I 4 The Newt-Review, Roteburg, Ore. Wed., Nov. 21, 1951 Thanksgiving Dinner Guests in Every Home Vital Statistics Mtrrltgt Lictnstt LA MAR-CANNON Billy Rich ard La Mar and Carol Ann Can non, both Oakland. KING-LEWIS Herman Eugene King and Veryl Lee Lewis, both of Sutherlin. KEESAMAN - AUGUSTSON Clifford H. Keesaman and Mar garet Louise Augustion, both Cot tage Grove. THOMPSON - STOPPLE WORTH Thomas John Thompson and Mamie Margurite Stoppleworth, both of Woodworth. N. D. GIBJrN-HIATT -Roy Lee Gib son and Mary Evelyn Hiatt, both of Myrtle Creek. rubliihtd Dolly ict Sunday by tht Newi-Raview Company, Inc. UtUDf He1 elan nklltr Mi? 1, lM. at tta t ftb(( Orogoa, naiti ot f March t. 1111 CHARLES V. STANTON EDWIN L. KNAPP Editor Mtnoatr Mambar of tht Aisociottd Prtti, Ortfon Ntwanapt' Publlikon Association, tht Audit Burtou ot Cifculttiont ln a nitr-HOLMDAT CO. INC. .Kit., la Naw talk. Ckleaia. a rraaclna. La, Aaialaa. Ilia, rarllaat, alarat a. aa.and CI... Mallar Ma, 7. lilt, al Ih. Part Olllaa U Kaaabarc. Orafaa. Uaaar Aal af Marco t, IS71. fUBSCMFTION ATr-la Orafaa Br Mall rat Saar, SIS.Mi ala ajaalaa. II.Ml laraa aanlai. tt la. Br Nw,-Balr Carrlar Par (in, llt.aa lla aa aaaaal. Ian (ban aaa raar. tar naatb. ll.Ot. OataIJa Oracaa By Mall rat Taar. II1.0( ala ataalba. IS.MitlBraa aiaatba. M at. ( FURNITURE CD. ) SLEEPING CONSCIENCE By CHARLES V. STANTON Tomorrow is our national day of Thanksgiving:. Wliat have we to be thankful for? In these troubled days with active warfare in the Far East, a cold war throughout the rest of the world, political scandals at home, and an agitated and confused people, we might question whether we have reason for thankfulness. Some people will be thankful for what they describe as prosperity. We have national income of unprecedented proportion. We have high living standards. We have little unemplovment. On the surface we should be able to give thanks for national prosperity. Yet we know, if we will but stop and think, that it is a false prosperity a prosperity which exists only because we are living beyond our means, borrowing money against the future that we may spend it freely and extravagantly now. Normally we could give thanks for our national leader ship. But it is questionable today whether such thanks are warranted, when we have a leadership fattening on graft and corruption, associating with crooks and gamblers, us inir nolitical nowers for nrivate ends. Then, too, we have sua picion that certain elements are trafficking with subversive forces aiming at the.destruction of the principles upon which our government is founded. Thankful For Power To Change ( If it is a dark and dreary picture we paint on this eve of Thanksgiving, it is only to bring into proper focus the one factor for which the American people should be extremely thankful. That is the fact that we still retain the power to brine about change to direct our own destiny. JIanv Tieonle throughout the world today live in fear. Day and night their ears are attuned to the dread footsteps which herald approach of the secret police. Jt is not neces sary that such people commit an offense against the state. They may be deprived Of liberty or of life itself at the whim of political leaders, -who may need a horrible example to intensify the fear in which the party is held by the masses. No man can claim rights or privileges.' He lives only so long as his political dictators permit. He has no recourse to justice, for justice does not exist in a police state. So he is in constant fear of torture and death. We can be thankful that, as Americans, we still have left certain freedoms denied to many millions of other peo ples throughout today's troubled world. We also have it within our power to weed out the graft and corruption within our government, to change our lead ership and to alter our policies. By the simple stroke of a pencil we can achieve a revolution which in many other countries could be produced only by bloody warfare. Can Be Thankful For Ideals We can be thankful that clean government still is an ideal In this great country of ours; that some people, even though they may prove to be in the minority, cling to the traditions upon which our nation was founded. We can be thankful that there are millions who will continue to cry out for political honesty, for constitutional government. These voices may be drowned In that clamor for special privilege and selfish personal gain, but they cannot be stilled so long as we avoid the police state. We can be thankful that we still champion the cause of freedom. That despite ur national sins, we still cling to the Christian doctrine of the dignity of man, and that we are willing to risk our fortunes and our lives that we may carry the