THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Mtm, Oregon Tneeday, March K 1958 Capital Journal : An Independent Ntwspoper -Established 1 888 . BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published vtry ofttrnoon excpt Sunday ot . 444 Ch meketo St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want , Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. na u mn unu tt a.ii.m wnm n 1 Th. AmocUM Fwi to aelHtnlr uua thi i jw ''"""J! all m aUMtahM tIIU4 M at ItunrlM trvUM in tbto ppct In am publldus tb.nl. fi, -, s,.-' i, SUBSCRIPTION KATISj ' : - ?' ;: Br eutmi Mooihtr, ii.mi sis num.. w.Mt o ""L'? if1!! roil, wm.nw " "-..TTw,:J..-S: M.UI on Tr, . u ""--...rs, rfc-inT .S Fl.oo; on. Tttr, 113.0. mi mmu odhhi www - Out M, SU-00. typical McCarthy smearing n, n.fv amIi Mlatinm committee after thor- ..,.1. ifivaiftmfinn flnnfirmed President Eisenhower's nomination of Charles B. Bohlen to be ambassador to Russia. Notwithstanding the staunch support given Bohlen by Secretary of State Dulles and the president himself, McCarthy is continuing m cnKwUii wu tactics based, as Senator George says, on anonymous letters, rumor and hearsay in the FBI's secret report to the state department." None of it, Dulles says, Involves nnn of Bohlen's loyalty and security. Yet Mc Carthy wanta "a He detector test" . - . -. , thm Incident has demonstrated tne unsuDstan- ut.A ,i,.r nr far that whenever McCarthy cracks the whip the president and hia advisers jump and obey, and that his defiance prevails in congress on matters affect ing executive prerogatives. , Dulles has officially stated that Bohlen is "uniquely oualified" for the Moscow post, especially since the succes sion of Malenkov to Stalin's job and the increasing tension of Soviet relations witn tne wesi ana me biiuckb on American and British aircraft. The need is imperative that the U.S. have a qualified ambassador at Moscow as soon as possible, and the appointment of one is important in a personal way ana we preeiaenrs prerogative 01 oi- . fii-A. ' .r . .;-;' An ambassador does not make foreign policies, though his report may influence them. His is not the function of a policy maker that function belongs to the president end nis caDinei ana tneir xoreign expena. Objection to confirming Bohlen was based on his de fense of concessions made to Stalin by Roosevelt at Yalta. That is not the issue for he was not chosen as a policy maker. The secret pacts are denounced by the re publicans on grounds that neither FDR nor HST had legal powers to make them and that they were dupes of Stolen when they did. Bohlen did testify, however that Nationalist China should have been represented, instead of ignored at Yalta and its territorial claims should not have been vacated by wartime allies. McCarthy has no valid case against Bohlen as the senate will probably recognize it by his confirmation in spite of McCarthyism. THE 'SKYSCRAPER' BILL A perennial piece of legislation, commonly known as the "Skyscraper" bill was buried by the house of repre sentatives Monday by an overwhelming vote. This bill would have removed an excise tax exemption granted to building owners who derive 85 per cent of their income from rentals. This exemption was granted to these building owners when the law was enacted in 1929 for t principal msont: i; ; , , i ' ' Tint, thai the bulldlnc owners Mid a heavy property tax bated on a valuation that was at leut a third higher than the .; avenge valuation piacea on ower property; ana, . Second, that the building owners did not enjoy any personal : property onset as oia owier corporation. Rep. Lee Ohmart, chairman of the house tax committee, who along with seven other members of the committee, brought in a report recommending indefinite postpone . ment of the bill, declared that the same reasons for the exemption exist today that prompted the exemption back in 1929. Every time this bill has come before the legislature it has been defeated. Until the equalization program now being carried on statewide by the state tax commission under which it is hoped to bring about more equity in valuations of various types of property, the effort to - bring about repeal of this exemption should be forgotten. It is simply v waste of the legislators' time to make an effort to do something that it is generally agreed cannot be done until the equalization program baa been com- pleted. : GOOD NEWS FOR SALEM The public does not yet know what the sale of the government alumina