Capital AJourna! An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press and The United Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or otherwise credited in this paper and also news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier: Weekly, 25c; Monthly. $1.00; One Tear, $12.00. By Mail In Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos., $4.00; One Tear, $8.00. V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos., $6.00; Tear. $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Friday, March 3, 1950 Lewis Out-Foxes Mr. Truman The change in President Truman since his re-election was never better illustrated than in his handling of strikes against public welfare. He acted promptly and vigorously in his first term against both the railroad unions' walkout and Lewis' coal miners, summarily ending the emergencies they caused. He refused to recognize an emergncy existed in the present coal miners' strike, refused to use the Taft Hartley law's provisions for months and then fumbled his opportunity. Federal Judge Richmond B. Keech, formerly an adminis tration assistant to Mr. Truman in 1945-46, whom he ap pointed judge of the District of Columbia November 1, 1946, before whom the case was taken, after ordering the mine workers' union to return to the pits, has ruled that John L. Lewis, other union officials and the 372,000 mem bers of the union were innocent of contempt of court for refusing to obey Lewis had ordered the miners back, but the miners individually refused to obey under the "invol untary servitude" clause in the constitution, until their slogan, "no contract, no work" is recognized. Judge Keech drew the assignment of testing whether an injunction of a United States court was powerful enough to get coal mines operating. Coal miners said it was not, and stayed away from the mines in the face of Judge Keech's injunction. The judge, his order disobeyed, was left with the problem of showing which was the more powerful the law of the land or the strength of a labor union. The union won out. When a similar issue arose on two earlier occasions, the law won out. Judge T. Alan Goldsborough, on those occa sions, levied fines totaling more than $2 million against the mine union, with supplementary fines against Mr. Lewis as the union leader. Held in contempt of court, Mr. Lewis and the union paid the fines and mining was re sumed. But Lewis was foxy enough to order the miners back this time so there was a different problem from that faced by Goldsborough. However, Goldsborough's action and opinion formed a precedent which Kreech ignored. In one of his opinions, he ruled: "As long as a union functions as a union, it must be held re sponsible for the mass action of Its members. Men don't act col lectively without leadership. The suggestion that 350,000 men , would get the idea simultaneously to walk out collectively is,' of course, simply ridiculous." What solution the reluctant and procrastinating Mr. Truman will arrive at to solve the emergency remains to be seen but John L. Lewis seems to have proven again that he is more powerful than the president of the United States for the time being. But the president has created a real emergency that may lead to a national economic break down if not promptly solved. Meanwhile the war of the goons on producing mines con tinues, with tragedies mounting among those who believe in right of men to work if they desire. The 'Why' of Gl Insurance Dividends A reader of the Capital Journal, Fred C. Taylor, had asked how the federal government could have a "surplus" of billions in GI insurance dividends to be distributed to veterans. The technical question was referred to Con gressman Norblad from this district who in turn tossed it to the Veterans Administration. . The answer covered both the philosophy and the princi ples on which was based the national service life insurance program of World War II. The act, passed by Congress in 1940, provided that: First, the U. S. government would bear all expenses of adminis tration; secondly, the government would pay all death and disability claims traceable to the extra hazard of mili tary or naval service. Congress apparently felt that expenses of administra tion of the insurance plan should be carried by all tax payers as an additional service to members of the armed forces and to veterans. Furthermore, congress evidently intended that the insured servicemen pay only the cost of the insurance exclusive of all losses directly traceable to the extra hazards of war. The disabilities and mortali ties of war were charged to all the taxpayers as a cost of war. The government contributed over $4 billion to the insurance fund. This is the way the Veterans Administration explains why the dividend is not a bonus but a dividend: "The special dividend of $2,800,000 now being paid arises because the premiums paid by the insureds which were intended to cover all mortality and disability claims ex cept those traceable to military or naval service have, in the light of experience, proved to be more than enough to cover this risk. "It is common