4 The Statesman, iSalem. Ofqon. flamiaT fnlT 20, 1953 rtjaon Statesman BIG STORM BREWING i "No Tavor Stoav U. No Ftar Shall Atc Fresa first SUtcuBUL March tt. IH1 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. Editor and Publisher FhUshed Terr morula. Bui taw ftle tlS 8 Commercial. Saleaa. Oregea. Telephone S-S441. Catered at the pos toffies at Salem. Oregea. aa claaa matter aader act at Mare S. 1T7& Purges in Satellite States The dropping of Ana Pauker, high priestess of Communism in Romania from office in the government and power in the Communist party, has started a great deal of speculation. The offi cial report accused her of capitalist deviation ism, but such is the gobbledygook of Communist jargon that the only sure meaning of the charge is that she "lost out." Coming as it did after purges in Czechoslovakia some have assumed that unrest prevails in the satellite states, or that their performance has fallen short of goals so that the purges were ordered as disciplinary measures. One cannot be sure of the true causes. They may differ in different countries or among dif ferent individuals. One thing is clear that the prescription of the purge is the standard prac tice of Communist materia medica, both in gov ernment and within the party. There is no per sonal security except for those who in the com petition for power and place are able to save themselves. Both Stalinism and Leninism are based on deception and the double-cross, as Ed ward Crankshaw writes in an article in last week's New York Times Magazine. The purge is a convenient device employed by those in power to accomplish certain objec tives. As Cranshaw says: It may be used directly, to kill off the once faithful, who have suddenly begun to doubt; or it may be used to get rid of particular individ uals or groups, who have served their purpose and look for a reward which Stalin has no in tention of bestowing; or it may be used to liqui date a policy for a time pursued by Stalin, but now to be abandoned; or it may be used to pro vide the people with scapegoats, or whipping boys, for Stalin's own errors; or it may be used as a blunt instrument of terror, to keep the people cowed. Cranshaw offers no opinion as to the reason lor the recent purges in Romania and Czecho slovakia. He is sure however that the object was to make it easier for Stalin to mold these coun tries to his own will, "for the greater glory and security of the Soviet Union." The second act in the three-act tragedy of the purge (Act I, charge and arrest; Act II, the trial; Act III, the punishment) has not been staged in the case of Ana Pauker or Rudolf Slansky. We are not sure they are under arrest. But they have fallen from power, victims of the very system they helped to forge for their countries. York and Boston; it is spread out over the coun try. Accustomed to dealing with figures, when these were announced the stock brokers voted to stretch out their day. The French Riviera has been featuring "Texas week," induced evidently by the number of oil-cotton-cattle millionaires from Texas who haunt this corridor of pleasure. Long Beach holds an annual Iowa picnic where former Hawkeyea gather to reminisce about hot summers and cold winters and corn and hogs. The Riviera wel comes Texans in a different way, with bartend ers toting six-shooters, orchestra players wear ing Stetson hats. Must have been quite a week along the blue Mediterranean. One thing we may be sure of though, there never will be an Oregon week at Cannes. Oregonians don't get that far, and if they do they put padlocks on their pocket-books. Standard Oil Co. of California has bought a big tract of land just north of Seattle with a view to locating a refinery on it. It may be abla to get crude oil from a pipeline now crossing the Canadian mountains to Vancouver, B.C. Or the refinery could be supplied by tanker from Borneo or the Middle East. California is no long er able to supply the growing demand of West Coast motorists and industry for petroleum products. - sX mm rifcj Wanta buy a town? Long-Bell Lumber Co. is offering its model logging town, Ryderwood, in Cowlitz County, Wash, for sale. And the Atomic Energy Commission which has owned every thing at Richland, Wash., a city of 24,000, is giv ing residents a chance to buy the place. In buy ing a town presumably one has to consider tha upkeep as well as the first cost. --t D aw ny'ypL Joy and sadness mix in the news. To illus trate: One front page column in the Saturday Statesman reported that President Truman had signed the bill increasing social security bene fits $5 a month and at the bottom carried tha item that the price we pay for newsprint had gone up $10 a ton. The latter took the prospec tive joy out of the former. Exchange Hours, and the West Members of the New York Stock Exchange have voted to lengthen their trading day, Mon day through Friday, by one-half hour, and closa on Saturday. Heretofore, they observed Satur day closing only through the summer months. One reason for the change was to accommo date western customers. When the Exchange closes at three it is only noon on the Pacific Coast (or 11 a.m. under PST). This cuts out