Pitt 4 Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor ond 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. Win 1H the) Th aYawocttt ptms it acluiMly u dupiubM cdiM4 to II r SUBSCRIPTION RATES: CwrMr! Moathlj. Il ltl (II Month. VM: Om Iw. lilt. It WiD M HUM, Folk. LIU. Enu. cickBM CoiulM: Msstklr. Mc: i Kibi MM. Oh Tu W W. Br MU Iirh.r U Otm: WoaUUr. II at: U Nnltt MM! Tw. I1J M. r UUI OttoMa Mw IIMUI, lljii u U'aUu, IW; ' Tr, 11100 REPUBLICAN SENATE Senator Taft'g death converted the Senate Republicans from a majority into a minority, as he will be succeeded by a Democrat This might be expected to unite them, but it seems more likely to Taft, generally looked upon as a conservative near-isolationist, was on good terms with virtually all members of both parties. He had a capacity for getting opposing factions to work together which it is generally conceded no other senator possesses. Republicans elected Taft'a choice as temporary leader, Enowland of California, without a contest, but this does not mean that Knowland enjoys unanimous support. Far from it. Six influential senators were noticeably absent when he was named, after failing to get the election of a leader postponed. They are not considered reconciled to the choice. Republican factions follow logical lines. Mid-westerners are conservative some say reactionary isolationist for the most part, and none too friendly to the Eisenhower administration. This group extends clear out into the inter-mountain west, including both Idaho senators, at least one from Utah and the one from Nevada. They are a formidable group in numbers end in determination to prevail The other group is principally east and west coast, New England, New York, mid-Atlantic, Oregon and California. Knowland was presented in nomination by Cordon of Oregon. This group loyally supports the administration. Most, though not all of them were for Eisenhower "before Chicago." Knowland himself was for Earl Warren, who shares many of this group's views. The Republican conservatives can't change the occu pant of the White House till 1957 at least but they can make life miserable for Eisenhower, and many think they are planning to do just that, for many of his ideas on both foreign and domsetic policy are bitterly resented by the group. Here the southern Democrats will play a major role. They can play a Democratic party line game, wreck the Eisenhower administration and' get a left wing northern Democrat for president in 1957, or they can follow their natural inclination and support the bulk of Eisenhower's program, especially on foreign policy and economy, with votes enough to carry the measures even if the anti administration Republicans carry out their natural in clinations. , 1 - ' If this happens we will see government by a bi-partisan coalition, just as we saw such a coalition reduce President Truman'a power to virtually nothing while his party held nominal control of both houses of congress. What'll we see in 19567 Probably a real knock down and drag out convention fight between the right and left wings of each party, then an unprecedented amount of plit ticket voting in the fall, and finally another bi-party coalition of rightists and leftists, one to govern, the Other to oppose. The day of party unity in this country seems to be ever, for a long time to come. But government must go on, and will, through coalitions of like-minded members of both houses of congress. TRUTH WILL OUT DESPITE CENSORS The bonehead censorship imposed by the army on press interviews with released American prisoners in Korea seems as much of a failure as that they attempted to impose last April on the exchange of sick and wounded "brain-washed" POWs rushed to Valley Forge in Opera tion "Little Switch." Sooner or later the truth comes out to dissipate the wildcat rumors created by suppression of facts. The press associations reports from Freedom Village that Interviews with the returning prisoners were con ducted with frequent interruptions from censors, and the returned veterans have been instructed on what mihiprt they could discuss, presumably a policy of appeasement to avoid antagonizing the communists. The futility of the attempted censorshin is elreadv apparent, for the released American and South Koreans are telling of beatings, burnings, death marches and star vation at the hands of their Red captors horrors which Killed countless fellow prisoners. That the censorship has already been abandoned is in dicated Dy tne interviews Thomas D. Harrison, 82-year-old fighter-bdmbcr pilot, and highest ranking American officer yet returned, in two-day prisoner exchange, who arrived on crutches, with one leg missing. Perhaps because he is a West Pointer and a cousin of Lt. Gen. William K. Harrison, who nego tiated tne truce lor the U.N. command, he was permitted to tell his story of 12 days starvation and the