nn 4 TEX CAPITAL JOURNAL. Sales, Oregon ToeeJay, Hay . HM Capital AJournal An Indaptndant 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, Wont Ads. 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. : ,,, M ImN Win Santoa 1 Um Imiliiw m u4 fa CM ma Tba aawciatM rtN It neiwlftlr nUUM U ll sm lor mkiMMa at ui am upuhi mm w n iff oumwim mM la tola aaia i alia am poalUaat luru. 1 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Br Cutmti UrathJr. ll.Mi aa Moaiha, tr Mi Om t.u. ili.M. Han ! Ifatlaa. rolk. Una. Baalaa. ClacSamM aaS TaaUiUI Csubum: UoBthlr. Ste; Sl Mentha. VM SWT. .VV. WW MU IIH1HII IB WW: MODUU7. il BO. MI HOalM, MM: Ona Ttar. II 0. ll Malt OaUMa Oram: MoaUdf, IIJll aU atoalal. HMi frHl.T.rJflPj NATURAL GAS COMING . Salem Chamber of Commerce members witnessed an interesting program oa the advantages of natural gas at their weekly meeting' Monday, particularly the nat ural gas tne west Coast Transmission company Ropes to pipe in Irom tne Peace Kiver country In Alberta. The gas would come in a long pipeline extended from what are believed to be the greatest gas fields in the world, wnose proven supply already runs up into the trillions, with more being added by new explorations. The line would run to Vancouver, Seattle, Tacoma, Port land and on to Salem, with branches to Spokane and Richland. It would be distributed here and in Portland by the Portland Gas and Coke company. natural gas is cheaper than the manufactured gas the area has now. This would presumably lead to its much wider use for heating in homes and for Industry. bince many industries require great quantities of cheap, clean heat a large scale industrial expansion is seen when natural gas becomes available. , however, there's competition for the honor and profit 01 serving wis great region with natural gas. The Pacific Northwest Pipelines corporation wishes to sup ply us with gas irom the San Juan basin which is located in New Mexico and Colorado. It would come in via south ern Idaho and eastern Oregon. The Federal Power commission will consider and act on the applications. As previously stated, the Portland Gas and Coke company favors the Canadians, as does the Oregon Journal, which expresses the belief .that Canadian gas will be cheaper and that it will not have to be shared with California as gas from the U. S. South west presumably will. " There is,, however, another angle. Canada Is after all a foreign country which might some time have a govern ment unfriendly to the United States, particularly in Al berta province, now governed by a Social Credit party, now grown prosperous and capitalistic, but once wilder than a March hare and plenty radical i Should a radical move recur in western Canada we might some day find our supply cut off on one pretext or another. How important this uosalbilitv ia we do not Vnm hut It certainly exists and ought to be considered by the com mission. Price and capacity to build the line promptly are also important items to consider. Natural gas looks like another piece of good fortune for a region already enjoying more than its share of this fickle dame's favors. "REDS TO REWRITE FAIRY CLASSICS (NEWS ITEMS) Uf7 TO MOST lrTCAUTHCa XLZ PT" I OFFAlWTAltilNOWTIM 1 fCitTl liMIlB POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER London Kids No Longer Say 'Got Any Gum, Chum?' London ") An open letter to any ex-GI from the London he used to $ now: Deer Joe, I came over here to see the Queen get her crown. and I've been here three whole days, and not one little kid has said, "Got any gum, chum?" I. tea you, tt gives you a lone some reeling, w The old town sure has chang ed from wartime days when a guy in an American uniform with a carton of cigarets under his arm could walk the streets and feel like a king. Remember how beat-up and nattered London looked then? Well, now she looks like some old family aunt who has come into a little money, got her face. lifted, put on a new paint Job, bought herself some glad rags and started looking for a boy friend. It's fun to see the old girl smiling and having a good time, after all the years 01 tears. The British are going about ibis coronation the same way they fight a war or make tea methodically and thoroughly. They will do the job right even if the Queen becomes eligible for an old age pension before she finally - gets her crown. By HAL I0YLI been a real vitamin shot for the British people, and they are Quite excited. Of course, Joe, you know they aren't like us. We