Page 4 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Orefjon Friday, January 22, 1954 Capital A-Journal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus ' Published every afternoon except Sunday at 280 North Church St. Phone 2-2406. Fill Lttted Wlr Strrlc r Hit Amrltted Treat ind Tbc Collra rrM. Tlw AijocUttd Preu It cicluilvel; entitled to the ut for publication of all newi dlipatehu credited to It or ouwlit credited In tbla papor aod ftlao oewa published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: f Carrier: Uonthlr. ll.JSl an Montha. 17.901 One rear, $18.00. Br Mill Is won: uonthlr, toe: su Uontha. M.SO; One Taar. to CO Br UaU ouuida Otiipq Itonlblr, 11.31; Mi Uontha, 17.90: One rear. 11900. COLUMBIA COMPACT AN ACTUALITY The recently organized Columbia Interstate Compact Commission at last meeting at Jioise voted xo recommena that the permanent organization be one of 17 members with a corresponding total vote. Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington would have three votes each. Wyoming would nave two votes; Nevada, Utah and the federal government one each. But this compromise came after the commission rejected a proposal from the executive committee to give the minor states only a fragment of voting power in the permanent group. The adopted proposal was made by Harry S. Dor- man of Salem, director of finance lor Uregon. The commission adopted various reports from the fish eries, engineering, polution control, executive, legal and power committees which are to serve as a rougn outline for Frederick Zimmerman of New York City, expert on Interstate compacts who will assist in writing the docu ment for the Columbia Basin. The Compact Commission is organized along the lines of the new cooperative policies of the Eisenhower adminis tration to give states a voice in the control of the develop ment of their natural resources with the federal agencies and private industry. It is a substitute for the proposed Columbia River Authority which placed all natural re sources development and administration under Washing ton federal bureaucracy, a plan vigorously opposed by the Columbia Basin states affected. The compact idea was first proposed in Oregon by Gov ernor Oswald West in his message to the legislature in January, 1911, and it has taken 43 years for its realiza tion. It was among many other then "radical" legislative proposals made by West for development, conservation and welfare, many of which were enacted during his term of office and others since. An excerpt from West's 1911 message follows: "It has been suggested, and the suggestion is a good one, that the Interstate waters ol a basin lying wiuun tne boundaries oi several adjoining states, might, as far as possible, be turned over to tne joint control ol these states. "As an instance, the Columbia basin is practically all within the boundaries of Oregon, Washington and Idaho. The waters of that river and its tributaries could undoubtedly, upon passage of effective uni form water laws by Congress, be safely turned over to the joint con trol of these states. "Orecon thrniieh adootion of most excellent walcr laws and their effective administration has shown her ability and willingness to con trol, protect and regulate the waters of the streams within her jur isdiction. "To join with her sister states In the passage and administration of uniform laws for the interstate streams in the Columbia basin would be but a short step forward." G. P. EYES OF THE WORLD ; Tf Yif . 1 fc "tv' j i m , v " "'! -'Jilt s q if iL MA, m POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Cloppity-Clop-Clop of the 6 O'Clock Horse Thing of Past By HAL BOYLE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND EISENHOWER'S 1954-55 BUDGET President Eisenhower's budget for the government's 1954-5 fiscal year, submitted to congress Thursday, shows that his administration is keeping its pledges for reduced spending and reduced taxation, but that it will not balance the budget during the second full year of his administra tion. The president proposes to spend $65,600,000,000 which will be more than $12,000,000,00 less than Truman spent in his last year, and five billions less than will be spent in the present fiscal year, Eisenhower's first. This is a drastic job in cost trimming when it is con sidered that national defense still eats up the major share of the budget and that many items, such as interest on the national debt, cannot be cut at all. We do not think any fair-minded person will question the sincerity or vigor