Pa 4 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. Salem. Oregon Saturday, February 20, 1954 Capital jkjJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor end Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every ofternoon except Sunday at 280 North Church St. Phone 2-2406. Fill U Wit. StrtlM ! Ih Auerlatfl rcni ane The UlKH neta. TT Aaaodalca Prtu U Hcluttvrli cnlltlto to the uae for publication of e.11 oeva dlepatehaa etedltotl to U or otbe'ftiaa creoltfd 1a thlo paper tod also oowa publUood therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Br Carrtari UontlUr. HIS: 8I1 Hon l hi, I7M On. r.ar. tlt.Ot. Ir Hall li Orotoa: Monthl?. too: an uontha. UM; Oat raar. 19.09. j UaU OuUKle OrtiM Vonthlr. 11.11; Sli Month. 11.50: On. liar. Ill 00. FORMER RED SYMPATHIZER CHAMPION OF LOST CAUSES Secretary of State Earl T. Ncwbry, candidate for the Republican Republican nomination for governor, in an obvious bid for support of the big truckers, declares his department is conducting a "serious study of a plan to collect truck and bus highway users' fees through the gas oline tax." Newbry would eliminate the weight-mile tax, adopted In its present form in 1947 a mileage tax so graduated that it is paid in proportion to the loaded weight of the vehicle, as well as on miles traveled, and is designed to cover added costs of building highways strong enough to support the mammoth trucks. William Healy, assistant secretary of state, explained that under the plan, a meter would be installed ahead of the carburetor on all trucks subject to the fuel tax. The meter would be locked, accessible only to state inspectors. Apparently Newbry, in his desperate effort to gain sup port in his race against Governor Paul Patterson, has either forgotten or is ignoring the verdict of the people at the November 4, 1953 election. On the ballot at that election, were two measures deal ing with the truck tax. One was a referendum on a truck tax fee schedule passed by the 1951 legislature and the other was a truck tax scheme devised by the truckers. To defeat the truckers' plan of wrecking the mile tax, ' the voters were required to vole yes on the referendum measure and "no" on the truckers' tax proposal. The legislative weight mile fees were upheld by the voters by a vote of 409,588 "yes" against 230,700 "no The truckers' tax scheme was buried by a negative vote totalling 484,730 "no" votes with only 135,468 favoring the plan. In 1940 a legislative interim committee on highways mad? an exhaustive study of the plan now proposed by Newbry. This committee found that the big truckers under the plan would escape paying large portion of the truck taxes for the simple reason that trailers do not con sume gasoline and the only tax against the trailers would be the small license fee. Mr. Newbry knows as well as anyone that the gover nor has no more to do with fixing truck fees than he as secretary of state has had. He knows this is a purely legislative function and its enforcement is up to the public utility commissioner, whose salary is now a minimum of $9000 and a maximum of $11,000 a year. Nor has the secretary of state forgotten that the then Public utility Commissioner George 1-Iagg, resigned 1951 to accept a five-year contract at $15,000 a year as lobbyist for the big truckers organization to promote their interests. u. l HCRE1 A MAN WITH M AWFUL X (fWh '2m?-i& RECORD HE CONTRIBUTED AAICUONS I I Ml THT7Y1 i TO THE REDS- HE PftAlEt TALiN- IMf (5BAC,' U 1 WA$ FRIENDLV WITH THE RUSSIANS- JJg-g? WHO LA WORKEbTO GET 'EM In THE U.N. HlV E- AjU ..- iwiri' vs. "a i ntof WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Robert Young to Keep on Fighting for N. Y. Central RHEE RAISES A VITAL ISSUE Tough old President Syngmnn Rliee, president of South Korea, has again created a "situation" by offering to send one or more Korean divisions to fight the Communists in Indo-China. Reaction of U.S. military leaders is said to have been privately favorable, but the political reaction was "no soap." It is not doubted that Rhee's men would give a good account of themselves in Indo-China or anywhere else, for they hHve been trained by American bfficers and armed with American weapons. South Korea's best divi sions are now rated on a par with any troops anywhere. Whether they would fight as well in distant Indo-China as in defense of their own land is another question, but Communist troops have fought well in far off spots and ours might, too. Reason for the adverse political reaction to Rhee's pro posal was two-fold. Withdrawal of first line Korean troops from Korea might tempt the enemy to launch a new offensive, particularly with U.S. troops being reduced in numbers at the same time. But the principal