'4 Ths State man, Salem, Oregon Saturday, Wormbw 8, 1943 JL, I. ' S "N Favor Sway Us, No Fear Shall Awo" First Statesman. March 2. 1S51 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher - t - ' (Zntered at th postoffice at Salem. Orefon. as second etass matter under act of eongnm March X int. Published every morning except Monday. Business office 213 S3. Commercial. Salem, Oregon. Telephone 1-2 1. MXMBEK Or TBS ASSOCIATED PRESS Vila Associated Press la entitled exclaslvely t tka use far repass1 rati af all ma laeal aws prmted m tuts aawspaper. as wen as as at atvi 1 MEMBER PACIFIC COAST DIVISION OP BUREAU OP AOVnTBINO Advertising Representatives Ward-Griffith Co.. New York. Chicago. Saa Pranclsco. Detroit. MTMBKR AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATION By MaO (Ca Advsac) Oregon Sa where la U.S-A. .1 1.00 : 4j t est m.,..,,, ujoq By CMy Carrier One month . , . . One month , Six months. One year. Six months . One year- MM - k - .' i ; . ' 1 '$" i v:.:'t - ir ; i. I : ' ' ' ' - I- Lincoln's Fan Mail One George S. Wright wrote President Abra ham Lincoln in 1860 that he had: "Stude in the streets and hurade for you and bet 50 dollars that you would be elected" only 1 to find when he went to collect the bet that ;5 "one word brot on another tel at last I Nocked the gentleman -down and so you see he tuk the , law on me and it cost me 50 dollars so Mr. Lincoln I have don my part for you I think you ar in debt to me for my Cindness to you. Please ancer this letter." I This post-election gem is part of the Lincoln papers, a collection of 18,000 items which was made public at the Library of Congress in July, 1947, and many of which appear in the latest contribution tp the Lincoln legend, "The Lin coln Papers" edited by David C. Mearns. , ? These papers were deposited in the national library by the president's son, Robert Todd Lin coln, with the proviso that they were to remain secret until 21 years after his (Robert's) death. Historians have been immensely curious- about the collection, only to find that it contains few important documentsl The bulk of -the papers is letters; not letters by Lincoln or by men in high office, but mes sages and requests from the public to the pres ident, lake any other fan mail or like letters to editors of newspapers, this collection does not reveal much that is new about the subject (Lincoln) but it does throw light on the minds of the American people of his time. And, judging from these letters, the people "have not changed much during the past centu ry. Self-interest appears to have been the com pelling motive, then as now. sa. Mothers wrote to ask Lincoln to give their soldier sons "a higher place than private." Office-seekers flattered and cajoled. Cranks and crack-pots offered their advice and vitupera tions. And one republican who said he had hurt his arm shooting off a cannon at a party rally suggested Lincoln might forward "a little of the needful" to make" him feel better. The New York Times book reviewer suggests jthat it seems characteristic of Lincoln to have saved these humble petitions and subliterate I epistles along with important documents and political information. For the president, facing perilous decisions and a civil war, these letters may have served as "a little of the needful": the comio, relief he craved. A Democrat for Treasurer Oregon has not escaped its share of election day upsets. ! The neck-to-neck race between republican Howard Beltoii and democrat Walter J. Pearson for, the state treasureship shows that, here as nationally, the cohesion of the democrats was underrated and that, here as nationally, repub U.S. Voters By Joseph and Stewart Alsep WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 ( There is only one question on ' which professional politicians. E oil-takers, po- tical reporters ' I 1 I ' iuu uuier wac- $ acres -and prog- ' 1 nosticators can' ! any longer ! speak with much author- ity. That is 1 it. . . v uuw iuc wnui their crow cooked. These particular re-, PKrtera -P5fi Joseph Also their crow LJ-J, s With this preface, It is Inter esting to speculate on the tri umphant reelection of President Marry S. Truman in the face """ of the univer sal belief that . . he was beaten i ' before the bal- loting started. , 1 An explanation is at least strongly sug gested by the vote for