Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1948)
NEWS-REVIEW, ROSEBURS. OREGON THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1948 SECTION 2 Page ONE Expose of Communism by Former Party Member Reveals Purpose Of Total Erasure of Capitalism . . By RELMAN MORIN AP Foreign Affairs Anavst A man who once "wat the most devoted Communist In the United States" has written a book about Communism. It may poison your dreams, If It does not prevent you from sleeping entirely. Nevertheless, it Is an Important book because of the man who wrote It, and because, in many respects, it is like a key to a secret cipher. It will help you to decode the strange, unpre dictable, and often contradictory tactics of the Communists. The book is called "The Whole of Their Lives." I Charles Scrlb ner's Sons.) The author is Ben jamin Gitlow. Gitlow was the head of the American Communist party in 1929. He made three trips to the Soviet Union on official business of the party. He knew Josef Stalin personally. He rose to this eminence because, for many years, l.'j was a whole-souled be liever in the movement and more important, because he had char acter and brains. For the same reason, he says, he no longer is a Communist. Gitlow disagreed with and de fied Stalin on a matter of prin ciple (he is one of the few men who lived to write the story of it ) and he says that caused him to break with the entire movement. Would Destroy Capitalim Therefore he would appear to be what a newspaper reporter calls "a reliable source" on the question of communism. Let's see what he has to say about it. Question 1 Do you doubt that American Communists and their Fellow Travelers get direct or ders from Moscow? On page 204. describing the birth of the Ameri can Communist party in 1919, Git low says, "Stalin tuuk over the American Communist party lock, stock and barrel, in the middle of May, 1929, by a series of decrees promulgated by him and read by Molotov." On page 54 Gitlow writes, "In 1919 the American Communist party became a branch office of Moscow. Moscow made the decisions governing the actions of the American commu nists." Question 2 Do you wonder sometimes, in the light of Soviet pronouncements, whether the American system and the Russian system can get along together? Gitlow says, "From the days of Lenin to the supreme ruler, Stalin, survival of Soviet power and Communism is held impos sible unless capitalism with its political and social structure is destroyed. It explains why the theory of world revolution has never been abandoned and why the Soviet government at great expense and effort maintains and supports communist parties in other countries." Policy Never Stable Question 3 Does it puzzle you to see the agreements made at Yalta. Tehran and Potsdam so bandly disavowed by the Soviets today? Gitlow has many state ments on Communist integrity. Here are two of them! "Commu nist policy is never simple. It is always complex and paradoxical. A momentary policy is always tied up with a long-range basic policy. This accounts for the many twists in the party line." And again he says, Communist lead ers may with Impunity break one day the solemn pledge they made the day before. Question 4 Why are the labor unions so important to the Com munists? Gitlow writes, para phrasing Stalin himself, "with out support in the unions the Communist party cannot make a revolution. Getting control of the unions is, therefore the number one task of the party. By getting control of unions, the Commu nists mean getting control of those unions In the decisive, the basic industries of the land, the industries upon which the econo mic life of the country depends." You may have wondered too, how the Communists are able to capture young people, boys and girls in their teens, and bend them to the will of the party. The stories that explain it are numer ous in this book. They make shocking reading. These are all the statements of a man who helped to organize the Communists In America, who knows the dialectic of the party, used its tactics, and was an inti mate of its orthodox leaders, as well as having been one himself. They are the words of a man who was on the "Inside." And they are worth reading in the attempt to understand the problem that confronts us all. Watersheds, Ads, Tax Base Topics At Toastmasters Talks ranging from advertis ing, water conservation, and story telling to political Issues were featured on the program of the weekly Toastmasters Club meeting Tuesday night in the Umpqua Hotel. Byron Powell pre sided as toastmaster, Jim Turk, News-Review