Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, February 09, 1957, Page 1, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Capital JuJoiiHial
THE WEATHER.
PARTLY CLOUDY with occasional
showers tonight; Increasing cloudi
ness and rain, Sunday. Low to
night, 36;. high Sunday, 48.
3 SECTIONS
24 Paget
69th Year, No. 35
Salem, Oregon, Saturday, February 9, 1957
tntarod at Meond din
mattr at Salm. Ortjrcm
Price 5c
Zhukov Says
Ike Doctrine
Warlike Step
Soviet Marshal Says Eisenhower
3Iight Not Be Same Man He
Knew During the War .
MdrseDeclares
"Three Sisters
Area Reduced
Senator Plans to Seek
Restoration Through'
Congress Action
WASHINGTON Wl Sen. Morse
(D-Orc) said Friday that the
Agriculture department had cut
53,000 acres off of Oregon's Three
Sisters wilderness area.
And he said that E. L. Peterson,
an Oregonian who is assistant
secretary of Agriculture, was
responsible. ,
"It is high time that the assis
tant secretary started doing some
positive thinking, instead of mak
ing decisions first and plans
later, Morse said.
New Areas Created
The Agriculture department
Friday announced that it was:
creatine Ihree new wilderness I
areas in Oregon Three Sisters,
Mt. Washington and Diamond
Peak.
A 53,000-acre tract west of
Morse Creek will not be included
in the Three Sisters area, the de
partment said. This is to .be
opened to timber cutting . and
other development.
Morse said he will ask Congress
to overrule the Agriculture depart
ment on the 53,000-acre tract.
"I shall propose that the de
partment's action be cancelled by
the Senate Committee on Interior
and Insular Affairs by the incor
poration of appropriate language
in the Anderson Bill, which will
set up a national outdoor recrea
tion commission," he said.
He added that he believed "no
areas should be taken from wil
derness status until the depart
ment formulates an acceptable
wilderness preservation program.
'No Plans to Manage'
"The department has no plans
to manage these lands, has not
requested road funds, and has
opposed an increase in the author
ization for access road funds," he
said.
Sen. Neubergcr (D-Orc) also
opposed the plan. He said Con
gress should pass a bill to prevent
reductions in wilderness areas.
The department's aclion, he
said, "needlessly sacrifices valu
able and picturesque recreational
terrain."
Tree Planted in Arbor Day Ceremony
Hi
NEW DELHI (AP) - Marshal Georgi K. ZUukov
declared Saturday the Eisenhower doctrine tor the
Middle East "undoubtedly is a steo toward war."
The Soviet defense .minister, who has exchanged
several letters with Eisenhower
since their wartime association, ad
ded in a chat with reporters that
the President might not be the
same man he knew in Germany
12 years ago.
View on Doctrine
Of the Mideast doctrine, the
touring Soviet army leader de
clared:
"I- do not know if Elsenhower
really is its originator. But it is
meant for interference by using
American capital in the Middle
East militarily and economically.
It is a new edition of the old
colonialist policy."
After he said the Russians were
sure the Arabs would reject the
Eisenhower plan, Zhukov was
asked why he did not "make his
views known in a more intimate
fashion" to hist "old friend" Eisen
hower. Uses Interpreter
Zhukov, speaking through an
interpreter, said with apparent
deliberation:
"Eisenhower Is my old friend
as a soldier. I do not know what
is left of him as a soldier
whether he is still the same man."
Train Collides
With Car; Man
Is Hospitalized
A Salem man was hospitalized
with serious injuries after his car
was struck by a train at the Hincs
street crossing of the Southern Pa
cific tracks shortly before noon
Saturday.
David C. Snyder. 58, 1M7 Waller
St., suffered a head injury and
possible fractures of the ribs, one
leg and one arm, Willamette am
bulance attendants said. He was
treated by city first aidmen and
rushed to the hospital by the am
bulance.
Snyder's car was heavily dam
need in the 11:25 a. m. collision
it was reported. He was alone in
it at the time of the collision.
He was still under treatment at
the hospital early Saturday after
noon and no report on his condi
tion was available.
