Monday. January 18. 1954 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. Salem. Ores" Capital Adjournal . An Independent Nwipopr Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor ond Publisher i GEORGE PUTNAM. Editor Emeritus Published every afternoon except Sunday at 280 North Church St. Phone 2-2406. 9m Lnm4 Wlro Mmntm TM IMIUM PrM to tirltuli.lr tamiM lo liM IH lof MOUM11M U Mt iNttk crton MUM iuviui rt4iu4 ! Ulo rwo 1M rwolUhoo' mria THE ECHO PARK DAM The Congressional Record of January 11 containa replies fcy the leading conservationists of the nation to the vicious Jiropaganda attacks being made against SB 1655 authori ng the upper Colorado river storage project including the Echo Park dam. one unit of the project. Opponents would have the general public believe that Echo Park dam would flood about 90 per cent of the spec tacular canyon of the Green and Yampa rivers, whereas the Bureau of Reclamation a report shows that not more tiimi 11 per teut uf Dinosaur'National Monument would be flooded. . Misrepresentations and misleading phrases have been used by the opponents of Echo Park dam as substitutes for facts to bolster their claims that the Eisenhower ad ministration is engaged in a "give-away" program of na tional resources. Innocent, well meaning organizations, ignorant of facts, . "victimized by the scurilous practice, have blindly entered opposition, when if the truth were presented to them thy would have entered support instead as many of them bave. - Ernest II. Linford of Salt Lake, editor of the Salt Lake Tribune, who last October was awarded a plaque by the American Foreaty Association for "distinguished service to conservation dealing with the various phases of western land management by spearheading crusades to protect watersheds and encourage good management of soil and water," is quoted in a letter to the New York Times: "Your editorial No Dam at Dtnouur of December J2 repeats the familiar shocker that this dam (lo a remote and almost Inaccessible section of western Colorado i would destroy one of the west's great scenic preserves and that Secretary McKay's dicision Is, as the Sierra Club of California claims, a threat td the national park system. "Actually, as many sincere conservationists have testified, Echo Park, Dam and Split Mountain Reservoir, scheduled for later construc tion, would flood nothing much of scenic, historical., or geological value except in a small section of the canyon, and this can be dupli cated in a hundred other areas. "This program is the only means by which Utah. Colorado, snd ether upper basin States can fulfill their compact obligations to the lower basin states snd put to neneiiciai uu weir snare w uie mio radio river water. Perhaps one has to live in this semiarid county lo realize just bow important this 'last water hole' is to the region." Linford adds that with so much at stake in the battle over public lands it is difficult to understand "why Echo Park is being made the blazing symbol of conservation at this time ... the mere window-dressing for a behind-the-scenes movement of greater consequences to an intermoun tain west and indirectly to the nation." The Desert News and Telegram sums up the behind-the-cenes propaganda as follows: "We might at well face it. California wants Colorado river water that belongs to Utah. As long as Echo Park and other upper Colo rado river project dams go unbuilt, she will get that water. So the present campaign will continue. And It It effective. Shibboleths such as 'bureaucratic boondoggling,' 'stealing the public's Inheritance,' 'de stroying nature's wonderland,' and other empty phrases make an effec tive substitute for facts In the public mind." Not having succeeded so far in diverting the Columbia river to lrigate Southern California deserts, the Califor- mans seek a monopoly ol Colorado river water at the ex pense of other states dependent upon it for development. TG-P OUR NEW DEFENSE POLICY Senator Dick Russell of Georgia will support the Eisen hower cutbacks In the armed forces, he announces. And there goes one of the most attractive Democratic political issues for the new session of congress and the political campaign which will follow. For Russell is the most in fluential of all Democratic senators. Many of them would be sure to follow his lead and the others would make no capital, political or otherwise out of disputing his wisdom. What Eisenhower is doing and Russell is endorsing ia a fundamental change n U.S. military policy. It emphasizes striking power with new and terrible weapons as the chief deterrent of Russian aggression. Less reliance is to be placed on huge ground forces, which would in any event be heavily outnumbered by Russia's tremendous army and which couldn't possibly defend all the points where a Rus sian blow might be struck. Instead we develop our new weapons and the means of delivering them on their targets. This means a larger rolo for the Air Force and the Navy, a smaller one for Army ground forces, though these will be kept quite large. We have no expectation of being able to stop a Russian drive with ground troops, but we do expect to make