o Tin News-Reriew, Roicbura, Ore. Thur., April 25, 1957 House In Heated Debate On Bill Giving Utilities Head PowerTo Probe Fund Sy PAUL W. HARVEY JR. a, 33 27. It had been defeated SALEM The Oreson House I Wednesday 32-28. Now the bill will of Representatives, engaging in be on Thursday's House calendar, heated partisan debate, revived 1 Purpose of the bill is to deter Wednesday a bill to permit the I mine w hether utilities place extra public utilities commissioner to in-1 amounts of money in their pension vestigale whether utilities put too funds in order to use these much money in their pension j amounts as business expenses in u' I determining the rate base, and The Vote to reconsider the bill thus make rates imnrnwrlv hieh 1 It is supported by AN PA President Hits At Dulles China Policies NEW YORK i The presi dent of the American Newspaper Publishers Assn., commenting on Secretary of State Dulles' quali fied offer to permit a limited num ber of American newsmen to visit Red China, said Wednesday "there is no such thing as limit ing the right to know. GILBERT'S "What Young People Think1 Teeners Split On Publicizing Delinquents union em ployes of the Pacific Telephone 4 Telegraph Co. They think the hill could lead to increased pen sions. The vote to reconsider was al most on party lines,' although four Democrats joined the Repub licans in trying to block the bill. When the motion to reconsider was made. Rep. Wayne Giesy ( R ), Monroe, heatediy argued that the mofion was out of order. His point was that the bill was indefinitely postponed Wednesday, in which case it would take a two thirds vote to reconsider. Speaker Pat Doolev (D). Port- William Dwight. publisher of land, ruled that the motion to in The Holyoke. Mass., Transcript-1 definitely postpone hadn't been Telegram, told a general session I official because the vote wasn't uLiiciauy announceu. diesy appealed from the ruling. of the AN'PA convention: "The secretary of state Tues day invited the American news gathering community to devise a way to send a limited number of reporters to Communist China without breaking down the gen eral ban on travel to that country. "The secretary refers to 'lim ited' travel. In the thinking of the American newspaperman there is no such thing as limiting the right I to know." j Dwight inserted these remarks' into the original text of his speech, which had been written prior to Dulles' news conference. lie made no deletions from the original text in which he declared: "The Bamboo Curtain now hangs by order of our government between us and Ked China By EUGENE GILBERT Should the names of young law breakers be published in newspa pers? FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover has urged this as a means of curbing juvenile delinquency. But what do teen-agers themselves think? This is one issue on which they are split almost down the middle. While they agree generally on a "get tough" policy for handling voung criminals, a feel that notoriety merely gives them a feeling of importance. but the House sustained Dooley in a party-bne vote. Giesy then protested that "if these high-handed tactics are con tinued, I'll have more to say about it." "I'm sure you will," Dooley re plied. The Joint Ways and Means Committee killed bills to buy $100,000 worth of library books for Portland State College, and to LONDON I A long, amicably compel scnooi districts to sunmit phrased letter from Soviet Pre- Bulganin's Note Doesn't Impress British People their building plans to the state Board of Education. The committee also buried a resolution for an interim commit tee to study migratory labor problems. It approved a measure appro- Dwight said newsmen should be ! Priatinn $250 000 to buy property permitted to go to any country not at war with the United States. "This battle we are engaged in to sustain the people's right to know is endless," he said. "We find ourselves engaged in a clash on this subject now at the highest level with the President of the United States, the secretary of state, and the Congress." A number of newsmen have pro tested the State Department ban. Only two days ago, the Asso ciated Press Board of Directors said "qualified newsmen should be allowed to report first hand from the mainland of China. Secretary of State Dulles Tues day made a qualified offer to al low "a strictly limited number" of responsible newsmen to visit Red China. He said any such "one-shot ex periment" must not lead to an in flux of other Americans into China, and that prior approval by "lead ing figures in the newspaper world" would be required. There was no immediate indica tion of what would come of the qualified offer. for future state buildings in the Capitol group, and also voted to enlarge the Capitol Mall. The Senate approved and sent to the governor a bill providing that when arsonists are released , from state hospitals or the prison. tne administrators ot those insti tutions must notify the state fire marshal, state police, and the lo cal police in the area in which the arsonist lives. The House sent to the Senate a SI .890,982 appropriation for the state Forestry Board, ud 2 Der cent from the present biennium: and a SI .978.394 budget for the state Board of Health, up 10 per cent. The House Education Commit- mier Bulganin to Prime Minister Ma cm ill an on disarmament, the Middle East and European peace aroused no perceptible enthusi asms in Britain today. The British Foreign Office was said to consider the letter friendly in tone but not necessarily , signi ficant British press reaction was gen erally cool to the Soviet Premier's latest. Soviet Ambassador Jacob Malik delivered the 8,000-word communi cation to Macmillan over weekend. Moscow radio broadcast the text this morning. To relieve the present "undesir able aggravation of international tension," Bulganin set forth a number of proposals. None varied greatly from Soviet policy express ed in recent months. His main recommendations in cluded : 1. "Immediate banning of atom ic and hydrogen weapon tests." 