The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 07, 1952, Page 4, Image 4

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fThm Ctgrttmrni, Odera. um tT-ilcrr. KorfsOCT T, t t
PEA&' PROGRESS' AT" THE "UNITED NATIONS
T
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. .
s i.f AkiPkr:i .in w a i i
Wo favor Stfays
Frees first
Usi Aw rear Shall Ato
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Hare tX 1X31
i HE ST A I'ES&IAN Pli
rablisbed every
taUres st the posteffice m
me tu ft
ttaiem, Uregea. ae M
BUSlllNG COSIPAN
CHAKLJg ASPHAUIJ& i&liu and PubUsUer
pessseeecxal, BaJeoa, Oregea. Telephone S-14IL,
act at eoaxTM Uarea S. 1R1
A Way to Help the Chest
Salem's CpuoAuuuy Chest is still a long way
from its 1952 goal of $126,000. In fact, after two
months of soliciting by community leaders on m
volunteer basis, residents of Salem and the sub
urbs , have not yet matched the 1931 amount
raised, let alone the 10 per cent increase de
cided on for this year. , -
To argue the merits of various devices for
attracting public support to the Chest agencies
is beside the point. The one important point now
is that Salem hasn't given generously enough.
' It is certain that citizens have been made
aware of the Chest appeal, considering the time
devoted to solicitation by hundreds of Salem
folk and considering the widespread, publicity
given this campaign.
i- It would be hard to believe, too, that the fine
work of Chest-benefitted agencies in Salem has
escaped attention. '
I .Thousands of boys and girls and folks-inrneed
ire served in the area-wide programs of these
teencies Boy Scouts, Catholic Charities, YM-
CA, Girl Scouts, Legal Aid Clinic Camp Fire
Girls, YWCA and Salvation Army. These w
ganizations submitted budgets to the chest to
talling $140,000 this year. The businessmen
serving as budget committee for the Chest felt
that amount was too high to be raised, but they
i found no particular services they considered ex
! pendable. However, they ordered a 10 per cent
eut and set the Chest goal at $126,000. Toward
this, only $108,000 has been raised.
I The Chest expected that increased contribu
tions would make up for the elimination of
house-to-house canvassing this year when the
emphasis was put on "giving where you work."
&ut it didn't work out that way, and now the
Chest has decided it will ask Salem area folk to I
give at home. -
j i This will be in the form of a Porchlight Cam
paign Tuesday night when anyone wishing toj
give should have his porchlight on between Q
and 7:30 pan. Chest workers will call at those!
homes. It is hoped this maneuver will bring lnj
gifts from persons somehow overlooked In the
asain campaign and will bring in extra con-'
trlbutions from those who decide to up theirT
donations. The need is genuine. 5
costs (up 8 per cent over -two years ago) and j
wages (up 12 per cent in the same period). And
in the month of September alone, West Ger
many's exports exceeded imports by nearly $36,
500,000. Too, unemployment has been cut to 1,
037,000 out of a total population of 48,500,000
which includes 13,000,000 refugees. 1 '
j In ordinary times and under ordinary circum
stances, such an economic picture could bring
nothing but praise and pleasure. Certainly it
earns congratulations at any time. But we hope
the remainder of Europe can begin to share in
the results of enterprise,' initiative and hard
work so that the cleavage between the haves
-and have nots won't endanger operation of the
integrated alliance against the encroachment of
, Communism.
L r '
Portland's Rerolt "
j From the attitude expressed by City Attorney
Alexander Brown of Portland, it can be taken
that Oregon's metropolis again will break out
With Daylight Time next summer, regardless of
tKe statewide vote against it.
If such is the case, it can only be assumed that
Portland just doesn't give a hang about the re
mainder of the state. It must be well known that
Portland, with its centralization of so many of
the state's interests, has a great deal to do in
determining the course of other municipalities.;
It is both inconvenient and a bother to have
Portland time differ from burs. But if Portland
Ignores the state-wide mandate and goes its own
way, let it go. And we hope other Oregon cities
feel the same way. - .
j It is admitted that the vote Tuesday leaves
the way open for Portland to go on Daylight
Time. There is no known way of enforcing the
majority opinion. But it might help make known
state displeasure if, in event, Portland changes
Its time again, we just stay home more. Such
action might make Portland realize that de
pendency works txth both ways,
jj There is no right or wrong to the time argu
ment, not even after Tuesday's vote. But we feel
there's a moral obligation to abide by majority
view and more than a moral obligation to have
the state uniform no matter which time is in
Vogue. . - , - - .
