THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon Friday, February 19, 1954 Capital iLJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARlNG, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every afternoon except Sunday ot 280 North Church St. Phone 2-2406. Fill Ltd Hlri Strut t tht AiMrliUi Preii int) Tht, Unl rrtM. Trtt AMOCitted Preu li exciuilvflf entitled to tht iwt for publlcitloo ol ftll ntwt dupttrhw crtdiud to It or ottie') credited in this ptT o4 io bcv publUhed therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: r CuiUn Monthlr. tl.JS: i Woothi. ' 0i Om Ttir. I1S.04. Ir Mill b Otmoo: Uonlhli. IM: fill Monthi. It M: Oil Tr. lt.00. tj Mil OuUkU Otmm: MonlhlF. II : ail Uontlu I". SO: On Vir. IH.M. THE PELTON DAM ISSUE ' The U. S. Ninth Court of Appeals at 'San Francisco has invalidated a federal power commission order by a vote of 2 to 1 which would have permitted Portland General Elec tric company to build the Pelton hydroelectric dam proj ect on the Deschutes river in Central Oregon. The appeal had been filed by the state of Oregon and the state fish and game commissions. Oregon and the commissions had objected that the dam would prevent the ascent of salmon and steelhead trout to spawning grounds above two dam sites which had been contemplated in the project.. They said the dams would seriously curtail the fish population and impair the state's fish hatchery on the Metolius river above the sites. It was also claimed that the power company had failed to obtain permits from the Oregon hydroelectric commission and had not complied with the Oregon law as to fish in the Deschutes. The court held that although the dam was to be built on federal land, Oregon has the right "to regulate its own waters in its own chosen way." It held that "Oregon has complete sovereignty over the waters of the Deschutes river. This was established by congressional passage of the desert lands act of 1877." It continued: , 'Undoubtedly the commission has a legal right to give its approval to the project as a whole and we do not doubt that it has the right to grant its permissive license to the construction ot a proposed dam. "But, the commission has issued no mere permissive license. It has Issued a license purporting to grant the complete legal right to the con struction and operation of the whole project. In this, we think, it has exceeded its legal jurisdiction in that the ownership of the power dam site does not empower the U. S. government to use the waters of the Deschutes river cither at the site of the power dam or elsewhere, contrary to Oregon law It is our opinion that the commission has trenched upon the sovereignty of the state of Oregon," The history of this effort to supply the people of Cen tral Oregon with power from the Deschutes is too well known to need repetition. It was universally approved by the people of the region as a solution to the exising power shortage and the exhaustive investigation made by the FPC showed that this portion of the Deschutes never has been and probably never will be a salmon spawning stream because of its swiftness in the rocky canyon and never had a salmon run. In addition the PGE had agreed to establish costly hatcheries for salmon and trout, and to landscape the lake formed as a recreation resort. The opposition was inspired by the political influence of commercial fishermen who never fish the stream, to gether with the public power advocates who oppose all private power development. Probably if the government had planned to build this comparatively smnll project, there would have been no opposition. There never has been to the gigantic projects built by Uncle Sam, which effectively cut off the ascent or descent of fish at the high dams. It is to be hoped that the PGR will appeal the appelate court's decision to the supreme court and get a final ruling fettling federal and state rights on our streams. Power development in the northwest should not be an exclusive government monopoly controlled by Washington political bureaucrats at taxpayers' expense. The issue is too vital for regional development not to be definitely settled and the federal and state rights issue clearly defined G. P. FAR EASTERN PEACE CONFERENCE One thing at least came out of the Berlin conference, a decision to hold another conference. The sequel is to be open at Geneva, Switzerland, April 26 on Far Fast prob lems, including Korea and Indo-China. Red China is to be invited, as she would have to be. For Hod China is the chief stumbling block to a .settlement in both places. The agreement is said to be a personal triumph for France's Foreign Minister Hidault, who de nerved one for he stood foursquare with Dulles and Kden at Berlin, presenting a united front that must have sur prised and dumfounded Molotov. For the Geneva conference gives France an opportunity to end the shooting in Indo-China. which she has been eagerly looking for for a considerable time. If the l.'