any business from the West developing after those hours for that trading day. The time lag has been helpful to western exchanges. Midwest at Chicago, and San Francisco and Los Angeles, which picked up considerable business after the New York market closed. Recent studies of stock ownership made by Brookings Institution helped to convince New York Exchange members of the desirability of lengthening their trading day. These studies showed that 24.02 per cent of the shares and 2.86 per centr of the shareholders are credited to the West Central, Mountain and Pacific Coast states. Capital no longer clusters around New Every family is entitled to one fool; so tha British will just keep on suffering Dr. Hewlett Johnson, the Red Dean of Canterbury. Anyona who believes, as he does, that Chinese children pick up U.N. disease germs by chopsticks is so silly as to be harmless. Chiang Kai-shek says his Nationalists do not need foreign manpower to recover China from the Reds, but do need "other military assist ance." Recalling how he promised to clean up on the Communists in six months one can't put much faith in his present confidence. Deatli Claims F. V. Edwards, Mill Worker Forrest V. Edwards, Oregon Pulp and Paper Co. employe and resident of Roberts and Salem most of his life, died Friday at his home on Route 5. Born in Frankfort, Kans., Sept. 12, 1895, Edwards came to Oregon with his family when he was two and a half. They settled in Roberts where Edwards lived until moving to Salem several years ago. He was a member of the Roberts Grange. Surviving are his widow, the former Reba Rodgers to whom he was married at Eugene Feb. 17, 1914; a son, Forrest Leroy Edwards of Beaverton; two brothers, John and Claude Edwards, both of Sa lem; two half-brothers, Orie Mar tin of Portland and Clarence Mar tin of Salem and six grandchild ren. A daughter, June Eyerly, died in 1946. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by the Virgil T. Golden Co. The Safety Valve AFTER THE TUMULT To the Editor: Now that the "sound and fury, the "tumult and shouting" of the Republican convention is dying down and the Democratic con vention is not yet under way, it may be well in the lull to ap praise developments up to the present. In brief, as usual "we the peo ple," get stung. Eisenhower apparently is less of an evil than Taft or MacArthur. How much less if any is problematical. For a candidate for vice-president the party's choice was more restricted. About the only worse choice that could have been made is Joe McCarthy. Nixon is a less evil than Joe McCarthy, if he is a less evil, only because he is of lesser caliber. In a recent Interview Martin Dies is reported to have said he had been "vindicated" by events Following this assumption, Judas Iscariot might be said to have been "vindicated" since Christ was considered something of a "subversive" by some. H. M. STRYKER, Salem. Four Soldiers Arrive Monday Included In the more than 3,000 Marines and Navy veterans who will return Monday from Korea aboard the U. S. transport M. C Meigs is Sgt. Eldon W. Shafer. Shafer, son of Mr. and Mrs. I V. Shafer, 1220 N. 21st St., gradu ated from Salem High School in June, 1948. He worked one year and then attended Oregon Stata College 1949-50. He entered tha U. S. Marines Nov. 27, 1950 and has been in Korea since July 13, 1951. His parents last heard from him July 4th when he wrote say ing he was on his way from Korea. Also listed as being aboard tha transport are Cpl. John R. Monroe, 370 N. Cottage St.; Cpl. Lawrence D. Brown, Salem Route 9 and CpL Jacob O. Zeiszler, West Stayton. Recause rain pnnrfnp( m-fc4-r city quietly from clouds to earth, lightning frequently stops when rain begins to fall. Some summer conventions not reported in the usual run of daily news: The annual convention of the Willamette Valley Rock Skip pers and Crawfish Searchers Association. This lively group is made up solely of fathers who attend picnics with young children and are called upon to teach them (the kids) how to skip rocks over stream surfaces and how to hunt for crawfish. Roundtable discussions were held on such topics as "A Study of the Varia bles In Wind Resistance For Flat Rocks and Round Ones," "Stone Bruises and What To Do For Them," and "Separating The Toddler From The Crawfish." 2TU Former Governor William M. Tuck told tha Virginia Democratic convention that the Demo cratic administration in Washington is "a vast bureaucracy, grown fat, wasteful, corrupt and arrogant under the leadership of a Pendergast politician." This Democrat seems to be stealing Republican thunder. Marion Davies, who surprised everyone by marrying a merchant marine skipper shortly after the death of her great friend, W. R. Hearst, is suing for divorce after nine months of mar riage. In spite of the skipper their matrimonial bark went on tha rocks. Harriman and Barkley are Regarded as Truman Choices But Race Still Wide Open 1 rT M A y JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON In the next great drama to be staged at Chi cago, the most important actor will remain in the wings (or ra ther here in until tha grand climax. By an authori tative estimate, Harry