Part 4 Capital AjJournal An Independent Newipoper Established 1883 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che meketa St., Solem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. Van LnnI wira SantM 1 tl laMdmui mm tat tea IHIUJ Ftcm. Tl AuocitUd prau to nelulrtlr tntltwe tu aw lot srailluttOD t 11 aiwa tunuiwi cradiud M U f suurwiM mail la uu ut aa4 kWi n- puuubtd UMrlm. RUSSIA, INDIA AND THE U.N. , As this is written the vote on what if any role Russia and India are to play in the forthcoming peace conference for Korea has not come to a vote in the U.N. but enough has already happened to make the success of that confer ence about as nearly impossible as failure can be before the conference is held. Bitter debate was touched off over who should sit in at this meeting to end the Korean war and if possible to relieve other tensions in Asia. The United States insists that only those who took an active part in the fighting should make the peace. This would eliminate India, which tfidn't fight and whose sympathies were certainly not "tl) our side, which should have been India s member. India is always or to help, and is eager to conference. Th U.S. formula does not eliminate Russia, for it Is recognized that Russia was in the war up to its ears, in fact it was the real party in But the U.S. insists that if request of North Korea and she sit with them, representing that side, also that she sign whatever settlement is In view of India's past attitude her insistence upon get ting Into this conference occasions no surprise. Russia s attitude is peculiar which of course Is not a new develop ment. Russia evidently wants to pursue the fiction that fools nobody that she is not a party to a war she started and provided the munitions for from start to finish. She wants to sit with the U.N., with which she has actually been at war for three years. proceedings that way, and in to be seen in company with her satellites. This is under standable. They might feel the same way. America's-position does not meet with favor with some of her allies, such as Britain. The British have been appeasers from the start, due to their anxiety about Hong Kong and the China trade. They want to give the oppo , aition virtually anything it wants and will probably vote ' against us in the roll calls. However, a two-thirds vote is required and the U.S. is therefore expected to win. But the sharp, bitter split over who should compose the delegation and where they should sit virtually dooms the conference to failure. there would be no peace unless the Russia formula were accepted, which it won't be, and can't be now that the U.S. has "stuck its neck out" on the issue. Perhaps we'd have been better off to have swallowed tur pride and let both Russia and India in on their own terms, as disrupters, but we've swallowed our pride time after time without accomplishing anything and probably would have made no contribution to peace had we backed down again. The trouble is that the other side wants peace only on its own terms, which includes the complete. mastery of Asia now and the rest of the world later, when they get to it. With this aim there may be temporary truce, there may be little wars or there jnay be one big war. But there can be no real peace till the objective is attained or abandoned. Many will conclude that we should have fought the war to a military decision, but this is by no means cer tain. Such a course would probably have brought Russia into active fighting and started World War IIL If this did not happen we could hardly have overrun all China and we could not have made an enduring peace from a front located at the Yalu any easier than from one on the 88th parallel. What all this adds up to is that we've got the biggest bear in the world by the tail and nobody has as yet figured out a way to let go without being devoured by him. We are only buying temporary, uncertain reprieve from the all-out war we all dread and will do anything short of outright surrender to avoid. THE MENACE OF SECURITY In an address to the American Bar association's annual convention at Boston, Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson Btressed a fact that is becoming increasingly apparent that the nation's traditional freedoms are in danger of being lost through "being gradually bartered or traded" for "security." . enduring, as history proves leans to a aismai swamp. Jackson said that individual the philosophy "that all else of the state." He continued: "In this anxiety-ridden time, some of their liberties for a real against external foea, Internal betrayers or criminals. "Others are eaacr to bargain awav local controls for a fed eral subsidy. Many will give of collective advantages." The recent action of the farmers in voting by an over whelming majority to let the their crop planting quotas in subsidies to maintain war prices, was an