Pace 4 Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 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. ' fjO bul Win Into tka AmtltU mm Bf T Vulu fraaa. Ttaa Aaioclatad Prw to radnslvtlr antiuad U lha on lor aubllcatlaa 0 MWI UIHUbM tnHU4 U M W attUWlM aradlud U Ull Ml M 1m Dm lla ItMnu. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: T Cmi Wonthlr. Ills u Untlu. IT U: On Ytar.'llIM- B? UiO la MaMoa. Folk. Linn. Eaatan, Clukamw Couottu: HoBthlr, UK: Sli Moot a, 14 M; On Ttw. M 00. 1 MU Bntlun In Orwon: UonlMl. II 00: su UouUia. $4.00; On Iw, in oe. By Man OaUMa Otmod: Uootnir. iin Su uratiia. fiJO: Om Ttr. m 00, NO NEED TO HURRY Usually we subscribe to the old maxim "don't wait till tomorrow to do what you can do today," and that more recent but widely accepted truism "eventually, why not now?" But we cannot do so with President Eisenhowers request for an immediate hike in the national debt limit of $15,000,000,000, voted Friday night by the house. We fully sympathize with the nervousness of the ad ministration. It is faced with a large deficit in the fiscal year which commenced a month ago. The debt is now about J272.000.000.000. which is pretty close to the dead line. Tax receipts are lighter in the last half of the calen dar year than in the first half, so a deficit of S7.3 billion is anticipated for the next five months. But Senator Byrd, who is probably the best informed fiscal man in the senate, points out that the treasury now has a cash balance of around nine billion, with three bii lion dollars more bor-owintr capacity. This means 12 bil lions available to meet an estimated deficit of 7.3 billions, a 4.7 billion dollar margin, which seems ample. . Then the Eisenhower administration is determined to hold actual spending below the authorizations, and if it faces a limitation on its right to borrow funds for the next five months more pressure for economy will be ex erted on the government departments than if they have been given authority to hike the debt to 290 billions. Refusal by congress to increase the limit' would sound a warning that there is a bottom in the barrel and that deficit spending has just about reached it. The warning would be felt in every agency of government, and should produce a more wholesome attitude. Barring all-out war, which would bring congress hurry ing back to Washington, there is scarcely any doubt of the ability of the administration to weather these next five critical months without the increase. Early next year the flood of income tax payments will commence, and the government might get by until the end of the current fiscal year, with the rigid economy to which the admin istration is committed. By then we may have a balanced budget, so the debt limit might never have to be raised. A gamble perhaps, but isn't it worth trying? What have we to lose by mak ing a determined effort to keep the debt under its pres ent ceiling of 275 billions? Another way to avoid hiking the debt would be to sell some of the government's vast investments in transpor tation and industry for cash and apply this against the debt. If satisfactory offers can be found this would help carry out the administration's pledges and improve the government's fiscal position at the same time. THE REDS ARE SWEATING The giving of food packages to hungry East Germans is the smartest propaganda move our government has made in the whole cold war. It really has the comrades sweat ing, and swearing, too. They angrily Rejected the offer, but failed to control the people of the Soviet zone of Berlin who were hungry and didn't care who knew it. They streamed into the west zone, got their packages and returned to their homes, defying the Russian police and army. Now the fury of the Russians has reached such a point that they are forcibly taking the food away from these people and distributing it elsewhere as Soviet food, think ing thus to get credit for a generous act. . Here Is our opportunity, through the radio, to broad cast the facts all over Germany and throughout the Soviet realm where people do listen to the foreign radio despite all effort to prevent it. America gives food to hungry Iron curtain people, but their soviet masters take it away from them by force. The East Germans already know this. The whole world should be made to know it, and can be made to know it if we broadcast the facts effectively. BALANCED CONSERVATION SOUGHT In a special message President Eisenhower Friday told congress that the federal role in development of western water resources should be re-examined with an aim to the creation of a "better balanced program" for use and devel- opment of its natural resources. He called it "indispens able for maintaining and improving our standard of living as we make the future secure for a growing Amer ica. The president stressed the fact that problems of devel opment "are undergoing considerable change" because of Increase in the urban population and expansion of indus trial and mining activities. "These developments have brought about strong com petition for existing water supplies and have stimulated the need for a broader approach in planing new water re search development," Mr. Eisenhower said. So conser vation and development is "high priority business for all of us." Mr. Eisenhower