adver tising manager, pointed out that competition is the lifeblood of America and that advertising Is the life blood of business. Were it not for mass production, the re sult of competition and mechani zation, we would be paying $1200 instead of $200 for a refrigerator, and $50,000 instead of $2,000 for an automobile, he declared. Advertising, in effect, he stated, is the efficient projection of Ideas. In its simplest form advertising is done by everyone, in their manner of dress, their general ap pearance and their actions. Through business advertising thousands of unknown customers who could not otherwise be con tacted are reached. He expressed the hope that when people read advertisements' they would stop to consider its importance in holding prices as low as possible. Water's Importance Cited "Know your Watershed." was Bill Benecke's topic, in which he emphasized the importance of the conservation of water resources as one of the major steps In pre servation of our timber and pro ductivity of the soil. Water actually is of more value to us than timber, he said. Our pure streams provide us with water for normal use, for our lawns and flowers, for irrigation, for hydroelectric power, and last with our fishing and sporting ac tivities, he stated. Without water we cannot have our forests. The rapid development of our timber resources has to some ex tent upset the balance of nature, and what we do today in develop ing our water resources will have much to do with our future, he said. Conservation is a relatively new word. One answer to conser vation, he listed, is regulation, but If we don't want regulation we must take definite measures to watch the type of cutting of our timber, provide roadside a no streamslde strips to prevent rapid runoffs, and protect our soil from erosion. Water comes from the land. We must protect our water and water resources. It is not necessary tn act fast, but rather wisely and In an orderly manner. He advocated we support good watershed management. Phil Harth, third speaker, em phasized the Importance for a public speaker to have a good story at the tip of his tongue whenever called upon for re marks at a meeting. For his talk he told several Interesting stories. New Tax Base Favored Stressing the need for revision of the six percent tax limitation law to meet Inflation and popula tion growths. Leroy Inman urged adoption of the constitutional amendment which would permit counties, municipalities and tax ing districts to Increase their tax base. Inman defined the proposed law, up for vote In the Nov. 2 election, which would permit es tablishing a new tax base after the legal Voters have authorized a tax levy In excess of the six per cent limitation for two successive years. The new base would limit the base -to the average of the total amounts levied In the year of such election and the two years Immediately preceedlng it. The six percent law, he said, was origi nally adopted to prevent poorly managed administrations from establishing budgets in excess of the abilities of the taxpayer to pav, Dut does not taxe into con sideration population growths and Inflation, and as a result extra WHY BE SICK? Headaches, sleepless nights and nervousness are usually caused by nerve Interference. Call 273 for An Appointment DR. H. B. SCOFIELD Polmer Chiropractor Neurocalo-meter ond X-Ray New office location . , . 410 mile north of County Shops. Now location but the same office telephone 273. Arrangements have been made to twmor hatpltal ellae ene atete acvtdant caiea. ACCUSED Evangelos Veivanas (left), (till at large, and Gregory Stalttopoulos (right), under arrest for the past two months in Salonika, are charged by the Creek government with complicity in the slaying of Ceorge Polk, Columbia Broadcasting System correspondent. Staktopoulot, a Communist newspaper man, is held with his mother, Anna. Actual shooting was done, according to the government, by a top Communist, Adam Mou ides. I AP Wirephoto via radio from Rome) monies must be voted in most cities or districts annually. Glen Clute, table topics chair man, had as his topic early recol lections of childish pranks and re sulting punishment. Jim Oakley was general critic, and individual critics were David Daniels. Jerry Sheldon, Bob Harvey and Tom Coates. Broadcast Row Leads to Slaying RAVENNA, O., Oct. 21 UP) A farmer who prefers Come dian Jack Benny to a give-away prize program on the radio shot and killed his tenant. Sheriff George Shields reported today. In fact, said Shields, it was an argument over those programs that led J. A. McDonald, a 