infamous "water torture" at the hands of North Koreans trying to pry air force secrets from him. Freedom Valley accounts of sadistic torture were grimly accented by the sight of pitiful, broken wrecks of men who made up part of today's 392 returnees. Some could hardly walk. Others were terribly emaciated. One, a South Korean, was delivered dead. Some of the returning Americans were in excellent condition. But in general, they were worse than the British, though not in as desperate shape as the South Koreans. Airmen seemed a special target of Red brutal ity, in reprisal for allied bombing and straffing. The returning prisoners presented grim evidence that gome of the thousands of missing Americans never will re turn. The worst horrors were in the early days of the war. Conditions improved somewhat in some cases after the Chinese Reds took over and improved further during the truce negotiations. G. F, Pope Pius Refers to Martyred Saint Vstlcin City (JPh Pope Piui XII says the calamity of the Catholic church In Communist ruled Poland parallels that of POO years ago when the na tion's patron saint was mar tyred. The Pontiff made the com parison in a letter addressed to Poland's Catholi Hierarchy - VMM 4t DHJ Mtl mtmtx. to lb m tt Wieitoj f Umj-vIm milt to ifato ir FACTIONS have the opposite effect. both geographical and ideo given the press by Lt. Co . upon the ocacsion of the sev enth centenary of the canon ization of Stanislaus of Cracow. Ml'ST BE MISTAKE Memphis, Tenn. UJ Mrs, Sadie Ciaramitaro denied at s beer license hearing yesterday that her son was a bootleiter in 1934. My son, Joe, was nine years old in 1934." she said. Red-faced police confessed their records "must be tn er ror." mm ) Ss WASHINGTON MERRY Iron Curtain Food Riots in By DREW Washington Much more than the American people realize, the prisoner world be hind the Iron Curtain is watch ing the food riots In East Ger many. Also, more than the American people realize, the Eisenhower administration has been holding backstage debates regarding the next step to be taken in East Germany. So far there's been no de cision. Two facts, however, are fair ly clear: Mo. 1 The East German food program is only a drop In the bucket compared with what needs to be done in all the vast and restless area be hind the Iron Curtain. No. 2 The Eisenhower ad ministration was elected on a platform of stirring up revolt behind the Iron Curtain. So vigorously did Eisenhower and John Foster Dulles emphasize this during the political cam paign that Adlal Stevenson publicly chided them.' Once In office, however, the Eisenhower administration has been bothered by doubting Thomases, do-nothing advisers, has moved with exasperating caution. FIRST FOOD PROPOSAL The present food program for East Germany was pro posed by this writer to cer tain state department officials on June 23, shortly after the Berlin riots started. Some of ficials were enthusiastic, some dubious. "If the Russians won't let our surplus bread and butter enter East Germany," It was proposed in one column, "then the American radio station in Berlin, RIAS, can put them on the spot by blaring the fact behind the Iron Curtain. "All we have to do is put the bread and butter down in West Berlin and let the East Germans come and get it. Sev eral thousand cross back and forth every day. I have crossed back and forth dozens of times . . ." This has now worked out exactly as predicted. Though tt took three weeks of back stage debate, press and radio comment, this idea has now given the Kremlin Its worst setback since the end of the war. As stated In a column of June 30. "If our millions of tons of surplus food were used appropriately In Berlin, the effect on the Russians would be devastating ... If the Rus sians refused they would be more on the spot than ever The Russians did refuse Eisenhower's offer of July 10 and they are now on the spot in a manner which has lost them more prestige than any oiner single move we have made. OVR NEXT MOVES Desperate, the Russians are now blocking food distribu tion. And the question is, what is our next move to be? Here are a few suggestions: 1. Drop food by balloon In the rest of East Germany'. If Red tanka and troops continue to block the East Germans, give them a spectacular dem onstration of Yankee ingenu ity by dropping food parcels at THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. Sakm, Ortfoa SHAKY STRUCTURE - GO - ROUND People Watch East Germany PEARSON their front door. The god given winds of upper altitudes which move from west to east are with us in regard to this and this is something the Kremlin can't change. We should use them The Junior Chamber of Commerce executive commit tee, meeting last week at Tulsa, Okla., offered to take over this friendship balloon food lift ifj the state department had noj objections. 