Pat 4 Capital AJourrial AnlndepttvWnth4wspopr Estoblihedl888 ' i " BERNARD MAI NWARING, Editor ond Publisher ". ' ' ' , .' GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus 1 Published every ofternoon except Sunday ot 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phone: Business, Newsroom, Wont Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409 rH tMMi Win m 1 Ik Am Hi tnm ui I f BIU1 Tttm. an am dlmtehM rUU4 I U at tUuiwIM nua IB UUs MPW 4 IW Mil sukltalua ttwrtm. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Br Canter. Monthly. S .m tMJ; ow T.II!!'-''U1 SfSS folk. Una. Zuha. Claekuau OoaaUMi MoUUF. tot: au Montha, S4.M. " iw, ?. It uS Embn la omw kfcmthlr. U N; i Mniiu. tt-tti oaa suSk Vr UU Oateid orwoa: MosUOr, tMti au Mu SMS; Cm Tr. U.W. ' 'BATTLE OF FREE FOOD DRAMATIC - American press correspondents In Berlin agree that the free food parcels distributed by the United States to the half-starved people or East uermany, wen over o muum. to date, constitute one of the most effective means in the xnll tcnr" wafred hv Russia. The crowds flocking- to the western centers constitute the largest sample of the Eastern tone the West has seen. They are described as a shabby lot, emaciated, ill clad, shod and fed, a poverty stricken and destitute peo- PlAnne O'Hare McConnick, a foreign correspondent and columnist of New York Times, writing irom Benin in her column "Abroad," remarks: m.. - 4hmmnita tit neanla trekking lone dis tances and running great risks to get a 10-pound package of food la a sad one: nevertheless, a thrill of cneeriui excite ment nma through the busy distribution centers. The recipl nit ara eager aa children to receive their gifta and equally ' riper to talk, and everyone questioned expressd his opinion nf ta Communist regime." . T American feature of giving food to anybody in Tsl Germany who comes and get it has received con wttan&te criticism, especially from the British. But it fcra tpfci a tztost favorable impression on the Germans i both EAik and West Germany, and behind the Iron Curtail Air. 0 Bare says products. Tint, tt taxf-ac many Germans to come to Berlin who have sever btlot area the difference between the Eait and West Zone. It establish the wider communication envisioned in last week request by the Western powers to the Soviet high eommisisoa to aooUsa interzonal passes ana restore iree travel throughout Germany. Meantime ' the 16 food distribution centers in West Berlin have become a place of reunion and comparison for separated Germans. "Secondly, the East Germans get a taste of freedom. They all speak of what it means to be able to breathe again. More over the influx of workers confirmed vague reports of the extent of the June riots. Now dubious West Germans are convinced that their brothers In the East share their senti ments. The food distribution, looked on as a postscript to the revolt, not only supplies fresh evidence to the pro-westerners that the East Is with them but diminishes suspicion among Easterners that the West has abandoned them." But Soviet opposition and British criticism have had little effect although some of the people caught carrying food have been arrested and fined, lost their ration cards and otherwise penalized by the loss of their jobs, but the people have remained defiant and the opposition half hearted. The distribution is being carried on with speed and smoothness. The Berliners regard themselves as front line soldiers In the cold war and regard "the battle of food parcels" as a dramatic episode. As expected, the entire Soviet state, party and propa ganda, is being utilized along Communist goons to "interfere defeat Adenauer and support East German Beds, and as Pravda gays, make it "the bulwark of the peace-loving lorces m uermany. It looks as though Malenkov'g policy may have a boom erang result and merely unite Communist opposition eventually in behalf of a free and united Germany. G. P. SUBURBAN STORE FOR PORTLAND Meier and Frank, Oregon's largest retailer, is decen tralizing on a large scale. The announcement of a big new department store for Salem a few months aeo is now followed by revelation of plans for a shopping center to be built on a 50-acre site in the northeast section of Portland adjacent to Sandy boulevard. . It is announced that a complete department store will go in, together with other stores and of course a big park ing area, somewhat similar to Northgate, a big shopping center north of Seattle. Whether others are to follow is not revealed, but it will occasion no surprise, now that the course has been set. We doubt this means that ness district is to become the or even to become noticeably surprised if the main Meier and Frank store suffers much loss of volume. But it does suggest that Meier and Frank thinks the parent site has about reached the saturation point where little if any more business can be handled. and that it is time to take the ers. The trend is general in the wnere tne need is greater However Portland is handicapped by her narrow, pre Civil war model streets, which can be only partially re lieved by one way traffic. Salem, fortunately, has wide