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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1950)
- 1 Capital AJournal 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. Pull 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. 25e; Monthly. S1.00; One Temr. 112.0. By Mall In Oregon: Monthly. 75c; Mos.. $4.00; One Tear. SI. At. V. 8. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; Mos., SS.ot; Tear. SIX. 4 Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, June 21, 1950 Expanding Social Security By an overwhelming vote of 81 to 2 the senate has passed a bill that would double benefit payments under the old-age and survivors' insurance system, in the federal security system. It would also add about 10 million per sons to the 35 million now covered and liberalizes qualifi cation requirements for benefits. 1 The legislation makes the first drastic reforms in the security program since its inauguration 15 years ago in the depression 30's. Final approval awaits settlement of deficiencies between the senate bill and the house bill passed last year by a vote of 333 to 14. The house measure would extend full coverage to 11 million persons and increase benefits about 70 percent. The senate bill doubles benefits and raises payroll taxes as much as $ 18 a year. The security act now covers 35,000,000 persons. The senate bill would add 5,000,000 self-employed, excluding farmers and certain professionals ; 1,000,000 full-time farm laborers ; 1,000,000 domestics who work at least two days a week for the same employer and 600,000 employes of non profit organizations. About 1,400,000 state and local em ployes without retirement plans would be included on a voluntary basis. The senate voted to increase maximum individual benefits from $43 to $80 a month. Minimum benefits would be raised from $10 to $20. The maximum allowed to any family group would go up from $85 to $150 a month. A retired worker is allowed an added SO percent of his individual benefit when his wife reaches 65. He also receives added sums for dependent children under 18. The house bill would raise benefits on a less generous scale but would allow a one and one-half percent "bonus" for every year of coverage. The senate refused to accept that The senate also rejected a house provision for federal aid to the totally and permanently disabled. The senate bill would liberalize eligibility requirements by granting full benefits to workers with as little as a year and a half of coverage It would not materially change existing federal contributions to states for public assistance but would increase amounts for care of dependent and crippled children. Both bills would raise the taxable "wage base" for social security purposes from the present $3,000 to $3,600 A year. This would increase taxes collected on salaries of those earning mora than $3,600 a year by $18. The tax is split between the employe and the employer. The house bill also would increase the payroll tax from the present one and one-half percent to two percent start ing next January. The senate voted to freeze the present tax until 1956. After that, the tax would increase gradu ally until 1970 when it reached a maximum of three and one-quarter percent. The Chamber of Commerce Moves The familiar second-story location on North Liberty street for the Chamber of Commerce will be changed the first of the month for one in the Senator Hotel. When headquarters of over 30 years in one place are moved, as from the Eckerlen building, the event is more than of pass ing interest. The event, furthermore, is of interest to the entire city of Salem and surrounding area. After all, a chamber of commerce promotes businesses already in a community, seeks new businesses, and boosts civic development. The city's welfare and well-being can be reflected in its chamber. Salem's chamber has announced that one of the reasons for the move is to save money on rent and maintenance. The matter of internal finances is one for the chamber it self. But the chamber's activities are the concern also of the entire community. So if the move can bring about a healthier chamber, one in which more money can be spent to bring new businesses into Salem and the adjacent area, the move will be accepted as in the best interests of the community. A city which is developing like Salem, needs an aggres sive chamber of commerce. No sooner has the census fig ure of 43,064 for the city been released than a prediction of continued