Part I Capital AJournal An Independent Newspoper Esioblishsd 1888 BERNARtJ MAINWARING, Editor end Publisher - GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus . Published every oftemoon except Sunday ot 444 Che meketa St., Solent Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont Ads. 2-2406; Society Editor. 2-2409 STALIN'S ANNIVERSARY Monday, December 21 waa the birthday of the late Joseph Stalin, born Josef Visarionvich Djugashvili, in Tiflis, Georgia, in 1879, who died March 5, 1953, ruthless dictator of the far-flung Soviet Russian empire and his European and Asiatic satellite states. Though Stalin was, next to Hitler, the greatest and most fanatical assassin and gangster in modern history, who consolidated his regime of terriorism by countless purges, numerous starvation slave camps, persistent campaigns of propaganda exalted and deified him. A serious effort was made to isve the Russian people replace Christ with Stalin at Christmas time all over the vast Soviet domain. Great portraits of him hung in churches and radios and loud speakers everywhere bellow ed his praises while Red sycophants brayed forth sicken ing laudations. Since his mystery death, this year Stalin seems all but forgotten, even as a member of the communist trinity of Marx, Lenin and Stalin, for no mention has been made even on the birthday of the departed Red savior. One of the birthday events recorded, not in Russia, but in Mexico, was the refusal of Jacque Monard, the myatery assassin who killed the bolshevik lesder Leon Trotsky 13 years ago by cleaving in his head with an axe, who re fused a parole from his 19-year sentence to remain in prison. He evidently feared he would be killed himself, either by the Trotskyitea or by Soviet agents to insure that be will not tell who ordered the assassination. Stalin's anniversary was featured in Moscow however, by the Kremlin's acceptance of the Eisenhower proposal to confer on a world pool of atomic energy materials for peace provided the Soviet demand for a ban on atomic and hydrogen bombs is taken up simultaneously. . This may be in a way, a repudiation of the Stalin policy. Another feature of the anniversary is the campaign waged by the Kremlin propaganda machine to whip up in ,the Russian people hate against Lavrenty P. Beria as the probable prelude to the official announcement that he has been shot as a traitor. Beria was head of Stalin's secret police atid did the dirty purge work and one of his most ardent supporters. Probably both he and his six alleged accomplices are already dead. Dispatches reveal an intense nationwide campaign of denunciation and vilification of Beria has been going all over the USSR at all these meetings, organized and di rected, of course, from Moscow, speakers demanding the death sentence for the "criminal.'' All of which shows that the Malenkov regime, for some reason or otner, may eventually repeal as wen as modify Uncle Joe's foreign policies perhaps from fear of the Russian people as well as those of the Satellites. But it should not be assumed for It Is probably illusionary. G. P. NEW LOW FOR JOHN L. John L. Lewis has more public eye of late, mainly because there nave been no sug gestions this winter of freezing the public with a coal strike. This, it is said, is because there is a large stock pile of coal due to overproduction and an increased num ber of nonunion mines. The situation does not favor a Lewis type squeeze play. " But the old maestro is not Idle. It is revealed that he has joined forces with the discredited, crime-ridden Inter national Longshoremen's Association which was kicked out of the A.F.L. He has advanced it United Mine Work er funds, which be treats as if they were his own to do with as he pleases. " . This involves Lewis in another fight with the A.F.L., which has organized a new union for longshoremen and is seeking to be designated as their bargaining agent. Lewis has now solved the financial problems of the old union, its new president says, by providing a wsr chest for the fight. If Lewis succeeds in saving the power of the I.L.A. on the New York waterfront he will probably be able to join it with his U.M.W., which will give him another club to swing in the fight with the rival union leaders, Meany of A.F.L. and Reuther of C.I.O. Lust for power has been the moral undoing of John L. Lewis, who hsd potentialities for greatness as did Mussolini, who rose to power in another land under other conditions in a somewhat comparable way. He is an other gloomy proof of Lord Acton's classic observation that "power corrupts and absolute power corrupts abso lutely." BIG NEW BUILDING PROJECT Many Salem residents must have blinked their eyes Monday when they read of the new $800,000 building project planned for the south of State street area next year. Portland capital Is coming here to erect the Unrest building in the Salem business district, one of three to get under way next year, an arm for the old capital city. The other two are to house Oregon's two largest de partment stores outside Portland. The new project will be different from any others built in Salem heretofore, with space for ground floor stores, professional offices to two upper floors and a big parking area on the roof. 