"Concede v ' O l'F -rvi, Inc. Vijl La Grande Observer Tuesday, Juno 2, 1959 " "A Modern Newspaper With The Pioneer Spirit" runuRiircn by tiifj I, A ORANOhJ I'UHU.SIIINU COMPANY Rubnrt W. Chandler, President M. McClolliind, Jr., Vice l'reildent Playing For Are we in (lunger of buinjr embarrassed ' HKaiti alt he summit? This is another way: of asking: are we so abort-willed wn don't know how to make propu- ' tratida or how to combat the efforts of the Communists In this field? "If we are," an inwluential senator has stated, "we had better learn (how to - make propaganda). 1 think jt is that kind of world and we have to accept it." The speaker: Sen. James William Ful brijrht (D-Ark.), chairman of tho Senate Foreign Relations Committee.' In a recent Interview with a reporter of The Christian Science Monitor, Son. Fulbright said be has grave doubts whether the Russians really want to compose solutions for such problems as Merlin or the Middle Kast. "Hut those doubts, in my opinion, do All That They're Willing To Is the head of a large union as much entitled to a large salary as the head of f a large corporation ? Any negative answer to this question is sure to result in an indignant protest from some labor leaders. This was proved when the monthly letter of the First Na tional City Bank of New York last sum mer included some comment on union leaders' salaries in an analysis titled, "Union Power and the Public Interest." After reporting that unions collect a minimum of 620 million dollars a year in dues, and , that employes' pensions funds run into billions, the bank letter stated: "Union leaders have learned to know and enjoy superior living standards formerlly reserved to successful men in business,' the arts, science and politics.. In fact union operation has become a relatively unregulated type of big busi ness." George Meany, president of AFL-CIO took violent issue with the whole article, and his reply to it was published in the April issue of the City Bank's monthly letter. Meariy commented that the bank seemed uncomfortable about the fact that workers and union officials had managed to achieve some decent status. Commenting on the statement about liv ing standards quoted above Meany wrote : "I find such a statement appalling because I had hoped this kind of barren feudalistic prejudice, at least, had dis appeared from the thinking of American finance." Then the top labor leader of the na tion went on to say in effect that a union president had as much right to the finer things in life as a corporation president. Obviously the rank and file of union members agree, since so many of them approve generous compensation for their top leaders. One union was even too generous. The AFL-CJO Brotherhood of. Railway Clerks paid its president so much money that he returned part of it. His refund to the union last week came , to $127,313. His salary has been, $76,000 This Putt or I Won't Play" EDITORIAL PAGE M1.EY D. ALLEN GEORGE S. CHALUS 11. E. PIIII.BY ..; TOM HUMES A Bag Of Marbles not justify refusing to enter into summit discussions," he satjj. "Now it may be (the Russians) only want to make propa ganda, but 1 don't know why we cannot make propaganda the same as they do. . . . All I am saying is that we ought to find out what they are doing and pursue opportunities to find out." iy exhibiting our willingness to sit down and talk with the Russians, Sen. Fulbright believes we will help dispel the impression we are afraid of the Com munists and that we have no ideas and no polices. What: the senator might have said is that we. are playing for a big bag of mableg,and the other fellow has a pretty effective taw. Unless we attempt to learn ' bow he operates, in the ring we standa good chance of losing all our marbles. , , , a year since 1951, but he thought that was too much and accepted only $60,000. The delegates to the union convention thereupon reduced his salary to $60,000 . a year, but raised from $23,333 to $30, 000 iv year the annual pension he will receive when he retires, and set up an annuity of $15,000 for his wife if she outlives her husband. There' are those, of course, who will argue that any union man ought to dress, act and live the part of someone who is having the struggle to get ahead that he often claims for his members. And some union leaders do act this part. In one city in Michigan, the standard uni form oi' the United Automobile Workers is a sports shirt with an open collar. They will come dressed that way to any public .occasion, no matter how formal. Other union leaders believe it is unseemly for tliein to wear expensive suits, drive exponsve cars, and live in big houses when those who pay their salaries are not able to live on a comparable scale. To be 'perfectly fair about it, it must be admitted that a person should be com--pensated according to the size and im portance of the job that he does. Unionism