insurance practice in the mutual insur ance field to charge a premium that is adequate and con servative to cover all possible contingencies, such as epi demics, pandemics, and the like, and to adjust the pre miums to the cost of the insurance through the medium of dividends." Actually, the dividend represents a distribution to the insured veterans of that portion of the assets which experience has shown not to be required to meet the cost of claims not traceable to the extra hazards of war serv ice. This was sizeable since administrative costs and claims not traceable to the extra hazards of war were paid by the general taxpayers. It represented the earnings under ap proximately 20,000,000 policies, some of which had been kept in force for the full eight years. BV H. T. WEBSTER Bridge yffie KiBiTie I I I i I CwjH 'T. w it WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND 'Phew Drearson Vaughan Are Taken Over the Hurdles By DREW PEARSON Washington The circus saints and sinners in New York took good old General Harry Vaughan over the hurdles the other day, and also included a few sideswipes at yours truly. In fact, they wrote a column, "Washington Merely-Go-Wrong, by Phew Drearson," And in the spirit of good clean fun, I re produce "Phew BY CARL ANDERSON Henr) Drew Pearaon KRISS-KROSS Suggestions for New Form Of Daylight Saving Time By CHRIS KOWITZ, Jr. With the annual early-spring argument involving daylight saving time coming into prominence again, B. E. Braucht of 3620 Garden road comes up with a suggestion that has some degree of merit. Braucht believes his method of handling the time problem during summer, - monins w o u i u provide ' work- Drearson's" col- " ""W. 1 ? umn forthwith and herewith , below: "It will be denied, but I have it on the best of authority that there is a serious split in the White House family between President Tru man and his military aide, Major General Harry S. Vaughan. The cause of this cleavage is your correspondent, whose offer to apologize to General Vaughan rocked official Washington yes terday. "From sources that I have hitherto found to be absolutely reliable, I have learned that I offered to withdraw all I have said or written against General Vaughan if President Truman will withdraw all he has written or said, especially said, about me. "Last night a closed meeting was held at Blair House. Present were Truman, Vaughan, and others of the Missouri crowd. of the scriptural injunction 'Let him who is without sin cast the first stone.' "During the war did you ever have to grease a sales manager in order to get supplies to keep you going? Before the war and after did you ever have to slip the price of a new suit to the purchasing agent of some con cern with which you wanted to do business? "Did you ever send your con gressman a box of cigars? Did he send 'em back? Is all the liq uor in your cellar paid for or did some of it come from guys who you hardly knew but who wanted to do business with you? "How do you know but that you may -need someone some day, like General Vaughan, to soften up your 'command per formance' with the collector of internal revenue? "FIVE PERCENT ISN'T BAD "Moreover, it's about time we re-examined our attitudes to wards the so-called 'five-percenters.' "The fact Is that the govern ment needs certain supplies, that ilk HENRY - WILL YOU TOSS THIS SALAD FOR WE - j ' f PLEASE ? Yl r Cf 1MB. Kiag fwi.m WwM iwmi -sa MacKENZIE'S COLUMN "The President, who. at the there are small businessmen who time, was holding three aces and hav he stuff for sale and that ing people with that extra hour of daylight, yets would not in terfere with time of network radio programs bus and rail schedules, etc. Braucht's sug gestion is simply 0h'to ,Uw", '' this: Hi dence at Salem high school Mon day night, when the district 11 1 high school basketball tourna- merit anrl s rnmmnnitv concert were held simultaneously in the same building. The district tourney had been scheduled months ahead of time. When the community concert as sociation requested use of the SHS auditorium for the same night as a basketball session, school officials were careful to warn the asociation that the concert would have to run com- a Joker (George Allen) Insisted upon standing pat. "Vaughan, according to my in formant, tried to get the Presi dent to accept my apology, but the meeting broke up at mid- the man who brings them to gether is performing a service to the government and to the taxpayer. Moral for All in Conviction of Dr. Fuchs, Convicted Betrayer Fn all etfti.no UnVR etc., to ooen an hour earlier each Petltlon W1n he bal1 8ames morning and close an hour ,thef . cncer group, was "nab,e earlier each evening. That's ' find anothe.r suita.bIe dat.e- all there is to it. People would the tw. events went on at the actually be living on daylight sam tlme- . ,, . . ... saving time, yet their clocks Those wh attendfd1 hf would remain on standard time "vent are still complaining to to conform to radio programs, .PKS? '""f transportation schedules, times d "fdents livn near he Mother towns on standard time, ' . , private driveways, etc. Several And everyone would get that cars were double parked on 14th extra hour of daylight after and D streets ... a definite working hours, Braucht points fjre hazard. I,.