such a push so expensive to Russia that it will not be under-1 taken. This policy has evolved out of months of study an8 dis cussion by military and civil leaders at Washington. .The concept did not originate with Eisenhower alone. Russell points out that he has felt this way for a considerable time nd is glad to nee Eisenhower adopt this viewpoint. All those air bases the U.S. has built and is building cross North Africa. Turkey, Okinawa and at other points round the perimeter of the vast Russian realm carry out this policy of containment through means of retaliation rather than through assembling forces large enough to resist an attack at any point where it might come, a mani fest impossibility. This policy involves risk? Of course. Like any other policy toward Russia. Rut it seems to carry the maximum of protection for the free world without bankrupting the U.S. economy. And it is cheering to assume that it will not be made a vote catching issue in congress. Criticism based on honest doubts as to its wisdom are of course to be welcomed. Democracy flourishes on free discussion, IF WE REFUSE TO HAVE A RECESSION An Associated Press business survey, results of which are published in the Capital Journal today, indicates a mixed picture, with increasing plant layoffs, hut a stead fast refusal on the part of Anicricar. Iuisinessitu'ii to be licked. There can be no quetsionlng the reduction in industrial output implied by the numerous layoffs, including some times whole plants and st other times whole shifts. As these families reduce their buying retail trade will be hurt and this will soon he reflected in smaller orders to jobbers and by them to manufacturers. But on the other hand new plant investment is expected to reach a record breaking six and a half billion dollars the first quarter of this year. This is simply phenomenal, considering the enormous investments already made since the war. And department store sales for the first week of January were seven per cent above the same week of 19S3. Neither of these facts adds up to a depression. Our greatest asset at this time is an intangible one, the long term optimism of the A merit an with money to spend, whether he is a businessman, an industrialist, or just an ordinary citizen planning for a new house or a new car. If these refuse to accept a recession we probably won't have more than a minor one. despite the determina tion of certain politicians to sell ui a big out. THE "ORDINARY" AMERICANS AMERICA I MADE CXfOH- GOOD tCOPU-? HARDWORKtNO PEOPLE- WOrU UM The SALESMAN AMD INWSTRV MPtMDJ OH Tur vjjnotf OF THE 4U.CMvM- .f , i HAVC VOO HtAW ABOUT TMC jAltfMeW CKt NlGrtT LlTf? HERE M I AT IT . WRITIM6 UP TH6 PMV OftKRfc INSERTING NEW CATALOG -SHEET AND READING OP ON TH6 New MERCHANDISE; COINS OVER, TOAAORROW PROSPECT U$T- r j i mmmmm. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Bricker Chief Eisenhower Opponent- Next to McCarthy y DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON One of the in teresting things about the present session of congress is that Eisen hower's chief senate opposition aside from McCarthy comes from r- republican whose record is vul opportunity in connection with the propagana campaign for the amendment Holman has likewise teamed up with or permitted the teaming up 1 of some of the worst isolationists, nerable. Members of the senate i anli-relieious. semi-fascist, or cm. press gallery, who have a way of ' ixations in the United States in smelling out their senatorial on-, support of his Bricker amend ions, have even rated him the ! ment With aenator. , fact it h bn Cera)d L He is: John Bricker of Ohio, I K. Smith's Christian Nationalist whotias opposed the president on the St. Lawrence Seaway; who has drummed up a nation-wide drive to hamstring the president's treaty power with the so-called Urtcxea Amendment: and who Is Crusade and Merwin K. Hart's Na tional Economic Council, among others, which have yammered in cessantly at the American public to "write your senator" in support of the amendment. Most of these Salem 31 Years Ago By BEN MAXWELL January 18, 1923 Questions centering around the government lease of Teapot Dome naval oil reserves in Wyoming to Sinclair oil interests had gotten before the senate oil investi gation committee. ' Salera public library was feat uring books on thrift to comme morate Thrift Week. An appropriation of $600 for purchase of an oil portrait of Governor Ben W. Olcott had been approved by the legislature. m m w Capital Journal's "Along State Street" column had this to say: "In the old days it was wine women and song. The wine is now gone, everyone can't sing and women are in politics." Bricker and Ike A careful examination of tb president's remarks at bis press conference on Wednesday the 13th offers bo substantial basi for claims by opponents of the Bricker amend ment that iw will fight any limita tions on his actions ia making treaties and executive agreements. Ia fact, in what bt said there is plenty of room for compromise. Despite mis, an iniporuim uu influential New York paper head lines the president's remarks in this way: "President to Fight Treaty