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S, Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00: 6 Mos., $6.00; Year. $12. 4 Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, January 24, 1950 Mr. Truman's "Red Herring" A jury in the federal district court in New York City, after listening to evidence for a month, has found Alger Hiss, one of a gallery of bright young left wing "liberals" that influenced the New Deal, guilty of perjury in denying the espionage stories of Whittaker Chambers that named him as one of the high placed Soviet spies in the American government. It stamps him a traitor to his country in its critical hours. Though Hiss was ultimately prosecuted vigorously, and successfully under the Truman administration, the presi dent himself belittled the charges repeatedly. Two days after Chambers told the house un-American committee that Hiss had stolen state department secrets for him, and confessed that he himself had been a communist engaged in RDvincr for Russia. Mr. Truman on Aug. 25, 1948, condemned the investigation as a "red herring" designed to divert atten tion from the refusal of the republican 80th congress to enact anti-inflation controls for which he had called a special ses sion. The president also said that no congressional committee would be given loyalty check records on any former or present government employe. A week Liter as the special session was about to adjourn, Mr. Truman returned to the attack. He said the investigations were red herrings with a strong odor and promised to prove during the presiden tial campaign just what they really were. The investigation bogged down finally when Chambers and Hiss each stuck to stories so utterly conflicting that one of them had to be an extraordinary liar. The commit tee closed hearings and hoped the justice department would bring perjury charges against someone. Hiss then sued Chambers for $75,000 on charges of slan der after the former spy had repeated on the radio his committee testimony that Hiss was a communist, prelim inary hearing of that suit obtained from Chambers new documents which he said incriminated Hiss. The committee issued a subpena against Chambers de manding any other evidence he might have. On the night of December 2, Chambers at his Maryland farm gave com mittee investigators the "pumpkin papers" microfilms of state department documents. They led ultimately to Hiss' indictment and conviction. State department officials ad mitted on December 7 that the microfilm evidence indi cated that department codes probably had been broken by . foreign nations. In the last week of December the president said he had not changed his mind about the house investigation "it still was a red herring." Chambers first told his story to Assistant Secretary of State Adolf Berle in 1939 when the Stalin-Hitler pact on Poland was signed, asking him to place it before FDR so that Soviet spies could be removed. Nothing was done about it and the microfilm spies remained in their jobs for Chambers was characterized as a liar in the '"highest cir cles." Other stories were investigated by the FBI and till nothinor was done, but Hiss was finally eased out by Byrnes and made president of the Carnegie Peace Founda tion. Hiss, according to Chambers, was not the only red her ring." There were a lot of them who had wormed into high places, particularly in the state department. How much Hiss and the others influenced the failing FDR to whom he was an adviser at Yalta, where world peace was lost by concessions to Russia, will always be subject to conjecture. And how much these "red herrings" were to blame for our betrayal of China to the communists, and our desertion of Chiang at Formosa is any one's guess. Matthews as Johnson's Goat How Defense Secretary Johnson must squirm as more and more details are revealed of the disgraceful ousting of Admiral Denfeld as chief of naval operations last October. On the hot seat of public attention, however, is Johnson's secretary of the navy, Francis P. Matthews of Nebraska. Matthews is trying to get out from under charges made that he is either "untruthful or incompetent." Those charges were leveled by Senator McCarthy who quoted Matthews' testimony that no commission had been given Denfeld for a second term as chief of naval operations de spite the fact that McCarthy had a photographed copy of such a commission. Matthews then discounted the com mission since Denfeld got it through "irregular channels." McCarthy had raised the question whether Denfeld was legally ousted and Admiral Sherman legally appointed to Bucceed him. At the time of the ousting, it