T1W JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon Tuesday. August 11, 1953 Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. rmll ImkI win tmvUt at ta aamlaua rma aaS Taa ttatti turn. Th. iiimium Prm ! nclul'ill wuutd I u u lr auMlcaMaa at all a,w dimwhu craaiu It II v MMratM tM Is tola paiat aa4 ftlM ofi suaiuhaa' tnartta. , SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrl.r! Monthly. ll.Hl 111 Mtrntha. HM; Out till. Ill M. r Will ta MarM. Polk. Una. Ecnloa. Clutu CounlW: Monthly. Mel SIX Monl.il. M M: OM Tiu. W OO By Mad BUtvhara U Ornoa: Uoolhly. ll 0: all Uffitha. M M OM Tw, 111". Ef Mall OaUMa Onaaa: MonUUy, fljti SU Mtaiaa, 17 .Mi OM THE VOICE OF AMERICA THE EXPERTS TAKE A LOOK AHEAD , Look Magazine has just polled 60 of the top Washing ton correspondents and commentators on which party they think will capture control of congress next year and whom they think the Democrats will nominate for presi dent in 1956. By a 83 to 28 vote with one member abstaining, the group expects the Democrats to capture the House of Representatives, while 48 expect Republican control of the benate. This would reverse the present majority in each house and calls for some explanation. The reason evidently is that the correspondents believe the Democrats are going to be a little stronger than the Republicans nationally, hence able to win the House, but not strong enough to capture the Senate. Only a third of the senators must stand for election. plus any vacancies to be filled. These will be the positions last filled in 1948 when the Democrats captured some normally Republican seats while the Republicans got scarcely any normally Democratic seats. This gives the Republicans an advantage which this group evidently uiiiuiB wiii ue Bumtiej'i. iu givo went majority. There is a strong belief among this group that Adlai Stevenson will again be the Democratic nominee in 1956. He gets 44 votes out of the 65 who expressed an opinion. Second is a man political railbirds should be watching, the new Missouri senator, Stuart Symington, whom many besides these correspondents think likely to be nominated for president next time. He gets seven votes. Senator Russell of Georgia three and Governor Shivers of Texas one. These views are interesting, particularly as it is the first poll of its kind since the November election. Nobody is bound to accept the result as authoritative, however. Doubters are privileged to recall that this group was polled last tali and believed then that Stevenson would defeat Eisenhower. The expert can be and sometimes is as wrong as any amateur. WASHINGTON M:RRY-G0-R0UND Congressmen Trying to Get Free Rides From Air Force By DREW PEARSON POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Let Man Again Be King of Fashions as He Once Was CANADIAN LIBERALS TRIUMPH Oregon Democrats, vexed about a "one party" monopoly of political favor in this state, ought to study the Cana dian Liberals, who won a smashing landslide victory in the national elections up there yesterday. It was the Liberals' fifth victory in a row, their second In four years. They elected 168 members of the new par liament, which totals 265, with four undecided. The Con servatives, main opposition party, won only BO seats. The Cooperative Commonwealth Federation captured 20 and the Social Credit party of the western prairie prov inces won 13. Independents secured five seats. The significance Canada's Liberals ought to have for the present leadership of the Democratic party In Oregon is that the Canadians operate a genuine liberal party, with the traditional principles of one, without the social istic features the Democratic party has adopted nationally and in Oregon in recent years. Canadian Liberals keep their government on a balanced budget and take delight in reducing taxes whenever they are able to. They are friendly to business, welcome the investment of local or foreign (chiefly American) capital. Their program has such continuing popular support that the opposition in Canada has more basis for a "one party" complaint than exists here. But whether its Canada, Oregon or somewhere else, one party dominance has the same meaning, that a ma jority approve its principles and the way it implements them. The Canadian Liberals still command the confi dence of most Canadians and are assured another tenure of power. Most Americans will be pleased, for the party has given Canada honest, able, farsighted leadership, which is friendly to the United States. FRANCE IS WEAKENED FURTHER A million and a half French workers returned to their Jobs at the end of the week after a short strike that paralyzed their country and shook the resolution of its new government. The demonstration was not against emolovers. but against an announced determination by the government w eiieci some government economies with a view to balancing the French budget and enabling the country to get along if