2. Repeat the food program In other areas behind the Iron Curtain. Vienna, like Berlin, Is divided into sectors, so that people can cross over from one to another. A similar program In Vienna would have the same electrifying results in southern Europe that the Ber lin program is having In northern Europe. 3. Send food by balloon to other Iron Curtain countries which are not near Berlin and Vienna. Food by balloon is a little more expensive, but in tensely dramatic and drama Is needed to win the cold war. Furthermore, Poland, Czech oslovakia and other satellite countries were invaded by Germany, don't particularly love the Germans, and don't like to see us favoring the German people. For us to con centrate on helping Germany alone would be a serious psy chological error. 4. Demand that free elec tions be held in every Iron Curtain country. In a formal note to Moscow we should em phasize the fact that the Yalta Pact gives these nations the right of governments of their own choosing and we should demand that the United Na tions supervise free elections. Yalta has been used against us in many respects. We should not be so slow about using it to our advantage. This is one of our biggest aces-in-the-holc. and so far we have completely missed the boat. 5. Move for a United States of Europe. Most Europeans know they are doomed both economically and militarily if they remain smBll. divided, in dependent countries. The only way they can exist is to emu late our example and unite. GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY The death of Stalin, the purge of Beria. the restless ness behind the Iron Curtain constitute an opportunity which comes only once In a lifetime. We can't wait a year or a month or even a few weeks. Speaking tn Buffalo Aug. 27, Just about a year ago, John Foster D.illes promised that Eisenhower, if elected, would encourage "quiet revolutions in Red-dominated countries through such methods as pas sive resistance, slowdowns, in dustrial sabotage." And Eisenhower himself, speaking in Denver, Aug. 13. said: "The United States must try to obtain by peaceful means the restoration to the captive nations of Europe the right freely and honestly to determine their own fate and their own form of govern ment." Again speaking before the Amrrican Legion Aug. 26. Ike said: "The American consci ence can never know peace . . . until the countries cap tured by the communists are restored again to being masters of their own fate. These pledges will not wait Not only in the affairs of men, but in the affairs of nations, opportunity strikes but' once. If this opportunity is lost it may not strike again. (COPTTllht, ISM) Salem 25 Years Ago By BEN MAXWELL August i. 1921 City council had issued a call for bids on construction of North High street culvert and a bridge - spanning Pringle creek gulch on Liberty street. Marion county had been re quested to replace the 300-foot covered bridge over the San- tiam at Mill City with a mod ern structure. Fifty-five members of the Salem YMCA climb party had reached the summit of Mt. Hood. Postmaster J. H. Farrar had received word that a substa tion of the postoffice would be established in the Hollywood district beginning September 1. Oregon public service com mission had a copy of Oregon Electrlct Railway company's petition asking permission to abandon the branch line be tween Woodburn and West Woodburn. Cross Market had announced its intention to occupy its ew location at 26S North Liberty street on August 10. Efforts were being made to hasten construction of the ! Wallace bridge road connec tion with the Tillamook high way. Riverside park, new picnic and swimming resort on the Willamette south of Salem had been opened by George J. Veall. "Butch," Salem fire depart- ment's 16-year-old mascot, has disappeared. Fire of undetermined origin had extensively damaged the Theo. M. Barr plumbing and tinning shop on South Liberty street. Less D. C. Drinking Corvallis Gazette-Times Since the new Republican team took over last January, coffee and liquor consumption has dropped in Washington, DC. Government Services, Inc., which operates most Federal cafeterias, reports coffee con sumption has dropped from 44.000 pounds a month to 34, 000 pounds a month since January. Howard Lewis in his "U.S. and US" column in the Wash ington Times-Herald reported ". . . those who know report cocktailing and free - loading sessions attended by govern ment officials off at least 80 per cent from normal. This should be some small proof that the taxpayer is get ting more work for his money out of the federal workers and that the hither officials sre paying more attention to busi- ness than they are to partying Both improvements are for the public benefit. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Trying to Please Wife Gets Fame, Fortune for Chemist ly HAL New York WV-All most hus bands feel they get for trying to nlease their wives is exer else and maybe a kind word. But the reward of Paul Charlao. a 28-year-old chenv 1st, was fame and financial success. It was by trying to please his wife that Charlap developed nylast, -chemical subsistence that increases the snaa-resistanca of nylon stock' ings and adds to their wearing oualitv. The Charlap success saga Is the kind of young-love-con quers-all story that Hollywood would reject as too true to me to make a good movie. Back in 1949, while caring for their infant son, "Cookie" Charlap snagged her stockings and complained to Paul: "If you know so much about chemistry, why can t you do something to make my hosiery last longer?" "Being as it's your wife, you don't ordinsrily psy any atten tlon to a remark like that, Paul recalled. "But that night she showed me that she was spending $4 to S3 a week for hosiery - and that kind of woke me up." Paul checked with the Du Pont Co. chemists and found they had a substance which helped protect nylon from snagging during the manufac turing process. "Why couldn't a housewife use it?" he asked. He was told it was Impractical too high a temperature was required, and the substance washed away in soap and water. But Charlap wasn'lsatisfied He took some of the substance home, set up a laboratory in his basement. After 18 months in which he devoted every spare hour to the problem, Paul came up from the base ment one day and said conn den'tly: "I've got it!" .. He had developed a chemical solution that put a protective coating on stockings. But first the stockings had to be washed and then throuoghly rinsed twice. Cookie found that was so much trouble that after a few weeks she quit using it, "You're just too lazy," Paul accused her. "Nope, too busy," she said. "A woman with two children doesn't have that much time to spend on her stockings every night. Why don't you combine the chemical solution with soap? Then I could wash my siocmngs ana pur me proiec tlve coating on them at the same time." Great ides, wonderfully slm pie. Who would have thought of it but a busy housewife? "The only trouble was that the basic ingredient and soap were antagonistic like oil and water," said Paul. But he set out again to please his wife, "If you really want this stuff," he told Cookie, "you're going to have to do most of the work. I have to earn you a liv ing." So he and Cookie tested more than 200 soaps, detergents and Preventable Drownings Grants Pass Courier About two thirds of the TOO sccldental drownings of pre school children each year in the United States occur among youngsters who are presuma bly safe at or near their home, statisticians of the Metropoli tan Life Insurance company report. One-year-olds account for almost 300 of all the drown ings, a greater number than at any other single year of life. Only a small proportion about five per cent of the fa talities among children at ages one to four were reported to have happened while the chil dren were playing either in or near the water at public or private pools, beaches, or parks. Drownings in ' these places were fewer than those caused by children falling off landing docks, piers, and simi lar structures, the statisticisns note from a study of the ex perience smong their young in dustrial policyholders for the period 1946 to 1951. More than three-tilths of the drownings occurred in rivers, brooks, ponds and similar bodies of water, many of which were on or near the home grounds of the victim, and an additional one-sixth took place in fish ponds, cess-pools, sep tic tanks, wells, cisterns, and water troughs. Several chil dren in the insurance experi ence were drowned In bath tubs while parents left the youngsters unattended for a short time. "Most drownings among pre school children could be avoid ed if parents watched their children more carefully," the statisticians point out "Even st public or private bathlag places where a life-guard Is present, children should be ad vised to stay within range of his supervision and to heed his warnings." BOYLE other cleaning agents in their basement laboratory be tore finding one that might work. The stewing chemical mixture was kept at a constant tempera ture with a thermostat from th family's fish tank. When their supply of test tubes was broken. Cookie esme up with the answer the baby's nursing bottles. A home-made agitator that Paul had built broke down. Cookie met that crisis by turning on the washing machine and put ting the mixture on top of it "That was clever of her," said Paul. "Oh, a woman can do more with a hairpin than a man can with a whole box of tools," said Cookie airily. "It took us a year to solve the problem," said Paul. "Cookie had to go up and down those basement stairs 25 times a day to see that everything was goining right. Paul still thought of his product only as something to please his wife and ner irienos. Cookie had to prod him into taking it to a merchandising firm. This