Carta Plan in Leadership Test." The story which follows be gins with this sentence: "Presi dent Eisenhower has told his offi cial family that be is unalterably opposed to the Bricker amendment restricting the treaty-making pow ers of the president and is ready to stake his leadership on the issue." Further down in the story and till on the front page is an editor's parenthetical statement that at a Columbia university conference, "Noel T. Baker, professor of con stitutional law at Columbia" read a paper against the Bricker amend ment. There is no such person at Columbia university. There is a Noel T. Dowling who, according to the same paper, did read such a paper. The president's position appar ently Is somewhere between the present text of the Bricker amend ment and the determination of the state department that there shall be no change in the present ar rangements regarding treaties and executive agreements. The president flatly said in his press conference that he would not object at all to a "statement," which presumably means an amendment, "which said that any treaty, or any other executive or any kind of international agree ment that contravened any article of our constitution should be null and voind . , ." Then he rather vaguely said that he did not want to go back to the Articles of Confederation, wherein any individual stats could repudi ate a treaty. This is a point on which compromise is possible, be cause if he will agree, as he said he would, to section 1 of the Brick er smendment, such matters would become subject to judicial review. The fact is that Bricker and the president in several conferences have discussed the matter, and Bricker is not at all pessimistic about a compromise satisfactory to both. The real irreconcilable op position comes from people in the state department who do not want any limitation on their powers to POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER , U. S. Senators Still Do As Their Roman Predecessors . . By HAL WASHINGTON US Senators in the days of the old Romans used to talk over problems of state ia their marble baths. It waa a privilege of office ana a luxury that set them apart from their constituents, perhaps leading the Roman man in the street lo mutter enviously: "Why should Senator J. Quintus and his pals get steam-cleaned at the taxpayers' expense when 1 have to patronise a public bath with the riffraff?" This may be the origin of the saying that "a politician is always in hot water." Be that as it may, the senators of practically every country since Rome have managed to have their private baths where they can quietly discuss public issues while their tissues are being pummeled by attendants. Senators are a traditional breed, linked by a brotherhood of dignity snd posi tion that defies differences of time, language and politics. They stui do as the Koman sen ators did, who set the pattern long ago.- The U.S. senate has its pri vate marble baths, too. But it doesn't brag about it Indeed the senators are downright bashful about mentioning this - special plumbing privilege and the fact they luvs their own swimming pooL I discovered the existence of this marble-walled senatorial re treat when I asked how the elder statesmen managed to keep physic ally fit for their exhausting tasks. Talking over a hot desk all day A True Celebrity Seattle Post-Intelligencer With the passing of Death Val ley Scottv. the country has lost something more to be cherished than a mere celebrity. Behind Scotty's deliberate pic turesqueness was a definite strain of greatness, the largeness of view, the power of laughter, the disdain toward littleness in men or things that mark the free spirit Scotty himself would have dis missed this description as undue fuss over what, to him, just came naturally. Perhaps he would nave BOYLE can b pretty wearing. "They go to the oauis am re lax," said a veteran eorrespoa. dent here. When I expressed as interest in seeing them, he look! shocked and replied: "Why. you couldn't get in there. That is one placi where senators want to be aloo , ana mey an very jealous of this privilege." Well, that piqued me as a tax payer. If Mr. and Mrs. Eisenhower permit people to wander through the White House, why couldn't I at least take a peek st the sena torial baths, particularly if I prom ised to bring my own soap and not leave the hot water tap drip ping? ' , Easier said than done. But I finally made it after going through four channels, three roadblocks and piercing two Iron Curtains of verbal objection. I pushed open a swinging door in the Senate office building that said "for senators only" and stood at last within the sanctum sanctorium. Frankly, I was distppointed. The mysterious baths consisted only of some old-fashioned marble-walled bathing chamber, a small steam room, a tiny gym with a rowing machine and a mechanical horse. There also was a handball court and a swimming pool hardly big enough to accommodate s pair of medium sized Great Dane dogs. Two unadorned senators were idly toweling themselves dry. I didii't recognize them. Senators without their spectacles on look pretty much alike. I started to ask an attendant what kind of exercises the senators favored, but he was reluctant to talk. I couldn't even find out wheth er they had a special ladies day for Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine. .