stated that the administration plans to present at the next session of congress suitable recom mendation for achieving these objectives, which include comprehensive river basin planning with the cooperation of state and local interest and adherence to "sound princi ples for the financing and the sharing of the cost of mul tiple purpose land and water resource development." Two new government commissions after the adjourn ment of congress will be studying the problems involved during the recess. One unit is a commission on organiza tion of the executive branch of the government and the other to study federal-state relations. In his State of the Union message February 2, the presi dent called attention "to the vast importance to this na tion, now and in the future of our soil and water, our forests and minerals, and our wild life resources" and in dicated the need and necessity for a cooperative partner ship of the state and local communities, private citizens and the federal government in carrying out a balanced program. G. P. v. J ' ' 1 ' ' THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. Salem. Oregon HIS HONOR ARRIVES v HIS HONOR ARRIVES WASHINGTON MEY40-ROU"l Ike Insists Commanders Settle Their Differences By DREW "ARSON g ur..t,incrtnn Most impor-1 againsi -"""- .. r. ' BcN4ujht 8yneiU, Inc. .'- POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER War of Fashions to Bring Division in Ranks of Women By HAL BOYLE MOST READ MGK Grand Fan Courier What is the most widely read portion of a daily news paper? Is It the sports page, the "funnies." the ditorial page, the front page, society, or what? We long have been ot the opinion that none of the list above is the most popular rather, It is the want ad section. This opinion is bolstered by the result of a national survey of reader interest conducted by Continuing Study of News paper Readership, which re veals that at least 40 per cent of all newspaper reader turn to the want ad pages every day. We doubt If any other de partment of a daily newspaper claims the attention ot that great a proportion of the read ing public. New York VP) There I a war blazing up today -in which no woman can be an innocent bystander. Girls, it's a .battle you can't sidestep, unless you go around in a bathing suit. You can't skirt this issue: Should my new dress flap around my li'l ole shinbone, or should it just reach down far enough to tap my 11 1 ole kneecap?" It's a real ticklish issue. An argument over the length of a woman skirt is the height of nonsense to most men. But it has launched in Paris the war of the fashions," and it promises to divide women in to two classes as nothing else has but the institution of mar riage or the question of bob bed hair. There has been more than a suspicion that lor a number of years the famous Parisian designers got together before the start of each new style sea son. Over a few friendly "French 75's" b randy in champagne they were re ported to have reached chum my but Ironclad agreements on the two crucial problems: How far down to expose mi lady's bosom, ho'." far up to expose her legs. Editor's Note: Couldn't they avoid both problems by join ing a nudist colony? Everybody was happy. The designers made money. The ladies were content, because they knew no rival dared try to gain male appeal by expos ing more of her epidermis than the designers had de creed, as this would immedi ately stamp her as "brassy, definitely not in style." But now that cozy cartel is a complete bust. Christian Dior broke it in 1947 with his rebel "New Look," the inspiration for which may have been the middle tent in the Ringling Circus. Remember the bil lowy dresses? A small wom an sighed, "I have to take three stops before my dress begins to move." Now Dior, after years of repentance, is leading another revolt in the opposite direc tion with something he calls "The Live Look." This, as nearly as I can gather, is his old "New Look" after it had been sent to the laundry and come home shrunk. It Is hard for a male non combatant to figure out what is going on In the Parisian fashion battlefield. But, ac cording to late front-line dis patches from lady combat re porters in this war, Dior and necdle-and-scissors ally nam ed Dosses are making a door-die stand for a hemline a full It to 17 inches from the floor. ShiaparelU Is heading an old guard squad that is com mitted to go to any length to keep dresses at their present length 12 to 13 Inches above street level. "She is also featuring a "too big look," and I guess that means clothing that will make a fat lady feel like a little girl, and a little girl feel like yelling, "Help! Get me out of here. I'm lost." On the other hand, Dior's "Live Line" silhouette craft ily emphasizes a built-up bust line, raising even another frontline problem in the war. Nobody knows why he picked "The Live Line" for a title instead of "The Wolf De light." Although the Parisian de signers, fighting at needle point, are bearing the brunt of the fashion war, it is the, women of Anierica who are doing the silent suffering. Whose army shall they enlist in, Dior's or Schiaparelli's? Altitude enters in. A Dior outfit on a S-foot-7-inch girl would fall below her knee and still give her a leggy look. On a 5-foot-2-inch girl the same '-ss