growth for Oregon's capital is made. C. A. Mc Clure of the planning commission foresees the possibility of reaching the 50,000 figure by 1960. Salem's chamber built a reputation in those quarters on North Liberty street. In fact, the physical quarters them 1 selves became recognized as being as fine as any in the country for a city of this size. The adjoining rooms of fered meeting places for groups in the city and from the county. A move from such a location and history should be ac companied by a new aggressiveness on the part of the chamber management and by a renewed program of parti cipation by the membership. BY H. T. WEBSTER. The Unseen Audience Pint, up fcu CXAits, tt rnteuos, awO wu. 1 I H4ve7 a pnienovf urtie own and as MY 6000 ATIOS DROOPY SATS " J I vjo hovj, note's You eoco fmend ano MINE, OUH VMNOOMCCf. VJHO MAS A FRtCAJOCY I HESSA&e POt ALL OUT COOO FAlCNDS (WHO SUFFCR WITH NA&GING BACKACHE. VtTAUP J Vis a miu. FwieTNOLY neMeoi Vr- the RADIO WOULD IS A FRIENDLY ONE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Columnist Says Eavesdropping Old Habit With Sen. Brewster y DREW PEARSON Washington Eavesdropping is an old family pastime with Maine's Sen. Owen Brewster who, as this column revealed, tapped the telephone wires of California airplane manufacturer Howard Hughes. More than three years ago Feb. 18, 1947 Senator Brewster appeared before BY CARL ANDERSON H e n r y m Drtw htrtM KRISS-KROSS Feel Tired Yet? You're A Busy Man or Woman Today ByCHRISKOWITZ.Jr. a judiciary sub- committee to oppose the ap point m e n t of of John Clifford as U.S. district Judge for Maine. The senator ex plained that Clifford came to Brewster's ho tel room to dis- c u s s a local housing problem. "He said he would come up to my hotel room and see me," Brewster continued. "I did some thing which I have never done before, and I do not think I will ever do again. We had two rooms at the hotel, the door open between, and I asked Mrs. Brew ster to listen to the conversa tion." Since then it's been a stand ing joke in Maine whenever any one mentions having a talk with Senator Brewster to ask: "And pocket. All four would have voted against McCarthy. Whereupon McCarthy moved that the committee refuse to ' honor proxies. Such a refusal is almost unheard of in congress ional committees. However, Mc Carthy had a scant majority of the committee with him, and got away with it He then obtained the appointment of New York's Congressman Gamble, a foe of housing, as chairman of the housing committee, with himself as vice chairman. It was as vice chairman that McCarthy spent the taxpayers' money to tour the country studying housing, and later cashed in on that trip by getting $10,000 from the Lustron Corporation. McCarthy s tax troubles Though McCarthy now states he sold his article to the highest bidder, actually, according to Lustron officials, McCarthy pleaded for more dough Cap me. Km, hmmam. an. at You are a busy man or woman today. Statistics bear out was Mrs. B. standing behind the f ho!!;.th' ?",n Zhy- M 'JT1 that your heart will neat more times ana mat you wiu xaxe joor?" more breaths today than on any other day of the year. What's more, your watch will tick more times today thai, on any other eaueu lur mure auusn. himi AiAnlirn His income tax for 1948 may POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER mi day in 19S0. You see, June 21, longest day of the year. Vjt Ana mat s one ; thing that day-; light saving j time hasn'tr changed. Dr. Chester W. Hamblin, pastor of Salem's First P r e s b y terian church, has his . own weekly ra- ' dio program on station KOCO . . . and from now on Hamblin is going to confine his radio ac tivities to that program . . . last night he took his initial whirl at baseball broadcasting . . . handled the mike during the fifth inning of the Salem-Van-couver game at Waters park . . . Hamblin had a lot of fun, but he's decided to give up sports casting . . . "It sounds a lot eas- the first day of summer, is the ier when somebody else does it,' he explains. DIOGENES PUTS DOWN LANTERN Most Congressmen are scru pulously honest about taking gratuities for introducing legis lation for their constituents unlike Congressman Wood of Georgia whose office collected $1,000 for passing a bill corn- Gambling Is again flourishing in carnivals and amusement parks in Oregon, and apparently law enforcement officers can't do a thing about it. (At least pensating Ralph Stanfield after road5- in the state