter cen tury Magnolia began to grow and now is in full bloom. The discovery of oil was a big factor. But so was the spark of new leadership. The young men quit leaving town to seek opportunity elsewhere. Magnolia now has a popula tion of 10,000. It has diversi fied industries ranging from oil to aluminum, plastics, cloth ing and wood products. It has spent nearly $9,000,0000 in new homes since 1946. As the townspeople flocked to the courthouse square to watch a mammoth centennial parade "the biggest ever held in Arkansas" I chatted with three leading citizens who are a link between the city's se rene past, its bustling future. They were Col. Charles W. McKay, 81, a lawyer; John W. Colquitt, 75, hardware dealer for half a century, and Charles B. Lyle, 78, who has been fill- By HAL BOYLE was rich. Now everybody has got some money, and feels poor." But Colonel McKay then put in a stout plug for the young folks. "I don't say that we our selves were as good as our own parents," he said mildly. "But people are getting better all the time. "They used to come to town on Saturday night, get drunk, hold chicken fights, fight each other and race their horses up the main street. "They don't do that on Sat urday night any more. What do they do? I don't know. I don't go out anymore. I hear they go to the movies." , . The three old friends were silent then, musing over the past. But they are no mossbacks. When I asked them what they liked about their town, Lyle said firmly: "The citizenship." "Yes," said Colquitt, "The citizenship. The people are civic-minded. There is a spark here you don't find In other towns." And laywer McKay summed it up: "The good people are in the majority. In this town it has always been that way." OPEN FORUM and put up the rest of the money without the necessity J ' "scV fn hi. dru t onntv,.. M-;,. in,. Mti. ci -i..v 'iflU: prescriptions in nis drug of another "drive." The North Salem Kiwanis club set a good example last week in passing the hat among the members. Let other civic and religious groups do the same and the money will either all be secured or we'll be to close it won't be any great chore to fill the Bmall gap. The Blood Bank won't be closed, of course. To do so would be to invite a disaster, to say nothing of the wound to our civic pride. Let each group now in its own way make its contribution and we'll save this vital program. 1 Jon Lindbergh Explores Cavern Bower C a v e 1, Mariposa County, Calif. W Jon Lind bergh, 20-year-old son of fam ed aviator Charles Lindbergh, has explored and photograph ed a large underwater cavern In a remote mountain area near Yosimlte National Park. Jon wearing navy "frog man's" gear, swam 180 feet under the waters of small lake to reach Bower Cave which never before has been explored. Jon mad two dives Bttur- day into the grotto, The second time he carried photographic gear in a water proof bag. He spent more than an hour Inside the cav ern, described as one of the largest of Its kind In the west. His only link with safety was a thin nylon line attached to his trunks and held by an other member of the party. He was accompanied by two members of the Western Spel eological Institute, a research organization. Young Lindbergh attends Stanford university at Palo Alto, Calif. Snow usually is about as 10 times as deep as tht water It nates when melted. store for 64 years Add us together and you have a ripe old age," said Col. McKay cheerfully. The three old friends are all sons of pi oneer settlers, and love to talk about the old times. How do people differ now from then? Lyle studied some passersby, then said: "We were more religious in those days. The whole town would close up for a week to go to a camp meeting." "Yes, people used to like to do more things for each other then," said Colquitt. "They served each other then. Now too many people serve only for money." "And I'd say we had more fun, too," , Lyle continued. "They have too much enter tainment today to have any real run. They don't know what real fun you can get out of a picnic or a hayr.de. ' "Remember the square dances?" said Colonel McKay. "The girls all went wild over the fiddler." "Everybody was poor then, and didn't know It," said Col quitt. "A man with $8,000 NON-CONFORMISTS HONORED New York Times In this age of conformity we like the idea of awarding priz es for nonconformity. The men who dared to sail westward on an ocean that was flat were non-conformists, and they dis covered a new world. The men who fled their homelands to settle that world were noncon formists, and they founded a new civilization. The men who rebelled against tyrany were nonconformists, and they estab lished a new country. The men who brought unity and strength and wealth to that country were