'It thus combines the shopping center with offices and mass psrking facilities, all of which seems to fill a need here. Real estate folk will be interested in this challenge to a trend nortnward and westward in the business district, which must have given concern to owners of property south of State. This area cannot now be discounted. It will make a strong bid to keep what it has and gain more. Meanwhile 1954 looks like one of the best construction years in the history of Salem. THE FANS WILL RESPOND Decline in attendance at sports events was a general eomplaint among colleges and sponsors of other athletic entertainment this past year, but they set an all time attendance record Monday night at Gill Coliseum when 10,424 persons clicked the turnstiles. Occasion was a basketball double header par excellence, Oregon and Nebraska and Oregon State bracketed with Indiana, top rated team of the nation in the finale. Fans thronged into Corvallis from all over the Willamette val ley. Cars were pouring out of the college town bumper to bumper on all the main highways for nearly an hour aft erward. Here is visible proof that come high water and all that is sometimes associated with it, the fans will support sports events when the attraction is there. And proof that such games need not be played in the state's chief city to "pack 'em in." m Mi hot or less dropped out of the unprecedented shot in the f7 night nnut emsrhuM, SS nvinmu tunning , i H HOT CVCA MOVitj ii:W.st?, ChlLbMNlttUlHHG. Vi??f 2 liariMMaUAt lii True put wTRr j re. MAiiine iuai CLXrrrB.r- , . .... . ft to see what a mattca Ma WASHINGTON MERRY Hoover Says No Reds Left In Policy Making Positions By DREW Washington J. Edgar Hoov er told a super-secret meeting of the houie appropriations committee (judiciary subcom mittee) recently that to the best of his knowledge no com munist agents hold any policy making Jobs in the government. A lew impeded Reds in minor government lobs are still under FBI surveillance, Hoov er told the committee, but that is all. Hoover also admitted under questioning that he did not lavor making public the hith erto secret FBI'reports on Har ry Dexter-Whit. He laid he agreed to make the files public when ordered to do io by his boss. Attorney General Herbert Brownell. Hoover also admitted that In a parallel case in 1931, both he and former attorney general Howard McGrath had refused to give any ot the FBI secret tiles on communism to dem ocratic Red-hunting committee, headed by ex-Sen. JIMard Tyd tngs of Maryland. The FBI chief alto testified that leu than 10 per cent of employees discharged from the Justice department under the loyalty program were proven Communist or fellow travelers. The rest of those discharged were so-called security risks, including alcoholics, Incompe tents and employees who for one reason or another might be blackmailed. Mr. Cohn and Mr. Schlne Gerard David Schine, the handsome, dreamy-eyed young man who gravitated around Europe at the taxpayers' ex pense on behalf ol Joe Mc Carthy and who belatedly was drafted into the army after va rious maneuvers and medical examinations, Is now at Fort Dlx.. N. J. There, he has been the ob ject of several phone conver sation! between hii pal, Roy Cohn, McCarthys counsel, and the commanding ofliccrs. Roy, who also gallivanted around Europe and was pub licized in the German press for engaging In a private scuffle with David in a Ger man hotel, has been very so licltious about his friend's welfare In the army, Two or three times a week for awhile, Roy called the commanding officer to ask now Gerard Da vid was getting along. "The senator," said Cohn ominously, "wants to know." This had the d'sired effect among lower echelons at Fort Dix. Gerard David was kept off kitchen police, guard duty and other disagreeable chores. Finally, however. Gen. Corn elius Ryan, commander cf the 19th infantry division, could take It no longer. He got in j touch with the secretary of the army, Robert Stevens, ex- enc of Joe McCarthy's counsel in affairs at Fort Dix, asked him what he should do about It. "General." replied the sec retary of the army, already harassed over McCarthy's var ious probes, "this is one you've got to handle yourself." LONELY TOM DIWBT Probably the bitterest polit ical feud ever experienced In side the Republican party Is now taking place in New York. lit has direct bearing on the 1 Republican presidential nomln- THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, gatoa. Ortpw RUSSIAN TRANSLATION ,,,, - GO - ROUND PEARSON ation for 1958, and means that Gov. Tom Dewey, even if he wants it, will be out of the running. Dewey Is now engaged In probing the taxes of some