-- pre shackle the internal economy of ferred t0 be thought of as just the United States with socialistic soother hard-bitten old Westerner international agreements. In those agreements and not in big formal I treaties lie the real dangers which who mystified folks for the fun of il and nothing else. His own summation of his life was, "I had the supporters of some kind o( run tor my money. FAST FINE SERVICE amendment wish to check. spearheading the confirmation of people, incidentally, have only the a McCarthy man, Robert E. Lee vaguest idea of what the Bricker to the Federal Communications Commission an appointment which some White House advisers would just as soon have vetoed. Yet if friends of President Eisenhower took a careful look at Senator Bricker's record, the nation would wonder how he has the nerve to fight on certain is sues. On the St. Lawrence Waterway, for instance, the senator from Ohio was picked for service on amendment is all about And it's highly doubtful that the American Bar Association, up on whose good name Bricker trades, would care to have itself associated with these extremist elements. And it's highly doubt ful also that some of the sena tors, such ss Lyndon Johnson of Texas, realize what forces have inspired their heavy maiL Johnson, incidentally, though supposed to be the Democratic Grey Eagle, only steamboat on the Willamette working south of Oregon City, had been recondi tioned for log towing on the middle river. Most Brutal Tax? Columnist George Sokolsky, in a recent article, took a crack at the income tax. It is, he said, "the most brutal tax ever devised. because it gives the taxpayer no option, n imprisons him in the power of government . . . There is no way to employ an option, to make a choice with reeard In the Man s Shop, 415 State street. 1 income tax except to cheat, to William A. Zosel and Ellis E. swindle, to falsify statements, to looiey, proprietors, nad sa over- commit perjury. It is, in effect, a coats for $14.85, dress shirts for police tax." $1.15 and silk and knit ties for 65c He might have gone on to say mat mere is an element ol brut- rarest of all humans a true celebrity who never stooped to meanness. His pranks did not hurt or shame a living souL the key senate interstate com- i leader of the senate and nn wh. merce committee in 1948, a com-; constantly harps on teamwork, mittee which has much to do ! deliberately ignored his own with passing or blocking various transportation projects, including the St. Lawrence.. RAILROAD RETAINS FIRM At about thii time, the Pennsyl vania Railroad, which opposes the seaway, dropped the law firm of Henderson, Burr and Randall in Columbus, a very fine old firm in the senator's home town, and retained the Bricker law firm, paying it $25,000 in 194a About the same time. Senator. Bricker voted to pigeonhole the St Lawrence project in his com mitlre. Senator Taft took a stand Just the opposite. So did the farm team, the Democratic members of the senate Judiciary committee, by coming out for the Bricker amendment. Democratic judiciary members, meanwhile, had writ ten a contrary report, opposing it. HOLMAN'S BACKGROl'ND Meanwhile, Brocker's friend. Frank Holman. not only has done Grand Theater had billed Dixie i ality in all taxes. Minstrels with a cast or 60 people including singers, dancers, performers. A street parade had comedians, band and orchestra been scheduled. Good New Industry Astorian-Budget The fact that the Astoria Ply wood corporation has produced 1000 carloads of plywood worth $S million in just a little more than two years of operation is a note worthy evidence of improvement of Astoria's economic base. An industry that brings $2.5 mil lion a year into the community is obviously a tremendously valuable D. A. White and Son, 251 State street, were advertising alfalfa hay for $24 a ton. SHOULD TALK ANYWHERE Pendleton East Oregonian When one reads that represent- nothing to discourage extremist i tiv'! of the Big Four cannot support, but has definitely snug-! aRree upon si'e for a conference gled up to them. On Jan. 30, 1953, 1 1,6 wonders whether the meet he spoke before the Women's Pa- j lnR scheduled 10 days hence, can triotic Conference on national de-1 accomplish anything toward eas fense in Washington, after Con 'n?.the tensions in the East-West steel industry and the platform of the Republican party. In the years that followed the Pennsylvania Railroad continued to pay the Bricker law firm $103. 