Page 4 Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketo St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. ran Laaut Wtra SOTtaa af tka Saaaclalaa: rraaa Hi Ta CalnS rraaa, Tha Auoelatatf Praw la aieluilnlf antiuad ta Iba ma far aualKiUoa at all nea aupatehn cradnad to It ar aiiaraua aadiud to tola paiai a ' alaa oawa auallahad Ibarala. . SUBSCRIPTION RATES: t camari Monlhtr. II Hi li Mratha. tl-U: Ona faar. lU.ta. B U'D U Marlon, folk. Linn. Emon. Clackaaaa counllM: Monthly, act! Sil Uoolaa, MM; Ona Tar at 00 Br Hall XUawhara la OraaaD: Monthly, II 00: SU Montha. M Ml Ona Ttar. 11100. By Mall OaUMa Oral on: Monthly, II JK SU MralUa, 7.ai Ona Taar. Ill 00. ANOTHER SUBWAY SERIES Although the big league baseball schedule has nearly seven weeks to go, the races are ss good as over now, barrinc one of those alwava Dossible but seldom experi enced collapse of the leaders. In the normal course of events the New York Yankees and the Brooklyn Dodgers are "in." It will almost series, fifth straight pennant for old Casey Mengel. Both leading clubs have had their troubles. The Yankees sustained their longest losing streak in years right after a long winning streak, but they snapped out or that and are now playing winning ball, two victories to vexed by weaker pitching than usual, trailed till the sea. son was well alowr. but they appear to be safe from over taking now, unless they fall apart, as they did to the Giants in 1951. It Isn't likely this time, though. The real excitement has been furnished in each league by the second place club, which will probably receive more honor from the fans than the winners to whom pennants are an old story. The Chicago White Sox are likely to finish second, highest since scandal broke and banished organized baseball for life. performed a miracle since he ninl second division outfit till late June, finished fourth that year and third in 1952. Second this year. 1954 ? White Sox fans will wait with keen anticipation. Their favorites haven't won since 1919, the year they "threw" But the greatest thrill of vided by the Braves, an also ran club which became a pennant contender overnight when moved from Boston to Milwaukee. The led the league for many weeks and are now running a vigorous second. The club's remarkable success is largely due to the Milwaukee fans who are still averaging an attendance of 30,000 a day for home games. The club will almost certainly lead both leagues in attendance this year and will threaten Brooklyn's all time National League record. This experience will likely result in the transfer of the St. Louis Browns next year, probably to Baltimore but maybe to Kansas City or Hous ton, j It's a pretty good year for the majors even if neither has a slambang pennant race. The White Sox and Braves have provided unlooked for thrills, and the resurgence of the long subdued National league has given interleague competition a shot in the arm. But attendance as a whole is again running behind the previous year, an ominous sign. , NIXON'S RISING STAR One Washington figure who definitely gained stature during the first six months of the Eisenhower administra tion was a man who held a position that normally con demns its occupant to obscurity, Dick Nixon, the vice president. , Not too much has been beard from Nixon by the' public, for he has made few speeches and no attempt whatever to grab the spotlight. He has played a willing second fiddle to the head man, the president. He has been extremely usefnl to the president. Be cause of his past service in both houses of congress he has contacts and understanding of both legislation and legislators that the president lacks. His role is bound to be a larger one now that the president has lost his No. 1 man in congress, Senator Taf t. President Eisenhower has encouraged Nixon to fill a larger than the traditional "veep" role. He has had Nixon preside over the National Security Council meet ings in his own absence and has directed Nixon to preside over cabinet meetings while he, Eisenhower is in Colorado. Eisenhower has also asked Nixon and his wife to tour the Far East this fall as personal representatives of the White House, which means that they will be received everywhere with honors comparable with what the presi dent would receive if he were able to make the trip. The president is in good health and there is every reason to believe he will finish his term in good physical condition, possibly seek and receive a second. But what happened to Taft is a grim reminder of what may happen to any other key or "indispensable man." Taft was also in excellent health six months ago. This possibility may have influenced Eisenhower's de cision to build up his standin in every way possible, but the larger factor probably is that Nixon has already shown his capacity to fill the larger role in a manner help ful to