Pift 4 Capital AJournal . An Independent Ntwtpopur Etoblihd 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every afternoon except Sunday ot 444 Che-'- meketa St., Solem. Phonti: Business, Newsroom, Wortt Adi. 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409 ft bwi Wn hnta tm-UU4 Htm tm TU OsIM w TU AMKUU4 rrtM b mellMwtt alHM ( IW mM f KWMtMe J II upuh u u sr MkwvIM utu Is pMt tM ftlM Mt salUe Hurtle. . SUBSCRIPTION RATISi It eirm MwlUr, HJ(i els WoatU, nasi ot TM. Orww: MMhlr. (Hi Sis MM. Htt On T. HIW Oiui Orwi Meatus, ta VnlU tr.Hi o Tii. in a HOUSE BUYING PROSPECTS The National Association of Horn Builders, the 8ocIetr of Real Estate Appraisers, building and mortgage firms eem to inti that prospect for buying new home will remain about the aame aa at present, for used housea much better, but that financing and mortgage availa bility differ regionally. . A shortage of mortgage money exists in some regions in the far west and south, but the crisis is easing. And proposals are afoot to remedy the shortage both in bank ing and legislative circles within the year. Although there'a been a slight drop in home building, most forecasts are that we'll keep on building houses ' near the whopping rate of about a million a year. Reces sion talk is fading. But the supply generally continues '. good. While pressure for price boosts is being generated by rising costs of labor and land improvement, this is coun tered by growing competition among builders. So new home prices are mainly steady and the competition makes for better quality. . . While new home prices are firm, the prices of prewar homes have dropped 6 to 10 per cent, according to re port on 12 cities throughout the nation. Many owners of newer than prewar houses have slashed their prices, sometimes up to 20 per cent. The general prediction is that used house bargains will be plentiful. The trend is toward building larger and costlier houses. A reaction from postwar buying of small homes by G.I.s and others who now have bigger families and higher in comes. They have outgrown their dwellings, which are on the market for newiyweds. Buying of houses, new or old, will be a little easier after the first of the year because of the 10 per cent income tax cut, which will go into effect for 1954, affecting 50 million taxpayers. G. P. NO PAROLE FOR ALGER HISS ' ' The country will applaud the decision of the U. S. Parole Board not to parole Alger Hiss, now serving a prison term for perjury. . There were two views the board could take on the Hiss case. It could go by the official record alone. He is doing time for lying under oath, a serious offense, but not one , that ranks with murder or armed assault. He has served the usual time for this offense and would be qualified in the ordinary course of events for release. What the board evidently did do was to consider the further fact that while Hiss was technically convicted of perjury the actual offense was treason for which he could not be prosecuted because the act itself had been outlawed by the running of the statute of limitations. And whatever sentence was imposed for perjury would be an extremely light penalty for what Hiss did. Therefore he should serve every day of his sentence and be thankful that this was so much less than he deserved. It seems clear that an agency like a parole board is en titled to consider and rule on the basis of the known facts and not be bound to the official record. The official record might make Russia look like a neutral in Korea but the facts certainly don't, to offer an illustration of what we mean. THE LOCAL LIVESTOCK SALES YARD One of the significant trends in the livestock business has been the growth of local sales yards at key points throughout the western livestock country. Formerly the stock was sold on distant big city markets. Now it is likely to be sold to packers or feeders close to the ranch where it is grown. The foregoing observation is prompted by a news story in the Ontario Argus-Observer to the effect that the On tario Livestock Commission sales yard there sold 3160 cattle Tuesday of last week, the largest number in the 15-year history of the yard. Eight thousand four hun dred were sold at the yard in three consecutive weeks. Ontario is probably the largest yard in the eastern part of the state, but by no means the only one. Thirty-seven miles further east, at Caldwell, Idaho, there is another of comparable size. These sales are held one day each week. They bring in hundreds of sellers and buyers, giving the grower a cash market close enough to home so he can withdraw his stock without serious loss if he is not satisfied with the price. The trend toward local sales yards is a help ful one to the producer, and the