nonconformists, and they are our heroes of yesterday. Today there are too many among us, with wits dulled by ignorance or by fright, who seek safety and security only In what they think is the narrow pattern of the past. It isn't the pattern at all; if our ancestors taught us anything, they taught us to dare, to ex periment, to explore and not to fear. It is contrary to the best of our tradition to equate non conformity with treason, un orthodoxy with disloyalty. Yet that is the state of mind to which some of our public fig. ures seem to be trying to lead us. Nothing could be more un imaginative or "un-American." All of this is why we are par. ticularly glad to see someone get a prize for unorthodoxy, True, the Lord & Taylor awards given to five distinguished men Monday- for original noncon formist thinking in their re spective field did not touch on politics, but the principle Is the same. Free spirits and unbri dled minds are too rare even in a free society. They deserve en couragement. The worship of conformity, of orthodoxy, of authority should be left to the Communists and the other to talitarian of left and right. It Is not tar us. Engineer's Troubles Bring in This Poem To the Editor: .. The txoubles of Hedda Swart, our county engineer, as told in Saturday's Capital Journal, are enough to make any responsible-official "blow his top." But such troubles are shared by city, county and highway engineers throughout the country. Let him read the following and laugh it off: FIXING THE STREETS They took a little navel. And toot a little tar. With varloui lngredlenta Imported from alar; Trier hammered It and lolled It And when they went away, They aald they had a pavement To last for many a day. They came with picks and amote It, To lay a water main And then they called the workman To put It back again. To lay a railway cable They took It up ones more And then they put It back again Juat where It was before. They took It up for conduits To run tha telephone And then they put It back again Aa hard aa any stone. They tore It up for wires To feed the 'lectrlc light And then they put It back again, Which was no more than right. Ohl tha pavement full of furrows. There aro patches everywhere, Tou'd like to ride upon It, But 'tis seldom that you dare. Xt'a a Tery handsome pavement, A credit to the town. They're always dlggln of it up, . or puttln' of It down. (Author unknown) CARL P. RICHARDS, Oregon State Highways, Salem, Ore. CIO ADDS DIFFERENTLY Baker Democrat Herald The CIO's economic policy committee has sharply criti cised the first 100 days of the Eisenhower administr a t i o n , and says it is sowing the seeds of another depression. They particularly object to the rise in interest rates on government bonds and failure of the ad ministration to take aggressive steps to renew the excess profits tax. These labor leaders are be ing short-sighted in their rea soning. They too often seem to take the position that the more they can hamstring corpora. tions the greater will be the benefit to the laboring man. There is more logic in the op posite position. Taxes on earn ings of corporations in recent years have so prevented ac cumulation of capital for ex pansion that progress in new or larger enterprises has been limited. At the same time our population is growing and new worners will constantly need new employment. How can ad. dltlonal workers be employed wtnout additional capital for financing additional enterpris es? The CIO has never aulte re conciled itself to the fact that a prosperous employer is requisite to a prosperous work er. are supposed to be confident ial, but one ex-congressman has parlayed a $14 invest ment into a lifetime govern- ment pension of $2,160 a year. Ha is William f. J.amuerusuu, Kansas Republican, who ser ved 15 years in the House. However, he didn't con tribute a cent toward his own retirement until after ne ieii Congress. Then his Kansas .niieainip. Congressman Wint Smith, nut Lambertson on the Federal payroll from January 3 to January 31, 1947 Just long enough for him to pay u nto the retirement runa. This made him eligible for retirement benefits and, under s tpcnmcaiuv in uiu aw. . wna able to take credit ior his full 15 years Congression al service. Irony is that both Lambert- nn and Smith have voted consistently against social benefits for others, but ap parently believe in governr ment handouts for themselves In addition to his 2,160 onvernment pension. Lam bertson is drawing anotner Government salary as a county commissioner. He also owns a 200-aore farm in Fair- view, Kansas, Ex-Congressman Lambert- son, reacnea ior cuuuman, said he didn't want to dis cuss the matter but admitted he had' never paid any money into the pension fund while In Congress. IKE'S