of the most important Republican political figures in New York state some of them once quite close to him. Certain Republicans, in turn, are busy checking on the com plete circumstances under which Dewey released Lucky Luciano from Sing Sing during the war. At that time, Luc iano, considered the No. 1 crim inal of New York and head. of Murder, Incorporated, still had about SO years to serve. Behind this GOP civil war is first the fact that Dewey, with a good record as gover nor, suddenly woke up to find various political allies involv ed in the "race-track take" and other shades of dubious political operations. Also behind It Is the fact that Dewey figures that, unless he proceeds with a .vigorous cleanup, not only his political goose, but his political repu tation, is cooked. He has pretty much decided not to run for governor again. But even If he were Inclined otherwise, the atmosphere is such that young Franklin D. Roosevelt would win In a walk. Furthermore, Dewey, the man who nominated Ike, has found his position faulting in Washington. Despite the fact that he appointed two cabinet members Dulles and Brown ell plus t h e White House Press Secretary, Jim Hagerty, he's had a hard time putting across his Niagara Falls pow er project. I When Dewey went to the White House last week to dis cuss the Niagara Power proj ect, he had to go hat In hand,: and he didn't come away with' a definite promise. Ike indi cated that he was for letting Dewey have his way at Niag ara, bu' he didn't button it up definitely. Weakness in Washington, say his friends, is the chief reason why Dewey reversed himself on "Brownellism" and came out with a rousing speech in Hartford, Conn., backing up the spy expose. Previously he had been .mphatic in saying pri vately that his old friend, the attorney general, mrde a mis take in digging up skeletons of the past. But at the SlOO-a-plate GOP dinner In Hartford, he sounded the battle cry for more skeletons. Anyway, the governor of New York today presents a pic ture of a lone warrior, fighting a lore battle, with most of the New York political leaders wbo once rallied round him now sore at him and In. some cases being invesUgated by him. It is not the picture of a man who can ever be nominated again for president The Russian embassy still hasn't replaced iti huge paint ing of Stalin with a portrait of the new Soviet dictator. Georgi Malenkov. . . . Isw Jersey's jrpublican bosses are backing Congressman Robert liiean. cnairman oi the house tax fraud committee, to take the GOP senatorial nomination away from Sen. Robert Hend Irickson. Both are good men. , lVfe"- ,r . """" '0" OPEN FORUM State Manufacture of Paint Draws Protest To the Editor: I was told today by a state official, who wishes to remain anonymous, of a, proposal by a department of our state to enter Into the manufacture of paint for state use. He told me tbii is but one example why the taxpayer does not get his money's worth. A questionnaire Is now be ing used in connection with the state formulated paint. I am told these questions will not be answered sincerely be cause, the working man in public service- Just don't stick his neck out. Some one's idea that the paint manufacturers do not know their business Just does not hold water. It seems to me that business men, technicians and chemists are being subjected to an ama teur whose Intentions may excel his knowledge on this aubject. If this experiment Is allowed to go through we will not only be thwarting these professional men's Judgement but also penalizing the tax payer. Men who make a business of paints have thousands of satisfied customers in Ore gon and as most people will agree that dissatisfied custom era will sink a business man Just as surely, quickly and devastatlngly as dissatisfied voters will sink a public ser vant. One of our neighboring states has a commission of eminent citizens designated by the chief executive to con sider problems of ethical stan- GIVE 8 Diamonds s Watches STL -'. IX? I Costs 'ClFh- " I kt. 11 ji fvvw t POOP MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Man and Woman of Year: Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus By HAL BOYLC New York Iff) Would your wife let you out even one night a year If you spent it climbing down and up strange chimneys? Certainly not But Mrs. Santa Claus does, and isn't the least bit Jealous of her bus band. This makes her the world's most undemanding wife. So why not give a little long overdue recognition to this good gray dame and nominate her "Woman ot the Year?" And how about making old Santa himself the "Man of'the Year?" . It is time we make a break In tradition and give these honors to a family team. And who has better earned the award, century after century, than Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus? . Some time they ought to share a Nobel peace prize, too. It would be hard to name a couple who have done more for International good will. In an era