plant here to the Harvey Machine company will mean in terms of future production and payroll and probably the buyers do not know either, to a certainty. '; v. But the plant was doing no one any good in government hands, and the buyers expect to use it or they would not have agreed to the $825,000 purchase price, so we are assured an industry where we have none at present. And it appears to be an industry with a future. If alumina can be made from local clays instead of imported from distant parts of the world at a competitive price a large expansion seems likely. The buyers are obviously laying a substantial wager that the project is economic ally feasible. So Salem has taken an important industrial stride, the second so far this month. The Moore Business Forms company earlier announced that it will virtually double the size of its plant here. Salem is on the way. LEGISLATORS as Seen by Murray Wade I w 1 1 Rcp.RooerickT. 7finkS tlosar tLlmosl peopt A ptricn mho sayt Mfensmtttf then Ith him run ttlartt-hktMM itietmu jealtt flit tUf'. :I1 icX.BgrlDAY . mil t safety conlrot tignaJr Henry SerfoH Chairman S if.vSSL.... WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Eager Beaver Public Relations Firm Gets Railroads in Dutch Y DREW PEARSON Willys Merges With Kaiser's New York (U.M Common stockholders of W i 1 1 y i-Over-land Motors, Inc., meet April 34 to vote on a merger with the Kaiaer-Frazer Corp. that will make the new firm the fourth largest automotive man ufacturer in the world. Negotiations were completed lait night for purchase of Willys-Overland for an estimated $62,300,000, by the Kaiser Ma nufacturing Corp. wholly- owned subsidiary of Kaiser Frazer. Edgar F. Kaiser, president of Kaijer-Frsier, said the mer ger is the biggest of its kind in the history of the automo tive industry. The new firm will rank fourth In size behind General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co., and Chrysler Corp. It pushes Studebaker Corp., the present fourth-ranking auto maker, In to fifth place. The transaction is subject to approval by Willys-Overland common stockholders and by the Reconstruction Finance Corp., which has 948,417,000 in loans outstanding to Kaiser-Frazer. Millions Saved, Is Post Office Promise Washington AMD A post of fice department plan which would improve rural postal service and save the taxpayers millions of dollars" at the same time ir scheduled to get under way April 1. Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield announced the reorganization plan yesterday. It would establish new rural free delivery routes and revise other RFD and star contract routes to conform with popula tion shifts and highway im provements since World War n. i Washington. A new chap ter in the battle between the railroads and the trucks has just been revealed in a suit brought by the Pennsylvania Motor Truck association against 31 eastern railroads and against the eager-beaver public relations firm of Carl Byoir & Associates. It indicates that the Byoir firm has got the railroads Into a neck of trouble. For the way this high-powered public rela tions office went about influ encing public opinion was by paying a member of the New York State Federation of Wom en's clubs, by subsidizing a newspaper columnist, by put ting money behind the Citizen's Tax League of New York, and by paying the expenses of a member of the Maryland state highway commission. '' ' - WHAT DID THEY KNOW? How much the eastern rail roads knew about the opera tions of . their public-opinion molder has not been clearly re vealed in the court battle a battle which may result in some moves by congress. However, the railroads must have known that Carl Byoir was Investigated by the Me Cormack . committee prior to Pearl Harbor for being a pro pagandist from Nazi Germany, and that official testimony re vealed that, the.. Byoir firm "handled the contract .with the German tourist bureau with the fee for service set at $6,000 a month . . . The contract was secured with the help of George Sylvester Viereck (lat er sentenced to six years In Jail for being a Hitler agent) . The committee linos tnat the services rendered by Carl Byoir Associates were largely of a propaganda nature." The propaganda technique which Byoir used on behalf of the eastern railroads, now spread out in sworn testimony, shows the following amazing moves to Influence or bam boozle public opinion. - 1. Bessie Q. Mott, former. chairman ox ine puduc anairi committee of the New York State Federation of Women's clubs, received $500 monthly from Byoir to make a series of speeches attacking the truckers. 