Council to Get
11 Resolutions
For Sidewalks
A sheaf of sidewalk resolutions
11 in number, will be introduced
at the city council meeting Mon
day-night, mainly for new walks
in one general district of the city,
Streets along which walks will
be built arc: Hansen avenue,
South 24th, Lee and Ford. The one
on Hansen will be a curb sidewalk.
Street Improvements
Two petitions for street im
provements will be read. One peti
tion asks for the improvement of
Lower Ben Lomond drive from
the west line of Lot 24 to south line
of Lot 24 in Ben Lomond park.
Signatures on the petition repre
sent 61.8 per cent of the assessable
property and the engineer recom
mends a 24-foot pavement. It
will be without sidewalks.
The other petition is for im
provement of 24th street from Lee
to Simpson. The city engineer re
ports that signatures represent 56.7
per cent of the assessable property
and recommends a 24-foot pave
ment with sidewalks.
The only public hearing slated
for Monday night is on the in
tention of the city to construct a
sewer line in part of Hammcl
street and Marcia drive. A resolu
tion will be introduced calling for
the construction.
Mayor Robert F. While will In
troduce a bill for. adoption of the
1955 edition of the Pacific Coast
building code. The code, which the
city now uses, is the 1952 edition.
The gas safety code will be on the
calendar for final action.
The taxicab fare increase 'bill
will be up for final yote.
DO YOU
KNOW
Thai the FBI could become
a Gestapo only It the tradi
tional checks and restraints
were corrupted or eliminated
by dictatorial government?
Read
GOD
Sec. 2-Page 6
The
Storv
M-m ml
til fe-
pmW TP : IxX II c '' :;
Benson T Support
Prices on tf Commodities
Saud Praises
PactConcluded
With President
Salem officially recognized Arbor day
and Willson park got a new tree, an 8-foot
black maple, In a ceremony Saturday
morning near the state eapltol building.
P. H. Brydon (left) donated the tree and
on hand to receive It was Alderman Pres
ton Hale (right) for the city. Representing
the 4-H clubs and leaders, sponsors of the
Arbor day observance, were (center) Ed
ward Majek, chairman of Salem 4-H ad
visory council; Jane Irving, county 4-H
agent, and 4-H'ers Robin Sughrue and Tim
Emmons, who wielded the shovels in the
planting ceremony. (Capital Journal'Photo)
SWIMMING POOL STARTED
Amusement Park to
Open This Summer
JAPAN BUYS CHINA COAL
TOKYO 11 Japan's ministry of
international trade and industry
said today it has allocated $1,100,
000 for the purchase of 50.000 tons
of coal from Communist China.
Develonment of an amusement
park on a 47-acre tract east of the
city, to be In operation this sum
mer, is announced by the buyers
of the property who will operate
the project.
A deal is practically complete
between the Salem Chamber of
Commerce and an association of
buyers who will add large acreage
purchased from the Chamber to
adjoining property prcviou s 1 y
bought.
Swimming Pool Started
Construction of a swimming pool
is already well alone and much
other preliminary work has been
done.
Paradise Island, a 12-acre area,
was acquired some months ago
from Otto K. Nation. An adjoining
area of 34.5 acres has now been
purchased from the Chamber of
Commerce. This property is the
location on Turner road that was
used for Air Force barracks dur
ing World War II and later used
for transient labor housing. The
deal was made through the Oregon
Development company.
The name of the concern that
will build and operate the park
is Paradise Islands. Associated in
the purchase arc Rex Ellis, Pen
dleton; Curt Ferguson, Salem, who
will be president of the concern,
and Wayne Harris, Pendleton, secretary-treasurer.
He is a son-in-law
of Ellis and is connected with
an engineering firm in Pendleton,
.lanet Hagen, also of Pendleton,
daughter of Ellis, will be ;vicc
Ellis and Ferguson said that the
amusement park will be largely
for the use of children, but there
will be ample facilities for adults
as writ.
Swim Pool Work Starts
The contract for construction of
the pool has been let to Cascade
HALEY NOT RECOVERED
Britain Survives
Rock, Roll Rythm
LONDON VP Britain is just be
ginning to recover from the latest
American invasion Bill Haley
and his rock 'n' roll rythm.
