F Pag i THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, galea, Ortgt" ' Tuesday, January 12, 1954 Capital AjJournal An Indapendenl Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every afternoon except Sunday at 280 North Church St. Phone 22441. i f IS toidirt PraM at T" Ttaa AbmcuM rrtM U iduivtlr wtllM t a wm for auNUattea all ciHUb, ertu4 u u at alJMral crrtjua la lua ease, eae aiaa Mat a aaUalwe Ibarala, EISENHOWER T-H PROPOSALS President Eisenhower's proposals for changes iq the Taft-Hartley act strike a slightly right of center middle ground as his policies usually do. They represent a dis tinct toninjr down of the somewhat sensational revisions White House authors proposed to submit to congress sev. eral months aeo. These brought violent outcries from em. ploying interests. Jt developed that Eisenhower had not seen inera so 11 was never Known wneiner iney reprewriucu his views. Since then the nresident has no doubt heard extensively from both sides and given the matter considerable per- aona! study. The proposals are based on a conviction mat T-H is essentially a good law, but needs revisions. Taft himself believed this and was ready to make revisions as far back as 1949 only to be thwarted by President Tru man s threat to veto any changes snort ol outrignt repeal. Vtf- 1L!.I. 1L. . ...... kxj.ammm JBt iah rtf Um TVO iniHK VUO IIIUBI, lllipuruilll. icvuuiuiciiuauwu v m president is for a secret ballot of union members before caning a strike, wis to oe supervised oy ine government Ake a vote to designate a bargaining agent. At the pres ent time union omciais can cau a strike, mougn in practice the larger unions usually vote authorization in advance. The president believes the members have a right to de cide without coercion from any source whether to go on etrike. There may be fewer strikes if this provision be comes law, but there will be as many strikes aa the union members want. Several proposals favor the unions. Eisenhower wants to restrict the ban on secondary boycotts to eliminate re fusal to handle "struck work" and "farmed out work." He reiterates his objections to the true secondary boycott and his determination to see it forbidden. Eisenhower would protect the rights of workers while they are on strike by permitting them to vote in union representation elections while they are on strike. This would prevent employers from securing decertifications of unions while their members are on strike. The recommendations also call for imposing of the union hop requirement that an employe join the union within even days in construction, amusement and maritime in dustries where employment is often brief. The president also wishes to remove the present discrim ination implied in requiring labor officers to take the non communist affidavit while no such requirement is made on employer representatives. Almost everyone who analyzes the law agrees that this should be done, but it hasn't been as yet One of the most important recommendations is for a government fact finding board to make recommendations for settlements in national emergency disputes, such as coal, trasportation, steel and the like. This would involve the government more in the disputes than it is now, and is at variance with Eisenhower's previous pronouncements. The president wishes the rights of the states to deal with labor problems when not in conflict with federal legisla tion to be protected. This is in line with his general atti tude to have as much governing as possible done at the state and local levels. The recommendations appear to be well thought out. They ate fair and temperate. They will not satisfy extrem ists on either side. Nor do they cover all the revisions need ed in this complicated piece of legislation. No presidential message could. This is a job lor congressional committees i . : 1 1 i I i i : .j .j I n VUlJipUBCU Ul ilJCIl BIWIICU 111 IHUUr irf ISltt 11UII, ItlUtJU Uf Oil the facts six years of operation of the act have developed. The president has provided a good sound basis for con gressional study, and enactment of needed changes. It is to be hoped that congress will get on with this task and bring T-H amendments up for a vote at the coming session. It should not shun the job because the subject is controver sial This has been done for too long already. ELECTION (Y EARS I vUftWW W-sl VI.. ...7 J mf iL. 1 . i I'lVn-i r mat jk ' r. wy ? 