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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1953)
.! 1- 4 Thm Statesman. Saism 'x?No Favor Sways Us No Fear Shall Atp ' ' Fnm fin Statesman. Marc 21. U51 . tatesxnan; Publishing Company CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. Editor and Publisher .'VI PuDliif nemla(. :!B4iatnai offlea x North Chum SU-Salem, Ora Telephone 2-2441 Enterl at tb " at Salem. ..cl j matter undr aot of Cmhtih March a, H79. I;! Member Associated Press jaja Associated Press is auUUed exclusively to Uw tut f. tor repubUeaUoa of all local aawa onnted ta ,." -: i ; tKu aawapapat - yashingtorij I ;t 'Washington State is just rib off of old Oregon, and this year it jisi celebrating the centennial of its separation from its parent. Agitation for establishing ai territory north oiCthe Columbia began in, 1851 when there were about 1.200 whites residing there. In 1852 conventions' were held at Cowlitz in August and at Monticello near the mouth of the Cowlitz River to consider moves for set ting up "the fuiure state ofj Columbia." The Monticello; meeting adopted a memorial to Congress urging j action .toward giving the aea territorial status. The Oregon Legisla ture had a few weeks before approved a memorial voicing!" its assent to the separa tion. The Congriess soon acted and President Fillmore signed the bill onf March 2, 1853. Jt was "hot until : 1888 however that Wash ington Territory was made fa State. ', Cities arid towns in Washington are taking dije noteof this! anniversary! year. Many are holding community celebrations. Vancouver has held Stockade days, and the Columbian published there issued a find Centennial edi tion. Chapin Foster, executive of the Wash ington Historical .Society angl himself a for mer newspaper publisher in the State, has Stimulated interest and activity in the Cen tennial all over the State, j jj jl'There is an interesting bit bf history on the ilarty settlement; of what is ow Washington. Vancouver was the rhief hite settlement and was the stronghold of the Hudson's Bay Company (British). Dr. Mclaughlin headed immigrants into the Willamette Valley and discouraged American settlers from locating North of the Columbia. The; Simmons party ot 1845, however, rejected the advice and set tled at the tip of Puget Sourfd at the present Tomwater near jOlympia. Their reason was that one member of the pirty, George W. Bush, was a free mulatto mimed to a white .Voman. The Oregon law at the time barred Ifee Negroes from residing fin the territory. "Since Bush had been so helpful to the party oh the overland crossing its Members decided td stand by him,; so they turned north. There still is a section of Thurston County, Wash., , called Bush Prairie. j j 3$y 1852 settlements were springing up: Seattle, Port Townsend, alng the Cowlitz, Olympia; and the residentb wanted terri torial government of their; dwn. Without any hitch the territory 1 was created, the name Washington being selected on the suggestion f Congressman Stanton of Kentucky. Restless Oregonians, thinking the Willam ette Valley was getting "filled up," migrated to- the Walla Walla, Palouse and Spokane regions and to Piuget Sound. jRailroads crossed the continent to reach the jsalt water ports on the Sound. Lumbermen from Michigan and Minnesota -i and Scandinavians took the immigrant trains to tbef state where the tail timber grew down tol the water's edge. 'The Alaska gold rush poujred wealth into .'Seattle. Irrigation transformed the Yakima and Wenatchee valleys. Finally the daughter outgrew the parent in population and wealth. Relations between the two states have re Tinained intimate- however, though their po litical paths iave sometimes deviated. XOregon now j delights i in congratulating 'Washington on rounding out a century of independent government. j r;A harsh echo from the pid timber fire in I Western Douglas County in jL951 comes in the form of suits brought by! Long-Bell and CJardiner Lumber: companies against the E. Wood Lumber Co. for! $2,700,000. The complaints blame the defendant with neg ligence which let jthe f priest fire 'destroy ; standing and cut timber! belonging to the ; plaintiffs. The : prospect jofj suits like that should stimulate greater vigilance in "Keep ing Oregon green. World Festival In Z INTERPRETING THE NEWS By WILLIAM L. RYANj 2 AP Ferelga News Aaalyfti v'V t-v rnvti, mtr4t festival of vuth and students for peac ind -friendship." a Communist show Wataged by a world Communist jor- rganizauon. is in full swing in sea Bucharest this week. It should get 2a! lot of serious study froraahti- "Ommunists as one of the most! in- -jgiidious and dangerous forms ( &c Jjivity sponsored bv Moscow's fifth jBlumns. ii - j M-Tbe show is under the auspices the "World Federation of Demo cratic Youth," a brain child of jthe -Communists, who have" chosen ftbe iyord "Democratic for use hi a -t large variety of militant front jor StJanizations. " i' Hi "ONot