Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 2, 1951)
i! ? t U 4 Tb Statesman. Scfls Prooo. Sunday. CergaBbr 2, 1S51 a I . - J K. Bandeasesi UN mt L;KtAl U Y Your Health DC Oi tx:v-i i -m1 iV-; . ! t:c'4' - TiitiT it: t .. tfto tll CiH 1 ft , ' j v . . - tfo fsvor Stoeys Us. fo Fear SKaH Awe . : ' Frees first gtttrtaam. Hare M. K51 I - . , THE STA1ES5IAN PUBLISmNC C03IPANY CHABXJE3 A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher ! r-hUsfced every aaenlng. Easiness efflee IIS S. rwrnemliT, Sales, Oregon. Telerhoee X-24U. 4 the pea logics at awes, Justice Douglas and . Recognition of Red China Justice William O. Douglas eumazea iui inountam-climbihg trip in Asia with a state ment on his return to this country that the: Un ited States ought to recognize communist China. This touched off a barrage of criticism in the senate, with old Sen. Tom Connally, the Texan democrat who beads the senate committee on foreign relations, leading in the sputtering. Old Tons is edgy these days for the veteran faces M probable opposition next year from the present Blake Sore WlieiC Your Money Goes - . tm - r i i : m. i i . , . i I r. i ... governor ox xexa. xic wunaea uu agsuui uu administration program, of aid to -Asian coun- tnea, ana mat was aurmuiea to make political medicine with the tsikx. He pounced on Douglas for statements' and called his proposal "outrageous and ridiculous. -.Republicans naturally poured fuel on the fire, making the most of the fact that Douglas was a new deal appointee. I t What Douglas had said was that recognition would give the fre world avureal political vic tory." .He added: - ' j I ' -'. "Recognition wCl require straightforward and . courageous thinking by all Americans but It is - the- only logical course. r' - t- : Douglas erred in his timing and forgot that his official position gives his statement undue importance. With red China branded as an ag gressor by United States and joining in war to "support North Korea, it is hardly the time or ccasion to talk about giving it China gives no sign of wanting hasn't acknowledged Britain's move of recogni tion vet: and its treatment of bur Consul" Ward showed such ill manners as to renel from recognizing the new regime in China, i Nevertheless, the principle holds that we can not dictate the nature of the government of an other country. Through our history, until Presi dent Wilson's time, our practice was to recog nize the established government of a country, at least as a de facto government, when its author ity was established. Wilson departed from that policy in withholding recognition in changes made during Mexico's revolution. But the de-. - viation from the old policy has not justified it self. We .withheld recognition of Russia for 14 years but finally restored diplomatic relations . and in spite of present friction no strong voice has been raised to cut oil these relations, we withdrew our ambassador from Spain (though we kept a charge d'af fairs at Madrid) but have - sent over a new ambassador. The point is simple: . The established government of a country is the one to be dealt with, whether we approve of it or not, whether it came into power by . way oi We do not believe that our prompt recogni- lion oi ine reopie s nepuDuc or inma wouia have changed the course of eventa much; We think, though, the state department made a mis take in conceding f privately) to the senate that . . no recognition would be granted without : con sultation with the senate. This is definitely; an executive function of government. j C But what about the future? When the Korean business is settled, then if the red government still is the de facto government of China and shows a disposition to conform to. the normal Poison-pen Taft Advised to! Repudiate Br Joseph sad Stewart Also WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 The best proof of the terror Inspired , among certain groups of poliU- 1,1 " i ; mere name of ! Cen. Dwlaht D. . Ksehhawer is the simple fact! that flood of - poison-pen - lit erature about the general is alread ' pouring out. Occasional ly it is useful to anow the way .i the politicalferrtl ' sewers are flow-1 1 inf. and In this case it is partic ularly instructive.' ; i A fair sample of the stuff being circulated is a pamphlet called i the "Williams Intelligence Sur- vey, pubushed In Santa Ana, CaL, by a char acter who bills himself as"news analyst, lectur-, er, former counter- intelligence officer." Wil liams strikes his two keynotes in his first para graphs, describ ing Eisenhower . as a "carouser y f 4 I H i 1 JuMii l All with Zhukov and other high So viet criminaLSj' and "the man most wanted by the Zionists to head the government... From this start, the reader Is planted fate . a -'strange antl semitie nlchtmare dominated by the firnre ef