are pround of our coun- try out loud, and they are proud of their empire in silence. You really need a alow motion cam era to catch a bud opening or an Englishman showing sn emotion of any kind. I guess It's hard to ssy which has really stirred them up more the coronation or the strain of three days of perfect weath- er. They are looking up in the history books to see 11 they ever had three straight days of sunshine before, and the unessl- ness probably will remain un til the next fog arrives. But Joe. you should be here now. I got news for you. Brus sels sprouts are out of season. In the restaurants they ask you if you wouldn't like some fresh strawberries. How do you like that, Joe? Strawberries Instead of .Brussels sprouts. You came here ten years too soon, kid. But that boiled potato you left behind you Is still on the menu, ten years soggier. Remember how we used to wear an arm out in a block saluting the top brass out at lAiacnnowcr piaix, wnere ucn- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND President Worried About Cabinet; McKay Looks Good FIGHT IN AIRFORCE ECONOMIES A major fight ia underway against the Eisenhower adV tmiuoM.vwii, ji4iwiyauj mi vuto iiinuo 111 ttiriorce expen ditures and other economies, yet the president is merely carrying out cempuim promises lor economy In c-nvern. ment and he knows the military situation better than anyone else and fa better qualified than critics to know wnat is necessary lor deiense. The bitter attacks of loudmouthed democrats and bull ous leftist columnists calling for the resignation of Sec retary of Defense Wilson, and the demands of airforce partisans are Just cheap politics designed to prejudice a public that has full confidence in middle-of-the-road poli cies of the president as well as his military judgment In his announcement of fiscal policies made a week ago, the president asked , 111,669,000 for the airforce and a goal of 120 wings in mid-1955, a reduction of $5 billion from the amount President Truman had asked with a goal of 143 wings my mid-1955. As Mr. Eisenhower atated the airforce will not be limited to $11.6 billion in fiscal 1954 aa it will have over $40 billion available in unspent appropriations, and more than 40 per cent of all the defense funds allotted for 1954. Naval airforce in addition will have the funds allotted the navy. The pres ident said: . , "This meana that almost 60 cents out of every dollar to be available for national defense in the next year will be de voted to air power and air detente. Security cannot arbitrar ily be defined as the simpls equivalent oi a specific number of aircraft or air wings. "Today, three aircraft with modern weapons can practically duplicate the destructive power of aU the 2700 planei we unleashed in the great break-out attack from the Normandy beachhead. . , . Security ia planned, not blindly bought It Is the product of thought, and work, and our ability and resd lneas to bear our military burden for however long the threat to freedom exists. Q. P. WE LOSE AN INDUSTRY Salem thinks in terms of gaining industries, just as a vtiouipiuu attuicie minus in terms ox ine nus ne is going to make or the blows he is going to land on his adversary. But there are retreats as well as advances in the life of a growing community, though happily few and of brief duration here. One such is the announcement yes terday of the closing of the Sick brewery. Reason given is that expansion of the company'a plants in Seattle an Spokane will slack all customer thirsts in the Northwest with greater profit to the company, which will have only two instead of three plant overheads to carry. So most of a 70 job operation will fold up for Salem, offsetting for a time at least the gain we all anticipate from the reopening of the aluminum plant under Harvey ownership. . It is significant that Slck's are moving against the general trend, which is decentralization of industry, more plants, particularly in smaller cities where living condi tions and employe relations are usually better. It is hoped that some productive use can be found for the personnel and the building, whose large, well located floor space should not long remain idle. BAME ON THE ' WEATHER MAN! Albany Democrat Herald It's a pity our ordinarily de cile Oregon weather had to ect up so shamelessly Just When the state baseball cham pionship was to be played In our town. Fortunately. nohl is attributing the cancellation of the tournament to any Al bany eustedneas. The aam. thing