only, in the! world's so-called backward countries, but in virtually every area, the main attack ef the Communists is on youth. : ; ( ' I ;f We know front I experience liow 7 that the parties which exist today. strong and disciplined, in many countries India. Ceylon, Iran. the -Middle East and elsewhere were built from cadres of youth captured -'years ago. indoctrinated and dedi cated to the world supremacy! of the Stalinist dogmaJi ,j If . - Five or ten years from now many of the youngsters being royally jen- jenainea unay is tne Kucnaresi "show will form nuclei of militant - Communist Party j! organizations. CThat is what Moscow banks od in its long and patient ' strugglei to m conquer the world of ideas. To American ears, the shenani Orw Monday, August 1& 18S3 statesman Ora. a The theft, of from a locker stuff in spite A number can of 'Peace Friendship Being Bucharest, Trains Red Youths gans of the world youth congress in Bucharest sound ridiculous, but it is no laughing matter. These youngsters are being grad ually indoctrinated to form, the hard cores of the future, to do mission ary work in the outside world and lure the unsuspecting, the adven turous, the foolish, into the net. The world youth congress, in its manifesto preceding the "festival" openly advertised its pro-Moscow aims. It informed the youngsters: "The imperative duty of youth is to participate with all their force in the campaign' started by the world peace council for negotiations for a peaceful settlement of the in ternational agreements, for the ces sation of wars now raging and of the aggressive actions against the j independence of peoples." t This Is Moscow's Bne, and the; world peace council belongs to Mos cow. All aggressive actions are as cribed to the West, with the JJnited States in the role of chief criminal. All peaceful endeavor is ascribed to Moscow. , That there is no logic in it makes no difference.' The technique is the repetition of the big lie.; over and over again. Hitler proved it worked. Wha can be done o counter it? One of the best answers came from a young Negro lieutenant just freed from a North Korean prisoner camp. Because of his race, said LL Srr.uel E. Massinberg of Detroit, the North Koreans tried to indoc trinate him in Communism. v , "I un "Titanrt ft better now, and I hate it more,' he said. ' Korean Pledges and the Conference Sixteen U. N. members have declared they will! continue to protect Korea against Red aggression, though Britain and Canada seem! to have kept their fingers crossed when they, signed. Also Secretary -Dulles and the .For-, eign Minister of Korea have signed a security: pact by which the U. S. Is committed to come ' to Korea's defense in event of a " new Red invasion. This iwaa part of the price we had to pay to get Korea to acquiesce in the truce. It should have value in- serving as a "Keep Out" notice for "the' Communists. Maybe U one had been' served in 1950 no invasion would have occurred, I ' . - Secretary Dulles has a tough job. He wants to keep Syngman Rhee in line. At the same time he doesn't want to commit this country to support all of Rhee's ambitions. The latter would go plunging toward the Yalu at once if he thought hi would get U. S. support. For all the age of their country, the mod ern Koreans are politically immature. They had no experience in governing from 191Q to 1945.1 After liberation, the allies agreed on a five-year trusteeship. The Koreans would have none of it and the Russians refused to cooperate in setting up a joint government. While Rhee is one of the ablest leaders in Korea he is an autocrat; and we dare not underwrite all his ventures. Next week United Nations General Assem bly will meet to select members of the po litical conference on Korea and pick a site for the meeting. What we are apt to see is a renewed deadlock for each side will want unification set up on a basis which will prevent- the opposition forces from gaining con trol. This would not mean an immediate resumption of fighting. But it would mean continued, instability in the Far East. What Dulles needs at such a conference is wide freedom for maneuver. In view of the demands of Rhee and the jumpy nerves of Britain and the bland liberality of the In dians and the strident objections of Amer ica's Chiang-f irsters one sees scant elbow room for Mr. Dulles. A radio station and a gossip peddler have learned that branding a schoolteacher a Com munist and Communist sympathizer didn't pay. The offended teacher, Fern " Bruno of San Lorenzo, sued them for damages and after a trial she was awarded $55,125. The slanderer was Jimmy Tarentino, a rather notorious dispenser of gossip in the Bay city. His mistake was that he didn'.t get himself elected to the Senate first, where he would be immune from liability for his libels. $225 worth of frozen foods is reported at Medford. "Hot of its temperature. The mosquito sprayers report ak 100 per cent kill of these cannibals on sloughs and stagnant water. They are a bit optimistic. We heard of one that got away. Wall Street is either smarter or less greedy than is popularly supposed. Stock exchange members voted down a plan to increase brokerage fees. Editorial Comment MILITARY LESSONS What have been the military lessons of the Korean campaign? Hanson Baldwin, military expert of the New York Times, lists 18 and discusses them briefly. be grouped under three headings: 1. A reappreciation of the role oi grouna troops. With enormous superiority on the sea and in the air, the UN could not have remained on the peninsula, much less driven the Red hordes back, had it not been for the foot soldier and the artilleryman. 