rait I Capital AJournal ' ' An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emtrltut Published overy afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, .Want Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor. 2-2409. tt) buH Wkw tmttm (to taMkM Tnm m4 tte Vmtu mm. Tm ImilKK hw mtHtolr wutlad u, mm tm MUutui at a m twiliaii nnt f m m mimiwIm aradiwt M this mic m4 . SUIJCRimON RATES: ur Cirtlm Mostht?. SISSi ets Manila. It Wt On Iw. Ill M. Br Uitt la Hwloa. Folk. Liu. Butoa. CUUuu aaS TMfciU CoaBUw: Uontalf. We; III Month HHi OH Ttu, UK 99 wg soawMra la orMoa: Monuir. ii.oo; hi nooim, MM: Oat Iw. I11.M. tr MU CMUI4 Orajoa: Moalhlr. IIJBi SU atonUll. SlSSi pa, Tw, 11110 THE GOVERNOR AND We welcome the governor's decision to sign the snti plcketing bill passed by the 1953 legislature notwith standing apparent imperfections that must have caused him tome doubt before be finally made up nis mma. The bill, now to become law, contains one section of very doubtful legality, which bans any picketing, whether .union inspired or not, regardless or what provocation an employer might commit to invite it. For instance, an employer might refuse to pay a worker's wage, yet he could not, as this bill reads; put a placard on his back and march up and down outside the employer's place of business announcing the fact We strongly suspect this to be an unreasonable interference with freedom of ex presssion and will not be in the kick it out the first time they are presented witn a case involving audt an issue. . But this la only one section, and court attacks will provide an adequate remedy if enforcement becomes too literal. The bin undertakes not as prevalent as it was, It is believed that it does goes too far, as perhaps it does. Whether it will actually remedy what it seeks to rem edy no one presently knows, but it represents the best thought of a legislature which gave the problem a lot of careful, sincere study. The governor could not bring him self to bring all this to naught, nor do we think he should. A veto is to be used sparingly when a governor is firmly convinced that an enacted measure contains more evil than good and Is clearly against public policy. For the legislature, not the governor, is the legislative agency of the state, and the courts, not the governor, say the final word on constitutionality Two years of experience will place the next legislature in a position to correct such errors as show up in the ad ministration of the act, and to produce a more workable measure, , TRUCE TALKS STALLED AGAIN The current Korean truce talks, which opened with such bright hopes based on an apparently conciliatory Russian attitude, are stalled again and on the same issue, what to do with the enemy prisoners in U.N. hands who do not want to return to communist control. The United States has taken a firm stand against turning these men over to murder or slave labor, the only stand a nation such as ours could take after what happened to many prisoners we turned over to the Rus sians after World War U. We cannot yield on it and expect to enjoy the respect of the world for years to com. ' But it appears now that the Russians will not allow a truce except on terms that will enable them to get their hands on these prisoners. They refuse every offer short of this : we refuse every plan that enables them to achieve their aim. If Malenkov intended a conciliatory course in the open ing days of his regime which may be doubted his atti tude is toughening now, not only in Korea but in Europe as well. Evidently the "peace offensive" was intended for propaganda purposes with a view of getting the new Moscow regime off to a good start while power was con solidated in the hands of the new rulers. The invasion of Laos is but part of a pattern of com munist determination not only to hold everything it now has but to rush on to new conauesta. President Eisen hower is fully Justified in wanting some evidence of Rus sian willingness to deal before committing himself to another of those fruitless "conferences" and the attitude of the British leaders appears to be inspired by nothing bigger than domestic political advantage at the expense oi mi tree world s vital interests. Gloomy picture? Of course. But we'd better be real. istic. It is not recorded that departed while be burled his head in the sand. a-aaaaBaBapaspyBBBBBBBBaaaaaB BRITAIN DIGS IN AT SUEZ Dispatches from Cairo say British troops in the Suez canal sons are digging trenches in expectation of attack from the Egyptian army as negotiations between Brit ain and Egypt reach a stalemate. . Egypt's rulers, victims of a nationalistic hvsUrfa Rome of them helped to arouse, do not now dare to make a realistic settlement which would permit the British to remain in the canal tone until Egypt is able by herself to assure its safety from Russian attack in the event of war. And the British cannot afford to leave before then. Nor can the U.S. afford to have them leave. Sues is a lifeline between the east and west for the whole free world in the ovent of a new war. Its defense must not be turned over to a weak, decadent power like Egypt. The British have besn pig-headed and imperialistic in the past Egyptians cannot be blamed too much for their feeling against their former masters. But this is one time they dare not yield, and Egypt will be perpetrating an act