of Wisconsin, Mc Carthy's tax return shows his total income was $28,947, in cluding his senate salary of $12, 500 plus the $10,000 from Lus tron, plus $4,535 in dividends from the Milwaukee and the Central of Georgia railroads. However, McCarthy also lists It's Hal Boyle's Day To Act as a Pavement Plato they're not.) Here's the twist: Operator of gambling concession tells pros pective player he may play for prizes or cash. Player is paid off in tickets, and told that he may cash tickets at any time. When player decides to collect cash. By HAL BOYLE New York W Cuff notes on life by a pavement Plato: It's hard to go on paddling your own canoe when you're mar- losses to the tune of $25,881 ried to a girl who yearns for a yacht, which he claimed from the sale Bankruptcy isn't the heaviest penalty for steady sinning of securities of the same rail- boredom is. . The greatest he was crippled by a U.S. army truck. For example, when Senator Sparkman of Alabama was still a congressman, he introduced a private bill to compensate a con stituent who also had been in- McCarthy had failed to pay test of the art taxes on about $45,000 of income of conversation during the war, for which the these days is to state of Wisconsin and the fed- fill in that three- eral government later nicked him. At that time he claimed he was out of the country and jured by an army truck. The al not nave 10 P raxes mougn constituent was so grateful that " ""' J""s " minute interval at a cocktail party between the time the liq uor runs out i and the time the his taxes just the same. McCarthy's 1948 tax return would indicate he had sold his railroad securities in order to pay his earlier tax deficiency. Perhaps he needed the money operator of the game hands him a merchandise prize . . . then v, mn i- .. h.-i, have known that every member Sparkman's name and sent the "T.1 aaa w ; deposit slip to Sparkman. This was promptly returned, however, with a courteous note, thanking the constituent but ask ing him to keep his money. After Sparkman changed the rinnit hark in th .nntitiint'a name, the bank returned the UP deficit worthless deposit slip to Spark- (CprrifM man. - Across it was scribbled: "At last Diogenes can put down that lantern." This referred to the Greek philosopher who carried a light ed lantern around in mid-day, searching for an honest man. buys the merchandise back a few minutes later. Legal? Well, that's the way they work it, anyhow. Salem's postoffice probably has the distinction of being the most elaborate postoffice build ing in the United States without a drinking faucet in the lobby. from Lustron in order to make tom5rr0' Pickpockets Pick Wrong Man Mankato, Minn., June 21 W Police Chief William Krnse conducted a one-man investigation today for the two men who slashed his pocket and tried to steal his wallet in a bos station ticket line. MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Political Events in Europe Encourage Peace Optimism By DeWITT MacKENZIE tin tmlm Affftlra Jtnii.tti The trend of political events in western EuroDe certainly is an ?' invitation to considerable optimism among workers for peace and .', ,. , ... prosperity. It s well known that the $10,- One of the most enrouraeinir vrntx nf nnr irnhii ti. i. 000 the Lustron people paid Mc- the agreement of Western Germany to join the council of Europe. Carthy wa Part ' the RFC mil- s - m r linns utriink 4 Via nmm -s m Ant r) . Police Gazette now has a son who leers at the corset ads in the fashion magazines. Raising children wouldn't be so expensive if they'd just make a pair of shoes last as long as they do the castor oil bottle. If the eaves ever dropped on all the world's eavesdroppers, who'd have a roof over his head? Mankind would be better off if science would leave the atom alon? and find a way to cross breed happiness and the seven year itch. Isn't it about time to put the international crisis on a five day week? People are begin- The boy who learned about in to worry about it on their by studying the old A wife can forgive her hus band everything except his abil ity to have fun without her. The bald man's philosophy: 'Oh, well, hair today gone MCCARTHY'S $10,000 There may be more than meets the eye behind the $10,000 paid to Sen. Joe McCarthy of Wis consin by the now bankrupt Lustron Corporation for writing 7,000-word booklet on hous- Mississippi's a Big Creek St Louis, June 21 u.B Two patrolmen saw a flickering light at the water's edge last night and