2. A reappraisal of the possibilities of air power. The extraordinarily precipitous terrain in Korea and scattered targets and considerations of grand strategy in Manchuria -foreclosed re course to atomic bombing. Even with the enemy's 200-300rmile-long lines of communication concen trated within a narrow peninsula and with com plete control of the sea along his flanks, air interdiction did not stop the Reds' flaw of sup plies. Korea, however, did demonstrate the im portance of close air support of ground troops. 3. A new understanding of sea power first, as indispensable to any major ' and prolonged overseas operation. Ships carried 700,000 tons of supplies per month to Korea; air transport but 60,000 tons in a year from Japan only. Inchon, and the continuing possibility of other "end runs" had it been necessary to enlarge the war, con vinced the Army that amphibious warfare is not an obsolete technique. Christian Science Monitor Massinberg. ' in simple words, gave us a profound observation. We are too much in the dark about ih. world Communist conspiracy, its aims and its methods, its as sault upon human dignity. . Stalinism can little afford expo sure to the light of day. The more young people understand it. as the lieutenant said, the more they are bound to hate it pyrifht. 1963 New Tork HeraM Tribune. Inc.) 'Better English By D. C WILLIAMS 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "Why do you not own up that you ;were there, when it has been proven"? . What is the correct pro nunciation of "hygienic"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Instantaneous, in superable, insidious, indeclin-, able. 4. Whaf does the word "line ally" mean? 3. What is a word, beginning with pel that means "transpar- . ent? . ANSWERS L Say, "Why da you. no ten- fess that you were there, when I it has been prevedT 2. Pro- ' nounce hi-ji-en-ik. first 1 as in high,- second and third fs as ia , it, e as, in; saen. .accent third syllable. 3. Inseparable. 4. In a manner descending in a direct line from an ancestor. "She is lineally descended from 'that king." 5. Pellucid,' GRIN AND BEAR f .rffJJf ' 13 H MmM W npatrtmtoi, air, amfaat fct cm fair ilm tfce a LsbVa aaA aBMBtfa) akaA tSsK Wf fv ajTTwW IwrW tKP (,H A H i tJS IKD QDC3 (Continued regarded," as Mr. Poore writes, "as a one-man Kinsey report on the morals of the 18th Century, an Inside Europe Guntherized fro. i a gondola, a rake's prog ress toward the hellfire state." But Pcore has a suspicion that Casanova was something of a novelist in writing his autobiog raphy. He embellished his nar rative with a wealth of detail to rivel the modern competition of the "Forever Ambers". He "seems to have run out of tales only when he ran out of names for his heroines," putting "the recollection of romantic epi sodes on a mass production ba sis." His tastes and his con quests ran from tavern maids to duchesses; all over Europe too, to quote Poore again, Casa nova moved "from one town, one country,' one palace, one hovel, one jail, one castle, one boudoir, and then another bou- doir and then another boudoir to another." My information is really second-hand, and I cite the author ity. I have read little of Casa nova';. Memoirs. I do recall be ing a guest in a home and in the interval between dinner and bridge I drifted 'into the host's library. Noting a set of Casa nova on the shelf I pulled out a random volume but as I read of his approaches toward .one lady of fashion' I found the pages of the book had never been cut! So I returned it to the shelf to join its mates as an unopened mine of literature which the Watch and Ward so ciety never would allow to cir culate. The rediscovered Mengs por- i&fmmmmmia Time Flies FROM STATESMAN FILES 10 Years Ago Augest It, 1941 Winston Churchill completed acoher venturesome Atlantic crossing to perfect a pattern for global offensives in conference with President Roosevelt and Prime Minister W. L MacKeniie King. Miss Elda Russell, superin tendent of Hillcrest school for girls, resigned to become direc tor of the Oregon Protective Society at Portland. In the "Bombar-Dear" contest. Miss Dorthie Lott was chosen Miss "Bombar-Dear,"' Mrs. Flor ence Rose, second, and Maxine Wickman, third. Sidney 'Stevens of Salem donated the prizes. 