4 (Sec IV-Statesman, SoImbu Or. Saturday. Sept. 2S. 1853 ."lid Favor Sways Us, No Fear Shall Awa" Frm Flrt SUtesmn, March 2. mi Sutcsman Publishing Company CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher Published every morn inf. Buiins offlc 280 Korth Church SU. Salem. On., Tclcphon. 1-3441 Eatmd at Um poatoffira t Satem. Or. as etaas-matter uader act of CensTcaa March a. lwl. , Member Associated Press. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication e all local news printed in this newspaper Let's Ship Him One We'd say off-hand that the swank Chicago hotel which was unable to serve Prince Aki hito of Japan a hot dog will give its chef a rather stern lecture in protocol and amenities. But such things have happened before. A paying guest in a first-rate hostelry can get just about anything he wants. If he needs a safety pin, a bell-boy appears promptly with one. A missing button on- a suit can get in stant attention. A TV set, if not standard room equipment, is promptly installed on re quest. Every service for every guest is a rou tine pledge. But many a time it is not that way in the dining rooms. A kitchen geared for a la chaise lounge or royal fried ribs of Siam leopard can't be bothered with egg sunnyside up at the dinner hour. And a hot dog! No chef in his right mind would be caught with one, skinless or otherwise, in the lowest reaches of his exalted storage cellar. But we didn't set out to chastise the hotel which easily could have met the royal de mand since it seems probable that even Chi cago, at la Salem, would have an all-night market. We just sympathize with the prince who merely wanted a hot dog, a bit of pure Americana, in the hot dog center of the world and had to settle for beef tenderloin which, after all, is merely something that money can buy. Belated Stitch The corps of engineers, Portland district, has recommended a breakwater to protect Tillamook bay from the ravages of the ocean. They propose to construct a rock, gravel and sand fill to close the gap at the Bayocean gand estimate the cost at $1.5 million. The lo cal interests would be required, to pay 17 per cent of the construction cost and assume the annual maintenance cost of about $15,000. Back in 1939 the ocean made its first heavy assault on the Bayocean peninsula. Through the years it has continued its ravages. City lots and paved streets have fallen into the waves, houses have become victims. Across the narrows of the peninsula ocean waters poured at flood stages, and finally they tore out a wide gap, spreading sand over oyster beds in the bay. In that year of 1939 the situation and the threat were called to the attention of the army engineers. Residents at Bayocean held the. opinion that the erosion was caused by eddies set up after the south jetty was built. At that time the engineers said they could do nothing, that bank protection work was out side the province of the corps. Now 14 years later and tens of thousands of d a m a g e s greater, and over a million dollars in needed remedy greater the corps recommends ac tion to protect what values remain on the bay and on the present Bayovean island. The stitch was not taken in time. What Happens in Philippine Election Deemed Of Vital Importance to Entire Free World By JOSEPH ALSOP MANILA, P. I. Probably the most trying characteristic of the Hew world in which we live is that what is ,-v; distant o f t e n ; All VAC:. 7 'vjj than what is near. Whether Gov. Thomas E. Dewey leaves politics - t ; I or runs for re- i election inf Ns 1954 will cer-f f 1 t a i nly matter! I 1 I to the peopleLiiK I State. But even rr v to New Yorkers, it can perhaps be less important in the long run than whether Elpidio Quir ino is beaten or is reelected in the current contest for the Phil ippine presidency. Bat why should this be so? The answer has to be deduced from the circumstances of the Philippine election itself. These may be briefly summarized as follows. First, all impartial observers here agree that there is almost no doubt about the popular ver dict Quirino and his Liberals have altogether lost the support of the country. Since Gen. Car los P. Romulo boldly led his Democrats into coalition with the Nationalists, the Nationalist Democratic candidate, Ramon Magsaysay, is certain of a huge popular majority. , From the country people of the barrios to the businessmen of Manila, from the leftwiag la bor leaders to the famous Phil ippine multi-millionaire, CoLSo renau (who still has great in fluence here although now an American citizen) the support for Magsaysay is impressively solid and passionately enthusi astic. Quirino, by contrast, seems to have no real adherents except the members of his political ma chine and the beneficiaries of the machine's special favor. In these circumstances, It is clear that Quirino can only win by force or fraud or a comb in-, tion of both. The question ev eryone now asks in Manila is not ' whether Magsaysay is in the lead. That is taken for granted. The question asked is, rather, whether Magsaysay' lead is huge enough to overcome any attempt to steal the election. The Quirino administration . is now reshuffling the provincial and municipal treasurers, who have the largest share in report ing the vote. The removal of the Philippine army's able and impartial Chief of Staff, Gen. Calixto