76-year-old widower, to shoot Jack son W. Bailey, 68. yesterday. This was Shields version: Last Oct. 10, McDonald wanted to tune in . the Benny show. Bailey and his wife preferred a give-away program. The Baileys won the argument but a quarrel followed. The bad feeling continued. Then yesterday the radio pro gram incident came up again and McDonald got his shotgun. The Baileys went to a room where thev kept a rifle but did not shoot It For his part, McDonald Insists the shooting was accidental. Shields' office said a charge will be filed against him. 250-Lb. Lady Kills Sweetie in Fight CHICAGO, Oct. 21 UP) James Noble, 35-year-old bus boy, was slain Tuesday night and po lice said his 250-pound blonde sweetheart told them she shot him as he struggled with a rival for her affections. Held without formal charge pending an inquest is Anna Ter ry, 23. Police Sgt. Charles Martin said she had been living with Noble in a South Side apartment where he was killed. . Martin said Miss Terry gave this version of the shooting: Noble returned home and found her with Melvin Reener, 28, of suburban Morton Grove, a former suitor. After an exchange of words. Noble fired one pistol shot a Reener but missed. During a struggle Noble dropped the weapon. Miss Terry said she grabbed the gun and shot Noble in the back, then struck him on the head with the gun butt as he sank to the floor. Harry C. Clair, Early Northwest Timberman, Dies PORTLAND. Oct. 21. UP Harry Cornelius Clair. 83. pioneer timberman who followed the west ward aprend of the Indnatrv from Buffalo, N. Y., through Michigan to tne racillc Northwest, died un expectedly Tuesday. A native of Moo res Hill, near Towanda, Pa., he started logging at Buffalo while in his teens. later was at Saginaw, Mich., and came here In 1903. He was a stockholder In the Weyerhaeuser Timber Company, naa oeen associated with a num ber of Pacific Northwest firms and was a former president of the Pacific Logging Congress. He re tired from ?tive work In 1930 but had inspected some of his timber holdings near Corvallis only yesterday. his first active work in the industry here was as a partner in the Washington Oregon Lum ber Compan". Later he joined the executive staff of the Twin Falls Logfrmg Companv. later known as the Clark County Lumber Company. Clair was Instrumental In or- fanizing the Columbia River Log caline and Grading Bureau and the Columbia River Loggers Asso ciation. Survivors Include a son and a daughter at Portland and a daughter Helen I Clair at Olympia. Oregon's Higher" Schools Crowded With Students EUGENE, Ore.. Oct. 21. tm Oregon's six state institutions of higher learning have 17.259 tu dents crowding the classrooms and the chancellor sees little chance for a decline In the fu ture. The number of war veterans In the colleges dropped off 1.095 from last year. Chancellor Paul C. Packer reported today, but total enrollment is off only 114. "We need no clearer indication than this that the numbers which have overcrowded our institutions of higher learning for the past three years will continue well In to the future," Packer said. "It Is obvious that Oregon s swollen population and the Increasinz numbers of high school students who continue on into university and college work are taking up the slack as the veterans com plete their education. In last year's record-breaking total of 17.373 students there were 9347 veterans. This year M HOT WATER HEATER J fca - .' fully Automoffc jS 10-year replacement Terms to suit your budget. Frost, Shortage Of Pickers Threaten Rich Apple Crop OMAK. Oct. 20. V-Omak business men were warned yester day that lour day or picking stand between a $1,000,000 Okano gan Valley apple harvest and dis aster for many growers. A shortage of pickers and ar rival of frost during the late har vest are blamed for the emergen cy. Growers expressed fear that the cold nights would start large scale dropping of the Xr lit. Growers also complained that the open deer season also has lur ed away some pickers. Ralph Forrey, a warehouseman on the Growers' Committee, flew to Seattle to confer with union officials on the possibility of get ting striking maritime workers to Tend a hand. Prices for picking have risen from the early season 12 cents a box to a record 14-to20-cent range. Frank Hendrick. a Grow ers' Committee inexperienced flicker can make $15 a day. Hous ng and meals are provided at many orchards. An Omak Committee met to consider rloi'.ng of business hous es. Omak and Okanogan high schools were closed. Two Omak warehouses closed yesterday in an unprecedented