| OCR Text |
Show 's - I- - ' 4 , ,in.tts own field.' GEORGE E.SOKOLSKY - ' Americans ', Who Ktiew About C0hna i . - - , ' - - ' - , - - - 11 - - - . . . Kal-she- ' - - - . - , - , , the ist - - 1 , .! - ' , - high-scho- ol . , A Missourian, he arrived in China in 1908 from the Phil- - -- - , ' , - "hell-week- ", ed ippines where he was an American lawyer. He was the United States district attorney attached to the American ' court under extraterritorial Jurisdiction. During World War I, be was provost marshal fast" In Tientsin. He was an astute intelligence officer. Going into business, Bassett pryved tellpossess an unerring Intuition concerning Chinese , . , , , , - whin ,.. , to employ Chinese methods - , , - - - . ' shishseChhlesede- ei ;int-. As of fact, his oomoo- servedtor revolutionize the sales methods of all coe.mpoolco dealing in im. , Thought trom loud-speake- rs, - attention-compellin- . ' , ' Day , . - - ' - ' - ' 4 ' ''' -- '. ', ' i.) ' -- '' S Ice tch c s t ' :''''''''' - . Ct:, al By - - 1" - - t y .1. 1 , , ;, : A , . I , ; - ; , . - jr ,, i ' ; ... . , Paifn. mon- - - ',' ,Cir.) , 41141:-41- 1'' ' - . . - , , ., - . . - Dean 'Acheson ' inuld, out of La many Americans with Fa Eastern experience, select those whom he wished as experts and advisers. He apperentb, chose not the most leaperienceds the most successful, or' the wisest, but those who , fitted his ', - . Tabe , ,This Orgaluzation became a kind of Far Eastern trade 11 ,t the rrwindked Because they a."' so many Important Chines personal, and tntimate ly, they were supposed to be biased. Most: of the newer men who emerged as authorities centered about the InOttute of - , ' , ... - - l'ILEDISPOSMONS Alter Roosevelt became president, :most of the eocall0d "old China . hands" were dropped by the State Department.' Because of their ' tryl7ttierul) dwers'esupl ''' ,I ' - , ''L 6 , - ... 4 t t ar I govurnment, , '',. - . 4 ' t 3 - .... C e '1)--- - I, t t:-- - I 4.11 . ,i,I ,,,,,,, .,.. , C11,?. ( , Ans., Y r - ' 1 , ,e,,..40..op.-;:A- " rl -- ; ...-- "ml'Vr; t aili,--- 0. ,i.; - ,,,v. .0.3.A i'r 'erg; t 11;1: 114 ',,, i t . e'.V15 ' 11.3.) m - 1 , 11 ,.-- -, ,- 4,."'.. 7 -- "sr - - s "::':- .0....,49.,,.,..4t. le........7..!74'. - "-dtai-Js. 401bl ,, 'le - le:;: ,,,,,, sae,:!Calo711.-!- " 11'11.110Flos-s- e- ' ....9- 1.44,,,,.., :;,..,:,;--c, : - . . tr, rat - : ' - r question then arises: What predisposed him. in the 'direction that he took? , ibbas) ccesonast, Lag ',shwa - a : .N ........... ..a, - -- -- ,- .-- - ,,,' ,f 1 . --- N ,,, . N. . j. :"IN, ; . tto,:4 x . . t.,,A .11' - , - :,- t -- , I.. :40 r'.4-',1- ' , 4- sfe ! ,,,i1- S. iiik, Wotit,,,,- .0.- , u :i ' ' k" 4-"- "' . BLUNDERBUS BILLIONS . . LETTERS FROM NEWS READERS ' ... Is This Tax Relief . "excess profits" in their first The Deseret News invites readers to express their epin- ions or contribute Inferination on topics of mores: its. terest. Letters must be signed, should be brief (not over 200 words preferred),.and mutt not violate. accepted canons of good taste. Adiress: The Editor, Letters to the News. P. Box l257, Salt Lake City 10, Utah. , Far Small Business? - The general public should consider carefully what the Senate . Finance - Committee has announced as its plan for 'relief' for small new busi- messes created since 1H6. The linen" Committee says that instead of having to maximum excess pay 17 profits taxes on top of 30- 52 normal and surtax, small new businesses created since 1046 should have to pay "only" a maximum of 55 le in their lint year, 58 in the second year, 62 in the third on imtll the full Yeanarice .......,..and is imposed in --""t- ml 'the'', year? Most manufacturing concerns lose money their first year, are lucky to make a little in the second year, and if they prosper In their third year they must plow back every nickel to keep ahead of competition, which