objection seems to have been a fear that intervention of Koreans in Indo-China might have been sized upon by Communist China as an excuse for full scale Chinese intervention in a war China is already ac tively supporting. How this squares with the sending of U.S. airplane technicians to Indo-China is not explained. We do not see how it squares at all. Our own view is that the U.S. is still taking an unreal istic attitude toward the use of Asiatic troops in our wars there. The other white nations have used them for 200 years. Indian Sepoys did most of the fighting for Ptritain and France in the struggle for India that was part of the Seven Years War, 17f(i-l:!, and these countries have used Asiatics and Africans in their major wars since. The U.S. has shown in Korea that Asiatics can be made tho virtual equal of white soldiers with good training and good weapons. The same thing is doubtless true of other Asian peoples, whom the Russians arc using to the hilt on their side, but whom we hesitate to use on our side. There may be good reasons for not sending Koreans to Indo-China, but the principle of using Asians to fight communism in Asia is sound and ought to be employed on a much larger scale thRn it has jet been employed on. Chiang, for instance, has a large idle army on Formosa which he hRs heretofore offered to employ in the common cause against communism, only to be turned down. ARMY TO TRY DICKENSON Tht widely criticized plan of the Army to court-martial Cpl. Edward Dickenson, one of the 22 who returned from the communists just in time to save himself from heaven enly knows what, is to go forward after all. It was an nounced Thursday that Dickenson will be tried for infortn- injr on other U.S. prisoners and collaborating with the enemy in order to gain better treatment for himself. We do not believe any question of bail faith by the Army is involved. So far as we recall there never was any promise of immunity to Dickenson if he returned to us. .Unless there was ho returned subject to prosecution for any -offense he may have committed. the) trial should bring out some interesting; facts on how prisoners were treated by the Reds and the extent to which they put pressure on our men to embrace commu nism. The public will have only contempt lor any Amer ican who became nn enemy tool in order to gain favors for himslf, but it might readily forgive a youth who wilted under torture or threat of it. There is much the public would like to know about how our prisoners were treated in the Communist camps and what kind of pressure was exerted on the handful of men who finally deserted to them. The Dickenson trial should help clear up some of these points, if the Army will permit publicity on the evidence. By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON I talked at length the other cay with Rob ert R. Young, the bouncing lit tle tycoon from Texas who has taken on the second biggest rail road in the U.S.A. and the big gest big-business battle the na tion has seen in (his century. Among other things, asked him what he wr .Id do if he should lose his stockholders' fight to acquire the New York Central on May 26. "There will be other May 26ths," Young replied, "And I am only 57 years old. I have eight years before I reach the Net. YorV Central'! retirement age of 65. I'm going to keep on fighting." I had not realized before that Young was only 57. I discov ered, as we taiked, that he had made a fortune before he got to be 35, retired from business and weni back into business again. Retirement was too hum drum," he explained. "I got tired doing nothing." Born on a Texas cattle ranch which his father managed, he had gone '- work during World War I for the I)u l'onts, became assistant to John .1. Ttnskob, learned the game of finance from the inside, am. became one of the early sparkplugs inside Gen eral Motors. "Why did von go into the rail road business afler you decided to go br to work again?" 1 asked. "Hecause it was the most run down business in the country." he explained. "You have the greatest op, rtunily In ny busi ness that i' backwird, and the railroad business has been held back for years If the automo bile hiisim ss had had t lie same lack of imagination as the rail road business, it wouldn't he any where todav either." Train X When I asked Mr. Young what he intended to do for the New York Central that hadn't been done before, he replied that one of the chief improvements he would install would be roller bearings. "Can you imagine an indus try with more friction than any other not using roller hearings?" he exclaimed. "Their use on the railroads would savi millions of dolla.'s. et there s been a con spiracy to ban roller hearings." Young went on to tell