Duque, has only been prevented by prema ture publicity. In the Army's lower ranks, however, the capa ble, non-political officers promo ted under Magsaysay have re cently been transfer re d to school assignments and the like, while important provincial com mands have suddenly been con ferred on officers purged or passed over for incompetence and bad behavior. Perhaps Quirino will choose differently in the end but his partisans are at least readying the instruments of force and fraud. Nor is the force wholly on Quirno's side. Magsaysay was a brilliant guerrilla leader in the last war. There is some evidence that a guerrilla organ ization supporting him, sworn to "enforce a free election" is growing up in key provinces. As these words are written, moreover, Manila is ringing with talk and talk that is not groundless either that there will be a revolution if Quirino steals the election. In these cir cumstances, the Philippine Sen- ate, which is pidoniinantly Na tionalist, will first refuse to cer tify that Quirino has been duly elected. But if this should fall, the most solid and respectable Nationalist and Democratic par ty leaders sly they will "go to the hills." . : If Quirino allows a free el ection and wins, that's our bad luck,1 one of these men told this reporter. "But if the will of our people is going to-be 'defied, we may as well fight now rather than later. Such are the ex plosive ingredients now bub bling away in this Philippine el ectoral pot There are several reasons why the outcome, what- ever it may be, must be of great interest to Americans. t In a practical sense, in the first place, Magsaysay is the The Korean Escapes Income Tax When this $100,000 offer for the first MIG plane delivered to the U.N. in Korea was an nounced speculation arose in The Statesman newsroom over whether any one who claimed and got the reward would have to pay income taxes on the hundred grand. That curiosity was satisfied with the statement of the inter nal revenue bureau that no tax would be de ducted or assessed because the money was earned outside the United States. (Congress has passed an amendment to the tax law clos ing this loophole which movie stars were us ing by going abroad to perform in pictures, but the change evidently doesn't apply to this North Korean). Tax statisticians figured that for an Amer ican to retain that much income after taxes in this country he would have to have a net before taxes of $940,000. This shows up quite graphically the unconscionable weight of our progressive income taxation. Some will say that a million dollar income is itself uncon scionable; but if it has been earned legitimat ely such a verdict reveals envy rather than a sense of justice. ' A net income of $100,000 a year is large to be sure; but for the government to reach in and take $840,000 before a person can keep that net certainly makes it a greedy partner. We can justify this in grave emergency when resources must be mustered for common safe ty; but we ought to relax such imposts when the emergency passes. The case used is merely a pertinent illus tration of the way our income tax structure is steeply graduated under the pressures not only of raising money but of "levelling." This is levelling with a bulldozer. Torture Is Relative More than the wisdom of Solomon will be needed if there is to be justice y disciplining one-time prisoners of the Communists who, in the words of defense secretary Charles Wil son, "made false confessions or informed on their buddies too readily." Just what is "too readily?" Is in 20 hours of mental torture and interrogation, or is in 100 hours? And who's to say how many hours it actually was? Or is to be 20 lashes or 50; hung by one arm for an hour or 10 hours; confined in total darkness and priva tion for three days or 30? Torture is relative, both in substance and by individuals. The Marines, as we understand it, do not excuse giving information to the enemy under any circumstances. The Army, it appears, is more prone not to forgive but to forget ex cept in flagrant cases. It takes stern stuff, more stern that most of us have, to be able to take torture unto death, slow torture and agonizing. It appar ently was such torture that finally brought to the Japanese the secret of where the planes came from that bombed Tokyo in 1942 from the Carrier Hornet. ' Wilson promises "sympathetic investiga tion" before any punishment is meted out. Except in provable cases of blabber-mouthing without more cause than fear or favor, we'd say the defense department should go a little easy at this date. It's pretty hard to know what a man went through months or years later. For those who yielded to enemy pressure willingly or easily, however, we have no sym pathy whatever. Paul Robeson, singer, has been awarded the Stalin peace prize. The presentation was made by Howard Fast, author. That pretty well tags the pair without any surprise to the public. American candidate. He has be come so without American gov ernmental action or American support of any kind. But he is the American candidate none the less, by virtue of his past close links with American pol icy, when he was fighting the Halts; and by virtue, too, of the known though unspoken prefer ence of the Washington adminis tration. Perfect correctness has been maintained by Ambassa dor Raymond