Haley said he still hasn't re
covered. "The rock's knocked me," he
and 40 at the second."
"It's physically impossible to do
more than .10 or 40 minutes of
Swimming Pool company of Port
land. It alone will cost $50,000.
About 2000 feet of ditch work Has
been done, and construction of
other facilities will start shortly.
There will be many contracts to
let, and as far as possible these
will be let to local concerns,
Contemplated, among other
Ihinus. are merrv-eo-rounds and
the various other rides for chil
dren, a wading pool for the chil
dren, softball and baseball dia
monds, moats for boats, an open
air dancing floor, and picnic la-
cilities. Parking space for cars
will be ample. Mill Creek runs
alone the edge of the area. The
landscaping will include driveways.
Ellis said it was probable that
as much as $100,000 would be spent
on the project this year. Much
futhcr preliminary work has to be
done. Negotiations are under way
with the city for use of city water.
If that is acquired it will be neces
sary for Paradise Islands to build
a mile-long water main. Drainage
and irrigation systems will be
necessary.
State Streams
Will Run Low
TWO PROPOSALS GIVEN
Bus Survival Plan
Studied by Cities
Antarctic Cold
No Deterrent
For Ice Cream
LITTLE AMERICA V, Antarc
tica Iff) The meals are hearty in
this village dug out of snow and
ice. And no matter how cold the
weather the favorite dish is ice
cream.
That's the experience of the
men who run the "Little America
restaurant and coffee shoppc," A
boxlikc aluminum building that
serves as the mess hall for the
scientists and sailors readying this
U. S. base for the International
Geophysical Year (IGY).
Second to ice cream in popular
ity is canned chocolate milk
served ice cold.
Nixon on Hand as Arab
Leader Departs for
Visit in Spain
WASHINGTON (AP)
King Saud of Saudi Arabia
lelt WashinKton Saturday
with words of praise for
the airbase-for-aid agree
ment he reached with
President Eisenhower dur
ing a state visit here.
Vice President Nixon
was on hand to say goodby
at departure ceremonies held in
a steady rain at Washington Na
tional Airport.
Nixon apologized for the rainy
weather and voiced a hope that
it "doesn't leave a bad impres
sion on your majesty." Saud
smiling broadly, said through an
interpreter that it was of no con
sequence, that the thing he re
members is the warmth of the
heart."
Leave In Ike Plane
Saud and his party took off in
Eisenhower's plane for a flight to
the Azores. There a Spanish plane
will pick up the royal party and
take them to Spain for a four-
day visit.
With Saud went Victor R. Purse,
38-year old deputy chief of pro
tocol for the state Department.
Purse, who has been guiding the
king on his American visit, is go
ing back as Saud's personal guest
for a visit ot several days in
Saudi Arabia.
Arab World Represented I
The entire Arab world was rep
resented at the airport. Arab and
other diplomats queued .up to wish
Saud godspeed in the rain.. Also
present was Adm. Artbur W.
Radford, - chairman of -the joint
chiefs of staff, and a number of
State Department officials.
Secretary Dulles didn't make It
through a mix-up,
By STEPHEN A. STONE
Capital Journal Associate Editor
Two trails that might lead out of the bus trans
portation morass in which the cities of Salem and
Eugene are floundering are under consideration
following a meeting of the joint subcommittee of
the two cities Friday.
Salem officials are willing to consider a sug
gestion made by Carl Wendt, general manager of
City Transit lines, which is going out of business
March 1 unless it is authorized to
Envoy's Auto
Kills Woman
NEW YORK cfl An auto driven
by the Yugoslav ambassador to
the United Nations crushed a
woman to death Friday outside
an cast side supermarket.
The victim, Mrs. Ruth LaBar-
tunek, 45, was pinned against the
store doorway at First Avenue
and 66th Street. Her daughter,
Frances, 11, had just passed
through the store entrance, and
was not hurt.