S. Tru man can swing at least 400 Democratic del- gate votes to any candidate the convention f"""" ... likes : and can delegate votes to a candidate tha convention does not like. Such, at any rate, is said ba the Presi dent's measure- xnent of his own power in his ; party. All those close to Truman agree that the President dead -set against being drafted himself. And they also pic ture him, at this ment. as being -1 in the mood of a cheerful travel er happily surveying a Swedish smorgasbord table. It is quite possible that tha President has already made his choice among the bewildering variety of Democratic candidates who constitute the smorgasbord. If so, he has only whispered it to one or two confidential agents. In any case, one can venture a highly informed guess as to where the choice may fall, and where it will not fall. Proceeding by the method of elimination, the candidates who are highly unlikely to get the Presidential nod are the following: Sen. Estes Kefaaver of Tenne ssee. Truman's lw opinian at to .1 Kefaaver is unchanged, although those close to the White House say the President will not Inter pose a veto if the convention roes Kefauver's way. Sen. Robert A. Kerr, of Okla homa. Kerr is a Truman crony, and" is supported by other Tru man cronies, but his associations are too oily, and Truman thinks he has no national standing. Sen. Richard B. Russell, of Georgia, Truman likes and re spects RnmselL and is grateful for his cooperation in the effort to work out aa agreea civil rights plank. Bat he feels Russell can not carry the big- Bartbera states. Among the serious, active can didates, thereiore, the President's choice may be considered as ly ing between W. Averell Harri man and Vice President Alben Barkley. Each of these two has his own special attraction and drawbacks in the President's eyes. Harriman is a 100 per cent Fair Dealer, who would fight it out with Gen. Elsenhower on domes tie issues in the hammer-and-tongs manner Truman admires. Harriman's candidacy was strangly encouraged by the White House. It did not begin as a serious candidacy, but Harri nsan has made it into a serious candidacy by his own sheer guts and determination. The President has been much Impressed by re ports recently received of Har riman's performance in Colorado and other Rocky Mountain states. Moreover, he likes Harriman best of all the candidates. The objection to Harriman is that his nomination would com mit the Democrat party to an extreme and radical strategy. In itially, the President favored such a strategy against Gen. Eis enhower. The South was to be cast to the winds. A strong, ag gressive fight on home issues was to win the northern states. But the recent performance of Gen. Eisenhower and the Republicans in general has made this strat egy less attractive. And because of the southerners' opposition, a Truman nod to Harriman would be almost sure to split the Dem ocratic party. As for Vice President Barkley, he is the candidate of the Senate and not of the White House. Tru man does not much love Barkley, despite the faithful service Bark ley has given to him. Yet Barkley is a vigorous campaigner. He would unite the party instead of dividing it. He has a s uprising amount of hidden northern sup port. The objection to him, both in the eyes of Truman and of the party in general, is simply his age. Because the Vice President is seventy-four, he looks, inevtiably, like a caretaker candidate. And against Eisenhower, a caretaker candidate is not a tempting can didate. If all goes as now planned, the President will weigh these pros and cons until the appropriate time (unless he has already made his decision). Then, when tha right time comes, either Harri man or Barkley will benefit by the laying on of hands. If Bark ley is the choice, the laying on of hands can easily be enough to put him over. If Harriman Is chosen, the outcome will be more doubtful, because of the south erners. In short, despite the greatness of the President's potential in fluence, and his present inten tion to choose a candidate of his own at the right time, the final decision of this Democratic con vention is still unpredictable. The plain truth is that the delegates will perceive the same objections to either of the President's choices as the President himself has noted. And if the convention thinks that these objections are insuperable, a kind of basket-of-eels deadlock can still result, and the convention can still turn to Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois. The semi-annual picnic and fishfry of the Society of Cross word Pussle Addicts. The convention opened with a heated talk by J. Fgty Oof on the general theme of legislation seeking to eliminate the use of words meaning- old Roman coins, Lithuanian wine measures and Egyptian dynasties in crossword pussies. Mr. Oof, often billed as the "only man in the -world to work pussies in a three letter word meaning- writing fluid," said that the use of intricate medical terms by puizle makers was driving him stark, raving three-letter word meaning angry. The annual conclave of the Pacific Coast Association of Fly ing Saucers and Other Strange Heavenly Phenomena