streets, designed a century ago with a prophetic eye to conditions a cenxury nence. Anyway, a new, Jaster, more competitive merchandis ing era is on in the Willamette valley, in which Salem will play a larger role, assisted in stopping mid-Willamette shoppers here where we have wide streets and fairly good parking by the coming construction of two big de partment stores. So we may do our bit to relieve con gestion in the over-burdened state metropolis. TROUBLE AT TRIESTE The world has always had' Its hot sparks, its points of tension. The Rhine was such while Hitler was rearm. ing Germany. Since World eral, and Trieste has been Warfare almost flared up the Adriatic several times immediately after the end of the war in Europe, and only the presence of U.S. and British troops prevented it -Since Tito broke with Mos cow and began edging over toward the western camp Trieste has been quiet, but the dispute was never settled and perhaps never will be. It has just flared up again. The international boundary runs through the town, rt of it Yuiroslav and part Italian. The conulation i mainly but not entirely Italian. Both countries passion ately want It ail, xo sausiy iung neiu nationalistic ambi inn and for reasons of international prestiire. whatever imDortance Trieste has for foreism trad could be adjusted by making the port free to both coun tries but only complete possession will ever satisfy either country's feelings, which are distinct and apart from its Interests. . tv. fianum la embarrassing because both countries are nreaently rated as members of the western group. Pre sumably the dogs will b. called off before they start bit ini but the issue will remain lika a festering sore, one of inanr that work against Europe ever having an enduring rTeace Politicians of course play on these old ambitions .d wimosiUei for their own aelfish endg. that it has two valuable ny. with a forced invasion of in the German election to the Portland west side busi proverbial "deserted village' less congested. We shall be stores closer to the custom great cities of the country, than m a city like Portland, (Vt was it just plain luck?) War II there have been sev one ot these. at this city at the heart of WASHINGTON MERRY Secret Army Order Permits Liquor Sales on By DREW Washington A red border around a military documett means the document is "claw fied," or secret therefore off limits to the eyes of Washir g ton newsmen. The forbiddi. g red border, however, doesn't always mean that the military document deals with national security. ' " ... Sometimes it involves opera tions which Pentagon bran hats don't want the taxpayer to know about, as, for instance. the army's recent secret order dealing with the nonsecuntv matter of imbibing, liquor oi military posts. . - - -. . A perusal of this Interest ing secret document leaves no doubt about why military chiefs wanted it kept secret especially from church an temperance groups. For the order is interpreted by son e as putting the army almost on the verge of the night-club bus iness. Ever since a law passed in 1901, the sale . of liquor hat been forbidden on military posts. Though this law is still on the books, the secretary ot the army has set it aside to permit . on-the-spot sale of liquor. The secret order, sign ed by adjutant general ot the army Major General William E. Bergln, and effective Sent 1, i53, states: "It will be noted that srovl- slona ot the inclosed regula tions represent a major change In the existing policies and pro cedures applying to alcoholic beverages. It is believed that the privileges extended under these new regulations will, if used with moderation and re straint, serve to enhance the morale of all. concerned. "It is important to note that the sale of alcoholic beverages, as authorized in the inclosed regulations, is a proper open mess activity. However this activity must not become the major open mess activity. MODEST DECORS "Bars or lounges must be constructed and located so that there is no suggestion of a saloon or gaudy night club. Furthermore, the location of the bar or lounge must be, in sofar as possible, located so that persons not desiring to partake ot alcoholic beverages are not forced to use or pass through the room where the bar is located. "Since the manner in which the army governs the posses sion, use, and sale ot alcoholic beverages is subject to critical public scrutiny, it is impera tive that all commanders ex ercise constant supervision to insure that no unfavorable publicity or criticism la ten erated through the exercise of the privileges extended." Temperance croups, learn ing of the army's order, are planning to challenge the state ment that the new system con tributes to "morale" and that the sale of alcoholic beverages is "proper open mess activity." They claim that the universal military training act of 1051. which authorizes the secretary or mm army to Graft new. on- tne-pott drink nc reiulatlnna does not supersede the act of iwi. which ha never been repealed. Some of the legal experts point out that In the Rosen berg spy case, where the m THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Sale. Orecoa