Monday, August SI, 195J Pajre 4 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, gafem. Orefoa Capital AJ ou rn al An Irvopendent Newspcper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publish ' 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. rat imi ww Santa " m iMhM rm hi n, Vmtui ma Tht ImniK mw to Mluira ituU4 kite win MUmUc, l all am timxthm tuw) M It a? Matnrtos w&4 ta Ui, swat a4 alia Hn siillrtas taanaa. SUBSCRIPTION RATESt S Carrier! Meatkrr. It.lSi at Heaths. r.Mi Cw Year. Ill M. M-iD ta atarloa, aaik. Una. Mates. clMkuus Ooaattai: llootblr. toe; ai Motto, M.M; Oa, Tau. H w. Br MB Initon la Oncoat Month), tl 01: au limUu, M.Mi oh riu, lll.oo. ar Han Oauws On, mi Kaatblx. Sl-su au aVaUM, tT4t; Oa raw. M. WEATHER OREGON'S Because we had In Oregon that is drizzle punctuated with light showers, that de layed harvesting of beans, hay and seed crops, loud were the complaints. The local weatherman, who merely announces fore easts, received by teletype from central U.S. weather bu reau stations that compile them reports that he was hourly cussed and threatened and was as unpopular as a person could be by those who ought to know better, that the weather men do not make the weather merely re port it and the forecasts are as scientifically compiled as poeible. Notwithstanding all this the local weather observer was berated over the phone by farmers, hop, bean and other growers, orchardista, party planners, baseball fans, and many others who expressed disgust, apprehension and condemnation. The Oregon farmer, -in comparison with those of the nation in general, has been unusually fortunate in the weather this year. The farmer's life is a constant gamble with the weather, but his crops in general are above nor mal yield this season. He has not been bothered by pro longed drought, floods, heat and oppressive humidity or destructive tornadoes and electrical storms as those of vast areas of the country. The August heat wave has been a record breaker in the east, south and central west, punctuated by disas trous storms. A stifling air blanket still reaches from the Rocky mountains to the Atlantic coast and the weather bureau forecasts little change in the immediate future. Temperatures plus SO degrees are still the rule, with a heavy death toll due to heat, over the week-end. Today's dispatches announce: Some communities faced serious water shortages tor do mestic consumption as a remit of brassy, rainless skies; many banned use of water for sprinkling and automobile washing. Lawns burned up, trees and crops suffered, and the dry Bess of vegetation posed the threat of grass and bruin fires in rural areas. . Hundreds of thousands of persons swarmed to the beaches seeking relief. August 30 all-time temperature records were set by the dozens. Nor was relief in sight There is variety in the heat misery. In Texas cloud bursts have overtaxed drainage ditches, overflowed streams and made lakes of low spots, driving thousands from their homes. Seven inches of rain fell in five hours in some localities. Oregoniana do not realize how fortunate they are in the . weather, heat unusually confined to a few hot spells of a few days each in summer. In winter an occasional snow storm and an average ample rainfall throughout the year which keeps Oregon an evergreen state. With devel opment of our natural resources and industries and our equitable climate continuous growth in population is as sured. G. P. s LEBANON LOSES HOTEL Effective yesterday the Hotel Lebanon closed for good, after doing business continuously since 1912, leaving one of Oregon's most thriving communities without this vital service. The First National Bank of Lebanon holds an option on the property, and may if it wishes, tear the hotel down and use the site for a new bank building. Otherwise the 70-room hotel building will be remodeled for offices. Increasing costs of operation, which plague all busi nesses, for they increase whether income does or not, and declining patronage are given as the reasons for clos ing and they are reasons enough, for any business must take in more than it pays out or shut down eventually. Usually this means pretty soon. , We suppose the principal "villain" in this drama is the motel, which has captured a large slice of the tourist overnight dollar everywhere except in the large cities where the motels are too far from the center of activity. This has put the hotels in the smaller cities at a terrible handicap and we fear what has happened in Lebanon will happen in many other communities. This is unfortunate because the town needs the hotel whether the tourists do or not. Its restaurant fills a need for group meetings, and many travelers still want to stay in hotels. Even the smaller cities like to cater to conventions of such size as they can accommodate and loss of hotel services virtually destroys this source of . revenue and pleasure. But popular