2 SI PI JjioM vct ii i HO.HN 1 The StoosmcnC Salem, Oregon, FridaTr McrrcH I, If 41 - u::' MM " v, tfa Favor Stoeys Us, N6 Fear Shall Aw first SUtesssaa Karcfc M. USI THE STATESMAN PUBLISHINC COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUS. Editor and Publisher fXntertd tt tli rxl0fflc kt Siltm, Ortfoo. M Meond class matter under act of conaroas March a, II fbSaneg . evory morning except Monday. Burin offio US S. Commercial. Salem, Ortgon. Telephone S444L acinara or ths associated rasas fa AmocUUS PrtM to ad4 ctMlntf I Ik w wtrtumw f UOm local mi as asi af aovs MXMBta PAcmc coast Dtraion or bvkxav or aovbtbino 0 month mohtha- Advertising lUprwt aUUw Wsrd-Ofttritti Co, Kw York. CM go. Fraaeloea, Detroit trnnrni audit svuau or czxcvlatiom Br Mas o AJvMMft r cy cmtsm i unmnavjA IjPV Ortt .11 On monta. j.o . CM JIN Six month. jroar- For This Our Gifts ... One; of the saddest things in connection with the trial of 15 Protestant ministers in Bulgaria is the report that their receipt of funds from Americans was used against them. They were , accused of taking this money as pay for espion age instead of spending it for church aid. The charge is of course utterly false; and it weighs heavily on the hearts of Americans who sought out of their generosity to succor their brethren in Christ overseas. Nearly ajl of the churches, Catholic and Pro testant, conducted vigorous campaigns to raise funds for European relief. Money was sen$, foodstuffs and clothing were shipped in large quantities. Distribution was made not through American channels but through churches over seas, with the World Council of Churches in tieneva taking charge of donations from Amer ican Protestant churches and the Catholic churches distributing supplies from their fellow churches here. Certainly there was no thought of espionage. The aim was to give physical assistance and spiritual comfort to the distressed churches of Europe, their pastors and members. It was thought that She restoration of religious life and activity would do much toward rehabilitation of the people, giving them hope and confidence. It is a bitter thought to realize, that these gifts are twisted into evidence against these patient shepherds of the flock; whose chief concern was religion and not politics. One reflects however that the charge is merely a pretense, trumped up to condemn men who were condemned even before they were arrested. The communist re gimes are determined to sever all ties, religious as vrell as other, to link the people under them with countries of the west. . valid the levy of personal property taxes on national banks; The corporation excise tax was devised particularly to collect taxes from banks. The original draft excluded certain types of cor porations: utilities, those whose income was al most entirely from real estate rentals, ori the ground that they were already (this was 1929) very heavily taxed by levies on real property. To lighten the burden on other corporations the original act in 1929 allowed them to deduct from the tax 90 per cent of the personal prop erty tax they paid. It was estimated that in this way banks, being exempt from personal prop erty taxes, would pay the full 8 per cent, while the effective rate on other corporations would be about 3 per cent. If this had not been done the banks would hays enjoyed a substantial tax advantage. In later years the deduction for per sonal property tax paid was cut to 50 per cent, which it is at present. All these facts should be considered by the legislature as it studies HB 208. Equity should be preserved as between banks and other cor porations; and the present inequity as between incorporated and unincorporated business should not be increased. Corporations probably should pay something extra for the privilege of operat ing as corporations but they should not be pe nalized unduly. Most of our Oregon corporations are pretty small potatoes, so the tax hits "per sons" and not just legal fictions. - If mora revenues-are needed by the state the easiest and most equitable method would seem to be through HB 281 which eliminates deduc tion of federal income tax on personal incomes ahd readjusts the rates. This would spread the load on the familiar basis of ability to pay with out putting the gouge on a particular form of business operation, such as the corporation. Moving Stairway Going Up .Tax Deductions for Corporations it is true that by removing the partial deduc tion allowed corporations in computing; .their state excise tax the state would pick up con siderable revenue $3,000,000 a year, it. is esti mated; but it will impose a considerable penalty on business operating under the' corporation form. Corporations now pay heavy federal taxes on their incomes, as well as the state excise tax of 8 per cent. Their stockholders pay personal in come taxes 'federal and state, on dividends they receive from corporations. 