25 Years Ago Aagast 10, 19U eago pitcher, brought his Illinois baseball team to play the Salem Senators. LONDON (INS) British sd- According to City Recorder entists have discovered what they Mark Poulson, the city has 316 believe to be a fool proof method employes. (In 1953 Paul Hauser, of protecting fruit trees ' from city treasurer, states they now spring frosts, hire 377 employes. The Horticulture Research Sta tion at East Mailing, Kent coun- It will take an average of $5 ty, after If years of experiments from every man, woman and believes the answer is a "water child to pay America's road spray." building program for 1528, so Dr. W. S. Rogers, head of the cording to the American Auto- department of Pomology (science mobile Association, $1,338,025,- 0 fruit growing) declared that 778 to be spent for highways, by and plants should be iprin an estimated population of 120,- Ued the water being allowed 000,000 people. to form tekles, which prevent - .1 the frost from harming buds aad - 40 Years Ago piossoms. t : r , ( Rogers explained that as water Astgnst It, 1SU v - cools to freezing point it gives t out heat. He said that 2400 gal- LowellWilL of Will's Piano Urns of water at freezing point. Store. . has been in New York turning to ice. produce as much for three months studying new beat as 16 gallons of boiling wa methods and makes of . bistro- ter J . ! n" . ; ments. , i . Already ome Kent county fruit I ' j v Y ;' ' ' growers have installed sprinkler The ministry at Paris has given systems but complain of the high its-approval for development of initial capital outlay, the aeroplane to cooperate' with Dr. Rogers only answer to this the navy. The minister of marine fa hat an orchard, like a bouse, asked parUament forf $2,730,000 cannot be heated cheaply. ; ' T. Gv Bugh, manager of the Rliph Theaters offered a reward - for the capture of thieves who gobbed his office. - IT I By Liclity from page one) trait brings the Casanova fact and legend into the limelight again. This serves to inform us that loose morals is not the product of our modern age. No matter how great are the sins of the moderns none is as boast ful as this native of Venice whose itinerary was "a postal guide to 18th Century Europe." Literary Guidepost By W. G. ROGERS THE VIOLENT WEDDING, by Robert Lewry (Deubleday; S3) "Baby" drives to "his training , camp, over the River, or under it by Tunnel, across flat eastern Jersey, up to Half 'n Half . . . "half Louie's and half fallin' down," as "Baby" calls it He's booked to fight Jorgensen, and he's there for days and days of running, punching the bag) sparring, and food and sleep. But Laine Brendan, believ ing he's in good enough train ing for her purposes, tele phones. He lives in Harlem, she is a white artist down in the Village. Married, divorced, hunting a vague something frantically, even desperately, she has gone from Jerry Claw son to George Jones to sports writer Dick. He treated her to a ringside seat for the first bout in which she watched dark, sleek, oily "Baby" knock out Chavez. She'd never seen any thing like this' man, this was something she fiercely must have. And so she did have, aft er Dick introduced them in a dive. She knows better, he knows better; their fault is, they don't know better at the same time. When he must train, she's too ardent; when she would resist, his need is too exacting. It's bound to lead to tragedy. This is a gripping and power ful story of struggle in and out of the prize ring. A couple of professional bouts, and other scenes, in particular the one in which Laine's mother appears unexpectedly, keep you reading breathlessly. Lowry's two prin cipal characters are trapped by desires they don't have the strength to deny, nor the cour age fully to satisfy. This isn't a story of black and white, but of man and woman victimized by an overwhelming force -in which color is only incidental. You draw no smug social mor al, you just wince at the tale of a weakness that couldn't help but be faUL British Find Guard Against I jrf H rncr A A a JSL V ! In 1952 the United States used almost nine trillion cubie feet of matural gas. i Ybu Ith By Dr. H Bamdesea CORRECT FIT IMPORTANT IN SHOES FOR YOUNGSTER "Baby needs new shoes' is far more than just a slang expression these days. These essential arti cles of clothing are protective de vices for the child, shielding his feet from rough surfaces, j An infant's foot needs no pro tection while he is in the crib or play pen. However, protection of the foot is important as soon as the child can move around to a considerable extent outside the play pen. a a a If be walks with his toes point ing outward, at an angle of more than forty-five degrees, it is pos sible that the child will have weak feet and so needs an examination by the doctor to determine if he requires added support in the form of special shoes. An infant usually does better with , high shoes that cover the ankles at first, only because of the fact that they