habits change steadily. The motel is here to stay and readjustments will have to be made to take it into account. Fortunately for the larger cities, their hotels seem not to have been seriously affected, more travel having largely offset the loss to the motels. SMALLER FORCES, MORE GENERALS Congressman Walter Norblad put his finger on a phenomena of present day military establishments when he protested the creation of 22 new generals in the Ma rine corps Just as the fighting ended in Korea and the administration decreed cutbacks in the military estab lishment. Time was when an army had one general and all the others were of lesser rank. Now an army like ours boasts generals by the hundreds and other hifrh ranks in proportion. They have a "table" that calls for so many in each rank and they usually contrive to have them, whether needed or not. Pressure of men in the lower ranks for promotions accounts in part for this, as does the liberal retirement policy of the U.S. armed forces, which enables officers to retire in the prime of life, with pay for many years to come, while others also draw pay in their places. This situation accounts to a considerable degree for the tremendous cost of maintaining the U.S. armed forces, so we get far less military strength per dollar invested than any potential enemy. Dt HAT LOFT FOB MONTH Redon, France UJS Fran cois Marchand, 80, a farmer, turned up hale and hearty yes terday at his home In nearby Bt Jest) La Poterie. GREATEST ASSET a few days of "Oregon mist" Police and distressed rela tives had been looking for him for a month. Ha said ha was in the barn loft at his home all the time. "I wanted to grow a beard In private," ha explained. f , . .a ea - aJe WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Hungarian Red Quits U. S. Mysteriously By DREW Washington Just as mys teriously as he came to Wash ington, Dr. Emil Weil, Hungar ian communist minister to the United States and the Doctor who helped drug Cardinal Mindszenty, has departed. Without explanation. Dr. Weil has been replaced by Charles Szarka, for five years in the Hungarian, diplomatic service and without any special political background, though be must be a member of the com munist party to hold such an important post. Dr. Weil was first exposed in this column on Jan. 2, 1952, as having been high up in com munist politics and as having participated in the Mindszenty trial, at which the famed pre late finally gave an astounding phony confession of his alleged underground operations. Mrs. Weil was reported - by this writer to have been the per sonal physician to Premier Ra- koakl and Dr. Weil 'was head of the Budapest Chamber of Doctors, the AMA of Hungary. It was also revealed that he had been especially picked to come to the United States to promote communism among Hungarian-Americans or at least to keep them friendly to the Red regime in Budapest Among other things this writer told how Dr. Weil attended a meeting in the Barbizon-Plaza hotel in New York on Kossuth Day, Nov. 9, 1952, where the main speaker was Carl Mar- zanl, former state department official convicted for failing to reveal he was a communist. After the speech, at which Mar zani attacked Eisenhower, Tru man, Stenson and Omar Bradley, Dr. Well made a con tribution toward a campaign to "deuver the American people from slavery," and on his way out the legation staff gathered up various communist booklets and other propaganda sold at the rear of the meeting. Many diplomats felt that this was a violation of diplomatic rules which forbid a foreign ambassador or minister from participating in American pol itics. However, the state de partment consistently declined to ask for Dr. Weil's recall, on the grounds that the Hungarian government would then de mand the recall of the Ameri can minister in Budapest. Reasons behind Dr. Well's return to Hungary are shroud ed In secrecy, but according to me diplomatic grapevine, the Hungarian government felt that the publicity given him in the U. S. had destroyed his usefulness. There are reports that Dr. Well will now teach at the University of Budapest, but this is unconfirmed. He may face the same fate as oth ers connected with the Minds zenty trial; for though they carried out the bidding of their communist matters, dead men tell no talcs. a Robert E. Lee, who achieved fame two years ago, not be cause of any association with the Civil War general, but be cause of the McCarthy post card campaign to defeat Sena tor Millard Tydings in Mary land, is being considered for the extremely important pott of comptroller general of the United States. Lindsay Warren, one of the ALL HE GOT OUT OF IT Minister PEARSON grand old men of Washington, is planning to retire as comp troller general, and Lee is be ing pushed hard by powerful republican friends to take his place. - The general accounting of fice, which the comptroller general heads, was set up by