3. Byoir paid "expenses" to Clinton H. Johnson, public re lations director for the Mary land state highway commis sion, at the same time the highway commission was con ducting crucial tests to deter mine what effect heavy trucks had on highway maintenance. 8. Sworn testimony . by Byoir employee C. Colburrt Hardy reveals that Byoir paid newspaper columnist J. Joseph Grlbbins about $250 for "re search" on truck damage to highways and helped promote sale of Grlbbins' column. In a Byoir Interoffice memo, Grlb bins was described as valuable "because he has never been known to operate as a front man In the past." - 4. Byolr's firm prepared anti-trucking speeches for Ar- temus Leslie, Pennsylvania in surance commissioner. New York State Assemblyman Leo Noonan also received speech- writing help. . 5. Testimony reveals Byolr's outfit bought, printed, and mailed thousands of post cards in the name of the Pennsyl vania Association of Township Supervisors. This la a group representing the small towns of Pennsylvania. 6. The Citizens' Tax League of New York also came to the support of the railroads. The league was receiving about $300 per month from Byoir through its director, Mr. Men- lH. ' 7. Byolr's firm helped of ficials of the Ohio state depart ment of highways In gathering anti-truck material. And when the department's public rela tions director, Harold Cohen, made a trip to New York, By oir picked up the tab. USING THE FARMERS An Interoffice memo of June, 1951, to Jerry Swinehart, presi dent of Carl Byoir tc Associ ates, from Reynolds Girdler, a staff, member working on the railroad account, sheds further light on the Byoir technique. "When the (railroad) presi dents decided to embark on this program, they decided that change in their tactics was abandon completely attacks by the railroad industry on truck ing subsidies, and, in their stead, carry on the fight by means of other affected groups. This meant, in the final analy sis, involving other people and getting ; them to fight your battles. "Obviously, the only people that you could involve directly were people who had some rea son to do something for the railroads.:.- ' f "vAa an example, we were able to . mobilize the farm groups partly out of railroad association with certain farm leaders, but mainly through the deal we made in support of the farm radio network. Everyone understood the quid pro quo, so the alliance was a strong and reliable one." (The rail roads had purchased time from an upstate New York radio net work owned by nine farm or ganizations.) , . .'' "We formed - the Empire State Transport League in New York because we needed an or ganization that could legiti mately mail all types of propa ganda on the general subject of trucks and highways." The memo then recites some of the problems involved, In stirring up the public against the truckers. "We went first to Charley Symington of Symington Gould. Everyone In the rail road business told us Charley would do anything to help the railroads. Charley ducked the Job neatly. Others ' either ducked out entirely or promis ed to do things they never did. We wound up with a few fel lows, some of whom allowed their names to be used, but that was all. "One motor club we tried to get was largely owned by a director of the Erie Railroad. We tried to get Johnston, presi dent of the Erie, to speak to his director and get that motor club to join the fight. We never heard another word." The 1951 memo concludes with a recommendation that the railroad presidents be urg ed to show more interest in the campaign so their subordinates would be more cooperative. . Thus developed the million-dollar-a-year campaign to "ed ucate" the American public. (OopnUhi, its J) OPEN FORUM Takes Gloomy View of Trend Toward Cities To the Editor: In an editorial In early March captioned "Declining Farm Population," the author lauds such a migration, ana contends there Is nothing to be alarmed about The good editor's interpreta tion on this vital matter Is as far removed from the truth and the general good of our country as would be a land scape in Peru compared to one In Pennsylvania If you will.' Cities always were consider ed cemeteries for humanity. The city dweller misses that closeness to nature which is a symbol of. faith and a reminder of eternal values. They miss life's yearning for itself. That reaching out