Pa? f THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Ortgoa Friday, April 8, Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 ' BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher J " GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus . Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketq St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want , Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. . rail LmmS Win Sort) 1 th iMtliM Mi Hi Tk, Dn4 Praia, Tlw AuMiatM rrm U txelarlralr eaiiutd to lb, uu let pubUutlos of in em dlipitchu trtolUa to II or otB.rwU andUM In thu jwiar m aba am paMUatd Unttln. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: : r Crrli Montalr, H.m U lloatlu, T.I0i Oat tin, S1S00. Bi 'Mall l roll, una, watoa. ciaenanai aaa Ttmam ootuiw; aonwii, .v.. M.soi Ont Ttr, .eo. MtU IUlur la Otmob: Moalhlr, ll fk,'5 , so.og; oat Ttar, 111.00. ar wtu uuiaia, vrnon. uhkui - -.... ona Tf, Hi.00. ...... WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND White House Debating What To Do About Joe McCarthy f Y DREW PEARSON ' rv - V - nnlAll Kirlhl I k.1 F Now that Governor Patterson and the state board of control, the three veteran wardens who made the prison investigation and deposed Warden Virgil O'Malley have all made public their reports in full, the public is better informed or the conditions existing at we aww pnaun which culminated in a change of administration and the appointment of Clarence TV Gladden as warden. Gladden recently retired after 28 years of experience with the federal bureau of prisons. The three wardens making the report Joseph E. Ragen of Illinois, L. E, Clapp of Idaho and G. Norton Jameson of South Dakota declared that the trouble first stemmed . from interference with the authority of the wardens by a senate committee in 1951 who interviewed inmates and granted numerous concessions to them. They were back ed up by private organizations which championed the complaints or tne trouDie-maxing convicw. The committee's action, the investigators found, was "a direct slap at the warden's" authority and enough to render him useless as head of the institution." Warden O'Malley ' "should have had things under control in less than a year and a half that he has functioned." But they gave him credit for his efforts in the realm of prisoner classifica- tion. education, health and recreation, placing the blame for conditions on lack of discipline. Their report was summarized as follows: "Your committee has had many years experience In institu tions of this type, and has visited many others, and previously aerved on similar investigating; committees, but we do not hesi tate to state that the degradation, lack of control and general s confusion in the Oregon state penitentiary is without parallel In our experience. ... We feel the institution can burst Into : flaming revolt at almost any moment. "Last year there was a 81 per cent turnover in prison pay roll because guards were beaten-up by prisoners with little or no punishment, 25 beatings were reported last year alone. Bootleg pruno flowed among inmates, homemade knives were frequently found. Homosexuality was rife." In his defense statement, O'Malley said that the three investigating wardens spent only 50 minutes inside the , walls of the prison during their three days' investigation. He shifted the blame for many deficiencies on divided . control with Superintendent George Alexander, denied ' some charges and intimated that the entire investigation was "rigged" against him, and no attempt made to verify - the charges made by the "parade of witnesses," nor any 'inspection made of prison records. He added: "Furthermore, it Is my opinion that it is a highly unethical practice for any committee or board evaluating a report to ' codemn anyone without giving that person a chance to refute the charges made by a reactionary group of wardens." .' O'Malley stated that when he "took over, the charge was made that the prison was run by a group of inmates, but the group has been eliminated. While inmates are not strictly regimented, they are under control." , , v ' '' The record of the prison speaks for itself for it has been front page news very frequently since O'Malley took charge. He is right on the divided control issue, but the legislature will remedy that. Fifty minutes within the prison tells the story to experienced experts in prison management. If the parade of witnesses, guards, etc., testifying as to prison conditions had taken place within the walls of the prison, the prisoners would have known of it and another riot probably follow and fresh demands fesulted, rendering discipline hard to restore. The board of control has acted wisely in effecting a surprise change in administration it attained the objec tive without violence. It is to be hoped that it works out satisfactorily tor despite the lobsisters, the prison should not be a country club. . .. , . CRACKING DOWN ON G.O.P. MISDEEDS Some Republicans are doubtless shocked that their own party should so soon be embarrassed by some of the same seamy situations that plagued their rivals, the Democrats. during tneir long reign and especially during Its last few years under Truman. The national chairman, Roberts, resigned the other day, presumably by invitation after a committee repre senting the Republican legislature of Kansas reported that he had violated the spirit if not the letter of a state law requiring lobbyists to register. Now