The ambassador, Dr. .lozn Bri
lej, 47, collapsed en route to a
hospital, lie suffered a cut nose
and complained of a hip injury
Police said Brilej's black lim
ousine had jumped a curb after
nnoTt AMn m tiic. ,,.. colliding wim a car driven ny
ally heavy snowfalls come along Sa' Nevln 31), an attorney from
most rivers will run low in Oregon "'j" . . ;.
Iisevin lom ponce nrncj s nmo
went through a red light. Neither
fic violation. Police said Brilcj
has diplomatic immunity.
Brilcj was en route to his dele
gation's headquarters after at
tending an afternoon session at
the U. N. At the time of the acci
dent. Both he . and Ncvin were
alone in their cars.
operate under some new plan that
wilt give it financial- relief.
Wendt explains that the plan he
mentions is only a suggestion and
not yet a proposal. This would be
a flexible franchise, replacing the
present one, which would allow
the bus company to do its own
regulating of fares, routes and
service. By paring overhead and
other costs he thinks the company
might operate without loss and
possibly with profit.
The Eugene city administration
still favors a plan that would
amount to municipal operation of
the buses jointly by the city and
the school district, a plan first of
fered at a joint meeting this week
of the Eugene city council and
chamber of commerce, Salem of
ficials and the school board will
consider this plan at a meeting
next Wednesday afternoon, but see
little or no prospect of its being
accepinDic ncre.
The Eugene plan was outlined nt
British Queen
Undisturbed
By Rift Story
Palace Press Officer
Declares Report
'Quite Untrue'
WINDSOR. England W Queen
Elizabeth II went to the races
Saturday with her mother and sis
ter Princess Margaret.
The young Queen showed no
concern over reports published
abroad saying there were rumors
here of a "rift" between her and
her husband, the Duke of Edin
burgh. Cmdr. Richard Colvillc
'U IIL ... . . . .'
Ihc meeting Friday by Mayor John PM, " cc'c. at Buckingham Pal-
Mcuinily of that city.
aides said.
Soviet Budget
Has More Arms
WASHINGTON lfl Despite an
apparent cutback in military ex
penditures planned for 1957, the
Soviet Union probably will spend
more on guns, aircralt and nuclear
weapons this year than last.
That is the conclusion of U, S.
government experts who have an
alyzed the budget which . was an
nounced in Moscow early this
week.
this year.
That was the warnn
forecasters Friday. They said
January snowfall did little to im-
Drove the situation, the snow cov
er for the state as a whole being
about 70 per cent of average. It
runs as low as 50 per cent in the
Mt. Hood area.
Only in the Siskiyou Mountains
and the Blue Mountains of South
eastern Union County is the snow
cover near normal, the Soil Con
servation Service and the Oregon
Agricultural Experiment Station
reported.
The only streams cxpcclcd lo
have nearly normal runofls arc
the Illinois, Applegale and Klam
ath Rivers in the southern part
of the state and the Powder River
and Catherine Creek in North
eastern Oregon.
There is a bright spot, however,
for farmers depending upon res
ervoirs for Irrigation. Only four
reservoirs In the state are below
Antelope, 85 per cent:
rock 'n' roll," said Haley. "If
you don't believe me, go out there
and do some."
A sharp nosed, big jawed, chub-
said, "less than 48 hours after by faced guitar player, Haley
nnr first British concert and I'm takes his music even more scr-
cating breakfast in the alter- lousiy man nis ions, uui Pernaps.Valcyi -3 por ccnt. (:M Springs
noons. ' ;noi so seriously as me siaiu urn- 74 p(,r ccnl; an( McKay, 50 per
thousands of frenzied teenagers: "The parallel In concert music
gave the American bandleader at ; is Carl Orff, and the source of
London's Waterloo railway station! both is Beethoven, who built his
this week was outrivaled in push-1 musical structures on ideas which
ing and shoving only by such I were striking because they were
events as the original Battle of; basic."
