M'J'Jfi!iiiT. THK CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Ortgra Wednesday, September 9, 19SS Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1 888 r BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che- meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409 ' Tn Utmt WIM "trrie. at tka AiMUb tm ui Tka VMU4 Tnm. Ttf Aueelitod FltK U tidullr ratmd to to. rut lot aukllc.tloa si a bi alnutclu cndltta la U at IhtrwlM eraallaa la Ihlt ptptf d , alha uil pualUata llurtla. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: T emtn: MonthlT. II.Ki SCI Month!. 1TM: On Im. Ill M. Br Mill U Marin. polk, Una. Buton. Clatkimu Couatlai: Monthly, wet an Monthj, S4M; On. ht, M M. Br Kill KU.wh.ra la Onion! Monthlr, 11.00; Ml MonUu, M Ml On. yaw. li.ui. By Mill Onulda Oman: Mosul?, llJIi aU MonUu, I1.M; On. tt, til . THE MARSHALL PLAN WORKED At a press conference Tuesday Foreign Aid Director Harold E. Stassen stated that Western Europe has made great strides in the past eight months. In reply to ques tions he said he thought that this country would have to give very little economic aid after next July 1, the be ginning of the new fiscal year. Since President Eisenhower took office last January, Stassen said Western Europe has reached "the highest production level in its history. I believe we have made real progress in the cold war in the eight months. There are still some difficult spots but the general picture is brighter than it has been in a long time.." Stassen said that in the fiscal year ending next June 80, the United States will provide about $450,000,000 in economic aid to western Europe. i leel that western Europe is rapidly coming to a position where it will need bo more economic aid," he said. It was six years ago that Secretary of State George C. .Marshall bad suggested his plan oi economic aid xor Eu rope. He proposed the "Marshall plan" to help Europe's recovery from war destruction, economically, and so stop the rush to communism. Both in Washington and in the European capitals men began strenuous work to find out what Western Europe needed and the United States could afford to supply. If the plan worked, as it evidently has, it would obtain its objective. If Western Europe went to pieces, commu nism would triumph. After six years, Stassen was able to say the Marshall plan had worked very well. Recent developments in the cold war indicate that the communist world has entered a long period of internal trouble and tension which is bound to strengthen the west. Maienkov, successor to Stalin, has sustained sev ral staggering blows. . First, Maienkov adopted a "soft" policy toward the west Admitting failure, the Beds' police boss, Lavarenti uena, was purged as a scapegoat and Maienkov reverted to the old Stalin policy of hostility to the United States. ; There followed the June rebellion against Soviet op pression in East Germany. Then came the failure of the Tudeh communist party in Iran that led to the overthrow of Premier Mossadegh and the return of the shah. Last has come the landslide victory of Adenauer in West Ger many and the complete defeat of communists. G. P. TIME FOR A WESTERNER Only one name has as yet figured prominently in the peculation over the identity of Chief Justice Vinson's successor, presumably soon to be appointed by President . Eisenhower. This is Governor Earl Warren of California. Whether this is empty talk or reflects the president's at titude the public does not yet know. $. The president owes Warren no political debt, for War ren s uuuornia delegation stayed with him till Eisen hower's nomination was assured. But the president is known to think highly of Warren, and none can question his capacity for leadership, though he has never been a judge. - Warren is almost certainly interested in such an ap pointment Only the other day he announced that he will not seek a fourth term as governor. At the time it was said that he looked to some position in the Eisen hower administration. There is another good reason for a Warren appoint- ment aside from his outstanding character and ability. It is that the western half of this nation has been shame fully overlooked in appointments to its highest court for the past quarter of a century. Through the whole Hoover, Roosevelt and Coolidge periods, covering almost 25 years, no one has been named to the U.S. supreme court from west of Iowa and Texas. These came from west of the Mississippi, but not from tne approximate western half of the country. All the others came from east of the Mississinni. There is no thought here of promoting sectional interest or feeling, but a great and trowincr half of th rnnntrv ahould not be blacklisted from membership in a great policy making arm of the government It is long past time when the west should be renresented. but that on ought to be made from the west now that a partial oppor tunity for restoration