Attorney General Brownell has ordered a grand jury investigation or reports that certain individuals have tried to sell postmaster appointments in Georgia. The individuals are not yet identified, but they are presum ably either Republicans or pro-Eisenhower Democrats. The other kind of Democrats wouldn't be influential in choosing postmasters. This recalls similar situations in Louisiana and Mississippi involving Truman Democrats. We said these situations are similar to recent ones during the "fair deal," and they are, but there is a trreat difference in the way they are handled, and here we think is a tipoff on what will prove to be a fundamental differ ence between the Truman and Eisenhower administra tlons. ' Where Democratic scandals were allowed to fester and attempts to expose them were regularly blocked by ad ministration officials the Republican derelictions are promptly dragged out into the open and "appropriate action" taken. The G.O.P. national chairman walked the plank within 24 hours after the Kansas legislative committee reported, and certainly the energetic Brownell wasted no time in getting after those fellows who are reportedly trying to aell oostmasterships. The new administration cannot hope all its supporters will be honest and above board, but if it hops onto every indication of impropriety as it has to date the country will be happy. And tnere won t do too many derelictions. Washington Top question being debated inside the White House, next to peace in Korea, is whether steps should be tat en to crack down on the fast- dancing, quick-jabbing senator from Wisconsin, Joseph R. McCarthy or, as he's called Inside the White House, "Jumpuv Joe.", ;. One Ike adviser frankly ad' mitted the other day that It was never expected McCarthy would be a problem. "We didn't anticipate that Jumpln' Joe would precipitate things as fait as he has," ad mitted C. D. Jackson, former publisher of Fortune magazine, now intimate adviser to the president. "We thought he'd give us a little breathing space. Frankly, he's a problem." At first the president duck ed any move to tangle with McCarthy. He acted as if he wanted to stay just as far away as possible from any showdown, even with his own administration involved. When McCarthy first began delving Into the Voice of America, Carl McCardle, as sistant secretary of state in charge of the voice, phoned the White House and asked press secretary Jim Hagerty to get Ike to say something at his press conference to squelch McCarthy. Ike declined. Furthermore, when a news question was asked at the press conference, he indirectly supported Mc Carthy by saying it was the right of congress to Investigate. WRONG ADVICE This, of course, was prior to the bitter battle over Ambas sador Bohlen. Since then, White House advisers report that their chief is - sore, has stiffened toward McCarthy, and has decided the advice given him by Vice-President Nixon and at first by. Taft is wrong. Nixon had believed that the administration should try to get along with McCar thy and that McCarthy in turn would play ball. This was the same advice given Ike during the election campaign just before his speech in McCarthy's home state. Governor Dewey had urged that Ike cold-shoulder McCarthy on this trip. But Arthur Summerfield, together with Senators Ferguson of Michigan and Hlckenlooper of Iowa, flew to Ike s private car, finally persuaded him to re verse this. However, when Ike Inserted two paragraphs In his Mil waukee speech praising Gen eral Marshall, whom McCar thy had so bitterly castigated, Summerfield arranged for Mc Carthy to come up the service elevator' of the Pere Marquette hotel in Peoria and confer pri vately with Ike. At that meet ing, McCarthy persuaded Ei senhower to reverse himself again and take out the two paragraphs praising Marshall. IKE CAN GET HAD White House advisers say that despite this appeasement, the president can get awfully mad, and It's a well-known fact that when be gets mad, he usually stays mad. However, a man who 1 spent all bis life away from the hot and hectic arena of politics, usually shies away from political battles, with senators. This was true of Herbert Hoover, who like II senhowre, had spent much of his time abroad. The presi dent feels that he cannot fire a senator in the same way he could demote or transfer an army officer who gets out of line. Some advisers recall that over in the justice department is the senate elections commit tee report on McCarthy's weird financial operations, one of the most comprehensive reports ever made about a member of the senate. Some believe the Justice department should study this report and let the chips fall where they may. But more conservative leaders on Capitol Hill are very much opposed. That, In brief, is the present White House quandary. MERRY-GO-ROUND The American "melting pot" was brought home to President Eisenhower while lunching with Congressman Al Siemin ski of New Jersey, son of a Polish immigrant. "My father had many hopes for the future in this land of freedom and opportunity, but he never thought a son would one day sit down to eat with the presi dent," reported the congress man from New Jersey . . . Congressman Brooks Hays of Arkansas showed the president short-snorter the president himself had signed some years before. , The Arkansas told Ike how he had proudly displayed the signature to his young son. "The only signature he made a fuss about," said Hays, "was that of another