Waterloo. lOrff's music depends largely
Codj fought the kids for 30 min-1 on rythm: people write books
utes to set the 31-year-old Penn-! about Beethoven's.)
sylv
adnri
TV, ramn lh flrt rftnrrrt
ti-i... ...J k.. hAnbmA lii-.nninn tint Hit first mnvie hrnllffhl nut Oct. 5.
h.mmer.hent music en'ulled two ' screaming, wailing British teen-' Mrs. Brown, who suffered a
n.rkrd houses but set off a agers who tangled with the police kull fracture, died in a nursing
few niercini catcalls too. and once pitched a theater man
2 Men Survive
21 Story Fall
NEW YORK tin Two eleva
lor installers fell from the Slst
floor of an unfinished apartment
building and both lived lo tell
about it.
Donald McKcon, 23, and Wil
liam Vcssialiadcs, 35, were work
ing on an elevator cable al the
nearly completed apartments in
Salem Driver Safe
In Amity Accident
AMITY (Spccial)-Gcrald Case
of Salem narrowly escaped serious
injury early Friday morning, when
the late model coupe in which he
was traveling west on the Amily
Hopcwcll road, one. and one half
miles cast of Amity, failed to ne
gotiate a curve.
The car went out of control on
the curve an.l skidded across Ihc
roadway, destroying a curve
marker and hitting the soft shoul
der where It turned on Its side,
finally coming to rest between two
trees.
Case was uninjured.
Grimes Girls
Deaths Caused
By Exposure
CHICAGO m Medical experts
nave decided that the Grimes sis
ters, whose nude, frozen bodies
were found along a roadside near
ly three weeks ago, died of ex
posure to cold.
How or where the teenage girls,
Barbara, 15, and Patricia, 13,
died, the doctors did not say.
One pathologist said the girls
"could1 not have died naturally."
Another told reporters: "The girls
were alive when frozen."
Three pathologists, who made
Ihc exhaustive laboratory tests of
the girls' tissues, disclosed last
night there was no evidence of
alcohol, drugs, carbon monoxide
or poisons. They said they were
unable to find injuries, internal or
external, which could have ren
dered them unconscious.
The pathologists told reporters
there was no evidence of sexual
molestation.
While investigators agreed that
the scientific report cleared up
some of the mystery In the
baffling case they also admitted
they were confronted by one of
the city's most puzzling murder
mysteries.
AMERICAN REDS MEET
NEW YORK W American
Communists, split on future pol
icy, gathered here today for their
first national convention in seven
years.
Dairy Produce
Not Affected
By Changes
WASHINGTON (UP)-
Agriculture Secretary Ezra
Benson toclav lowered
the government's support
prices for eight major farm '
products.
Benson tixcd lower sup
port prices for this year's crops
of feed grains, cotton and oil seeds,
crops of feed grains, cotton and
oil seeds.
But the department announced
that producer prices of dairy prod
ucts will bo maintained at present
levels during the year starting
April 1. .
This ruled out much hope for
lower consumer prices for butter
and cheese. .
Compared with last year, sup
port prices for the 1957 grain
crops were reduced as follows:
five cents a bushel for oats, eight
cents a bushel for barley, 12 cents
a bushel for rye, 14 cents per
hundred pounds for grain sor
ghums. Benson reduced oil seed price
supports below last year by these -amounts:
six cents a bushel for
soybeans, 17 cents a bushel for
flax seed and 12 a ton for cotton;
seed.
Supports for the 1957 cotton crop
were set at 28.15 cents per pound
for Inch middling, the bast
grade for supports. This was 1.19
cents below the 1956 crop support
price.
Since farm production and living
costs have soared to a record
high, supports were cut more in
terms of parity prices than in
dollars-and-cents. The parity level
fixed by Congress as a fair
price" 1 1 a n d a r d rcflecU the
prices farmers must pay lor '
things they buy.
The cotton supports represent a (
decline of about three per cent In ,
dollars-and-cents, but were low-
ered more sharply In terms ot .
parity. The new support amounts
to 77 per cent of current parity f
prices, compared wun .02 per cent i
t
ace in London, said Friday the
rumors were "quite untrue.
1 Me Queen was understood to
have been informed of the rumor
story, which first appeared in the
Baltimore Sun. British newsna-
pers have ignored reports of the
rumors and also have Isnored
Colvllle's denial, issued only to
foreign newsmen who asked for
his comment. Radio and TV sta
tions also have ignored the ru
mors. And tnilllnnv nt nrllnns
were unaware of thm support on the 1956 crop.