1 Business which is operated as a cooperative, a partnership or as a proprietorship escapes all corporation taxes. Stockholders of corporations feel they are at a competitive disadvantage with cooperatives and unincorporated business, be cause they are in effect subject to double tax ation. , - Probably few know or remember the origin of the corporation excise tax. It was enacted following a court decision which declared in- The house staged a revolt Wednesday. Worn down by the school lobby the members rose up and smote the bill to legalize a state association of school directors. The prospect of another un it in the school lobby made members see red, despite arguments that this association might counter the teachers' lobby. The revolt didn't come however until after the house had passed HB 193 to boost the basic state school fund by $30 per child. So the lobby won after all. This from the Canby Herald Suggests another reason why-editors sometimes go berserk: ! A lady came to the Herald office one day last week and asked if we had any old newspapers to spare. "Sirica the Portland papers stopped printing," she explained, "I haven't anything in the house to start fires with." i Information from Copenhagen is to the effect that Denmark may join the North Atlantic se curity pack. It's a hard decision to make. The Danes realize that in a war between east and west they would just be Danish squash. Budget Control in Oregon 'Just Isn't' Br Ralph Watson George Aiken, it develops Is noU the director of the budget, or the budget master, at alL He is just tne exe- cutive secretary of the gover nor, a compiler of figures and estimates hand ed him by the many and var ious depart ment! of- the state. He writes their financial tickets as they hand them to him. He looks them over and if they seem too high he may scale them down so that they do not hang too far over the fence of the . constitutional lim itation which surrounds all such things. And then be talks every thing over with the governor, and if the governor gives him the green light on his sugges tions he prints the book and "recommends" to the legislature that it run along with his train of thought And the governor, when you come right xiown to eases, rides long in much the tame kind of a boat. He may agree with his budget director that some part of the budget is riding at a cockeyed elevation and he and Aiken can batter it down to where they think it ought to be and tell the legislature what they think the elevation ought to be, but that don't make any difference at all to the legisla ture unless it wants to agree. Then there is the state board of control, the three Big Brass, the governor, the secretary of state and the state treasurer. They are the three men in the same brand of boat except that they can reach out and put the finger on a few of the spots and tell them what to do stout spend ing money. Did you ever step to think that when it gets rirht down to It the state board of control hasn't any control over any of the- functions of the state gov ernment other than the state institutions the hospitals, the penitentiary, reform school and such others. They can tell the heads of these institutions what to 46 and when end how and if it U not done they can lift their official scalps and hlras another scalpee. ( The governor is up against the same gaff when it comes to tell ing the board of i higher educa tion, and similarly constituted departments, where to head in. He can make recommendations to the highway commission, or the board of education, or to this department or that and if they don't come along with hn he can fire the whole outfit and get a new one in its place. But that is a messy procedure and usually gums up the works. What's all this about?. Well It comes from a lecture given by Senator Belton, chairman of the ways and means committee, on the subject of efficiency, econ omy and budget control of de partmental expenditures. The board of control was for it, two of its members had said they wanted the "deadwood" cleaned out of the state payroll and re 'sultant salary adjustments made. It was suggested that maybe the budget master, or the governor, could scale down the high spots and fill up the valleys. But It seems, so far as salaries and wages are concerned, they have turned over that Job to the civil service board almost in