was not known that Denfeld already had a commission to succeed him self. Matthews claimed the commission had been "irregu larly placed" in Dcnfeld's hands by the naval aide to Presi den Truman. The president had signed the commission. So had Matthews. When McCarthy said Matthews was incompetent, the description was about the same used by Matthews to describe Denfeld. So, for "the good of the country," Den feld was bounced. Matthews had been in office but a matter of months when the obnoxious episode affecting Denfeld took place. Therefore, Matthews should not be made to bear the brunt of all criticism that is deserving to be heaped on those involved in the stinking mess around the office of the chief of naval operations. Because Matthews was Denfeld's immediate superior in civilian capacity, Matthews happens to be the main target of criticism. Senator McCarthy, however, should demand an explanation from Defense Secretary Johnson who ap pears really responsible for the ousting. All indications indicate that he pursuaded President Truman to fire Den feld after the admiral said the navy was being slighted in unification of the services. Then Johnson had Matthews carry out the shameful assignment. Johnson Is to blame, not his administrative assistant, Matthews. Youngster Has False-Teeth Troubles Seattle, Jan. 24 W) Guiding a lively 3H-year-old young ster through dinner is no picnic even under normal circum stances. Any parent knows that. Which is why Mrs. E. L. Koff is happy to report that son Timothy doesn't make any fuss when she takes out or puts in his false teeth. The artifical chompers were Installed as a temporary meas ure after dentists removed 11 of the youngster's 20 teeth. A new set of his own should grow in within two or three 7 tars. BY BECK Recollections l STOP THAT WHINING ABOUT FETCH IN' IN WOODALL FALL YOU COULDN'T v WAIT TILL THE BEAUTIFUL SNOW , CAMS.. AND SNOW MEANS COLO I , WEATHER ..AND THAT MEANS MORE WOOO FOR THE STOVE. I HAVE TO TAKE THE I WITH THE ( IN THIS WORLD. RSnSsronwri'i I ( CA. AND SNOW M6AN5 COLD I HCK l L Iffk. VWPATUEO Aajr) THAT MEANS J rl HA i!! il l MORE WOOO FOR THE STOVE. I : l i .i ii'P-Wlil YOU HAVE TO TAKE THE I j II I L ' '--H tdL?J to BAD WITH THE 60OD Mf !!! Hi 1 PEARSON AND -RUMAN-BRYNES FEUD President Truman's recent "do - as - he - damn - pleases" crack at Jimmy Byrnes climaxed a long feud which has been told in detail by Drew Pearson. Byrnes was among the first to fly to Truman's side after FDR's death on April 12, 1945, later becoming his secretary of state. But in March, 1946, Pearson told bow this friendship was fast cooling and how Truman wanted General Marshall to become secretary of state. Then, on June IS, 1949, Pear son reported further inside details regarding the Truman-Byrnes estrangement. Byrnes then wrote Truman a letter, and Pearson, on Dec. 17, 1949, quoted Truman as replying (in reference to Byrnes' Dixiecratism): "F no.v know how Caesar felt when he said 'Et Tu, Brute?' " Whereupon Byrnes, according to Pearson, wrote back, telling Truman, "I am not a Brutus and neither do I consider you to be a Caesar." BY CLARE BARNES, JR. White Collar Zoo KRISS-KROSS Lower Slobbovia, Alias Crooked Finger ByCHRISKOWITZ,Jr. Think you had troubles during the recent snows? Then pity the people who live in the Crooked Finger district, east of Silver Falls park. They really learned the hard way what discomforts Old Man Winter can bring. In the first place, roads in that area, blanketed under a layer of snow, became! WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Powerful Officials Tried to Block Crime Networks Probe (Ed Note: Another of Drew Pearson's series of columns on national crime networks and Costelloism.) By DREW PEARSON Washington One year ago two justice department lawyers, Max Goldschien and Drew O'Keefe, began studying a stack of crime reports three feet high gathered from various cities of the U.S.A. Thus, very slowly at first, began the current probe of the nation's far-flung gambling networks. , Actually, 1 m p a s s a ble Bulldozers were) dispatched to; u, it t- scrape the snowfe. J off roads. Thei. . U..tlVn- B A if V" their bit too low and 1 Crooked Finger is truly the Lower Slobbovia of Marion county. Byung Choll Koh, the Korean student who leaves Willamette university for George Wash- the. federal govern ment cannot in vestigate gam bling. It has the power to Inves tigate narcotics, white slavery, immigration vi olations and in come taxes, but although the public doesn't realize it, these Drew Pearson couldn't get his undercover agents inside it even though an ex-policeman was the eleva tor operator, and