and at least touch the fingertips of nature. In the depth of himself he loses that feeling of kinship with all life and of participa tion in its mysterious process as It were that feeling of being an instrument of God. Unfortunately, gullible greed has brought to bear a totalita rian philosophy of Survival of the fittest upon the farmer as well as upon other enterprises. In this city migration trend, farm real estate debts have risen, longer hours of work for the farmer have ensued, fewer hours of work for the city dweller. Where does this leave UsT - Instead of a higher standard of living, it; has produced a higher plane of mechanized non-profit living for the farm er. It is a gala day for the farmer if he can buy a new hat that he can call his own. We suppose the editor's next consolation to the farmer will be that today he lives longer than those of the 18th century. Yes, true, if we didn't how else could we pay our taxes! EDW. HAMMER, Mt. Angel, Route 1. TAPE RECORDER (Albany Democrat-Herald) The Roseburg News-Review says the circuit court of Doug las county is about to install a tape recording device to re cord the proceedings of the court. This Is designed to take the pressure off the court report er, who now takes a steno graphic report of everything that is said and done in the court. It's a tough job, and recesses are often called to give the hard-worked stenograph er a chance to rest his hand. It's still probably a long way in the future, but no doubt the time -will come when the court record will be completely kept by mechan ical process. This would save much time in the completion of the report, since part of the taped record could be typed while the recorder was still operating quietly in the courtroom. Salem 51 Years Ago y KEN MAXWELL March 34, 1903 Is anticipating explosions that will shake the treasury department to its very m j.lnn . Cinm nfflelal in UIIUIIMMinwi - charge of certain construction at a yearly salary oi juuu u building himself a $50,000 house.' - r.M it Williams, attor ney general under president Grant, was tooay onereo ui Republican nomination for m.vnr f Portland. Williams Is now over 80 years of age. , : An editorial in the Capital Journal states: "No matter which faction controls the state convention or the legislature, the state house has got to be cleaned up from top to bottom." A small audience greeted the "White Slave" Saturday owing to the most inclement weather of the season. But those who attended enjoyed the play very much, as it was the rich, old stvle melodrama full of action and good acting. Harry Ralph and his father yesterday rescued a dog that had fallen into an uncovered well on Fairmount hill. The dog's barking and whines at tracted Ralph and after hard work this pet that belongs to L. H. McMahan was saved from drowning. There should be a law against . leaving wells un covered as children as well as animals are liable to meet death in such a trap. J. H. Haas announces he will be Republican candidate for Marion county treasurer. Marion county Socialist's platform would put all pub lic officials on a flat salary, have government ownership of the locks at Oregon City and election of senators, the presi dent and supreme judges by a direct vote of the people. A weekly paper called Salem Weekly Democrat succeeds the Salem Weekly Review. A. M. Dalrymple and R. A. Harris will be publishers. . Mr. Dal rymple has been for some time an employe on the Journal force and is secretary of the Democratic central committee. He is a stalwart of stalwarts and a very competent man. Harris has been identified with the Socialist party and is an able writer. First issue of the Weekly will be out next week. Alderman Griswold has taken hold of a live wire. He is talking municipal ownership of light. , . - , Meneley Concert company will be in Salem April 1 at First Methodist church.. . . Jos. Meyer & Son, at the POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Hal Says They Don't Let You Get Any Fun Out of Illness ly HAL vuf Vnrlc Mt Have you had any fun being sick lately? If so, I'd like to know how. It seems to me there is a plot . Waan f11nw from cet- AWk w - ting even the slightest pleasure OUt OZ niS aumenu anyinuie. Ani n, wtnr vour wife and your best friends are all In on the conspiracy. . n iiri to he that a man. at the onset of a sore throat, a mild fever or an upset stomacn, .....1.1 ka 4n him tli with a sense of quiet satisfaction and mild self-importance. -nu vrilm