of criminal folly if she forces the issue. EUGENE FIGHTS DOG RACING The law of Oregon empowers the state racing commis sion to consider local sentiment in deciding applications for permits to build tracks, and Eugene is taking full advantage of this in protesting vigorously against an nounced plans for a dog race track there. The Eugene city council, tho school board, Springfield officials and numerous civic groups in both communities t't00d up 10 """ted. all against the project Objections include greater trouble and expense in law enforcement financial loss to local interests by removal from the locality of the lush gambling profits made by the outside promoters, and the fear that introduction of commercial gambling will bring other evils usually asso ciated with it vWt mud it the racing commission overrides this local attitude and grants the license. For if ever local sentiment has a right to be considered it is on a proposal of this kind. Jelas Dairy Great N. O. Pew, route 1, Sslsm, Ore., has been named to mem THE PICKETING BILL least surprised if the courts to deal witn an evil, wnicn is but might become so again. this. The critics contend it the ostrich's troubles ever bership In the American Milk ing Shorthorn society iccently, W. J. Hardy, secretary of the society, has announced. IT WAS I POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Woman's Big Moments Linked To Tears, Man's to His Ego By HAL New York (V-It is the big moments' that makes our little lives memorable. To a woman her wedding day, the day she gives birth to her first child, and the day she buries her huiband these traditionally have been the great landmark moments, although now a fourth is getting more popular: The day the Judge gives her alimony. The big moments with men are different. When a man marries he hardly tenses what Is happening to him. He li too stunned even to cry 'Help! Let me out of here' snd he Is In a similar daze when he first becoms a father. A woman's treaiured moment are always allied to tears, a man s generally are tied to his peacock pride, to a goal won. Perhaps you csn find some of your best remembered mo ments among the following: 1. The day you let go of the sofa and took your firit uncertain step alone. Lean ing to walk It the biggest mis take a little man will ever make, and naturally he can't forget It. He will have to wear shoea the reit of his life, and never cease tecretly regretting that he ever got up off the floor. S. The day your first tooth falls out. The gaping cavern In your mouth leaves a lasting hole In your mind. It it your first deep lesson in mortality, your initial Intimation that you won't last forever, and there is no final security . I. The day your kinder garten sweetheart breakt the newt your torrid affair It over, the It going to marry an older gup In the first . grade, but she will always think of you at a brother. Thlt teachet you that there it no real justice in thlt world, honest merit is rarely recognized, and tex is a snare. 4. The day you put away your marbles end put on your first pair of long pants. Mow you are sure at Inst you will really grow up, and you won' der why dad laughs and mother we pi. S. The day you cash your first paycheck and know that never again will you ever ask anybody for money. Ex cept maybe your boss, the bank and your father-in-law. 6. The day your girl gives you a present. This both thrills and terrifies you, because if you have any brain at all ou know by now that a woman doesn't spend her money on a man for nothing, and sooner or later she will catch you. 7. The frightening day when, heart in mouth, you tell your employer you'll have to get more money or look for another job and he gives you your first raise. It Is only IS, but no amount of money you ever made after wards will give you as much satisfaction. You have dared the lion in his den and won. I. The day your eon beats up the kid next door. After four generations of black eyes. It is nice-to know the THE CAPITAL ' JOURNAL. Salts, Oregon SUPPOSED TO BE 'EXCLUSIVE' tfcKMSjBfc4 BOYLE with someone who can do some thing besides fight lost csuses. 9. The day you win a Thanksgiving turkey In the office raffle. It Is wonderful to know that, after all, your luck can turn, and maybe life really hasn't got you behind the 8-ball forever. 10. The day when, after 33 years of losing arguments with your wife, the suddenly crumblet and says, "Dear. I am wrong and you are absolutely right. Levi do as you say. This brings your life to a peak. After that there isn't much left for a man except to take hit pension, start baby sitting for his grandchildren and look fondly back through the gathering mist at his big, big moments. Salem 52 Years Ago ly IEN MAXWELL May II, 1101 President McKlnley had abandoned hit trip to the Northwest due to Illness of Mrs. McKlnley. United States Navy found wireless telegraphy feasible. recommended its adoption and proposed to abandon the ute of carrier pigeons. A five year hop contract at 11 cents spelled prosperity for this section. Albany toll bridge was net ting about $200 a month. me government lr.ule was well fed and cared for as com pared with the fourth clan postmaster. Grand Court of Oregon for esters of America held its final session at Salem. Buren & Hamilton had just received 10 new designs of go carts. "It behooves all mothers to get out in the