instance of sur rendering individual rights for collective advantage, that increases living costs for all farmers themselves in increased costs of production for all they buy, and the merry another whirl. Security is the golden lure nism, and the results have for the masses, denied initiative and opportunity as bar barism replaces civilization a high price for loss of free dom. Jackson further declared: "The real question posed by the Fascist and Communist movements ... Is whether, today, liberty is regarded by tha masses of men as their most precious possession. Certainly in the minds of many foreign peoples our type of Individual lib erty has been outvalued by promises of social welfare and economic security, which they want too passionately to be critical of the price. If this indifference to traditional values should spread to us, it would be the greatest threat to our liberties.1' G. P. RED FACES TURN RED Panmunjom, Korea CUB Red prisoners had red faces today when they stripped off their uniforms In protest against the United Nations. Two young women from Communist Poland turned up to welcome the Communist troops to freedom. The repa triates had nothing but caps side because India is a U.N, anxious to talk if not to fight be in this troublesome peace interest on the enemy side. Russia attend it be at the China, her satellites and that reached. She could better disrupt the addition she seems reluctant Vishinsky as good as saidj This security is anything but a false will-o'-the-wisp that freedom is threatened by must give way to the interest many are ready to exchange or fancied Increase in security up individual rights for promise federal government regulate exchange for minimum price the people and reacts on the - go - round of inflation gts of both fascism and comma been on y slavery and sadism BACK BEATER DE Lt'XE Battle Creek, Mich. (UK Benny Mark, 41, said today his wife, as a back icat driver, did more than talk. She grabbed hi arm at he drove along street here, causing him to crash into a tree. Mark uf fered a broken leg. to cover themselves. RUN N IN' W HE' AREALNWTRAC, A ;, AH&SOMeONfc SUC6WTE&) f V S INVITING HlfA TO r ' it I the Korean peace J iff , -tniSt. 'Pfetf-MANKJI4Cr- POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Taking Care Education to By HAL New York VP) When you try to educate a child it is hard to say who learns most you or the child 'Little Jughead," a tiny miss wno came to our house recent ly for what we hope is a per manent visit, is right at the formative stage too old to be kept in ignorance, but too young for college. As a matter of fact she is only two months old. But, operating 0, East Is East wall Street Journal Among tne recent sugges tions of a lessening tension be tween East and West, none is more encouraging than an em phatic statement of the Rus sian government organ, Izves- tia, as reported to the New York Times from Moscow. It discloses a hitherto ignored chord of sympathy between our 160 million and their 193 million or more. Izvestla asserts that Russia's crying need Is more and fun nier jokes. That's one of ours, too. Izvestla says there aren't enough circuses in Russia. There aren't here either, espe cially when Congress is In re cess. In all the Soviet Union there, are only 18 clowns, among whom painfully few are the least bit funny. We have more clowns than that Many of them are indeed funny, most of them so uncon sciously and without intention. But is that art? Izvestia would certainly say it isn't, with the finality of ultimate authority. We look forward hopefully to the convening of a four power conference on interna tional standards of humor. Per haps Kipling was a bit too pos itive about the duration of the chasm between East and West. 20 Years Later McMinnvllle News-Register Tuesday's interesting re count of events surrounding the 1933 forest exDlosion In the Tillamook burn by Sam Smith. Willamina city recorder and News Register correspondent, marks some difference in the weather 20 years ago and this week. At time of the 1933 holo caust, which devastated 320, 000 acres of virgin forest, the woods were powder dry. It's different this week. Heavy rains have farmers wor ried over possibility of real damage to fine stands of bar ley and other gains still In the field. Continued downpours most certainly would discolor barley and bring lower mar ket operations. This week's drouth-breaker rain cam at the exact time that 1952 s long dry spell end ed. But, this year the rains were not as badly needed as a year ago. Woods were dry and humidities low, with real tire danger In harvest fields, but the year's picture was not near ly as critical as In 1952. How ever, we wouldn't have minded a little rain now, neve had enough! Long range forecast lnfll cate a dry. warm period through most of September, Let get on with it and get our crops in the bin. Give us a break, Mr. weatherman. