Ta THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, gait. Ortgtm Friday, August SL 1981 Capital Journal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publish 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. ra but Win tmrlm f k aawilili mm aa Tk IMU4 mm. TU AMoclaU mm ! mJwitiI? nuu4 tm tto mm for ambllcauca at u tm dUMtehw mdiu mum auarolM mntim ta Into rum aa 1m uwi aukUtaal IHMti SUBSCRIPTION RATES: T Canton IfORtMw. II.Hi mtm Umtlu. tljflt OM TM,. Ill M ft. WtD til Iflrioa, Folk. Una. Braton. Clukuai Couauw lleaUUT. Wei an Moal4i,-ui Tur. 04. ft, it.tl imbn la Omoa; Moathir. 1140: aa vu M M ou iw. Ill oa. Mill ouiat Oram: Meatier, llJti u Hutu !; dm MOSSADEGH GETS THE GATE The good don't always die young and the villain some times gets it in the neck, even in this wicked world where it doesn't happen anywhere nearly aa often aa it should, Old Mossadegh, the "strong man" of Iran, who only a few days ago staged a phony uprising against the young shah and made himself supreme dictator of his country, is now out himself in a military ooup staged by army lead ers. But as we aaid of Mossyi earlier success, "for how long heaven only knows." For one can be up today and down tomorrow In that explosive country, and Mossadegh might yet stage comeback. However, the army is the real basis of power in a dictatorship and anyone who can command the troops is likely to hold power for a considerable time. Assuming that this proves true the way may now be open for a settlement of the Iranian oil dispute. The new ruler is described as an extreme nationalist, and anti-Brit ish, but if he has any sense at all, and army leaders usu ally do have, he must already have seen that Iran can't run the world a biggest oil refinery. Hence he may be willing to make a deal whereby it can be reopened under a lease with British or Americans, with something like a 50-60 split on the profits, such as the government of Arabia gets from American companies. Settlement of this vexatious dispute would do more than increase Asia's and Europe's oil supplies. It would ease the tension all through the Middle East. Meanwhile the Iranian Communists will prove a trouble some factor. They were well on the way to taking over Iran when Mossadegh fell. They are the biggest imme diate losers in the coup that toppled him from power. So they may be expected to make things as difficult as possible for the new ruler. . u. KINSEY'S REPORT ON WOMEN The long awaited report of Prof. Alfred C. Kinsey, the MIXED WELCOME I HFRI ADLAI ft (( lfBiMHEAR . m ; u h h,;z.. l POOR MAN'S philosopher Offichl Cars This Is a Story of a Hero Who Fell Victim to Cancer By RELMAN MORIN For Hal Boyle apart, though it will be avidly reed by the morbid, Kinsey and his aides report on interviews with 6000 women, who evidently bared all the details of their sex lives, whether truthfully or not neither Kinsey nor any one else knows. From these interviews Kinseydraws the conclusion that a very large proportion of American women are faithless to the teachings of church and society and to their marriage vows. If his findings may be regarded as typical the country is indeed in a sad state, on the way to such a decline and dissolution as has become all too common on the other side of the Atlantic during the past 83 years since the end or World war l. We are not disposed to question the veracity of Kinsey, who seems to enjoy a good reputation in this repect. While there was no doubt some exaggeration in the sto ries told his investigators they may be for all we know substantially true. But what we do question is that 6000 women who were willing to bare all the most intimate details of their lives in this manner are typical of women in general. We sus pect that Kinsey has produced something as far out of line with reality as the late unlamented Literary Digest presidential straw vote in 1936. Just what wholesome or useful purpose this sort of thing serves is something else again. For our book none whatever. New York W) A friend ol mine, a newspaperman, closed Sultan of sex, is out, and without shaking the country I hu typewriter lor the last time f uie tuner oay. The news hit hard and hurt, at first, as it always does. The vision of his red hair arose, and the freckles, like flecks of cinnamon, all over his Irish mug. His nose was large and defiant, and shaped pretty much like the prow of a fri gate. He had a wide mouth and a boulder for a chin. The whole effect was of a fierce and for midable man. And sometimes, around the office, he tried to put on a mask of Irascibility, but it wouldn't have fooled a 4-year- old because he could never get the grin out of his werm brown eyes, so vivid a man he was. But there is no room for sor row in the manner of his pass. ing, and that is the reason for this story. Bill had cancer. He weakened one morning in a hotel room a long way from his home. The pain had him so bad, he said, that it al most unhinged his knees. Still, h got in his car, and barely crawling because of the weakness, started home. On the way, as he told me, a thought came to him suddenly. It sounds strange in the