Eisejihwer himself. . the "Zionist candidate. the "red caterer," the ex-President tf C-- lombia Cnivenity. ("As yad . Imw," Williams remarks eWfI- dentUIly to his readers, "Coliini bials In New York C3ty. and vir taally a shetU instltaUen. aa tn eabater f proselrtes and fatter Miioual Jewish reTotnttonaries. According to WiHiamsi Eisen hower is guilty of innumerable misdeeds, ranging from plotting , to become a military dictator, to insinuating a left-wing Polish professor into the Columbia lac- ' ulty. .. "Is Elsenhower Jewish?" Wli- lhum at last asks himself. lie Orearea, aa sccaM'ciaas muter tmder standards f international relations then ! vr should be ready to give it recognition. TTe can not ignore the 400,000,000 people who live .ia China even if they are under communist domi nation. We do sot see that such recognition Would civt the free world any particular politi cal victory, as Justice Douglas predits; but keep ing red China a pariah among; the nations will neither change its government nor strengthen our political and economic position in Asia.) j i A wealthy San Francisco public relations man has been indicted on 64 couSQf'bf mail fraud in connection with his handling of funds raised for such legitimate charity organizations as the Sis ter Kenny Foundation : which . combats . polio, several child adoption agencies, and the Hospi talized Veterans' foundation. . j j Among; Henry von Morpurgo's victims are Governor Warren, Bing Crosby, Kate Smith, two federal judges a. former senator, several banks, three newspapers, several business firms and la bor union locals. He is alleged to have "obtained money by means of false pretenses" from these as well as from unknown numbers of individuals who sent him their dimes and dollars to pay for treatments; for polia patients, or buy radios for veterans in hospitals, or get on the lists at child placement agencies. It is estimated that von Morpurgo diverted at least $94,000 of the funds iui aesm 10 TexaiThome making "fool he collected in the recognition. rations to his own use. recognitions - it . This case ought to make the public more wary of "sending in" contributions willy-nilly. There must be millions of people who hear a stirring appeal for some good cause on the radio and forthwith mail out money without any investi gation into; who will collect and for what pur pose the funds will beiused: - ; I ( The possibility of fraud and f alf easance 4s very slight in an organization such as the Com munity Chest. There, atrict budgeting and ac counting of funds are required. The Chest, more over, goes over the finances of the agencies it as sists and sets its limits on the sums to be raised for them in the community. j Our advice to . generous souls, who want to make their; money work for good in this world is to make! sure the recipients of. the donations are reliable and competent to handle sums of money. Usually one can tell from the names of the sponsors whether the cause is in good hands or not. The local appeal really has the prior claim, after alL if - :- this countrv The yille cutoff, Way commission are negotiating for right-of-vifay on the; route between Boone's ferry and the end of the Hubbard extension. So what? The route is part of the highway plan and acquisi tion of right of way doesn't prove the road is in for immediate construction. Decision on that has yet to be announced by the commission.. s . v ; - " ; : Out of copper, the U. S. mint Is out of pen nies. What really would bring trouble would be if the bureau of. engraving ran out of the paper they print bank notes on. ;" " swers with . a 'eaatlffed aegatlve. Bat hm add steraly that wc -dar m4 farsiva the farehHBrimrnals and morons : af ear own nee, merely because they are led by the nose ,r bribed r diiven," ' - Williams pamphlet Is a fair sample of I the cruder style of this special literature. But per haps there is even more signifi cance In : the style that wears a , thin cloak of normality. (Indicated ,' by avoidance of outspoken antl ; Semi tism), which is best repre- sen ted by the! 1951 "report" of a 'public group known as the Par tisan Republicans I of California. This curious manifesto lists Eis enhower, Gov. Earl Warren of California, and former Gov. Har old Stassen as the "three princi pal prospects which the commun ists and new dealers are trying to impose ; on the republican ticket.