of the economy drive. But the president cannot offer the prospect of a bal anced budget in the coming fiscal year, but forecasts a deficit of 2.9 billions, only a little less than the 3.3 billions now forecast for the present fiscal year. How come? The answer is five billion dollars worth of tax reduction, principally on a 10 per cent cut in the personal tax, but in cluding the excess profits tax on corporations, which was allowed to lapse as scheduled. This had been promised and had to be delivered, in view of the justifiable com plaint against high federal taxation. The president stands firm against further loss of rev enue through tax cuts, and he should, for the country should not operate on an unbalanced budget in prosperous times, which these still are and likely will continue to be. Taxes arc being cut more than the situation justifies any way. They certainly should not be cut more, no matter how great the pressure becomes. There will be disappointment that the promised budget balance is again deferred and Democrats cannot be blamed for an occasional jibe, for this is the way tha party system works. But it is evident that a good, businesslike job is being done at Washington. FIRST WIN FOR IKE'S PROGRAM Senate approval of the long pending St. Lawrence sea way project marks t he first victory lor 1 resident hisen- j howcr's program in congress and may indicate the pattern congressional voting will follow on many controversial is sues. Several interesting facts are to be found in the Seaway vote. It was prompt, belying the senate's reputation as a slow, deliberate, often stalling body. It was decisive, 51 to 33. And party linesvere split right down the middle. For the seaway were '25 Republicans, 25 Democrats and Senator Morse, Oregon independent who is seldom found on the president's side. We have not seen a detailed roll call but we suspect this will show that most of the sup port came from the central states which stand to benefit by the project, irresoctive of party. Opposing were 18 Democrats and 15 Republicans who were mostly from east and gulf coast states that fear the seaway will adversely affect their port business. Thus a coalition of senators of both parties, represent ing what they assumed to be the interests of their states, put the president's recommendation through. We believe this will happen on issue after issue. Party lines will break under the pressure, a bi-party coalition voting for measures embodying the recommendations, Republicans supporting both because of party loyalty and because the recommendations appeal to them as right, the Democrats disregarding party to do what they think is right. We shall see a minimum of party cohesion, but we might see a good deal of sound legislative action anyway. Let us hope. The St. Lawrence seaway vole is a good sign. same proportion as has meat on the hoof In the nation's sales yards. We've noticed it. too. Our fam ily meat Maple has graduated from hamburger to pot roa.-l dur ing the pnM year, and all on the same budget. Cabinet Seriously Worried About Rising Unemployment By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON The cab-1 dinner, given before the Wash- inet is more worried about ris- jneton Ad club. Air Force Gen. Ing unemployment than it likeil Everest was asked. ,.Do 10 !iam"' you think Chiang Kai-Shek The railroads have laid off , wU1 be nbc to invadc the mnin- 18,000 ana tne automoDiio in-!iand? repiica Everest: "What you mean is, 'do I think Chiang Kai-Shek can defend Formo- 16,000 since than 142,000 in Michigan dustry another Christmas. More arc out of jobs alone. Labor department officials believe privately that the na tional unemployment figure has already hit the 2,000,000 mark. In New York, Bethle hem steel has cut production 25 per cent in the last two months and introduced the four-day work-week. In Ohio and Ala bama, Republic Steel has laid off over 4,000. In Connecticut, Bridgeport Brass has put 2,000 on a four-day work-week. Washington Weather Even at the White House, Washington's winter weather has been a major topic. Rush ing Into the President's office for an appointment, breathless Congressman Harlcy Staggers of West Virginia apologized: "I almost didn't make it, Mr. President. Couldn't get a taxi in all this snow." "I'm lucky," replied Ike. "One thing abojt this job of Binpmnn rrn ih rximirv being President is that you are cutting down their payrolls !don't. hav,e to ut "V; because of dropping sales and "- " " "" tanks, military men still main tain that Wilson's policy is one of being