9W 'W POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Family Corporation Solves Many Problems Peacefully NEW YORK ) "Anything you da far kid take lots ot time. And while wt are willing to give the in everything else, that is the one thing we are re luctant to give them time. "And that is probably why we have so much juvenile delin quency. 1 think that remark pretty well iuma up the problem of dealing with children. I wish it were my observation, but it isn't It belongs to Frank Blair, who discovered the truth of it by living. Frank, who was a trans port pilot in the last war, has seven children and make more money than a successful coun terfeiter except J rant makes his honestly. He is newscaster of the NBC-TV network show called "Today." But having and loving seven children and earning them a good living Frank found wasn't quite enough. Too much of the burden fell on his pretty wife, Lillian. With my odd working houn." he said, "I couldn't spend the time with my kids that i felt a dad should." But Frank, who at 38 looks like a handsome older brother of his children, found the answer in a family corporation in which each member has a voice in the By HAL BOYLE family decisions. Here's bow it came about; . . . "Lil and I discovered the kids liked to nave bull sessions to discuss . where they'd got out of line and done wrong or to talk over family projects. We found they didn't mind being punished if they bad a voice in deciding whether the punishment fitted the crime. . "At their own suggestion we started having these 'Let's talk it over sessions,' an they developed into mock trials, and Lil and I found ourselves on trial, too, sometimes. We found out what the kids thought we were doing wrong, particularly after one of the kis got the idea of keeping minutes of the meetings." Then Frank decided to create a family corporation to rule on all family questions with each member being allowed one vote for each year of his age. The current voting status is as follows: Frank, 39; Lil, 37; young Frank, 17: John, 15; Tom, 13, Mary, 7; Theresa, 4; Paul, 2; Bill, Currently, the senior partners are able to outvote the junior partners of the Blair corpora tion 75 to 59 In a showdown, but Frank says it doesn't often come to that "The kids don't vote as a block against us," he said. "The first thing we found out is that they woat take adantage of a situa tion if you girt them t cense of participation. That is the win derful thing about children their real sense of honesty and fair-mindedness." The family corporation meets every Sunday, ind no outsiders are allowed. The members vote fines and penalties and punish ments, decide questions like what type of new car to buy and where to spend vacations. The kids have routine chares they are expected to perform, but are paid for extra duties such as baby sitting. Each mem ber of the family pays a penny a week for each year of his age, and the pot is divided among the kids just before Christmas each year, including as a bonus the money chipped in by dad and mom. Lil acta as treasurer by papular demand. "I don't kn.iw whether it would work with every family," said Frank, "but this corporation game has helped bring us closer together, and we all have learned a great deal from it "It has given up a real in sight into our children's minds, really opened a new world to us. You can't push kids out the front door, tell them to come back in three hours, and then forget them. That is how they get into trouble. You have to find a way to give them some thing to do and a feeling or responsibility." When I asked Frank whether the Blair corporation had closed its membership lolls, he laughed and said: 'Well, you never can tell. I haven't been home since, break fast I don't know what's out there now." WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND CODE OF ETHICS FOR PUBLIC OFFICIALS An unusual feature of Governor Dewey's 12th annual message to the New York legislature was the request to write into law a code of ethics, a series of measures to revise the moral and ethical standards of government offi cials and political party leaders. Dewey declared such action necessary to assure the pub lic that its political leaders are not only honest but above suspicion. Both houses promptly adopted a resolution put ting the governor's plan into effect. . Dewey's program for raising moral nnd cthicnl stan dards called for creation of a special