the four presiden tial candidates, . olus the votes jfor candidates -Jfor congress. r.Stewtrt m V f I -A The people of the United States are considerably further to the left than had been supposed. The facts to support this con clusion can be summarized very easily. First, anyone who paid much attention to what Truman said must have been astonished to observe that his campaign speeches were consistently more aggressive and more radical than any Franklin Delano Roose velt ever uttered. At his hot test and angriest, Roosevelt never laid Into big business as Truman did. Nor did Roosevelt ever promise specific reforms, well beyond any currently pop ular with other politicians, as Truman did. I ' Second, the record of the 80th congress was beyond doubt Truman's greatest strength. In the farm states he could and did point to such phenomena as the republican senators and rep resentatives 'undercutting the rural electrification administra tion at the behest of the power i4obby. In the great urban areas . he could and did point to the licans can no longer afford to depend on past victories or yesterday's public opinion polls, j Young (44) Walter J. Pearson, if the final :i count gives him victory, would become the first democrat elected to the office of state treasurer since 1886 when G. W, Webb was voted to the I post and served until 1891. The last democrat to hold the position was Walter R. Pearson, father of the treasurer-elect, who was appoint ed by Governor Martin in 1938 to fill the va cancy caused by the resignation of Rufus C. i Holman, republican appointee of Governor Mei 7 er. Jefferson Myers, another democratic ap pointee, was named statetreasurer by Governor Pierce in 1924 to replace O. P. Hoff, elected re publican who died in office. The new treasurer will also be the first dem ocrat to sit on the state board of control since his father was replaced by Leslie M. Scott in 1941. Only five democrats (Governor .West, Pierce and Martin and Treasurers Myers and Pearson) have served on that board since it was created by legislative act in 1913. But statistics like those, interesting as they are, are quite irrelevant today. Oregon simply is nOt as solidly republican as it once was and "Pearson's election should not come as a com plete surprise. Eighteen years ago, when republican Hoover was president and republican AW. Norblad was; governor of Oregon, every county in the state had a republican majority in the numbers of voters registered. Such unanimity is no long er part of the state political scene.? By 1936, democrats were in the lead in nine counties; in lf)38, 13 counties were predominantly demo cratic ;this year, as in 1940, 14 (including heav ily populated Multnomah) out of 36 counties had higher democratic than republican voter registrations. This year, the statewide margin between democratic and GOP registrations was about 12,000. It is only fair that nearly 335,000 democrat voters in Oregon should be adequately repre sented in their state government. Whether their choice for treasurer and their choice of demo crats for the legislature insures adequate rep resentation remains to be seen. Individual candidates aside, if Pearson's elec tion;: indicates a rennaissance of the two-party system in Oregon, then that is a good thing . . , good for the democrats because it may inspire them to become better competition, good for the republicans because it will make them look to their laurels, and consequently, good for the state. I Jantzen Knitting Mills, Portland swim suit martufacturers, report record sales and earn ings; More and more out of less and less, it seems. Consistent in Taft-Hartley act. His huge audi ences did not seem to listen very carefully at the time. But these points of Truman's meant pork chops to the farmers and workers; the farmers; and work ers evidently went :. home and thought about It and decided' that a vote for: Truman would be the best safeguard of their interests. " i Third, the republican conser vatism of the great mid-western farming area, which has been , an accepted fact In all recent American , political calculation, is a fact no longer. Truman had to carry several states , in this area to counter-balance his loss of New York and the Dixiecrat territory. He carried them hand ily. No one can any longer talk with pompous certainty about "isolationist, stand-pat Iowa." The voters in these states were not going to the polls in the mood of the sheriff - chasing mortgage - burning farmers of the '30s, A good maijy of them could, if they chosel jiave flown in to cast their ; ballots in their private airplanes. Yet they voted for the democrats just the same. L.. more ... add U S VOTERS ed pg 11 There may be something to their argument that the prevail ing prosperity was a great help to the Ins and an obstacle to the Outs. But it is outrageously patronizing to assume that the electorate did not understand the issues involved in this elec tion. ? f Furthermore, Jthere; is ample proof that the voters,' knew ex actly what they wanted. With out, exception, ; the t senatorial candidates of true 80th congress flavor the brassy ; Brooks of Illinois, Ball of Minnesota. Wil son of Iowa, Robertson of Wyo ming and Neanderthal Rever comb of West Virginia ran badly behind Governor Thomas E. Dewey. In these states Dewey was undoubtedly preferred, as being relatively: modern-minded. On the other hand Dewey trailed the more progressive Cooper of Kentucky & who was unfortunately beaten by a small margin, and Saltonstall of Mas sachusetts, who ' won. All these returns, together with the ridic ulously small vote for the pa thetic Henry A. Wallace, make a perfectly clear picture of the voters' political viewpoint. only one or two of the re publican isolationist reaction- Swing Left aries sensed the voters view point before the balloting. One such was the great tax-cutter,-Harold Knutson of Minnesota, who listened to the wind in the grass roots of his supposedly rock-ribbed isolationist republi- can district, and loudly announ- ced his last-minute conversion to the Marshall plan a few days before November 2. Those who could not grasp what the voters wanted: before November 2, however, must at least be able to do so now. The brand of domestic policy peddled by the National Association of Manu facturers, and the brand of for eign policy offered by CoL Rob ert R. McCormick, may now be officially considered to have about is much political appeal as red-hot vegetarianism. a This Is the answer, of course, to .those blind extremists in the republican party who are now muttering that the whole busi ness was the fault of Thomas E. Dewey and his "high level" campaign. Governor Dewey could only have come to hard grips with President Truman by talk ing like Senators Brooks, Rever comb and Cox. In that case, the' figures say that he would have been far worse beaten than he was. Dewey took the best line he could have taken to escape the onus of the 80th congress record. The 80th congress rec ord, which was Truman's cen tral campaign issue, was a han dicap Dewey could not over come. , As to what will now ensue, these reporters, feeling some what replete after one heavy meal of crow, are not prepared to make forecasts. President Truman returns to the White House owing no individual any thing except grudges. He owes much to the American people collectively. But the labor lead ers did not want him, the polit ical leaders tried to get rid of him, the democratic contributors almost unanimously dried up on him, and the press patronized and discounted him. Even with in his own administration there are those whose support he must regard as having been strikingly lukewarm. The question is whether he will now proceed to pay off the unfaithfuls, or will concentrate on the vast respon sibility he has courageously won again. (Copyright. 1948. New York Herald Tribune. Inc.) The Good Earth?' Literary Guidepost JOURNAL OF A VISIT TO LONDON AND THE CONTI NENT BY HERMAN MEL VILLE. 1849-1850. edited by Eleanor Melville Metcalf (Harvard; $3 75) When Melville took this trip, which was partly to sell a book of his and partly to humor a persistent wanderlust which was not stilled even by the pain of separation from his family, he was a 30-year-old author about to write "Moby Dick." Published for the first time, this journal consists of incom plete sentences, broken phrases, and memos that would serve to prompt him when, back home, he told his wife what a time he had had. Despite its sketchlness, it is delightful; only a master can interest us in these slight ma terials. But I enjoy with him his frequent glass of stout, his gallery tours, his greeting to the Queen, his