2. New discussions ot tne pro- "They get their charge from the publicity," argues Kory, a Long Beach, Calif., teen. "One good way to cut down on juvenile crime would be to let the press ignore all teen-age hoods. Let the judge take care of them." Forty-eight per cent of the young people we talked to go along with him for one reason or another. Only 41 per cent favor publication of the names. About 11 per cent didn't answer the ques tion. Those in favor of publication think that coddling in this as well as other respects leads to further transgressions, and that some youngsters may be taught a les son if their families are suffi ciently humiliated. Divided on Age Toe If you are going to print names, at what age should it start? About half of the teeners thought it should start before the age of 17. The age of 18 was a popular one for a starting point, but neraly a fourth of the group thought that publication should not start until age 21. The division on the printing of names was closer than on any laree number s'niilar studv we have made-m-ri l.Close divisions are rare in studies of this kind. On the treatment of delinquents, however, the youngsters are not divided. They Say "Get Tough!" Ninety per cent of more than 5000 youngsters interviewed in an other survey believe penalties im posed these days aren't severe enough. "You've just got to show them who's boss, or they'll show you," a teen from Camden, Ark., says. "Give the goofs a taste of their own medicine. Scare the guts out lee approvea a resoiuuon ior an ; , ma1e j 19M by th pnme interim committee to study school, Minjster Eden (or th7e creation of districts, proposals to create jun ior colleges, and Oregon Techni cal Institute at Klamath Falls. The American Jumping mouse can leap, and maintain perfect balance in flight, for a distance of about 10 feet. demilitarized 'sanitary tones" in Europe. 3. The great powers should Join in "denouncing the use of force" to settle disputed issues In the Middle East. 4. British-Soviet talks to expand trade and "cultural and scientific- technical" exchanges. I nil I ' '1 ' New time lover for ironing ruffles and sleeves. VIN-MAX puff ruffle iron, 8" Mother always appreciates clever Hems ihM make her work easier and that's just what this new elec trie PL'FF IRON does. It irons all materials like magic by merely pressing them over trie heat con trolled head. Safely irons the most delicate pockets and contours, puffs up curtain ruffles and hard to iron sleeves m a jiffy For blocking and shaping millinery Your clothes will always look neater with less efiort for vou. v,.ijv ai i nr. ft Employer Groups Refuse To Okay Labors' Plan SALEM iJfi Employer groups said Tuesday night they wouldn't the I approve the state CIO-AFL Labor council s proposal ior increasea and liberalized unemployment compensation benefits. I But they did say they would, favor increasing the maximum benefits from $35 to $40 a week if labor would accept other amendments that would eliminate some workers from getting benefits. The employers proposed a top employer contribution rate of 2.7 per cent of taxable payrolls and a minimum oi .o per cent, ims would drop the top rate from 3 per cent, and would increase the lowest rate of .3 per cent to .6 Der cent. The employers also proposed barring a disqualified worker from getting benefits during the Deriod he is disqualified. The present law disqualifies a worker for eight weeks if he quits work without cause, is fired for mis conduct or refuses to take suit able work after losing a job. Labor's new proposal was sub mitted Monday night to the Sen ate Labor and Industries Commit tee. The original bill provided that maximum benefits should in crease $5 a year until they reach more than $55 in 1960. .. " III L' '" Temporary Wage, Price Controls Possibility Seen WASHINGTON I Sen. tV- M honey (D-Wyo) ssid Wednes day Congress may have to con. sider temporary wage-price con trols unless President Eisenhow er'a administration finds soma other solution for inflation. O'Mahoney told a reporter that as long as "the administration is unwilling to do anything about this inflationary spiral we're hiv ing, the cost of living is going to keep on going up." His comments were prompted by new government data Tuesday snowing that living costs rose again in March to a new record level for the seventh straight month. The government's index for March, at 118.9 per cent of the 147-19 base period, was 37 per cent higher than a year earlier. O Mahoney, a member of the Senate-House Economic Commit tee, said the administration "tight money" policies, imposed by the Federal Reserve Board in the form of hieh interest rates, have been ineffective in curbing inflation. It has only meant, he said, that citiiens have to pay more for money they borrow and greater taxes for interest on the government debt. of them, and you'll soon see the difference." advises a Chicao lad. Most young people from 80 to 87 per cent of those interviewed would mete out indeterminate jail sentences for offenses like smok ing marijuana, using narcotics, street fighting, driving a stolen car. vandalism. Adults are afraid to punish de linquents because of their youth, youngsters say, and lawbreakers take advantage of their reluc tance. Thev don t dare do anything to us." one interviewer reports hearing. 