Spruance, but the practical situation is such that a new American ambassador will have to be named if Quirino is re-elected. Vastly more important, the re-election of Quirino, if achiev ed by fraud and force, will write finis to the hopeful polit ical development of the Philip pines, the most politically ma ture of the free nations of Asia. Such a defeat for the cause of free government in Asia will be a sore blow in itself. In the Philippines, meanwhile, the surface of affairs may re main unchanged for a little. But discontent will smolder angrily beneath the surface even if it does not break out in rebellion. The authority of government, already precarious, will be wea kened still . further. And the first external shock, such as a drop in world demand for Phil ippine products and a resulting of poverty and unemployment, . will then be likely to give the Philippine game to the Com munist Hukbalahaps, who are still capable of a strong come back. Maybe Manila opinion is whol ly misleading. Maybe the Philip pines are strong for Quirino in stead of Magasaysay. If the el ection here is reasonably hon est, there is little to fear either way. But on present prospects one kind of election result pro mises to build the Philippines into a bastion of freedom in Asia, while the other threatens the eventual loss of the Philip pines as a significant partner of the Free World.: Those who doubt the American interest in this kind of change in the Asia tie power balance, need only think of Korea. ? (CopyricM. issa. , New York Herald Tribune, XaeJ Tift' "TJiML C XV vsl r" -Smmh J' ill They say that Rocky crawled into the ring Thursday night humming, "Don't Let LaStarza Get in Your Eyes," and crawled out chanting, "LaStarza Fell On His Alabama ..." S'S??' Bu newsmen said they'd send round-by-round 'J. : . i . reports over the wire anyway . . . Then radios f nTN got in on the act and said they would recreate Lt - 4V w-J the fisht (which also was tabooed by the pro- motors) from the press wire ... So if you thrilled to the real istic report of the slaughter over KOCO, you should know it was done with mirrors ... Recreating the fight was Rod Belcher who also does the same thing for baseball. For the Marciano-LaStarza report Belcher was reading the blow-by-blow account as it came in over the news wire. The crowd noise was dubbed in. And what with commercials and between-rounds chatter it was difficult to tell the Belcher article from the real thing . . . Ac tually Belcher's announcing was about two rounds behind the real fight in New York City . . . None, except radio station managers, know from where Rod made his broadcast--from Seattle, Oregon City or where and they aren't announcing. TELE VINE KOIN-TY (VHF Channel 6 Portland) has booked about 90 per cent of CBS' nighttime programs. It also will carry some top ABC programs . . . Initial telecasting will be from 3 p.m. through midnight. Hours to be increased later. Among shows to be televised are Omnibus, What's My Line, Fred Waring, Jack Benny, Studio One, Burns snd Allen, I Love Lucy, Red Buttons, Godfrey, I've Got a Secret, Place the Face, Pentagon USA, Ozzie and Harriet, My Friend Irma, Jackie Glea son, Four Star Playhouse, Strike It Rich, Orient Express wrest ling, Cisco Kid, fights . . . and . . . oops! we almost added Rita and Dick ... Intial power will be 56 kw, an estimated three times stronger than any station now within range of Salem . . . KOIN-TV's 271-foot, $30,000 tower is the tallest in the area . .. An antenna of 708 feet is planned later to radiate 100 kw, full authorized power. iBSJBEgSSSgS!3S5g Literary Guidepost By W. G. ROGERS THE COMPLETE WORKS OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, the text established by Herbert Far jeon, new introduction by Ivor Brown (The Nonesuch Press Random House; four volumes; boxed, $35). Who says the pnee of books is going up? Some 20 years ago the first Nonesuch Shakespeare, in seven volumes, with the same text cost $200. At that time it was hoped the day would come when the common man could afford a set of books as hand some and a text as sound. The day has come. This is the Coro nation edition, too, with each volume bearing the dedication: "By her gracious permission this edition is dedicated to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth by her dutiful and devoted servants of The Nonesuch Press in the year of her coronation MCMLHI." Volume I contains 14 come dies; volume II, 11 histories; volume III, 15 tragedies; and the last volume, the poems. In ad dition to the plays generally at tributed to Shakespeare, this set includes three of the apocrypha . . . there are a dozen or more with which the bard of Avon's name has been associated ... Far j eon's choices are "Sir Thom as More." -Edward in" and The Two Noble Kinsmen." Brown gives reasons for these choices in an introduction which covers briefly the facts of Shak espeare's life and the principal speculations about him. This is "the sheerest Shake speare there can be," according to the nice phrase of Francis Meynell under whose direction Nonesuch produced this edition. It is the exact text of the First FATL MIGRATION? 