American aid is reduced. A dispatch from Paris said that following th triV the government was considerably shaken, and uncertain whether to go ahead with its program of austerity. The workers had probably won their point, and this French government will be afraid, as its predecessors have been to initiate any policy that will make any large sector of the voting population unhappy. Here is the trouble with France. The government has no resolution because the people have none. This time It is labor. Next time it may be business and industry, or the farmers. The French just haven't got it any more, and no government can function vigorously in their behalf. By HAL BOYLE New York VP) Men need a Christian Dior, a bold fellow to restore the male feeling of being quite a guy. Us gents are in a male quan dary. We either have to ex pose more of our charms or re treat to the soft anonymity of the sleeping bag. As I read the front line re ports from the great style war in Paris, women don't know whether to throw away their corsets or keep them, elevate their skirts to their knees or go ahead and protect their up per ankles, expose their bos oms more or try to throw an other layer on those they have rented or bought . . . It seems to me that In this moment of feminine doubt men should move in and take over their old peacock strut. Let man again be king of fash ions, as he once was. I do not advocate long stockings, tight pants, and lace at the throat, although George Washington and Thomas Jef ferson were robust and mascu line in such attire. As a mat ter of recent history, some people feel that a gent doesn't represent his sex fully unless he has worn khaki. That's unfair, because a lot couldn't. It might Just as well be the other way around. Why shouldn't a woman feel un easy if she has never worn the uniform of her country. That is the pattern of some Council Chary On Vacations At the request of the Salem school board the city council will consider the vacation of part of Gaines street and also a nearby alley so the premises of Grant School may be ex panded. The Gaines Street portion extends from North Cottage to North Winter through property owned by the school board. Immediate plans are to use it for additional school play ground. Two resolutions asked the city to initiate proceedings for the vacations. Council members thought that would put the council on record as favoring the vacations, and they were amended so they simply put the council in a position of con sidering the vacations and plac ing the matter In position for public hearings. Robert DeArmond. attorney for the board, explained that was the only purpose of the resolutions. INDUSTRY DROPS Hong Kong (IP) Red China, starting Its first five-year plan this year, has revealed that several classes ot industry failed to reach production tar gets in the first half ot the year. TYPHOON SKIRTS GUAM uuam vn i ne cage of a typhoon caught northwest Salem 57 Years Ago By BEN MAXWELL August 11, 1898 "It free coinage of silver will make SOc dollars a certain Sa lem editor had better immedi ately cancel his obligation with the poor painter who had re ceived nothing for painting that gentleman's house." In one ot Astoria's bars they had a "silver 1 izz" made of gin and the white of an egg and "golden slipper" made of gin and yolk of an egg. Crown mills at Albany were giving farmers 40 pounds ot flour for one bushel of wheat. A large number of fine carp weighing from five to eight pounds each had recently been caught in South Salem slough. At Salem wheat had a price ot 44c a bushel, fancy creamery butter 20c a pound and dressed veal 3 Vic a pound. Woodburn Hop Growers as sociation had met at Woodburn and decided to pay 24c per nine bushel box for picking hops in 189fl. A band of bunch grass horses were driven in and had been sold tor $6 a head and good teams went from $10 to $23. Bids on bankrupt Salem Mo tor railway were soon to be considered by the court. Labor Exchange had arrans. ed for a picnic In the beautiful grove near their warehouse Guam Monday with heavy rain north of Salem. Tickets could and winds up to 70 miles anhe had for 50c. Babies under hour. Damage, apparently was; five and lunch bask tot wra a4. slight, I mltted free. nations. Certainly no woman who believes in equal rights can deny today how much happier her life will be if she only was won the approval of a lady top sergeant for -the way she can strip down a ma chine gun or make a bed. That used to be the thing In the Army that separated the men from the boys. Why in days to come shouldn't it be the test that separates the girls from the women The problem for men is to win equal rights in the world of fashions. For example, wny snouian't women worry about how far we bare our chests Wouldn't they fret about this problem If men were courageous enough to make it a problem? Same thing at the other end. Short or long pants. A man ordinarily has his