toto. Consequently, from what could be learned in the lesson, such a thing as budget control in Ore gon just isn't. Maybe the ways and means committee is going to 'recommend' that the legis lature do something about it, provided it finds time after it takes care of the "surplus' and does a few other chores like that. Senator Gibson, who Is Scotch and believes in budgets with a mouthful of teeth, was told to think it over and tell the com mittee what he found out about the problem, if anything. Literary Guidepost Br W. G. Jtog-ers GARRICK, by Margaret Barton (Macmillan; $5 David Garrick, who as an act or is said to have revived Lon don's interest in Shakespeare and as an entrepreneur to have help . ed make Stratford a shrine, was in 1717. Brought up in Lichfield, where Samuel Johnson was his "slightly older friend, he took a flier in the wipe business with his brother Peter bit at 24 years of age succumbed to the allure of the candle-lighted stage. Testing his talents in the role of Richard III, he played in Dub lin, won engagements at Drury Lane and Covent Garden and at 30 began his 29 years as Lacys partner in the management .of Drury Lane. He presented 75 new plays, besides pantomimes and other entertainments, and in the course of a life sin which "he could not stop acting," he took 90 different parts. Practically everyone of any ac count in 18th century; England knew him; the list of his friends, enemies and acquaintances in cludes, besides Johnson and his . BoswelL Reynolds, jRomney, Gainsborough and. Hogarth, who was bis dear intimate; Gold smith, Smollett i and I Richard Brinsley Sheridan, who finally bought him out; Sir Horace Wal pole, and even a pair of Georges. Peg Woffington was for a time his mistress, but in 1749 he took a dancer for wife, and there was "not in all history," says this ad miring biographer, a more per fectly happy marriage.' ' Thinking the best is none too good for Garrick, Miss Barton has a pardonable weakness for superlatives. G a r r i c k s first (1747) company consisting of four women, Cibber, Pritchard, Clive and -Woffington, and such men as Barry and Mackiin, was , "the strangest ever known in the history of the stage." His Lear "has never been equalled." Of his withdrawal from th theater in 1778 she writes: "Never has the retirement of an actor made so much commotion." He was certainly one of the greatest naturalistic actors, and as a person sometimes exasper ating but almost always lovable . . . economical to the point of stingy in domestic matters, very changeable, a tireless practical joker, a kind and amiable coun try gentleman st Hampton House, generous with the needy, temperamental. He died at 62 and was buried in Westminster Abbey; his wife lived to be 98. V ... ,. i cm 'I A X- Riding platforms far the Robert Bras, store's new aaetor-drirea stairs are being Installed this week ana win be ready far ase by the end ef this loonth. Manufactured by the Motors talr Co.. of Ceffeyville, Kans the conveyance Is being Installed by H. J. Baa son, foreground; E. A. Llndblom, left center; H. J. Clew, right center all of Seattle, Wash, and J. E. Ross, supervisor, CoffeyvOle, Kans backsToand. (Statesman photo). CRT ECODDQB ffi ffin D: (Continued from page 1) depends on the nature of the" university. Thus a school main tained by the Catholic church would not tolerate instruction in Protestant religion; a Baptist fundamentalist seminary would not allow a modernist - to hold forth. A state - supported insti tution will not retain a teacher who advocates overthrow of the state. A university unrelated to a church and not maintained by the state will have a wider orbit for professorial thought to range, but still it would impose stand ards of good form and intellec tual honesty. There is a deeper reason for challenging the privilege of com munists to teach and that is the very real threat that commun ism presents to intellectual free dom. As developed in Russia communism has become a form of state religion and deviation ists are heretics. The intellec tual world has been deeply stirred by the Lysenko - Vavi- lov controversy in Russia over the science of genetics, vavilov, whose ideas conform with those of the greatest scientist in this field, .was discredited, sent to some place in Siberia where he died. Lysenko, who advocated the theory of the transmission of acquired characteristics, long discredited among reputable sci entists the world over, rose in influence in Russia and became president of the Lenin Academy. That science as well as music, the arts, must conform to the po litical party line is indicated in a Moscow dispatch which