- Come to think of U' Concert - goers were irritated that a the sole purpose of day- bv the congestion of young peo light saving time, anyhow. ple moving about the halls dur- How would the plan affect ing halftimes and between games farmers? Well, Braucht's not of the basketball tournament, too sure about that. Perhaps In fact, we haven't found any some of you rural readers can one who was pleased with the enlighten us on the subject. situation except the little black dog that joyfully trotted from Need for an adequate civic gym to auditorium on several auditorium in Salem was in evi- occasions during the evening. POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Women Don't Understand A Man's Idea of a Den By HAL BOYLE New York Vft Animals have dens, and ever since I was a small animal I wanted a den, too. Let me tell you about my den. When we finally became rich enough to afford a four-room apartment a couple of years ago, the wife of my bosom said: "For ten years , partment store and perpetrated some draperies by the window. The draperies had brown horses rearing against a chartreuse background. "Look, Man-o-War might like those but I don't," I com plained. "They're real manly," said Frances. "What did you want on the draperies men chasing pretty ladies across a meadow?" Why not? Next a beautiful white birch By DeWITT MocKENZIE (tJPt Foreign Affairs Analyst) There is s traeic lesson in the case of Dr. Klaus Fuchs, natur- niWo4 nriHch eiiVtiorr. who has been convicted in London of be- "After all, booking agents get tr-vj.,,, Aneln-American atomic secrets and has been sentenced 10 percent for their services, to 14 vflars in miaan. night with the general apparent- lecture agents get even more, so Tne morai js that anyone who subscribes to communism of ly losing the decision and $42.60. wly snoum anyrjoay kick at a the Soviet brand . reasonable figure like 5 percent pie(jges his loy- "SECRET MEETINGS to k.eep he wfeels ol business alty to Moscow, . ... , ., . turning, to make as many peo- irr(.!rMr't i v e of "It can now be disclosed that , ... irrespective oi , . . . , . , .. Ple satisiiea as numamy pus- I have held several clandestine sibl and to lighten the crush. meetings with General Vaughan, Jng burdens upon the president? and that he has been largely ..He hag been unfairly ma successful in convincing me that iigned (Vaughan, I mean) and no personal animosity was re- as S00n as I get Truman's apology fleeted to the President's ap- rm going to call halt to it parent uesignauon or. me as an "Reactionaries and character was one o those '0.'.?; . . . .... assassins like Westbrook Win- wv,n missed the chell. Fulton Pegler, and Walter poitutil lt , ' :.. . juewis naa Dewer wa,on ineir was too late. th in ti! Toh n.Tiv SteZ The. Ame,fican Pe0Ple are Fuchs was a German subject that he divulge the atomic se- : ."7 " :"T 8el8 lea P- ...u j w,i rnn n crets of America and Britain. his nationality. A lot of folks seem to have failed to grasp that cardinal fact, and it may be that Fuchs DoWltl Maokensia 1933 and was given refuge in England. He was a brilliant physicist and was given oppor tunities to become one of the world's outstanding atomic ex perts. Finally he was loaned to America to work on the atomic bomb. Dr. Fuchs had become a mem ber of the German communist party in 1032 and he clung to this ideology. Naturally the time arrived when Moscow put the finger on him and demanded (OopyrlaM isso) accepted as meaning sweet old bungler, as applied to one who, CSSlaSS1 MERCY DEATH FOR ELEPHANT wrong thing. "While I am entirely willing to accept this interpretation, I felt that I was still justified in demanding an apology from the President, in view of the fact Coco Had Friends to the End Perhaps the doctor was shock ed at first. Who can say? In any event, as he himself had said, he split his personality into two parts, one loyal to the West and the other paying de votion to communism. In this uncertain state of mind 1fflaBRaKS r 1 1 V 3J you have beenf howling to have (j a aen. now want you to take the small bed room and make yourself a den. And from now on please do all your growling in it." Well, first there had to be furniture for the living room and the bedroom, and you know desk and stiff upright chair ar what post-war furniture costs, rived. I am afraid to use the So for more than a year my den desk for fear of getting finger was a storage room for old print marks on it, and I'd rather trunks, boxes and stacks of lie on the floor than sit on the books. chair. It's more comfortable. One night we bunked a friend The photo montage then was in there, and the next morning ruled out because the lease did- at breakfast he said: n't allow it. Instead an Did pic- "When I woke up and looked hire, ot wi,f,e' grandfather around, my first thought was wen UP- J. ho lered at this so that I had been put in here as a mu;h s,he finally put mirror