telling, but not if you look at it as he d)d. He was glad it had come to him in this way, while he was alone, away from home, and the only one to know. That was his thought, and with it came a plan. You can picture him on the highway, holding hard to the wheel, lighting down the pain and tear, and thinking, working out in his mind what he would do. For nearly a week and this is the gallantry and the wonder of the human soul he said nothing and tried to let no sign appear in his lace. Meanwhile, he was conduct ing his own diagnosis. Bill had a strong bent for medicine and the studyof it. He might have been a good doctor. Anyway, he said, he determined for him self what had happened, and the zone where the trouble must lie. He did It by turning to some medical books and matching his symptoms with what was written there. His diagnosis turned out to be correct. Then he went to a doctor for the examination. "The point is, ' he told me, "I was already 99 per cent certain. So the very worst news he could give me would be no more than I ex pected. And if t was wrong. well, that would be just that much better." He made them give It to him straight, including the percen tages In an operation. Only then did he go home and tell his family. That was the hardest part, he said. He tried to think of some way to break it gently. He even con sidered lieing about It. The only time be ever flinched was in the woment when he must fare Helen and the boy. Incidentally, Bill had been a hard-shelled woman-hater until he met Helen. Now she and the boy mattered more to him than his own anguish. He used to say of his son, with mock despair "what he's good at is eating; VON PAPEN'S MEMOIRS ' ' . Franz Von Papen, now 74 years old, long a prominent and crafty figure in German politics who changed his politics to shift with the wind of power; with slippery guile from one side to the other,' has written his memoirs, translated by Brian Connell, published by Dutton. The book confirms the popular impression of the hypocrisy of this betrayer of his country and servile toady of Hitler. Von Papen was born an aristocrat and was a Roman Catholic, but he devoted a dozen years of his life to the Nazi cause in a cloak of self-righteousness, posing as an honest man battling for an honorable cause. In a review of the memoirs,' Orville Prcscott in the New York Times summarizes the reading of the recently published book as a "bewildering experience" in the fol lowing excerpt: "The 'Memoir' of Franz von Papen is remarkable docu ment, a brazen triumph of self-Justification, excuse and apolo gy. All his actions, says Von Papen, were motivated by the highest ideal according to Christian principles. A monarchist who believed in tradition, authority and order, his one politi cal goal was to further Germany's historic mission to defend the rampart of Western civilization against the Asiatic Slav. "Patient, tolerant, forgiving, scrupulously honest compared with everybody else, he was entirely ignorant that Hitler's regime meant aggressive war until sometime in 193S. Hitler tricked him in this, aa be did in many other matters. But as a true German he had to continue to serve Hitler even after the rape of Austria, which Hitler had promised him not to commit even after the Gestapo had murdered several of his subordinates and best friend. "Reading these 'Memoir' is a bewildering experience. Black become white. Obvious falsehoods, misleading statements, crucial omission and partial truths are all mixed together. No one who ha not devoted the last ten years to a full-time study of German politics and history could possibly be certain where to draw the boundary line between fiction and fact in these tedious pages." The book is not only a whitewash of Von Papen himself but of Germany s aggression in launching both World War I and World War II. He violated American neutrality in supervising sabotage activity when in Washington as a diplomat. In the 1920's he was leader in the Catholic Center party and a protege of Hindenberg. He became chancellor in 1932 under Hitler and became his supporter, and later ambassador to Austria and later to Turkey. Von Papen admits that he admired and respected Hitler and at the same time scorned and feared him, but Hitler always tricked or ignored him. G. P. "SOBER AS A JUDGE" Superior, Wl. Olio Torrey Frederickson, 68, appearing in municipal court on a drunken ness charge yesterday, com plained: "I'm sober as a Judge." Judge Claude F. Cooper nodded in agreement and gave Freder ickson a suspended sentence. TYPHOON HITS FORMOSA Hong Kong ) Shipping along the Red China coast was warned Friday of approaching nign winds and heavy rain as a typhoon blasted on toward the mainland after rocking For mosa with winds of 90 miles an hour. he'll eat anything that won't Due mm nrst" When he told them, ha add. ed, with that chin stuck out a mile, "This business may kill me, but by golly, it's not going to scare me to death. So cheer up." - Well, that was nearly two years ago. As soon as he could, he came back to his desk. If he had an occasional set-back, he tried not to show it. He never spared himself on