can be kept on the feet more easily than the low shoes which can be kicked off. However, as soon as the child learns to keep his shoes on and is able to stand and walk, low shoes are preferable because they are eooler and offer greater pro tection to the foot. Even children with weak fe t should have low shoes, according to most physicians. A defect or deformity in a weak foot occurs below the level of the ankle and high shoes will hide the deform ity. This is not desirable in most cases, because it is important to see and correct a foot deformity early in life. It is important to fit a child's shoes properly. This can be done best by having the child try on the shoes and then having them tested to determine the proper fit. If a mother is told that the child will grow into shoes, it is very likely that the salesman is more interested in making a sale than in correcting the foot a Young children will outgrow rather than outwear their shoes, since their feet grow in spurts. The fact that a child has had a pair of shoes for four to five months does not necessarily mean that he needs a larger size. The best wav to test this to note the distance between the tip of the first and second toes and the end of the shoe while the child is standing. When the dis tance is less than a quarter of an inch and the toes almost touch the end, the shoes have been out grown. Should Fit Snagly The back of the shoes should fit snugly without slipping or rid ing down and they should be comfortable. A mother, when buying shoes for her child, should observe the child in the store. The shoes should not gap at the sides or at the back when the child walks. The normal foot requires no support from shoes. Therefore, they should be pliable and inter fere as little as possible with foot action. Poorly fitting shoes are not only uncomfortable but will tend to wear out more raoidlv and miv result in foot deformities. Prop- eiiy litting shoes are essential for health. QUESTION AND ANSWER H.D.: Can drinking water with a meal cause gas? Answer: No, not unless a great deal of air Is swallowed along with the water. Tobacco Grown In Cambodia PHNOM PENH. Cambodia (A There's a new industry underway n Cambodia the growing of to bacco. The first growing tests were made in 1948 by Agricultural Research Institute, jfhich reported "favor able results." Since then, despite the war in Indochina against the Communist led Vietminh, more and more to bacco has been planted. This year, the dry leaf crop of tobacco is ex pected to reach 250 tons, j nl ,e ' ill "A W. L CHARLES W. CIAGGCT. Mgr. v Hea on J M L.I Byrnes AsftG; cSoro; Conference Limited To War ardlciDahcG s YAaf nrt f WASHINGTON Uh Gov. James F. Byrnes of South Carolina said Sunday the problems of all Asia can't be settled in Korean peace talks and nrged the peace confer ence there be limited to war par ticipants. ' He said. In an interview, how evr. that "the sky ought to be the limit in discussion of world issues at the projected meeting of U. S., British, French and Soviet foreign ministers. Although the South Carolina gov ernor and his colleagues of the new delegation will not attend the emer gency U. N. meeting to arrange for the Korean political talks, Byrnes is expected to wield strong influence among the U. S. delegates in future decisions' on Korea. In support of his position that the original talks should be limited to nations which participated actively In the war, Byrnes said the Rus sians themselves forced adoption of this principle at the very beginning of the cold war. Secretary of State Byrnes was secretary of state from July, 1943. until January. 1947, dealing with the Russians during early phases of the cold war. "It was the Russians who in sisted at the first conference of foreign ministers, in London in 1945 that only those nations which had been signatories to the surrender terms should take part in negotiat ing the peace treaties with Italy, Red Tractors To Serve War Peace Needs PHILADELPHIA (INS) Sovi-Bi et mobilization plans apparently call for production of Russian tractors and other commercial vehicles which can easily be adap - ted to militarv use. Automotive Industries magazine reported that "the principal rea son for construction of a "large proportion of crawlers (tractors) in Russia today is the possibility of their requisition by the armed forces for engineer troops and for artillery prime movers." Name Withheld The article, written by an au thor whose name was withheld to protect the sources since ma terial in it came from behind the Iron Curtain, claimed that crawlers probably account for three-fourths of Russia's tractor production. "An example of military appli cation," according to the article, "is the T-12 crawler, which also Is the chassis for the SU-76 self propelled gun. ; . "Another example is the use of Russian S-80 crawlers in the Ko rean War. Furthermore, factories making crawlers are more easily converted to armored vehicle pro