Par 4 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, 0"fw" Thursday, August IS. 1953 Capital AJournal An Indaptndant Ntwspopar Established 1888 BERNARD MAINpVARING, Editor end Publisb.tr GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emtritui Published tvtry ofternoon except Sunday ot 444 Che meketa St , Solem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. rM UuM inn SantM at Ik aaMtlatat tnm aaS M Battai Taa aauciaus Pnw n nchuiralr nuud ta u m lar putituHw 1 all am amutehM crMltaa w It m UiwIm nOU4 ta Ihli Mm 44 alM am aabuaaatf abmla. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: r Cuti! Uonthrt. IV an Moataa. tlM: Ona TMr. Ill W. t ariS la Harm. Polk. LIb a. Etatoa, Claekuau CoaatM: MaalMr, Ma; All IMalm, M M; Ob Tr WOO. T UlU Eibr la Oruaa: Uoalhlr. 11.01: au UoDUlt, Ml Oa Twr, m oo. a? iiau Ouula Oroa: Moaiklr. tl-Ui au IwaUu, IT.M1 Oa yur, til og. THE STUDY HOUR LIBRARY FADING Room. QUIET i If WHY NOT FORT VANCOUVER? We'd turn a deaf ear and a glassy eye at anybody who suggested West Salem or Salem II aa a better name for our own fair capital city, but this proposal to change the name of Portland's nearby Washington suburb to Fort Vancouver sounds all right to us. Not that what we think seriously matters. His honor the mayor of Vancouver is carrying the ball and setting much support, with only a little opposition. Reason Van couver people are interested in a change is the confusion with Vancouver, B.C. Mail is always going to the wrong place, it seems, and there is plenty of other confusion, especially when one gets outside of the immediate Van couver, Wash., area. It is suggested that the U.S. Vancouver is actually the senior member of the duo, having been started first, and that the lusty young Canadian namesake is the one who should change if a change is called for. But this is hardly practicable. Vancouver, B.C. won't do it. Being a lot bigger now, it isn't the one who suffers from the con fusion. The proposed change won't be as warmly opposed as name changes usually are because the name Vancouver is retained. The change would be to add a name the place originally had. However, it goes against the trend, which is to shorten rather than to lengthen names. It used to be North Yakima, Baker City, Boise City, etc. It's too bad the early poineers didn't have more time to give this name business. Portland should have been Mult nomah, Salem Chemeketa, Albany the original Indian name which aa we recall meant "hole in the ground." (No present reflections intended, it should be unnecessary to add.) But we fear it's too late now, in most cases. Happily for the state's two chief cities, they've outgrown their New England namesakes, which are too far off to cause much confusion anyway. If any changing is done to avoid confusion it'll have to be done back there, not out here. RUSSIA BUYING BUTTER . Russia is buying butter in the international markets, more than 25,000 tons, which is big news from two angles. First economic, which will interest Oregon dairymen, somewhat worried about the U.S. surplus, aggravated by the inroads of oleo. Much butter moves in export trade. Russian purchase of even relatively small amounts should firm up the market all over the world. But we think the major import is. political, and here there are two angles. First, it is evident that Russia, once an exporter of butter, is falling down on the produc tion front, and this must be because of the Communist imposed collective farm system, which Russian farmers still bitterly resent after more than two decades of it. They aren't producing as they once did. The second angle here is that where the Soviet govern ment would have been indifferent to a butter shortage as recently as a few months ago, it now goes abroad to spend ita precious gold for consumers goods. Why? Evidently because it fears trouble from the Russian people, having witnessed in Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia howi an enslaved people can rise against their masters when they become desperate enough. So Russia is buying butter abroad because the Commu nist economic system cannot produce enough in what ought to be the greatest food producing country on earth and because a now frightened dictatorship does not dare to take away from the people their previously scant upply. EISENHOWER'S SPEND LESS ORDER President Eisenhower's order to all government depart ments to hold expenditures down tightly during the re mainder or the calendar year is in keeping with the known character of the man and in sharp contrast with his imme diate predecessor who would have encouraged free spend ing if only to prove himself right in the argument about raising the national debt limit. Truman would of course have favored raising it had he