Investigated. They fonnd Samuel Jay Bond, 91, Hugo, Okla., wading in the river, holding a lighted match. "I was just looking for my hat and cane," Bond told the officers. "I lost 'em when I slipped and fell in the creek." The ancient was bundled off to City hospital. Bnt this morning, before seeing him aboard a Chicago bound bus to visit relatives, officers drove him back where they fonnd him. Bond was impressed by the broad expanse of the Missis sippi river. J'My," he said. "It's a big creek at that. Isn't it?" OPEN FORUM Marble-Faced Gas Station made up of rep resentatives of non -communist governm e n t s. This ranges the Western Reich on the side of amity with neighbors against which it twice waged world wars of aggression. Chanc e 1 1 o r Konrad Adenauer summed up the action as a commitment on the side of the West against the East, and a contribution to world peace. That's the way it also struck many close observers. This historic move came on from this armchair it looks like an accurate appraisal. Particularly interesting is the Times' view that "there is no doubt that the present temper of the German people as a whole is pacific." That is an idea which this column has advanced more than once. As a matter of fact lions which the government ad vanced to Lustron. Thus, in ef fect all the American taxpayers helped to subsidize the senator from Wisconsin. But not generally known is that McCarthy had done a ter rific job for the real estate lob by prior to receipt of the fee. Not only had he engaged In a tenacious, vitriolic battle against th twn wnrlri tinr nr... nr.. clpitated by Prussian aggression the housin8 bill a battle just as which took advantage of the un questioning loyalty of the aver tenacious as his present row over alleged communism in govern- West German action in joining the Schuman plan is seen in the smashing defeat given the com- the heels of Western Germany's munists in a Ruhr election Sun- age citizen to his government "ent but he also dominated uic aftiuiiiuuciii ill uuusv-scil- at housing committee supposed to Investigate the need for pub- An interesting corollary to the llc houln and his adaptability to regimen- tation (Editor's Note: Letters to the Open Forum must be signed by the author, with address noted. Letters most be kept to the 300-word limit or else they will have to be cut to that length.) To the Editor: The Salem city council has not been remiss In it's guardianship of the fringe land around the Oregon state capitol; furthermore there is not any truth in the Insinuations that the mayor or Salem city council are marble headed for relaxing their zoning ordinance and permitting a marble-faced . . . gasoline wagon station to be located so near "the Capitol." council of Salem if they care to We have not only been diffi- have our capital arrangements dent but exceedingly dilatory; in Saiem mterfering with tke have moved to Portland or Eola de!ired commercial exploitation Germany are as important as the , .. ,.. k. of their city? designs the girl next door has .MindiJ In, th.'rv..! fi n nntri.r - . On junior, odd years. Did anyone ask the mayor or Definition of a love poacher: A fellow who tries to corral some other guy's dear with a fast buck. They say money talks, and maybe that explains why a dol- " lar bill just whispers nowadays. There hasn't been so much change from the good old days. People used to fall off horses. Now they fall off diets and water wagons. An optimist Is a fellow who hands a dime to a nightclub hat check girl and waits for a smile. Two young honeymooners spread their picnic lunch in a bed of poison ivy. Well, that's one way of starting from scratch. The difference between mar riage and a good circus is in rings. Never believe that staying in a lowly job will guarantee you a secure future. Even ashtrays get out of style. Since we got silent popcorn and people can actually hear the dialogue on movie screens, the real criticism of Hollywood is beginning. You can never convince mother that Stalin's overtures to BRYAN J. ENGLISH 4213 N.E. 9th ave. Portland One kind of experience gives a man character. The other kino) just puts circles under his eyes. Help, Police! House Stolen Oil City, Pa., June II State police today reported a all from a man who told them: "I just found out I bought a stolen house." State police checked to see If any houses had been stolen lately. Sure enough, there was one. . Robert J. Bchnitier of Venus reported someone tor dowa and hauled away