- . j ., si It sumes Mr4 FraakHaj D. ' Raeaevelt aal the eemaralst party aa - leading Bsenaewer . backers for the republican nom ination. It rehearses several of . the U'UUams' eharges the Polish professor, .hob--nobblng- with Zhnkev, etc. S It accuses Eisenhower of com plicity in a "Soviet" plot to send American troops! to Europe, which certainly puts Soviet for eign policy in an unfamiliar light and it reaches its low in the statement: j - "Ony God knows how many hundreds of tboasands of men. women and children were tor tured and murdered by the Soviet criminals because, ef (Eisenhow er's) actions. The blood of these Innocent victims justified Eisen hower's df aeration by the . The reason why it is now pru dent to have this look into the sewers is, very bluntly, that the sewers are threatening to well on Into our public life. Neither Wil- t,i i w licans have any real importance - in and of themselves. Yet they are symptoms of something very important indeed. We do not yet hear open anti-Semitism on the t - floor of the United States senate. Yet the attack on i Anna Rosen I berg early this winter stank, of concealed antij- Semi tism. Gen. Eisenhower. is not yet the victim act at eejureas zatd X, 173. names of the charity organi- Canby Herald, watchdog n. the Wilson- utoff, reports that employes of the high- Such Disease' of public attacks like those sketched bove. Yet Sen. Joseph ' W. McCarthy's recent denuncia tion of Gen. George C Marshall ; was an ' experiment in the same art form,! . - WM stfll. the dlsrvstlns; wm-' ease contained la these poises pen pamphlets ef." which bmn smlsfat b enated la aetaaJDy b- ' tinrunx to be accepted as sennd peiitieal enrreney by entwardly f respectable politicians. When' the Partisan Republicans accuse Eisenhower of "never; op posing the treacherous policy of Harry Hopkins, Alger Hiss, Dean Acheson and Reds whose records show they served the Interests of ' Stalin," they speak the language ; of twenty senators. In the past ' fortnight, these reporters have several times been solemnly told about Williams' Polish professor canard, as a sinister incident dug up by senate republicans of the 4 Taft from. wWrh mnlH nnwlv block Eisenhower's nomination. : Probably these senators are faith ful readers of Williams. j - The troth is that tee many ef the more conservative politicians t both parties, bat particnlarly of the republican party, are be-' ginnins; to suffer from a milder form of the saaae vicious disease that shows itself ta this poison pen literature." Among the republicans, -the acknowledged leader of these men is Sen. Robert A. Taft, of Ohio, who is of course utterly free of the disease himself. Yet thus far Taft has accepted : the support . of the infected (both Williams and the Partisan Repub licans are strong Taftites, by the way); and in the ease of Senator McCarthy, he has even seemed to encourage the infection for po litical reasons. No one , has ; at tacked Franklin Delano Roose velt's delay In repudiating com thLtTaft th. than Senator Tan. And the sen- munist support more " bitterly a tor now owes it to his own high character and great talentsin deed, he owes it to the country to'repudiate and rebuke all man ifestations of this spreading and menacing' disease, both under ground and in the senate, in the , sharpest; and most emphatic manner.'' ; : CCopyrlrht. 1951. Kew York Uenld Tnbuoe, Inct . v of i ' 1 -i " - " 1 : i I. f - . i "- i Exhibits, especially industrial, -agricultural and county, seem above average at the state, fair this year. Outstanding is the Til lamook county booth depicting a pioneer cabin with authentic furnishings. Another dandy is the Umatillai ' I I ;.tf,rrjtmT of higher education is manned Salem, A model of a model fairoround at the booth was made by "Warren Carkin of Salem, architecture student at the University of Oregon. The UmatiJia and Walla Walla Indians are tepeeing on the grounds near the horse show pavilion, causing all sorts of ex citement. The Indians, part of the Umatilla county booth, include Chief and Mrs. Clarence Burke and Tom and Annie Johnson . . , Hub Saalf eld, state veterans bonus director, has his usual dis play of gladioli in the flower exhibit building. I - ! , j ' If you Wear a size 25 and pay $1,000 each for your shirts you should visit the western clothing booth of Brick Head rick of Stayton in the horse show pavilion. On display are three western-type u6ol shirts insured for $2,500. Two of them would sell (but Brick doesn't sell them) at $1,000 each and the other (a cheap one) for 1500. The fancy raiments ' are covered with hand embroidery of western, scenes and - sport sterling buttons. When the truck currying the Crosley - company kitchen appliance display tried ta back into the narrow grandstand door the truck, was about three, inches too high. Yes, you guessed it; they let the air out of the truck - tires and squeezed it in . .