Thcro have been whispered ru- Tl,c rcdc'ion "n cotton supports
mors for two years about discord was "my 10 stlr "P ProIcst trom
in the royal household, but never
any tangible evidence to support
the rumors. Friday's Baltimore
Sun slory said cafe society folk
were "talking openly of a rift"
and that the gossip was "perco
lating down to the British mass-
Rain Forecast
Over Weekend
It's to be a rather dreary week
end, speaking wcatherwlsc.
The outlook is for increasing
cloudiness and more rain on Sun
dayand that was just what the
situation was for Saturday, but
Sunday 11 seems is to bring more
of it.
New snow was reported all
along the high Cascades with
warning from the highway com
mission that those traveling the
pass routes better be equipped
with chains.
Eight inches of the white stuff
were listed new at Timberline
this morning, and there were three
new Inches on the Santlam pass
as well as at many other moun
tain points.
Strong winds and drifting snow
The fight Is between old line were reported to be complicating
Reds, who would hold fast to the the situation for the bantiam pass
Moscow doctrine, and revisionists. I region.
congressmen from cotton states .
who have contended that dollars- -and-ccnts
supports should be '
raised this year since heavy ex-1
ports have cut sharply into the
surplus.
New support prices were set as
follows for other crops:
Oats, 60 cents a bushel; barley.
94 cents a bushel; rye, 11.15 a
bushel; grain sorghums, $1.83
cents per hundred pounds; soy
beans, $2.09 a bushel; flax seed,
$2.92 a bushel; and cottonseed, $48
per ton for loans on farm-stored
cottonseed and $42 a ton on direct
government purchases.
The department said tt would
continue through the marketing
year starling April 1 support
prices for manufacturing milk at
$3.25 per hundred pounds and sup
port prices tor Duttcr tat at 58.1
cents a pound.
ILLEGAL ENTERPRISE' CITED
Salem Union, Lebanon Company
Guilt Souirlit for Labor Practice
Man Killed in
PortlandCrash
PORTLAND (fl A man identi
fied as Francis Smallwood, about
35, from Tcxarkana, Ark., was
killed and another man was in
jured early Saturday when an
automobile plunged off a road
here.
The injured man Is Terry Lee
Mcidcl, 20, Portland.
Their automobile plummeted oft
Canyon Road and down a 200 foot
bank to a road below. On the way
down it snapped off a power pole
which shut off electricity to the
area.
WASHINGTON 11 A National
Labor Relations Board examiner
held Friday that Teamsters' Un
ion local .124 tried illegally lo
force a union shop on an Oregon
concrete firm and Its employes.
Trial examiner David Doyle
said the union appeared lo have
been more concerned over getting
dered, and thereafter was an ac
tive participant in the Illegal en
terprise." By "illegal enterprise" the ex
aminer meant the signing of a
contract under which Morse
Brothers employes would be com
pelled to join the union or be dis-
issed although the local nan not
average in stored water. They arc Harlem when the cable suddenly .with workers' rights,
money for its various funds than'focon designated a bargaining
Agency , whinlashed out of control
Vcssialiadcs was knocked Into
McKcon, who plunged Into the
shall. An instant later Vbssialia
des toppled in, loo.
McKeon managed lo grab one of
the fixed cables and swung him
self to safety on the 17th floor.
Vassialiades, frantically groping
for cables already in place, wrap
ped his legs around one steel rope
1 agent by a majority of employes.
cent.
Woman Dies
After Beating
PORTLAND Police stepped : about midway and. just before hit-
t-anl T h ough how Un tat- The mo , ,iR thing about up Saturday the search for a manning bottom, got hi, hand, on a
nng mob Haley's concerts, however, was who beat and robbed Mrs. Amelia ' second cable. He then eased h,m-
;hen came the first concert, the refusal of his audiences to D Brown. 76, on a street here sell the re-t of the way down.
home Friday.