buyer finds it handy, too. It has become "big business" in the cattle country. NO DEATH CELL WEDDING The average person might ask ".what possible objection can there be if Carl Austin Hall and Bonnie Brown Heady want to be married in the death house of the Missouri penitentiary prior to their execution, scheduled for Dec ember 187" This was our Initial reaction, but on second thought we think the prison officials are right. There is a sanctity to marriage for which this couple are hardly qualified. Theirs has not been a union either church or state can wish to bless. Congratulations, rice, wedding cake and general good will go with the marriage ceremony. None of this can be felt or properly expressed here. Better to let the law take its course with as little sentimentality, maudlin or other wise, as possible. ROSE BOWL CHOICES There will be little dissent over the Rose Bowl selections. Michigan State is probably the strongest team in the Big Ten, certainly the most colorful, and this team will have the advantage of novelty, not having played there before. Ucla is not a colorful tram, but one that wins its games, which is the acid test of strength. The far west, beaten in all but one of its encounters with the Big Ten teams cannot afford to present less than its best. Even if Stan ford does have more colr.r. This game should be fully up to the established tradition. Los Angeles J Mrs. Bet ty Fisher, seeking a divorce, teitifld In Superior Court that living with her husband, Ken neth, bad become "impossi ble." She said they now have dl viaea tneir relriserator with a brignt blue line, her food is kept on the right, hu on the left. TM CALLOW ( MY NAME 1, I GO TO CORNER V tot? Rs BEARS ACCUSED KIDNAPPING iVUIDEN- OUTCOME OF THE CASE- MAIDEN AGREES NOT TO PRESS CHARGES AGAINST AAE A LONG AS I PAY OFF WASHINGTON MERRY Bishop Ox man Prays for President's Golf Score By DREW Washington Bishop G. Bromley Oxman, the Metho dist church leader who was banned from speaking in Los Angeles' leading auditorium was received by President Ei senhower last week, during which the two men had a friendly conversation about golf. The bishop Inquired whether the president had had a chance to play his regular Wednesday afternoon golf game, to which Ike replied: "Yes, Bishop, and I want to thank you for your offer to pray for a better score for me." "Well, did my prayers do any good?" inquired the bishop. "Frankly, on the first nine holes, no," said the president. "But on the second nine holes, the answer is definitely yes." TV A FOR NEAR EAST Eric Johnston, head of the motion picture industry, came back from the Near East the other day to report to Presi dent Eisenhower on the tough est of all diplomatic Jobs building up long-range friend ship between Israel and the Arab states. Johnston was asked by Ei senhower to go to the Near East as his special ambassa dor, officially to settle the question of Arab refugees, but actually to settle the broader nd more basic problem of Arab-Israel friendship. What Johnston took with him was a comprehensive plan for impounding the River Jordan and using its waters for power and irrigation un der a system similar to the Tennessee Vally. If this ir rigation-power plan could be put across, he told the Arabs and Israelis, the Jordan val ley could be made to bloom like a rose, and permanent peace and prosperity would nr.v.il in th. Nr F.t Amh refugees could be put to work on the project, thereby re- movlng a difficult thorn in . . . . .. . the side of Arab-Israeli rela tions. At Dresent Arab refugees. some 875.000 of them, live on the border of Israel, fed by the United Nations and costing ! American taxpayers about $60,000,000 this year. All day idle refugees look across little white stone markers which designate the border and proi- m r,:L rm: ;L asssK-ai iitrj unit unuvu. -rti night they frequently cross the border to steal sheep or goats. When they do. the Israels raid back, and under the old eye-for-an-eye and tooth-for- a-tooth doctrine, men are kill ed almost every night. Twen ty were killed, Johnston re ported to the White House, just during his brief stay the Near East. JOHNSTON GUARDED Johnston reported that at first he was met with " - tlllty from both sides. Arab preu claimed his mother ,nnounctment. ..xh wh0 and father were Jewish, that!,,,, ,he 8ct will re he had changed his name. The ; celve ,,old . embossed. calf Israeli press published a car-; lc,,hM. bound cp,,, of Ben toon ot Johns on with a big ; ton t pllln lor virl(. Urm. knife seeking to earv uj. jf - . . , I raaL He waa warned his life THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Ortfoa THE BIG PXYOFF - GO - ROUND PEARSON was in danger. Both sides guarded him day and night. However, the