even though newsmen had no difficulty gain ing access. Furthermore, not many of Fresno's largely law - abiding citizens realized that the 32 houses of prostitution in the city paid an average of $175 per girl per month to the police with about $5,000 to the powers that sers icil . ,w K. iJ j"s blades aKA i' fOl ington U Thursday, is pretty scraped off all1 the gravel as well. Result; JVIud. Chrif Kowllt, Jr. One unfortunate chap got his car stuck along Bridge Creek handy with a table-tennis pad dle. His long list of accomplish' ments along that line include the national championship of Manchuria. It was a dark day in Marion road, near Drake's crossing, just county circuit court yesterday. before the big snows came, wo, mere weren't any particu When the blizzards finally sub- lar grievances over the ver sided, he went to fetch his car diets; the darkness came when and found nothing but a 20-foot 'he lights went out, due to a snow drift. He hasn't seen any- faulty fuse box. thing of the car for two weeks. Judge George R. Duncan, a He fears that bulldozers, Cater- dozen jurors, four lawyers, pillars, trucks, etc., have been plaintiff, defendant and specta driving right over his car all tors didn't let the lack of light the time, gradually crushing it slow them down, to pancake shape. Louie duBuy, the radioman Another resident up Crooked electrician who operates a shop Finger way peered out of his only a half block from the court farm house window one morn- house, was summoned to appear ing and discovered a giant-sized ln, curt- H threw "ght ,n 'he bulldozer sitting smack in the situation after about 15 minutes middle of his strawberry field, f sk,1Ied tinkering with the He still can't figure out how the Iuscs- are closely meshed with the be in order even to get started, great gambling syndicates, until To take over an old lease on a the organized world of the na- house of ill fame cost as much tion is now integrated and di- as $35,000; so it was cheaper to vided in about the same way start a new house for $5,000. that a railroad changes crews Meanwhile, cheaper gambling es- and engines at division points, tablishments paid at the rate of Two powerful officials have about $150 a month for police tried to block this investigation, protection. One was inside the U. S. Treas- One gambling house, the Club ury in wasmngton, tne otner Alabam, was even owned by Lieut. S. A. Meek of the police force. high up in the state of California. Probe Gets Results thing got there. Bertha Pinco, who teaches pl- "It wouldn't be so bad " the ano and voice at SaIenVs Mer. farmer said, "but the bulldozer lam danci studi , , former brought several hundred pounds d si with the Na, of rock in with it." The ma- Uonal 0pera company of Lon. chine finally J"3 J don. She learned her warbling squeeze out of the field but the at the Rova. Academy of Music gravel remained behind. in Dublin, Ireland, Now operat- In addition to all that, about jng private studio in Port a dozen families in that terri- land, she travels to Salem each tory were marooned for two Saturday and Monday to teach weeks. at Merlain. o MacKENZIE'S COLUMN Reports From Red China Tell Of Higher Prices and Taxes By FRED HAMPSON (For DeWItt MacKenzle. AP Foreign Affairs Analyatr Hong Kong Fresh reports filtering out of Red China tell of more belt-tightening, higher prices and stiffer taxation. Predictions of last summer are materializing into a winter of woe for China's common man. Even the communist press and radio have stopped trying to keep it secret. Reports! reaching the As sociated Press from the Yang tze Valley, site of such great cities as Shang hai and Nan king, say large shops are get ting smaller and small shops are disappear ing; communist pa- Mr i 'nmwn Frfil llampson of officials there that north Chi na farmers are paying at least 20 per cent of their production in taxes. He said it takes the taxes of 30 farmers merely to feed and clothe one soldier, ex clusive of ammunition. The ex pense has become a perplexing problem because of the many na tionalist troops shifting over to the Reds. Nan said Russia had sent 300 miles of rails and 50 technicians pers carry daily notices of clo- to help restore damaged rail sures because of lack of business, roads. Doctors and hospitals are also Reports from both Nanking hard-hit. The American Mis- and Shanghai say the Chinese sionary hospital and University public is' becoming increasingly hospital affiliated with Ginling convinced that Chairman Mao college in Nanking are reported, Tze-tung's main purpose on his "selling their medical supplies mission to Moscow was to get on the open