still been president. Eisenhower's order also helps to justify the attitude of those who differed with him on the debt increase, in cluding this newspaper. It will be recalled that congress refused a White House request for a $15 billion boost. A majority of the members appeared to believe the govern ment could get by without it till January with rigid econ omies, which the president is now ordering. Even if it fails the effort will be worth while and if it succeeds it will give millions of suffering taxpayers a new respect for their government's fiscal intelligence. TRUMAN AS A UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT We pride ourselves that nothing really shocks us any more, bo we were just flabbergasted at this report of Harry S. Truman being considered for president of the University of. Maryland. With all respect for Truman's good pointa, it must be pretty obvious that he lacks virtually all the qualifications of. a university president. He never attended college and it no scholar on any subject. Nor was he outstanding as an executive. On second thought he does have one qualification of a aort. His presidency would make a lot of headlines. He would write letters to people. If it's publicity Mary land U wants, here is a sure way to get it. But as an eminent railroad section boss once para phrased, that woud be a h - (heck) of a way to run a university. If I WM'KIP I ,7V .OK I I ah I ft, .lVaTSTf Ela & . 1' J 1 1 wS ' POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER With Patience and Tact You Can Make Child Do Anything WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Two Great Soldiers Retire Successor Lacks Qualities By DREW Washington Two great army officers with a long rec ord of public aervice retired today. With their retirement may come a drastic change in military policy. If I were to try to put my finger on the chief qualities of Gen. Omar Bradley and Gen. Joe Lawton Collins in their PEARSON pushed the betterment of the enlisted man. Consistently he has preached the idea that the backbone of the Army is its non-coms and Junior officers. Omar Bradley is so mild mannered you wonder how he could ever order troops Into battle. Yet it was he who han dled the combat strategy for work as chairman of the Joint Eisenhower during the historic Chiefs of Staff and as Army Chief of Staff, I would sum marize it: Though great military men they (re civilian minded. Though great combat sol diers the thing they hate most is to see men die. ' Though they dislike disa greement, they champion the right of others to disagree. Though trained to fight wars, they leaned over back ward to prevent war. . In these days when Russia probably has the H-bpmb and invasion of France and Ger many. And while the much publicized Field Marshal Mont gomery was still sitting at Caen near the Normandy coast, Bradley was romping up to the Rhine. Bradley's only real differ ences with Eisenhower were: 1. When Ike diverted gaso line and men away from both Patton and Bradley to Mont gomery at a time when Brad ley and Patton were convinced they could have penetrated Germany and won the war be- when wars can come at the fore Christmas, drop of a hat, these qualities! 2. When Ike wanted to run are vitally important. for president in 1948. Brad- Unfortunately the man who I ley, as one of his oldest friends, replaces Bradley as chairman of the Joint chiefs, Adm. Ar thur Radford, has not always shown these same qualities. IKE'S STRANGE DECISION And with the President of the United States having or dered the Joint Chiefs of Staff, at the recent Quantico confer ence, to bring him only unanl mouse decisions, the personal ity of the new chairman can influence the lives of millions. Furthermore, the instruction of President Eisenhower that he wants no disagreement from his Joint chiefs Is one of the most Important and sobering statements the new President has ever made. For it is the constitutional duty of the Pres ident as commander-in-chief to helped argue him out of It, told him politics was no place for a military man, that he would be a fish out of water. Ike listened in '48. Bradley got no chance to talk in '52. DYNAMIC BRADFORD The man who succeeds Brad ley as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff literally talked his way into his Job. When the President-elect was en route to Korea last December, his plane stopped for one hour in Iwo Jima to refuel. Dur ing that hour, redheaded Adm. Arthur Radford took him on a leg-stretching work-out around the island during which he talked brilliantly about using Chiang Kai-Shek s navy against the China mainland, about using Chiang's troops in get all points of view amona his military advisers, to review I Korea. their agreements and disagree- j At the end of