the Job. And he would kid around about how much better off he was man oiner people. He even claimed, "Why, they cut eight strokes off my golf game with that operation." I don't suppose he ever tried to- fool himself, though. He knew he would be a long time getting out of the woods. Bill never quite made it. so vivia a man, and so brave. Surely, there can be no better proof of the lndestrue tibility of the human soul than that it harbors such gallantry. Salem 45 Years Ago By BEN MAXWELL August 21, 1908 Counsel for the government had filed a petition for re hearing the case of the Stand ard Oil- Co. of Indiana in which Judge Landis assessed his famous fine of $29,400,000 Judge John Scott of Mar- inn rnirntv ITnirtnAap TahiIi j , " - a'hd Oswald West had appear ed at Cottage Grove in behalf of better roads for Oregon, free locks and water rights for the state. William Howard Taft speak ing to republicans of Virgin ia, had urged the "solid south" to break away from the demo cratic column. A Capital Journal editorial had declared that "we tear down and destroy our public men instead of holding up their hands and building up their influence." This had been development week for Western Oregon. Capital Journal had stated that "Portland people who have a mania for airing their family troubles in the news papers and courts show very bad taste." Stock Inspector Keeler of Marion county had found most of slaughter houses in the county unsanitary. Jacob Vogt, proprietor of the Little German Shoe store at 343 State street had adver tised, "My Prices Are Lowest." Waller and Hentschel, suc cessors to E. Eckerlen at the Elite cafe, had advertised an excellent merchant' lunch for 25e. Bid were being Invited for construction of Eaton hall on Willamette University cam pus. Mt Angel College in charge of the Benedictine father of fered board, tuition and laun dry for students for $250 a year. McMinnvill News-Register Topmost officials of the largest corporations are ex pected to provide their own transportation between ' home and office. The use of com pany cars is tightly restricted and generally they are avail able only through pools. But not in government. Not only mayor, governors,' president and cabinet mem bers, but hosts of lesser func tionaries have official cars as signed to them for their ex clusive use, often with chauf feur attached. At all levels of government in this country, where no one walk a block if he can avoid, the official car is not infre quently used for such unoffi cial purpose as shopping, taking the children (who won't walk, either) to school, or vacation trips across the continent or to Canada. It is an abuse so widespread that even the taxpayer who may not himself own an auto takes it for granted that an official car is a perquisite of public office. Nowhere has the official car proliferated a in Washington, where may be seen the biggest of black, shining, chauffeured limousine, and thousand of less imposing but late model jobs, all provided by an ap preciative public for its serv ants. Upon ' this costly luxury, Budget Director Joseph M. Dodge is casting an impatient eye. He has ordered a survey which has for its purpose a sharp reduction in the number of official car. To a horri fied bureaucracy he ha ug gester more use of public transportation and he reminds all concerned that regulations require the suspension or dis missal of federal employes who use official vehicles for unofficial purposes such as riding to work. Dodge has embarked on a Freedom of Press Grants Pass Courier On April 24 and again en May I, a New Yofk newspaper editor named Wechaler was questioned by the senate ub committe generaly referred to a the McCarthy committee. Wechaler admitted that he had been a Communist member but had later become "mili tantly anti-Communist" H e contended that the committee "endangered the freedom of the press" by questioning him. He asked the American Society of Newspaper Editors to ap point a committee to "investi gate" the "investigation." , The ASNE president appoint ed a committee of 11, of which J. R. Wiggins of the Washing ton Post was named chairman and Wiliam M. Tugman of the Eugene Register-Guard a mem ber. The committee "committeed" and came up with a unanimous decision that editors should read the transcript of the Wechsler hearing and determ ine each for himself whether freedom of the press had been endangered. Wiggins, Tugman and two others submitted a minority re port which held that, "it fre quently repeated, such inves tigations would extinguish, without passage of a single law, freedom of the press." We haven't read the trans cript of the Wechsler hearing but we have read the news re port prepared by both the Ac sociated Press and United Press. We doubt that we would be any better informed on the subject by reading the com plete transcript. We have that much confidence in those two great news service. With all due respect for the finding of the four-man minor ity, despite "frequently-repeat ed" Congressional investtga tions, whether they be by the McCarthy committee or 'any other, we hold no fear- of loss of freedom of the press "with' out the passage of single law. The Fourth Estate can take care of itself in that respect. If committee hearings are not fairly conducted, the public may be relied upon to note the fact. In this tempest in a teapot, we believe that Mr. Wechsler merely made use of the some of the technique he learned as an active Communist and has succeeded in having the American Society of Newspap er Editors fall for it. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Pearson Cites McCarthy's Feuds with Top Publications - Br DREW PEARSON Washington Jumpin' Joe truth about the senator from McCarthy really pinned a badge of honor on Russell Wiggins, managing editor of the Washington Post, when he demanded that Wiggins be in vestigated for following an al leged anti-McCarthy line. Wiggins doesn't particularly need any badge of honor. He hn a lone and distinguished record, ranging from the edi torship of the St Paul Pioneer Press to assistant to ine pub lisher of the Kew York Times. But when McCarthy singled him out for attack, here is the company be put Wiggins in: Saturday Evening Post charged by McCarthy with fol lowing the instructions of Gus Halt secretary of the commun ist party, when it published an article by tne Aisop uromers. McCarthy took the precaution of inserting this charge in the Wisconsin. MISSED THE BOAT Friendly diplomats both in side and outside the atate da. partment feel that Ike missed the boat when he let the Rus sians call for free elections in Germany. The Red move 1 bad blow to our friend Chan cellor Adenauer. Inside fact is that various proposals had been submitted by lower level U.S. diplomats to Secretary Dulles and tha White House by which the United States would demand free elections both in Germany and elsewhere behind the Iron Curtain. But with one excep. tion, when they got up to tha top, they were stymied. The one exception was a milk-toast message from Eisen hower to Chancellor Adenauer nn June 2fl exDreasinff th ..- Congressional Record so as to port of tne United States for protect himself from a libel all-Germany elections. suit. Knew Where to Go Washington Times-Herald Anthony Eden, the British foreign secretary, who under went an operation June 10 in a Boston hospital, is scheduled to fly back to London soon. His surgeon has reported that complete recovery is assured. We rejoice in the foreign secretary's return to health and in the wisdom he displayed in coming to the United States for medical treatment. Govern, ment medicine, a practiced in Britain, obviously must not be good enough for high officers of the government. QUICK, EAST WAT Chicago U.R Two Chicago, ans say they have abolished dictionary drudgery. Chester McChesney, a gteel company executive, and Mrs. Ella B, Wenger have patented a "talk ing dictionary." The machine works like a tape recorder. Put a card in it and it plays back the word, giving the correct pronunciation. commendable reform, which could have wholesome reper cussion in state capitols and city halls across the nation. But it will require more than a directive to accomplish his purpose. Washington's first reaction will be that the man's mad. Time Magaiine McCarthy wrote to every company adver tising in Time asking that they cancel their advertising after Time carried a cover picture and critical feature itory on McCarthy. Milwaukee Journal Brand ed by McCarthy as the "Mil waukee edition of the Com munist Daily Worker." In ad dressing the retail merchants of Milwaukee, McCarthy also urged them to withdraw adver tising from the Journal on. the ground that their aas were helping put the communist line into the homes of Wisconsin. Christian Science Monitor McCarthy claimed he saw a re porter for the Monitor shake hands with Robb Hall, Wash ington representative of the Daily Worker and that after ward the two paper followed the same line in covering him. The Madison Capital Times McCarthy accused i's city edi tor of being an ex-communist, and the Capital Times of fol lowing the communist line. He also sent most residents of the surrounding county a circular attacking the paper. Marvin Arrowsmith When Arrowsmith, who covers the senate for the AP, failed to re, port McCarthy' speeches in ex tenso, McCarthy called him in and threatened to denounce him as being pro-communist. Arrowsmith has a long record for conscientious impartial re, porting. John Steele When McCar thy didn't like one of Steele' UP news accounts of a McCar thy hearing, he proceeded to bawl Steele out at a press con, ference for following the com munist line. . James Wechsler Editor of the New York Evening Post was subpoenaed to testify be fore the McCarthy committee after he criticized McCarthy and also after he published a series of penetrating articles di agnosing McCarthy's defender, Walter WincheU.i Others McCarthy has attack ed include the St. Louis Post Dispatch, the Portland Oregon ian, cartoonist Herb Block, and this writer. McCarthy's first at tack on a newsman was the hour-long diatribe he delivered on the senate floor attacking this writer in which he de manded that the Adam Hat company cancel my radio pro gram. McCarthy followed this with other speeches and with a letter to 1,800 newspaper edi tors asking that they cancel the Washington M e r r y.