pants Just long enough so that he tramps on them if his rubber heels wear down. If you see a guy with bis cuffs above his ankles, you au tomatically are sure that either he went to Princeton or he got caught out In the rain with a cheap suit. Maybe it's time for us to dazzle our girls. Show that thin gray hair on the lean but vibrant chest, expose the male fatted calf. Naturally, since the girls never bare their bay windows we don't have to un- zlpper ours. The main idea Is to stir the girls up by showing them that men have their fashions too. Let's show 'em that while knighthood is always in flow erit can change Its blooms. They've taken men for grant edd too long. Think how you could con fuse your wife by wearing the cousin ot the hat she confused you wlthl IKE'S VACATION Albany Democrat-Herald It seems to us petty to quib ble about the President's rec reation and to grudge him time off the job. So we're inclined to doubt, reports that "the democrats" can be expected to to'.e up Mr. Eisenhower's vaca tion days as part of their cam paign against him. It was all right with us when Mr. Tru man used to take a few days away from Washington to en joy himself at Key West or on the presidential yacht, and we don't think reasonable people expect the President just to stay in his office and work. The chief executive must keep fit. We are better off with a well president in Colo rado than with a sick or "stale" president in Washing ton. The presidency can east ly be a man-killing job. It is unwise from any point of view for the chief executive to let himself get involved in detail that can be delegated. Gen eral Eisenhower let someone else drive the tanks in the war, and he knows how to delegate detail and hold sub ordinates responsible for results. IMPORTANT CHECK Oregon City Enterprise Courier i Last week Harold Holm- strom and Tommy Jones, treas urer and president of the Clackamas county chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile paralysis, put their signatures on the back of a check. It was a large and very important check. Its probably the most im portant $30,123 check ever cleared through Oregon City banks. The check was an eraeraencv loan to the Clackamas county chapter of the paralysis found ation from the national organi zation. Money backing the check was collected from the doorsteps of America's homes. And it will be sent to hospitals in the Portland area where Clackamas county's victims are sweating and laboring for every breath. Ike's Movie Tax Cut Veto As was weeks sgo when the movie in dustry was shoving its admis sions tax repealer through Congress, President Eisenhow er has vetoed the mcasun an act of considerable courage in view of the pressures which that industry can exert. His action, however, is based on two very good reasons: 1. With the budget still un balanced the Federal Govern ment cannot afford to lose up wards oi iuu million a year revenue from this source. 2. It Is unfair to grant this relief to the movie industry when other Industries in cluding stage shows and com munity theatres are being denied similar relief. It has been the plan ot the Eisenhower administration to submit a bill for comprehen sive tax revisions at the next session ot Congress beginning In January. When we were in Washington last spring the tax consultants of the House and Senate Ways and Means Com mittees were already at work on the drafting ot this com prehensive measure an enormous task. The movie people lumned the gun and through their ability to bring pressure on Congressmen and Senators Washington So many con- iressmen have been cauing up the Defense Department for free transportation to summer climes that Undersecretary of Defense Kves decided to do something about it. He called In Secretary of the Air Force Harold Talbott. "Where in hell are they all going? What are they going to do?" stormed Kyes. It was embarrasing, he indi cated, to have the Air Force flying congressmen all over the globe after its budget had been cut to the bone. Secretary Talbott pointed out that congressmen couldn't very well be banned, as long as De fense Department officials were doing the same thing. Kyes demanded to know what officials were taking junkets, but Talbott knew of only one scheduled trip at the moment an overseas trip by Assistant Secretary of the Army John Slezak. Immediately, Kyes issued orders for Slezak to stay home. As for the congressmen, Kyes and Talbott agreed to cut out special airplanes for congres sional trips unless the Defense Department is convinced it is strictly business. - However, they meekly decided not to of fend any powerful congress men who are willing to travel on planes that may be going their way anyhow. This means over two dozen congress ional committees, which plan to investigate ev ery thing from uranium in South Africa to statehood in Alaska and the information program in South America, may have to put up with the inconvenience