congress for the purpose of aud iting and checking on govern ment expenditures. Appoint ment la for a 14-year term and the appointee cannot be re moved. Furthermore, he re porta not to the White House but direct to congress. Lee, the proposed new comp troller general, figured in the senate probe of the Tydings Butler campaign, where it was revealed he had received check for $5,000 from Alvin Bentley, former state depart ment official now a GOP con gressman from Michigan whose grandfather help e d found General Motors. Lee re ceived the check in the office of Senator McCarthy, took it to Baltimore and used it in a campaign to mail 300,000 post cards to Maryland voters signed by GOP candidate John M. Butler allegedly in his own handwriting. , Later, Maryland court con victed Jon Jonkel, Senator Mc Carthy's campaign manager, for failing to comply with the Maryland election laws. The senate investigating commit tee showed that checks count ersigned by Lee were used to pay for the post card campaign without properly recording them. Note Lindsay Warren, who will retire as comptroller gen eral, formerly served in con gress from North Carolina, has saved the taxpayers millions of dollars by keeping an eagle eye on government accounting Just the opposite of the ac counting used in the Maryland election. a Paul Styles, recently re signed member of the national labor relations board and a friends of labor, will become labor consultant to department store owners in Toledo, Ohio. . . . Dr. Astin, now securely back in his job as director of the bureau of standards, will quit next spring unless Secre tary Weeks his boss sup ports his views on a reasonable budget for the bureau. Con gress recently cut the bureau's budget 26 per cent and an other cut would virtually put it out of business. . . . Clare Booth Luce, U. S. ambassador to Rome, will visit Italy's sea coast cities next month on her vacauon, sne may charter a yacht for the occasion. . , . Su preme Court Justice Bill Doug las is roughing it in northern Canada, near the Arctic Cir cle. . , . Top depocrats say their national chairman, Steve Mitchell, wiU be able to hold his job as long as the democrats have a big debt. Few demos want the chairmanship until all past bills are paid then the real scramble will start . Former Secretary of State Dean Acheson may lead the legal battle to return the tide lands to the federal govern ment A multi-billion-dollar suit brought by several states will be thrashed out in the su preme court tCOTTTHM WW) Socialism's Heart By RAYMOND MOLEY Santa Barbara The late Harold J. Laski whose com mitment to Marxism was so extreme that even the Attlee government found him a liabil ity had a habit during his many trips to the United States of telling pop-eyed academic audiences what should be done about America. The essential theme was always socialism. In one of his discussions he stressed the importance of .Fed eral grants-in-aid to the states. These, he concluded, are fun damental to the idea of a "na tional minimum." That, I be lieve, is a piece of jargon mean' ing the extent to which the cen tral government should take over. The national minimum Laski said, "lies at the heart of socialism." This point of view toward federal expansion runs through all socialist propaganda. For, to make socialism effective, it must be at the national level And the most certain way to eliminate the states is to bribe them with federal grants, the money for which is raised by stealing the tax sources of the states. A nation of kept states must be the necessary prelude to a nation of kept citizens. The extent to which the states in - the past few years have been reduced to the "kept" status is shown by the growth of grants-in-aid. In T.R.'s first term the federal government gave only $3,000, 000 to the states. In 1912 this had risen to $5,255,000. Then came the federal in come tax, innocently contrived by both Democrats and Repub licans, but with the malignant power within its limitless reach to destroy all private property. Grants-in-aid proliferated. In 1920 they were $33,188,000. After 1933 the march really got under way. In 1941 grants-in-aid were, $836,082,000. And in 1951 they were $2,280,000, 000. Those grants per capita show a tremendous variation among states. They ranged in 1951 from $7.03 per capita in New Jersey to $48.99 in Wyom ing. Social welfare grants have become the greatest pur pose of these expenditures. A few of these grants are for purposes for which the fed eral government ahould bear the primary responsibility, such as care and assistance for vet erans. There are also tome things, such as conservation of natural resources, highways, and agriculture, that are joint federal state responsibilities. But three-fourths of the money spent in these grants are for purposes for which the states should have responsibility. And the states must beg for this aid because the federal govern