is big busines, as is frequently pointed out. Unions own office buildings, vast amounts of stock and bonds, and even a few banks. Men who handle the affairs of such unions certainly deserve to be paid more than if they were work ing at the trade their union represents. We would say that a union leader is entitled to make iill the money the union is willing to pay him, but that would apply only to a union where democratic principles are followed to the point where approval of a high salary actually repre sents the feelings of a majority of those who pay the bills. The union official who fixes his own salary is tlie one to look out for. Barbs It takes a you just take Publisher Adv. Director Managing Editor Circulation Mgr. Pay lot longer to grow old if your time doing it. DREW PEARSON King Of The Taught Us Some Lessons WASHINGTON Being a king in this modern day of democrac ies, press conferences, and Rotary club luncheons is no easy job. Es pecially it's not easy when you're only 29 years old and have nev er taken an official trip outside your country. However, the eoast-to-coast tour of the young king of the Belgians, just terminated, held both les sons and highlights for the U.S.A King Baudouin's visit was a bit diffrent from that of his famous grandfather, King Albert, who with his- consort came to New York during the distressing days of World War I. Chiefly remem bered from that visit is Mayor John Hylan's famous remark: "You said a mouthful, Queen!" King Baudouin's visit began in Washington in the Belgian embas sy where he stood tall, handsome, and very much alone. , One by one, bemedaled diplomats, , full uniformed officers, and jeweled dowagers stepped up to shake hands. Shyly he greeted them. There was something a bit in congruous in the scene. Here was a scion of European royalty which through the years had become more democratic, surrounded by representatives of American democracy wanting to become more aristocratic. There was a day when Benja min Franklin and Thomas Jeffer son, appearing in the royal courts ol Europe, refused to wear uni forms, inserted a provision in the U.S. Constitution that medals could not be accepted. But at the Belgian embassy tho other eve ning medals glittered on almost every uusoni. t Even the embassy in which the "8 aiuuu mew ajriiiuiuv. m ""scouts and mcir Deneiacior, uar- can happen when Americans yearn for aristocracy and wealth. It was built by the director of the mint under Woodrow Wilson, Ray Uaker, who married Delphinc Dodge, the copper heiress. It passed on to the Belgian gov-! ernment when inheritance taxes ate up family fortunes. The King's Sadness King Baudouin of the Belg ians didn't know this 'as he stood shaking hands. Nor did the crowd milling . in the errtbassy know why he looked shy, almost a little sad. Most of. them did not realize that his mother, the LETTERS Maximum length 300 words. No anonymous letters but true name will be withheld on re quest. To the Editor: At Tuesday's meeting of the Boise Kiwanis Club our good mem oer Kev. (J. Keith Mil's an nounced that he was moving to your city to be associated with a Methodist Church. In the Mills family your city is acquirng folks who will be a groat asset. They will be workers in every worthy civic undertaking. Keith has served our Kiwanis Club as a director and the head of sev eral committees. He has been active in many other community organizations, He has been a build er of his church and we know your church will feel the quickening drive of this man. ; - Keith understands the problems of business people and your cham- ber of commerce will find in him one who wants to help on its com munity building programs. As a former Oregonian with many friends in La Grande, I congratulate your community and I know that the Mills people will appreciate everything you do to help them get acquainted and cs- tubMshed in their new home. Their wide circle of friends in Boise wish them well in their new home and our blessings go with them. Cordially, yours, ' ' Ned Harhm , 1627 Ridgewny Lane Boiso, Idaho To The Editor: The undersigned committee of the Mt. Emily District Scout Cir cus wish to sincerely thank you for your splendid cooperation in advertising our event held at Ack erman gym on May 2, 1959 The success of the event was due in no small measure to your ef forts. , Sincerely. ' Mt. Emily Circus Committee James R. Sheirick, General Chairman Belgians beautiful Queen Astrid, had been killed in an auto accident when he was five; that his father had been taken to Germany by Hitler v hen he was 10; and that after the war his father was subjected to bitter criticism from the people he was supposed to rule first, because he had surrendered to Hitler; second, because he took a commoner as his second wife. When the criticism became too intense, his father abdicated. Baudouin became king of the Belgians. He was only 21. He had