about Train X. the model streamliner he had built, patterned after a Spa ish train, lighter in construction lower on the rails and costing onelhird less t build than the modern passenger car. "I built it for use on the Chesapeake and Ohio," he ex plained, "Hoping it would set an example to other roads and that they would foil suit. However, since the C. an.l O. hs to link up with ot.ter lines we haven't been able to use It yet, because we can't hook up te their Junk. "One trouhl with the rail road business," Your.g continued, "i. retusi.l to change. The present-day freight cai, for instance, got its height from the old plan tation wagon d'awn by a team of ! mules that used as well as its opera .ors. Dwindling GOP Margin A serious illness in the house of representatives, plus the conviction of Congressman Ern est Bramblett of Cnhfoini.1. has reduced the republican working majority in the house of repre sentatives lo only one vote. This leaves the republicans with a minus-onc-votc margin in the senate, and , plus-one margin in the house. Actuall;' Congressman Bramb lett will continue to hold his seat in congress during his appeal which wilt take about 90 days, and which will be str-mh out as long as possible jn order to keep his vote in the house i.l repre sentatives. Meanwhile the last GOP con gressman to reduce the margin is Alvin Wcichel of Sandusky, Ohio, who has been in Kethesda Naval hospital suffering from a nervous breakdown. Wcichel has j had diabetes for some time, and friends say he neglected all care of himself; so that the suffering has caused a .ncntal lapse. Doc tors have advised that he will not be able to return to con gress, and there are no plans for his re-election. Congressman Thor Tollefson of Tacoma, Wash., will take Wcich el's place as chairman of the house merchant marine and fish eries committee. This will be the third commit tee whose chairman the republi can leadership will by-pass or plans to by-pass because of in competence, incapacity, or recal citrance. The other two arc Hoff man of Michigan, chairman of the Government Operations com mittee, who h.-.s heenme so crus ty and difficult that his commit tee voted 2'' lo 1 to by pass him. The other i 78-yonr-old Con gressman Pan Reed of New York, chairman of the Ways and Means committee. Reed is still going strong as chairman of Ids power ful tax writing committee, but Kisonhowcr leaders have found returned from Europe has taken a unique step to improve U. S. relations abroad. Leopold D. Sil berstein, chairman of Pennsylvan ia Coal and Coke, was upset by hearing Europeans forecast that U. S. economy was on the eve of a 1929 nose-dive, so he broad cast a special report to business men in Europe over the Voice of America, and is now urging other American businessmen to do likewise. Silberstcin discovered that the United States 'vill spend $3,000, 000,000 this year on peacetime use of atomic energy alone, told European business that the U.S. A. is moving forward in indus trial research with tremendous speed, that pcacetine use of the atom alone will create vast new markets, new jobs, circulating new billions through the eco nomic bloodstream of America. Drab Story That Sickens the Heart Unfolds in Pentagon By ED CREAGII WASHINGTON W One of, nonetheless those 20th century stories that stagger the imagination and sick en the heart is unfolding in a drab, improvised courtroom on a hill overlooking the Pentagon. It is the story, as told by men who saw it happening, of a brave man goaded to fury and gradually broken bv his Com munist captors under a load of abuse, pain, humiliation and physical wretchedness. ' Frank H. Schwable, a flying Marine with a brilliant record of combat experience, is the central figure. He was a war pri soner in Korea 14 months. Mid way in his captivity, he signed a false confession he took part in germ warfare activities which, in fact, never were carried on. The Reds made noisy propa ganda use of Schwable's "con' fession." Now a four -member court of inquiry is trying to de cide whether the 45 -year -old Schwable, a slender, alert man with thinning and graying hair, should face a court martial. Four Marine enlisted men and one Army sergeant who caught glimpses of Schwable in POW camps during his ordeal told their stories yesterday nail ing fragments that added up to a harrowing picture oi. wnai "brain-washing" does to a man. Some told of seeing Schwable in September and October, 1952- amaciated, unshaven, jittery but Salem 26 Years Ago By BEN MAXWELL February 20, 1928 Salem police department had asked the council for an appropri- tion sufficient to supply a prowl er car for the residential district. m Fire burning between walls had ; damaged Marion hotel to the ex- j tent