.S. could sign a truce in Korea that stopped the slaughter ven if it left the issues unsolved, why should not France make a similar deal? And now France, along with her western allies, standing firmly united for a change, will have a chance to try. Perhaps the prospect is no better than P.erlin offered. Put Berlin has not been a failure, for this conference showed clearly who was holding bark a settlement for Germany and Austria. TV Geneva conference should at the worst do the same for the Far Fast. And the P.erlin conference was worth while if only to show the futility of Winston Churchill's hope that Russian attitudes had changed. COMPANY IN OUR MISERY Newspaper editors should be the last to criticize errors in other publications, so we shall go particularly easy with the authors of the new Oregon Blue Book, who seem to be afflicted with more of 'em than any official publication in many a year. The name of a deceased supreme court justice appears under the picture of his successor, along with the picture of a deceased circuit judge. Congressman Harris F.lls Worth will lie interested in learning that he is listed as a limine rat. Anil a former deputy warden at the peniten tiary, out since April, is listed as currcnt'.v in office. The excuse of the new spapers. when they are caught with a crop of bad ones, is that their job is 'performed in haste, as it certainly is. This alibi won't do with the Blue J?ook, whose authors ought to scan their material more carefully next time. Meanwhile they did get out a beautiful book which is a credit to the state. IMLAH CASE TO BE APPEALED Many persons throughout Oregon and especially here In Salem will feci a sense of relief that the Donald Dwaine Imlah murder case has been appealed without the consent of the doomed boy and will be heard by the Supreme Court. This means that the execution will not take place next Tuesday. There Is no question whatever of guilt, and no mitigat ing circumstances in connection with the murder itself have appeared. But the boy is obviously the product of a tragic environment, clearly entitle,! ;,i (1ny consideration the highest court may see fit to give. There is a certain reluctance to execute boys, no matter what they have done, and this one was only 18 when he was sentenced. A Supreme Court review before execution in a capital oae is never out of order. r - f f i. ' ' WASHINGTON MERRY Jefferson's Writings Banned From Overseas Libraries By DREW WASHINGTON The U.S. Infor- mation service, believe it or not, has banned the collected writings of Thomas Jefferson from over seas libraries. Officials are a little red-faced over the ban and wish they hadn't gone quite so far in appeasing Senator McCarthy. Nevertheless, the book has already been taken off the shelves of some overseas libraries. Some, on tlte other hand, have not removed it. Iteason for the removal was that Jefferson's writings were com piled by Sheldon Foner, who was on a slate department list of those who had taken shelter under the fifth Amendment when quizzed by a congressional committee. It has been state department policy ever since McCarthy raised such a storm Inst winter to remove books by congressional witnesses wiio invoke the fifth Amendment. and since foner was one of these. his compilation of Jeffcrsonian writfcigs got the ax in some librar ies. Other overseas librarians with more courage regarding Mc- Carthyism decided that what Jef ferson wrote was more important than who compiled his writings and kept the book regardless of the directive from Washington. Cubinet Lady Guest After the White House radio correspondents dinner the other evening, Commentator Fulton Lewis threw a gala party at the Shorbam Hotel attended by vari ous celebrities, most of them men. Invited, however, was the one lady of tht cabinet Mrs. Ovela Culp Hobby, secretary of health. education and welfare. Mrs. Hobby is a lady with a fine back ground of public service, having been head of the WAC during the war. also publisher of the Hous ton Post. Despite tbe years, how ever. Mrs. Hobby is a lady of great charm, and on this particu lar evening she looked positively ravishing. Appearing at the threshhold of the Fulton Lewis party, she gazed at the crush of male guests and hesitated. "I'm afraid I've come to the wrong place," she murmured. "Not at Jl, nut at all.' assured Mr. Lewis in his most expansive mood. "These nien need some one like you to lone up the party. Come right in." The one lady member of the cabinet still hesitated. nut utter lurtlier assurance from commentator Lewis, she fi- i nally entered, t.iok off her wrap anil prepared to meet with guests. "Now. let mi see. dear," said host lewis, "What did you say mir name was?" A Mrs. Hobby told him, Ful ton literally fell on his knees. To slip up on a male mrmher C the c.ihinrt Is not usually done in Washington, but to slip up mi the only lady member, said Mr. Lewis with conviction is unforgivable. Competitive llond llnsinrss Its been obscured by news of butter. Brickr and Berlin, but the Securities and