Monthly news letter . . ; clip and send . . October opened
dryly amid continued parched conditions ... Driest fall in me
mory' of most old-timers, halted fall planting and deer hunting.
TTTvT -cis .,t.. i t - - - m n l :
An TV . Mn nilU ;.nwnt rt S.1m T
. dies ... Big Berg's Market planned for Keizer
area- north of Salem . . . President Truman
miffed Sslemite by whipping through town
early one morning in campaignasleep . . '.
Ray L MacLoughlin of Salem, pioneer in north
west frozen fruit industry, dies . . States
man's new building ahead of schedule, gets
roof . . Political pitch warms when Ike visits
'v-taJ taaicm us wouucnwp, uue turnout
- -. - . I
. jFrestea Hale, Deme candidate for atiriosi County enimls
sloner, charges Ceaaty Court witl waste la purchasing tins . .
C B. Anderson, new police judxe at Sllrertea ... Air Force B
If crashes near WUsonriU Ferry north of Salem aa4 11 crow
men died ... Alien. MeKae re tarns to Salesa pence force after
It months Ah Force duty la Japaa ... Five Salem m stadeats
expelled for secret society activity aad IS other beys withdraw
.' John Doerfler, 85, vFeedbum, dies . . . Jack Hayes. sUU ci
vil defease 'diroctor. stricken by heart attack, critical hot re
covers . Prime earners wrestles here ... Joseph Hopkins,
former vets heaslog mgr. convicted of embesxllng fmads by Cir
cuit Coart jury . . . Construction oa new &00Mf Bl school la
Somth Salem .starts. j
. ' -
Record 50,448 register in Marion County for elections (rec
ord 86 per cent voted) ... City officials pledge crackdown on
noisy; trucks . . . ML Angel Benedictine Sisters observe ,70th an
niversary of arrival in Oregon ... Rescue of delayed deer hunt
ing season local nimrods could (for one week, anyway) hunt
deer,! pheasant, quail, ducks, geese and political candidates . .
Dr. E. A. Lebold, Salem, lost for 5 days while hunting in Idaho
wildsi comes thru okeh ... Hanlon Hunt, 59, Fruitland, killed
in auto-train crash' near Quinaby week later Arthur D. Reed,
68, Keizer barber, dies in train-auto wreck on Salem's Market
St. . I . Walter Snyder, state educational dept. man, appointed
new superintendent of Salem public schools succeeds Frank
Bennett, now prexy of EOCE ... Arnold W. Karlin. 23, killed
on Navy ship by Communist shore fire off Korean coast .
James L. Deweese, post office employe past IS yean, dies..
Charles Spraceo makes speech la UN ... . New approach for
Center St brldxs la Salem started and Marioa St bridxs almost
completed ... Bruins Ashcroft. 71, maa who shot SOrertoa Coa
stablc Emery Jacksoa last Jane, committed to state hospital, post
poulur murder trial . . . Woodbara IQ cancels football games
because of polio'. . Patricia Gsyle Ball. 15, aad t-moath-old
soa'ef Graver Hanaa, an Amity, killed ta car wreck aear Amity
. . j Six coas' try to crash oat of Oreson pea with a boxcar, sty
mied .' . . Ford South, ss. Clear Lake fanner, arrested Iff- his
house leaded with a fantastic collection of articles obtained
throaxh the malls la past several years oa credit from stores all
over nattoa
( Be RftSNnP CALUSiB V
i
I Reputations of 8
Counties Intact
Weslern Germany Rebounds
It is seldom that a healthy prosperity can be
sailed unfortunate but that is just what some;
analysts are terming the economic wave which
has Western Germany riding high right new. I
In fact, the New York Time's Jack Raymond
radios from Bonn that the belief there is that
both Eastern and Western Europe are becoming
so perturbed over the resurgence of West Ger-I
man economic strength that policies toward the;
Independent German government are being re
evaluated. ( -V,T - w!