the administration. In any event there is no danger that the presidency will in this administration fall to a vice-president who had been as little briefed for the top job as Truman was by Roosevelt. None ever should. MOST BEAUTIFUL WORDS Dr. Wilfred Funk, the dictionary man who knows about all there is to know about words, has picked the 31 most beautiful words in the English language, both for sound and for meaning. His top 10 are tranquil, murmuring, dawn, hush, lullaby, mist, chimes, luminous, golden, melody. Others which he rates a little lower but still extra good include jonquil, chimes, luminous, chalice, marigold, oriole, thrush, tendril, cerulean. We suppose these are very good, particularly from the viewpoint of a word artist. But we suspect the avernge gent would have simpler, more widely used ones, prefer ably in certain word combinations. Among such that come readily to mind: "The drinks are on me," and that extra special delight conveyor: "En closed find check." Paper Demands Info on Winnie London MV-The Dally Mir ror demanded today an official "full statement" on the condi tion of ailing Prime Minister Churchill. The tabloid said in a front naff riltnrtal that Britons have been "driven to pick up their Information at second-I certainly be another subway steady, consistent pennant every defeat. The Dodgers, 1920 when the "Black Sox several of their best men from Manager Paul Richards has became manager of a peren- in 1951. He led the league the series of Cincinnati. the major leagues was pro hand from tittle-tattle abroad." It cited a report by Ameri can columnist Stewart Aluop that Churchill had suffered a slight stroke In June and said. "Even more alarming reports have appeared in the French press." Churchill's doctors ordered him on June 27 to rest for at least one month. A government spokesman Indicated he was suffering from extreme fa tigue, but the exact nature of his Illness nounced. never wa-a. f IS LATER W JSr rv . r tone distance -A i Jd !Zi I11 KREMLIN I I (VTV CALLING aWLOyD'Jj, I f: agOF LONPON-- jf, WSsSST CALLING TO INQUIRE j rSScp' flrferfl -n ABOUT LIFE INSURANCE M POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Avoid Pest Who Tries to Foist His Hobby on You BySAULPETT For Hal Boyle New York My hobby, if anybody carei. It avoiding hobbies. To be more precise, my hob by it avoiding people who in sist I should try their hobby. It will change my whole life, they say, give me .. new perscep tive, added freshness, escape, relief from frustration and the commonplace. Baloney. If I want to be dull and unhappy, that's my privilege. Leave me be. Any way, I have by doubts about the enthusiasm of new hob byists out on the stump. I mean those hobbyists who live and breathe the stuff all the time. You know the kind. The hob byist and his wife will drop over for drink. He will re main glum and silent during the small talk about operations and Jobs and the way polio is going around. Then he finds an opening and wham! There goes your evening. , Why is it that the first time a man is seduced by an eight inch ball-bearing power saw. with a miter gauge and splitter, or by a one-rupee uncancelled stamp from the Maldive Is lands, he becomes an evangel ical bore about the whole thing? He pounces on his friends, neighbors and rela tives as though he Just found a cure for the five per cent mort gage. They, too, be argues, must try this hobby and ascend with him to the bright and glorious plateau of a new life. I wonder. Why Is he so anx ious to convince us? Is it because down deep he is still a little uncertain about the wisdom of a grown man spending so much time and energy on a new weapon for etching in leather? Does he need the moral support of im itation to fortify his expendi ture of money and passion on a new soil tickler? I have heard it said that you can acnieve new peace oi minacar only knocked down a side- Dy ooserving mo yeuow-oet- Backstairs With Eisenhower By M EMU Denver ton Backstairs at , the summer White House. The president wanted some thing cool to drink the other day when he was fishing up above Pine, Colo. No sooner had he expressed the thought that his alert military aide Col. Robert L. Schutz, dumped six cans of tomato juice into the riatte river. The Juice cans wollawed in the cool stream bed for about 30 minutes and were almost frosty when they were hauled out. Mr. Eisenhower is amazing ly non-profane, considering his many provocations. When he dubs a golf shot miserably, he says something like "Ooie, boy, look at that" or 'That was typ ical Eisenhower." When a big rainbow trout gets away, he remonstrates with himself: "Now, what kind of fishing Is that?" You can hear him two creeks away. Bob Hope may catch up with the president again as a golfing partner. Hope is coming here soon to play In a tournament Nti Cherry Hill Country THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. Salem, Orejon THAN YOU THINK, TOVARISCH .lied sapsucker, in its natural habitat. That may be true. But I'd rather try to work out a negotiated peace with my own natural habitat and let the yellow-bellied sapsucker envy me. But, of course, birds have move sense than to take up a hobby of people-watching. I'm sure it will alarm nobody If I happen to feel that this whole business of making a hobby the be-all and end-all Is a dangerous mistake. ' It tends to lead people In the wrong direction away - from themselves and the reality of their own existence. If they are bored or oppressed by their home life pr job, is there noth ing they can do about It but creep into an esoteric, base ment. Instead of trying to fertilize their barren acres, this over emphasis on hobbies persuades them to take up something else three nights a week and all day on week-ends. Is this really enough to satisfy? Seems to me it s like trying to irrigate a desert by wetting your head. What does It profit a man. married to a terrible shrew, if he conquer the whole world of butterflies? He's still married to the same wife. Why doesn't he try to find out what she's mad about? Seems to me he might do bet ter to stand up to her and sound off than to stick pins in poor butterflies. HE GOT EVEN Hollywood (IMS Police warned William Skipper, 33, today not to carry out his threat to get even with a Holly wood night club. The police said Skipper was thrown out of the club when he refused to pay for a mirror he allegedly broke. 'Skipper leaped in his car, drove into position and then charged the nightclub. There was a resounding crash but his waij canopy. AM SMITH club where Eisenhower has been playing almost daily. An amazingly prominent man in private life on the west coast writes the White House almost every day, telling the president and members of his staff how to run the govern ment. The advice, for the most part, is duly filed away. So many people have been trying to lure the president into speaking dates, barbecues and fishing haunts since he's been here that Gov. Dan Thorn ton had to issue a public plea lay off, let the man have a vacation. The president won't permit anyone to rig his fishing line. If he wanted to, he could say to any of several angling ex perts around him "here, put on my yellow grasshopper." Instead, he does it himself. He ties some of his own flies, particularly when he is work ing out a downstream com bination lure using the bril liance of a spinner and the ap petizing, for a fish, appeal of gaUy colored fly. LONG DISTANCE THESE 1$ KREMLIN CALLING ULOyp'i OF LONDOM Planners Retreat Corvallis Gazette-Times The wave of national plan ning that dominated the econo- my of Britain, The Netherlands, Denmark, Norway and Sweden has all but disappeared, accord ing to the quarterly report of the Economic Commission for Europe. The report does not analyze the American econo my, but if it did, it would re cord that such attempt at na tional planning as we saw un der the New Deal have also all but disappeared here. National planning in the five Northern European countries so closely identified with ours reached . its heydey between the years 1945 and 1930, under Labor and Socialist govern, ments. Its symbols were na- tional austerity and the tight belt. No doubt, It served a use. ful purpose, by bringing real ization of the tremendous ef fort needed for recovery from the bankruptcy of war. As the pressure of inflation has been reduced, the need for tight economic controls has de creased. It is no longer deemed necessary to fix and rely on quantitative predictions of in vestments, prices, national In come, production and other goals of economic planning. The technique of the five-year plan has been tried in demo cratic nations and found want ing. EPITAPH Akron Beacon-Journal "A station wagon traveling south on Rt 176 at an estimat ed 60 to 75 miles an hour, failed to make the curve in a driving rain and barreled into a utility pole at 1J0 a.m. today." . This is the story of the skid ding, crashing, crushing death of four persons at the intersec tion of RL 176 and 21 south of Richfield early Saturday. A fifth victim is near death. Two children escaped death or serious injury because they were thrown from the speeding station wagon before it wrap ped itself around a utility pole. No other vehicle was in volved. Too late, the driver realized he was going too fast, in the rain, to make the curve. Speed killed four more early Saturday. What's the hurry? Slow down. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Pearson Says G. M. Not Cut Back on Gov't. Contracts y DREW Washington It may be pure coincidence, but Secre tary of Defense Wilson's for mer company, General Mo tors, seems to be the only out fit that hasn't been hit by the drastic cutback In defense spending. Factories all over the nation have felt the impact of Wll son's order last month to start demobilizing plants engaged in producing tanks and vehicles. But so far, his own company, General Motors, has escaped. Strategy behind Wilson's or der is to reduce the number of plants until only one Is left making each item. This has the laudable goal of Increasing efficiency and saving money, though it's in direct contrast to the previous policy of spreading production so as to make It harder for Russia to strike a crippling A-bomb blow. While the general policy of reducing costs has merit, what really raised eyebrows in in dustrial circles was the selec tion of plants to be closed down. For example, three big auto companies Chrysler, Ford and General Motors are pro ducing the Patton M-48 tank. Following Wilson's new policy. Ford was arbitrarily declared out of the running by direct order of the Pentagon. This means that Ford won't even be given a chance to bid for the right to continue produc ing. It will be left up to Chrysler and General Motors to bid against each other, and the losing - bidder will go out of production next March, likewise, Studebaker was ruled out of the bidding over trie 2.5-ton truck, and was or dered to wind up its produc tion by September. This will leave G.M.'s truck and coach division to bid against Reo Motors, Inc., for the truck con tract. The Pentagon also ordered production stopped on the M47 tank, which happens to be manufactured by Chrysler and .American Locomotive, General Motors was not af fected. On the other hand, the pro duction of M-41 tanks will be continued full speed at G.M.'s Cadillac plant in Cleveland. In addition, General Motors will take over the added pro- auction or antiaircraft guns, now manufactured by Ameri. can Car and Foundry. The excuse is that many gun-car riage and M-41 parts are in terchangeable. Brig. Gen. Carroll H. Die trick, commander of the De troit Automotive Center, In sisted to this column that the army was not deliberately showing favoritism to General Motors. H e acknowledged. however, that the instructions came straight from the Penta gon as to which companies should be allowed to bid. "I haven't received any or ders not proper and In the best interests of the govern ment and the taxpayers," he hastened to add in defense of his boss, Secretary Wilson, onetime boss of General Mo tors. A high Pentagon source. who asked not to be identi fied, explained that Wilson wasn't trying to enrich his former company so much as he was sincerely convinced that General Motors could do everything better than any one else. "Wilson really believed It when he said what was good for General Motors was good for the country," said this Pen- tagonian. Note 1 When Charlie Wil son protested to senators last January that he did not want to sell his General Motors stock, he said he saw no con flict between the public In terest and General Motors' in terest. Note 2 A report suppress PEARSON ed by Sen. Lyndon Johnson's defense investigating commit tee shows that General Motors made as much as 30 per cent profit on Sabrejets and was also far behind in production. This delay was one reason for our onetime failure to have enough Jets in Korea. Franco's Lobbyist Charles Patrick Clark, the bumptolus gentleman who draws $100,000 a year from Dictator Franco and who has lobbied $187,500,000 out of congress for Franco, is having a hard time these days. It isn't Franco or congress that's causing him trouble. It's love letters. Charley wrote quite a few love letters back in 1934 and they're about to be produced in court The only trouble is that Charley can't remember what he wrote 30 -years ago. Since he -can't remember, it would be an act of kindness to refresh his memory before he has to go on the witness stand. There was one letter he wrote in 1934 in which he told the lady he was about to marry that his father not hers was a "lousy old man" nd that his brother Arthur was an "exact counterpart." Then there was another let ter written on March 24, 1934, which asked his fiancee the question: "Do you think I have an Intelligent profile? I mean, do you think I look like War ren Williams (the movie actor)?' Some of Charley's amorous statements can't very well be published In a family newspa per. They would burn up the page. But one curious ten dency he exhibits is to cheat on his age. Though he claims to be in his middle forties, his love letters show he's now pushing 53. The letters bobbed up, in cidentally, as the result of a mistake which the eminent lobbyist is charged with mak ing in falling to support a di vorced wife. After writing her these glamorous letters. he persuaded her to permit a divorce. And now. though he gets $100,000 a year from Franco, Mrs. Clark claims non support, i Washington Pipeline French counterfeiters, re cently nabbed in Paris with $5,000,000 in phony U.S. cur