would bisect her knee cap. .ince an estimated 75 per cent of American women are 3 foot-3 or shorter Patricia Porter, women's editor of The Boston Traveler, predicts a Dior victory "may bring forth a million knees that . have never seen the light of day." Is there any man unwilling to face that prospect with for titude? This fashion war may un nerve women unable to make up their mind. But it's a boon to the American . male. He' tired of women trying to be different,- by looking alike. Now, at last, the feminine landscape will offer a more varied choice. On Dior! On Schiaparclli! Let's have no truce in "The Battle of the Hemline." Salem 28 Years Ago By 8EN MAXWELL August 1, 1925 William Jennings Bryan who had died July 26 was buried in Arlington cemetery, His grave site had a simple wooden marker. a At 12 o'clock last night all church bells had been chimed in Essen, Germany, to observe the official termination of oc cupation of the Ruhr by allied troops, there sir.ee early in 1923. a Will Rogers had declined to become a candidate for gov ernor of California. a a July had been entirely with out precipitation for the first time since 1922. 'Last mea surable rain had been on June 11. a a a Sentiment in favor of head on parking had been ex pressed strongly in Salem, a a a Three boys at the state training school at Woodburn were critically ill of typhoid fever as a consequence of drinking water from old wells on the premises. a a a Clifford Fults and Clarence Wilson had made a round trip to the coast on their bicycles covering 170 miles in a day and a half. a a a A channel between Port land and the sea, 35 feet deep and 500 wide had been pro posed by Portland commercial interests.' a a a Carl Benson who had a pheasant farm near Silverton had shipped 1000 birds to California. NAIL IT DOWN Roseburg News-Review Now that thieves are carry ing off safes, parking meters, merchandise or what have you, it might be advisable to nail down Ye Oldc Towne Hall lest it wind up piecemeal in a junk yard. Unt development at the Quan tico meeting of the top bras wa an order by President Ei senhower that hi military commanders must settle their differences inside the Pentago and end him only unanimous recommendations. If minority views are for tn him at the White 'House. Ike bluntly announced jhe will pay no attention to them. In other words, ne ex pects the new joint chiefs of staff to present a united front In the past, the navy fre quently differed from the air force and army regarding Ko rean war strategy. But from now on no dissenting opinions will be permitted. At the Quantico meeting, the fiery, red-haired chairman-designate, Adm. Arthur Radford, served notice that he consider ed last year' election a man date to the new joint chiefs to revamp their past policies. Radford didn't elaborate on what changes he expected to make, though he went on to stress the importance of the Far East. He has long wanted the United States to intervene in China, rescue Chiang Kai Shek, put him back in power on the Chinese mainland. The outgoing joint chiefs opposed this as likely to embroil us in war. TOP SECRET MEETING A "top secret" sign was posted outside the conference door as the president met with his military leader at the Quantico Marine base. How ever, this column can give a thumbnail account of what happened except for mat ters involving military secur ity, which are omitted. The president rambled along pleasantly . to the, top brass about team play and harmony, about how pleased he was to meet with his former comrades-in-arms. Then he told a joke about a duck hunter who was so "roaring drunk" that his companions left him behind in the rear blind while they went ahead to man the forward blinds. Finally, one lone duck flap ped by. Ike related, and the hunters blasted away. Not so much as a feather was ruffled. Then as the duck passed over the last blind wham!! One shot from the drunk brought down the stray duck. The hunters rushed back to con gratulate their companion and found him still happily blotto. "It was nothing," Ike quot ed the drunk. "Out of that flock of ducks, I wash bound to hit one." Likewise, the president add ed soberly, out of all the speechmaking at the military conference, he wanted to stress one point. "I want the decisions of the joint chiefs to be unanimous decisions, approved by the chairman," he declared. "If a minority opinion is sent up to me, I will treat it as if it hadn't been sent." When Admiral Radford's turn at the rostrum came, he hinted of changes to come in military planning. "The civilian leaders have changed. Now we also must change," he warned. "The elec tion was a mandate for us to make some changes." Radford stressed the impor tance of Formosa as a bulwark DON'T Throw Tour Watrh Away We Fix Them Wbea Others Can't THE JEWEL BOX 44 Stela 11 (aa 'u in the Far East. Thr,1ed.omeofthemmta leader to conclude that the first "change", would be more military aid for Chiang Kal- SlAny minority view against moves in China, they feared, would be oppressed by Pres ident Eisenhower' order. Note Theme of the Quan tico conference was "team play," though some admirals and generals complained that they were treated like high school kids on a picnic. At a barbecue, for instance, they were given huge aprons with "The