France, as is well known, has become increas
ingly wary in its attitude toward Western Ger
many. And the Soviet effort to halt the present!
trend in Western Gernjany political develop- j
ment has been renewed. Both these factors ap
parently can be traced to the Bonn govern-;
merit's new economic stability rather than to the
traditional, fears of a German military comeback.-
, - : - '': ?
; In Western Germany, unemployment is at a
record low; the cost of living has risen only
moderately; savings have gained and industrial
production is approaching new high levels. The
tovernment itself has a huge surplus In the!
luropean Payments Union. ' ' g
Typical of statistics are those involving living
'Nov. 4 election results include Marion County representa-
Editorial
1TETHDAT FAETT
Recently the Statue of Liberty celebrated her 66th
birthday on Bedloe's Island. A flag was presented.
; jspeeches were made, and Liberty showed no signs
of wanting to lay down her torch. Tet if that gal
lant lady had been holding down any of a great
many other Jobs in the United States she would
have faced compulsory retirement a year ago at the
1 mystical moment of reaching 65. - ,
; j A writer in the November Reader's Digest decries
1 as nonsense the practice of compelling people to re
tire at 65 or even at 60 when they are qualified to
work, prefer to work, need to work, and have in-
I valuable experience and talent to offer. He recalls
jthat the great Inca civilization prescribed certain
occupations for certain ages regardless, of Individ
ual abilities, and Implies that this rigidity may have
contributed to the decay and downfall of the Incas.
Hi. The arbitrary retirement policy of cresent-dav
lAmericansT the writer asserts, ignores vital statis
tics, is medically unrealistic and takes no account
of the fact that Inflation has made a mockery of
many pension plans. Other voices have been point
ing out the same thing and deploring the waste of
Skills and energies through Inelastic retirement po
licies. There appears to be a growing' recognition
jthat a man is as young as Ids thinking, as mature
its his experience, as valuable as his demonstrated
ability. - ,
Keep that torch high, liberty.' ' - .
li . - v- (Christian Science' Monitor)
WA&uiaiiTUN (ft EirM coun
ties came through Tuesday's bal
loting with their reputations Intact
lor voting in tune with the nation
al trend for many years.
But three other counties that
tlves ChSdwick, Elfstrom, Hatfield and Ohmart; Roy Rice, coun- w
ty commissioner; Denver Young sun snerixz. Clayton Jones and I Belmont County in Ohio, Marion
Claud Jorgenson, tied for councilman post from Salem ward 3 "-west Virginia and Fayette la
of sUU . . Sports put Sacred Heart Academy, with one of Stevenson, instead efthe nation's
best football teams in its history, wins Capitol League; ML. An- choice. Gen. Dwicht D. Eiseo-
pel Prens win Vv lllamette Vallev Iatrua - - - Salpm Hi fVvtthall I hower.
so-so! but track team wins state cross-country title . WU foot
ball good average."
DIP 933330 V QDOffl
This left Crook in Or ran. At I
bany and . Laramie in Wromlnr.
Jasper and Palo Alto in-Iowa. Van
derburgh in Indiana and Strafford
and Coos in New Hampshire
among me select.
(Continued from page one.)
Party
Chang
World's Fears Over Isolation in U. S.
je Decline; Arabs Wolcbme
The word which got out la this
country, that the speech writers
had given a poorly-worded . ex
pression of the Dulles-Eisenhower
view, did not penetrate to
Europe against the flood of Tru
man Democratic reaction. , .
In fact, the whole campaign,
with speakers grabbing every
little twist of words for political
capital, served to spread confu
sion about what the world could
, expect from either Eisenhower or
Stevenson. -
Only when the new administra
tion gets down to work. and. Con-
r1
By J. M. KOBEKTS J
AP News Analyst
Few things so attest America's
position of leadership in world af
fairs as foreign interest in the re
sent campaign and election.