that hour, Ike ments. then make uo his own i aid to his pilot: "Can't we mind However, the new President, himself a military man, told the make room for Admiral Rad ford on the plane?" After that, the stormy petrel Joint chiefs he wanted no split of the navy was as good as in uccwons, no minority-majority Eastern Wheat Men May Decide Quotas Washington WV-Farm lead ers said Thursday wheat grow ers east of the Mississippi river apparently hold the key to a nationwide economic vote with strong implications for next year's congressional elections. It Is the referendum Friday on the question ef Invoking rigid marketing quotas on the 1934 wheat crop. Reports received by hesd quarters ot the National Farm ers Union and the National Grange indicated that opposi tion to quotas was fairly strong in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. The quotas require the ap proval of at least two-thirds J In the first group. reports. He instructed t h e Army, Navy and Air Force to be unanimous before bringing a decision to him. NOTE Generals Omar Bradley and Joe Collins have sat through plenty of tough de bates on the Joint Chiefs of Statf and have not hesitated to tell their commander-in-chief that they could not agree. Us ually Bradley and Collins have agreed as between each other. But they have frequently dis agreed with the Navy over the importance of Formosa, the use of Chiang Kai-Shek's troops in Korea, or the use of super-air-piane carriers against B-38's. TWO TYPES OF BRASS There are two types of offi cers among the top brass of the Pentagon: 1. The humble, civilian-type. GI type officer: 2, the aggressive, ooliticallv minded officer who likes to barge into the civilian field of government. Bradley and Collins belong of the (rowers voting. TO FIGHT DEPORTATION Joe Collins won fame as the ority more brazenly than Ad miral Radford in the summer of 1949. He was relegated to the Pacific as a result. He was so brazen ir his chal lenge of civilian authority that mild-mannered Omar Bradley, who does not have a low boil ing point, went before Congress and made his famous "Fancy Dan Admirals" statement about the most vigorous public critcism he's ever voiced. These are the two men who change places today. It should be noted that Gen. Nate Twining, chief of the air force, and Gen, Matt Ridgway, army chief of staff, are both conscientious civilian minded generals who believe in team work, not fireworks. However, with President Eisenhower de manding unanimous decisions. and with the brilliant, aggres sive, talkative Admiral Rad ford as chairman, the Joint chiefs are likely either to func tion his way or fall to pieces altogether, i Salem 24 Years Ago By BEN MAXWELL August IS, 192 . High winds and low humid ity had brought slumbering forest fires into activity and certain sections of the North west were again threatened with conflagration. Work on county market roads had progressed rapidly and Roadmaster W. J. Culver believed the entire 40-mile im provement program would be completed this season. An offer to furnish paint for a sign on some downtown Sa lem roof to aid in air navi gation had been made by a paint manufacturer. A seven-foot cougar weigh ing 133 pounds had been killed by Ed Taylor In the Mehama country. United States hotel in Bos ton, patronized by Daniel Webster, Henry Clay and Charles Dickens, had closed its doors. Returning on the Cruiser Hel ena, he got to know the new secretary of defense. Charlie Wilson, and having persuaded Ike to play golf In Honolulu, Radford put him up in his own quarters and, like the busy bee Improved each shining hour. Prior to this, however, the new chairman of the Joint chiefs was in Washington s dog house. He had been transferred to the mid-Pacific to get him away from the stormiest eat- and-dog fight the armed forces had ever staged Sore at unification, irate over the Increasing importance of the long-range bomber, the ad mirals organized a secret prop aganda agency, operation 23, to smear the air fore. And Rad ford himself circulated a secret statement, later made public, criticizing his superior. Secre tary of Defense Louis Johnson. Included in the smear was Sec retary for air Symington and his determination to push the long-range B-36 bomber as against airplane carriers. Fancy Dan Admirals It was probably the smelliest. Father Dominic of Mt. An gel abbey had a black straw hat he had acquired 40 years ago. The hat remained in good, wearable condition. An experiment in shipping Willamette valley strawberries without Ice from Portland to the Orient had been made by West Coast Air Transport Corp. A small, ordinary looking turtle with "D. Boone, 1760' carved on its undershell was getting official attention. J. C. Nelson who had lately resigned as principal of Salem High school stated that during his 13-year tenure there had been five complete turnovers in the teaching staff. Gambozia, imported African fish that eats larvae of mosqui toes, had been released In sev eral Marion county sloughs and lakes. Where Cash Goes Do you ever kick about the high cost of food and other goods?, ou'd be wiser to kick about the high cost of gov ernment. Last year the average Amer ican family of four had an In .ner.i wno captured one of most acrimonious interservice the most difficult cities In the, feud In history, and the chief Las Vegas U. Crooner Dick k.. . Y, """'" tner- backstage commander of the come of $3400. It paid out H.vme.. farina denortatlon fnrln.".?:. 