Exchange Commission, charged with polic ing Wall Street, appears on the verge of junking a regulation that has saved American cousumers and investors millions. It is rule U-50 which requires investment bankers to compete against rach other in bidding for thr bonds of publie utilities. Prior to 1I41, big investment i houses iliwdcd up the utility bond business among themselves. Many boards if directors of in vestment houses had tie ins with utility boards nf directors, so a bond Issue was floated by d- MOLOTOV - GO - ROUND PEARSON vance secret agreement rather than by competitive bidding. This meant that the price to the util ities was high. In fact, during the five years from 1369-1941, the utilities paid an average af $20 in commissions, discouts, etc., for every thousand dollars they borrowed. After 1941 when Hule U-50 went into effect, however, the utilities paid an average of $6.58 for every thousand dollars they borrowed. This saving also meant reduced rates for consumers, since elec tricity, gas, rail rates and other public-service rates are based on over-all costs. And the cost of floating bond issues is invcri ably passed on to the consumer public. However, the vigorous opposi tion nf Robert ji. Young, thtn of the Chcsapeak and Ohio Rail road, together vith Cyrus Eaton, the Cleveland banker, helped change the noncompetitive flota tion of utility stocks and bonds. and Rule U-50 wa: apodtcd. Mellon Lawyer ' Today, however, I quiet drive is under wcy to kill competitive bidding. Spearheading the drive is the new republic She chair man, Ralph II. Demmler, former law partner of Sen. Dave Heed of Pittsburgh, personal attorney for the late Andrew Mellon. Demmler formerly represented the Mellon Securities Corpora tion and helped arrange one of the biggest banking mergers of recent years that between Mel (Continued on Page 3) OPEN FORUM Salem's Clubs Should Have a Meeting Place Dear Editor: To the garden flubs council meeting held last Monday eve ning at the Y were invited all the other educational, art clubs, such as painting, ceramics, weav ing, etc. We found them just as eager to have an educational art cen ter as the garden clubs, where we could hold our monthly meet ings and store our libraries and necessary equipment. When we saw their sincere interest and willingness to aid In acquiring such a center the council voted to accept them as members of the , t council. j This state of mind is certain- I wish it were possible to im- ly unworthy of our hold and press the general public with the ingenious Oregon people, importance to the general wcl-i The most amazing talk was fare of our community S.ilem 1 the attack on several of our and its countrysideof these ed-1 state legislators on the rrmark uratinnal clubs. If it had not been i able theory that thry arc anti lor the interest and advocacy of labor, even though this state the tax bv the garden clubs, Sa- mcnl is ridiculous. His remedy lem would not now have a two ' novel ss it is dangerous, mill Lit for the imnrnvrment of Th" ' n Mo to many of our parks. Thousands of Salem homes are now nicely landscaped because friendly garden club member, neichhor encouracrd them to do it and told them how. I doubt if there Is another city in Oregon with a greater percentage of nicely kept up yards. Only this winter a small community store keeper told me how he had worked up a good plant sale busi ness by beautifying his own yard and getting his neighbors inter ested in doing the same. Hi re is hoping tbe park board anil eitv council fully realize the great value these educational clubs are to the city. If the city i would go all out to build home i for these clubs thr park board would only have to make known College Teacher Tenure Problem Grants Pass Courier The columnist, Leonard Lyons, recently raised an interesting question: "Should teacher tenure protect the position of a college instructor who insists on impart ing to his students las facts pro positions that are generally known not to be true? The columnist quoted a tele vision statement of Norman Ramsey, Harvard physicist, that an instructor "has a right to be wrong" as long as others at the institution of learning are teach ing the opposite theory. Ramsey was defending the re tention of Dr. Wendell furry oh Harvard' staff after the instruc tor had taken refuge behind the Fitth amendment in refusing to answer a Congressional commit ttee's question about subversive activities. Ramsey was asked if he believ ed a tenure instructor should he retained even though he sought to teach his students that the world is flat. , Ramsey had this glib reply: "Once there was only one man who taught that the world was round: suppose he had been fired?" All of which, of course, is beg ging the question. A teacher may speculate about unknown facts, of course, as long as he makes it clear that he is engaging in pure speculation. When, however, a fact has been established, a teacher who still in sists on teaching the opposite should be fired tenure or