Sighters. This fraternal group of 100,000 was nearly split assunder over debate on a proposal that PCAFSOSHPS members should take a loyalty oath. The convention was almost thrown into a tizzy when a member reported having sighted unexplainable vision ary phenomena on the second night of the sessions. His report was thrown out, however, when it was discovered that his ex perience occurred right after a lively welcoming committee par ty in one of the hotel rooms. The quarterly debate and oratory session of the Union of Chronic Worriers. The convention was held out-of-doors because convention goers were fearful an auditorium might burn down. Topics discussed (until everyone was sick and had headaches) Included: "How To Find Additional Things To Worry About, "How To Keep An Ulcer When Things Are Going Good, Which They Never Are." "Getting- The Most Out Of Death, Taxes, Fam ines. Depressions, Wars and High Prices." Helpful advice from old worries was passed along to beginners. And one resolution called on members to not Just sit arounand worry alone but to pass the bad news along to friends. - The annual seminar of the Oregon Association of Vacation Wives. This organization is made up of wives who have qualified for membership by making up their husbands' minds on where to spend the family vacation. Panel sessions included such in teresting topics as "Husbands vs Dogs As Vacation Companions," "Road Maps And How To Train Men To Read Them," "A Cri tique On Effective Back Seat Driving," and "The Use Of The Tantrum In Changing Your Mate's Mind." One resolution passed by the organization urged members to train their husbands on the proper care of children on vacation trips. This, the women felt, would give them a chance to relax and enjoy their vacations. PU5 S3DQS tJO) ffiQCH (Continued from page 1) stood in the big room, a pile of cotton bags beside it, ready for the cleaning of the clover and timothy seed. It was the orchard, however, which held the greatest lure. There granddad liked to sit in the shade. Youngsters sought fallen apples in the tall grass, hoping to find some free of worm-holes; or climbed the tree to pick the ripe ones. The wat erboy sought its cool shade when the breakdown of a binder in the grain field provided a respite from his chores of rid ing the pony and bringing water to the thirsty harvest hands, the strap in the jug-handle loop ed over the pommel of the sad dle. The old house had its mem ories. It had been located on that side of the homestead be cause that gave easiest access to an old military road. The new house was built on higher ground, near the corner where a church stood, with its coun try graveyard, and where the newer road, laid out on section lines, led to the county seat. The old house was hallowed with the deep experiences of living: birth and death, singing and dining and just visiting. The folk, in the new house which was no longer new, liked eeht A VICTOR Adding Machine FOR AS LITTLE AS Per Month tyOO 223 North High St. Phone 3-8095 Salem, Oregon Paul isn't n He just doesn't have "Continuous Vision What happens to Paul can happen to any bifocal wear er. If you find yourself tilting your head in order to see clearly, check with Morris Optical . . . contin uous vision lenses, if prop erly prescribed, will help you see easily and naturally at any distance. Our many years of optical experienca assures your satisfaction. Dr. Henry E. Morris and Dr. Kenneth W. Morris Optometrists at Morris Optical Co. 444 State St. Phone 3 -552 occasionally to go down to the old house, to see if a missing hen had hidden a nest under it, or if the red plums were ripe. Perhaps in the dusk of the eve ning, when the harvest hands were sitting out on the porch or lying on tha grass under the maple tree, resting, smoking their pipes, speculating on whe ther the rain would hold off till the harvest was done, the grand mother might be seen coming up the lane, a basket on her arm filled with Siberian crab-apples from the old orchard "nothing like those crab-apples for jelly," j she would say. "The old farm home is mother's yet, and mine. And filled it is with plenty and to spare. But we are lonely here In life's decline Tho' fortune smiles around us everywhere. "We look across the gold of the harvests as of old; The corn, the fragrant clover, and the hay; But most we turn our gaze, as with eyes of other days To the orchard, where the children used to play." (Riley) To the orchard, and to the old house nearby, and back into the misty past. "s Now In JulyA. f pS plant June's gradua-'N. ' tion or wedding-gift dollars J f0 in Towle Sterling and reap a Irfe-timeS 000 harvest Wonderful return, treasure for treasure! Your Towle Sterling will live through endless Junes. Buy it and you buy for life. Buy it here, and you buy with confidence. This fine solidilver starts at a low $3.70 for teaspoons, $29.75 for six piect place settings, from $4.00 for serving pieces. And we'll arrange terms. SEE ONE HUNDRED PATTERNS BY GORHAM - TOWLE - WALLACE - ALVIN - INTERNATIONAL - REED & BARTON - LUNT - FRANK WHITING - WATSON - FRANK SMITH 390 Stata 4-2223 Divided Payments No lirtarast or Carrying Charges