Pare 4 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem. Oregon Tuesday, August 4, 1953 Capital AJournal 1 An Independent Newspoper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. ra lui Win UnU 1 (to iMkM fm ul Tk VHt trtm. fb AiucUlM W mdotmlj mllUM I tb aw lor rutUulloa all am whkih mdius u U w aiawviM araaiwa to tan m aaa alM m 9ukUud taenia. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Cirrhr! UoolhlT. II Hi 111 Ifnitlu. SMSi Oiw Yaw. Ill V Br U',n la tUHoa. roll. Linn. Eanlon. CIkUkh Countlw: Moathlr, toel n Moatku, M M: Om Ttu. W OO. Sir Ul) tiuwhm la Oiwoa: Uoathlr. H 00: SU UnUt, M.OOi On, Tin, moo. Br Mail ouUMa omoai hosuut, HJl au Mratu. aim: uu y,r, m .00. BACK TO LIFE FROM LIVING DEATH Exchange of allied prisoners is scheduled to begin Tues day evening when the Communists promise to turn over 12,763 captives of which 8,313 are Americans. Seventy Americans are due to walk to freedom in the first ex change. Not only have these POWs been confined In stockades with less rations some since early in the Korean conflict but most are unaware of world happenings occurring during their imprisonment. But they will soon learn that Joe Stalin is dead; Dwight Eisenhower has moved into the White House ending a 20- year Democratic reign. They will learn that Joe Lewis has hung up his gloves and Rocky R. Marciano is now the champ. And that a charming princess has been crowned queen of England. The allied command has released a kit which will be handed to all U.N. captives as they are released at Pan. muniom. Inside the manila folder are three illustrated booklets and a "welcome" letter from Gen. Mark Clark, U.N. Far East commander. One booklet tells the prisoners in capsule style what the outside world was doing while the soldiers sat in North Korean stockades. The first entry date is June 25, 1950 the day the war began. It closes with June 13, 1953, when Jimmy Carter retained his world lightweight crown at Madison Square Garden. A second booklet, bearing the blue and white U.N. globe and the words "Welcome Back " leads off with Clark's letter, outlines the situation in Korea and the events lead ing up to the signing of the armistice. The third booklet opens with a letter from the Eighth army commander, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, welcoming his returning men and then spells out, step by step, the processing each repatriate will receive on the route home. The booklet ends with bold black letters, "Bon Voyage." Doubtless the returned prisoners will appreciate the thoughtfulness of the U.N. command in furnishing them information of world happenings during the period they have been imprisoned. But we would guess that reading of the booklets will be delayed until they get that telephone call back to their loved ones who have been worrying over their safety over these many months. IKE AS A 'NEW DEALER' It takes all kinds of people to make a world and each kind sooner or late gets in its two bits worth in a democ racy such as ours, which makes it so interesting, if also a bit confusing at times. This thought is prompted by Utah Governor Lee's charge, made at the governors' conference in Seattle, that Eisenhower is a new dealer who's carrying on the Roosevelt-Truman policies. People who "worked their hearts out" for a change at Washington "now feel it's hopeless," the gloomy Utah head man observed. Lee was one of three Republican governors out of 26 who did not support Eisenhower for the Republican nom ination last year. One of these, Earl Warren of Califor nia, was running himself, so only two could be called anti Eisenhower. He is an extreme conservative and an ex treme economizer in state government, who takes it out of the hides of the schools as well as other government agencies. Eisenhower a new dealer? This will be quite a sour laugh to the real new dealers, the labor chiefs, the public power advocates, the "spend and spend" cult. Theso lock upon him as a conservative, and certainly with more reason than Gov. Lee has to envision him as a continu ation of Roosevelt and Truman. Whatever an exact definition of Eisenhower may be, he is no extremist. To a reactionary he looks liberal; to a radical he looks conservative. Actually he is a middle of the roader, and awfully close to the common denomina tor of the widely varying political thought of all of us. This could have considerable to do with the enormous vote he received last November and with the high popu larity rating the public opinion surveys give him today. despite the disappointments and frustrations of his first six months In the White House. AT OUR DOORSTEP n m x i ,tji .,. na i McMwtflljMcato Utfiiy,,,,. ii.h.iw na if POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Chances Lie All Around, Like Stepping Stones to Gold Mine By HAL BOYLI WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Pearson Recalls Last Two Meetings With Bob Taft MORSE RUNS TRUE TO FORM The first session of the 83rd congress ended as its weelky sessions all during the session have ended, with a long overtime harangue by Senator Wayne Morse of Ore gon, elected as a republican. He deserted the party in the '52 political campaign because he did not like the candidate he had helped nominate in the convention and viciously opposed for election. He proclaimed himself the independent party in the senate. Morse delayed senate adjournment, forcing the turning back of clock for an hour and 39 minutes after official adjournment time, delivering a harangue