ment has invaded the tax re sources from which the states ought to get the money to help themselves. Candidate Eisenhower made a point, over and over, in his 1952 campaign that these func tions, together with the tax sources to support them, should go back to the states. In fact this is a cardinal principle to his philosophy. Eisenhower is firmer in his determination to accomplish this restoration than was Senator Taft who, it should be remembered, was sponsor for projects for aid to education and housing. Pursuant to his promise, the President secured from Con gress authorization tor a com mission to make a coraprehen- POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Capitalize on Hobbies If You Want Extra Cash By HAL New York There is more than one way to keep the wolf from your door. Thousands of American fam ilies today are beating inflation by extra income earned by sideline pursuits. Other thousands would like to do this also, but don't know how. Yet almost everyone' can find a way to earn spare time cash, if he but looks around One of the best ways is to capitalize on your special In terests or hobbles. A former newspaper friend of mine, Ted OXeary, editor of "The Profitable Hobbies Mag azine" published in Kansas City, has collected hundreds of examples of how hobbles can be turned into a source of profit as well-as relaxation. One of the oddest is the case of Albert F. Marsh of Mobile, Ala. Some yean ago Marsh re ceived a single male hamster in payment of a $1 debt He bought two female ham sters and then began breeding and selling the little animals. Within 14 months he quit his job with the state highway de partment to devote all his time to the hamsters. Within tnree years Marsh was grossing $4000 a week, selling hamsters as pets and to hospitals and laborator ies for experimental purposes. Being a housewife is no han dicap in the search for gold mines in hobbies. Mrs. Myrtle Helm of Minneapolis began painting plaster figurines with friends in 1946 for fun. She wasn't satisfied with the paints. With the aid of a chemist Mrs. Helm devised a quick' drying, hard finish paint that removed the need of kiln fir ing the figurines. She began selling the paint and other sup plies.. Her husband resigned his post office job to help her. Soon their annual sales rose above $110,000. Or take Mrs. Helen Simon of Kingston. Wash., who searched for a way to aug ment her farm income and found the answer in her own kitchen. Mrs. Simon tasted some wild huckleberry jelly made by a relative. It was delicious. The idea came to her, "why not try to market home-made Jel lies with wild fruit flavors?" She did. In five years her sales jumped from $3,000 to almost $25,000 annually. Faith in U. S. Douglas McKay in the Country Gentleman Some believe In the United States as a country which can best serve their own interests. Others show their faith by their efforts toward improving the general welfare without concern for their own personal or immediate gain. As an example of the latter group I like to recall the un selfish faith the people of my own state of Oregon have dis played in working together to make a valuable contribution to the future needs of the na tion. On the huge Tillamook Burn devastating forest fires in 1935, 1939 and again in 1943 destroyed valuable tim ber over an area almost half as large as Rhode Island. The people of Oregon in 1948 vot ed a bond issue to reforest the Burn. The biggest reforesta tion project in the world is now under way. Lumber com panies are reforesting cutover land elsewhere in the state. The material accomplish ments to date are spectacular. But the most inspiring factor is the faith of my neighbors, who are willing to plant a tree crop that will not be ready for harvest for 80 years. Many men and women In many communities are build ing a better America that they will never live to see. They are demonstrating in this way their faith in the future of the nation. "I will shew thee my faith by my works" la a very practical precept. Only through such a faith can we assure that America will re main strong and a land of freedom and opportunity for our children. live study of the subject As chairman of that commission, the President has Clarence; Manlon, former dean of the law school of Notre Dame univer sity. I Manlon's position toward federal super-government has been made very clear in many speeches and articles. He firmly believes that the wide highway to socialism la through the progressive encroachment by the federal government up on the resources and respons ibilities of the states. He can be counted on to be as aggres sive In this field as Herbert Hoover will be in the wider field to which he has been as signed. Together for in many ways their lines will cross in these twin investigatons they should constitute a good team to pull back the federal gov ernment from the areas which ii naa ucxupira in ukh paiii four decades. I BOYLI Such financial returns from hobbies as those in these three eases are, of course, unusual. But almost anyone with a lit tle Ingenuity can turn a ready dollar as Editor O'Leary's other case histories show. Rudy Lecompte, a Baytown, Tex., oil chemist, bought an outfit for duck hunting and found he had no money left for decoys. He saw some buoy ant driftwood and wondered If good decoys could be carved from this wood, which was plentiful. He began doing so, now he sells the decoys for $48 a dozen to other hunters. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Cox of Orlando. Fla- specialize in making reproductions of faded photographs in old family al bums. They get their orders in house to house soliciting, some times earn $100 a day. Janet and E. John Royle went to Arizona to be cattle ranchers on a place near Tuc son. There they got the idea of making novelty jewelry pins, bracelets, earrings and necklaces from cholla, or "jumping cactus". They now have a country-wide market and virtually have forgotten cattle raising. Age is no barrier. Mrs. George McCollum of Batavia, 111., loved as a girl to make doll dresses. Now 81, she estimates that in the last 20 years she has made and sold about 100,00 doll garments to stores and individ uals in all parts of the nation. -Each year she gives many doll outfits to orphanages, and her work has won praise from such people as Henry Ford, Helen Hayes, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt Here is Mrs. McCollum's philosophy: "If you get up in the morn ing knowing that someone is counting on you to accomplish something that day, then there is a real purpose and joy in living." Baring Inequities Albany Democrat-Herald Figures just announnced on the reappraisal of Grant coun ty property as the first results of a process that is to cover ev ery county in the state go far to demonstrate the necessity for the reform, instituted two years ago. Some of the assessing done in that county, which probably will be matched, more or less, elsewhere, is little short of fan tastic in its inequality. The re searchers found some farm land assessed as low as 5 per cent of its cash resale value. other parcels evaluated as high as 240 per cent They found a good deal of inequality on all types of property. Valuations of city realty ran all the way from 6.5 per cent to 187.5 per cent of cash resale figures. We can expect somewhat sim ilar discrepancies as the results come in from other counties. The job, once equality is re stored, is to keep the values equalized, as State Tax Com missioner Samuel Stewart has said. We must keep up. as best we can, the morale of the tax payer, whose burden has reached an all-time high. Tax paying Inequalities are one of the basic reasons for recurring unrest in France, such as the one we've been seeing now for some time. LOCKER BEEF Fancy Eastern Oregon Beef FRONT QUARTER m Pound. HALF OR WHOLE 20' Pound ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL 60 LBS. FOR $26 SALEM MEAT CO. 1325S.25HiSr. EXTRA EARNINGS 3 Salem44YearsAgo ay sin maawkll Aarmsz 11. ltaa A warrant has been Issued by the city council to pay Mrs. Nancy Clark $1650 for vacs- liiiii m ucjuvmvm LJ T u . . J . U J , B.k. iwrcn iiui ww Aaw airceia. Canltal Journal had dr-lr.j that the statue of Ceres at the tat fairgrounds needed flxm. Her hands and face had bees chapped by winter's rains, her alckla was broken and clothes soiled and hopelessly . u QUI OX BfciV. A Hudson, Wyoming, sender, taker who had trimmed a lengthy corpse to fit a normal coffin bad been threatened with prosecution by relatives Lof the deceased. Spencer Hardware company had imported Hartz Mountain roller canaries for sale at $1.5j each. Mayor Rogers had sent a special message to the city council demanding action be taken to protect the city against owners of open South Mill ditch. TJ C Hallberff had anfnA a new ladies and children's furnishing store In the Catlln Linn block. McGilchrist & Son. pro prietors of the White House restaurant had a 25c dinner for 20c. All stations of United Wire less telegraph service had been silent for 30 minutes out of respect for George Eccles, op erator on the Ohio when ha was lost, who remained at his post of call for help and there by lost his life. Prices of Capital Dairy and Fatrmount Dairy milk in Sa lem, September 1, 1909: pint, per month, $1.25; quart, per month, $2.40. Phone 41451 1955. Commercial Tele-fun by Warren Goodrich plenty ef time te answer He'H be brushing tils teeth bent now I".. .You'll com plete more calls if you give the other person time to answer at least a minute ... Pacific Telephone. HIND QUARTER 25' Pound Phone 3-4858 (aaaaaMajassBssfa SBBSsM Savings Earn Safely Your Savings ore In sured Safe to $10,000.0f by the Federal Savings & Loon Insurance Cor poration. Open yonr Insured Savings Accoant today with Salem Federal '160 Slat Strttl 'eeinf Cewrt Hi lAllM. OM0ON '