of $20,000. Oregon Electrical railroad had a rate of $2 for a round trip be tween Salem and Portland. Trains I left Salem at 7:15 and 10:02 a.m. I and at 1:20, 4:11, 5:30 and 8 23 p.m. I I New Polk county jail at Dallas 1 had been about completed and ! would be ready for occupancy ' come March 15. , George B. Culhrie. owner of E1-! sinore theater, had proclaimed I "Sorrell and Son" the finest mo- i lion picture he had seen this sea- j son. I Miller's were advertising new spring hats at $.195 each, latest chic, sparkling new." Capital Journal comics for this issue of 26 years ago featured Dumb Dora. Bringing Up Father, Barney Google and Mutt and .leff. $600 Exemption Medford Mall-Tribune The House Ways and Means committee, busily whipping a new tax bill into shape, is under some pressure to increase beyond the present $600 the exemption al lowed for each person covered by an income-tax return. A number of bills have been introduced in Congress to raise the exemption. The personal exemption was $1,- 000 or higher from 1913 to 1940, and during much of that quarter of a century, it was more than twice as high for a married couple as for a single person. By 1944 it was down to $500 per person. It was raised to $600 in 1948. Prices to city consumers, on the average, have risen by 12 per cent since 1948, so to allow for the low er purchasing power of the dollar over six years the $600 would have to be raised now to $672, or to $700 for a round figure. But Chairman Reed of Ways and Means esti mates that a $100 boost in the in come tax exemption would alone cost the treasury something like $2,500,000,000 a year in revenue. And to make the exemption $1000, as provided in some of the bills in Congress, would entail revenue loss estimated at $9,500. 000,000 almost one-third of all individual income tax collections counted on for next fiscal year. That is because a very high per centage of the collections comes from the parts of all incomes tax ed at the lowest rates (35 per cent of collections for 1950, were from returns showing adjusted gross income of less than $5,000). $600 is also the limit on the gross income that any child or close relative of the taxpayer may obtain during the year to be classed as a dependent. Chairman Reed agrees that this limit is too low. and that it could be raised without costing the treasury much revenue. A PHONY VALENTINE DEAL BOSTON A') A florist report ed to police yesterday that a young man bought $12 worth of flowers for his "Valentine" and paid for them with a $25 check. The girl and the address were fictitious and the check was a phony, police said. defiant. Schwable had been taken prisoner the pre ceding July 8. He'd been thrown into solitary confinement, har- rasscd by constant questioning, deprived of food. But his atti tude toward his Red tormentors was: "Go to hell." Former Marine Corp. William N. Shockley of Denver, Colo., testified he heard those words ring out in a firm American voice on one occasion when a browbeating, finger-waving in terrogator was submitting Sch wable to inquisition. And Sgt. 1 C. Pearson 0. Porter of League City, Tex., an Army man, told of stronger language used by the Marine of ficer to a Communist questioner. "You can spell the word if it embarrasses you," a lawyer told Porter. "I'm not embarrassed," said the self-possessed Porter, and he gave the court the short word he said the colonel hurled at the interpreter. It was a different story, though, by Dec. 8 when Schwable and some of the enlisted men were herded into a truck and trans ferred to another camp. They had their own individual ways of describing the colonel: "Awful nervous." "He just stared straight ahead." He kept jerking and twitching like a punch-drunk prize fighter." Once, the men agreed, Sch wable leaped to his feet and cried out he was surrounded by oil. There wasn't any oil on the floor. Again, they said, he brood ed two full hours before answer ing a Communist guard's remark about the weather. One said the colonel suddenly started shadow boxing when they stopped for food. They didn't hold it against Schwable, the men said, when they learned he supposedly had signed a "confession." They just figured somehow he was forced to do it. Some of them had ex- perience of the Communists' forcing techniques themselves. The president of the court, Maj. Gen. Henry D. Linscott, put a direct question to one of Sch wable's fellow passengers in the truck: "Did he appear to you to be a man in his right mind?" "No, sir, he didn't," said Pfc Mclvin J. Gaynor, 21, of Tell City, Ind. That hearing resumes Tuesday. General Lindbergh Astorian-Budget Charles A. Lindbergh, who re signed his reserve commission in the army before World War II in anger, is now being