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon WHO COULD BLAME HIM of Baby Adult Too BOYLE on the theory that a girl can't start learning too soon, I have begun ner formal education al ready. The first thing I am teach ing her are music and interna tional affairs. I do this by play ing the phonograph for her and reading her the newspaper. "You are positively crazy, Rover," said my wife, Frances. She has the feminine idea that just because a baby can't walk or talk it can't appreciate the finer things of life like cul ture, and all that stuff. But I know better. Take mu sic for example. Little Jughead and I are having a wonderful time exploring the world of music. She likes Beethoven, but he puts me to sleep. When I play a record by Hayden, we both fall asleep. But Mozart we both love. The other dav Jughead started a strange crooning, and I yelled for my wife. Now what's wrong." she said. 'Can't you hear what the baby is doing?" I asked excit edly. "Certainly." said Frances. "She is making happy noises." "Happy noises nothing. Lis ten again. She is humming Mo zart." You are positively nuts." said Frances, going back to the kitchen. Well, that just goes to show you how much more fathers appreciate daughters than mothers do. A musical genius in the family and her own mother won't even admit it. Reading the newspaper to Little Jughead is something of a problem. , We both like the sports page, 1 but she gets restless when I try to read the comics. I like them, but. they bore her to angry squalls so I read them real fast On the other hand nothing contents her more than the edi torial page, which I sometimes find heavy going. The longer and duller the editorial the bet ter she likes it. She lies there smiling, gnawing her hand with her gums, and nodding thought fully. She is also keenly interested in foreign affairs, and really knows more about them than I do. For example, some time ago I read her a piece about the Shah of Iran flying to Rome. "How do you like that, kid?" I said. "I guess the shah's had it Old Mossadegh kicked him out to stay, eh?" I looked over at Little Jug head, and she shook her head violently in the negative. She didn't agree. Sure enough, a tew days later old Mossadegh got bounced and the Shah started back home. When I read that to Lit tle Jughead, she leered up tri umphantly, smug as any wom an whom Ume has proved right. One thing worries me about our mutual cultural and en lightenment program. The last couple of days she hasn't been listening to the phonograph or my newspaper reading. Just lies there on the floor flexing her leg muscles and doing pushups. Oh, well, maybe if time for me to buy her a glove and a bat What if Little Jughead aoesn t want to become an in tellectual. W rnuM nu annrf lady Softball pitcher In the fam-l Uy. Salem 41 Years Ago By BEN MAXWELL August VI, 1912 T. G. Bligh had contracted for a large, $450 electric sign to hang across the street in front of his theater. Notice had been served on the section foreman in the Turner district by Dr. J. O. Van Winkle directing him to bury part of a human foot and leg of a man killed on the railroad right-of-way a few days ago. : ' John Carmichael, Indepen dence hop grower, had adver tised for 1000 hop pickers to pick 400 acres of hop on the Wlgrlch ranch. Health of Isaac Durbln, 81, pioneer of 184S had failed rap idly and he had been brought from Newport to Salem on a cot. Arrangements had been made for the O. A. C. basket ball team to tour the east this winter. C. L. Rose, 246 S. Commer cial street, was local distrib utor for the E-M-F "30" auto mobile. New fall dress goods were offered to the Chicago store, "Saves You Money," included Russian colt skin cloth, a latest novelty, astrachan, heavy whale sponge cloth and chinchilla. A bank had come to Donald with $15,000 paid up capital. Dr. O. B. Miles had lately rigidly enforced the sanitary ordinance against the meat men with the result that most of them had been arrested. Treason Trials Pendleton East Oregonian Few if any U.S. prisoners of war in Korea who sided with their Chinese captors against their fellow GIs are likely to be tried for treason, according to Attorney General BrownelL Most of them gave way only under torture or other extreme duress. . And a handful who may have gone renegade vol untarily will probably not have been repatriated. The attorney general ex plains that the armed forces will turn over to the depart ment of justice for action any evidence Indicating actual treason. He says that no such evidence has yet been turned over. i Under the Constitution, a U.S. citizen commits treason only by "levying war" against the U.S. or adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort." And conviction may come only by testimony of two witnesses to the same 'overt" act or by confession In open court. Very few of the World War II treason case