firm lab tested it for six months, had 1,000 wom en try it out then put it on the market The Charlaps are still d-.zed at what happened. Some two million dollars worth of the ny. last solution was sold in the first few months. The firm ex pects it to mushroom Into a 10 million dollar a year business. The royalties assure Paul and Cookie of a fortune. I want to buy an airplane," said Paul. "You can have a boat not an airplane," said Cookie, add ing: "He is already driving me crazy asking me to think up an other idea to keep him busy." "Yes. the problem is to find a problem," said Paul. "I guess don t have a very original mind. But If somebody presents me a problem, then I can at tack it." Checkrein on Debt Boise Statesman In its action killing, for this session of Congress, the pro posal to raise the debt limit, the Senate finance committee has taken care of the question for the present. And the ad ministration will be forced to reconsider the whole matter before making a further move to get the raise. The President must either wait until next year for the proposal to be placed before the Senate again, or else must call a special session of Con gress to act on it Only gen uinely urgent matters sre justi fication for special sessions, snd congressional leaders probably would be hard to per suade that .the debt limit raise is in that class. The call of the session would be blunt con fession that the administration is unable to keep spending un der control. A delay until next year, on the other hand, could be a very good thing. Throughout the en tire government cash spending would have to be watched with a careful eye, in order to help the Treasury stay under the $273,000,000,000 borrowing limit. The administration might discover that it really is possi ble to hold down spending. If the line could be held until CandVlabra - 170 pair (ir I Console sticks $IS pair sterling silver candelabra with A-lwi. , so that they may be sticks shown right In GorhMT, beautiful StratbouM pattern, they'll do duty at candle-lit supper or two . pr her most elaborate dinner parties. Prices Include Federal Tox 5 III Bute Street Thursday, August 6, 1953 Congress meets again in Ju. uary, perhaps by that time th. way could be seen to hold if for another year. OPEN FORUM Trapping of Ducks on Mill Creek Resented To the Editor: May I request that th ru Council or the State Game Commission, whichever k.. Jurisdiction, to establish a dtf taite policy in regard to th ducks on Mill Creek. My fsmlly is very much ... in arms about a man on rk. meketa street who recently has been observed more than once trapping these ducks. Pernio, he hss been feeding them all spring and does have some right to them. But most of tk. other families along the creek have also been feeding them and should have some right to say something about them. Granting that they would be come too numeroui and be come nuisance, but there are at lesst six more weeks of sum. mer in which most household. era would prefer to keen feeding them and enjoy watch. Ing them go up and down the creek. When we first moved to the creek in '33 there were no ducks and I have often felt that those on the middle sec. tion at least, may have come from a pair that I purchased, raised, and turned loose when they were large enough to take care of themselves. I have pur. chased a great many sacks of grain and loaves of bresd snd hsve taken care to feed the ducks in cold and stormy weather when many forgot about them. Our wish is to keep them living and hannv along the creek. My suggestion would be that the area be made a game re serve and a stiff fine, say $500, be imposed on anyone taking one of these ducks. If too many survive the dogs and cats and little boys (whom we have ob served throwing rocks at the babies) they could be caught by the city or game commis sion and given to the Salvation Army at Thanksgiving time. Or one to each household which had been feeding them. A meeting of the home own ers along the creek to discuss this matter would be advisable. MRS. E. C. RONNER Gervals and Wystt Court NO USE TO SEND BILLS Orland, Calif. 0J. Garbage Collector Leone Penna told the city council he has given up sending garbage bills to his customers. "What's the use?" he com plained. "I send a biU, they throw it in the garbage can and then I have to haul my own bill to the city dump." THEY DONT NEED EM San Bernardino, Calif. SJA Some 200 nudists at the 22nd National Convention of the American Sunbathing Associa tion took up an Important item today plans for a clothing drive to help the' non-nude poor. FLAG UPSIDE DOWN Los Angeles (U.B The flag was flown upside down at the Equitable building, the signal of mutiny or distress, but it wss only a mistake. The building's assistant man ager said, "one wisecracker wanted, to know if we were in 'upside down mourning.' " converted Into th u 1 i ynv Ji Fhoa t-XMt