'We're as free as birds to do anything we want until we're at least 18. They can't stop us be cause, after all, aren't we the same age as their own kids the little brats?" Most of the teens defined ju- Soldiers Los Battle Against Whales And Sea CAPE HENRY. Va. W Nine small whales were tossed ashore here Monday by a brisk northeast storm. I.t. N. H. Jongeblood, at nearby Ft. Story, was ordered to "get them back to sea before they die." Jongeblood and his men attarhed lines to the tails of the whales and hauled them back into the water. When the soldiers returned to the beach, there lo greet them were nine small whales. Nearly half a dozen times, the soldiers repeated the performance and only on the last go-round did success seem to be within their grasp. A check of the beach yesterday , revealed it was only a partial vic ! tory. Seven whales were gone but two had perished above the tide. venile delinquent as a young per son who is first and foremost a lawbreaker. Many go on to sug gest he is a neurotic, maladjusted youngster who feels out of step with the world. Most youngsters rest the burden on the parents. The home envir onment accounts for nearly nine- tenths of all delinquency, they say. A child stands a good chance of becoming a criminal, insist high school boys and girls, ,f he doesn t find love and understand ing in his home. It doesn't matter if the family is rich or poor it's the parental interest that counts. Thev reason this way: Everyone has to feel important somewhere. If parents don't care, the child will likely as not fall into bad company to find acceptance among others who aren't wanted. He'll get satisfaction, too, in be ing important to the police. But most teens are optimistic A young delinquent can be turned into i useful citizen, they insist, if his parents will take hold with love and understanding. Of course, the young people In terviewed don't think of themselves as delinquents. Eight-four per cent say none of their friends are, either. In fact, they're pretty Indignant about what delinquents which they consider a small minority are doing to their reputations. "It reflects on us, all this pub licity. People begin thinking that every teen-ager ia a 'bad kid.' Thev expect us to go around breaking into stores and smashing windows. And we don't like it one bit." British Journal Hits At Trial Of Dr. Adams LONDON I The trial of Dr. John Bodkin Adams on charges of drugging wealthy widow to death may keep many doctors from trying to ease their patients' pain with narcotics, a British Medical Journal said Wednesday. Dr. Adama was acquitted early this month on charges of murder ing Mrs. Edith Morrell, 81, by giv ing her massive doses of nar cotics. The motive, said the pros ecution, was to gain from her will. The defense said Mrs. Morrell was dying from a cerebral throm bosis and the drugs were admin istered to ease her pain. i-mi Tiii"'ri .-sv44. I nr A Z nnmts vwsti LjcortaroTS I mi noons -iKttis AUIO IUSr - UUMWUM flOWW80 jjin J -V--- """Sit. MKTUM products vmt- Enter Occident Flour's 75th Anniversary Contest! MADE BY 1ST PRIZI Allls-Chelmert MoJl WO-43 Dfttfl Tractor l,M Twe tfurfJy Tracfeyctee One leu OccMent W pwraeie Flour I More Interests Needed At Fairs, Managers Told CORVAM.IS More eco nomic and social interests must be represented at itate and coun ty fairs if they are to hold public interest, fair managers were told ! Tuesday. I Walter Holt, manager of the Pacific International I,ivctork I Exposition, told a meet inn spon j tored by the Oregon Fair Amii. and the Oregon Stale College Kx tension Service: "This does not j imply lessening of agriculture's i part in lairs, hut a broartrning of the entire program structure." Some fair managers said that i the State Fair should be held late i in September. They said the pres ! ent Labor Day opening makes it i difficult for county fairs to be held before the State Fair. Exclusively Ours In Roseburg 91 Like Magic Classified Ads jra mm. rmn a 0,",,"'" 9 JUST M OUR 73 ti.SAE.YCME Ynur fiTiit ran witt' Sfv thifl rMuMtViltf rfiffWont raks rtt anon Whit ynu r rnOYinff it, think ttp namaa thaf dswrir ft. Htnd 'm U to mm. to tolling mhtft nam wit. ' t-inf bom th tr-tor"l CONTfST SUlM f. Tttlab mp m fat OwMeM1! ?U A ! Cat. 1. !"' at mtrif eta. rev v fasts am ( takMlKatf a Official lasra Hani fovea" "e-aa Qioaam tta 13 , a) tmtfll M wr flSMBr t ft-). I. Marf Mrm H Ocoda-f Km Cantaa. laa 7tl, Wamaapaai. Mm 9 (! fca Mflaal a ta aa a aria ar.y anal aaaa by eee'e a tmtpn raaa- vaae fxnt Wst w fca aifte1 r Ja 10. Iir. rViat l ira al H b aei,afa4 aaarta at aaan a aoM'Wa. Dvataata s.ea4 awaraaa m a feat. Ia Hat at imm, aortas a 0mm4, wsm Win ymm anrr. m m l ivw w, (i. iwum mnl-m rA d tifU ioJM AfcwJ-. f mmmwmhiiim.iimp.i..im CSvmm flomn I j i '' fm UrjUAWBAtU all-purpoaa FLOUR I OR 2-3321 Diol ORchorJ 34628 0 0 Corner Ook and Jackson