was going on all ever the lata, and there wasn't Am. andably dry spot whm tha contests could have been trans ferred with any assurance of playable conamons. Because our weather is us ually so pleasant and conven ient well overlook this lapse. But for next year we insist -on something different Cancella tion was a tough break for the leading teams. A good many seniors thereby missed their last chance to participate In a uua race. The law of averages, ought to assure them some thing better when the state's best prep diamond stars come to Albany for the 1B54 cham- piensnip games. eaaaaaaaaai In Sweden, livestock feed is manufactured from wood. Y DREW PEARSON Washington The president becominc increasinilv moo dy over the shortcomings of certain cabinet members. Here the general line-up of how tne cabinet rates with Ike, He takes an increasingly dim view of Secretary of State Dulles. . - .- . Secretary of Defense Wilson annoys him. Secretary of Agriculture Benson Is liked, but the presi dent has begun to realize that the farmers don't. Secretary of Labor Durkin seems to mske no Impression on tne president, Is regarded as a necessary evil. Secretary of. Interior Mc Kay has left the president Net ty mucn atone, Knows how to get things done without ruf- kOlng White House waters, Attorney General Brownell and Postmaster General Sum merfield rank high, somewhere behind Secretary of the Treas ury Humphrey, IKe is concerned sbout the health of his legislative liaison expert Gen. Wilton B. Persons. Persons is a No. 1 advocate of compromise with Ike's enemies in congress. This policy now shows signs of failure, and Persons' health may force him to withdraw from the lob. e nas also lost some of his enthusiasm for his chief of staff, former Gov. Sherman Adams of New Hampshire. Adams has his eye on Sen Styles Bridges' seat which is up for grabs next year, and this could be Adams' cue to bow out of the White House, What Ike is hunting for are more people with a global view. Including a White House Chief of Staff with more in ternational experience. RED POTASH IN U.S. It's been kept undercover. but the communists are dump ing potash in the U.S.A. at cut rate prices. American producers claim this Is an attempt to close down our domestic mines, so we will be caught short of potash in case of an emergency. They point out that potash is high on the strategic list, since farmers must have it for fer tiliser. This column has been able to trace the flow of communist potash back to an East Berlin firm, called Dls, run by Ger man front men but strictly controlled by the Russians. Their source of supply Is the East German potash mines in the communist tone. Three American firms have been quietly doing business wnn uis ana peddling the communist potash on the Am erican potash market at knock down prices. They are: Wood ward and Dlckerson of Phila delphia; General Fertilizer and H. J. Baker, both of New York. However, Herbert Rauch fus of Woodward and Dicker son explained to this column that he not only had the state department s permission to trade in East German potash but had actually been encour aed to keep the lines of trade open behind the iron curtain. He claimed that his company had been bartering third-rate tobacco for the potash. Thus, the west has been getting stra tegtc potash In return for poor-' grade tobacco, and he argued tnat it would be unpatriotic not to snsp up such a deal. Furthermore, he pointed out that the government. Itself. bought 40,000 tons of commun ist potash from his company ana trans-shipped it to For mosa to help Chiang Kai Shek's sarmers. The deal was made through the Commodity ureait corporation. ' Note: Dozens of private fer tilizer plants have refused to buy the cheaper East German potash . snd are paying much as $10 a ton more to American producers. In brief, the U.S. government Is buying communist potash that many American firms hsve boy- conea. WASHINGTON PIPELINE Senate Red hunters are hir ing a secret ex-communist wife to catalogue any party-liners in American colleges. Chief in vestigator Robert Morris went behind closed doors to ask the senate judiciary committee for permission to pay her without putting her on the pay roll. He made the request in an aura of great mystery, refused even to divulge her name. The com mittee flnslly sgreed that she could be hired anonymously for two days a week at S3S per day. . . . Secretary of De fense Wilson has refused to turn over comparisons between Russian and American plane