duction." The article said -"that most of the Russian tractors are of "Amer ican ancestry." It added: Designed Like U.'s "The design of Sovief tractors often follows the U.S. models, since thousands of them were im ported before the USSR develop ed its own industry. "From 1921 to 1931, Russia im ported 90,000 tractors, practically all of which were American. Very few were purchased from abroad after this until the war j years, during which 10,000 came from the U.S." Already Used The author asserted that some 560,000 military-adaptable tractors were in use in Soviet agriculture in 1950. He also estimated that 117,000 such units were produced in Russia in 1950 alone. It was explained, however, that between 1940 and 1950, the num ber of horses for agricultural use in Russia .fell from 21 to 13-mil- Uk. a lion head. The article contended that this shows conclusively "that the prob lem of power in Soviet agriculture today is very acute." The Islamic religion met with strong opposition when it was founded 13 centuries ago but now has 370 million adherents. "ve, -jt v "ir : f m, ESTABLISHED 189 SINCERE SERVICE AVAILABLE TO AU , fHONI 34173 Oat mt Tnrs Cails at Oar PARSING LOT AVAILABLE HIGD0N CO., FunbrciJ Dirccfcrs m N. COTTAGE ATCHrMfKnA Bulgaria, Ipungary, Finland and Ru- t ii - i i tile saioj Russia opposed Allied demands hat France land China take part.adding that be regarded this as the beginning of the cold . v : ; 1 I lthougj Byrnes ai4 he broke Up the Loedon conference because he believed that' on this Issue "no agreement was better than a bad agreementl the 194 Moscow con ference of foreign ministers agreed eni the Soviet formula that only na tions whic had signed the surrend er! could participate in peace talks. Ltinlted t Red China jj I In Korel, Byrnes said this form til, would! limit i Communist parti cipants to I Red China, represented through th so-called People's Vol unteer Anfiy, and to North Korea. On the Allied side would be only nations wlich furnished: troops un der the UJN. Command.; ' fWe cart settle: the! affairs of the world fby talking ta the North Koreans aid the Chinese," Byrnes said. "Butjif there is m settlement of the local Korean problem, it will lessen world tensions somewhat and may open the way to some agree ment to end the cold; (war." . Byrnes fioted that the American dejegationf to the U. ; N. will be operating tinder Eisenhower's or ders, recalling that he himself was instrumental in ; getting j Congress to! write such a provision into en abling legislation, j KlthougbjGov.. George N. Craig of Indiana said he I couldn't serve on the delegation because! of a state constitutional provision, Byrnes said that because the V. N. delega tion membership isn't so "office," most . governors could ji accept and serve without legal difficulties. ;l 'rj !l V l,M RMAN VI At LKER WASHINGTON L H- Businesl groups' were reported highly dis- turbed Saturday by the; "prelimi nary"' draft ofj a message to Con gress containing Wnitt! House rec ommendations I for changing the Taft-Hartley5 4ct.- . j , i The tentative! message, whict leaked out Recently, was considered favorable to labor unions rather thjan toniployers. lj I It never (was formaKy submitted, to! Congress, but the question re mains whither it is a; real tip-off n what i President ! Eisenhower Wants done! on the touchy Taft-Hart ley question, j j . j j ! The proposed ! message ' did get from the White House to the chair mien of U4 Senate and House I,a bor Committees with a; request fot fast scrutiny and comment. rint U Committee iM . This wal on Friday! Uuly 31. t about fie'same tijime the draft feached th committee ichairtnen.. Sen. Taft It-Ohio ), principal au thor of the! labor relations act, died jn New Yfrk; j . jj j f'Businefi men have been highly disturbed f x;" the; Chamber of Commerce! of the United States said lit its Wishington report. "The Hsultant ionfusion has done iittle id allay tli fears of the business community NAM Repa1 1 ITheNat nal Association of Man- ufceturers j was a little less dis- turbed. d sing members in NAM'S privately ifculated ''Washington bulletin" as follows: in j I r"x xx j number of persons fa miliar, wits the situation are of the opinion that there is more excite ment than fa justified. Whether this viewpoint fi correct only time can tell." but it lis known that the draft Isj being ri vised. " , p! It now appears that Eisenhower's labor recommendations will not be made public until some time next )nonth at f he earliest; The draft which stirred so much interest is on the shelf ffri a i while. ) I SecretarM of Labor Martin Dur kir said in! an interview at Pitts burgh Friday he believes Eisen hower's eventual recommendations Ivill be acceptable to Congress. -f f'l don't fnagine labor's full pro gram win e aqceptea out there trill be changes! to make the law Durkin: said. i-i h.- I kkveaae .-t iWUriionT-H t . n in A a. inr 1 'II I rici vaiaii&ca aid Proposed if Bv No I I II rMj a i i I i