t"rch of liberty to oppressed people throughout the world. , Wj decry our loss of moral fiber. We are troubled by evils confronting us at home and abroad. But we can give thanks to Almighty God that we still are a people dedicated to the cause of humanity and that we have within our-hands the power to change from sinfulness to righteousness, if, and when, our national conscience is awakened. TWO DRUNKS FINED Fines of $50 each were levied in district court against two persons who pleaded guilty Monday to drunk charges, according to Jud'je A. J. Geddes. They are Robert Lee Roy, 38, Drain, and Wilbur White, 20, Sutherlin. Fulton ",aV A 1 Lewis Jr. ft In The Day's News By FRANK JENKINS out of this one. I've got i copy of the Time memorandum, also, and just for the record I'll keep tabs on what Linen does about pub lishing it in conjunction with what McCarthy has to say. I didn't pil fer it from Time's hies. It wouldn t be worth the effort, if Time's files are as incomplete as indicated. McCarthy didn't pilfer the mem orandum, either, and that is what makes Luce and Linen act like quacks. Somebody on Time's own staff dredged the memorandum out of the files and sent it to the senator. The slaffman couldn't stomach Time's story with the references to Duran. Luce and Linen know it but not who did it. It may happen again, and that is what makes them nervous. Hear Fulton Lewis Daily On KRNR, 4:00 PM. And 9:15 P. M. (Continued from Page 1) answer our charge that they butchered thousands of our prison ers of war with a counter-charge that we butchered STILL MORE THOUSANDS of their prisoners of war tne result wiu be to cause millions of people throughout the World to UlSBKLHSVH BUTH STO. K1ES. That's about the long and the short of Mt. Such Is propaganda and propaganda is an inseparable part of modern war. Is that true only ot modern war? Of course not. Propaganda has always been a part of war. The basic purpose of propaganda is trickery, and it has always been known that if you can trick your enemy you will have him at a dis advantage. That was the purpose of the Greeks when they left the wooden horse outside the walls of Troy. Propaganda, If you can get it believed, is useful in gaining al lies for yourself and in preventing your enemy from gaining allies, it always has been used in war and it always will be. The point is that in earlier cen turies communications were slow and inefficient, It took a long time for news (true or false) to travel by word of mouth. Modern com munications arc fantastically swift and well organized. Within a mat ter of minutes. statements (whether truth or lies) can travel ALL OVER THE EARTH. That is why propaganda is in creasingly useful in war. lous speed and efficiency of mod ern communications makes propa ganda THEORETICALLY more useful now than ever before. Notice, please, the word "t h e- i y t ,n,nk P"haP' propa ganda may be defeating itself here in our country, and in other en lightened and sophisticated coun- . i-rraonauy, im finding it practically impossible to believe iii amicmeni mat has ANY po litical implications. I just put it down instinctlvr.lv . nrn....j. and let it go in one ear and out of uie oincr. I imagine there are manv, many people who feel as I do about it. That brings up another point. I think it is probably true that propaganda Is effective or ineffee. live according to the Irgnorance or re sopnisucanon ot those to whom it is addressed. If that is true, propaganda is more useful to the reds than to Us, for in the main their propaganda is addressed to the ignorant, the unsophisticated and the prejudiced. In our case, I'm prettv sure, plain, ruggedly simple TRl'TH is our best weapon in the war of words. Propaganda, unfortunately, I s also one of the mainstays ot poli tics. If you can put out a discred itable story about your political opponent and get it believed you have him where the hair Is short. In politics, as in war, the fabu-l Pfc. John Bishop Home On 15-Day Furlough Pfc John Bishop Is home on a 15 day furlmnh before reporting run i.awion, wash., for over seas assignment. Bishop was graduated Oct. 20 from the teletype and telephone equipment repair school at Kort Monmouth, N. J. He is among the first nine to be graduated in this course in the I', s. He traveled from New York to San Francisco, and then took South west airlines, to Kosvburg. WASHINGTON In his reply to Senator Joseph R. McCarthy, Henry Luce, the owner of Time magazine, says both Time and the senator must try harder than ever be fore to put "principles of fairness into practice." Luce can say that again. Since March of 1950, Time has used more than three-score snide and deriding adjectives in describing the senator s fight against commu nism in the