penny-wise and pound foolish. Lyndon's Leadership Sen. Lyndon Johnson of Texas, the likable democratic leader, has been deliberately slow about calling a caucus of J democratic senators for fear they might challenge his lead ership. Some senators have been grousing that Johnson is so worried about appeasing Texas republicans and keeping an op position candidate out of the senate race that he's guiding democratic policy in the senate to help Johnson, rather than the democrats. Rather than give these sena tors a chance to contest his leadership, Johnson by-passed the usual democratic caucus supposed to be held before Congress opens and is dealing with each senator individually. If he brings them together in a group, some of the mavericks might gang up on him. Chances are that Johnson would win any intra-party election con test, but he doesn't want it overstocked inventories Note The administration, anxious to put a good face on the economic situation, has re vised unemployment figures by cutting the number of "em ployable" workers by 700,000. It is argued that approximate ly 700,000 people are too old or otherwise physically dis qualified to hold regular jobs except in periods of peak pros perity, therefore can be classi fied as "unemployable. If those 700,000 are added to the 1,850,000 officially admitted as unemployed, the total comes to around 2,600.000. Recognizing Red China A bitter backstage battle Is raging In the state department between two of the adminis tration's highest advisers over the recognition of Red China. One is Assistant Secretary of State Walter Robertson who flatly opposes any compromise with Red China. The other is Arthur Dean, law partner of John Foster Dulles and special Ambassador to Panmunjom, who leans toward an eventual deal with China. ' knniirn Ihiil thn- 1- executive offices, "- ""j- uppu- : suion 10 mm wnatsoever. Note The are in the west wing of the White House proper so thej President doesn't have to stop .. ,. . , outside when he moves be- BSllCf Mail JCTVIC6 tween nis living quarters and office. i Stayton Penny-wise Wilson Charlie Wilson's policy concentrating defense depart ment contracts in the hands of a few big companies, notably General Motors, is coming in for more and more backstage NEW YORK W-Manhattan has its own morning sounds that sets it apart, just as a small town does ... or a farm in the country, where alarm clocks wear feath ers and boss a barnyard. But the dawn sounds here are more mixed in mood ... the wail of a fire or police siren, stirring a fear-thrill in the city heart . . . the clank of a garbage can against a sanitation truck ... the wall vibrating snore of the man next door . . . and a cheery sound we miss the most, now that it is gone, the "cloppity-clop-riip" of the 6 o'clock horse. Let me tell you about that horse, and what he came to mean in a big tenement city, and I'm sorry I can't give you his real name, be cause I don't know it. One summer morning several years ago, shortly after we had moved into an apartment in a big 15-story brick hut by the East river, I woke to see my wife stand ing by the window with an alarm clock in her hand. "Who are you going to drop that clock?" I asked. "Don't you know it's against the law to bean anybody from a high window in New York?" Rover," said Frances. "I'm waiting to set this clock. It stop ped during the night." 'What are you going to set it by, the morning star?" "No," she said. "I'm going to set it hy the 6 o clock horse. "What in the world is that?" "Come and see." I yawned my way to the win dow. A few moments later there sounded a distant "cloppity-clop-clop." It grew louder. Then around the corner came a small elderly man sitting atop a small elderly ice wagon shaded by a faded small elderly beach umbrella. As the little dark sorrel animal and that creaking vehicle passed beneath our window. Frances set the clock and said: "That's the 6 o'clock horse. Haven't you heard him before? He's never more than a minute or two off any morning. "He makes such a cute sound. And he looks so patient and nice. Sometimes that old man leans over and hits him with a little stick, but the 6 o'clock horse does n't pay any attention to him. He always goes at just the same pace . . . listen to him." "Clippity-clop-clop, clippity-clop-clop," rang the hoofs of the 6 o'ci".k horse. After that I heard him many a morning. In New York you aren't allowed to keep even a Shetland pony in an apartment; I . r , n : , ...hi. . i yuu uuve iu laii m luvc wim umer people s norscs. Ana tne 6 o clock horse became a