re ports that "the Academy of Sci ences must above all follow con sistently the Leninist - Stalin ist principle of party adherence in all spheres of science." This simply means intellectual slavery. As Joseph P. Lash writ ing in the New Republic for January 3rd says: "When however the Central Committee of the Soviet Com munist . party aligns itself with one faction in Soviet biology and decrees the truth of the long dis carded view that acquired char acteristics can be inherited, the scientific - basis of the modern world is threatened: the specter of the Dark Ages rises again to plague mankind." The academic freedom that ex tends to the nurture of habits of thinking which imprison the mind is committing suicide. The evidence of the slavery of the mind imposed by communism is too strong to be denied. No in tellectual freedom is tolerated under Soviet communism. The preservation of freedom, of in quiry calls for no quarter with the isms which challenge it at every turn. Small Losses In Grain Mart CHICAGO, March 3 -(APV-With the exception of the new crop wheat deliveries, which showed a firm tone right from the start, grains sank for small losses on the board of trade today. Deal ings were light and most of the day the market simply drifted lower. Independent steadiness in new crop wheat was hard to explain, although dealers said these months and all selling below what is likely to be the government loan level on this crop. There may have been some shifting from the May Into deferred months, deal ers said. Wheat ended 1 cent to low er, corn was IVi lower to V high er, oats were Vt-M lower, rye was 4 lower, soybeans were l"-2 lower and lard was 5 to 12 cents a hundred pounds lpwer. May was also the weakest con tract in corn, again reflecting an increased movement of cash grain and easiness in cash prices. Losses, running to 2 cents were recorded in the spot market. Biggest Civic Party in Years Due for McKay The city of . Salem will cele brate Its biggest civic party in years Monday night when the citizens honor Gov. Douglas McKay. Plans have been completed for the combined dances in both the armory and the Crystal Gardens ballroom. The main reception will be 'held from the hours of 8:30 until 10:30 p.m. in the Mirror room of the Marion hotel. The party will be "strictly In formal" and Mayor Robert Elf strom and heads of the various citizen committees have joined in issuing an invitation to all Salem residents to attend. Governor McKay, who first came to Salem in 1927, has serv ed as the mayor of Salem, state senator from Marion county dur ing four terms, and now as the state's chief executive. iat various times he has been president of the Salem Chamber of Commerce, commander of American Legion's Capitol post 9, ahd director of the Salem com munity chest. Lonelv Hearts Slayers to Face New York Jury ALBANY, N.Y., March Gov. Thomas K. Dewey signed ex tradition papers tonight for a "lonely hearts" pair arrested in Mirhg" in connection with the slaying of two women and a baby girL Dewey's action was the first step in a move to try and send swarthy Raymond VL Fernandez, Si, ahfl bis fat girl friend. Martha Bock, 29, to the electric chair. Ternandex and Mrs. Bock now are in Michigan where the sever est penalty for murder is life Im prisonment. They are accused in this state of killing Mrs. Janet ray, a middle aged Albany woman. Michigan warrants accuse them of the Hay ings of Mrs. Dolphins Downing, a comely 29-year-old Byron City, Mich, widow and her daughter, RalnelL. 21 -months-old. The three killings, authority maintain, grew out of a money making scheme in which Fernan dez wooed lonely women by mall in many parts of the nation. District Attorney James N. Geh hlg of Nassau County, N.Y, who asked Dewey for the extradition i fj.cQSMasji mm WCJ Sa St papers, said be had been Informed that Michigan would not oppose the return of the pair to New York to stand trial. Gehrig claimed a "complete and detailed confession" from Fernan dez and Mrs. Beck in the brutal death of Mrs. Fay. The body of the. 50-year-old woman was ' found buried earlier this week in the cellar of a homo in South Ozone Park, Queens, N.Y. Her skull was crushed. K. S. !Hort Agency Constitution Liie Co. Has Moved from C03 Eexewater SL to 417 Oregon Bids. Phono THEIR HOPE IS THE RED CROSS i WAS? mm '0 mm" m He 1 NX When flood, fire of famine rav ages the land the Red Cross stands ready to stem the tide, . soothe the scars and succor the pangs of suffering. Now Ready your Dollars to help the Red Cross help humanity wherever v and whenever it is needed. 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