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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 29, 1956)
-Icrics ct C:;;kr--5 tilaie ns Jrolicy Spelled Out Death .' ; ' '-'' : i : ( k - ; .,'! ',... tA... af M i ii ii' i a . v A 6 t 1 . V II !! II . Pilate For Kehraslui Primary Race LINCOLN. Ni-b. - Prtitlonij filtering Sm. Fstrs Kefauver IL Tcnnl In Nebraska's Democratic presidential preference primary were filed Wednesday with the sec-rt-tary of state. He U the only Democratic candi date entered to far. The filing deadline U April 3. Kcfauver'l acceptance of the candidacy, required under Nebras ka law, accompanied the filing. Four yean ago Kcfauver defeat ed Sen. Robert Kerr D-0k1a) and others in a hard-fought preference primary. Frank Morrison, Lincoln attor ney who managed Kefauver'i 1952 campaign, filed the petitions today. He said Kefauver will meet In Omaha April S with Nebraskans who have filed as delegates to Uie Democratic National Convention. Morrison said no effort has been made to enter a slate of candidates especially favorable to Kefauver for convention delegate posts. Results of Nebraska s May IS presidential preference primary I will not be binding on delegates under Nebraska la v. Neither does the Nebraska ballot show which candidates each aspiring conven tion delegate favors. There have been no reports of moves to enter Adlal Stevenson of Illinois In the Nebraska primary, but Republican leaders have an nounced plans to enter President Elsenhower In the Republican primary.. r-i C y UdiICC ii.Ci "9 P Caili Oil k (f'Uture wlrtjihoU page) WASHINGTON Or-The lnt.-rn.il revenue service said Wednesday Die sudden and iwwplng federal tax raids against roniniumt party nftlcrs and the nevupnrwr Daily Wirkrr were In line with standard operating procedure. While the Daily worker s attor ney talked In New York of going to court and Us editor denied any tax debt, Revenue Commissioner Russell C. Harrington said in a statement for reporters. "I can assure you that this case Is being handled precisely as any other similar taxpayer matter would be hnndled by the service under its obligation to enforce the revenue laws." Ne Notice Clvea Harrington had just gone ever the case with Donald R. Moysey, the New York regional tax chief who apparently engineered the Tuesday raids without advance notice to Washington. Several informed officials said that Moysey acted alone, using his authority as director of the scrv Ice's Lower Manhattan district He became director of the district Feb. 7, after Serving M acting direrliir mice Lint Atijiuit. ' M'ivmv (u'ured lh.il the? piiity owed In Income lane fur I'IjI anil tii Daily Winker ocl ltfl.019 fr mi, 'ii and 'U. O'flirt I'a.Ka. trif Willi Die fiK.irrition tit oilier rryiutmi tan diifiiori. It had pad lixki put on party office in I'lid ade!'liia, San KraridKH and I.( Angeles, as rll as in New York, licit s.iml.ir n .ii t.iWn nn-t tl.e Ilwdy Wuiltt-r, li e p.ij-er came out Vir ! r d.iy, liorer, nd Vowed t'l keep n MiM..!nl,2 III d.tllllal Ulf, lockril out of its 0n hen tijuar- Cable From Comintern Started Daily Worker NEW YORK UB - On Aug. 21. 1923, the executive secretary of what was then called the workers party In this country received a. came from the Comintern. It said: "Know no more important task American workers than establiah ment militant daily." On Jan. 13, 1524. "The Dally Worker" started publication In Chi cago with a pledge to "Join hands with the comrades of the Commu nist international." J. Louis Engdahl, respected by American Communists as a lead ing party philosopher, became the first editor, Two years later the paper moved to New York to the eight-floor of fices of a dingy building on Fist; I2th street where It has been ever since. I Through the veari the Worker has continually been In financial hot water. MOSCOW reportedly