pride at seeing a copy of one of his books in a stranger's hands, his long walks in London, Paris, Brussels, Cologne. There are moments of excite ment, such as a suicide and, in London, a double hanging: "A most wonderful, horrible and unspeakable scene." But it is usually more trivial, about the shape of a leg, or the girl who shortchanged him yet wasn't, alas, pretty, or the beggar who "tormented me home to the hotel." However Inconsequential the matter, this "pondering man" was nevertheless astute, as when he admires the Madeleine's "su perb exterior and remains dis creetly silent about the interior. PIAZZA TALES, by Herman Melville, edited by Egbert S, Oliver (Hendr icks-Farrar, Straus; $3.50) The six stories In this collec tion are "The Piazza," "Bartle by," "Benito Cereno," "The Lightnin - Rod Man," "The En cantadas" and The Bell-Tower." Only one, "The Lightning Rod Man," and the one you might expect, betrays in its topic and quaint handling the marks GRIN AND BEAR 'If I have to listen tothat cheerful breakfast couple on the radio again, itll Just start another fight..." Stamps in Today's News By SYD KRONISH Associated Press Writer The descriptions of the last two stamps officially scheduled on the U. S. commemorative stamp list for 1948 have been announced by the post N office department. The 3 cent stamp honoring the 100th anniversary of the Turners Society will be placed on first day sale Nov. 20 at Cin cinnati. The stamp will be blue and depict a torch throwing light on the history of the Amer ican Turners. On the left and right sides of the torch are a pair of gymnastic hanging rings. Below in a circle is the Ameri can Turners national emblem. The 3 -center commemorating the centenary of the birth of Joel Chandler Harris will . be placed en first day sale Dec. 9 at Eatonton, Ga. Harris created the immortal "Uncle Remus." This new adhesive will be pur ple and will show a portrait ft Harris in an oval frame against a background of colonial de sign. At the base of the por trait will be a closed book, scroll, quill pen and an inkwell. Stamp collectors desiring first day cancellations of these adhe sives .may send up to 10 ad dressed envelopes with remit tances addressed to the Post masters at Cincinnati, Ohio, and Eatonton, Ga. respectively. Australia will issue three spe cial postage stamps, during the Royal visit next year. The 24 pence, for empire mail, will fea ture a portrait of the King, Queen and Princess Margaret Rose. The, 34 pence, for for eign mail, -will show a portrait of the Princess. The 18 pence, for overseas air mail, will bear a portrait of the King and Queen. Russia has issued a special 40 kopeck blue stamp honoring the of its advanced age. The others are as fresh as when they were written In the 1850s, and the second and third belong in any anthology of great American short stories. IT By Lichty "Vcfl'V- ets iw- 1 late Andrei A. Zhdanov, secre tary general of the communist party central committee. Zhdan ov, one of the closest associates of Stalin, was a member of the powerful politburo, a found er of the Cominiorm and a lead er in the Cominform's recent attacks on Premier Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia. He died of a heart attack last Aug. 31. Spain celebrates the 100th an niversary of its railroads with three new stamps, reports Leon Monosson. The 50 ' centimos brown pictures. Marquis de Sala manca, who was instrumental in establishing, building and fi nancing the railroads in Spain. The 2 pesetas airmail red shows a streamlined train above which flies an airplane. The 5 pesetas green depicts a train en route over a high stone bridge. Ecuador has issued a beauti ful set of 5 postage and 5 air mail stamps honoring the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the "Four Freedoms," re ports the Penny Black Stamp Co. The 10 centavos pink and 20 eentavos olive are for "Freedom From Fear." These two picture a bell and scales of justice. The 30 centavos olive green, 40 centavos orchid and 1 Sucre brown are for "Freedom of Worship.' This group illustrates a man and boy kneeling in prayer. The 60 centavos green and brown and 1 sucre pink and grey, both airmails, are for '"Freedom of Speech. They show a man speaking from a platform. The 1.50 sucre green, 2 sucres red and 5 sucres blue, also air mails, are for "Freedom From