eyes the markets the pioneer has ere-st- et a By the time realizable profits develop, taxes under the proposed tax law make survival or progress impossible. --J. S. Finger Houston, Texas, which tax caused thousands of bankruptcies. The will pay a higher tax than last year and the in their senility, must shoulder the same burden as their ' ancestors. Even in the first two years of corporate existence the so called "rater Provisions are a hollow gesture. The Finance Committee uys that on top of a 51 regular tax a small new business need pay only 5 excess profits tax during the first year. But how many four-year-ol- ds fifth and years. ' Under such "old. mature" subsequent "teller the company of three years' age will be pay- as It paid be-blip, thethssme....Its - five-year-ol-ds, i Movie Encourages Bible Reading . e Grady Says U. S. Should Be 'An Honest Broker' in Iran Henry T. Grady Is returning to Washington from his unsuccessful mission to Iran without a chip on his shonider but prepared to tight for the principle that the United ' ' marked for its own by the empire on which the stm has - wrnmal., Mr. Grady, however, unlike some others who have not satisfied with the urg, been ency of the American effort In their part of the world, expects to do battle from with- in the administration ranks. He is both a political liberal at home and an internationalist abrUad: the Gradys happen to be also party Democrats--Mr& Grady is a farmer nation al committeewoman from California and state ' vke chairman. ' It was understood tri Washington when be yielded to White House prersure to undertake the difficult Iranian chore that Mr. Grady bad ex- 'Pressed a desire to be bill, .country's first ambassador to Japan and that promises front high authority were categoritally expressed to him. Lately, however, even ha-- beecs in a Iran,mentialsonedname ytheBib.le I think that these titer I saw , ' - considerations weigh also In welcoming Gradys home.. California is the second largest state in the . . ,- - to run for re.4teetioo. moose.' 11 ad sea Iliyattese) a nuiTtibt"thill whyre"not . , , - i - -- i ;,.., - 5- , , I pos- thenr wni,nPrePermiehme- -t - lataetutbnizes atorythe embatiti: middle and Cad' back to the beginning? Or start from the end, flash back to the middle and flash back to the Or start at the nips of the middle, flash back to the end of the beSinning, dissolve to thi beginning of the middle and then britia in a narrator to straighten everybody out Flashbacks, humbug! I do better writing about lull-back- s. - - a begin-hebegg- il- . FISH TALES : If all big tisk . - That got away Should form a dub And meet some day They'd aa:loode congeal With whopping tales ; Of rod and reel! .....4rIereDet P. lattesms ''' '' '' , ' litianatasrltle Thaest to I'LrveryThese what youLvo got, makes a lit' tle bit less." , ,. ,,, by the grandeur of the natural setting. and ' is God's etweuld feel ;hie or as Young so .aPProPriatelY it, Tressed anis is the place' ' Green ' ' -- -New York City. : f , 4, the grab ' Plastits: - Korea. UMW itolineto: first time I have had the oc-- to stop over in your CatiLet011 any length of time. me say that I am just delighted with Salt Lake City and with its beautiful and majestic natural surround- . -- - r, , TM Army wal"try out a awe-strick- union, Its convention delegation and electoral vote among the great prizes of 1952. And President Truntiui makes like a man who wants t i IT amabwletaril:igdaff:- - whist:handl , I have travelC4 all ever the country, and have ilea, nothing to compare wit! it. Ver Any visitor - ' here for one day would be to the f California some time next month. I have passed through - ing , ',t NEVISBRZAK: (Fromi ths Long Wand Star JournaI). "Maj. Gen. T. B. Larkin. Army nuertermaster.generld. ordered a study of possiblit reductions in Army rations. The chief of the subsistence section will fake the invmtlita- thm 1 ilatiputidalla I . sojourning only temporarily In Salt Lake. QV, fOr perleVe,a weeks. I am haps six or a resident of New York, - , The administration ha's some political ....Edwin Anderson Philadelphia The Inner of this letter is th; mad a, to them regarding , , 't - ' It can be expected that will seek to end their careers not on the Iranian note, but in fulfillment of the pledges Japan. , 1 asolai New,Yorkerts Tribute To Salt Lake City - poL meAblolGtz .1.thbatick'em and "SWUM) Your city Is very picturesmind living que. I atatadn't' . 