government. There are probably more, but I only Kept score anyway just to give you a sample of Time's "fairness." Here are some of them: Rash-talking Joseph R. McCar thy:, pugnacious Senator Joe Mc Carthy; loud-mouthed; wretched burlesque: scarencad puDiicity; desperate gambler; a fool or a knave; weasel-worded statement; vituperative smear; half truths; wild charges." As I say, these are only a few of the words used by Time to describe the senator's efforts. In another paragraph of his letter to McCarthy, Luce said: "You conclude your letter by a reference to those principles of fairness which must be the basis of a free America. You feel Time has not lived u to those principles in its treatment of you. Time feels you haven't lived up to those prin ciples in your campaign against communism." It may be nolcd here that in in-fighling with the Reds in Wash ington and elsewhere there is little time or opportunity for sparring in lace cuffs. The Communists use every dirty trick in the book, with such rapidity and such agility that it's almost impossible to keep up with them. Yet Time, instead of saving its nasty adjectives for the Communists, uses them all up on McCarthy. Luce wrote that Time, after ex amining the available evidence in the case of Gustavo Duran, came to the conclusion that there was not sufficient documentation to support the charge that Duran was a Communist agent. juayue so, but Time did not say so. It staled flatly that "Duran was clearly anti-Communist." There is a dif ference. If in Time's opinion Mc Carthy's evidence is insufficient to prove Duran's affiliations with Reds, then Time could have said so. Time said, instead, that Duran has been a fighter against com munism. There is no visible evi dence of this fact. If Time has it, let's see it. We've seen McCar thy's to the contrary, and there is considerable of It. Apparently on the theory that Luce is loo important to get in a bare knuckled brawl with the Wisconsin senator, Time fired a double-barrelled reply to McCar thy, having the dirty work up to James A. Linen, publisher of Time. Linen accused McCarthy of pil fering Time's files to secure the Time memorandum that has re proved the slanted fiction that goes under the name ot Luce jour nalism. McCarthy has promised to make public the Time memorandum that calls Duran everything but "clearly anti-Communist." Luicn wired the senator: ! "You say you have such files i and intend to publish them. My only answer to your threat, then, ; is to say that if that is your in-! tenlion, I cannot prevent you from : carrying it out. Because I am sure you will not quote the files in their entirety, I reserve only the pnve-i lege of carrying on the quotations as you make them to restore them to their proper context and mean ing." Let's mak a three-way stretch Col. Lindbergh Gathered Data On Luftwaffe PARIS bTI Col. Charles A. Lindbergh visited Reichmarshal Hermann Goering in 1935 at the request of the United States gov rnment to get information about the expanding Luftwaffe, a forth coming book on Goering says. The book, "Marshal Without Glory," will be published in Lon don on Dec. 6. It was written by Ewan Butler and Gordon Young, British journalists who worked in Berlin in the pre-war years, "American service attaches in Berlin, able and conscientious as they were, could not furnish the full picture of the rise of the Luft- walfe which Washington, urgently required," the book says. "Perhaps, the War department thought, "a private visit to the creator of the German air force by America's most distinguished airman would provide the informa tion which normal diplomatic channels seemed unable to elicit. "This hope proved to be fully justified. Colonel Lindbergh re turned to Washington with an ex tremely full report of the Luft waffe for which he was rewarded by the enthusiastic thanks of the American air staff. He has yet to receive the thanks of the rest of his countrymen, or credit for the silence which he maintained during the subsequent years. PRISON TERM METED Earl Arthur Batchelor, 54, En. cinitas, Calif., has been sentenced V Now- R tvttw 9 rial not oaar, 1 I dadvorod by I 1 4:tS.mpona I 2-74JI botwtM fell aval; p.. I I to two years In the state penitenti ary after jury conviction on a for nication charge. The sentence was passed by Circuit Judge Carl E. Wimberly. PARENTAGE AT ISSUE Eugene Perotti, 23, Eureka, Calif., was arrested by MyrUe Creek police to face Douglas county parentage proceedings, the sheriff's office reported. District Judge A. J. Geddes fixed bail at $1,000 and Perotti was given time to secure legal advice. Are your possessions proper ly protected by adequate in luraneo present cost con tiderod? 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