01 ,ne .,fw I nv battle "tratcgy was the SHOO of it In direct and Indl .,.... J. .v .Jil , ,un , uPn wnose man who now becomes chair-irect taxes. That $1100 would "r. .v u". " '"a " " " b"-. A' mn. ,h J01"1 !!' ef "ve been enough to buy a $21 ' r.r f . nrmjr a instruction : seldom has an Xlgiu lur juncricau cmcciuuiy. I ana education division. Officer in un- hasket of a-rnrerln each and "I'wra cnauengea civilian aum- every week 01 me year. New York ( Amy Pett. who is 10 and has roots, has finally changed her mind. She is now willing to move with her family to a larger house. For months, we had talked about getting larger quarters. As the only male in a three female family, one-bathroom house, I was tired of shaving in the office. There were other reasons, too, but none that persuaded Amy. All her friends are here, she insisted, and, besides, the cats wouldn't like it. She was that adamant un til -a recent Sunday morning when the wind blew the real estate section over her comics. "I wanna move!" she yelled, My wife and I exchanged silent looks of triumph. It was, in its way, a rare tribute to our long, subtle efforts to make the child change her mind without injury to the roots. The idea ws to make her think it was really her de cision not a command. "I wanna move to this house!" Amy said. The ad she displayed con cerned a house with 49 roll ing Connecticut acres over looking Long Island Sound. It was described as a "gem like residence of pure Ital ian Renaissance design" fac ing two miles of private water front. How blind parents can be! It had never occurred to us thst "pure Italian Renais sance'' was Amy's favorite period. The ad said the Drooertv in cluded: 1. An' outdoor floodlighted theater. 'I could put on puppet By SAUL PITT Far Hal Boyle shows snd make a pile of money," Amy said. 2. Four formal gardens, in cluding floodlit fountains and a replica of the famous gar den of Versailles. "I'll plant tomatoes." I. A ballroom with a maple floor balanced on springs. "We could tip the whole thing." ' 4. Two and a half miles of automobile road. 5. An Aeolian organ in s 30-foot domed reception hall. "What chopsticks!" The tone cf the interior, the ad said, is reflected by "the lavish use of gold leaf and neM; marble and "gold fittings and Still Serving La Grande Observer Former President Herbert Hoover, who will soon be 79, quit remarkably has agreed to serve his country once more. At President Eisenhower's request, he has accepted th chairmanship of a new and per. haps more powerful commis sion to study the organization and operation of the federal government. Mr. Hoover was eminently successful as the head of an earlier commission in 1947 which proposed sweeping re organization. Many of the sug gested chsnges have now been carried out. The new group will examine effectiveness of these changes, propose further ones, and oth erwise treat freshly of this never ending problem. Unques tionably, Mr. Hoover will per form this additional service with his accustomed thorough- wedgewood inlays in the mas- West Recalls Visit to ter bath." The ad continued:!,,. ... r.L I A-- DUIIC wicciv kviiy nyvr "The main residence has six master bedrooms. Also on the property is a 14 room supirin tendent's cottage, an addition al S room cottage, large green house, stone coach house, and an 8 car garage.' This place, Amy observed, had more room for cars than our house now has for people. "Despite the sumptuous nature of the house and grounds," the ad concluded, "it is possible to maintain the entire property, inside and out, with ten in help "If de sired, furnishings are available at $100,000." So, naturally, I called the agent to find out how much the place cost without the furnishings. 