signer, Bing Crosby" . . . Recalling a meet ing with Walter Reuther and CIO leaders, Ike told friends he was struck by their "youth and mental alertness," and that he genuinely enjoyed the "fast play of wits among them." Ike said Reuther had urged "gen uine collective bargaining," with plenty of freedom be tween labor and industry. "I told him and the other CIO leaders," . added Ike, "that I would be sure to be in their corner if they would just stay with that." EISENHOWER PIPELINES When President Ike prac tices his golf shots on the White House lawn he uses only his irons never 'his driver. The president is afraid one of his long shots might hook or slice right out of the White House grounds ... President Eisenhower tells friends that pickets who parade in front of (Concluded en Pace s. Column 1) LEGISLATORS as Sen by Murray Wade RKkTW I 1 1 1 1 liTfUlrrfinf 1 1 S ?M!fe--r W. A I Til il I N (sLJ . ill Fred Lamport foulil for equal gattuv boost forslate rosters in tf lower . bracktts RerJoeHarvey a friend or, cne , eraer cicixeno POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Two Vets Parley $5000 to Huge Business Salem 22 Years Ago By IEN MAXWELL Bank Bandit Wants Juvenile Treatment Portland (U.B Seventeen-year-old Glen R. Sullsky of Umatilla, acsused of the 18, 000 armed robbery last month of the Mt Angel branch of the U.S. National bank, Thursday told a federal court Judge he wanted to be prosecuted as a juvenile. Assistant U.S. District Attor ney Edward Twining, however, said it would be up to the V.3. attorney general whether the youth would be prosecuted as a juvenile or Indicted by a Scientists are checking un An so-called jet streams ot atr above the earth which around the world from west to vast in both the northern and southern hemispheres at the rate of 150 to 300 miles an BOUT. jit' April I, 1931 If the council adopts the proposed contract whereby Sa lem would agree, subject to approval by the people, to pay the Oregon-Washington Water Service - company 11,100,000 for the Salem water system, plus the cost of building an unfinished filter plant, it is certain that an injunction suit will be immediately started to halt the deal. . Resolutions have been adopt ed by the state board of high' er education agreeing that a policy of retrenchment must be adopted to chop $1,800,000 from the budget in the last 18 months of the present blen-nlum. Hal Hoss, secretary of state, proposes that expenses ot all state departments and institutions, due to depressed economic conditions, be re duced from 18 to 20 per cent or even more. Corduroy trousers, begrimed with months and even years ot turd service, have been blamed by school and health authorities for an epidemic of scabies or seven years itch rag ing among boys at Salem high school. Some boys, it is re ported, have worn their cor duroys without cleaning until the garments were almost able to stand alone. Now it appears that more girls than boys are suiiering xrom scabies. Immediate construction wnrV on the so-called suner-hlsh way between Orvann ritv and Portland has been authorized by the state highway commls sion. a State highway commission h&l affTMri tn niuh... tta " ' fu.vimee uig acres in the Sliver Falls coun I try to be dedicated Bi a state park. In the acreage are nine of 10 famous falls, all framed natural settings During a 24 hour Interval of this week 7.67 inches of rain fall descended upon Valsetz. Train service has been cut off for several days because of landslides and the Valsetz mill shut down for one day be cause of high water. Hop dealers in the Willam ette valley have ascertained that 31,902 bales of hops re maining from 1930, 1929 and 1928 crops remain in hands of growers. Price for the 1929 crop is quoted at five and six cents a pound, for the 1930 crop, 13 and 14c. New York, VP) Two young veterans here in less than seven years, have, parlayed $5,000 and a dream Into a multi-million dollar, business empire built on fire extin guishers, haircuts and house hold chemicals. Every thing that Lewis Wes- sel and Alvin Meyer touch seems to turn to gold and they Can't stop touching things. "We try to stay out of new things now we've got about all we can do," said Lewis. "But if it's exciting, we can't stay away from it." Wessel, now 36, and Meyer, 35, played in the streets of New York together as boys and have been lifelong friends. Each had a .small business and had to liquidate it when they went into service during World War H. Lewis, as an Air Force lieu tenant in Europe, and Al, as a combat artilleryman,' dreamed of going back into business on their own when the firing ceased. "Neither of us wanted to work for anyo:n slse," said Al. One evening in 1946, while they were playing bridge, Lew mentioned a new product he was interested in a compact fire extinguisher, no larger In than a flashlight, for use homes or autos. i ' Al liked the idea, too. They formed a partnership with $5,000 they had saved. Lew, an exception card . player, had saved some "of his $2,500 from his wartime winnings. "Everyone we talked to said we were foolish," Al recalled. "They said people wouldn't buy anything they didn't ex pect to use and nobody really expects to use a fire extinguisher." But by recruiting a nation wide sales force, the two part ners soon were selling the cheaply-priced fire extin guisher like grass seed In April. . At first they commissioned a metal firm to make them, then bought the firm with their profits. Now their metal plant and its products gross about $1,500,000 a year: "We got Into the haircut business by accident," said Al. "An accountant with us told us that the hotel barbershop he went to was for sale, and he thought It would be a good buy. "So we bought it, and took the accountant in as partner. The shop did so well we de cided to try another." They ended up by buying By HAL BOYLE the largest barbershop chain In America 18 barbershops and eight beauty parlors in New York, Baltimore and Pitts burgh. The chSln takes in bet ter than $2,000,000 annuauy. In 1951 the two partners commissioned a friend, who was visiting Europe, to jook around for new products. He came back excited over an item he had found in Sweden. A fluid in which household silver could be dipped and freed almost instantly of tarnish. 