committee that would: Define business and professional activities improper for government and party officers. Regulate private practice by public officers before state agencies. Promulgate a code of ethics to govern public and party officers when conflicts arose between their business and professional interests and their public duties. Dewey declared that "the people arc entitled to know that no genuine conflict of interest exists among their pub lic servants. They are also entitled to know that no selfish motive is permissible which interferes with the high-mind ed and honorable conduct of pubic affairs. Dewey asserted that the problem of cthicnl standards is not the simple issue of bribery and corruption, on which all are agreed but involved "a whole range of borderline behavior, questions of propriety and the question of con flict of interest." Also involved are "changing standards, in relation to man's ideals and thinking." The governor referred to the fact that conduct in pub lic office once condoned would now be universally condemn ed. He recollected that 200 years ago in Britain public offices were auctioned off publicly to the highest bidder who made up the price and profit from the public. He cited the fact that 100 years ago it was taken for granted in the United States that legislators represented special in terests and used their information "to feather their own nests," wore not condemned but envied. And Dewey added, "simple rules suffice in a simple society but our so ciety is no longer simple, but complex. Ike Finds Mamie Gets His Speech Before He Gave It WASHINGTON Right after President Eisenhower finished his ttate-of-the-union speech to the joint session of congress he was greeted by Mamie, who had watched him from the house gallery. What have you got there? queied Ike, pointing to some pa pers in Mamie's hand. Oh. it s just a copy of your speech. Everyone in the gallery was given a copy," she replied. Golly, said the president, "it I'd known that they already had my speech up here on the hill wouldn't have bothered to come up here to read it." "Bnrtoa Holmes" Nlxea Vice-President Nixon assured democratic senators in an off-the-record meeting the other evening that South Korean President Syne- man Rhee will not start war again in Korea. "I am not worried about Rhee using aggressive tactics," the vice president said, commenting upon Ithee's threat to renew the Korean war on January 27. "He will make lot of fuss, but he will cooperate with the United Suites. Nixon spoke affectionately of the wrinkled, little South Korean lead er with the apple-seed eyes, and pooh-poohed the notion that Rhee isn t strong in hut own country. Syngman Rhee Is South Korea, he declared. Don t think for a moment that Rhee doesn't have those people behind him. The vice-president was the only lepubliran at a private democratic gathering held at trie home ot his neighbor. Senator tstes Kefauver. The get-together was arranged, ex plained the Tennessee rrimebuster. ul the outgrowth of a neighborly chat about a Christmas motor bike that the Kefauver kids had let the Nixon youngsters ride. ' Kefauver Is the most popular papa in the neighborhood," ac knowledged Nixon, "because he bought his kids a bike with a mo tor on it Standing in front of the Kefauver fireplace. Nixon pointed out his travels on a map of Asia and gave a detailed, country-by-country re port. He warned in advance, how ever, that he would present no conclusions. "If 1 express any conclusions." he explained, "it is always attrib uted to the president." Mrong tor Chiang At one point, when he was giv ing a flattering report on another AsiaUc strong man. Chiang Kai Shek, the vice-president was chal lenged by Senator Russ Long of Louisiana. "A miracle ha been performed In Formosa," Nixon claimed. "Chiang Kai-Shek has 600.0UO well oiiupprd. ready to-go troops " Are you sure of that 600 1 fig. Interrupted Long ure" Interrupted Long 1 am a Tlou-ov'a nmi.nl f omU u-aa hv thn Hinrlnn. i member of the armed services ...i... . i .' . i .'t ...ki.k i... I committee. At the last bri Ultso lit invnricriinK ni ft uni iiv.p mif limn lui iti nr forced the removal of the acting lieutenant governor, the only scandal of his long administration. Whether a code of ethics will remove corruption and racketeering by public officials remains to be seen. It will however, be a restraining influence, just as the 10 commandments