- Only police action at the fair Saturday came when cops tagged a hilarious woman. She . was carrying a jug in a. paper sack and told everybody that she hadn't been in the fair for 17 years and, by golly . . ; Going over big with nearly everybody are the benches scat tered over the grounds in greater numbers this year. : - ' -: -t I. ',' - : j . I .,. ., - Tom Armstrong, In charge of concessions, says there are less gating places on the grounds this year primarily because 'local groups, looking for some easy gold, ended up with nothing but mustard on their hands last year . . . Rides about the same as last year except there are more pony rides this"year. - Newest thrill is a stomach-turner called The Rockets. Fourteen of the rides on grounds about $130,000 worth were made in Salem. Safety Valve S,"B on side of paper, give nam and nut ddrtM. Poetry Is sm accepted.) Gripe ea Eisenhower , To the Editor:? : SO! Gen Eisenhower is want ed by the "Dems." and renegade Republicans. The desire on the part of both these is not surpris ing in as much as they are pro ponents of expediency and left wingers. What'l Eisenhower ever done? Well, he never has lead an : army for one thing. He has and does go along with Truman-Ach- -MarshaHad hethe 'moral courage of : better generals and admirals than he, he could have saved America By sending Gen. wout? hTveioneurel He'd lujve to buck Roosevelt and sacrifice his career but he pre- ferred to go along, when Ger many surrendered to the U. S A. the reporters wanted to tell ft that way. But it is reliably stated Eisenhower stopped that by tell ing them they must say Germany surrendered to the Soviet. Luck ily, one reporter told the truth and so we real Americans heard it. As president of Columbia U. his "great accomplishment," was to accept a $39,000 subsidy from 1 communistic : Poland. There's plenty more if you care about inquiring such: as the fact that ; the left wingers control the Democratic party and they say they will do the same if they county exhibit complete with Indians, products and a plug for the Pendleton roundup! Linn county has a -mechanical sawmill setup. Marion county-booth has a good display of produce. One 0 oldest exhibitors at the fair is Harry , Hobson, the archery and "sports equipment man. Harry says he first open ed a fair boot? in 19 18 and has had one each year since. Says he toon a blue ribbon for his first booth . . . Booth of the board by Travis Cross, formerly of , get Eisenhower in. If this is the kind of a man those calling them-' selves "Americans" want, isn't it a cinch they don't care about their country? Their only interest is what they can get from it. " Leon V. Almirall :i 1181 Bellaire St. - Denver, Colo.- v The honor system Is the honesty system. -There can be no compro mise with dishonesty. That is the real issue today at Washington throughout the whole world. ;David Lawrence JAPANESE IS FRISCO , . ; SAN FRANCISCO, Sept Twenty-eight members and aides f the Japanese diet arrived today to act as observers in the Japan peace treaty conference next week. Overhead Deer Co. Of tho WiHaaaetto Valley SALES SERVICE E7STALLATION For Fret Esfinaiei Fhone Day or I Haht tsAa suits Soiexn - Albany - Crrallia lScJ.2nnvi2e a ss " r a CRT i (Continued ' from pale: one) drinking places like that (Should we change the old song to "Where is my wand' ring girl tonight?") But the problem still remains the one of helping adolescents cress the bridge to maturity without succumbing to the temptations of the mature. This' requires training in self-control; for nei ther: parent nor policeman can accompany Juveniles in all their goings in as loose a society as we have in America. Parents tell children: "You can't do this," and "You mustn't do that" How much; time do they spend helping children to develop their own disciplines, so they can' charts a safeif inde pendent course?; I Schools will be starting soon, and youngsters will be stepping ahead another notch from where they! were a year ago. One year older, one year advanced in school, one year forward in the business of growing up. New as sociations will Toe formed, old ones revived or modified." Can the parent -help the child to be increasingly self-reliant in these associations, ready to follow one's own! discreet pattern of conduct rather than' be pliable and ac cept lower standards?! Starting today in The States man and running for a few days Is an interesting series on bow San Francisco is trying to care for Its juvenile delinquents. At best it is a difficult and costly ens UUIUL ouo in oar . Silver Shop Divided,: Payments At No t Extra Cost TlrSaae Is Se Imiaat : la Treatbtr A Bead laivy In dealinv mrttS hMrl in4nr(M so prevalent in these days jef antomobila accidents, it Is of great importance that the pa tient be earefuUy examined at once mxtd observed for a period t weeks thereafter. When- such a case la first brought to the hospital, the phy sician must Immediately deter mine whether or not the patient Is ta shock, a condition which can be remedied by the giving of salt solution into a vein. Barely, whole blood or plasma may be required. : i - . . ; k 1 Another prime consideration