grown up in a crucible of suf fering. Even as he toured the U.S., in specting everything from atomic testing gounds to thhe Grand Canyon, word came that critical subjects back in Belgium demand ed that his father move from the Royal Palace because of his in fluence over his son, the king. Such is the power of subjects in these days of modern Europ ean royalty. ' ' American Aristocracy For the first time in his life he held press conferences, ad dressed huge crowds of people. Most kings , don't do this. In Washington, accepting honorary membership in the Boy Scouts of America, he told nervous Scout Robert Singleton: "Give me your left hand. I'm a boy scout too and I know the proper shake." "Your honor," asked the Amer ican scout, pulling some coins from his pocket. "Are these real Belgian coins? The king examined them, said one was from tho Belgian Congo, Hip nlhnr from Belgium. He ac- cepted ,a flag from : the Boy field Kass, the supermarket build er, but wanted to be sure it was a new flag with the 49th star for Alaska. It was. In Detroit, King Baudouin not only inspected auto assembly lines but dined with the first motor family of America the Henry Fords. Henry Ford II was host, erandson of the strait-lac. ed, abstemious old mechanic who had built a "back-yard machine shop into one of the industrial wonders of the worm. Youna Ford, unlike his grand father, was so ebullient later in the evening, that one Belgian lady left him on the dance floor. Next morning, however, Ford took the king on a personal tour of his plant, gave him one ol tne first rides in the new Ford small car. the Falcon, and showed him the miracle of modern motor pro duction. If modern-day royalty has as much strength and democracy as th vnune kina of the Belgians it has learned a lesson from which Americans can profit, They Claim They Like Each Other . WASHINGTON (UPI) Two of the most powerful men in congress insist that they do so like each other. Ren. Clarence Cannon (D-Mo.) tactiturn chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, started the bouquet-throwing by remark ing, "simply because nobody else likes Sneaker Sam Rayburn is no reason why I should not ime mm. "I am instinctively for tne un derdog, therefore I naturally am for Speaker Rayburn," ne aaaea Cannon took the house floor yes terday, to the amusement of his colleagues and a grinning aayDurn to refute "promptly and emphatic ally, categorically, dogmatically and totally and otherwise a mag azine report that he and Rayburn were feuding. He identified the publication as the current issue of Progressive magazine. Rayburn, who has served 36 years with Cannon in the' house after a 10-year start on him, chimed in to say he wanted it known that there was a "mutual warm friendship" between the two. RIGHTEOUSNESS ELUSIVE POMONA, Calif. (UPI) A 26 year-old fofmer minister pleaded cuiltv to burglary charges Mon day and was sentenced to 30 days in jail, placed on seven years pro- h.ntinn and ordered to seek dsv chiatriV' help. Donald J. W. Thralls, former pastor of the Church of the Bretflern In nearby Covini, complained: "I was hap py to lead others, but I have not been successful in leading myself down the path of righteousness." Don't Fall To See The 51st Annual LIVESTOCK SHOW! And don't forget . . . when you need stove and fireplace wood it's union WOOD CO. for your best buyl Phone 3242 Union THEY THOUGHT 'LIGHT YEAR' WAS GOOD TIME FOR JUNKETS By PRANK ELEAZER UPI Staff Writer WASHINGTON (UPI) When the House Space Committee was getting into orbit last year some or its members were said to Be lieve a "light year" was one in which they didn't have to run for election and could take a few weeks off fora junket. The committee now is able to advise, however, that the term actually refers to "the distance light travels in one year at 186, 300 miles per second." "So you can see that the Space Committee, although ' moving at something less than the speed of light, has. come a long way. In fact, after, a year's exposure to the experts in the space business it now speaks of space matters in such learned fashion it is im pelled to include glossaries in its reports to the House. A year ago the average space member, pressed for a definition of "deceleratifin," would have said it means slowing down. Not any more, though. The committee now defines it as "negative accelera tion." Familiar With Parameters Last year at this time the space men thought a nozzle was a gizmo on the end of a hose. Now they would as soon be caught with their papameters down as make that kind of a slip. QUOTES FROM THE NEWS NEW YORK AFL-CIO Presi dent George Meany, on "unfriend ly actions" by the federal govern ment against labor: "You. should think that we had come to a day of sanity, when there would be cooperation be tween Americans, if you please, Americans in overalls and Amer icans behind a desk. Well, that doesn't seem to be in the cards. A declaration of war seems to be the answer, and if that's it I guess we will have to take it." GALVESTON. Tex.