exists. This man need not be Warren, but Warren fills the bill io a x. I CAN DREAM, CANT I? mm '' litem m pill- 32UH& I mEJ& WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Navy Brass Finds Navy Secretary Plenty Tough FRANCO-GERMAN CONTRACT Landslide victory for West German Chancellor Aden. auers prowestern government In the German lrtinn spotlights international attention on the glaring contrast Between rrance and uermany at this time. France is slipping every day. She never has a Govern ment backed by a genuine parliamentary majority. Her governments hold office from dAy to day, are flouted by powerful interests whenever they propose needed re forms. The recent nationwide strikes are typical. France proposed the West European army but now ap pears to want to scuttle it She fears a strong Germany duv win noi create tne one antidote to it a strong France. France is bedeviled with inflation, stagnant production, unwillingness of her ceonla to work vicrnmnalv. West Germany has a stable government backed by a majority of her people, who have given it a strong man date for cooperation with the west against the Soviet menace, tier linances are stable, Inflation is checked, ner people are working hard, production is gaining stead. iiy. As France seeks to isolate herself from American lead ership and policies West Germany comes forward to take her place as a strong U.S. ally to succeed a weak one. In short every current sign points to West Germany as the coming strong nation of West Europe and Ameri ca s No. 1 ally if there is to be an effective American policy over there. Adenauer is an old man. Death or illness may stop him before his program can be carried forward by another, but this clearly is what is happening now. HIGHER REMS, SAFER GIRLS tot Angeles JJ9 The American Automobile Asso ciation today backed Chrlitiin Dior's efforts to up Milady's hemline. Tor some reason, the night driving; motorist is alerted by the tight of feminine legt in the path of hit headlights," AAA Saftey Director Burton Marsh said. "Thus, at the hemlirt goes upward, the walking gal is safer." Ir DREW Washington When Bob Anderson of Vernon, Tex., was appointed secretary of the navy by President Eisenhower, most of the top brass In the navy department figured he would be a pushover. In the tint place, the ad mirals are pretty good at soft soaping, sometimes even push lng around their civilian bosses. They have been doing this almost ever since the days of Josephus Daniels, who bucked the admirals on almost everything from liquor aboard battleships to proposing more opportunity for advance ment from the ranks. In the second place, Ander son is a farmer. True, he is a big-scale farmer, having been manager of the Waggoner 500.- 000-acre ranch In Texas, where he actually uses helicopters to herd mavericks out of scrub oak. Even so, the admirals knew the new navy secretary's nearest approach to battle ships was nothing much more man. a mud scow on the Brazos river. So they prepared to alt back and run the navy pretty much as they pleased. They have experienced. however, a considerable aur prlse. For the new secretary has started to rein them in with the firmness of a bronco busttng cowboy on his ranch. When he heard that Capt. George Hyman Blckover, ex pert on the atomic submarine. had been passed over by the navy selection board for his promotion to admiral because of his religion, Secretary An. derson acted fast. Since he has the power to reject selection board recommendations, he quietly let word drop that Capt Rickover's name would have to be among those recom mended on the next go-around or else other admirals might not get promoted. The admir als took the hint and Rickover now wears the two stars of a rear admiral. KEY WEST STRIP TEASE Again when this column ex posed the manner in which cer tain brass hats planned to rail road their Junior officer, Lieut. Comdr. Jerry McDaniel. at Key West, Fla., Anderson also stepped in. McDaniel was Jailed was 42 days for staging a strip tease charity benefit at Key West, though some of his superior officers appeared to be quite cognizant of what he was doing. Anderson has now Issued no tice of reprimand to Admiral Irving Duke for trying to make McDaniel the scapegoat, and has taken action against other superior officers named in this column. On another occasion, Ander son called in his bureau chiefs, told them certain budget cuts were necessary and asked them to submit figures to achieve these cuts. One bureau chief. Admiral Homer N. Wallin of the bureal of ships, did not take this seriously. Result: Ad miral Wallin was transferred to Seattle. Secretary Anderson never lost his temper, had no un pleasantness with Admiral Wallin. But he made his point so clear that Admiral Wallin himself requested the transfer. PEARSON Note 1 Cong. Charles Ben nett of Florida had a friendly talk with the secretary of