is the maintenance of idequate breathing. If there is some ob struction to the breathing, tor if ' jthen is unconsciousness, a tra- Guidepost i by W. G. Racers THE BIG v SHOW: SOME EX PERIENCES OF A FRENCH FIGHTER PILOT IN THE RAJ. - by Pierre Oosiermann, trans . la ted by- Oliver Berthoud i (Random House; S3) The fictional hero of World War I was, of .course, the fighter pilot; like Guynemer, Richthofen and other aces, he got on the front pages, and from there it was a; short flight to the novel, and a ; happy landing there. In this last war, it was the bomber ' crew, and the process was very much the same: Monster raids, said the papers, on German and Japanese sites, and then we read about the teams of fliers who didnt 'Come back in books like Falstein'a "Face of a Hero," which was the best of them. Now1 we have the account of a World; War H fighter pilot He couldn't write letters and have them delivered to hi parents in Brazzaville and so he kept a log of his; adventures and this, he says, is it and a very frank, and stirring document it is. He Jomed the RjV-F. in 1942. The hook tells 'of his experiences at the controls of a Spitfire and a Tempest and as the leader of fighter groups. It is in effect the story of a man for whom the war ended not a minute, too soon. Day after day there came hair-breadth escapes, to shells that bounced off his wings instead of exploding, the. enemyl fighter into which he came within a yard of crashing, and the steadily growing loss of -friends who dived into hard earth at 400 miles an hour, or disintegrated in an explosion, or, sailed out of a; fight wreathed in flames, The ifighter pilot is fearfully on his own... It's rue he can go back to a warm billet but once in the air it's up to him to decide what to do with his four tons of Spitfire, seven tons of Tempest speeds, that may rattle the wings right off. He dares impenetrable curtains of flak, he tangles with whatever sails into his ; range whether it's a single plane or a dozen, j - '. 'With Clostermann, you know what it is to be afraid, what can happen to a man's spirit if he gets no respite from the dreadful dangers. But also, you feel here wonderfully the incomparable excitement of air combat which remains primarily the fighting branch; for the lone wolf, doughty descendant of. the old-time knlghtl: ; I - . , . -. : . task. How much, better to guide youth j so they do not drop through holes in the bridge to maturity, so they don't, call for a beer when they have a quarter to spend. It is a matter of edu cation, of moral education; and it calls; for the best that a parent has in; understanding and firm ness and sympathy. : - Literary Priced nnder v" i -..: ; . .i " It Gjsts No More to Say It's Slate nod Uberry cheotomy (the making of j aa opening in the trachea, the tube leading from the throat to the tubes of the lungs) may be per formed. , . . The patient should be placed on his stomach with his head rarned to one side. This allows the secretions from the throat to drain out. . . ; ' i . In coma or sudden unconscious nesa. the patient shouM be care fully watched, for this nsutUy indicates the presence of brain hemorrhage in about ZS per tent of the cases. In this event, tho skull may be opened by the brain surgeon, the site of the, possible hemorrhage sought and , the bleeding checked. H jThe pupils should be carefully watched, since a difference in the size of the two pupils may also . mean, the presence of hemor rhage. - ' i A: , : -z : 'V L V A puncture of the spinal canal Is advisable in every case of head injury, to establish whether or not any bleeding into the brain has taken place. This should; be done cautiously, for it may prove injurious if too much fluid is re moved. Skull X-rays should i be taken in all cases of head Injury ta make sure no fracture 1s pres ent Any drug that depresses the individual, such as a narcotic, should, be avoided. , In all cases of head injury, careful vigilance is the important , rule to be followed.! f , QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Mrs. J. J What causes numbA ness of the arm and shoulder wittv needle-like sensations between the shoulder blades? 1 -, Answer: Numbness of the arm ' and shoulder may be due to a number of different conditions. - Circulatory disorders, disturb ances of the muscles, joints, ; or, nervous system may be responsi ble. It is possible that some dis turbance of the upper part of the . spine may be a factor. You are in need of a thorough study by your physician, f tr Copyrlxht last Kinf Faatima 1 I " ' " ' X- REMT A -j KIgiv Boyd PORTABLE FOX AS LfTTLE AS !i CO Ft . :r MONTH ! : a months wi3 apply to pu chase balance 1 year to pay NO trTCtST-- Nb CARX1T INO.CHAgCL . ?! ,223 NORTH HIGH ST. Phens 1-1053 ' sale- i, ohigoii 1 1 Jed. Tax Included from . .Kal 4-2233