pleasant part of our lives. In summer he hauled ice, in winter wood. But every day he was punctual. "He is just as punctual going back in the evenings," said Fran cis. "He comes by at exactly 5:30. I wish I had married a man as punctual as that little horse." I "Cloppity-ilop-clop," through the j years, through shower and sun-1 shine, through fog and mist and snow. Wagon and i..an grew old er, and so did the 6 o'clock horse. But he trotted at the same steady pace, "Cloppity-clop-clop." In the neighboring big brick hut our friends, Harriet and Ken Por ter, had a small daughter, Patty. The little girl fell in love with the nurse, and waited for it each eve ning, "She can hear it before any of . wfteat crop, Ike's Farm Program Giles French in Sherman County Journal The president's farm program will probably not be adopted in this political year although it is an acceptable start forward cur ing some of the ills that have grown up under the present farm program. In the course of time it could get rid of the huge sur pluses but it would be a slow process. A sliding parity price would tend to reduce plantings but a parity price of 75 per cent would, in normal times, be high enough to keep wheat planting too higih for any great reduction in itotal us, said ner motner, ana cries to be lifted to the window to see it.' The Eisenhower proposal "to insulate" the huge surpluses so they would not be a factor in the Someone else along the route market would be very difficult must have loved the small horse, too, because it sometimes would be wearing a gay ribbon in its bridle when it went "cloppity-clop-clop" by on its way home. Patty called the ribbon "the horse's hay." One night I made plans to get up early the next morning and take down some carrots and sugar lumps for the 6 o'clock horse. But I overslept, and awoke to hear his hoofbeats already fading away, and somehow after that I never managed to translate my good in tention into a deed. The other morning I awakened early and lazily watched the clock's hand crawl past 6 o'clock. No "cloppity-clop-clop." At 6:15 I got up and went to the window and looked down. The street was bare in the cold dawn. No horse. I turned and saw Francis looking at me. "I wondered when you'd miss him," she said. "He hasn't been by for weeks." "What happened?" "Nobody in the neighborhood knows," said Frances. "They all three were so old and looked so worn. Maybe the wogan just fell to pieces ... or the old man died ... or the little horse fell down and couldn't get up. Patty still goes to the window to look for him." A brightness left the morning and every morning since then. There was such a braveness about that steady "cloppity-elop-c 1 o p" ... it was like losing something you never owned but felt in your heart belonged to you, a feeling you often have about small things that give a stability to your life in a big city. This is my carrot . . . these my lumps of sugar ... to the 6 o'clock horse . . . given, as many things in this world are, too late . . . and I think of this as I lie in my bed in the morning, listen ing for a "cloppity-clop-clop" . . . and hearing only the wail of a siren, the clank of a garbage can, the snore of the man next door. Mil.Mij.lM) PUD to accomplish although the gov. ernment might do it if farmers woud reduce acreage enough to make eventual reduction of sur pluses possible. Unless some sort of agreement between farmers and the govern ment, as holder of surpluses, is found there will come a time when politics will demand that surpluses be put on the market. That would mean an entire col lapse of prices. A major diffi culty about having a billion bushels of wheat is how to get it used without hurting future production. Actually Eisenhower, as spokes man for government, is making a very good proposal. The reduc tion would not be more than five per cent a year and that only after another year of full parity. It is assumed that acreage con trols would continue as under this program. If the govcrnnv nt is willing to hold the sack full of surplus until the wheat grow ers have gotten used to produc ing no more than the market will absorb it is a good break for farmers. As for this northwest wheat belt. The war-time farm pro gram by establishing inflexible price supports increased the com petition northwest wheat grow ers had so that our market is a local one only. Furthermore, Jt stopped marketing of wheat so that no one is interested in sell ing it. We can probably raise wheat cheaper than can the lit tle 15-acre farms, but in order to compete