against the Eis enhower power policy he had made many times. He had a 41-page prepared address, but due to the impatience of the few senators listening to it, cut it short, putting big sections into the Congressional Record without reading them. The entire speech will probably be mailed to Oregon constituents, as is customary. Morse denounced Interior Secretary McKay as he has many times as "Giveaway McKay" the "philanthropic Ore gonian whose specialty is hydropower bargain bazaars conducted for the absentee stockholders of the big power companies." This was because McKay left the selection of Snake river dams to the Federal Power commission, in stead of trying to officiallyvforce the selection of Hells Canyon dam as his predecessor had. Morse is as much of an obstructionist and as fanatical in his way of demagoguery as Senator Joe McCarthy with his frequent groundless charges of espionage is todav and as Vardaman. Bilbo and Huey Long were in their way in the recent past and much more loquacious. Since occupying his senate seat he has talked more than most of the other senators lumped together with less influence in the senate than any of them, a perpetual seeker of publicity. G. P. BEN PACKS 'KM IN Haverstraw, N. Y. U.BAd tnlrers flocked to the hen coop on Frank Carella'l farm today to get a glimpse of Black Minorca with fabulous egg nroducina Dower. The hen has laid a double Washington The last -two occasions I saw Senator Taft were memorable ones. One was in his office where I had called to check on a story re garding a conversation he had with President Eisenhower. The other was at a luncheon given for his wife, Martha one of the first luncheons Mrs. Tait was able to attend follow ing her long illness. The meeting in Taft s office was ityplcal of his straight f rom - the - shoulder frankness. I had heard that, at one of the Monday-morning conferences which the president has with legislative leaders, Taft had made a crack about "Too Many Generals" in govern ment. President Eisenhower, Taft, Speaker Joe Martin and other Capitol Hill quarterbacks were discussing the appointment of a new veterans administrator and someone proposed Gen. James Van Fleet, former com mander in Korea. 'No," Taft was reported to have said, "We've already got too many generals in govern ment . . ." Suddenly he caught him self, stopped, and looked sheepish. The man to whom he was talking, he remember ed, was himself a general and one who had defeated him for the presidency. That was the story, and I went up to Senator Taft'a of fice to make sure it was ac curate. I told Taft that I had an am using, though slightly embar rassing story I had heard about him and repeated it Some senators would have ducked or even denied. But not Taft. He smiled and admitted I had the facts straight. I asked if Ike had smiled or taken it as a Joke. Taft said no, that this was what made it embarras sing. Nobody had smiled. However, he explained that he had not meant it as a xt- flection on President Eisen hower. He Just felt it wasn't a good idea to have too many generals in civilian Jobs. Reserved Right to Discharge After that we got to talking about how the Eisenhower ad ministration was getting along and the support he was giving It. Taft felt some blunders had been made, but pointed out that when any new adminis tration took office it was hard to get shaken down. He felt that, though the new presl dent had tried to get good men for his cabinet, they still had a great deal to learn. And he compared the El senhower administration with the conservative government of Winston Churchill's, point' ing out that when Churchill first took over it lacked good men, was unpopular and prob ably could not have been elected and had there been an election. But new men were being developed, and he thought the conservative gov ernment was gaining strength. The Republican admlnistra- yolk egg on every day but two ,D"' Preciciea. wouia ioi I". i... 4,JL .v. n low the same course. Taft went on, spesklng with his usual frankness about his By DREW PEARSON far, but he was reserving his definite right to disagree at any time and on any issue. He was extremely frank, extremely lucid, a man who knew exactly what he thought and enjoyed expressing him self, a man who seemed to en- Joy his Job of leading admin istration forces in the senate almost more than the job he missed out on at Chicago last year. Dreaded Leaving Wife-Partner The other recent occasion on which I saw Bob Taft was at a luncheon given by ex-Em-bassador and Mrs. Joseph E. Davies. Martha Taft came in a wheelchair and I was shock ed to see how three years of illness had taken their toll. During those three years, she had descended far down into the valley, and I was told her comeback had been nothing short of a miracle. This was her first luncheon with outsiders and it was ob vious that Bob was as proud as a peacock. He personally arranged her transfer from he car into her wheelchair. J pushed her into the room him self and kept a watchful eye to make sure Martha was all right. I thought back to a radio debate I had with Bob Taft Just a year or two after he entered the senate, when Mar tha, sitting backstage, was not only his inspiration but gave mm brilliant ammunition to fire back at his opponents. She had fought side by side with him through every po litical campaign, and I am sure that one reason Martha Taft struggled so hard to stage a comeback was so she could be by her husband's side dur ing these climatic years