TVA plan for developing the Jordan River aroused d e f in i t e interest. Drawn up by Charles T. Main of Charlotte, N.C., under the auspices of TVA authorities, it calls for the cooperation of Israel with three Arab states Lebanon, Syria and Jordan. The waters of the Jordan are to be impounded largely in Lebanon, with another dam at Lake Tiberias. From these two reservoirs, irrigation ditches would lead off into Syria, Israel and along the Jordan River. But since the river runs through four coun tries, the Cooperation of all four la absolutely necessary. By the same token, John ston argued, cooperation on this Jordan valley authority would lay the cornerstone for badly needed peace. JOHNSTON TALKS TURKEY "The American people have been spending $150,000,000 a year on this area," Johnston told Arab Prime Minister Faw zl Mulqul of Jordan. "And they're not going to do It much longer. If you don't go along with this project, you'll find yourself handling these re fugees at a cost of $60,000,000 a year." "That's your problem re plied the prime minister, which Is responsible for mak ing these refugees homeless." "No, It's not our problem," countered Johnston. "On the contrary, It was you Arabs; who refused to obey an order to stop fighting, thereby open ing yourselves up to Israeli retaliation. "Don't make any mistake about future money from the United States," Johnston con tinued. "The carpenter in Keokuk or the farmer near 1 "man. urn i imrrtMrn in i Arab refugees. And he isn t going to continue paying for ,h'm n,uch longer. "On the other hand, If you I put across this Jordan Valley n.m.M it will Mnl nnlu h nnm project it will not only bloom a n.i'.. KxifnM hut ivrv ... I fugee can be put to work." Johnston reported to Eisen hower that he hoped he had opened the door Just a crack in Jordan, and just a crack iin Israel. Bitterness over re I cent border incidents Is in I tense. Both countries are a long way from being con vinced. In Lebanon and Syria 1: Tope, to get more favorable reactions when he goes bark In Febru ary. BENSON SWEEPSTAKE Wisconsin Democrats have launched a "contest" to guess the date on which Agriculture Secretary Benson will resign. It's a straight political gim mick of course, but It's catch I 1 . , .1 CV" I i- 1 in on line wiiaiirv iiiruusiiuu Ithe state. "Every person who comes ' uiltM-k nn V lr tt I Kb Mr- I,-, ri.t. will rereiv. one I pound of dried buttermilk ' tcwrntM tsui Morse's Speech By Charles V. Stanton In Roseburg News-Review I was in the audience at the Junior High School auditor ium Friday night to hear Sen ator Wayne Morse talk about Senator Wayne Morse. The senator's speaking ab ility never fails to elicit my utmost admiration. Each time I hear him I sit enthralled by his marvelous command of language, h I a clear enuncia tion, his voice modulation, the effortless gesture, the tone of conviction, the biting satire, the peerless showmanship, the change of pace and perfect timing. To one who sweats and strains through every public utterance, trembling with fear at the very thought of facing an audience, the sena tor's talent seems nothing short of perfection. At oratory h has few peers. But, then, he gets a lot of practice. Listening to the symphony of words, as one who appreci ates words, I almost missed the senator's implication that of the 531 members of The Congress, 530 are party hacks, numbskulls, dupes and or sto oges, and that only one knows all the answers. And that the executive branch of govern ment, picked from some of the most successful and high ly respected men of the na tion, can do nothing construc tive and Is wrong on all decis ions and policies. Under the spell of his mag nificent voice my heart bled as he recounted the indigni ties heaped upon him the re fusal to allow him to sabotage the party platform, rejecting nis choice for vice president, and denying him the oppor- tunity to beat the bass drum on the band wagon. The sanctimonious words of forgiveness for those who had done him dirt, and the recital of his agony and travail, in mustering courage to be a turncoat, so wove their magic speU that ln anayzing reasons for his desertion specifically overseas extravagance laid at the door of the Republican nominee I almost missed the tact that overseas extrava- j inefficiency and .... J graft originated with the ec. onomic do-good-ers of the ad' ministration to which the sen ator had consistently given his allegiance in many past years. Also the thought that the sen ator's sudden passion for ec onomy, completely lacking in his prior record, existed only long enough to serve as an alibi, as evldenceed by his continuing demands for more free spending. Almost lost in the master ful flow of dulect words. piously