the navy regarding the Key West strip tease act, urged a higher standard of morality In the navy. Anderson vigorously concurred. Note 2 Another recent el. villian executive who was not afraid to buck top navy brass was Undersecretary of the Navy Francis Whitehalr. STASSEN'S PHONY TEST Harold Stassen's big hulls. baloo about an aptitude test to pick the best men to slay in government turned out to be a wonderful publicity tag. but otherwise the biggest hoax Washington hat seen In long time. Inside fact Is that Stassen's aides were drawing up the list or employes they wanted to fire at exactly the same time the so-called scientific test was being given. And after the tests were taken, Stassen, believe it or not, fired the men who scored the highest marks. These included too officials. With one or two exceptions. the men with the lower marks were kept. In the near eastern division of the technical cooperative as sistance program, for Instance, oiassen urea 17 out of the 20 top officials who got the high, est marks. He fired the admin. istrator for the Near East. Reeseman Fryer, the assistant administrator for the Near East, and the chiefs of every country except Israel and Iran. With Eisenhower worryina over what's happening in Mor occo, Tunisia, and Africa gen. erally, where vitally import ant U.S. air bases are in Jeo pardy, this could be highly dangerous firing. These areas have come to look upon the technical assistance program as one of their biggest aids, and it nas won many friends for the U.S.A. in an area where friends have been scarce. In the Asia division of TCA. Stassen also fired the five men who scored the highest. This again is an area about which the administration has been worried. The worry was ex pressed no later than last week in a speech before the Ameri can Legion by John Foster IKE'S PLEDGE 1 The men who scored high est in this division were the assistant administrator, Hal dore Hanson, who had been accused by McCarthy but was cleared; Deputy Administrator John Provinse; Charles Wolf, chief economist; Wilfred Wil Hans, chief adviser; Gusjav Pa. panek. No. 2 economist No wonder Chairman Rees of the house civil service com mittee, a staunch republican, is sued blast at the manner in which men with years of gov ernment service and civil serv ice rating behind them were Being fired. Note Speaking in New York, Sept. 1, last year. Gen eral Eisenhower promised that his election would not mean the discharge of "hardworking civil service employes. "No one could say I was fair," he said. "If on the instant that the republican party went into power I should authorize or A. D. Pettyjohn, route 3, had reported to police that 23 ofhls hens had been stolen from his chicken yard. Cherrians had invited from 90 to 100 commercial clubs and chambers of commerce in Ore gon to attend Booster's Day at the state fair. About 800 truck drivers In Portland had been arrested be cause their vehicles were not provided with mirrors. Salem 32 Years Ago September 1, 1921 "Babe" Ruth had equalled his world record of 64 home runs for the New York Americans in the fourth Inning against the Philadelphia Athletics. Mrs. Alice Weister of Port land had been named head of the art department for the state fair. Camp meeting services were being held on the campus of Willamette University. A car of 824 boxes of Mc intosh Red apples, an excep tional variety in this locality and produced on the farm of A. L. Page near Jefferson, had been shipped by Oregon Grow ers Cooperative Assn. First snow of the season had fallen at Helena, Montana. Competition had reduced the price of "raisin Jack," popular proniDition time beverage in Akron, Ohio, from SOc to 25c a drink. Midget Market had fresh hamburger and sausage for 10c a pound. The auction block for unem ployed men seeking work had neen resumed in Boston Com mon. A woman auctioneer held the hammer on the men who were again stripped to the waist to relate their abilities to labor then bids were called. Slight Gain Noted Yakima Herald The National Safety Coun cil's report that the nation's traffic death total for May, June and July was 1 per cent under the toll for the corre sponding period In 1952 is somewhat encouraging. The 1 per cent margin must be credited to only two of the months. May and June, how ever, as in July the number of deaths, 3120, was the tame at In July last year. Traffic safety education campaigns doubtless had some effect in the reduction of fa talities. Such campaigns are valuable, as they serve to re mind motor vehicle drivers that they are operating poten tially lethal machines. Yet nothing can beat strict law enforcement mm a u-H .n tn. I proper driving. Fear of the law it a powerful Influence on the person at the wheel of a motor vehicle. AISSIES CUT TAX Canberra, Australia W Australia Treasurer 6lr Arthur Badden, presented to Parlia ment Wednesday budget call ing for a 124 per