Defense Team" spelled out in big letters acros the top and "Varsity" written across the middle. Secretary of Defense Wilson and his civilian assistant also chipped in $100 each for prizes for the brass hats who caught the biggest fish, played the best golf game and otherwise ex celled in sporting events. To Wilson' chagrin, most of the winners were the generals who have been bucking Wilson on budget cuts the air force. POSTAGE GETS LICKED The backstage battle over postage tamp almost caused a divorce in the Eisenhour en tourage. Bitterness reached a peak between Ike' close friends. Postmaster General Summerfield and Senator Carl son of Kansas, chairman of the senate post office committee. Carlson has been so opposed to Summerfleld's proposed boost to four cents per ounce for first-class mail, seven cents for air mail, and an extra 42 per cent for second-class mail, that the postmaster general fi nally went straight to the White House. And Eisenhower agreed to make the postage hikes part of his "must" pro gram. . This brought Senator Carl- Saturday. Auguat 1, ijjj bvu .utiiimi over 10 th 1u- House next day. ThenT president soothed hi old frl.! from Kansas by lndlcatin. " vately that he wouldn't Vt mind If mall rates vtta?7 creaied after all. He ilr tracked on hi itand ttutT?" was "must" legislation However, Summerfijjj k o grimly determined to hi own way, that he guard outide the hoiis, ;? publican cloakroom and bet. buttonholing eongremeilw they came and went. A fnl! mer GOP finance chairman intimated that campaign tribution might dry up " Junior member of the aaZ post office committee unit they agreed to vote feft, postal increases. He also m GOP committeemen and m senator as Schoeppel of Kj as and Martin of Pennslyvmj, to phone the congressmen uj CACIa 5CW allVlV PCaSUrC, EXPENDABLE SENATOR Finally the eager -betva. postmaster general got into row with Carlson as the rtajh of a itatement before the hou post office committee. gua. merfield told the committa that Carlson had promised hiq to hold hearings on the aenitc side. Carlson promptly issue! t denial, but ummerfield k. peated his itatement over T-V This amounted, in effect, ti a public charge that Ctrlm was a liar, and it made hia furious. But to make mttttn worse, Summerfield griped ti four influential friends abort Carlson. "Senator Carlson is expend able," the postmaster genenl snorted. '' When word of this got bttk to the senate, he retorted ig. grily that. Summerfield, toe, might be expendable. (Oaprrltht. 1MI IT WAS A MISTAKE Moro Journal Women are said to be i. vading the fishing spots when there used to be nothing but men another man's last hi. ven. Teaching the women It drink wasn't such a good Idea; now they can't be kept out of any place. THE FIRESIDE PULPIT Christianity Built on Faith And a Historic Character By REV. GEORGE H.SWIFT Rector, at. P.m'i EpUcopil crwea A young college student told me the reason he was not in terested in religion was that it had nothing but faith to stand on. He seemed unaware that faith enters into so much upon which he based his pre sent and future activities. In fact there could be not so-called security at all without a reasonable faith in people, monetary values, rainfall, sun shine, stock markets, and a thousand other things on which we base decisions affecting our present and future. Of course there Is such a thing as unreasonable faith. An unreasonable faith is one unsupported by any reliable evidence. Oilr faith in God is a reasonable one because it is supported by many almost in vincible evidences. . As far as Christianity Is concerned, it is not only a re ligion built on faith,' but also on an historical character. Christ lived. People saw Him. They heard Him speak. Christ was not the creation of emo tional minds, nor even the product of theologians. Christ is an historical person in whom I those who saw Him had tbio- lute faith. Once Christ called to Km discouraged fishermen to put out their nets for a catch. Pe ter answered, "We have toiltd all night and have taken noth ing." Apparently the fiih men had concluded that the fish were still outside the biy waiting for a rain to comt ii lit would have been an unrea sonable faith on the part i Peter if he had acted on hi experiences as a .fishermu and had tried again. But untie the circumstances it was a rea sonable faith Peter showed when he said to Christ, "Nev-er-the-less, at Thy word 1 will let down the net." Acting not on his knowledge as a fisher man, but on his faith In Christ, he filled his boat with fiih. Sometimes we are toll something we just could not believe were it not for the in tegrity of the one who nude the statement. Peter' fait was not based on the wons of a fellow-fisherman, but tt the words of Jesu Christ fi was well rewarded. Watch for Our GALA Open House CELEBRATION All Slocks of Merchandise Will Be on Sale al Remarkable Savings Feoturing the amoxing Trained Chicken, Elsit, Henrietta, Liixie and Hermon. You've never seen anything like it . . . Elsia . . . the shell gam wixard, and Lixxia . , . the poker playing shark, and Henrietta . . . tht quix kid! Plus , , . Herman, tht only malt member of tht act a it positively a mathematical gen ius. DOOR PRIZES . . . AUCTIONS . . . MUSIC ... 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