-Go-Round column. Actual fact is that McCarthy Good Job on Ballot Titles they disagree with him or cri ticize him, not because they fol low a communist line. Russ Wiggins was denounced only because he was guilty of the terrible sin of printing the free all-Germany elections. The letter, however, lacked punch and conviction. There was no insistent and repeated demand upon the Soviet union that free elections be held not only in Germany but elsewhere behind the Iron Curtain. This is the most important point we can hammer home at a tima when unrest continues not only in East Germany, but in Czech oslovakia, Poland, Hungary, Romania. These countries were suppos ed to be guaranteed free gov. ernments under the Yalta pact but the U.S. has completely missed tne Doat oy not demand ing and re-demanding that free elections be held under the su pervision of the United Nations. looprritnt, ins 1 1 Tax Yields Fall Albany Democrat-Herald State income tax collection declined two and one-half mil lion dollar in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1953, from the all time peak, just short of $69,000,000, reached in the year immediately preceding. The drop is attributed to a con tinued decline in lumber prof its. , . Oregon legislative assemblies have been expecting some such showing now for several years but with the exception of 19S0 have been agreeably surprised each time. The decline in the income tax collections was confined, last year, to the excise tax on cor poration earnings, which was off about three and one-hilf miUion dollars at $18,606,000. As of now, several plywood plants and sawmills have cur tailed operations, with a result ing decline of earnings of workers as well as In profits of owners. Whether the current slump will continue is a matter of un certainty. Legislative policies on expenditures and revenue raising at the next session will depend on what happen in the next eighteen month. BUYS SPECIAL TRAIN Kansas City, Mo. (U.B Multi-millionaire Samuel Okin of Atlantic City, N. J. bought 125 train tickets from here to Denver, Colo., for $3,000 when his wife, Rita, who is ill, com plained about the swaying of fast moving train. Okin re quested that his private train be held to 60 mile per hour. WENT IN AFTER IT East Los Angeles (UJ9 A tipsy man weaving along the attacks newspapermen because sidewalk stubbornly refused to accept fate when he dropped a cantaloupe and it rolled into asewer. Police, summoned by passersby, arrived just in time to grab his ankle and haul him out. . Albany Democrat Herald Baiiot-tiues as they will ap-, and representatives pear to tne voters In the 1954 Oregon state elections have been prepared by Attorney General Robert Thornton and published in Oitgon Voter. which praises the job done by the new attorney general, At the suggestion of Thorn ton, the 1053 session of the legislature revised the form In which measures are to be sub mitted on .the ballot There is to be no more double number, ing of a ballot (310 Yes and 311 No). Each measure will have only one number, with a res square and a Mo square at the side for the voter to in dicate his preference. We'll vote either for or against No. 311. Even more important is the descriptive summary that ac companies each measure on the ballot. For instance, on the constitutional amendment dealing with legislators' sal aries, the nature of the mil is indicated by the side-head Salaries of State Lefislators." This is followed by "Purpose: To amend Oregon Constitution by giving state legislature pow er to fix the salaries of its members by law. Descriptive Summary: The purpose of this propoced amendment to Sec tion 29, Article IV, is to aUow the compensation of senator mem bers of the Legislative Assem bly to be fixed from time to time by statute and to remove the present constitutional lim itations to such a salary." The titles of four other pro posed amendment to the Con stitution have been written in: understandable form. These will provide (1) for subdivid ing counties for electing state legislators; (2) for institution of a mental hospital in or near Portland; (3) for a new meth od of presentation by the peo ple of constitutional amend ments (raising the number of signatures required from 8 to 10 per cent of the vote cast for justice of the supreme court at the most recent election); (4) for a change in the state property tax provision of the constitution, eliminating the present complex and unwieldy 8 per cent limitation and pro viding instead for a top limit of 8 percent on the levy to be made on property, unless a ma jority of the legal voters vote to permit an excess. The net result of the changes made in the titles is to sim plify them and make them more understandable. Th change are so natural and sensible that it seem odd ever to have handled thl matter in any different manner. I A SYMPHONY OF SERVICE Every detail harmonious in . Perfect understanding... plus an efficient staff for service rvneral Service Since 171 ym ' Caara rt Sine SAUM, eteoM