'We snapped it up," said Al, "and sold more than $1,000,000 worth in eighth months last year. This year we expect it will do $3,000,000." He and Lew have decided the best field for quick profits in America today lies in house- bold chemicals products to lighten a wife's chores. They are currently preparing to market a new wall cleaning paste and a liquid de-mother which can be poured into a washing machine and protect woolens from moths for a year. The two partners work as a Syracuse Stereotype 2-Day Strike Ends Syracuse, N.Y. W) News hungry Syracusans were ap peased today as their two dally newspapers operated normally after a two-day strike of AFL stereotypers. . The 27 employes yesterday accepted a retroactive pay package and a $5 weekly raise that brought their base scale to $96, and voted to return to the afternoon Herald-Journal and the morning Post-Standard. team, are closer than brothers. . "We do everything" to gether," said Al. "And, we switch the pressure back and forth between lis." Both take pride in the fact they have built their empire on youth; "Of our 12 executives," said Lew, "ten are in their 20's or 30's. I'm getting to be one of the old men." HIGH PRICE OF HAIRCUTS Grants Pass Courier A 20 per cent increase in the cost ot haircuts recently de creed by the Barbers Union in the Coos Bay area has brought forth a scathing editorial in the Coos Bay Times. The editorial declares that the new rates "are away out of line," and that "barbers are engaged in what has the ear marks of a conspiracy to set prices in restraint of . free trade." The Times editorial writer, himself a union man, con cludes: "We know of no other way to combat the apparent price-gouging other than to let the hair grow longer or, per haps, try a little home barber-ing." Thus, we are reminded that union members also are con sumers. The Albany Democrat-Herald adds Its bit anent the Coos Bay price of haircuts, as follows: "Oregon barberS no doubt will do a bit of thinking be fore they follow the lead of their Coos Bay fellow-shearers . . . With the price tending up ward, some ot the housewives will be wondering whether they hadn't better sharpen up the old shears again or buy a pair of clippers." funeral Service Since 1I7S Iwm Mil . Chared tt Nrrf "UNO WHO" - is the ordinary little guy who represents YOU, the public, in the REG MANNING CARTOONS starting Monday on the editorial page of the CapitalJournal Whatever comes, poor I' UNO WHO knows he'll get It N THE END! OPEN FORUM DISAGREES WITH EDITORIAL To the Editor! Vnn. -j... . . "Banning Private EntowSS (Anril 1) was a rr,.,?PU. near sightedness or won. n annnria Ilk It ... . . ":' " an official of th pn i How do you hold a power eoj "' i.'a hi rus etm, paign promises? Did it ever occur tn v.. .. if the Deschutes and other tributaries were h.Zt? off the Indians would hav. nothina to fish for . T,, Falls? . So far as you are r.i. to "SDortamen." flh. principal exterminators of flS! "J vjmuuu you Should be peddling that on a soap boi on a street corner instead of writing editorials like that ont "j" uoiicr understand ing Of the SlOW destnirtin. - suitable spawning grounds for aiuiaun una ouier sea run fish will change your opinions. Or could it? w Maynard C. Drawson. .... 455 State St ' COUNT YOUR SHEEP To thft HMftni. Mv j. -"j nua aa rives from the Durbin family old Odd Fellows cemetery, u do some of the West. . tt No male West or Durbin would ever have thought of trusting: the other with a .... sheep, even in a graveyard, on a ubtk nigni. So the emintv ivmit i.m.ij count their sheep every mora. inff. ana reearaieii nf tuhot preachers may have said at the services. 4 , OSWALD WEST Presbyterians Expect . To Raise $12,000,000 Portland W) Presbyterians will reach the 12 million dollar expansion goal they set this year, Dr. Herman N. Morse, New York City, said here Thursday. - The moderator of the Gen eral Assembly, he said churches already have guaranteed $10,. 600,000, and the rest will be pledged before early summer. The money is for construc tion of new churches and ex pansion of seminaries. WE SAVE furs? BECAUSE! Mr basincM requires a ttpftal metM sod well entbliibM bank credit. fm dependent on mj Ml iff. String, proridc me with money torrscuionisndother luzuriet. 3 srr'i aaatBaTia:vws . . Farming's big business tna savings gie me the necesssry credit to operate economicsllf and profiiibly. I're seen how strings ba helped others during lime ol illness and emergencies. ...ALSO Deposits ' made oo or before April 10th earn interest from April 1st at First National, open 10 to 5 six days a week, including Saturday, for your convenience. V SAIIM HCH FIjlST WATIOWAI ' ANK (XT Wl otfoo" roof-