of his life. I am sure also that what Bob dreaded most when the doc tors told him his time on earth was up was the thought that lor me Jasi live weeKs. vi the two odd days, she laid triple-yolk eggs. "I'm not sure, but I think that's some kind of a record," iCarella said. support of Eisenhower. He said he hsd backed the n e w president on tno?t hsues Plan Tax Study By RAYMOND MOLET The House Rules Committee has approved and given the green light to a resolution in troduced by Congressman Car roll Reece which provides for a study of tax-exempt founda tions and similar institutions. This will, when passed by the House, reconstitute and con tinue the work of a committee headed In the previous Con gress by the late Eugene Cox of Georgia. Due to limitations of time and the failing health of the chairman, the Cox com mittee was able barely to scratch the surface of a field that needs deep and vigorous ploughing. The Cox committee was able. however, to settle a number of points which clearly establishes the legitimacy of Congres sional study of the nature and activities of foundations. For they are, in a very special way, responsible to the public and its government. It was admitted over and over by officials of foundations in inquiries of the Cox investi gation that since their income is exempt from taxation it is, in a large part, money vested with a public interest. For without tax exemption it would share with all other private in come in the support of govern ment. The Congress as well as the Treasury has a right to see if it is being spent lor pur poses which are not only free of a subversive taint but use ful and wholesome. This principle of public re sponsibility was well estab lished 40 years ago when the first of the Community Foun datolns was established in Cleveland. The trust instru ment creating that foundation specified that three of the five members of the governing board should be appointed by public officials. W. H. Goff, the truly great and far-sighted man who conceived the idea of a Community Trust and who was himself once a member of a Rockefeller Foundation, stat ed that he could not agree with the elder Rockefeller's idea of a self-perpetuating board. Indeed, Rockefeller, 40 years ago when he was establishing his partner of the years, whothe foundation that bears his uau luuue nia Dames ner Dai- ties, would no his side. (Ceprrliltt, mil A SERIOUS LOSS Astorian-Budget There is no use trying to minimize the fact that the pending closure of the Prouty sawmill in Warrenton is bad news for the entire lower Co lumbia area. This mill has been one of the Institutions of this region for close to a half century and has provided a substantial payroll one of the really big ones of the dis trict. News of the closure should not be surprising, however. It has been apparent for some years that there no longer is an available log supply in the lower Columbia to support all the sawmills in the region, par ticularly one like the Prouty mill which depended on logs bought in the open market for its supply. New York (ffl What role doe chance play in your life? The chances are' that a quirk of chance ... a street you turned down long ago book you read . . . the passing advice of a friend or teacher . . . a blind date ... a door you knocked on and entered helped lead you to where you are today. The odd links of chance or haonenstance dont make man, but they do direct the path be treads. If he knowingly takes a chance and succeeds, he is likely to call it destiny. If another fellow takes the same chance and falls, he gloomily calls it doom. "Some fellows get all the breaks." glumly says the un successful man. "If I Just had another chance, I'd Tint there never is an end to chance. Chances lie all around every life, like stepping stones to a hidden gold mine, unior tunately. rarely do these chan ces bear a sign saying, "This way to your own Ft. Knox, The truth Is that man can't helo taking a chance. Every step he takes leads from one chance to another. Chance several times saved the life of Winston Churchill as a young war correspondent and soldier, in France auring the first World War he was called from a dugout five min utes before it was blown to bits. Churchill took a long chanco In the Dardanelles amphibious campaign in that same war and lost. All his long political life Sir Winston has been will ing to gamble on a chance, and win or lose go blithely on to the next chance. Acci dents have been a major fac tor in the careers of many busi ness leaders. As a boy, Dave Sarnoff kept his family going by running a news-stand and singing in a synagogue for $1.50 a week. - One day he headed down town to try to get a full-time job In a newspaper. By mistake he went into a communications building Instead of a newspa- per, but was offered a job as office ooy ana too n. The possibilities of wireless fascinated him. Today Brig. Gen. David Sarnoff, a pioneer in radio and television, heads the vast Radio Corp. of Ameri ca. What it he had gone Into the right building? Would he be a reporter now? or would he own the newspaper? Sometimes what looks like a bad break is actually the portal to a better opportunity, it was that way with Alfred C. Fuller. Fuller, fresh off a Nova Sco tian farm, came to Boston in 1803 to seek his fortune. He be came a streetcar conductor, and soon was promoted to $12 a week. Weary of collecting fares. however, he eased himself into the motorman s seat one morn ins: and steered an empty trol ley from the car barn out