IS THIS MY ROOM? - GO - ROUND Post Limits PEARSON atomic energy act conflicted with the -1917 espiooage act requiring the death penalty, the supreme court held that the older statute still applied and was not repealed by the 1948 law which did not re quire the death penalty. i McCarthy gambling When Joe McCarthy hauled a bookie before his senate in vestigating committee and claimed that bets were taken in the government printing office, Joe must have been very hard up for headlines. Furthermore, his tongue must have pressed very hard in bis left cheek. Tot, if there is one senator who has gone in for gambling on Capitol Hill and elsewhere, It ii the lumping gentleman from Wisconsin. Just a couple of days before Joe posed as the righteous eleaner-up of gambling in the government printing office, he himself was playing the ponies at the Del Maf . race track near San Diego along with J. Xdgar Hoover,. Clint Murcheson, the Texas oil king, and Sid Rich ardson, also of the Texas oil aristocracy. Joe is quite right, gambling should not exist at the gov ernment printing office. But here is the record of the man who throws stones from glass houses. Puerto Rican Roulette Last December McCarthy flew to San Juan where he fre quented the Caribe-Hilton ho tel gaming tables. His chief specialty was roulette. Some times he lost. But sometimes he ended up $1,000 or so ahead for the evening. Senate Betting McCarthy once admitted to my associate Jack Anderson that he placed bets regularly with a bookie in the senate office building Exactly what was done in the government printing office. Law ana Poker As a young lawyer In Waupaca Wis., McCarthy is credited with making more money at poker than at law. Betting wltn Lnstron While McCarthy's committee was probing the Lustron loan from the RFC, he turned up frequently at Fimllco and other Maryland race tracks with the head of Lustron, Carl Strandlund. And according to aenate testimony by Merl Young: "McCarthy is a funny man when it comes to betting . . . he will go ahead and bet on a tip from anyone." At Pimlico, Young testified, Mc Carthy "Lost his wad" on the first race, then cashed a check with Strandlund, head of the company McCarthy was sup posed to be investigating. Later, Young testified, Strandlund tore up the check. Strandlund gave a different version, denied he was in the habit of tearing up checks for McCarthy, though he did tear up two. McCarthy, he said, replaced them. Craps at Colnmbos Ac cording to testimony in a bankruptcy hearing at Colum bus, Ohio. McCarthy Inst $3,500 in a crap game to Ro bert Byers, Jr., a real-estate operator, then welshed on his debt. Some peopi wonder how a senator whe makes only 11111 OPEN FORUM No Courtesy Shown , In Burbank, Calif. To the Editor: I was not sur prised at Mr. Freeman's amaze ment at the courtesy he re ceived from our police depart ment. At Burbank, Calif., I re ceived a very different wel- ne. I was not familiar with curb markings and I parked improperly. When my family and I returned after eating lunch I found a ticket on my car. The officer on duty told me the fine was $3.75. I paid it Then told him of our cour tesy plan in Oregon. His an swer was and I quote: "That is a damn good place to go and stay." J. R. Workman, .. . 1908 N. Summer. Our Unreformed Bureaucracy By RAYMOND MOLEY Los Angeles The new es timates ot spending and re ceipts just issued by President Eisenhower's Budget Bureau are no doubt designed to cheer us. At any rate, they have been accompanied by loud huzzas by such loyal Republi cans as Speaker Martin and Leader Halleck. But the words ot praise must have seared the well-worn throats ot those statesman. For they must know that, despite these figures, the progress toward relieving the aching backs of taxpayers has been meager. In fact, I have found in my travels over the country this summer a dawn ing conviction that much of the talk last year about econ omy was mere campaign ora tory. I am convinced that un less something drastic is done, neither this Administration nor any other that we may elect will ever reform itself. A careful examination ot the earlier budget figures sub mitted by the President and his Budget Director shows that most of the cuts below the earlier Truman estimates were in defense requests. This was easy to do for two reasons. First, Truman inserted into the budget certain requests that he knew would perish In January. He put in everything he could think of to show his good will to grasping communities and politicians. If there were to be aching hearts, he was determ ined that somebody else would get the blame. Second, eighty billions had already been ap- $12,500 a year from Uncle Sam can afford to throw around such wads ot money on the gambling tables. That Is some thing a senate committee also was interested in knowing one year ago. Finally it published a whole volume on McCarthy a intricate and unusual finan cial setup, dealing in part with McCarthy's record ot gambling on the soybean market One transaction was a $10,000 parlay with money contributed to fight commun ism by Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Bentley. When