disclaiming ill will against his detractors, and the crime-does-not-pay denuncia tion of vengeance, was the harsh undertone of Jealous vindicUvenesa against the for mer Governor of Oregon, now serving aa Secretary of Inter ior, to whom the senstor at tributes all things evil. From the clash of minor chords In the symphony of words. I gathered the impres sion that had editors been dipping their pens in his blood to smear it on their editorial pages, as he so cutely phrased it, they would be writing in the green Ink of Jealously. The senator should know that newspaper offices hsve been using principally red Ink Salem 12 Years Ago By BIN MAXWELL November U. 1141 ' Nazi divisions had driven to within 11 miles ol Mocow. Fir had wiped out the bull nets section of Seward, Alaska, causing a low of 11.000,000. Brother Wolfgang Echmuehl, OSfl. a member of the order for SO yean, had renewed hit monastic vows of 1891 at high pontifical maw celebrated in Abbey chapel at Mt. Angel. Major General George A. White. 60. nationally known fiction writer and commander of the 41st division, had died. In 1913 he had resigned as Sun day editor of the Oregonian to become Oregon's adjutant gen eral of the National Guard. Coach "Spec" Keene and his party of Willamette university football players were soon ts leave Salem on the first leg of their Journey to Hawaii where they were to play the Univer sity of Honolulu December 8. ("Pearl Harbor" found them there and some did not arrive home for weeks thereafter.) OPM had issued an order in interest of national defense for bidding all use of tin foil on commercial products after March IS. United Airline service, sche duled to begin here December 5, 1941 had necessitated an ad justment of details at Salem airport. . since the crowd to which the senator has given his support, lo these many years, took of fice. Take a gander at the list ot newspapers forced to fold financially in the past few years! I must confess great admira tion for the senator's agility (Note to proofreaders No, I don't mean ability) when it comes to answering questions. As a verbal snooker player he is a master of position. One man at Friday's meet ing asked what was behind Brownell'a charges. He got, for free, an expert legal opin ion that Truman, as a private citizen, should go before the investigating committee vol untarily and then, as ex-president, refuse to answer any questions relative to executive procedure. Another gentlemen asked "What about Trieste?" He re ceived a lengthy and most de tailed dissertation on Junior's cleverness, astuteness and in trepidity in forcing through the Senate a resolution favor ing the World Court, despite urgings from fellew senators that his resolution was un timely, coupled with a person' al plea from the President to delay action. A third question was for in formation relative to the cur rent status of the Hells Can yon controversy, which resulted In the full treatment on federal power, which the senator favors, as opposed to free enterprise. I have heard the senator in several ot these brilliant quel tion and answer sessions, but seldom have I heard him bive a fair and square reply. But they furnish a fine spring board from which to launch his dives into his favorite po litical waters. As I said earlier, I love to hear the senator speak. I am a great admirer ot his techni que. But when Senator Morse speaks about Senator Morse it is my opinion that he needs a better subject. 3 1 2 if ... ? ' !:;! - ;i ill s m POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Hal Writes Today, Unable To U$e V Typewriter Key By HAL nw York W! Me have a great problem, me has. The eye Key on my iypwry ter ys broken. Thys may seem no great ua edv to vou. but to me yt ys utter desolashun. A good housewyfe can get her laundry done even though her wash board oreaxs yn am. A bank robber, by usying a gruff manner, may go on and OPEN FORUM Mesh Production and Consumption, His Plea To the Editor: Security of living is the goal of every one living. It Is the incentive that drives our activ ities ln mental, physical, and social efforts. Senator Morse mentioned the fact that stored food soon spoils and Is not tit for human use, which is true. He present ed no solution. In 1948 Oscar Ewlng reported to the presi dent that every day in the U.S., SOO people died from slow starvation, "not enough food to maintain physical health. He mentioned that in dustries are alowing down, making short week payments that reduce wages for workers. That farmers were producing surplus crops that had to be stored. That workers could not purchase the farmers' pro ducts and farmers could not buy the workers' product, making the conditions suitable for depression; that the inter ests of workers