PAPERWORK President Eisenhower makes no secret about his irritation at the load of paper work and other details that bog down the office of tne Presidency. Speaking before the Ameri can Retail Federation in the Washington hotel, he confessed: "I'm certainly glad to leave that maelstrom behind in my office for a while." Ike chafes at the number of callers, says nine out of ten are pure formalities and could be eliminated. They give him no time for con structive thinking. He also dislikes the chore of signing his name about 400 times a day as required by law on many state papers. Some times he even wishes his name shorter. "Dwight D. Eisen hower" has a few more letters than "Harry S. Truman." On a recent Saturday, the President was on the verge of going out to the golf course, when Bernard Shanley, White House special counsel rushed m witn new prooiems re quiring decisions. Ike let off steam, chewed Shanley up, later apologized. ' It Is estimated that a baby is born on the average of every st-cona somewnere in the world HIGHER INTEREST RATES D e m o c ratic congressmen are so alarmed over rising in terest rates that they are drafting legislation to curb Secretary of The Treasury Humphrey's power to boost the rates. The Democrats charge that Humphrey is soaking the tax payers and enriching the banks by hiking interest rates on the bonds the government borrows. They point out that the Increased interest on the national debt will cost the taxpayers several billions be fore it Is paid off. Worst hit, however, are small farmers, home builders and installment buyers, whose interest rates are being forced up by the higher government rates. The Democrats are also pre pared to blast Deputy Secre tary of The Treasury W. Ran dolph Burgess as the man be hind the interest boosts. A former Vice-president o f National City Bank of New York, Burgess headed the Committee ort public debt policy which for years spear headed the drive for higher Interest rates for bankers. The Democrats will charge that Burgess has be4h cracking the whip to get the Veterans Administration, Federal Hous ing Admlstration and Export Import Bank to increase their rates, too, and add to the pro fits of his banker friends. Burgess, on the other hand, Is convinced that higher rates are for the public good. He argues that they will combat Inflation end strengthen the American economy by dis couraging people from plung ing into debt. mricVilovnus senators are kidding the Senate's most eligible couple eor'a .h...ir.t.tar-d bachelor, Dick Smith about a possible romance. The kidding got its spark vnm at mv remark that Mrs. Smith dropped behind closed doors of The Senate Armed service Committee. Chairman Tvorott Saltonstall of Mass achusetts called upon Russell with the usual rehetorical flourishes, referring to him . thi. "distinguished former chairman, whom we all love." However. Saltonstall flush- o little strong even ior flowery, senatorial procedure. So the Massachusetts Yankee cleared his throat and cor rected: "I mean, whom we all admire." But Mrs. Smith interrupted "Please don't change it, Mr. chairman." That started Senators ribbing the lady from Maine, who is one of the most popular figures in The Senate, about having srone on record for her"love" of bachelor Senator Russell. Some congressional cupids then suggested such a match might be a good idea And so goes' fun and gossip among the nation's lawmakers. WASHINGTON PIPELINE Through an inadvertence, Congressman Andreson o f Minnesota, confused in a re cent column with Congress man Anderson oi Minnesota, both Republicans. This oppor- ;unity is therefore taken to make It , clear that is was Congressman Anderson of Tyler, Minn., not Andresen of Red Wing, Minn., who scolded Iowa's , Congressman Jensen for bowing to the Private Utilities . . . Mamie Eisen hower prefers to have her husband called "Mr. Presi dent" or "Mr. Eisenhower." She considers plain "Ike" as too undignified ... The President, who golfs at the Burning Tree Country club, found his ball blocked by a tree the other day. "They didn't burn enough trees here," he grumbled . . . The American Embassy reports form London that Prime Mini ster Winston Churchill-will soon how out and that his successor will be, not Foreign Minister Anthony Eden but Chancellor of The Exchequer R. A. Butler iV. The British will fly movies of the Coro nation to the United States by jet plane, so the American pub lic will be able to watch it on television the same day it takes place. This is made easier by the five hours' differ ence in time zones . . . The Democratic National Com mittee has salted away $125, 000 in the bank, but still owes $330,000 in campaign debts A rising power in Demo cratic circles is FDR's former Secretary Grace Tully. She