of doubt they have preached and practiced the bright renewal of belief. They are as . old-fashioned as long underwear, but as modern as faith Itself must always be. In. an atom age they still go on sturdily demonstrating that no man can know happiness who tries to remain an atom unto himself. Working as a happy team together, Mr. and Mrs. Claus must have brought delight and Joy- to a billion children in their time In a universal give away program, that crosses all countries and is heedless of all politics. And they show no signs of retiring on sn old age pension or complaining, "Children are getting so bad the whole thing is no longer worth while." So far as t know neither Santa nor his wife believes there Is such a thing as a bad child. What other childless couples do you know who has an attitude like that? If history records where Santa found his bride, the fact has escaped me. But it there are any more like her, I know few bachelors who certain ly would be glad to propose to one. Mrs. Claus deserves to be named "Woman ot the Year" If only because she hss proved a good, gal can win fame In the career of housewife, even though she does her house keeping In a place as remote as the North Pole. It Is well known by the elvei that Mrs. Claus actually supervises the North Pole toy- making operations during most of the year. But does she Insist on a seat by Santa's side, when he makes his an nual Christmas Eve sleigh ride around the globe? Not Mrs. Claus. She lets her old man get all the applause, because she believes a woman's place dards In the conduct of public affairs. The commission has no authority but is used as a guide as to how public offic ials should act and also gives the press and public a clear basis for determining offic ial right from wrong. George Baker, Kt. S Salem, Ore. or live oCadt A GIFT se . law '-er-- r "!-,.. (fTt Mm mm, is In the borne, en Christmas Eve, anyway. "Besides," she has placidly confided to friends, "I'm a backaeat driver, and with all that pack ot toys in the back seat, there really isn't room for me. And besides that. It is Just common sense to let a husband out one night a year by himself, and. no questions asked. i- 1 "You ought to see how glad Mr. Claus is to come creeping home on Christmas morning." Between them Mr. and Mrs. Claus help keep alive a force more explosive thin a million hydrogen bombs, the tuneless power of human love and un derstanding in a yearning world eternally lonely for these twin vitamins of the human souL ' Nominations closed. All in favor say "Aye!" Those op posed, say but how could anybody oppose them? We give you the "Man and Woman of the Year Santa and his lady! STOPPED WRONG PLACE Val D'Or, Que. S)J0Ulric Duvan, 50, was arrested for driving while intoxicated be cause he stopped his automo bile at a street corner to wait for the traffic light to turn green. TheVe is no traffic light on that corner, police said. REALLY RECKLESS Milwaukee UJ9 John Mc Lees was charged with driving recklessly over the lawn, through the picture window and into the living room of Grant R. Emerson's home at the end of 70th street SANTA'S LOST HIS REINDEER! Somewhere in the Capitol Shopping Center WON'T YOU PLEASE HELP HM FIND THEM? They'll Be in fhe Slores and Parking Lots Between 6 & 9 on Tuesday & Wednesday 25 REWARD PER REINDEER! 3 BUT BEWARE: K THEY'RE IN DISGUISE AND MAY LOOK JUST LIKE YOU OR YOUR NEIGHBOR, as Iflfjinute Sb CERTIFICATE $hm&&$S2 SAY JEWEtn BrtVEFCMITHS 390 STATS STREET SALEM, OREGON ! $ .6 - V2s. V s. i S - c r ... Tutidar. DCMbr 22, 1953 Salem 16 Years Agd By BIN MAXWELL Decease It, HIT Light snowfall had brough prospects of a white Christ' mas for Oregon. ... It had been expressed as possibility t b s t Eleanor Roosevelt, square dancing! first isoy, wouia try in. "Big Apple" si a wnna Horn, young people's j dance during the Christmas noildays. . Mrs. Ella T. Gray, SI, tot many years a resident of 8a lem, bad died in Seattle. (Mrs. Gray was a daughter of Ste phen Chadwick. governor of Oregon between 1877.78.) Her busband had built the Gray block at the northwest corner of Liberty and State street William E. Anderson, Sa lem sporting goods dealer. armed with a two by four club had escorted a (arage robber to the city jail. ; President Roosevelt had said that a large percentage of American newspapers were fostering a psychology of tear. Jake Kilraln, famous boxer In the "bare knuckle" era, had died in a hospital in New York. ., More than 1,000,000 labor ers were reported employed In Russia to rush completion of a great military highway in Central Asia that would provide a link between Soviet Russia and China. Works Progress Adminis tration reported that it had spent S10.6S0.7S9 in Oregon between January 1, 1937 and November SO, 1937. State highway commission hsd considered the feasibility of illuminating the super highway between Oregon City and Portland. topper w 'CHARGE IT'! ST - v r a? Jf Close Christmas Eve 5:30 P.M. T