and farmers were contributory to each oth er's welfare. All true, but he made no pro posals as to how the farmers could dispose of his surplus food when the workers were unable to purchase for lack ot money. True some of them get high wages while working, but he did not mention there are 100,000,000 people in this country who receive less than $2,000 a year, one-half of them less than $1,000 (government figures). That it takes $3500 to secure a healthy standard of living, according to U.S. health figures. These are prob lems that confront not only Oregon, but the whole U.S. . As our production is inter locking, the elected officials should be able to grasp the meaning, as production is di rected by laws formulated by our national and state legisla tures. Laws are force, that take from some and give others ape citl opportunities. There can be no freedom of action without financial security. He com' pared Russia with the U.S. We are not interested in the laws in Russia. We are interested in the U.S. and the state of Ore gon where we live. HERBERT DENNETT, 266 S. Cottage St. FUMES KILLED FLOWERS. San Pablo, Calif. U.B Nur seryman Francis Aebl com plained to tne mayor's office that fumes from the city gar bage dump have killed thou sands of dollars worth of his flowers. CARELESS COP Manhattan Beach, Calif. U.I!l Motorcycle Patrolman Rob ert M. Short noticed some thing shiny on the highway and pulled over to the curb. to investigate. It was his po lice badge, ' Be on the alert tor these Danger Signals . . they CAN be your Safety Signals. 1. A sore that will not heal 2. A lump or thickening in the body 3. Unusual bleeding or discharge 4. Any change in a wart or mole B. Persistent indigestion 6. Persistent hoarseness or cough , 7. Any change in normal bowel habits . Cancer is earabfe . . . if discovered and treated early. See your Doctor if any symptoms occur. CAPITAL DRUG STORE 405 Stale St. (Corner ol Liberty) We Give ZK Green Stamps IJimamj, nvwwmowr , iwat BOYLE hold up a bank even though he dyseover, at the last mo ment, he has left hys pystal at home yn a fyt of absent myndedness. A tenor, atryckea wyth lar yngytys'at the top note of hys song, can at least fynish yt by hummyng tenderly. Eye my. self would just as soon he dyd, as eye can understand an opera that ya hummed better than one that ys sung. - But a columnyst wyth a broken key on hya typewriter ys a far more pytyable plyght than a lyttle sparrow with arthrytys yn both wyngs. Th eye key ys more yndyspenablt to hym than hys own hand. He becomes lyke a plate ot han and eggs on whych there ys no ham. He ys tongue-tyed. Me yntended today to wryte an artycle on the vyrtue of never losyng one's temper. Eye was goyng to prayse th man who meets ' all trouble wyth a smyle . , . smyle . . . smyle. But now my heart ys ' no longer yn tnys subject. Any man who can smyle when the eye key on hys typewryter ys a broken would break out lnuoh- yng at hys own funeral, and thus scandalyze the mynyster. No, now eye wysh eye was a Spanyard lyke a trend ot myne once met yn Spane. The Spanysh are sayd by all trav. elers to be the most artful oath utterers yn the cyvylyzed world. They begyn young and study hard all theyr lyfe long. Thys partycular Spanyard was middle-aged and at the peak of hys cursyng power. Ht was a cahuffeur and he was dryvying my friend across Spane when he had a flat tyre. The Spanyard was very vexed. Flat tyres annoy Span yards more than they do Am erycans, because you get more flat tyres yn Spane because the roads are bad. Thys Span yard got out hys tools to fyx the culpryt tyre. But before reparying yt, he spoke of yt as yf yt were a human beyng, as follows: "O, tyre." Then for fyfteen full myn utes he delyvered an eloquent hystory on the flat tyre yn Spane. He denounced them alL Then he got down to the evyl nature of the partycular flat tyre before him. He questioned yts ancestory and projected doubts about the charter of yts offspryng. He called yt by all the bad names ever known, and spontaneously ynvented new and more terryble oaths upon the spot. "Eye was struck dumb by the pure poetical magnyfy cence of thys symple man's rage at an ynanymate object that had done him wrong," my fryend recalled. "When the Spanyard had fynally fynished, he bent down and fyxed the tyre and we drove on, both re freshed." Eye wysh eye was that sym ble Spanyard. "Oh eye key on my typre wryter " he would say, and then go on from there. But me am helpless. Even yf me knew Spanysh which me don't me could not tell thys type wryter what me really thiynk of it untyl thys blasted eye key ys repayred. A columnyst with a broken eye key ys a lonely man wyth lyttle left to say, so me wyll conclude with thys thought: "Sylence ys golden."