of Air Force schedules. However, such groups as the Armed Services, Foreign Relations and Appro priations Committee, taking le gitimate overseas 'trips, will still get special planes. PLEASANT SEA VOYAGES The most interesting vaca tion trips at the taxpayers' ex pense, however, are planned by Individual congressmen who have asked the Defense De partment to furnish transpor tation for themselves and their wives. In most cases, they will travel by military transport vessel, sometimes families have waited several months to join their husbands and fathers ov erseas, but will be bumped from the sailing lists again by sight-seeing congressmen. For example, GOP Congress man Robert Wilson of Califor nia has arranged passage to Hawaii for himself, his wife snd three children, leaving on tne s.s. Barrett August Z8 and coming back on the S.S. Alt' man September 8. Four con gressmen are planning to take their wives on vacations to Europe, largely at the taxpay ers' expense. They- are Wil liam L. Springer, Illinois re publican, leaving on the S.S Butner August 19, returning on the S.S. Geiger October 13; Huber B. Scudder, California republican, leaving on the S.S Patch August 25, returning on the S.S. Gibbons September 23; William J. Green, Jr., Pennsyl vania democrat, leaving on the Gibbons August 25, returned on the S.S. Rose September 14 and L. ,Mendel Rivers, South Carolina democrat, leaving on to S.S. Patch August 23 with no definite return date. Three other congressmen, also accompanied by their wives, have arranged govern ment transportation to both North Africa and Europe. They are Republicans Errett P. Scrivner of Kansas and Ed' ward T. Miller of Maryland, who will leave on the S.S. Gib bons August 15, and Democrat Robert L. F, Sikes of Florida, whose departure date hasn't been set. Congressman Ger aid R. Ford, Jr., Michigan Re publican, has also asked for free transportaiton to Japan and India. Engene Register-Guard predicted a few ,from every part of the nation WHAT IT COSTS they were able to do what the manufacturers were unable ,to do In the repeal of the excess profits tax. Their argument, of course, was that their in dustry is in real distress through competition of en tertalnment, some 8,000 the atres having been forced to close. In other times the distress argument for a particular group of taxpayers might ap peal but with the nation's finances in their present snape, it is bad business to make piecemeal revisions un der group pressures. The. only way an intelligent and equit able program can be worked out is by the systematic re view of tha Federal tax struc tures. All admissions and luxury taxes are actually "nuisance taxes" which are passed on to the public. They have an ad verse effect on business only where an Inequitable situa tion is created between com petitors and there are many such spots in the amusement situation. Our sympathies are all with the movie people in their petition for relief but Technically, these congress men are supposed to pay for their wives passage, but all that is charged is $50 per person to fcurope or the Mediterran ean Just enough to cover the cost of meals and clean linen. The congressmen aren't charged a cent for themselves, on the theory that they are on government business. Irony is that most of the junketing congressmen voted to cut the military budget on the ground that the armed services were wasting money. NOTE Three congressmen have already left on early va cations. Rep. James I. Dolli ver, Iowa Republican, drove his wife and son to Whittier, Alaska, where they plan to sell their car on the hiah- priced Alaskan market, then sail back to the States at the taxpayers' expense on the mil itary transport Funston. Con gressman Paul J. Kilday, Texas democrat, left last month for a European vacation with his wife and 18-year-old daughter, traveling at the Air Force's ex pense. Congressman Adam Clayton Powell, New York Democrat, took off on a simi lar trip last month, but left nt in tha Pentagon from Ko rea warning against a possible surprise Communist offensive in case the truce blows up. The report points out that the Reds kept men and supplies rolling toward the front until the last minute and that they have amnle trooos snd men for launching anotner gigantic intensive. Under the truce terms, we Communists are permitted to build airfields in North Korea while we are forced to close down our radar stations on the Islands off the North Korean coast Taking advantage of this the Chinese are reported building underground hangars and moVIng planes down from Manchuria. Without our radar warning net, the report adds, South Korea Is subject to sur prise air attack. The Treasury's alcohol tax unit is clamolng down on brew eries whose ads tell the public that their beer has a low con tent of sugar. Government tests show all beers contained practically the same amount of sugar . . . British security ag ents in Moscow