no ten ure. Schools are not maintained, nor do parents send their children to them, to be made dupes. their needs to the clubs to get them to grow tens of thousands nf plants to help beautify the parks. X. M. rETTYCREW, 102B S. 12th St. Prophets of Doom at Salem Gathering Hit To the Editor: Many Oregon voters got apene trating insight into current poli tics at a meeting held in Salem last week when the speaker, or prophet of doom, spoke of long lines of red ink in business, long lines of unemployed in labor and appalling human miserv and i seemed to be onlv biding his ime till the crash comes. our c-iiizens mai recarniess ol these legislators' contribution to good, sound and honrst govern ment and no matter how well they have discharged their re sponsibilities they should he eliminated. .Most of us. who know the character of our people, have a special reason to be optimistic. We live in the greatest state in the Union with the best educated electorate and a group of state officials today who work in the public interest and not a favor ed few. As long as we have our rare typo of press that we have -it has been said thev will warn us to which wav the cat will jump nd the public will nlwsys t-'-r c re ' tHn rit. HENRY HOVC!', liuut , daicui, ore. Subsidizing of. Over-Production By RAYMOND MOLEY Over and over in the past few years internationalists in . the State Department, in happy col laboration with like-minded of ficials in foreign governments and in the United Nations, have forwarded a movement to create international commodity agree ments. Such agreements, re duced to their bare essentials, mean controls thrust into our domestice economy and immense outlays by our government for the building up of what are called "buffer stocks' 'of raw materials. Om. need only exam ine such documents as Havana Charter, the so-called "Green Book" of the Mutual Security Agency, the record of the In ternationjl Materials Conference, and more recent Palcy Report to see the pattern of economic in ternationalism. The $600,000,000 wheat Agree ment, now condemned by the Randall Commission, is an ex ample of the perfected work of such a project. The story of an attempt to en gineer a similar rubber agree ment is tn example of an effort that so far has failed. For three years there have been conferences at an inter national -evel concerning the creation of an international rub ber cartel a . buffer stock scheme designed to raise the price of crude rubber. Representatives of the great producing and consuming coun tries in this case the British, United States, and Netherlands governments set up an Interna tional Rubber Study Group to dis cuss rubber problems and to keep the world rubber situation under continuous review. An nual meetings were held. In May, 1953, the management committee gathered in Copen hagen for the purpose of "se curing accord on the outstand ing points in the draft buffer stock agreement." Most recent ly, the committee met in Lon don, in October, and its find ings and a draft agreement were forwarded to member govern ments. The buffer stock idea would be self-defeating. Trends in In donesia and Malaya already have demonstrated how even antici pation by these countries of U. S. Participation in such a plan increases production. There is little doubt that such a plan, by raising the price of crude rubber, would further stimulate both crude rubber and synthetic rubber production. This would require addition of ever-growing surpluses to the buffer stock until the United States would be groaning under a monumen tal burden. The cost to the American taxpayers might dwarf even the International Wheat Agreement. In May, 1953, the Rubber Study Group thought that natural rub ber would ?nt-" !954 under the weight of a surplus of nearly 200,000 tons, "resent estimates are more encouraging, however. World production fell off slightly while consumption rose and American strategic purchases continued. Fort-inMely, a President's commission has finally put a stamp of disapproval on this plan. The Randall Report states that extensive resort to commod ity agreements will not solve the problem of price instability and that SEch agreements introduce restraints that impair "the clas- i ' POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Mary Pickford, at 60, Desires To Make One More Movie By HAL NEW YORK (AP) "Sure, the Irish drank goafs milk," said Marv Pickford. "That's how I have my vitality because my an ccstors drank goat's milk." At 60. "America's Sweetheart" of yesterday still retains the sim ple charm that once made her the movie favorite of millions. "I'm the busiest-woman in Bev- ery Hills or any other hill, she said, smiling, as we sat in the liv ing room of her hotel suite. "I have a big house to look af ter, and my husband, Buddy Ro gers, and my business interests Salem 63 Years Ago By BEN MAXWELL . February 19, 1891 Oregon Pacific railroad had a 90 foot scow, 324 feet wide, under construction' at Corvallis that had been designed as a