Want." Depicted is a man sow ing seeds of grain. Each stamp bears a side view portrait of Roosevelt in the up per left corner. Uruguay pays tribute to its Industrial and Agricultural Ex position held Oct. 9-Nov. 9 at Paysandu with two new stamps. The 3 cents green shows a wa terfront scene. The 7 cents blue depicts agricultural scenes. Engineer to Open Office Warren W. Clark, Salem civil engineer, announced Friday he has opened engineering offices in the Pacific building. A veteran of four years of army service in the South Pacific dur ing the late war, Clark moved to Salem with his family in 1946 and was associated with the G. B. Boatwright firm until November 1. Clark is a graduate of Iowa State college in 1936 and was em ployed with- the Natural Gas com pany from Chicago to Texas for six years before entering the ser vice. He will engage in all types Of civil engineering, but will spe cialize in structural work, ; 17 Firemen to Be -Added to Staff The firemen's work hour changes dictated by voters at this week's general election will require about -17 additional city firemen, it was reiterated Friday by the commit tee which sponsored the bill. Under the proposal as adopted at the polls, work hours are de creased from 84 to 63 per week for all city firemen and a tax levy of up to 3 mills will finance add ed firemen necessary. The States man's election report yesterday in advertently said 25 men would be added and work hours now are 72. : -i A ' - - " - OSCAR FOR BUE R G Rex Harrison. English movie actor, have ' a drink at a Paris reception in liss Bergman's honor after she was swarded the) 1 trench Oscar lot best foreign actress " 1 ''. . ,x" . . '" 1 v '4 7- 4 SWEDISH CHAMP AT HOME.) one Tsni. berg, Swedic h heavyweight baxlag champion, pases with dog, Siagge. at home near Stockholm. Ha is considered likely to be next opponent ef Bruce Woodcock, British and European champ. A 4 , & ' T1' 1 11 WiiiissM in iiwiii mill r susibssi mmmmmmmm ANTIQUE D O L I Aleen in the U.S. about I860 at antique fair in New York, The dell If owned by sirs. Frederick Smart ef Boston. Farmer Voices Opposition to Road Extension Hearinff on a petition to extend couhty road 530 to meet the Wood burn - Hubbard road north of Woodburn has been continued to December 17 the Marion county court reported Friday. The court set Friday for a hear ing date but only Irving Halter, who lives near the roads in ques tion, appeared in opposition to the proposal. No one was present to favor the petition. As the proposed extension would cross the Southern Pacific tracks. the court said Friday it is awaiting the railroad's reaction to the pe tition before holding a final bear ing. The move would extend a 60- foot road about 200 feet to meet with the Woodburn - Hubbard road. Nearby residents told the court that the road would provide an access to the Woodburn-Hub bard road. Halter, who owns the land over which the proposed road would be built, said such a move would re move almost three - quarters of an acre of berry and orchard land from his five-acre tract. He said it also would necessitate the mov ing of his barn and house and would reduce the value of his pro perty. Municipal Engineering, Struc tural Analysis i and Design. Streets, Sewers. ; Sewage Dis posal. Surveys Warren W. Clark Consulting Engineer Registered Professional Civil Engineer Phone 3-7123 Pacific Building Room 117 Salem. Ore. M A N Inrrld Berrmaa and . , " . ''fV-t '-- ,-'7A t "J i X St - jesssassaWTT s , 1 Hum ij nun Rylae holds a rabber doll made 1 BIBXJE MEETINO STARTS An evangelistic! Bible conference is being conducted at Pilgrim Holi ness church; 140 Carlton way, with Mrs. Belle Foster of Califor nia as guest speaker. Services are at 7:30 each evening except Sat urday. - n RODGERS Slaughter on Tenth Avenue. Paul Whitenaaa Orchestra. Record Na. J6183 LM Q COPLAND Appalachian Spring Beaten Keusaevitsky 8ysBpbeay Album DM-1I4I 4.7$ COPLAND El Salon Mexico Kewasevlteky A Beaton Symphony Album DM-54C tM MACDOWEIX Concert fori Plane Na. t Jesus Sanroma, Plane Album DM-324 7.25 All prices include tax Mail er Phone Orders Filled Promptly Please send me the records checked above. Name -' -' ' ' I FOR Records I 3-7522 128 Court ' ' i ! I ' , II ! RECORDS 1 - I 1 , i 1 Address h '! tf ' ' ' I enclose check money order for - j 1 Charge U my account 1 -