air and sun shine with the little one." Alderman and Mrs. S. J Eagon of Woodburn were ir Salem. Mr. Eagon was an ad' vocate of the popular loan system of finance but Wood burn has not debt enough to apply the remedy. John A. Aupperle had con tracted for the Jefferson flour ing mill and was surveying the property lines. Thursday evening session of the State Sunday school con' ventlon met at the First Meth odist church and the attend ance was very large. Friedman's New Racket store, corner of State and Com ON THf IHi BEST eh WHY DOO RACES? Albany Democrat-Herald We hope the Eugene city council will reject the request to permit operation of a dog racing track in the University city. The dog races serve no purpose other than to provide another avenue of gambling. The races themselves are about the lrriducible minimum in sport They're over In a flash, before the spectator can get set for a good look. The animals are small and hard to distin guish. The races would provide an other way to divert silly money out of the town. We wouldn't care much if the money could always be lost by those who can afford to lose, but the groups we saw at the betting windows at the Portland races Included many who looked as if they were trying to win the grocery bill. Wouldn't It be a lot better to promote good baseballT Or is there a tort of "Gresham't law" in sport whereby the unworthy crowds out the worthy? Any how, we hate to tee It made to easy for people to go to the dogs. - mercial streets: Men clay worsted suits, $9; Scotch tweed suits, $8. A well made and neat looking suit of Oregon serge, $4.80 to $9. F. I. Dunbar, secretary of state, was asking bids for 400 cordt of fir wood for utace at the statehouse. Portia Knight, who was suing the Duke of Manchester for breach of promise, did not demand any specific amount but said the had suffered dam age through the duke's promise to marry her. Miss Knight was n actress. (Portia was the daughter of Col. N. B. Knight who came to Salem about 1867 and for a time was William P. Lord's law partner. Colonel Knight married Miss Sarah Miller in 1871. Portia, the ac tress, was one of three chil dren. At the time of his death In Salem, February 18, 1902, Colonel Knight was only re cently returned from England where he had conducted his daughter's tult.) Irate Bartender Bites Off Patron's Nose San Francisco li.B Samuel Sedeno's profile was reported in good shape today after his nose was bitten off by an irate bartender Saturday night. , Patrolmen John Bird and Martin Roddy reported they found the missing piece of nose was bitten off by an irate bar tender Saturday night. Patrolmen John Bird and Martin Roddy reported they found the missing piece of nose under a juke box. Doc tors who put It back on said today It was regrowlng. HIGHWAY WAY IS... WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Penniless Texas Lobbyist ' Rose Like Meteor in Wash! YDEW Washington The supreme ceurt decided to review a case the other day which had noth ing to do with the Rosenberg Greenglass atomic spy death sentence, but did have a great deal to do with Irving Kauf man, the Judge who sentenced them to death. It also had a areat deal to do with one of the greatest perennial problems of the nation'a capital keeping track of lobbyists. The story It more colorful than that of the atomic spies and not so sordid. It goes back to a period just before Pearl Harbor when a genial gentleman wearing a broad-brimmed hat with only a few dollars in his pocket came up from Texas, leaving behind a none too savory reputation. After only six years In Wash ington, this columnist found him on a first-name basis with various senators. A heavy spec ulator on the Chicago commod lty market, the owner of 7,000 acres of cotton land around Granger, Texas, 1,800 acres and 700 cattle near San Antonio, plus a 531-acre farm near Poolesville. Md. The gentleman in uuestlon Is ebullient, back-slapping, fast' talking Ralph Moore, whose meteoric rise at a capital lob' byist illustrates bow a man with a happy smile, a ball-bear ing tongue and plenty of gall can roll up a fortune overnight. Hit career also illustrates how a smart operator could manip ulate the commodity market when millions in Europe were starving. 'Moore is delightfully frank about his career. Visited in his converted office building at 1707 N Street, the gentleman from Texas tat against a back drop of mounted longhorns, handsome paintings and ornate gray-green draperies. "I never have to bribe any body," he bragged. "It s a bad practice. I just show them how to make a little money. If you give a man $300 or $1,000 he feels like he owes you some thing and that you are trying to bribe him. But if you just show him bow to make money, he doesn't feel like he owes you anything. That's what I do with my contacts. That's what I would do with you if I trusted you." SENATORS SPECULATE Asked whether he handled the grain speculations of any senators, Moore said that he did not, but that several of them had speculated and usual ly operated through Bache & Co. In Washington, or Harriss It Vose In New York. "I expect I have more friends on Capitol Hill than anyone else In town," expanded the genial Texan, looking out his window at his Belgian court beneath. On the wall beside his desk hung a picture of Ralph Moore with officials of the Jack & Heintz war plant in