1:eref, 1 the niceold lady thin white hair, lips and tits in -7- .--- movien Delilah."' : Thheun 1 gewiSti:es ;Let ed trieck to rs to 2 good start. since the immediately shift forward to the edge of their seats, biting their fingernails and pulling tranticatollychanfoger ththe makeup haggard, tired old man into a tall and handsome young lover or the grandilse old dame into the glow:taus creature they shelled out 73 cents to see. IN THIS TYPE of picture, Loretta Young, for example, starts off the story poking through a photograph album or rummaging about in an attic trunk. in such a setting she quite naturally recalls her days of youth and beauty not to mention her many romantic conquests and soliloquizes as she gazes vacantly into specs . . 1 remember, now. It wu " the summer of 1874 She sends the audience Into a dissolve and in a second or two we're all back In 1874 when, the old lady was a sweet little Baltimore belle of 18, having her come-ou- ( From etha in-unfolds tht story regulation chronological order. ANTER A MORE or less cursory Study of the flashback, I have become convinced that the movie masers are by no ameals realizing the Sullat dreshima potentialities mode of narrative. Why, for Instance, should not all flashbacks begin at the end of the story, jumping the customer from there to the beginning? on Biblical stories are a good en they aren't trttigiou though Scripture. because they encourage the re.ding of the Bible. The rtn ;tearstim we I openedthe. BUe Athens. What be will do when he returns, beyond reporting to" the State Department. be will not discuss publicly. But, of course, he is far too knowledgeable about Washington not to understand the angles. The Gradys---ldr- a. Grady is as much a leader and perhaps I better politician than be is have been for Democratic via...7z..s velt and Truman for a long time. Their posts have included only the hard ones: India, Greece, Iran. f t ....- He fully shares the military COnVietiona of the importance of the Middle East to the defense against Russia. He Is therefore ready to battle a policy of drift or feeble optimism wtih respect to the irsanianArnatcliglinom Ira- that connection. The former ambassador is his interviews en rocounfinte ing ,som to the seriousness situation in Iran. He is wholly candid about that and though he does not elplictuy state it, Ms desire that his country shall be the boned btoker In the conflict between Iran ' and Britain, rather thbal; eBkristatino 'pl. Unshines ti ming he what has just said through In a discussion with me in , . fore he reseed questions shout -- - There are other rare Bathsheba" I agree with my fellow townsman, Lawrence Browning, that our day and age isn't so different from the "good old days," I also enjoyed Les Coates' comment, which I thought was perfectly true. After reading the Bible account' I thought that Gregory Peck was an Ideal David and he portrayed him pretty much as he was portrayed in the Bible. But way the script portrays Bathsheba "aint necessarily so." Susan Hayward, no doubt looked the part, and is a fine actress. But-we- ll just open and read it for N. 1 1. sibilities in the field of the After sifting "David and s DORIS-FLEESO- 1 toll-playe- o N. 1 keeolii : 6 ?',,, 'Iv awl colorful spectacle. a :466S'S, a P11 W - ,,,,,ot a .. Oil 6, e 6,--,7--- . THEY TELL ME the script writer on "David And Bathe 'Ube hadtoto do the piece over twice provide for that ,,,,de gisdhbabcrokmit ,,:st a position on tne foothill team like it sounds. The movie flashback is a stoydusuallvlop his device shrivelled-u- p LE .l. 0 a 1 a wheel chair. In the David film, it was lased to put the fight with Goliath at the end instead of the first. Likewise the anointing of the shepherd boy king by Samuel. the prophet , was one of the final scenes of this great ' ...Th."1176.1.1.1.natric71.