1 am W ii r ii -Of ' Although the ring riot is over for Rocky and Rollie the bloodletting in the courts has just begun . . . Promoters at first said no TV or radio broadcast of the fight, period ... Later they loosened up snd with great heart said they'd permit only a press-wire 75-word .A .1 M - l A. 1 I - Folio, of 1623, with all the Quarto variants, plus modern readings where essential. India paper is used, and a thicker sheet is set in for the title page to aid, as it effectively does, in finding your place. !ffiagE3aS5E3a T1Vi . .m i-k trK I EN AIN U BLAK 4 7i?AMM A "its mmda of " skJO ...strpmssmd y y thm fimtmdsl jTfat wfcjdb mttln yosi so btrf H ow sy jmjsWoC pirn..," Better English Br D. C WILLIAMS 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "Do you think you could tell me whether she plans on taking a trip to New York?" 2. What is the correct pro nunciation of "illusive?"' 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Agricultural, ag regate, agnosticism, ageratum. 4. What does the word "un tutored" mean? 5. What is a word beginning witht hi that means "boisterous mirth?" ANSWERS 1. Say, "Do you think you can tell me whether she plans (omit on) taking a trip?" 2. Pro nounce the u as in use, not as in rude. 3. Aggregate.. 4. Not educated in schools or by an instructor, "His untutored mind could not grasp the meaning." 5. Hilarity. Dtp kiiiiLLUB ffiD 03X3 (Continued from Page One) to prevent on the battlefield? It would seem to me unlikely if we adopt arbitrary positions in advance and our "room for maneuver and negotiation is limited. I hope our leaders will not be prisoners of domestic political propaganda or hobbled by inflexibility." Lawrence reasons that- be cause the Reds are wicked we just can't do business with them: "There can be no appeasement of gangsters." I think he mis reads Stevenson's meaning. As the latter says, "when we search for settlements we have to search, and when we negotiate we have to have something to negotiate with as well as for." That is not out of harmony with the Dulles speech. The latter ex pressed readiness to negotiate with Russia, and gave certain as surances with regard to our in tention in Korea. The following paragraph epitomizes the Stev enson position and seems to me eminently sound: ' "In these circumstances we i should press forward not un der any foolish illusion that one grand conference would yield security, but rather with realis tic faith that the foundation of stability must be laid, stone by rrr 1 1 By Lichty Time Flies FKOSI STATESMAN FILES I' 10 Years Ago r Sept 28, 1943 ' i .. ', President Roosevelt announ ced the resignation of Sumner Welles as under secretary o state and appointed Edward R. Stettinius Jr., to succeed him. The Keith Brown plant in North Salem at a meeting of employes pledged 312,300 in bonds. The plant committee was composed of, Stearns Cushing, Jr Frank Haynes and F. D. Van Sweringer. r . An auction sale st which $25, 000 worth of i n v a si o n bonds were purchased carried Silver- ton well over its quote tor the third war loan. Silverton passed with $30,000 bonds over the goal set for it 25 Years Ago Sept 2C, 192S Captain Emory S. Land, ob tained leave from the navy to . become vice president of Gug genheim fund for promotion of Aeronautics. He became an ac credited aviator in his 50th year and is a cousin of Colonel Lind bergh. Cecil B. DeMiUe's picture "The King of Kings." which played in Philadelphia, for nine weeks, is playing at the Elsinore theatre. There are 18 stars, 500 princi pals and a supporting cast of 5,- 000 persons. Editorially Consider the fate of the cotton stocking! And why? Silk is the answer. In the two years between 1923 and 1925 tho production of full-fashioned cotton "stockings drop ped from 1,793,600 dozen pairs to 727300 dozen pairs. 40 Years Ago Sept I, 1113 The Eugenics contest held in the auditorium of public library building was completed with As- ahel Bush, son of Mr. and Mrs. Asahel Bush, Jr., and Virginia Smith, daughter of Dr. and Mrs, F. E. Smith tied for the highest score. Both making a 995 per cent At St Louis a man by the name of John Lynch, 48 years old died. It took a special cas ket with 12 men to carry it Mr. Lynch weighed 692 pounds. Fifty thousand dollars in tax es was turned over to County Treasurer J. C. Moores by the sheriffs' office as part of the last half of this year's tax col lections. stone, with patient persistence. We owe it to ourselves and our anxious, weary friends to ex pose Communist intentions when we can; to confer when we can; to reduce tensions and restore hope where we can. The door to the conference room is the door to peace. Let it never be said that America was reluc tant to enter." The probable alternative is a universal war, universally de structive. At this point it is well to quote Mr. Dulles again: "Physical scientists have now found the means which, if they are developed, can wipe life off the surface of this planet These words that I speak are words that can be taken literally." Faced with that possibility surely our utmost energies must be devoted to preventing s war in which such engines of death might be unleashed. The former Illinois governor is no dream-walker: "But though the imminent danger has receded, this is no time to wobble or lower our guard, not with the hydrogen bomb and no certain evidence that softer music from Moscow reflects any basic change in the Soviet design of world dominion. And it is no time for arrogance, petulance or