Reaction has been about what
rou would "'-i
expect, a '
cautious watch- '
fulness over af
change from an -a
d m inistration
which has, been
very interna- -tionally-
minded
to a party which!
many foreigners
. Deneve contains i ,
They were j reassmred
what, heweverj i by Elseahew
ers laag interest ta Earsfwam
affairs, and by the pest-electlem
assaraaee frsta Jeha Fester
Danes, a prsspecttre secretary
ef sUte. that friendly Battens
had nethiax U fear. -
Eorspe's worries had n4
been based entirely oa political
or economic tToands. . .
Ever since Eisenhower's Amer
ican .Legion speech, advocating
greater efforts jto liberate Rus
sia's European; .satellites, they
had been nervous over possible
for checking. It saves time in ,
making the check. Showing the '
card is not a requirement, how
ever, j Signatures are compared
to establish : Identity of persons
coming to vote.
I saw no party challengers as -sometimes
are : maintained at
voting places, especially in
cities iwhere there is suspicion of
fraud. The officer told me that
.after the poll list Is made up the
names are checked and, if a reg
istrant is not located at the ad
dress given, a list Is. prepared
containing such names and sent
to the attorney general. Notice
. is sent to persons on that list ad- '
vising them to appear in court to
establish - their right to ' vote.
After that the final list is com
piled. ...
The voting place I visited was
certainly quiet and orderly, and
persons kept coming to vote ta a
steady stream though there was
no hneupv Over at our Minion
offices the policeman on duty
said that at one precinct up in
Harlem where - he . had ' stopped
early; in the day there was quite
a queue, nearly all Negroesof
course, and the majority of them
womeni -
Tonight we are accepting Ralph
Cake's invitation to come to GOP
headquarters at the Commodore,
to receive returns. Sunday night
when! we had dinner with him
and Mrs. Cake he was quite op
timistic, feeling sure Of 330 elec
toral votes for Eisenhower.
l Our . ruests at United Nations
today included Sen. 1 and Mrs.
Fred Lamport, who are back
from Bermuda but leaving to
morrow for a trip to Miami and
Nassau before returning to
Salem. : They - wiH be back of
course in. time ' for the opening
ox Legislature.
Another guest was Bob Frazier,
member of the staff of the Eu
rene Register-Guard who is in
Boston for the year as a fellow of
the -Niemaa Foundation doing
special work la the field of Jour
nalism.; He sayshe is doing a
piece for The Reporter on the fu
ture of Wayne Morse. I From re
ports a food fhany .Oregon Re
publicans would like to put off
that political future right now.
Rave had more debates with
the . Soviet bloc . in I committee
three where we ha ve been voting
on resolutions dealing with Free
dom of Information.! We beat
them yesterday on an anti-war
mongering resolution they offered
for propafanda purposes. Now I
am shifting to the special politi
cal committee to handle the U.S
participation' on the .question of
. treatment of persons of Indian
origin ta South Africa and Race
Conflict- in South Africa. Those
are touchy, questions
ABSENTEES LXXXD OI
PORTLAND WV-The absentee
vote from Multnomah County
Portland armed senk.es members
went more than two to one for
Gen. Dwight Elsenhower for Pres
ident. These votes were from un
registered service men and women.
Bottor Ennlish
By D. C WILLIAMS
1. What is wron with this sen
tence? -She laid the book down
on the table before answering the
telephone.
2. What is the correct pronun
ciation of -ex officio-?
S. Which one of these words is
misspelled? Professor, proselyte,
proceedure. peremptory. .
4. What does the word "consan
guinity" mean?
S. What is the word becinning
with se that means "witchcraft"?
ANSWEXJ
1. Say. "She lay the book f omit
dewa) on the table. 2. Pronounce
eks o-Gsh-io, -accent oa third
syllable. 3. Procedure. 4. Blood
relationship. (Pronounce third
syllable gwta. and accent third
syllable). "lie was not aware of
their cc4isangulnity.- S. Sorcery.
i
:
GROUCHO toys!