-- Ati4 e-- 4'1' ri.. - Flashbacks ,n; ?, t ide, b , Er Ao, ... ..,,,..., z..111- .a ,noNAL ,A, 1...,.;f1:i:-.-: ''. IJ.--6,-.4- , 4w 4- 5 , t,, AL, S-- so r i:, - N - ,,,,..- 4- -1 .p Gootest- b, 4 ,, Ilir ,., a barters '7 green She's zither far than 'She. ha's queen. ' - - - , - - , , , , la me :eV omit Tyne Tot Tont7:4,Whea I consider thy heavens:the eau i the gest work of thy fingers, the moon and the stars, which , thou hut ordained: what le man ' that thou art mindful Of him? And the WO of man, that thou wisitest him? For thou hos mad. him s little lower than the angels and has crowned him with glory and honor." ' 1124. - - ' fr 7 . . - ... - --- - ,- . ilk OW 4MIL de. 60,,AL40k-mit 4WAS-I-llt AliCat..."...016 Ak.114,10,AFEPA,,API.O. 4110 44 ,, , s dr.. 0 Irk, ,4, '4,77 t a 6 T1.2tivt...: ..,'''',' 1C7:41t , , I. ' gekteopt..; - . , o. , ., ifI. , .1 ,, , 0.. . 6; e a Les by jel ,, . i ..,, 1 f".. . ..,,o ,' ,, ' ) , , As...Ai' ) if kJ I41, 4, "16. 5 ,L..... .,. )), 4 ett - I sufficiently appreciate either Its own strength or - British weakness In this area so long - ii , it ia A : sonakbesand some of them - Some people collect, old ' ... 4 ' ' . ' coins . others says foreign ' . ti rve even come , stamPs ,,, RI , across a man . '. who fash. .. ' , ' ' i, ' . ioned ' . . . lamps I' , ,, odd,shaped -. . , .." I knew a than who saved old , e 'ka, J.. '' ' N 11 . V Ili : wheels . . - ,, from , , every day . , , -- 4-, and age '4; and some folks ' , , V. fir , gather fiction books ; . that folk ,, .1" one time were the rage ,,, . -i . some people model airplanes 11!.1 . and 734),, '7 11 sailing vessels too . , - In fad there are so many ; . . ., ' t .1 7;' tI ft rye mentioned but a few "etstea , ,V 7 . . . but what rm getting at , , .. , le.15 isthie a bobby is the thing . .: it,,, -- .., to put your woes to 4, ,, , ;v1.14 ..,-z.:so and it le I recomA .1' mend , for fun and peace of . 41S .1 -' ('- 'A. a mind '. . a bobby is the best 1 - ' ""4":'" 114? ' 1DSWer . . , the best you'll , Bela a llamas dyaamo! Tha others haven't ',Walked ' Per find-- . ' . ' ' tamest through postbag!" cutting outE,-h- o's . i.0,,' (S In the Middle East must pursue an American policy there. The fanner ambassador to George Clark - ' - 1100,til ,r .. 1 : ' - - : 4 men and women of this caliber in the United States. Americans with a vast and Intensive knowledge of Chi- - '' . i- 'Hove a Hobby' - . ' , '' ' ' lItiCi4EIGhBORS ' titatocicas 13;-BE- - there must with prolonged residence in that country and other parts of Asia. They were all available for the service of our . - -, I yoodL Prith430. a '- . . , ae, the not : , Tobac- British-Americ- an eo Company and the Standard Gil Company of New York, stayed long and knew much. No man hu accumulated more information and more friends than Major Arthur Bassett. He was one of this group. His career in China might be cited as an example of prolonged residence, and vast knowledge. CHINESE METHODS al ,,,,,-- i 0-,.- .. u. , , lel ' ' Tall" .,.,. e revolution of 1911 which de- . feated the Manchus. There were many such Americans In China. Rodney Gilbert, for instance, who occasionally writes for the "New York Herald Tribune," was regarded by Chinese as one of the best informed men In the country. Upton Close was an adviser to Wu Pel-fGeorge Fitch - was always k. close to Chiang At one time, nearly every Chinese war-lor- d or official of standing had an American adviser, and many of them did excellent service. The businessmen, partlitt- - , larly those connected with , ,s s '.4.