inflexibility either." Stevenson showed a readiness to support this administration , in its direction of foreign policy, saying: "U n d e r our constitution, foreign policy is the responsi bility of the Executive. The Democrats in Congress have al ready shown that they are eager to help the President carry out an effective foreign .policy, re store the leadership of America and give fresh inspiration and confidence to the great alliance which is indispensable to our se curity. If it brings the Presi dent great personal success we will all rejoice, because the na tion and the free world will be the beneficiaries.' In the face of this the Fer guson attack was foolhardy in the extreme. Not only does the United States need allies in this time of world tension; any political party in power needs assistance from the party in op position for preserving a united front in developing and carry ing out a sound foreign policy. If one reads the Stevenson and Dulles speeches without prejudice he will find a unity in attitude if there is some dif ference in emphasis. The people should rejoice that there is such cohesion in thinking among the real leaders of both political parties. Jh Xlte Chest Albert C Graft, Salem post master, is leader of the federal government division of the 3140,000 .Salem Community Chest fund drive, slated to star Oct C Worker Help In Defeating Reds Urged By NORMAN WALKER ST. LOUIS Jh Secretary of State Dulles said Thursday free worker organizations "help mighti ly in the quest for peace" by ex posing the Communist "workers paradise" as a myth. The AFL's annual convention gave Dulles an enthusiastic ovation after he praised tho AFL for having "done more than any other single body" to picture slave conditions behind the Iron Curtain. "In this matter," Dulles said, "there should be closer cooperation between us. You have not always received the official support and backing you deserve." The warm reception given Dulles was in marked contrast to the re strained and polite applause dele gates gave to Vice President Nixon Wednesday. Nixon denied President Eisenhower had broken a promise, as some AFL leaden claim, tn uin. port union-wanted changes in th Taft-Hartley Labor Law. The , contrast underlined the AFL's whole-hearted support of ad ministration foreign policies but bit ter opposition to many of the ad ministration's domestic programs. Dulles received nerhaos his rreat. est applause from delegates when he said this country's foreign policy can best succeed when uunoartitA by the American people generally ana oy dou political parties. Peace Policy For U. S. Still In the Making By' J. M. ROBERTS Jr. Associated Press News Analyst State Department consideration of policy for the Korean peace com ference, if one is ever held, is just beginning. So far no quid has been produced with which to bargain for the Com. munist quo. Officials will actually get down to work in conferences at the State Department next week. They will be searching for something to offer the Reds in return for establish, ment of -a unified Korea under a freely elected government. They aren't very optimistic on that point . . The other chief problem of the conference, the withdrawal of all foreign troops, is considered mors soluble. But even that is largely matter of degree. This troop problem has led to wSjVauuu sitiiviiaj uiiw mats that there is a possibility I covering both major objectives of the conference through a U.S. Russian-Red Chinese treaty guar anteeing the neutrality of a unified Korea. The one great drawback to this suggestion is that there is nothing n it for the Reds, since they have nothing to fear from Korea any way. sucn a tnreat as me Koreans can pose is hardly likely to causa any great loss of sleep in the Krem lin or in Peipmg. Some sources even credit them with a desire to resume the war when convenient, rather than shrinking . from it. Another thought that has been kicked around in State Department circles was that Russia might be sufficiently interested in a five power conference on general set tlements to make some concessions on Korea if that were offered. But that idea looked better a few weeks ago than it does now, the Russian post-Stalin peace offensive havinj died down somewhat. High level consideration has not yet been given to any of the ideal produced so far. In State Depart ment parlance that doesn't mean. are not thinking, but that they have not gotten around to confer ring with the men who gathered; the facts and produce assessment! of the situation and the aiterna lives it offers. One thing that hampers this sort of work is the uncertainty over whether there will really be a con. ference and. if there is one. whether the Reds intend to use i merely in an effort to force the Allies to break it off in frustration and so lay themselves open ti criticism throughout Asia. The chances now are that tht Korean War will not prove to hav chan zed the status of Korea at all except that tho Chinese Reds ha vi been drawn into North Korea ti replace the Russian Reds who ha previously withdrawn. The Allies will have to be satis. Ced with what were, after all. th major objectives of demonstrates the effectiveness of the Westers world's collective security system and tho saving of South Korea first nation established under thi aegis of the United Nations.