are with the masses. It will make exposure, conviction and punishment for violations easier. ti.l'. y DREW PEARSON anything in India that can stop communism from taking over." Nixon s most optimisuc report was on Turkey, which he described as the "strongest link" in our east ern defense chain. However, Big Ed Johnson of Colorado blurted out: "Mr. Vice President, which ones of all those countries are potential turkeys? irurlal Indo-Cnina Nixon replied that the other countries "don't have the re sources," and acknowledged that they are a long way from measur ing up to Turkey in strength. Prob ably we biggest drawback, he sug gested, was the lack of native leaders. For example, be praised Prime Minister Sastroamidjojo of Indonesia as a "great leader," but complained that he stood alone. "After my conference with him," reported Nixon, "I asked, 'who else should I talk to?' He said, 'just me . Nixon blamed the Dutch and French for not training native leaders in their former colonies. "The British trained natives for civil leadership, but unfortunately, the Dutch and the French did not." he said. Of all the Far Eastern countries. the vice president laid most rtress on Indo-China and indicated that the Eisenhower administration con siders Indo-China the key to our Asiatic policy, because of its stra tegic rubber and tin. This led West Virginia's Senator Harley Kilgore to suggest that we bring pressure on the European nations to curb the international cartels and fix a fair policv, so Indo-China will get some of the profit and benefit from its rubber and tin production. "I am not qualified to go into that," Nixon brushed aside the suggestion. On the whole, the democrats came away favorably impressed with the vice president's mission. One senator described him as a "mental blotter" who sopped up everything he saw and heard. Washington Pipeline The most powerful U.S. senator. democrat Dick Russell of Geor gia, told friends last week: "I did n't like Attorney General Brown ell's remarks about President Tru man, though I knew he was just playing polities. But Governor Dewey's speech in Hartford really got under my skin. Why, that litUe isn't fit to shine the shoes of a democrat." . . . Idaho's republican Senator Herman Welker has never spoken to Montana s democratic Senator Mike Mans field since he came to Washington, From Mansfield's viewpoint the feeling is mutual. . . . Democrat Sam Raybura's only regret during his 72nd birthday party was that I he couldn't find room for an old- fasnionrd dance, with his shoes off. Salem 42 Years Ago y BEN MAXWELL Jaaaary It, UU A news story of this date had urged that something must be done to give relief to unemployed men in Salem and enable hundreds will ing to work the opportunity to earn the price of a meal and a J bed. The situation had arisen, the I Capital Journal said, as a result of bringing contract labor into the locality to work on railroad con struction and on public buildings. PhD 0. Parmalee and J. Clifford Turpin, first aerial deputy sheriffs in history, had soared aloft from Dominques field to seek two ban dits in the San Fernando hills of California. Oregon's state tax levy for 1912 had been reported by the tax com mission as being $3,063,815.75 (something less than the cost of new. South Salem high school). . Postal savings bank had started operations here during September and now boasted deposits totalling $10,000. Capital National bank, J. H. Al bert, president, had advertised that idle money placed in their savings department would draw four per cent interest. Sam Morgan, owner of Liberty theater, had lately also acquired ' the Wexford. Ground breaking ceremonies for new Reed college in Portland had been held with Dr. Thomas Lamb Eliot presiding and Mrs. Helen Ladd Corbet breaking ground. OPEN FORUM Why Not Fix the Old Barn in Bush Park? S.F. CABLE CARS TO GO? San Francisco's world famous cable cars have endured Into the second half of the twentieth century largely on sentiment, one auspecta. People down there didn't think the old town would be the same without them, and they were right. Finally it seems that the cable cars must go, a victim t wh.t we sometimes ironically call progress. The city's nnhlic utilities commission has voted their end, overriding the angry protest of apectators at the meeting. It will be interesting to see if the cars really pass out Jheir demisa haa been frequently