'It has Just been reduced," he said, "from one million to $500,000." You see, with a little oa- tience, tact and subtlety, you can get a child to agree to anything. New California 1 Eugene Register-Guard In the San Francisco Chron icle, the alert editors of the Capital Journal (Salem) have discovered a phenomenon which ranks' .with "something new unoer tne sun" or "man bites dog." The Chronicle pro poses that the Navy's next su per aircraft carrier be built at Bremerton Instead of at Hunt er's Point on San Francisco bay, because Hunter's Point is overcrowded. The Joumsl observes: 'The Chronicle makes the valid point that this construc tion ought to be spread around the country, that too much of it has been concentrated on the east coast, leaving west coast yards Idle, their skilled men drifting away, so it would be hard to reactivate these great plants in the event of war. Hunter's Point has two bii drydo.cks, one ot which will be occupied for a long time to come by a $62 million modern izing lob on the 27,000 ton Bon Homme Richard carrier. "Why not put the new car rier in the other drydock? Be cause, says the Chronicle, It would be hard to recruit the necessary labor for this job around San Francisco, and even more Important, the second dry dock should not be tied up for a long period because in the event of war it will be urgent ly needed for repair Jobs on Navy vessels. The argument seems irrefu table, but what impresses us most is the broadminded atti tude behind It, which the Ndrtn west Is bound to observe is not the usual one In California or anywhere else for that matter. The Chronicle has always been an unusual newspaper. In our experience, all the people of the Bay area are unusual Californians. In fact, there have been times when we have been almost tempted to suggest the annexation of Northern Cali fornia to Oregon. But there is still Lot Angeles to be reckoned with and It might be well to make sure that we have Crater Lake and Mount Hobd still firmly tied down. Too Fast a Change Astorian-Budget The weather man was a little extreme when he switched sud denly from cool, cloudy sum mer weather than was even cooler and cloudier than norm al to a blazing sun, an east wind, and the distinction of be ing the third hottest place in Oregon. We who have been grumbl-lr- about not getting'any sum mer weather would have pre ferred to be eased into sum mer a little more gradually than the overnight Jump we got, which left most of us gasp ing like fish out of water. Not Worth It? Boise Statesman A soldier who went "over the hill" to look for his runaway bride, apparently without suc cess, had to be brought under military guard to a Chicago ci vil court where he obtained a divorce from his absent spouse. Me then rejoined his military 'escort" to return to his nost and face a charge of being ab sent without leave. He took with him a word of hope from the civil judge, noting that love was the cause of all his trou bles, that the military authori ties would not bo too harsh with him. The judge also added a com miserating word of adyice: "Women aren't worth it." Well, now. Judge, Your Hod or, that's a matter of opinion. THEY REALLY EAT IT Springfield, Minn., (UJ0 . Some 4,000 persons consumed 233 gallons of sauerkraut, 10, S00 wieners, 4,200 buns and 200 gallons of coffee at the city's 42nd annual sauerkraut day. t To the Editor: In connec tion with the recent Scotts Mills' Centennial ceremonies, I recall that around 62 or 63 years ago, Ed Baker and I, piloting a team of cayuses and a buckboard, drove out to Butte Creek to fish. As we were td drive beyond the village, we approached, as I recall, on grade. Above us on our left was an oblong frame building bearing the prominent sign: "UNDER TAKER" along its ridge pole. As we turned Into the only street, and faced the parlors, we looked up to find the sign: "CASH PAID FOR HIDES." But business was business) I knew the early miller, Scott. They were fine people. OSWALD WEST. THE NAUGHTY BIRD Menlo Park, Calif., (Up john Kiefer complained to officials that a parrot cajled him some "very ugly words." Kiefer said he climbed Into a pear tree after the uncouth bird and it squawked: "You don't know so much you old Authorities said they were sympathetic but there was no law against foul-mouthed parrots. SET DIVING RECORD Toulon, France u.R Two French navy officers set a new world recoid today by diving 1500 meters 4950 feet under the sea in a bathysphere., THEN MODERNIZE THEM WITH A NEW MOUNTING If your diamonds were purchased years ago, their beauty, no doubt, is hidden in an outmoded mounting. Modernization of them will reveal new loveliness and brilliance and will bring them j up to date. The cost is surprisingly moderate A. 18k white gold $42$ B. Platinum psssby $350 CM karat gold $150 D. I4 karat gold $110 E. 14 karat gold $75 F. 14 karat gold $40 All 14 KASAT MOUNTINOS AM AVAIIASII IN TIllOW OS WNITI OCHD AT THS SAMS atlCft Others from $1673 Prices include Federal tax Charge or budget All MOUNTINGS MUStlATtO HAVS SMAll SIM DIAMONDS. IS YOU CAN SUPflV TNIRk nowivis. thi psicis win at aiucn lowsa. (T7) J 19 stata nu Fhone 4-2211