rency, were blg-tlme opera tors. One of Europe's craft iest engravers worked on the bogus plates and the gang used a large commercial printing press to roil out the "money" over ine July 4th week-end when the owner was away. . . . The wage-hour division of the department of labor is quietly Ignoring dozens of violations. Many of the cases are ready for the courts, but someone is dragging his feet. HELLS CANTON FALLACY The Dalles Cronlcle One fallacy in much of the pro-Hells Canyon thinking Is the assumption that If the river is denied to Idaho Power Co. there will ultimately be a fed erally sponsored project there. There certainly can be no good grounds for believing that Con gress will look upon Hells Can yon with any more favor next year or five years from now, than it did in the past and there have been two flat re jections thus far. CHEST NEED FELT Astorian-Budget Up in Portland, the start of the United Fund drive is being announced. Here In Astoria, where the Community Chest no longer exists, we can look for ward to a multiplicity of drives during the coming year. The time will come when lo cal business men and citizens will look enviously toward Portland and other citle: where one big drive takes care of all the needs of all the social and welfare agencies. Priva cy ? Grent I i -s sa when you go Great Northern EITIPIRE BUILDER WESTERN STAR TWO CttAT STSXAMUNUS DAJIY MTWHN rOITUND AND CHICAGO VIA SrOKANt; MINNEAPOLIS AND ST. FAIA Ctnvtnitnt imtuctins h Chkan with fast trtmt ft hutrrn V. alUlt . lltNMAN, Tnr. Pm Agnt, TTuniaitoo $U Portland S, Or HONIl I1ACON 717 Blondar. Aujrui. 17, 1953 Salem 39 Years Ago ly IEN MAXWELL August 17, 1114 A special session of the leg. isiaiur uaa uccn unaer con- siaerauon sor jjeceroDer to clear up matters now before we aesen iana Doara, Max Gehlar, county clerk, had called for bids for install lation of a steam heating sys tem for Marion county court nouse. , a Ashland had had a temnen. ture of above 82 degrees ever J... -I T . a A heavy run of salmon had emcrru we umraiDia. a a a H. L. Burt of the Capital Journal had ridden his bicycle from Salem to Portland In tjx hours to see a double header i inm roruina Daseoau park, a a . a German cruiser Leipslc, lay. ing off the Golden Gate fa. days, hopeful of taking British and French merchant ships as prizes of war, had slipped into San Francisco to re-fuel and uppiy. a Fred Zimmerman, United press operator at the C.nit.i Journal, had gone to Newport with his wife for a two weeks vacation. a a Biggest battle in the Austria Servia war had been reported as raging near Belgrade. ALBANY'S INDIAN NAME Albany Democrat-Herald In an editorial favoring the change of the name of Vancou. ver back to its pioneer name of Fort Vancouver, the Salem Capitol Journal laments that the old-timers did such a stodgy job of naming their towns. "Portland," says the C.J.. "should have been Mult nomah, Salem, Chemeketa. Al. bany the original Indian name, which as we recall meant 'hole in the ground.' (No present re flections intended, it should be unnecessary to add.)" The name our esteemed con temporary was feeling for Is "Takenah," now retained without the final "h" as the name of a park and a sightly Old-Ttlmers tell us that "T. kenah" was a Calapoola word, meaning not "hole In the ground," but place of meeting, as tne confluence of two streams. It was applied to tha confluence of the Calapooia and the Willamette. The Montelth family. Linn county pioneers from Albany, N. Y., gave the name of their old home town of the Mon- teiths', slipped one over at the next session of the legislatur by having the community called Takenah. So Takenah. much more euphonious and dis tinctive than Albany, actually was for a time the name of this town, though not the original name. But it never did mean. from anything we're been able to learn, "hole in the ground." We stand with the Capital Journal in regretting that the ' pioneers were weak in nomen clature. Up in Washington they did a much better Job with "Seattle" and "Tacoma"; and "Belllngham" doesn't com pere with the original Indian "Whatcom," from which the name was changed after most of the pioneers were dead. REDUCING OVERLOADS Astorian-Budget The state highway commis sion reports there has been an 80 per cent reduction in over weight loading by loggers since the 1951 state legislature set up heavier fines and stronger provisions for regulations and enforcement. There wss con siderable objection at the time by logging operators, but the result of the legislation evi dently has been excellent. Fur thermore, one hears little ob jection to the law's operations any more. The highway com mission warns, however, that there is a growing tendency to soften the punishment in some jurisdictions by means of sus pended sentences. This would be a mistake, since the law is providing so effective. goo X.