proposed for a brigadier-general's commission, and on the basis of his war record he certainly seems to deserve it. He has proved his patriotism, which some people doubted at the time he was making speeches urg ing the U.S. to stay out of World War 11 at a time when most every one else felt that German nazism had to be extirpated if the world was to exist in safety. It was a bitter comment by President Roo sevelt on Lindbergh's activities of the time that led to his resigna tion. Most of us are never going to understand how Lindbergh's mind works. A great man in his own field, he has demonstrated the most colossal ineptness of anyone in all history in the matter of pub lic relations. Although he accomplished feats that inevitably would make him a public figure, he always wanted, like Greta Garbo, to be alone. He never made much effort to dis guise his contempt for the public that gave him cxeccssivc adula tion and then became bitter when jeers replaced cheers. But in his own strange way, he obviously has been a patriot and a valuable citi zen, and is entitled to the military rank now proposed for him. DISPLAY IT PROUDLY I Slot. Form off.r. its .x- cellent protection ond service at extremely low cost be cause it aims lo insure careful drivers only. GIT YOURS NOW! Made of headlight-reflecting Scolchlile to stick on rear bumper. Drop in for your free sofery emblem (Way. "SI" OLSON 626 N. High St. Phone 42215 STATE FARM INSURANCE State Form Mutual Automobile Insurance Company Stale Farm life Insurance Compony Slate Form Fire and Casualty Insurance Company Home Office: Btaomfngfon, Itlinott "It pays to knew your State farm Aflent" Reed so uncooperative that they j plan to use the senate finance Studebaker commander, committee lo rewrite his tax "World's champion car." had a hill. There isn't any use argit- j factory price of $14ii5 for the four ing with Reed, they figure So door sedan, thevl'l not wa:r breath until the ; bill set o er to the senate. I E. T. Bar.ncs had been elected "Nets Look" fur Business president of the Salem library An American businessman itist hoard. THE FIRESIDE PULPIT i'ft kWJJ f - -- -r r 'People Tip Waiter, But Most Folks Forget God By REV. GEORGE H.SWIFT r. st rsn' t FT-Lcopal ch'irrh T.thinc as a method of giving I check. And the host examined it. In Gnd. Mo Church and Charity). : " ttp r05p 10 nfCf ' hf ,?ln ome .. . . . , enms imilrr the edge of the plate, was practiced Ion. before the ad-( Th( wa,UT whfl 5(()0() nearb vent ol ( hnst.an.ty. happilv wmVh ,,rjnB imfr. ( I know a man who keep a scpa-! prr.tC(t nicans that the tip was sat-; rate mcoiint of one tenth of hi- , ismctorv . sal.iry. Out of this he pays his ' "New" with such customs we are! pledge to the church, church offer- ai miliar. Rut as I meditated ir.gs lor special needs. Community on )c coins that become tips. I . Chest, worthy causes of one kind hl,K;in i0 tllink o( tipS ana tithes. I or another, and chanty. ; for the proverbial tip must be at j From nil I cm learn not many ; least a tithe, lest the waiter turn j o load cotton i people do tithe today. A week ago against you. Whereupon it came bales into freight cars. Freight j I had a request from an out of unto me that few people treat their ; cars were built a convenient town friend for some information God as well as they honor their height for those old plantation ! on tithing. Having just read a lay-1 waiter, hor unto the waiter they mans paraDle on tne nuttject. i give t.tne, out unto i.oci tney sent it along. This is the parable: give whatsoever they th'nk will "Now it came to pass on a certain get them by. Verily, doth man fear day at noon that the writer was a the waiter more than he frareth guest of a certain man. And the God" And doth he not also love luncheon was enjoyed at a certain the waiter more than he loveth osernight passenger trains, mod-1 restaurant. And the waiter was God"" erni;e equipment, and let rail-i very efficient. Now when the end Truly, a man and wh.il he docs road personnel buy stock In the of the meat was at hand, the w:ih his money is p.isl under- road so they become its ownrrs waiter brought unto the host the jtamiinj. wagons and hnve been kept at that height ev.r since." Among varu u plans Yo.ing ht for the New York Central is to put a woman on its board of directors, put motio' pictures on via i 1 i" I ! W 1.1;:: i rf it ' Serving Solem ond Vicinity os Funerol Directors for 25 Years Convenient location. S Commer cial street, bus line; direct route lo cemeteries no cross traffic. New modern building- -seating up to 300. Services within your means. l r; - virau I. Ooiero Unca . UOrucD Virgil T. Golden Co. 60S S. Commerciol St. FUNERAL SERVICE Phone 4-22S7 i 1 Coll Now - For Your 1954 Calendar