cent income tax cut. Retirement Waste By RAYMOND HOLEY Lot Angeles Last month in Santa Barbara I had occasion to speak before a group known as The Retired Businessmen's Club. This organization, I wu told, comprises some 160 mem. bcr. most of them men who have retired from their com panies or professions at a more or less arbitrary age, presum ably 63. As I surveyed that group of intelligent and for the most part vigorous men, I felt a deep sense of the pity, nay the trag edy, of such a waste of expe rience and tested capacity. There were brains there suffi cient to run railroads, oil com panies, or banks, or to prac tice law at the highest level or to plan the building of ships. factories and office buildings. But for the most part these fine capacities were being wasted on casual reading, golf, or lis tening to traveling journalists like this writer. . American business brains that have been capable of vast and imaginative achievements, that have squeezed the last drop of usefulness out of a thousand natural resources have to far been bound in impotence by traditional plans of retirement based upon tacts outdated 50 years. For the age of 65 as a guide to retirement is an anach. ronisra. The evidence to that ef fect is before our eyet every where. The statistics on the sub ject are familiar. At the turn of he century, the expectation of life at birth was 47. In 1950 it was 68. That was largely due to a decline In Infant mortal ity, however. But the outlook at 65 is better by quite a few years. Those years are worth saving. Certain Regulations Necessary It is perfectly true that rules and regulations in companies and other institutions must have certainty. Young men are entitled to know when they enter employment that there will be opportunity for ad vancement as the older fellows die or retire. It is also true that pension and retirement plans must be mathematically calcu lated on the basis of some fixed periods. But It would seem quite pos sible to devise plans, even in big institutions, which will pro vide ample scope for the young to come up and also to keep the elder members reasonably busy. Why would not a plan of pro gressively lengthening vaca tions be feasible? Specific titles are not so Im portant for men of established reputations, although they are of necessity Important to younger people. The title of chairman of the board takes care of presidents and permits the heir apparent to come up while there is an old head to advise. But that is limited to a very few. Something of the sort Is needed all along the line. Perhaps a shifting of jobs would be workable in many cases. A Problem In Education What I am suggesting has probably been thought out and tried. But I have heard little of it in big institutions, and I have heard a lot about wasteful practice of arbitrary retire ment. It is, of course, a fairly common practice in small com panies and in family businesses. It prevails in many if not most law offices. This problem is also very serious in education. There, however, is the complication of finances. The old professors are the highest paid, and if they stay on and on, juniors in their thirties cannot be paid what the necessities of growing families require. Perhaps in colleges and universities some arrange ment could be made for a de clining pay scale after 60, with some lightening of the work. The money thus saved could go to the lower rungs in the edu cational ladder. Certainly, the urgent need that this country produce more and more should lead us to de vise means by which present trends can be reversed. For we seem to be moving into an era POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Hal Says You Don't Have To Meet Man to Know Him y HAL IOYLI New York, ) You don't have to meet a man In this world to learn something from him. I never met Maj. Gen. Wil liam Dean. I got to Korea late in July, 1K30, a few days after he was reported missing in combat This I have always re- greted. I would like to have seen him In action. He Is free ag-n now, after nearly three yeait In enemy prison camps. But although I never met him personally, he has enriched my life by teach ing me two things: 1. Don't sell faith short 2. A man's example lives beyond his presence. When I first reached Korea, Gen. Dean's 24th Infantry div- six colonels Including rugged Dick Stephens, later known as "The Big Six," and now a ma Jor general himself. The fate of Gen. Dean was to be captured, after trying to get a wounded man back. He knew that theoretically a man of his rank shouldn't be where he was but he was fighting a fact not a taught war. With, out the on-the-spot leadership that such commanders as be and Col. Stephens gave, the retreat would have become rout After his bullet-pierced hel met was found, those of us whit came later were sure that Gen. Dean was dead. But again and again we ran into this stubborn comment from the