-W Rus sell Long (D-La.), on his uncle, Gov. Earl K. Long of 'Louisiana, undergoing psychiatric treatment: "I think most of the people are now in sympathy with the gover nor. He became sick fighting for the common man." LOS ANGELES Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo.), on whether he would accept the Democratic nomination for president in I960: "Of course I would! Politics is my business, and the presidency is the highest honor the people can bestow.'' WASHINGTON President Ei senhower, on receiving the cre dentials of Thailand's new ambas sador: "The historic friendship which has developed between Thailand and the United States forms a lasting foundation for our. com mon endeavors to preserve free dom and .security in Southeast Asia and the world at large." for the tops in TV "Joe's handy, but we need a gas water heater." Some people will go to almost any length' to avoid getting a new water-heater but not you. You're the kind of intelligent, lax-seeing citizen who realizes modern laundries need extra hot water support and who knows that Gas heaters are decidedly faster than any others run by an all-automatic fuel. So why not visit our display floor or see our gas appliance dealer to see a choice of fine makes thriftily priced. There's a right size and model (or your requirements. ONLY w A nozzle, they told the House last week, is "a duct, tube, pipe, spout or the like through which a fluid is directed and from the open end of which the fluid is dis charged, desighned to meter the fluid or to produce a desired di rection and type of discharge." Of course any House member knows what a parameter is. But for the possible benefit of con gressional' pages, newspapermen, and others who don't, the com mittee defined it as an "arbitrary constant," obviously the very worst kind. Degrees Of Deviation Eccentricity is defined as "the degree of deviation from a cir cular orbit." In other words, just as the House already suspected, an eccentric is a fellow going around in circles, only not quite, and the senators can put the shoe on if it fits. The committee, helpfully, de fines lunar as pertaining to the moon. It says a liquid propellant is a propellant that is liquid. Interplanetary means between planets, the committee discloses, whereas interstellar don t try to guess means between stars. "Interface," according to the Space Committee's advice to the Army Recruit Courtmartialed SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) Army recruit Lou A. Lennear, 20, faced a. general court martial to day for refusing to salute an offi cer. He said, he had religious objec tions against saluting officers. Lennear, from Oakland, Calif., is a member of the Jehovah Wit nesses religious sect. The alleged offense occurred March 12 when he failed to salute Capt. Henry H. Gaskins. The for lowing day, he was on his way to explain why he hadn't saluted the captain, and failed to salute Gas kins, a second time. ' Army authorities put him in the Fort Sam Houston slockade where prisoners aren't permitlSd to sal ute. Lennear enlisted in the Army last Nov. 25. GALE UNDERGOES SURGERY HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Actress Gale Storm was reported in satis factory condition today at Holly wood Presbyterian Hospital where she underwent surgery for remov al of a disc in her back. Miss Storm, operated on Monday, will be hospitalized for about two weeks, doctors said. In Life exnerienRA is the great teacher In Scotch . . .Teacher's at is tne great experience entertainment watch "Playliouse 90" CBS-TV CRAP AUTOMATIC WATER-HEATERS GIVE YOU HOT WATER . FASTER, AT LOWER COST CALIFORNIA-PACIFIC UTILITIES COMPANY House, is a word for "the bound ary between two media,- especially as transisted by a propagated wave." I learned as a boy though not to use words like that unless I was sure. Fulton Plans Space Bill For the first couple of months last year committee members kept hounding the experts on where space started and ended. Now it develops they at least know what space is, if not ex actly where. It's "that part of the universe between celestial bodies." . For the latter, no definition is given. Rep. James G. Fulton (R-Pa.), a committee member, meantime has-disclosed he will put in a bill to erect, as I get it, some kind of milestones in space. "We can then move from an ex act point in time and location on earth to time, points and distances in space," Fulton saidjn a letter to the Bureau of Standards, sug gesting that the bureau get on the ball. ' . '' YOU CAN'T BEAT Anderson's FOR QUALITY OF REPAIR SHOE and LEATHER GOODS Also Dr. Scholl's Foot Aids Dog Supplies Shoe & Boot Findings Metalwork Accessories For Western Wear .vCAIV. ray GRA" Anderson's Shoe & Leather. Goods 1407 ADAMS . : 1