-1..!-. ' Pit) Vrirtatiger tent factor in Sun Yatstoil A Fie'''slim'an',Orit'niation ' Doservgs, Wider Use - -- g bl'enf s PI:iedtruaChingoeseuthPat-er- nticessellankde ' -- . son, who was born in whose father, a former in Atlanta, newspaperman Georgia, ture;f1 ndssionary was president ' . of Soochow University. Roy Anderson spoke many dialects of Chi- - ' .... - . . ' ,. "so-calle- d" 'turning point in world history". was ' , ., what Stalin called that step; and "turning ' conference where the Japanese ,peace treaty in world histnry" is what Russian point was signed. Russia lost its propaganda battle has termed it ever since. propaganda Ancl a the Sw.sceeltel.1,.A1,1,4111 ths,0.7: Turning point for where? The East Ger- that raw " because man establishment was to be the fulcrum for of the salt rubbed into it at the North Atlan.; . what? LOoking back over the past few ' ' months, Bunion' spokesmen and activities seem to make clear that the bruited three- satellite mergerwas it I ' The difference between then and now is . - ',,' , that what presently may be expected to ' School days ars here agate for the big emerge as a threat, has up to now been sugar-folks ast well as the little ones. Schoolboys 'coated as a promise to those who might find ; and girls should have dropped kite' their fall such a 'promise Inviting. ' tlass schedules by now, end college men and Particularly they are the "ethnic" Ger. women are Just entering, or preparing to en- - - mans who an now in West Germany as dis- ter. on. their collegiate. programa - an over the placed persona from Poland and the Czecho. state:: slovakian Sudetenland, plus refugees from , : One beim of relatively recent develop.: rest Cvernutny whose princitrent, as used now in most 'colleges, is the pies are yielding to homesickness. , preparatory activity known., as Freshman ' There are seven and a half million in the ' ' The idea is to be sure that the Orientation; ., first of these three groups alone. Altogether ' Incoming freshman does not fumble about on the three refugee groups form the most diffi, the campus for weeks before be knows his cult population-politicproblem in West - 'Imlay around. ' '' t - Representatives of the college or the stu- - , Germany.'":' The bait the Russians have ,alreadz in' dent organizations, er both, take the enter! gun JO offer' these is the possibility of a int freshmen ' in band and show him Abe chance, sometime, to go back home. Most ' ropes. It is Mourned that he is no longer a of the nativo West Germans would be glad' kid, and so has no business con-- 2 to see that happen, if it could be arranged. tinning to think like one. Once he matricu. What chance.- the Russian propagandists lates at college, he should consider himself a sissy be expected now to thunder, can there college man. and act that waY. . ever be of that if West Germany throws in ., : Of course,' the with the NATO and provides Eisenhower , !Inanitits that still follow shortly in some troops for its army? . fraternity chapters go a long way toward No chance at alit will be the rhetorical ' contravening any ideas that are either col. ' answer the Red propagandists will provide. ' .legiate or manly. ' But nothing is perfect' Particularly because thliwill mean that these i,' , Colleges have no monopoly on orientation Vest Gennep troops will be automatically :courses. The Army , has one plxv called arrayed against a strong new member of the "basic training." Many corporations have lISSZPoland, East Germany, and CzeCho- installed something of the sort to save time ' slovskia welded into a coherent strong Soviet t ' ' state. ' ,tand money in Indoctrinsting new employes ' .111 