his II by If foot summer cottage In Pine Grove township sometime between May II and May 18. Investigation showed the caller, who was not Identified, had bought Rchnltser's dismantled house. Stats police said Sehnltser will get the house back In pieces. Snake in the Mail Baffles 'Em Asusa, Calif., June 21 A snake la the mall confounded the parcel post department. Dellverymaa Cnrtis Anderson found It ander a parrel. Snake expert Edward R. Dickson said It's a boa constrictor, 14 Inches long, perhaps a week old, Dickson, who took charge f the reptile, says th boa Is a native to South and Central America. Now the pmtle In the post office Is how It got here. Best guess Is thst It stowed away In air mall. Signs of the Times i Detroit, June II OJB Signs of the times: David Voke, 55, was first arrested la 1911 for stealing a fcorse. Since then, he's been arrested 49 times and convicted for 15 crimes, mostly car theft and larceny. Authorities sought him today for stealing a CadlUaa. . acceptance of the sensational French Schuman plan to pool Europe's coal and steel, thereby throwing the vast resources of the German Ruhr into the melt ing pot with the great French Interests. Thus these two tradi tional enemies finally have Join ed hands at least temorarily to work for peace. The London Times sums up the development thus: "The Schuman plan which, in the German view, is intended to lay the economic foundation for political union in Western Eu rope, was largely responsible for the federal German govern ment's decision to accept the in vitation to join the council of Europe. By voluntarily join ing it, the federal German gov- day to choose a new legislature for the state of North-Westphalia. The Reds got only 5.5 per cent of the vote, and dropped from third to fifth place in party standing. Splinter par ties trying to revive Nazism also received only tiny support. Representatives of the govern ments which have subscribed to the Schuman plan are meeting in Paris today to devise ways and means of making this far reaching project work. Those participating are France. Bel gium, Holland, Luxembourg, West Germany and Italy. One of Europe's chief coal and steel nations Is missing-Britain. Socialist Prime Minister At- ernment of fifty million people tlee has declared that his ov. nailed its political colors to the ernment wishes to help and not Western mast hinder the plan to integrate Eu "There is no doubt that the rope's coal and steel. He holds present temper of the German the door open to future coopera people as a whole is pacific tion but says Britain can't go and that the Idea of a federated Into the project without know Europe In which they can peace- Ing more about it. fully deploy their energies and The point Is that Britain's so talents is the one which, for the clalists are fearful of entrust time being at any rate, has most Ing their all-important steel and atrongly seised the public im- coal industries to the dictation In the closed-door battle over the appointment of this commit tee, in October, 1947, Senator Tobey of New Hampshire, chair man of the banking and cur rency committee, turned up with proxies of four senators in his 'Pitch' to Okies Puts Station On Radio Spot San Diego, June 21 UJ9 Ra dio station KSDO of San Diego today nervously wrote to nine candidates for secretary of state in Oklahoma, offering them three tree radio commercials in San Diego for their cam paigns toward the July t pri mary. The gesture was ordered by Station Manager Jack Heinti after he discovered Cowboy Disk Jockey Bostick Wester, had used a unique "pitch" over KSDO for his uncleJohn D. Conner, one of the Oklahoma candidates. "Will aU you Okies in San Diego please write to your kin folks back home and ask them to vote for my uncle, John D. agination.' ciallst nations, that Is, countries That's strong mustard, coming which maintain the capitalist as It does from a leading news- system. This situation has creat- paper of a country which has ed a harraning political ques- suffered so grievously at the tion for Mr. Attlee'a govern- hands of Germany. However, mtnt to solve. Conner, for secretary of State." of a pool dominated by non-so- wester told KSDO audiences. But because of FCC regula tions regarding political time, Heinti warned Wester to halt his campaigning, offered Con ner's opponents the equivalent time. UV SMt'l i li ! I II .Vo GOLDEN'S FUNERAL SERVICES 85 0 DOWNTOWN IJOMU I. 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