move to send their employes Into the orchards to pick. They planned to pick and pack on alternate days. See The Display At W. M. SANDALL CO. there are onlv 8252, a decrease of 11.8 per cent. The total enroll ment drop is .7 of one per cent, however. The state's facilities were de signed for fewer than 11,000 stu dents, Packer said, and although registration next year may show another slight decline there is no indication tnat it win approacn the figure for which the institu tions were designed. . "Our greatest need now," he said. "Is to brine our faculties and physical plants up to the levels necessary to meet the needs of the present enrollment and to prepare for an even great er registration which will des cend upon us about 1955 and reach a peak about 1960." This year's registration at the various schools compared with last year s: Oregon state College at Corvallis, 7418, down 63; Uni versity of Oregon at Eugene and the Medical and Dental Schools at Portland, 6800, up 257; Oregon college or education at Mon mouth, 484, up 20; Eastern Ore gon College of Education at La Grande, 600, down 126; Southern Oregon College of Education at Ashland, 651, up 50: Vanport Ex tension Center at Portland, 1207, down 248. In general, Packer said, enroll ment Is concentrated more heav ily in upper division classes. ir r-. . rr fif. -re rt. i MARSHALL INSPECTS GUARD Secretary of State George C. Marshall (center foreground) inspects an honor-guard of Creece'i famous Evionei in front of the Parliament Building In Athens. At left is U. S. Ambassador Henry F. Grsdy and at right is the Evxone company commander. While Marshall was making his check ot U. J. aid to Greece, new,y-tramod break commandos went Into action and captured two mountains in the Communist' "Free Greece" area. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Rome) NEW JET BOMBER The second tix-iet Martin XB-48 took to the air for its maiden flight from the Glen L. Martin airport in Baltimore, Md. It will undergo tests at the Naval Air Station at Patuxent. Md. The first six-jet bomber, built last year, is undergoing the second phase of exhaustive tests at Wright-Patterson Field. The plane has a speed of more than 480 miles an hour and carries bomb load exceeding 10 tons. (AP Wirephoto) Would-Be Toiler Asks Court To End Dock Strike PORTLAND. Oct. 20. (,P A lumber mill worker who wants to go back to work has filed a citi zen's suit asking the Federal Court here to order West Coast Shipping to resume. , Arnold L. Couty, Coos Bay, charged both the Waterfront Em ployers Association and the CIO Longshoremen unjustly obstruct ed loading and unloading of ships by the strike. Couty said he was one of 1.500 Coos Bay citizens thrown out of work as a result of the maritime dispute. He said he was filing the suit without legal assistance, but explained he would welcome the Intervention of any neutral group as a participant In his com-Dlalnt. "I'm not filing this suit against I Individuals or officers, biV against the organizations. I'm doing It in the interests ot all the people of the Pacific Coast," he said. Couty explained he filed under Articles One, Nine and Ten of the BlU of Rights amendment to the constitution. He did not elaborate on what his arguments will be if the court heara the caae. The Bill ot Rights articles cited provides for redress ot grievances, right of the people to exercise) authority not delegated to the government and- exercise ot power reserved to the people. 1 in if ii ififfliu O JVsuJi Goes All Thm Way! See Ae world's tint car with Cockpit Control, tim VnUcopo . . . Supor-Louttgo Interiors, Twin Bods . . . Vnitisod BodyFrmmo ... antf more than 25 milos a gallon at average highway speed! Now sec America's most daring auto mobile! The new Nash, sleek as a silver bullet ... nearly 1 7 feet long . . . wider . . . only shoulder high I Far more space inside . . . safety-engineered! Big curved, one-piece wind shield. Twin Beds for day-time naps, or luxurious comfort at night! Here ii amazing new performance and economy with Uniflo-Jet Carbu ration ... a new ride with 4-wheel coil springs ... the hidden magic of Nash Conditioned Air . . . and the extra safety of a one-piece Girder-built Uni tized body and frame. Throw away all your ideas about motoring. See the Nash Airflyte for '49 it's the newest car in the world! Nee Mopfit 0HnMoa f4eo tCofoatnlot etosttoM OotVeeV TWO GBEAT 8ERIC8I Th leaariu Airflylm eoa In tht Nath "600" and A. Nath Ambafador. 01 ear sin en th Uttt COOPER MOTOR Co. 321 W. Oak Street. Roseburg i Highway 99 No. Phone 1117-R