mmishment " ln 'ront of Grandpa. But this But about a year ago Frances e,( a j WRnt ,0 when j hav'e Atlanta, March S (U.B Coca was gentle to the last, because there were children standing near. Tho frlenfllv elenhant of Atlanta's zoo was given a mercy that these initials are, in more death yesterday, and put out of the misery that had plagued Dr. Fuchs deliberately betrayed enlightened sections of the coun- her 3,000-pound frame and swollen a foreleg to medicine-ball size, the land which had given him try, associated with words , that There were a few groans, then refuge. And he divulged top have an entirely different con- one jast vast sigh Twenty or powerful shot of poison, inject- secrets of the United States notation, reflecting upon the more children were in the into an ear vein as Coca which is an ally of Britain, birth or ancestry of the designee. smaii crowd attracted by news stricken on the Grant Park When the law finally caught "Right here I want to say that that the end had to come for Co- rass- she feU yesterday, after up with him, Dr. Fuchs said I was not in the least disturbed ca's own sake. Tears sparkled weeks of keeping erect on suf- why, yes, he had given the se- when the President nominated on their cheeks, and their lips ferin8 les or suspended in a crets to Russia. We are not me as an s.o.b. What did hurt and the eyes of most were swing. told whether he fully recognized me deeply was that the senate clamped tight. "We knew we would not be the enormity of his crime at was ready to unanimously con- Coca sometimes surly with abIe, toget her 2P agalo'- that time. Be that as may, he firm the appointment someumes suny wn n parks Manager George Simons, finally realize what he had done, appoimmem. her trainer and especlaUy so ln who mourned her as deeply as for Sir Hartley Shawcross, the riinni?s .Kn rinrrirc her time of pain' lay uietly- a"y f the children who watch- prosecutor at the trial, pictured uuiLELbS5 ANUOU1MLE4S The feared lashing of her trunk ed the death of their favorite, the prisoner as "disillusioned and "I have never been sparing of did not come as a hypodermic Most of them had come daily ashamed." criticism of people in public life, needle was slipped into her ear. to sympathize witn tne zz-year but I must admit, in all honesty. The cause of death was a old pachyderm, that I made a serious error of judgment in my campaign against the general, and I vaughan to take it all back as soon as the President removes the stigma he has stamped upon me. "General Vaughan is really a man of rare personal charm who gives freely often too freely of his friendship. Naturally there are those who take advantage of him for their own purposes. "I have done some checking back and, when I receive Tru man's apology, I intend to say that I have found the general blameless in every charge made affninst him thus far "Take that matter of the med- To the Editor: We believe it would be in the public interest al from Argentina. I accused to clarify one statement which appeared with reference to the Vaughan of shortsightedness, Proposed insurance to be placed on the public service building medal - mania and excessive in Salem. vnit i , u "Strangely 100 per cent coverage . . . costs less for three appreciates Arrfentina's enmitv years tnan does ou per Wags Gag Reverse Marshall Plan Berlin, March 3 (U.I!) A gag of sorts was making the rounds today among those Berliners whose wry sense of humor came intact through the city's heaviest snowstorm in memory. The Wags were passing around the suggestion that the Marshall plan be reversed and Germany send some coal to the United States. Berliners doubt that anybody else in the world can ap preciate better than they the plight of Americans caught with their coal bins empty in the dead of winter. OPEN FORUM Insurance on Salem Building cent The presiding judge, Lord Chief 'Justice Goddard, summed up the case in part like this: "You have betrayed the hos pitality and protection given you with the grossest treachery. . . . You have done irreparable harm both to this land and the United States of America and you did it as your statement shows clearly for the purpose of fur thering your political creed. "Your statement shows the depths of self deception to which people like yourself can fall. "Your crime is only thinly differentiated from high trea son." Did Dr. Fuchs fully realize all i this when a Red agent first cor-y nered him and demanded the, 1 atomic secrets? Or is Fuchs one of those cases whose minds are ideologically wool- gathering most of the time? There are a lot of folks who, when mention is made of com munism, think in terms of the announced: Last Christmas a brown couch He Hopes to Beora 'Em Winnsboro, Tex., March S ff The Rev. Sidney J. Spain f Central Christian church wishes more people would come to see his beard. If more people would come ta church, a could shave. Spain promised his congregation h won't shave antll at tendance exceeds that of First Christian church at nearby Mineola. The whiskers are well beyond the stubble stage. They're several shades darker than tht minister's