It'
It
It's
s lovirl
a l-o-o-g-erl
lOY.lt.rl"
Soo tho Nov
1953
DESOTO
COMING NOV. 13
. &nd ttll 'ta Croucho tint jtcI
tfi3 ro)h
urn
a n lsoiauomst
faction. I
First fearful reaction in Europe,
Jtowever, began to abate some- '
what when returns ta the close '
House and Senate races showed
Eisenhower's personal popularity
had been a prime factor, rather
than any ideological shift to con
servatism. Perhaps the most enthusiastic
welcome for Eisenhower came
. from the Arab world, long at odds
with the Truman administration
because of its support of Israel
and the colonial interests of
Britain and France. ,
To the Arabs, say ehaare
' was foe the better. There was .
the danger ta that quarter that
they woeld expect toe aaoeh
from .-ffaseahowei" from i It
: reaa trace - to settlement of
1 saeh eaarrels as Kashmir, Ta- "
aisla. Morocco and Iran and
thus be subject to an naaappy -reaction
later. '-V'w
Western Europe, in addition to
v its fear of isolation influence in
; the Republican party, also feared
it might suffer from- a partial
shift of American. official interest
from Europe to the Orient.
They were well aware that the
coalition of Republicans and
Southern Democrats in Congress
would continue their insistence on
more attention to Far Eastern
""policy and revision of aid to
Europe. .-r-
brash moves by
might heighten
Russia.' ' . i I
the U.S. which
tension with
'.XSTlSrU S GRIN AND" BEAR IT
i f
bylLichty
Literary Gui
By W. G.
deppst
KOGEKS
FROM BEOWULF TO VIRGINIA
WOOLF, by! Robert Manson
; Myers (BobbsjMerrffl; $2)
-This "astounding and wholly
unauthorized history of English
literature," as it Is subtitled, be
gins right at the; beginning with
the settlement of; England by the
Angels, Sexton Jand Jukes, ad
vances through Dlde Anguische
and Muddle English, and winds
up with such significant compos-
. its writers . i 1 suppose Myers
would put It compost writers . . .
as Matthew Arnold Bennett, John
Erskine Caldwell and Upton Sin
clair Lewis, j I
' Tor this book, in its own
phrase, is almost "too humorous
to mention.? It's full of words
that Just shy; off - from being .
right. Mr. Myers Is Mr. Mala
prop . . . you remember General
Philip Henry Sheridan's tie Ri
vals," with Mrs.! Mala prop, and :
with Winchester only . 20 miles
away? Accidentally on purpose
Myers always just misses his
mark, and his miss is as good as
' - a smile, -
"Always" is not wholly correct,
perhaps; "Ode on a Greasy Urn,
"Puritan Inter lewd" and "semi
weakly periodical" are worse
than semiweaklv. But at his best
he makes you guffaw, and the
easiest way to show what he's
like is to quote. , . 5
Sometimes the variation from ,
the right word is so slight that -:
you may even wonder , whether
it is the right one. Who wrote
."Doctor Faustus" if not Christo- .
pher Morley? What's wrong with
Henry VHTs queen. Lady Zane "
Grey? Are you right, or is he,
in fthe .victory of Thesaurus at
the Battle of Salami" and in
"Seneca, a Roman prefix under
' Emperor Trojan?" v . -There
are some good pairs: Or
pheus and Euripides , oriental
and accidental, Solomon and
i GonSbrrah. Some proper, names
are bew&deringly twisted, like
Homer's" "Idiot" and "Oddity,"
. the Aegean stages, .the Four
Horsemen of the Acropolis, and .
Fra Flippo FlippL - . "
; And for good measure, the Il
lustrations have hilarious under--
"Jlaylw there's some laonry in year other eloihes, Vf aide ...wo can
Stall off everybody else, bat we simply have to keep ear
erecu good. wUTa the siOe.-
NOVV!
"Paclrard"
iell
W
EDDIE. LEWIS
495 Ferry
1
1 11 1 1
m 0
SCIIAEFEVS
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For fvnctlewul cSsturbancea,
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SCIIAEFER'S
DRUG STORE
Open DaQy. A. 1L-1 T. IX-
Sanaars, f A. at. r. as.
US tL CofmnercUI
Everybody Saves with
Greyhound's 6-RIDE FAMILY BOOK!
Boslaesamea art asaoog the saaay troops whs Eke the big
coonts aad sarinc roceirod on a Gnjbooad C4ltde Book. Tho
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HIRE'S JUST ONE TYPICAt EXAUPLIt
SAlIMTOrUCfKl "
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4-CJde Fairuly teJi Costs (Me fodorat tax) ... I 1-SS
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