did countless favors for high Democrats when she , had President Roosevelt's ear and now. that she moved into the Democratic National Com mittee, they're clearing every thing with her.1 (Copyright, 1M!) The extinct sea cow which formely lived in the Bering Sea were 20 to 25 feet long. Monday. May 11, 1953 Salem 61 Years Aqo ari- vwt VT May 11, 1893 Growers of roses and straw berries, are requested to meet at the reading room of Wil. lamette hotel to make arrange" ments for the annual rose nd strawberry show. Ladies of Unitarian assisted by the Second Regi ment band will give a musical and literary entertainment of rare excellence on Friday at Channing hall ln Unity church. . Drivers of fine roadsters are congratulating -themselves on the improvement of Cheme keta street and propose to make it the driving boulevard of the city. They say their horses pay no attention to the cars after a day or two. Turner's whiskey war has broken out again according t latest reports. An additional pile driver is now working on the s.u Commercial street vkriM The crossing is all in and the cars will be running in a few days. (About this time the covered bridge built followin the flood of 1861-2 was re moved and an open brld accommodate the street -. line to Rural cemetery built to replace it.) Improved Order of Men, Kamiakum tribe No. 8 Salem, holds council every Thursday evening. F. c Baker, prophet: Frank r Waters, chief of records. New daily stage betw Aurora, Butteville, Cham- poeg, St. Paul and Fairfield . is now in operation. : Gus Hoefer, proprietor. Liquor, Opium and Toba Habit. A complete, perma. nent cure at Keeley Institute, Forest Grove. Hoeye & Mills Shavine Pr- lor, 209 Commercial street, have the only porcelain bath tubs in Salem. .Tom Burroughs dellverv horse shied at an electric ear as it came around the corner of State street today and then tried to climb a roof. Dell Dlnsmoor executed a leap tor the rear car steps. The driver received some bruises, the horse got hurt on its tide. shafts of the wagon were torn out and spectators afforded t little excitement. Real estate transfers in Sa lem for February, 1882. amounted to $203,074.65. - PARDON OUR -;, RUSTY INDIAN U. Baker Democrat-Herald . There is some contention la Congress over naming the new lake being formed by McNary Dam, especially between the representatives of the respec tive Oregon and Washington congressional . districts. Rep. Sam Coon wants to call it Umt- - tilla lake, from an Indian word meaning "water-rippling-over-sand". Now what would be the Indian .word for "water-rip-pling-over-concrete"? Anyhow, there is sand in concrete, and we think Sam Coon will win, as he has a way of winning baseball games and things. Let's see, what would be the Indian word for "ball- flying-over-center-field"? BLIND "PRIVATE EYE" Burlingame, Calif. WB Friends are wishing Robert Bayne a lot of luck in his new profession of private detective. Bayne is the only licensed pri vate "eye" in the country who is blind. SAVE MONEY Buy The I.M.O. Woy to Save Stock's I.M.O. Sfore 637 N. High Street Salem, Ore. Ph. 4-5591 Television Sets, Radios Living, Dining, Bedroom Mattresses, Chrome Furniture, Fireplace Seta, Lamps. Clocks, Watches, Jewelry Small Appliances, Silverware, Refrigerators, Vacuum Cleaners, Sewing Machines, Luggage, Home Freezers, Ranges Dryers, Hot Water Heaters, Furnaces, Sporting Goods, Binoculars, Bicycles, Tires, Batteries, Groceries, Plumbing Fixtures, We Handle Every thlngl IS' -A ki of tliis-n-tliat GEORGE HUGGINS -By- SID BOISE How often do you pick up a popular magazine and start an interesting story? When you read to the bottom of the page it says, "continued on page 87" so far so good. You try to find page 87 and here the confusion begins. There is no page 87, because either it is hidden in an in conspicuous place or it has been omitted entirely. You look for the numbered page closest to page 87 (page 69) and start counting. But this is where confusion is com pounded. Finally you forget what was "continued " decide yLX?'nM lely lm.portant and turn your attention to, a book which has been properly numbered. Just a trivial portal. yU My' ii g the "Ule thing that can lm' How about that little extra service that starts when your agent reviews your insurance policlei Tand I ten? you that certain changes can be made to Improve your program? ?he n?HUnar4, aout Additional Extended Coverage, or hi rfi2e?Theft,,or Glas endorsements which cari now be added to your fire policy? These additions to a fire SP.yare new in our business because separate policies thm lnTly "P"1". We'll be glad to tell you about them and if we forget, Just ask that's free Mm 7S N. Church INSURANCE PHONE 3-9119 SALEM "Ih Capital Stock (ompinf tt rtttfrtd lki"