to the street and right off the tracks. Five minutes later he was off the payroll, too. He began selling brushes from door to door for a local firm. In 1908 he started his own business with $375. The first year the company took In only $8,500 a sum many of his salesmen now net lor inenv selves then went on to mil lions. Fuller always regarded his moment of bad luck as the best break of his life. The annals of industry and politics are full of ruch stories. Chance may step into your life at any second, as you pur sue the most routine tasks, to offer you romance, new friends, or a new career. Hasn't it already happened to you? If it hasn't It will. The art of living is to recognize the right chances when they come your way. i Salem 50 Years Ago s ly BIN MAXWELL August!, lttj " Cardinal Joseph Sarto, pa. triarch of Venice, had been chosen pope and selected the name, Plus X. Gold In immensely paying quantities had been reported as discovered on Ogle creek in Southern Clackamas coun ty. Samples had assayed be tween $200 and $3,000 a ton. At New York Racket store, E. T. Barnes, proprietor, $3 85 hammocks had been, reduced to $2 80. That modern Innovation of a white casket, white hears, and whitehorses bad come to stay had been asserted in an advertisement by W. T. Rig. don. a A new Masonic chapter or. ganized at Woodburn had be. come Woodburn Chapter No. 29. a Speer Brothers had an offer to pay 20c a duzen tor eggi, 10c a pound for hens, 17c a pound for butter. J. P. Rogers, wholesale and retail liquor dealer, had an advertisement Implying his wines, liquors and cordials were cheaper than a doctor and better than medicine. A shave could be had at Evan's barber shop on Stat street for 15c, a haircut, 25c and two bits for a bath. Fredrick's market In the Cottle block on North Com. mercial street had round steak, three pounds for 25c, beef loin steak for 10c a pound and chunk steak five pounds or quarter. known public Investigation of foundations, and, due to his ef forts, many were dissolved be cause of some relationship to the conspiracy of Catiline. So Congressman Reece will not be entirely a pioneer. Nor will he be unable to cite precedent. Great good can come from a penetrating and constructive study of foundations by the Reece committee when and if established. It need not con centrate upon the extant to which some foundations have supported subversive activities although there have been def inite instances of that sort. Foundations properly managed can do many things that are vi tally Important such as the magnificent contributions of the Rockefeller Foundation to health and Medicine. They are, on the other hand, often plagued by lazy and merely or namental boards of control and bureaucratic staffs. The risk of wasteful and undesirable ac tivities increases as they pene trate into the so-called "social sciences." There is need for some wholesome correctiveness in their work in that field eith er by their own efforts or by the strong push of a congres sional committee. FASTEST TRAIN H CHICAGO and GASTT 111 Go UNION PACIFIC StntAmUntx "cmr of NffrLMtD" WE ONLY COMPUTE HWOWH STtEAMLMBt BETWEEN fOmAND AND CMCASO Latest Jtfirtnrt PortUnJ . . , mrtiat mrrmsl tMcagt 9$ eULsV'tf J0f9 Vt. PwHaixl .......7.S fcMguo. At. Chicot;... r.r. r.r.i. nr. ll:SO a.m. Svnctey ahr 40 hoars en torn Too hare a choice Pullman accoraasodatsoos or reserved, reclining coach seats with improved leg rests; Relax in the homelike lounges. In the diningcars enjoy delirious food, fresh from the Union Pacific West 'Trrrel-sbop" Monday tttroagh Friday GENERAL PASSENGER DEPT. . Room 751, Pittock Block Portland 5, Oregon UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD so ao o mi Mur tntAuimtu nnme. vnlnlv mianl in hav longer be at Congress incorporate it Strangely enough there were enough voices raised in Con gress against such a recogni tion that the offer was reject ed. Radicals of that day re garded the idea as an effort to incorporate conservatism. At that time either President Taft or his Attorney-General I am not sure which made a slight ing remark about the motion of "Incorporating Mr. Rockefel ler." Times certainly have changed. High taxes and the convic tion among people of substance that great personal inheritances! are not a particularly good thing for children have enor mously increased the number of tax-exempt foundations. One expert witness before the Cox committee last year put the number between thirty and thirty-five thousand. He esti mated the aggregate assets of these at $7 billion which means an annual income available for spending at a billion or two. However, the wide variety of such foundations almost pre cludes any specific estimates. Students of history may be interested to know that foun dations are not new. ' They NEW CREDENTIALS ASKED Cairo W1 Egypt has asked foreign envoys in Cairo to pre sent new credentials addressed to President Mohammed Na- guib instead of to ex-King Faud ! seem to have started in ancient II. The United States, however ' Egypt and Chaldea. In 65 B. may not comply. iC Cicero initiated the first 5 mm Yes, our Prescription Department is the very heart of our store. It is THE MOST IMPOri, TANT department because her is where out) real reputation lies. That's why w have dona everything in our power to male our Prescrip tion Service THE BEST in town. Filling pre scriptions is the heart of our business. CAPITAL DRUG STORE 405 Slale Sf. (Corner of Liberty) We Give Green Stamps llllll HI 1 1 1 II It 1 1FFTFFFJ