threatened. . efing I intended, the figure was given as less than 300,000 troops, and some of them didn't even have shoes " Thai s the figure that is batted around. I didn't count them." Nixon replied Impatiently. He acknowieageo iniang :. d.intv .:, nf ,.., ,hJ hr. To The Editor: When you ask somebody with good ideas why they don't put their ideas before the public they say: "Oh, nobody would pay any attention tn what I think." Any good, constructive idea makes its impression no matter what its source, even from the least of these your brethren. Of course the one in office, who has the power to use it frequently i sees to it you do notget the: credit for the idea. But what of it? You have the satisfaction of I knowing it was your idea, and ' you shouldn't let the left hand , know what the right hand does Governor ; for the good of the world any way. You get your reward in heaven. As an example what I mean, why not fix up the old barn in Bush park for the use of the various small educational clubs in Salem' Wouldn't it be a good investment? W hen a group of people are In terested in a project they pile up a mass of small, constructive ideas which eventually give birth to a plan through which the de- reaiity. sired nroiect becomes a I'SF.I.F.SS SNOW STAKKS ' We have such a group Interested Bend Bulletin ' in the development of Bush park. Flanking various Oregon high- But how are they going to do ways east of the Cascades these ")' constructive planning If they balmy January days are orange-! are seldom in the park? What red snow stakes. They provide better plan to get them In the park than to have a meeting kai-Shek could noi mvaae ine rMdsirt ovrr ... ,-,, rri.!r,ce for their various clubs? nese mainland wiinoui u.o. sea .... .... fc .. i v. and air support. claimed that Formosa has been transformed into a model govern- n-ent. which he described as "sort of a world capital to the millions at Chinee outside ol China." Nixon was slightly less nattering In his opinion of India's leader. Pandit Nehru, though the vice president acknowledged he was impressed with Nehru's ability and "satisfied" Nehru is antirommu llst The trouble.'' observed Nixon, "is that Nehru isn't realistic in his policy ot neutralism. There isn't Shamko country. Ifore their Interest would be In these sunny, springlike days, auicke ned Into voluntary laoor the stakes are about as incon- to clean up the park and de gruous as a straw hat In a snow I velope beautiful, landscaped areas storm. I planted with shrubbery and flow- - I en donated by the member of WASCO AT t'F.NTl'RY MARK jthe clubs. They would have their The Dalles Chrenkle '"beautify the park" picnics. Hun- Wasro county is approaching 'dreds ot people would help with a significant date. Lens than two the work who otherwise would weeks from now H wll complete never enter the park. 100 years ? existence, the county ! Please think it over. Park having been created Jan. 11, 1854, j Board. by act of the Territoral Legiila-1 J.. M. PETTY CREW turt. ' in" S. 12th St. JU Qm aft! SAVE $100 General Electric 21" TV Set Strcrto-Powar Chassis 21" Picture Tube, Mahogany Cabinet UHF-VHF Tuner 10" Dyoapower Speaker. Reg. $399.95 ONLY $299 95 SAVE $100 Admiral 21" TV Console. Mahogany Cabinet All Channel Tuner for UHF-VHF. 10" Speaker 252 sq. In. Screen. Reg. $399.95 NOW ONLY $299 95 17" General Electric TV Table Model. Deluxe UHF-VHF Tuner. 1 Full Year Guarantee on Parts and Tube Reg. $239.95 NOW ONLY $169 95 ir Admiral Table Model TV. UHF-VHF Equipped Plastic Cabinet Closing Out Price ONLY 95 ir Crosley Table Model TV. Mahogany Cabinet All Channel Tuner. Reg. $229.95 NOW ONLY 14995 7 'i cu. ft. General Electric Refrigerator. Full Width Freexer. 5-Year Guarantee on Sealed Unit Reg. $209.95 . ONLY 15995 8 'a cu. ft. General Electric Refrigerator. Automatic Defrost. Full Width Freezer. Reg. $319.95 ONLY 259 95 27" Admiral TV. UHF-VHF Equipped. Mahogany Cab inet. Half Doors. Save Real Dollars. Reg. $705.00 ONLY $46995 66-gaIlon General Electric Water Heater. Twin 3000- Watt Heating Element 10-year Guarantee. Reg. $174.95 1 NOW Speed Queen Wringer Washer, Deluxe. Large Family Size. Pump. Reg. $174.95 . NOW ONLY ?12495 USED APPLIANCES AT HALF PRICE Norge Refrigerators, Frigidaire Ranges and Refrigerators . . . Pins Many Others ' Small Appliances, Clocks, Waflie Irons, Irons, Mixers, Heat Pads 25 to 50 off! Twmm Gilbert 2(0 N. Liberty Open Frldcry 'ill I