against them we will have to have a free market with out rigid price support. If a free market is too high a price to pay to regain our share of the market we might get inito the production of sheep or cattle. How to grow roses successfully There's one sure way to have masses of beautiful rose blooms in your garden this year. Get those wonderful floribunda roses and plant them "just right." In February Better Homes & Gar dens there's a colorfully illus trated article on the floribunda and step by step pictures on how to plant it. Get February Better Homes & Gardens today! On your news stand. Merllomes and Gardens Mail Stayton businessmen, we think have pnnH irrniinrle fnr ncbintf fni. of ; a later-afternoon mail riisnntch westward. With the mail closing hour in mid-afternoon now in effect, let ters must be written early in the day with the consequence that criticism, and may have to be lc"prs "rl"c" nor abandoned. : ci,,n,not be lc.l,1v"C(' ,0 I'"rtl:"1'1 . j addresses until 24 hours later It should be noted that Wil-ithp ncxt aftCrnnon. Since Port son, a hard-boiled industrial-j ;in( js our principal wholesale ist who lets the chips fall, trade center this slows up bus where they may, is not trying! iness considerably, to favor General Motors merely Some vears ago we enjoyed a because he once hcadrd the latc-attcrnoon dispatch. Its re giant corporation. His aim is instatcmcnt would do much to im to cut costs, and General prove our situation. The need has Motors freaucntlv comes un increased in the interim, what with the lowest bid. However, military men warn against the danger of concen trating production in a few fac tories and a few cities, which could more easily be destroyed in case of atomic bombing raids. Even if it costs more Robertson is the Virginia 1 money, they warn, vital do gentleman who went to Korea vnsc Plallts should be scatter and did one of the greatest pd around the country, not con- snlcs jobs in rocrnt diplomatic ! ceniratea, history by persuading Syngmnn Rhre to go along with the peace talks. Robertson now Now the military advisers have been joined by Sen. Estcs Kcfauver of Tennessee, a nicm- BETTER MEAT ON MENU Brnd Bulletin A recent survey by the depart ment of agriculture shows that the price of meat at tho butcher's counter h;s decreased during the past year in almost exactly the says there, is absolutely noiber of the armed services com chancc that Premier Mao Tse- j mittre. who has introduced a Tung can be persuaded to lie a resolution for the Investigation far eastern Tito, and threatens : of concentrated defense pro to resign if the United States duction. recognizes China. j Chiefly at stake is Chrysler's Dean, a highly successful i production of the M4H tank corporation lawyer, feels that j and the T43 tank, both tvprs all is not wi ll between the Chi-1 chiefly developed bv Chrysler, nose and the Russians, thntjand now scheduled to be sooner or later the United j switched from Chrysler to States will have to do business 'General Motors under the Wil with China. Already Japan, son program. Though G. M. has though it operates under the' now submitted lower bids on miirlnnre nf tht IT R A i in.' creasing its trade with Red China by leaps and bounds. It was Wall street attorney Dcnn's statrment at a private newspaper dinner that attract ed a cross-fire of criticism last week from Sen. Herman Wcl ker of Idaho, sometimes called the jmiior Senator McCarthy. If the battle becomes any more bitter, one of the two diplomats will have to bow out, In which rase belting odds favor Robertson to stay. Note At another recent with growth in population here and in the canyon and the sharply in creased volume of business as re flected in growing postal rcecipts. A mail closing hour of 5:13 would be ideal if it would fit in with dispatches out of Salem. Salad ideas for winter meals Sharpen winter dulled appetites. Sere your family healih-,civinj? silids that put unihine on your table in the deid of winter. You'll find a bey of wonder ful nfw i!id recipe in Frhru ary Better Homes A Gardens mjirine. Juu turn to pice 7:. Sunshine Salads for Winter Davi ' Oft February Better Homes & Gardens today. On your news tind. Bcllerllomes and Gardens SUNDAY NIGHT, JAN. 24, 7:45 P. M. Pastor R. G. Schaffner Will Speik on Is He a Living Personality Or Merely An Evil Influence? IP GOD CREATED THE DEVIL IS HE RESPONSIBLE FOR SIN?" THE DEVIL: JOHNSON MEMORIAL CHURCH N. Summer t Hood Streets m ofIamy H W'k DA rSf'L ' J Afl fl T) Funeral Service Since 1878 Phone 3-9139 Church it Ferry SALEM, OREGON