interviewed by senate agents, Bentley said he had not given the money to McCarthy to gamble on the commodity market. This is the man who pointed the accusing finger at $2 bets made In the government print ing office. wwmtki uu) Salem 11 Years Ago yIEN MAXWELL September 4, 141 Allied forces bad wrested the initiative from Field Marshal Erwin Rommel thereby reliev ing axis pressure on the south ern El AUmein line. Hop grower around Indepen dence, largest producing area In the world, had advanced the picking price to 3c i pound, highest price ever paid. Tax experts had told the aen ate finance committee that a five per cent retail sales tax would be feasible and would produce approximately $2,500,- 000,000 annual revenue. USO canteen at Salem had been opened for use by service men. A Tacoma woman had been arrested for hoarding a half ton of sugar in her home.' Organization of the top eon. trol board under the new fed eral marketing agreement had been completed. ' Women making their own clothes had discovered that new patterns also restricted their silhouette since they, too, had been brought under the same restrictions that the govern. ment applies to clothes bought in stores. Military p e r t s had ex pressed fear, of another Japa nese attack on Dutch Harbor, Alaska, as a prelude to an at tack on Siberia. Oregon Shipbuilding corpo. ration had launched its 68th liberty ship, the Andrew Car negie.. Hitler was reported scouring Europe for manpower with no source too small to tap. Chapels at Camp Adair were to be dedicated Sunday, Sep tember 6, 1942. Consumers of Brown Derby beer (a Salem product distrib uted by a chain store) were urged to buy quarts instead of stubbies and save two bottle caps for other needs. Tune Changes (Yakima Herald) Travel is broadening. Take the case of James Caesar Pe- trillo, president of the Ameri can Federation ot Musicians. Recently he returned from a trip to Europe. Previously he had opposed the importation of foreign records. Hed held them to be a threat to the live lihood ot American musicians. While abroad he was impress ed with the sales of American records. Now he says, "If we stop foreign records coming here, we stop our records go ing there." propriated and not spent. For in previous years the capacity of Congress to appropriate had far outrun the capacity of our economic system to produce. And so an Administration would have to be blind and deaf not to be able to cut bil lions from the Truman esti mates. It was the House of Rep resentatives that did the really serious cutting. For the boys there have to face angry tax payers at home. The real determination of an Administration to cut spend ing is reflected in the number of civil employees it is willing to fire.NThat is not the fuU measure of the cost of govern ment, but it reflects the extent to which spenders are going to be allowed to hold their Jobs. The record in reducing such employees is not so good. The able and indefatigable Senator Byrd released figures at the end of July which show that in five months the Administra tion has reduced the burden of 2,550,000, civil employees by only three per cent and most of those were in the Defense Department In June, I wrote an article concerning the failure of the absurdly overgrown State De partment to reduce its waste ful employment An official of that department wrote a letter to a friend of mine complain ing that I had been unfair to the new people brought in by the President and Dulles. He said that they had cut a great deal specifically, 827 employ ees. However, that figure amounted to about two per cent of the number employed by the department in 1952. Now, the department says that it will have got rid of about 1.100 by November. That will still be less than three per cent. The American people are not going to be happy about two or three per cent economies. Not when taxes compel them to deny themselves far more than that in what they want to spend or save. Drastic compulsion Is what bureaucracy needs. In another article I shall call attention to the violent opposition, includ ing propaganda, that has greet ed the cuts already made. Af ter that I shall describe what seems to me the only way to hold a bureaucracy In check. Friday. September 4, 1981 POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Live in Tenement, But They Had Their Party Too y HAL New York WV Helen sat on the tenement stoop st twi light waiting for Joe. . The heat from the great summer stove of Manhattan hammered at her, and she tried to fan it away with a folded newspaper. When she saw Joe coming down the sidewalk, his collar open, his coat dangling limp ly over one arm, she put the paper on ber knees and bent her head over it, as though absorbed. Joe slumped down silently at the other end of the stoop and watched her. After a mo ment Helen lifted her eyes, faked a squeal and aaid, "Oh, Joe, you startle me." "Don't give me that stuff," said Joe, crossly. "Why do you girls sit around thinking up phoney things to say? You saw me coming." They looked at each other warily, trying to decide wheth er it was too early in the eve ning