helped bail the paper out now and then but most of the financing ap pears to have come from Commu nists or their sympathizers In the United States. Annual ODeratinc deficits In th almost adless paper have ranged from faO.OOO to $200,000. The present editor, John Gates, heads a staff of about 30 persons. Few, if any, are known to have worked on any other paper. Gates was one of II 'top Ameri can Communists convicted In 1W9 of conspiracy to teach and advo cate the violent overthrow of the U.S. government. He served three years and eight months of a five year prison term. Otheri beading the paper daring Its 32 years of existence include former U.S. party secretary Earl Browder and Louis F. Budeni. Brooder was editor In 1931 and again In 1944. Later, he fell from party grace and lost his job with the worker. Budeni was named managing ed itor in 1940 and held the Job until 1943 when he renounced the party and returned to the Roman Catho lic Church. - . y - J tel I, vti; i- I ill I'd i," .ii l f t' Mm nlng sml.e.t, a Yi!.:, 'i ! n g'iai(s ne .' r I'll .iied lit t: ni.'ufl t'i.1 . 7'. uikcr i, a pnvai f.im's t)i-t:ii I presi f.i .Mies. ( Ne Tal Muysry'i Urlin Here to f il lwk and seue property a;.i n t huh taxe could be fLIuird. The party maintained It Is tax cxercjit; the paper said it otrates at a kiss and hence could owe no In come taxes. Autos are used to go to work by 77 per cent of Americans who live S to 10 miles from their jobs. STATI OF OREGON ORAL AUCTION 34-1949-1955 CARS Public and dealers Invited to attend this sale; begins at 10:30 A.M. Sal., Mar. 31 in Portland, Ore., 2305 $. I. 11th at Division, Stato Warehouse. Vehicles may bo Inspected between 9 A. M.-4 P. M., Mar. 2940, from 1A.M. Sat. Ws, lea, ant I "leers! bijridUsl." Wi UK N 10VIM6 PWAMTIOX. It clunges aieri EATIK6 Is DINING. TiiT M H k mrythlnf, heri (rent (kkkii to Sinbergtrt Hi titra thtrgi. THE SAII SHOP Th 7SMSr J" Portland koad at North City limits For Orders to Go Phono 2-4791 i f woodvo:ki::3 MACi:::;iRr (This Is the fifth ef aa Easter Week series about individuals la the bnmaa tide that carried Christ te His death.) By GEORCE CORNELL AP Newsfeatures Writer The high-vaulted chamber was silent except for the swish of the governor's robe as he paced back and forth. He stopped beside a bowl of fruit and plopped a grape in his mouth. Then, tight-lipped and annoyed, Pilate turned to the prisoner and gazed at Him distastefully. "Art Thou a king?" The country was full of these vagabond soothsayers with fool's dreams and impracti cal notions. - This one, a rangy fellow with a calm, unprotesting manner, seemed harmless enough, but there was a subtile sting in His reply: "Sayest thou this thyself, or did others tell it thee of Me?" . Pilate swore silently. Rome, the astute mistress! Firmness but eoDciUatioa that was the emperor's command. Would that great Tiberias himself had te : deal with this one not that the fellow's life mattered. But ambition burned hard In Pilate, whose ancestors had risen . from slavery. He knew that diplo ; matic mastery over these trouble some Judeans was the key to power. Personally, he had no use for justice a plague on it! I But already, his ruthless methods ' had brought scowls from Rome. He 'had to be careful, shrewd. He twisted the gold ring on his finger and turned, with sorely tried pa tience, toward this man called Jesus. "Thine own nation the chief priests delivered Thee unto me. What hast Thou done?" The maa had some visionary . answer: "My kingdom In not of this world. . ." Plainly, He was Just a paltry mystic with noth ing te do with the weightier mat ters ef running the actual affairs f men. Pilate smiled. "Art Thou a king then?" The prisoner didn't see the humor of 'it. "To this end have 1 been born," he said evenly. "To this end have I come into the world that I should bear witness to the