Waitlicr Details
Mailmam VMlfrilar. M; minimum
loiai ti-nnnr prropii
fnr mnnlh: 1.02: nnrmil,
"Thv thnucht he didn't olav aeer through a glass door. There1 The assailant knocked her down ,...,,.
1 k a t .ii. r.rAm. !u mAh -i.nf, t U atrrlno From behind and took the 1,0 she Ml. StatAn nr rlnltaflnn. 14 1- nnr
long rnouK i. ' w..u, . ..... . -- ------- ...... ... " " I mal. Jl.71 R er fiHihl. .1 f fool.
(R'port hy t. S. Urathrr nurraii.)
Haley's British agent. "He gave station
them 30 minutes at the first show I certs.
but no riots at the con-.had in her purse.
I An autopsy has been ordered.!
Doyle said the union had made
no prior effort to organize the
He recommended that the
NLltn find both the local and Ihc
employers guH.y of 7. andcontTnued?
i.w Th (.mnimjci-. wore iioeir "Through all of this activity
as the Morse Brothers, operating J1"8 labr organization seems to
Mews in Brief
have been interested soluly in the
acquisition of money for Its var
ious funds, without regard to the
rights or desires of the employes."
Doyle said that under the con
tract signed hy the company. Its
high school construe. i SI employes would be required to
which Morse wns pay $188.80 each to the union In
snnd and gravel plants at l.eba
non and Harrlsburg, Ore.
Doyle found that the company
surrendered" to tho union's de
mand for a union shop after the
Salem Building Trades Council
picketed
tion Job
on the case at Corvallis Dec. It-
12.
In his report Doyle said the fi
nancing aspect "places in proper
focus all of the union s connuci,
Including its purpose."
"11 placed lis picket on the
(high schnoD joh for the' purpose
of coercing Morse Brothers to as
slst It in fastening on each em
ploye of Ihc company an undo
sired membership," the examiner
said, "featured by all the usual
duties and obligations thereby en
tailed, and the additional contrac
tual obligation to pay the union
Hie sum of $r88.80 per man per
year.
"The amount of money here in
volved explains the lack of Inter
est of union representatives In
talking to the men. If the com
pany took the money from their
nnv. the omDloves could be dis
regarded entirely. Amusements
"It alo explains whv the men Kditonals
rf.r,,,.rt ia iin the itninn and an-! Locals ..
the board for assist-
working in Lebanon last Septem- Ihc first year of membership,
her. The Tcpmsters' local was a That would total $.10,028 80, cover-
memher of the council. ing payments for the union s wel-
"It is clear," Doyle said, "that fare, pension and security funds pealed to
Morse Brothers was not at first, in addition to Initiation fees and ance. . . .
a willing partner of tho union. 1 dues Doyle concluded, "The Tail-
Bui when faced with the ernnom- Doyle recommended that the 1 Hartley art does not permit em
ic pressure placed upon it hy the! contract be disavowed. He based iployes to be coerced In this man
union Morse Brothers surrcn-ihis findings on hearings he hcldner."
Saturday, Feb. , 1937
NATIONAL
Benson Reduces Sup
port Prices in Eight
Commodities Sec. 1, P. 1
Saud Praises Agree
ment - -. Sec. l.P. 1
LOCALS
Two Salem Pools Face Closure
Without Funds' ... Sec. 1, P. 7
Local Boaters to Have
New Facilities Sec. 1, P, 7
STATE
Children In Agriculture ;
Not Affected by
Wage Directive ... Sec. J, P. 8
Zhukov Claims Ike Doctrine
Step Toward War ..Sec. 1, P. 1
British Queen Unconcerned
Over Rift Rumor . Sec. 1, P. I
SPORTS
Willamette to Play CI
Again Tonight ......Sec. 2, P. 1
South Upset by
Sweet Home : Sec. 2, P. I
RKOl'LAR FEATURES
Society ....
Comics
Television ..
Want Ads .
Dorothy Dix
Church
Sec. 1, P. 2
Sec. 1, P.
Sec. 1, P. 7
Sec. 1, P. 4-5
Sec. 2. P. 4
Sec. 2. P. S
S?c. 2, P. M
v Sec. S, P. a
....Sec. 2, P. J