to quarrel. Then both decided it was too hot "What're you reading?" ask ed Joe. - "Oh, about the big party that rich old bird, the Mar quis" she glanced down at the newspaper and spelled the name Marquis de C-u-e-v-a-s in Biarritz. That's a place on the Riviera." "Yeah," said Joe. "but which place the one on the East Riviera or the Hudson Riviera?" Helen laughed. t Joe always said such crazy things. ' "Oh, it must have been won derful," said Helen dreamily. "Hundreds of famous people were there, and they wore costumes." They had lace covered benches to sit on. And they even had pedigreed cattle and sheep wandering around among the guests on the lawn. Wasn't that a cute idea?" "Sure," said Joe. "People get tired of seeing nothing but pedigreed pink elephants at parties." "It must have been excit ing," Helen went on. "Elsa Maxwell rode in on a donkey, and a French dancer arrived on a camel. But if I could have gone to the party, I'd have come on a big pale white horse, the kind you see at the circus and arch their necks and look so proud." "Not me," said Joe. "I'd have galloped up on a boa constrictor." - ; "I thought boa constrictors are something like snakes," re plied Helen. "Do they have legs?" "Well," said Joe grimly. "They will have by the time I get Invited to a party like that one." "They had more than 2.000 bottles of champagne real champagne. And simply tons of caviar. Do you like caviar, Joe?" No. The kind of money they charge for that stuff, they ought to be able to get rid of the fishy flavor." "Well, I think I'd give a vear of my life to go to a party line tnai, signed Helen "The memories would be worth it. It said in the paper that old Mr. . . uh . . . old Mr. de .C-u-e-v-a-s must have spent about $100,000 on the party. Can you Imagine spending $100,000 in a single night." Joe couldn't At the mo ment he was fingering the two subway tokens in his pocket. "Honey, I got bad news for you," he said. "We can't go to the movies tonight. I lost my last $5 on a bet in the of fice." The dreams of Biarretz re ceded. Helen began fumbling in her small purse and said, "Let me treat, Joe." . -1 It's a combination of many skills and many little things that have caused people to speak so complimentary of us. Funsral Service Since 1171 ' Mil 4 TV BOYLE "No," he said stubbornly "You've done that too many times already." . . - "Please," she whispered. "You can pay me back when we're married. It's such a good picture tonight All about adventure in Africa. And on the way home we can stop for a beer and a sand wich." "Corned beef or cheese?" ' "Cheese," said Helen prac ticaUy. "That's all we can af ford tonight" "It;s a deal," aaid Joe. "if you let me drink the beer from your slipper. I hear they al ways do that in the big lea gues." "If you do, all youH get is foam, goofy. I'm wearing toe less sandals." As they stepped from the stoop, Helen put her hand In Joe's arm, and he squeezed it Joe looked up at the" same stars that shine on tenements and Biarritz. "I wish he was h-re" he said. "Who?" " : ' "Old Mr. ' de, C-u-e-v-a-s," spelled Joe. , "What for?" "Because" said Joe,' "He sounds like a guy who enjoys parties and he's sure miss ing a wonderful one tonight." Helen reached up and took his face in her hands and pulled him down and kissed him and didn't care what the neighbors thought. " Pay Up or Shut Up Yakima Herald -Before the United Nations General Assembly proceeds with further business, the na tions behind with their dues should be directed to pay up or leave the halt -.,.. The latest report shows thst only 15 of the 60 members have paid their 1953 dues in full, that a dozen of them owe for membership last year and that four are still behind on their 1951 assessments. Soviet Russia, the most vociferous and troublesome nation of the bunch, is nearly $3 million in arrears and Nationalist Chins, which assertedly has a big hoard of gold, owes $2.4 mil lion for this year and is also behind on its -1951 and 1952 payments. The United States, which has nursed the UN along from the start and which pays 35 per cent ot the UN budget of $48 million, has met its share of the obligation aa usual. The members that can not or will not bear their parts of the op erating expenses should have neither voice nor votes at the assembly sessions. - . ... Human Rival Twin Falls Times-News , Some scientists up at ' the Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology have succeeded in pro ducing an electrical robot which virtually duplicates the sounds of the human vocal tract. The Idea is to give science a chance to study how man's vo cal cords developed and how they operate. This new appar atus, six feet tall, has parts which correspond to all the elements in man's speech-making system: lips, vocal cords, windpipe, etc. These ingenious fellows real ly ought to be complimented for their work. But they could have solved their problem much more simply. All they had to do was hire out Sen. Wayne Morse ot Oregon, who has the most tireless set of vocal cords in America. Certainly no ma chine could surpass him in the regular and automatic produc tion of speech. Si,. -;Ai1 J- On at fane