truth." Pilate shrugged. "What is truth?" A chimera, an idle fancyl Pleased by his own sage realism, Pilate strode out of the praetorium, up the stairway and through the curtains out on the gallery. The crowd quieted. "I find." Pilate said, "no fault in the man." A lull, then a regally garbed priest spoke up gravely,: "He perverts the nation. He says He is king. He sUrreth up all Judea." A murmor arose in the crowd. Someone shouted, "An insurrec tionist!"" . Pilate frowned, and went back Inside. The, rabble! Those priests, worried by their awn waning authority, were behind it want ing a scapegeat, a pawa te make issue el Rome's curb their punitive powers. --. Toe crowd's temper disturbed him. Once before, a mass protest against his use of Temple funds to build an aqueduct ended only in laughter by his troops. ) Again, when he ignored the Pax Romanum against offending native religions by affixing imperial me dallions on military standards, it starred a six-day melee. Instead of appreciating the gesture, Tiber ius sent a reprimand. ; Indecision tore at Pilate. Then he had a crafty idea. He'd turn the case over to Herod Antipas, a native, puppet king of the iirisoner'f home province of Gall ee. He also had come to Jeru salem for the tumultuous Pass over period. But Herod, though flattered, sent the prisoner back, dressed as a jest in royal purple. i Disgusted, Pilate returned to the outdoor tribunal seat. He gazed1 scornfully at the accusing digni-j taries, whose very refusal to enter the inner "heathen court it would defile them" was an insult. : A new strategem came to him. 1 A Passover custom was to pardon j one criminal, and certainly the' people wouldn't want him to free the vile Barabbas, a rebel and killer. Pilate raised his hand. "I've found at cause of death la this maa, Jesus." He paused. "Whom shall I release unto you Him or Barabbas?" The answer startled him. "Barabbas!" As he fidgeted and the crowd "milled noisily on the pavement, an attendant handed him a note ... in his wife's handwriting. "Have nothing to do with that righteous man," it said, tor i nave sunerea many wings in a dream because of Him." Angrily, Pilate crumpled the note in his fist. What did Claudia know of rule? He should have left her at his regular palace in Caesarea, 100 miles north. He'd come here to keep down Passovef riots not argue with a woman! He stood up. glowering. "What then shall I do with this man, Jesus?" "Crucify him!" Pilate reddened. So be it! He stormed back through the curtains. As fixed by law, he had the con demned man flogged, with the three-thronged scourge, tipped with metal and bone. The regulation number of blows 39. But back ea the balcony, as he watched the soldiers bring out Jesus, bloody and staggering, he again vasciUated. "1 find a crime In him." Aa authoritative voice spoke out: "If thou would release this man, thou art not Caesar's friend. Everyone who call&i himself king speaketh against Caesar!" Pilate quailed. The idea of dis honoring the name of Caesar builder of the empire, the title of every emperor since struck him with fear. Never! If such word got back to Rome, heidle finished. "Take Him," he rasped, "and crucify Him." A weak, vain man, Pilate, fifth of the Roman procurators of Judea, later was recalled to Rome for his brutality in putting down a Samaritan religious disorder. In disgrace, tradition says, he com mitted suicide. . Next: Pretonius Htlpi You Overcomt FALSE TEETH Loostntst and Worry No kcr be tanortd or fl Ul-at-m ktnim f toon, wobblr (Im tot. FASTEITH, an Improved alka Una inon-Actd) povdar, sprlckixl on Tour plat boldt thrai firmer m thay fral mora comforlabl. At old xnbar. rmn uad tor km piiiua Oat IiiTH lefey ataai drui ooubm. Healy Hits State Tax Structure PORTLAND Ufi Oregon Is building toward another spending spree with its surtax on personal