000. or a total of 128.000. And Senator Bricker continued to op pose the St ljwrrnce waterway. Furthermore, he admits that dur ing this period, his law firm paid him a total of S69.000. all? What happens to real pro- gresswoman Katharine St. George i cld : Certainly, if the ty earnings down, you won t henr people complaining very much about the income tax. which, many economists believe, is the fairest tax of all. The power to ! asset. When we consder the em- tax is the power to destroy" is an ; nomc status of the community, old economic axiom. It will be let us be careful not to overlook hard to convince a man who has the fact that this important in been paying property taxes on a dustry has been added, along with piece of idle land he hasn't been 1 other sources of new revenue. able to improve and which has ' never made him a dollar, that the i I income tax is any more "brutal." TIME FOR BUSINESS NOW This writer has had the ex peri- Hollywood (UP) Marilyn ence of "letting the lots go for; Monroe's studio indicated today taxes." The income tax doesn't hit j it is willing to discuss salary and anybody who is not earning. The other possible demands with her, greatest complaint against it but only if she cuts her honey from the taxpayer's point of j moon with Joe DiMagglo short I view is me stepping up oi rates i and returns to work by Wednes as income increases. This can beid.iv noon. ' regulated. True, the income tax "is. in ef fect s police tax." Aren't they Nr1hbunrf Malnllnm lev et 8:40 A.M.; 2:10 P.M. and 6:50 P.M. PORTLAND . . SOmln. SEATTLI . . . . I 4 hrs. SoithbvnJ Mainlliwa Imv et 9:50 A.M.; 4:25 P.M. ond 7:50 P.M. MEDFORD . . . l'jhrs. SAN FRANCISCO . 4 hrs. IOS ANGELES. . 64 hrs. for troval inforiftofien, caff Of wrifc UfiifcdV Airport Ttrminol. Coll 2-2459 or your rrovol agent. COMPAHC THt ttU AHB roim eo sr sis v. v,k ...r,.j . l. I were serious about talkine nr.. orgamzatipns oi onio, the unio. tne sme platform with such ev- , ' io u uown almost anyplace in Europe to talk about it tremist speakers as Robert H. WiiUims, California racist propa gandist anu editor of Williams In-! trlligenre Summary. Mrs. Grace WELCOMES CANDIDACY I.. H. Brousscau of Greenwich. Corvallls Gaiette-Times ( onn. who wrote the foreword in Those who know the excellent .k"', wKJmp',.tKlti "i,:.Mus' i0 Governor Paul Patterson has Abolish the I niled Nations," hn Hnins far th l rw A studio spokesman said he didn't know what disciplinary ac tion Fox might take if Mrs Mon roe doesn't show up. TRAGIC SEQUEL Council Bluffs. Ia. (UP) Tommy Smith. 14, whose story was publicized two weeks ago in the March of Dimes campaign, strangled Sunday in a harness he wore to support his polio weak ened back. Tommv was dead acira as program cnairman. i snn durjne ... Das, v.,r f hi, Williams is the man who pub- administration will welcome his lished a picture of Eisenhower candidacy for election. Fra men Every Republican President, or with Marshal znuxov when they; as able and capable as Mr. Pat- candidnte for president Irom were in Berlin together, with the ; terson have ever occupied our when found by his mother, Mrs.1 Herbert Hoover on. and including inflammatory charge that: "The governor's chair. Herbert Smith. Tom Dewey on whose ticket Marxist macnine is pushing Gen Bricker once ran as vice presi- eral Eisenhower as its chosen dential candidate, has favored the candidate." St. Lawrence ct Bricker. whose Despite this, and despite the state would greatly benefit from fact that newspaper widely pub- Name Your Job The 'Jeep7 Does Itl the seaway, has consistently voted the other way. RKICKKR AMENDMENT Now let's look at the senator's record and his supporters on the Hrickrr amendment. This amend ment is opposed by the Republi can president, his attorney gen eral and his secretary of state, on the ground that it would hamp er the president's treaty-making power and put U.S. foreign rela tions back to the divided days of 1776. It happens that F.isea licirrd the refusal of Congress woman St George and others to appear on the same platform. frank Holman proceeded with his speech and urged the "women patriots" to exert all their influ- j ence to pass the Bricker amend- i ment. I I-atrr Holman listed among the , groups supporting his amendment seven extremist organizations: ! and on M . 1953. he wired Merwin K. Hart whom Justice Robert Jackson has described as hower is more skilled in his! Tell known for his pro-fascist knowledge of toreicn alfairs thee leanincs." urging suro;t for the most presidents and far more so Bricker amendment. Holman even than he is on domestic policies, yet some of his totalled sup porters are clamoring to ham string his authority. Inside fact is that the Bricker amendment was sold to Bricker by his old friend. Frank E. Hot signed the telecram ' Frank E. Holman. past president American Bar Association." This gives some insight into the manner in which certain ex tremist pressure crimps, mas querading behind patriotism, have man of Seattle Holman is a prst mohilirrd public opinion to h-imp-president of the American Bar er the treaty making power of the Association, a distinction which president of the I nited States, he parades at every conceivable I (Copyright, 1954) $ $ INVESTORS $ $ Moke your SAVINGS' investments earn a more proriloble return. Buy first mortgages on improved real estate in this vicinity, your money will earn you S'i interest net. Mortgages in various amounts from $1,000 to $35,000 on form, city and suburban prop erties. W take care of all details end col lections. STATE FINANCE CO. 167 S. 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