would net and Dam per him, the neighbors would drop in lor a consoling cnai, the family doctor would come, feel his pulse, write a prescrip tion and say, "Just stay in bed, and you'll be as good as new In a few days." An illness then was a relax ing, satisfying, restful exper ience. All a fellow had to do" was gargle a bit, or gulp some foul tasting medicine every few hours. The rest of the time he could Just lie there and feel klmaAlf tiAallnff nr listen to the ...1.1 U .1 v radio or catch up on his read ing. Nobody blamed him for his illness. Falling sick and get ting well again were all part of normal living. ..... Not today. It is an insult to modern medicine if you get sick now. You are being ungrate ful to science. You get a sore throat, and de cide you will stay home and nurse it. That's what you think. You find out that peo ple don't stay home sick any more.'' ,-V;' "You're not going to stay nrminri here, mnaninff and groaning and feeling sorry for yourseu," says tne wue. -wnai nr we no vine monev into that hospital plan for?" "But I ain't sick enougn to go to a hospital" "Oh, yes you are. You know our doctor doesn't like to make home calls anymore. He's too busy. If I phone him, he'll tell you to go to tne nospitai. White Corner, "Salem's Great est Store," offers as Easter specials:. 5c standard Calico, yard, Sc; Amoskeag gingham, yard, 5c; bath towels, 15c; Lonsdale muslin, yard, 714 c; 75c taffeta silk, yard, 59c; 50c work shirts, 35c; 60c under wear, 37c; men'a socks, pair, 15c; 35c henrietta, yard, 19c. Rambler bicycles sold: by Shipp End Hauser range In price from $25 to $60 for chain less models. i , IOYLI He can treat half a dozen pa tients in the hospitals In the time It takes him to make one home call." Well, who wants to go to hospital with a sore throat? Once they get you on your back they might try to sell you an ulcer. So you gargle with salt water and plod weakly to work. At the office you feel sure of some sympathy. But what happens? When one of the other hired hands remarks you look a bit peaked, you paw tlr edly at your collar and mutter: ' "Ugh . . . throat . . . sore . . .. ugh." . . A look of intense science spreads over his face. "Hmra. It's probably psycho somatic." "Probably whom?" "f syenosomauc. . iuubi ius now are both physical and mental in origin. Have you been feeling frustrated lately?" "Certainly I've been feeling frustrated lately. Do you think I'm crazy? Anybody who Isn't frustrated is nuts." "Aha! That's just it. You probably aaid something you are sorry for. . And subconsc iously you are expressing your resentment at your throat. That is why it is sore. If you will -tint faea un to vour real problem like' a man, the sore ness will go away." "Never mind my sore throat," you reply. "Whty don't you go away?" But you are afraid to men tion your sore throat to anyone else, for fear he will diagnose it as a bottled-up urge to bite your mother-in-law. The truth is that everybody , today has the muddled idea that sickness : is unhealthy. That takes away all the fun and gives you a guilt complex. When you feel bad now, all you can do is wait silently until you feel better or die on your feet, still gamely proclaiming, "There's nothing wrong with me, Mom." . j Intestinal Infection Killed Society Beauty Los Angeles (U.B An autop sy revealed an acute Intestinal infection today in the death of San Francisco society beauty Conde Lee Benoist, heiress tot a brewery fortune, who died after being taken off the liner President Cleveland. Miss Benoist became ill aboard ship yesterday and was taken unconscious to the Queen of Angels hospital here where she died shortly after her arrival. BY BECK That Frustrated Feeling raW-te!rMT THEY",! Aw00 l MWTlSmX ASLEEP BUT THfc TEU VISION C l flj fSkWK VULONT 6 TILL BE J WJi 52vr V Srr " they'd J fi SjfV J I Jw"V.'ro''NEOi when ) Tri m II II VsSiA To-BuTi w- bjt J:. p Acklin's Boolery Acklin'j Jr. Boolery Arbuckle's Erich of New York Ermel's Colonial Furniture The Fashionelfe Fronk'j House of Carpels Cevurfz Furniture Co. Hamilton Furniture Co. Hutcheon Paint Co. Johnson's Store for Ladies Kay Woolen Mill Store lady Fair Hal Shop Margwen's Ed Williams HERE THEY ARE! Salem Merchants Represented in Today's EASTER PARADE! Miller's Dept. Store Montgomery Ward J. C. Penney Co. Price's Quisenberry Pharmacies 'Roberts Bros. Rohland's The Schlesinger Co. Sears, Roebuck & Co. The Smart Shop Stevens & Son The Towne Shop Vacuum Cleaner Clinic The Vogue Card Shop