uncovered 29 secret microphones installed in one of their embassy buildings by the Russian secret police. One mike was Imbedded be hind three inches of concrete, yet was so sensitive it could pick up all conversations in the room . . . Congressman run. Jr.'s comment upon his return from Africa: "Everywhere I went, from Morocco to South Africa, African leaders asked me If Senator McCarthy was extinguishing American free doms. I tried to tell them 'No'; but then they'd bring up the matter of book burnlr.g, and what could I say?" (Copyrllht. IH1I TRAFFIC PROBLEMS Albany Democrat-Herald Linn county stands well up in Oregon on highway safety, The other day, as already noted here, Lebanon received an award in recognition of its splendid traffic record for the preceding year. .The accident record, of course, Is never good enough as long as there are any mishaps, and the organization of Linn County Highway Life savers as a means of improv ing the showing is most wel come news. We can hope for constant Improvement as the attention of motorists is focus ed on careful and courteous driving which means safe driving. Linn is the 22nd county in Oregon in which an organiza tion has been formed, and the Impact on Oregon motorists' thinking and general attitude ought to be considerable. So we're improving in the matter of sate driving. Conven ient driving, however, is an other story. As communities grow, problems of parking and of efficient use of motor cars are constantly more pressing. No town in the county is large enough as yet to face the con gestion prevailing in the larger cities, but we can all see it coming. Learn Hard Facts By PHIL NEWSOM rrjalt STtnl Foralaa Aaalnl. The United States Is learn. Ing the facts of life about the Korean truce. One of the harshest facts so far is Gen. Msrk Clark's esti mat that the Chinese Corn, munlsta may be holding as many as twice the number of American war prisoners they have admitted. This Is not to Imply that th true should b regretted. It has halted, temporarily. at least, slaughter on th bat tlefield and It Is bringing horn 3.8 13 American war prisoners. But subsequent events have pointed up th warning of military commanders that a true simply marks ar suspen sion of hostilities, not th end. Th Strangest War Further complicating t h situation are th rules under which the Korean war was fought, wherein commanders in the field were governed not by military but by diplomatic necessities. So this strangest ot all wars ended in the strangest of all truces. This is a true without a victor and without a van quished in which neither side can impress its will ex cept behind its own lines. Hence the enormity of th problem raised by General Clark. Clark says that after th present exchange Is complet ed demands will be mad through the Armistice Com mission for1 an accounting- of all prisoners. A Solution Needed If satisfaction is not gained there, then the problem will be taken before the Interna tional Conference which will try to settle Korea's political future this fall. Secretary of State Dulles Had threatened United States retaliation against the Reds. But what kind ot retails tion? To the people of the United States, the holding of some 3,000 Reds for a like number of Americans would scarcely seem an even trad nor would it even be likely to im press the Chinese. . Another very great difficul ty is the fact that It will b many months, if ever, before registration teams ar able to learn anywhere near accur ately the number of Ameri cans taken prisoner, the num ber who died in Red prison camps and those who simply are missing and presumed dead. . PERSISTENT VIOLATOR Pacolma, Calif. U.R Motor ist William J. Stickler thought he got a bum deal when solic arrested him after a four-mil chase In which he allegedly committed 18 traffic violations. "What's the matter? I always drive that way," he said. SIMPLE LOGIC Milford, Conn., (U.FP Early settlers of this town, founded in 1639, once voted: "The earth is th Lord's and th fulness thereof; the earth is given to the Saints; we ar th Saints." 'rr wis is f J M Eastnoi See lb East at its best! Eoioy to balm? days, crisp aifbta, th stoma beamy of th cooouysid . . . New York's fashionable shop 1 1 the endtement of saw Broadway plays 1 1 1 famed art gillartaa Trawling on Ualoa Pacitc is a vacation la Itself ; i job enjoy auaoa Uoioa Pacific meals ia the dinar, relaxation Is tb n dab can, comfortable Pullman or coach accommodations. For raal trtnl plaajar plan your Indian Summer vacation East oa Union Pacific Railroad! we cannot tuonort their f.mii ,,. claims to special preference at ALERTNESS IN KOREA time. 1 a seer at reoort haa h a n ZVU4mUHCl CITY OP PORTLAND" "PORTLAND' ROSr "IDAHOAN Lrt us htlp pUu your trip "Travel-shop" Monday through Friday OiNERAl PASSENOIR DEPT. Room 7M Pi'ttock Block Portland 5, Oregon UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD tow of m tvutr iriiAiMM