Involved men from the U.S. armed forces. Life imprisonment sentences were imposed on Seaman Becker, who sold military in formation; on Sergeant Pro- voo, who cooperated with the Japanese in the Philippines; and Lt. Monti, jvho surren dered a plane to the Nazis and then joined the German army. In a Coronation year, even roses pay homage to the Queen. One of the nrize-wlnnins All- American roses for 1954 Is named Lillbet in her honor. End of an Era St. RAYMOND MOLEY Santa Barbara The death In Dublin last week of Edward J. Flvnn. for 31 year the un disputed bos of the immense Borough of tne Bronx, wa probably where he would have ordered it to take place. Hi nrrirra were usually law. He had an attachment for Dublin which surpassed most of the other sentiments which marked his life. ; His father, who came from there and was educated at Trinity college, was a dignified, cultured man who made the pursuit of leis ure a sophisticated art. Ed Flynn resembled hi father in both respects. He loved books and he hated hard work. His great personal charm and aulck nrtnd seemed to make serious exertion unnecessary. In these respects he defied the traditions of political boss- ism. In fact, he differed in so many respect from the Amer ican stereotype of a city poli tician that it is difficult to con ceive of him a a boss. A boss is supposed to mingle freely with all sort and conditions of people. Accessibility is sup posed to be essential to nis power. But Flynn was auii cult to approach. He lived in regil detachment. Most of his time between elections was spent far from the Bronx either in a Westchester estate, in traveling in the United States or in Europe. Flynn held hi political sub ordinates at arm's length. He said with complete candor: "I intended to keep my personal life entirely separate from my political life ... I have not visited the home of (hi dls trict leaders) nor have they been inside mine. I meet them only when occasion requires, But since 19 22 this man ruled the political affair of the Bronx with complete aw thority. In part, this mastery was due to a matchless sense of timing and of judgment of men. He never deceivea mm- self by wishful thinking. If an election was in the offing fh which his side was in trouble, he would frankly admit that fact to himself. In 1946, when many Democratic congression al seats were swept by Repub licans, he told me in confi dence not only which seats would change sides, but the approximate majorities in each, I knew in October, 1952, that Stevenson was lost in New York because a friend of Flynn told me so. His political pre dictions were the most ac curate that I have ever known. Beyond his capacity to win loyalty by the quality of his judgment Flynn' power rest ed in two other facts. For two decades he had complete aC' cess to Federal patronage. And he prevented any popular up rising by hi effort to keep his government scandal - tree. For instance, he held that law enforcement should be entrust ed to district attorneys of un questioned honesty and ability. When William O'Dwyer forced himself into the mayoralty over Flynn's doubts, the Bronx boss demanded and secured from the new mayor assurance that officers of the city who had large sums to handle should be kept over from the La Guardia reform adminis tration. The event proved his wisdom, because the scandal that later pursued O'Dwyer broke out in other quarters. Dishonesty, Flynn knew, was not only morally wrong but po litically inexpedient. Flynn was made leader of the Bronx when he was 30 years old by the fabulous Charles F. Murphy, then the master of the Party in New York State. Flynn had entered politics with reluctance and never seemed to enjoy his pro fession. When Roosevelt was elected governor, Flynn, again reluctantly, accepted the post of secretary of state, which meant that he was to master mind the pre-conventlon cam paign of the New York gover nor. Flynn claims that he and he alone brought Farley into that campaign. For years until Yalta, in fact, where he was an unannounced guest he was closest to FDR in all political matters, more so at all times than Farley. In later year hi detach ment became more and more pronounced. Ill health was partly responsible for that, but a disposition to regard politic a a bore and a rather Inci dental concern had.it part His death removes the last of the great Democratic barons in New York. Tammany, which is New York county as distinguished from the Bronx, has never been the same since Murphy. The Bronx will prob ably fall into destructive ri valries and weak hand now. For there can be no real successor to Flynn. OLD HAND AT IT Raleigh, N. C. J Officer C. J. Atkins testified in city court yesterday that when he halted a weaving automobile driven by Newton A. Walter. 38, the driver told him: "I've been driving drunk for 20 year. I drive better that way." Walters was lined S3 00. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Strikes Will Return to France Without Reforms By DREW Washington Unfortunate aspect about the strikes in France is that they are almost certain to happen again. France i likelv to have a wave oi nuralvzins strikes unless cer tain drastic reform are made In the French tax system and the French system of looa cu tributlon. Unnleasant but inescapable fact about the French econom ic situation is that the French government has been living on subsidies from the U.S. instead of collecting taxe. About the only p'eople who pay real taxe in Frassre are industrial work er, white collir worker and government employees thank to payroll deductions, But in the higher bracxeis taxes are just not collected. ' During the tax year 1951- 1952 for instance, only 7 300 Frenchmen declared income taxes on a salary of more than $6,000 a year. Of these 2,000 were government official whose salaries are a matter of public record and who there fore could not fudge. Another 1,000 were officials of semi- government Institutions rail roads, banks, gas and utility companies whose salaries alio are known. This left 4.S00 Frenchmen who claimed they were paid $6,000 or more. Since the num ber should have been nearer 100,000, this meant that about 95,000 Frenchmen In the up per bracket limply cheated on their Income taxe. And the French government did absolutely nothing about it. There is no Commissioner T. Coleman Andrews In France. French taxes are plenty nign nigner than ours, u a Frenchman makes $10,000, he pay around 65 per cent. If he goe much higher than this the taxes are almost confisca tory. But the upper bracket French simply do not pay, and the government make little effort to collect. Meanwhile, worker with taxe deducted from the pay rollsdo pay, and till wa one of the biggest basic rea son behind the crippling strikes. NO HOUSING Reason No. 2 Was the zooming price of food. Food prices in France are actually higher than in the United States, though wages are much lower. Reason No. 3 Wa almost complete failure by the French government to do anything about housing. After the war, the French government Instituted a low cost housing program under which apartments were to be built by the government and rented primarily to war veter an. However, they are being NOW! STERLING AT THE PRICE THAT'S RIGHT FOR. YOU! ABOUT $15: 3 piece place-setting ABOUT $20: 4- piece place-setting ABOUT $25: 5- piece place-setting ABOUT $30: o-piece place-setting $63 COMPLETE! "Starter Service" for 4... 4 Knives, Forks, and Spoons. Fricti slightly higher in tern pottttni end include Ftd. Te CHOOSE FROM OYER 100 PATTERNS 1 390 State Thursday, August 27, ljy PEARSON built so slowly that an. eran friend of mine long and heroic record have to wait 87 years beS he fan set an annrtm.-. " m- 'itui, needs 200,000 apartments ,J the government Is buildS them at the, rate of l,2oJr year. ' ' The government is also J - program private Industry. About iS. are now built and are sella, like hot cakes for around t? nnn The light of wealthy citize gobbling up these aparuw built through the aid French government funds iZ helped Induce the strikes Premier Lanlel, himself oa of the wealthier mm France, made the mls'ake tightening the French nomic belt at the exoense si the working classes, not u upper brackets. Result: Blazim indignation from the Catholk trade unions and the modenB non-communist unions. Tk. strikes they started are bound to flare again, unless Frenct economic inequalities get hick into balance. Note French workers i watched the way French win grower oiocKea roads, held up all traffic in wine areas u. til the government agreed to ouy ineir surplus wine Thi government surrender! French workers figured thi buck the government and win. ii - ,j i nicy cuum eiso. "HEART" TROUBLE The mysterious near-asnhre. latlon of mystery man Henrt Grunewald and lady friend I a Jersey City apartment wa not the first time he has bees found in a somewhat similw predicament. Early in July the famed tu fixer was found In apartment 208-A of the Wardman Park Hotel, lying In a heap ' at broken glass. His lady friend was also lvlnsf on thp flnn- Ha nnm.tftM V. n 4 n m V. -1 ligerently drunk condition. judging oy tne appearand of the room, they had been throwing table lamps and tumblers at each other. Grunt- warn naa occupied ine room for a week, and his lady friend, described by the hotel detective as middle-aced. had occupied the room next door also for a week. vj l uncwfliii m:m v t-ii m siiies pended Jail sentence from th U.S District Court on ths ground tnat ne was imierinl from a "heart condition. He also ducked testimony before a senate investigating commit tee, when this column first ex posed hi part in tapping th telephone wires of Howard Hughes on behalf of Pan American Airways likewise on the excuse of "heart" trouble. (Coprrttht 1MI) Dial 4-2223