the , IMMOa That is threat on thOlt boleIman with PhosPor things they teed, to , ous eyes and bloody grin. a lit figure for the ' new join. ,,, - , German folklore the Grimm brothers collect-:- a Sometimes the question. aSiseic Is not this good principle worth spreading further? cad; the horror stories that generations of ' - :What 11 we had an orientation course for new American children have known as "fairy- , ' talet." We're eager to see what our diplo. congressmen, or senators? ,f, It is perhaps unfortunate that so much of - macY can do to counteract the Russian Props-th- e hard, serious, devoted work done many of our national legislators gets : ' hi the news by the outbreaks of a blatant few headline-buntin- g for-thoften with . little to say but an g , ' ' el laYkit It v a ' ,Would they be talking better sense now , if they had had some "freshman orientation" If a government, like a spendthrift tiirowe in- - Congress? Or do discretion to the wind and 11 willing tomato they suffer from an eruption of the vocal cords that is incurable? no sacrifice at all in its spending; if it extends , we believe in freedom of speech: But ' its taxing to the limit of the people's power when the freedom overwhelms the speech, to pay and continues to pile up deficits, then isn't it time for a little orientation? , '. . it is on the road to bankruptcy. : - - , ' '' ThE BOLCS-EY- e. See-cho- w, in Moscow's mind. It is easy to read it into the telegram which Stalin sent East Ger- manyst soeldied president, pink, when that satellite area's People's it is even hotter than It otherwise would be because of the outcome of the San Francisco ... 4,, 1, 2 1 -7 -- It, f t , , I, missionaries, who always live close to the people, often far ' Inland away from the westernized ,atmosphere of the threatening . its hottest. - it would be hot In any CaMis heciu" of West Germany's key geographical and in, dustrial position. It la "the binge of Eu- ,,- - ,, ssit, i, A - ' C. - .1,,, I went to China. Some became expert in language and dialect; some ' .;Atill--We- , L 1 LES GO o, vie , - , ' n.,' xlc ril., ce" During the -a surprisingly huge number of Ameticana,public officials, ' tic Council meeting in Ottaws, where it wu ,Today the Western German' government ' ': at Bonn is pondering a formal . the American, French, and mbsioners in charge of the Big ' Russian propaganda move designed to fright. pation them- -inoltatieli an estimated Is furnish to The . the West German people out of accepting en , quartermMion Germans for the artily Can- - Alm Big Three's offer of erg Eisenhower is Putting together for the peace treaty, virtual defense of free Europe. constructi;e part in the ,i That Is the pries the allies ask for giving structure? GerMank a !Icontract7 which will The gist of the opinion of our observers establish them, in effect, as an dependent, the CommuIn iLurope is that the scare-boge- y e nation again. nista have thought up has its roots in Euro- headed Whetheror not the Dr. Adenauer will sgree to the panda upon whether or net think they tan get the' hulk of which-o- nce Germany German population to back it up; better beg to join. - So that makes that part of Germany Or else! which is not. now under Russian control the . The notion of such a merger of the three cockpit in wMch the battle between the Red satellites into one cohesive lind thus Kremlin's Pr'Vsgsnds and ours is pitted at whole does not seem to be new - , . yON. Three European , Red :Bogeyman Contrived to Score ' 'West !,,Germany . May Be Portly Real g. - tem -' , i .. , .:- ''' -- i ',WEDNESDAY, SEPTE,MBER 26, 1951. ' a'the , - - DESERET NEWS SALT, LAKE CITY, UTAH tot the Constitution of the United States with its three departments of ' ' , , . ' - as therein set forth, each one fully, independent ,s0..yernment . - - ,. , - 1i's EDITORIAL PAGE 2 We stand ' , , AIL .1nolln NIP |