Cleveland, another picture showing Moore with Senators Thomas of Okla homa, Bankhead of Alabama and others dining at the May-i f j PEARSON flower hotel, and so on. "Making money is easy, continued Moore, "if you know what the market is going to do. I'll make you some money right away and It won't cost you a -dime, if you'll go easy on me. But I'm afraid of you. Vm afraid vou might put it in the paper. If I could only trust you, I could maae you quiw few thousand dollars In a hur ry." THREATENED TO KILL There came a time when the genial gentleman from Texas did not feel quite so expansive toward this columnist, in fact there came a time when Ralph sent word he was going "to shoot that so-and-so Pearson' if he kept on digging into hit commodity-market speculation on behalf of Senator Elmer Thomas of Oklahoma. Thlt was about the time Judge Kaufman entered the picture. Irving Kaufman was not a Judge then. He wat a rather green, hard-working, conscientious young attorney who had come down from New York on the somewhat thank less job of enforcing the new lobbying registration act That act had just been put on the books as a result of in fluence peddlers who flocked to Washington during the lush days of the new deal, preying both on unsuspecting business men and unsuspecting senators. Finally congress decided that while there wat no way to abol ish lobbying, it was only fair to make all lobbyists register, so the public would know who they were. This was In accord with the foreign agents regis tration act, which requires at torneys and representatives for foreign embassies to register to the public may identify them. Kaufman grabbed hold of the Ralph Moore case with gusto. when It wat placed before him, and made It the first test of the new lobbying act Moore was indicted, along with Tom Linder of Georgia and J. E. McDonald of Texas for failing to register as lobbyists while pulling wires snd trying to in fluence senators. Moore, particularly, had been found up to his armpits at a speculating partner of Senator Thomas of Oklahoma. Partly as a result Thomas was defeat ed for re-election. Also partly as a result young Irving Kaufman was appointed to the U. S. district court in New York where fate later handed him the difficult atom spy case In which for the first time In American history a death sentence wat given for treason. ' But after Kaufman had gone up to the court in New York, a Washington judge, Alexan-i der Holtzoff, ruled against him and hit first test case of the lobbying act Holtzoff ruled that the lobbying act wat un constitutional and that Moore et al did not have to register. The other day, however, the supreme court indicated that it felt differently. It agreed to re- Funarol Service Sine Phone l-m ChHth SAUAL OMOON Friday, May 15, 1ISS OPEN FORUM This Writer Prefers Government. Projects To the Editor: All business In a democratic country begins with public permission and exists by pub lic approval. That being true, business should tell the pub lic what Its policies are, what it is doing and what It hopes to do. The control of water for any purpose determines the welfare of localities and na tions. It is a public need for every form of occupation. Deserts have been made by lack of water, and deserts made into garden spots by the control of applied water. What method is used requires a certain amount of operational expense to manage efficiently whether it it for private ben efit or public use. Under private management, the immediate profits to a small group of investors. In the shortest time at the least expense It the dominating motive, under public devel opment long range future wel fare of the greatest number of people, enabling them to se. cure food to prevent famine, power to work with and im prove living conditions is the object sought, undertakings have become so massive and financially expensive, that only the resources of the gov ernment can carry to comple tion undertakings that become necessary for the welfare of the people. Private investors strive to dominate and control a pub lic requirement to extract profit by excessive charges over the cost of building and operation of any development that the public uses. Water and power come under that heading. The persistent snd vicious attacks made upon public operation of these de velopments by management of private utilities, without tell ing what it hopes to do and why proves that it hopes to force the public to pay ex cessive charges for the use of public need. The public has to decidt whether it wants to pay monopoly charges to build profits for a small group of investors or to build for their own benefit The private in terests do not dare to lay their purpose open to the public for comparison as to benefits to be secured. HERBERT DENNETT, 266 S. Cottage St, Salem, Oregon. TAKES IT TO 'EM Hollywood QMS Television actress Sara Boner's ctr caught fire yesterday. But she didn't call firemen. She took the fire to them. Miss Berner drove to Engine Company 78 and they put out the blaze. view the first test case of the lobbying act initiated by Judge Kaufman, and the decision de claring the act unconstitutional by Judge Holtzoff. Upon this review will hang the important question of whether the public hat a right to know the identity of those who pull wires and in fluence people in Washington. ' (CoprrWht, 1MI 1878 tamuy nnauy cat come up