production to his chief buBget critic, Democratic Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri. "I am sure you are aware," wrote Wilson, "of the problem from tne standpoint of security.' Yet Symington used to be Sec retary of the Air Force with clearance to see the nation's most guarded secrets. . . . The air force still has received no takers on the $100,000 offer to sny Red pilot who will deliver MIG fighter into American hands In Korea. Early in the war, however, a North Korean pilot flew a Russian World War II Yak across the lines and turned it over to the Ameri cans. LABOR SKIRMISH It's well known that the ex- governor' of Virginia. William Tuck, now a congressman, will not sit on the House Labor committee. But here ia the in side story of how he was kept off. Havlne earned a renutatlnn for "keeping labor in line" while governor of Virginia, Tuck decided that his logical niche in congress was on the labor and education commit tee. Committee assignment for freshman democrats are made by democratic members of the Ways snd Means committee, but the hard-working Virgin ian dldnt wait for this formal ity. With the backing of potent Sen. Harry Byrd of Vlralnla. who interceded with house leaders. Tuck assumed this ap pointment was secure snd dis patched a clerk over to the senate labor committee to get him some data on "riaht n work" (antl union shop) laws, which he had promoted as gov ernor of Virglnls. Tuck also hinted at a public luncheon that he would soon be open to suggestions as a member of the committee. Marine of this, the Ameri can Federation of Labor got ousy. An Ax, of L. legislative scout, George Riley, called on tuck to find out if the Vir ginian's anti-labor views had changed any. They hadn't Tuck was blunt and forthright in stating: Tm going to vote against you nine out of ten times, and probably on the tenth." Riley end another A.F. of L. legislative adviser. Andrew Biemlller, promptly told dem ocratic minority, leader Sam Rayburn what happened. "This man wears the aolden collar of big business." Bie mlller protested, "as I recently statea oeiore the State Federa tion of Labor in his own state of Virginia. American labor won't take his appointment ly ing oown." Meantime, five house Wavi snd Means democrats Forand of Rhode Island. Kin of Cali fornia, Dlngell . of Michigan, Eberharter of Pennsylvania and O'Brien of Illinois were all set to vote sgslnst Tuck. Since the Virginian needed a majority of six of the ten Ways snd Means democrats to cinch his appointment this meant his goose was cooked. - ' Rayburn, who was for Tuck In the beginning, changed his mind. Tuck took a less-desired assignment on the Post Office snd Civil Service committee, where he is expected to do a conscientious Job. ' (CopjTUht, ISSl) Excavators have discovered a clay tablet with a little danc ing figure scratched on Its in 3,000-year-old Greek busi ness house, and the National Georgraphlc Society suggests the figure may be the world's first doodle. I You know how fast we throw up some wooden stands in Americs for some local festival, such as running the mayor out of town. Well, the coronation stands look like they hsd been built for the ages. They are held up by miles of metal pip ing, and the English hsve taken as much care in building them as the French did with the Eif fel Tower. I checked the wooden seats, too, Joe, and they are so smooth that if any vlslttor gets a splin ter in his you-know-where, well itll be such a scant some poor carpenter will prob ably be drummed out of the empire. Until now the British have taken ' the coronation festival in stride. A few dlehards hsve even been hesrd to growl in their beer, "It's all ruddy nonsense." But now they are getting Into the spirit of the thing. It's cral Ike bad his headguartersT Well, I went out there in a cab and drove around the square for old times' sake, and the yellow house fronts were freshly paint ed, and I didn't see a single American uniform, not even one tired old abandoned colonel. Boy, that gave me an eerie feeling. But if they finally got all those colonels out of town, swivel chairs and all, I guess the war must really be over and what we are having Is peace. WEATBEKNOTE London () Diana Maugh am, whose uncle, Somerset Msughan, authored the stage hit, "Rsin," has a play opening here Tuesday night Title of. Miss Maugham's play: "Snow." Hives of bees often hsve many workers assigned to carry water Into the hive. Salem 30 Years Ago May ZS. 1921 Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Clough, residents of Salem for 47 years, celebrated their ' golden wed ding last evening. A deal transferring over five acres at 14th and B streets snd along Southern Pacific tracks to Oregon Growers Coopera tive association as a site for cannery and packing house usages has finally been closed. A prune packing plant may be constructed there this summer. IEN MAXWELL school district above Scotts Mills is district clerk. He .is also a worried man. Though the district has a fine school house and modern there are now neither pupils nor a pa trol living in the district ex cept Sam who happens to be a bachelor. Sam Is wondering what to do about the school since the lumber company va cated tne locality and all the Inhabitants except for himself have moved away. Since March 3, not leu than 20 prisoners have escaped from the penitentiary despite Gov ernor Pierce's instructions to Warden Smith to keep Inmates from roaming promiscuously over tne sate at their pleas ure. . . Bert S. Haney of Oregon was today appointed member of the shipping board by Pres ident Harding. Sam Hill of Abiqua Heights OPEN FORUM Carleton K. Logan, Univer sity of Oregon grsduste In Journalism and for the past nine months managing editor of the Ashland Glad Tidings will leave that paper on Sat urday to become telecrach edi tor zor a saiem newspaper. Chevrolet "World's Lowest priced Automobile." Five dss- senger touring car delivered to your door in Salem $663. (Re- member the year. 1923. not 1953).- Deaf Assn. Assails Trading on Affliction To the Editor: It has been brought to thai sttanuon of tne writers, and members of the Salem Chapter I of the Oregon Association of I the Deaf that certain out-of. state deaf persons have cornel info the community to peddle cneap trinaets. inis is out and out begging because, stressine their deafness, they are de manding donations that are far in excess of the true value of tne articles offered for "sale.1 The desf people of Salem ara proud of their record as hard working and respectable citi zens. Tney pay taxes, snend their money in town, obey the laws and have the respect of tneir neignoors. Tney are homa owners, citizens contributing to and sharing in the benefits of tne city. These peddlers, or bes can in disguise, bnd out cheap articles and, with the plea that aeainess prevents their finding suitable employment ask Deo. pie to donate sums far In excess or tne real worth of the trinket to be "sold." The deaf people of Salem are proof that this argument Is false. The deaf can ana ao una gainful em ployment These beggars hsve been offered legitimate work out it nas always been refused because they earn more, ind mucn more easily oy begging. The City of Salem requires peddlers to have a license. Ask to see this Salem license befora money ,1s handed out Should tne peaaier be without the 11. cense, please notify the police at once, giving them a descrin. Uon of the "seller." The deaf people of Salem da not want these peddlers in town; they want to stoo thli nefarious practice of soliciting under the guise of selling. This activity can be stamped out if tne citizens of Salem will dis continue giving money to these pannandiers. Buy your articles from local merchants. Keep your money in town, u you have money to give to charity, give ft to the local Community Chest or to the Red Cross Blood Bank Fund. OLAF TOLLEFSON THOMAS ULMER. TIME FOB DISCRETION Los Angeles Tunes Prime Minister Churchill re cently urged British Laborites to stop nagging in public about the way in which the United states is conducting the Pan. munjom truce talks and, In so doing, pointed up a moral which, we believe, , has appli cation on DOtn sides of tha At. lantic. The right to criticise publicly must be temnered with judgment ss to whether good or narm wm result. It would be hard to quarrel with this as a present counsel both for mem. oers of Parliament and mem. oers of Congress. The estimated sverage cost or arming an oil well in the United States is $49,000. Free Homa Trial YEATER APPUAKCE & TELEVISION CO. 375 Chemelceta St. Phone 3-4111 f , - f H?l '-s -t -if T' ' - ' ' ' , ! i r y: . Lli m. ; ! tuts T. Oua oraw a. Owoaa 3 Serving Salem os Funeral for 25 ond Vicinity Directors Years Convenient location, S. Commer cial street; bus line; direct route to cemeteries no cross traffic. New modern building seating up to 300. Services within your means. VMS T. Oawaa Virgil T. Golden Co. 405 $. Commercial St. FUNERAL SERVICE Fhene 4-2237