incomes, William Healy, candidate for Republican nomination as secretary of state, said Wednes day. He told the Multnomah chapter of the Oregon Republican clubs, "W" have been taxing business and industry out of the state, and to top it all we added a 45 per cent surtax to our high income tax. We are now on the way to ward building a surplus. A surplus Is an automatic starting device for raids on the taxpayer by special interest groups." New York City harbor handles about 30 million tons of cargo a year. Housework Easy Without (lagging Backacha Kunint hackadM, baadacto, or Buanlar thm i ptu ayaaawaai wit aar liar Uen. aaaotioiial u parti or dajr U day ttnaa aad atraia. And folka waa aat aad driak aawtaaly aaMtiawa aaf far Mild al adder trritatlaa ...wltk that raaUaaa, aaaanrfortaMa Mine. If M ar ajiaarabla and worn ant baeaaaa af thaaa dlaeomforU. toaa'a Pilli adlaa kal J fclr Mia nltavinc artioa, ar UmU- aootfc. Inf afftrt ta aaaa kUdder krltatimi. and r tkatf aMM dioratMaatiaa tkraifk U kidaar taadlns kwraaaa Ika aatavA ad Utt II ilaa a kidaay tokaa. Sa If aactiac karkaefca Mkai yaaj iaal drmjmd .at, BiaaraMa, 4tk raatlna. aba, kna aqrkta.dWt wait trr Doaa'a Pilla. frttka aam kappy rtlirf million kan aajorad tar ar M jwara. Aak lor larr. aaonomy SiM aad an ajaawr. Cat ifeaa'a filla tadar I A k-af VJk 7 0R LLSbLPiSi U o. Lb aj! I nananai Tile Salem New Car Dealers Feel Is Is Their Job to TRY! Service of the Very Highest Quality Is Their Aim and They Constantly Strive to Earn Your Satisfaction and There-by De serve Your Patronage . . . Year After Year After Year. ig nam YOU CAN'T SATISFY ALL OF THE PEOPLf ALL OF THE TIMEi CONPUCIUI IBBBRBslllHMBHBlBlkl jEVERY NEW CAR NEEDS SERVICE-SERVICE COSTS MONEY IftTHE DEALER YOU BUY FROM WON'T PAY . . . YOU HAVE TO THESE DEALERS SERVICE EVERY (AR THEY SELL SMEffS W. I. ANDERSON DeSOTO-PlYMOUTH STAN BAKER DODGE-STUDEBAKER RUSS BONESTEELE STUDEBAKER CAPITOL CHEVROLET-CADILLAC ELSNER MOTOR - PACKARD TACGESELL PONTIAC VALLEY MOTOR FORD OTTO WILSON BUICK t im mm ASSOCIATION IODER BROS. OLDSMOBILE McKINNEY LINCOLN-MERCURY MARION MOTORS - NASH SALEM AUTOMOBILE' CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Mee'ern Car Camfart , Ola) Fashions Hf nasty In ALL WAYS your BEST BUY is ALWAYS in SALEM kJdka v n Specially Priced At ALLEN HARDWARE l i SI 1-USED 4" BALL BEARINO JOINTER In good condition. A steal at only 29.SS 1-USED SHOPSMTTH With II P. motor and stand. Good ns- , nine order. Includes I Reduced to 124.S5 1-USED 14 DELTA DRILL PRESS Floor model, com plete with motor and mortising attachment A Good Buy At 69.93 (j Agree That Person ShouldiTry ) J His Best To Do an Honest Job 11 ) and to Serve All Those to the Qest J( of His Ability Who Give&he jOppoi I al I m II I It 1-7-INCH MALL Portable Electric SAW Reasonably good , shape. JUST 20.09 (At Candalaria Store) 1-10-ER SHOPSMITH . Complete with motor and stand. - Yeurt Fof Only 119.95 1-7" POWER KWO Tilt Arbor TABLE SAW , Half Horse Double Shaft -. Ball Bearing Motor Mounted on Stand - 65.00 (At Candalaria Store) 1-PINCOR 6" PORT. ELEC. POWER SAW Used Very Little Looks Like New 22.95 2-USED 1952 SHOPSMITH "Five In One- Tool ' Complete with stand, ' motor, etc. Very good condition. 144.95 (One at Each Store) 1 -CRAFTSMAN B PORTABLE ELECTRIC POWER SAW Complete with metal carrying case. Top condition. ONLY 50.00 (Candalaria Store) I -NEW ATLAS I-INCH TABLE SAW Large table Ball bearing arbor. Price includes motor," belt and pulleys. Reduced from 7JI TO ONLY 49.93 I-NEW ATLAS UIN. BENCH TVPE DRILL PRESS Sells regularly for 42.90. Reduced for this sale. TO ONLY 23.C3 ALL POWER TOOLS NEW ft USED SOLD ON ALLEN'S EASY TERMS LOW COST FINANCE PLAN. (You owe it to yourself to owe it to Allen's) Wert Not Otherwise In dicated, Tools an at Downtown Store.. fm toaect. r fl v titr ilLLLih 236 N. Commercial 141 Alice Avtnv