float ing warehonse for Salem. A roof-, ed structure 70 feet in length had been considered as a suit able deck house. Mother Goose hats Something entirely new for the ladies were now available at Calverts. A damage suit for $21,000 aris ing out of injuries and losses suf fered in the Lake Labish train wreck, had been filed against the railroad company. A band of gypsies had camped in Polk county near West Salem. Their presence there had inspir ed the Capital Journal to com ment: They are more cunning than wise and should he com pelled to stay on the other side of the river." Odell typewriter with 78 char acters had a price of $20 and a Capital Journal advertisement de clared it produced a sharp, clean and legible manuscript Hellenbrand's Eating Parlor and Candy Manufactory, 295 Commercial .street, advertised this bill of fare for 63 years ago: Coffee, tea, chocolate and cake, 10c; mush and milk, 10c; plate of soup, 10c; beefsteak and eggs, 25c; 'cnison and eggs, 25c; saus age and eggs, 25c; ham and eggs, 25c; fresh oysters, any style, 25c; porterhouse steak and eggs, 50s. THREE ROUSING CHEERS New York Daily News Three rousing cheers and a British tiger, cry we, for Charlie Chaplin's decision never to re visit the United States and for his wife's Onna's dropping of her American citizenship to become a British subject. In Onna's case, Britain's loss is our gain; and as for Commie-kissing Charlie, we can't remember a parting that was a sweater sorrow than this. ticity of economic adjustment and the freedom of individual initiative, . which are fundamen tal to economic progress." The British weekly "Econom ist" commcntc ' shortly after the report's publication that "This year the natural rubber, indus try must work its own passage, since the Ram all Commission's objections to commodity agree ments have killed any lingering hopes of stabilizing the price by an international buffer stock scheme." BORN OF EXPERIENCE BORN OF TRADITION RICH IN SERVICE all unhurried, and with deepest understanding Funeral Service Since 1878 Wn J-1J9 Church at ferry ULIM. OftEGON BOYLE and the children, Ronnie nd Roxie. "Roxie will soon be 12, but she's already four Inches taller than I am. She's horse crazy. But I'd rather look forward to her be ing horse crazy than boy crazy." Mary also is active in half a dozen philanthropic and charitable enterprises. She recently complet ed her memoirs for McCalPs mag azine, and said she would like after 20 years away from tht screen to return in one last film. "It would be the story of my mother's life," she said, "and end on that day in 1909 when 1 walked into the old Biograph Studio and got my first movie job." Mary rose from $40 to $10,000 a week in a few years, and piled up millions later producing her own films. This girl with the haunting face of a golden angel also had a cashbox mind. "But I dislike business heart ily," she said. "A lot of career women may not agree with me, but I don't think business is a woman's world." Her long Cinderella story has had many bittersweet hours. Mary said she had enjoyed so many happy moments in her life she didn't know which to name first. "But there is no doubt about my most miserable moment," she said, it was the moment my mother passed on in 1928." Here is Mary Pickford looking back at her life a reverie aloud: "The greatest picture ever made? My choice would be 'Gone With the Wind.' Of my own pic tures, I still like 'Tess of the Storm Country' best. I made it twice in 1914 and 1922. "The greatest geniuses of the motion picture have been Charlie Chaplin and Walt Disney. After them: D. W. Griffith and Irving Thalberg. Irving had a bad heart. Ho walked with death at his back. He knew he had not time to waste on trivial things, or things half done. He died young. "I made 50-odd feature pictures. . . . We do look ridiculous in them today . . . And sometimes I feel like destroying my old films . . . Those awful clothes we used to wear . . . "They can't compare with the pictures now, of course . . . But silent pictures did speak 3 univer sal language ... I thirk we go in for too many sound effects now. . . . The great ones avoid super fluous gestures and superfluous found ... But the great ones are all too few . . . "They say the pioneers cut down the forests and made the roads and take the chances . . . And then the gamblers come along and make the money . . . "Chance plays so important a part in an actor's life ... He needs that lucky break in life more than a writer does, or a producer, or a director . . . "You know, in all of us arc two people . . . I've always been un predictable, even to myself . . . Nothing really pleases me that I do . . . My real fear is to be left alone in the world . . . Most of my people have passed on . . . Most elderly people are passed by . . , That frightens me . . . "But when the Lord loves you, He gives you an insight ... an un derstanding." And Mary, whose golden curls arc only a memory, looked up with her sweetheart smile nf long ago. r vidCo.