wavy hair. The Iftct it startling. . - "We're solvent again, Hover r detest brown arrived. It Boy. How would you like your was so big we had to leave it den fixed up?" in the living room until I paid a I told her I wanted it in red man $8 to take it apart and re and green and blue. I said I assemble it in "my den." wanted a beat up old pine desk Before that another fellow to work on, and a broken down had put "Little Blowhard," an old oak swivel chair to dream air-conditioning unit, in the in. I said I wanted to cover the space by the window where I walls with a montage of photos had planned to use my type from the war days the pictures writer. of old friends who had died The other day I saw Frances during prohibition. measuring a space by the wall. "Just a rough and ready den." "For television set," she ex I cautioned. 'Nothing fancy." plained. When I objected I Well, a carpenter came and didn't want to turn the room in hammered out a high-priced to a theater, she asked: built-in typewriter cabinet. The "Are you going to be stingy door is so hard to open that I with your den?" have never managed to get the "If this is a den," I said, "it's typewriter out and that is why for a different kind of hyena the great American novel has than you married." never been written. Frances can't understand this Then a thin-faced, ascetic- attitude at all. She feels I am Toicad gent arrived from a de- vesy ungrateful. ' - s " -' i Wd th ttsa j . coverage for one year". This value of certain types of property t,nAAn,: u jj 'I-.! i isn't pntirelv correct. Actually, it is nnssible to endorse a fire me UCVUiauuil lie WaS nVrrm ,j . V.A 4h .....in. ... veins ui only trying to cut down on their tne RATE would be about tne poijcy with a "coinsurance somewhat benevolent brand of stockpile of strategic metal. same ul ,ne cm ?" nu"?s ""u clause" which is, in effect, a the lsm which existed long ago. "His activities in the Tanforan cents would be just twice as contract between the insured and That was a Utopian ideal in racetrack and the molasses deals much because twice as much in- insurance company and like whieh the members of the corn were solely to stimulate business fura?ce wouId bc "j a11 contracts, imparts an oblige- munity "ved in brotherly love that was being stifled by bu- thV0,ieArJ2 f ,PJ1-... tion on both parties. The insur- and shared equally one for aU reaucratic red tape. His friend- at e SAME rate for 0 y ance company, for its part, will and ,al1 for one' ship for John Maragon was noble ' allow a percentage reduction "'s a far cry from that com and inspiring, and we all ought Fire Insurance rates, general- from the "flat" rate if the m"nism to the creed of the to bear in mind that Maragon ly on a national scale are based insured, for his part of the obli- PresRnt day Bolshevism. The cur has never been pointed out as a on the fact that those who gation will agree to carry an rcnt brand calls for one world, pro-communist. insure property will insure it amount of insurance equal to a and the capital would be Mos- . to at least one-half of its actual percentage of the insurable value ow, with the sovereignty of all "GRAFT OR GRATITUDE insurable value. This should, of the property which might be notions resting in the Kremlin. under normal conditions, provide anywhere between 60 per cent 'n sbort, every citizen of that "There's been a lot of loose sufficient premiums in order to t inn per cent at the option of world would be answerable to talk about deep freeze units, per- pay the fire losses arid the oper- the insured; the higher the per- Moscow. That's what Dr. Fuchs fumes, and such. ating costs of the insurance com- centage of insurance, the less the finally came up against, and "Before you become prey to panies. For those who wish to proportionate rate. ' Thus, the wnat every dyed-in-the-wool whispered innuendoes I ask you insure for an amount greater rate may be reduced as much as communist must face, to examine yourself in the light then 50 percent of the insurable 65 per cent for an "A" class There is growing recognition building if it is insured to 100 Wife on the Hot Seat per cent of its insurable value. of this truth. We see evidence of that in the Fuchs trial, and I In addition, the insurance e"fv? e Fuch CaSe W.aS fvfl Rome, March 3 iPi An angry husband in Parma took Tengeance on his unfaithful wife by seating her naked on a red hot stove, Rome newspapers reported today. The husband, 25 years older than his bride, found her with a youthful lover when he returned nnexpectedly from a trip, the dispatches said. The woman was reported seriously burned. ..... s . . laws of our State permit insur- flected in some degree in the . u. It?. recent British general election. ouit iu uc wi i u mr mice , , ... , years for just twice the one year FnmUniS,n g0t a ternlic kn0Ck rate a money-saving device for ,, the insured which is not allowed in all states. . . . S. A. BOISE Huggins Insurance There were 100 communist candidates for parliament, in-, eluding two members of the pre4 vious commons, and every moth er's son of them waa defeated. V