enlist t ition was ttill retreating after jmen who had seen him fight' m MB iAa A . M.tll.ul hut V ... I .MH 1 .... " series of confused but mag- nlficent delaying stands to hold up an overwhelming North Korean army that had it known how to use its power, would have hod the entire pen. Insula in three short weeks. A still-dazed American offi cer told me: "We thought aU we had to do was to stand on a hill and show the U. S. uniform, and all those little brown gooks would run back north where they came from." In those dark days the 24th division bad suffered terrible losses. And each day it suffer ed more. It is leu a criticism of the men than it is of Amer ica to say the division wat un ready for combat The men weren't in proper shape. They were short of the right weapons. And so it was that Gen. Dean, a first class fight ing man, had to go up and do what no division commander should be required to do. He had to go up and show the boyt how. He himself wat the 24th division. He was the spearhead of an ill-prepared America in the flesh. He had to do what they teach a com mander at West Point he shouldn't have to do. He had to go to the bare front, forget his two start, and lead like a second lieutenant So did his 'They lust couldn't hava killed the general' He's too smart for them. He'll turn un yet." This faith seemed futile and foolish to us at the time. But it was amazing how the ex ample of Gen. Dean's personal courage carried on with his men. They found it hard to let him down, knowing what he had done. And they didn't let him down. Through all the month, af ter that each member of the battered 24th division felt he could hardly do less than his lost leader. That kind of frontline lead ership went out of the Amerl can army with the Civil war. It is too expensive, and a miH. ern army no longer can afford n. But It Is a fact of hitter that the sacrifice and valor of Gen. Dean paid off magnifl. eently. Nor will the American army and the relations ha. tween officer and enlisted man tuffer by what he did. In the annals of our soM. iery he will be imperishably remembered as the generaL who, when it had to be done. went up gun in hand and showed the boys how. No other officer In our time hat done more to popularize the stars of rank. Use for 2 Benches Bend Bulletin New substitution rules In football (for college, not high school teams) may make the game slightly less Interesting as some experts are complain ing; certainly they will re quire far more sideline book keeping to avoid penalties for illegal replacements. There, it it to be noted will be class ed at "unsportsmanlike eon duct" and each infraction will result in a 15-yard lost for the offending team. The diffi culty of keeping track of play ers eligible and Ineligible for substitution is at once appar ent when it Is obsrved that any player who hat competed in either the first or the third quarter and hat then been withdrawn may not reenter the lineup In that quarter; but in the second and fourth peri od! he may be withdrawn in the first 11 minutes and re enter in the last four mln- jites. An interesting method of coping with the problem is that proposed by Len Casan ova, University of Oregon coach, who suggests a "two bench" system. Briefly it consists of seating eligible players on one bench and those no longer eligible for substitution on the other. It is the simplest that has come to our attention and may be the answer. Certainly It should minimize the confu sion that might otherwise eas ily retult Wa are of the opin ion that it may be widely used. EXCITING RIDE San Rafael, Calif. CW When Robert Gulney, Jr., de cided he wanted to go for a drive the other night he sneak ed into the United Ambulance company and took off in a ahtny new ambulance with red lights flashing, alrent walling and horns honking. Gulney wat arrested within a few minutes. where fewer and fewer mutt support more and more. (Released by The Associated Newspapers.) THE if LAW! W Do not park within 15 feet of the driveway en trance to any flee station. The Big New 1953 FORD Is II feet Inches long! To See ana Drive It Today CaU "WARREN MACREB 2-8232 Or Ask For Me At Valley Motor Co. S-S147 condone any discharge of a! hard working civil service em- J ploye." Speaking at Frederick. Md., Sept 25, 1952, Eisenhow er also said: "The loyaL effi cient federal employe, no mat ter where he it working, has nothing to fear from me." j Kivmsat, 1MI) J OREGON STATE PAIR. SPECIAL L. L. Jones & Son, largest builders of memorials, from the rough granite, are cutting out the middle man. Buy at the Oregon State Fair and save 25 or more. Only the owners are displaying and are offering you this chance to eliminate the sales man's commission. Stop at our booth and see these special Oregon State Fair Prices. Markers from $27.50. Monuments from $157.50. l. l. mm & son 7330 S.W. Macadam, Portland, Ore Phone CHerry 7145 I ft - a