market to pay their quick relief and extensive eco staffs." nomic aid, including large cred- its for railway rolling stock. Eight million persons are des- tituto as a result of "large-scale One source says, "so far as it natural disasters," according to is felt, China has not received announcement of Communist much material help; the much Premier Chou En-lai, which re- publicized Russian - Manchurian cently appeared in Red news- barter agreement of last year papers. has turned out to be only a local He estimated that last sum- arrangement. ' mer's floods in north and central Another report from Red Chi China inundated more than 14,- na says people are asking what 000,000 acres and forced 40,- Moscow's price will be, "will 000,000 persons from their Mao's regime be asked to sacri homes. In Hopei province alone fiee its dominant position as the more than 4,000,000 acres were leading communist government flooded and 10,000,000 persons of Asia and accept a secondary left homeless. role under the Kremlin?" Chou's directive to all city This source continues, "we governments suggested putting cannot answer now, but one refugees into factories and hand- thing seems certain: There is a iwork, but it is well known large and influential group in throughout Rod China that fac- the communist central commit tories are in financial difficul- tee who by no means Is subser tles and handicraft industries are vient to Russia and will not no better off. give up the paramount position . Nan Han-chen, member of the the Chinese Reds have won communist people's bank of through 20 years of struggle in Nanking, recently told a group which Russia did not help." Despite this, however, the probe began to bear real fruit when, last week, 16 members of a California narcotic gang were indicted. Leader of the gang Is Joe Sica, and his arrest illustrates how closely organized crime is integrated from coast to coast. Sica is a New Jersey boy and part of the original Costello gang, having trained with Willie Moretti, the gambling king of New Jersey. Moretti has been Frankie Costello's No. 1 man in that area. General Vaughan, the Presi dent's military aid, has admitted under oath that one of Costello's partners, Bill Helis, the Golden Greek, contributed through him, Vaughan, to Truman campaigns; while John Maragon has admit ted under oath that he worked for another Costello partner, Phil Kastel. Coming to California, with that state's wartime growing pains, Joe Sica became Mickey Cohen's bodyguard, then gradu ally climbed the ladder of crime until he is now southern Califor nia's No. 1 hoodlum. Like Mick ey, he runs a haberdashery shop on Sunset Boulevard (under the sovereignty of good - natured Sheriff Gene Biscaluz, rather than the tougher Los Angeles po lice) and also operates a health club as a blind for a bookie joint and a narcotics center. And, as the gangster star of Mickey Cohen waned, Joe Sica, the boy from New Jersey, be came more potent and has more or less taken Mickey's place. Being ambitious, Joe was not satisfied with the sovereignty of. Los Angeles alone. Up the rich central valley of California are some of the wealthiest farm lands in the world, and an old stamping ground for Sica. Once he served as bodyguard for Joe Cannon, the gambling king of Fresno, while one of his nar cotics runners, Alex Berry, was pilot of Cannon's private air plane. So Joe Sica became narcotics king of the central valley. Pine Lake Lodge, just outside Fresno, for a time became the headquar ters for the mob, with 11 tele type machines bringing in news of the racing world (Pine Lake Lodge is now purged of the mob and under completely new man agement.) Official Naivete Diagonally across from the po lice station in downtown Fresno, operated Joe Cannon's swank gambling joint, the Plantation Club. Not many of Fresno's overwhelmingly law-abiding cit izens connected Cannon with any outside mob, and ex-Police Chief Ray T. Wallace, when asked why he didn't close the Plantation Club, naively replied that he Police Chief's Holdings The police chief responsible for keeping order in Fresno at that time was blue-eyed, heavy set, likable Ray T. Wallace, who received a salary from the city of $450 a month. Not many people in Fresno probably took the trouble to in vestigate Chief Wallace's prop erty holdings, though such in vestigation can be accomplished merely by looking up the coun ty tax asessor's records. This columnist did look up the rec ords, and was surprised to find that the police chief or his wife owned some 16 ranches or par cels of land totaling 1,742 acres. This does not include three lots in the city of Fresno, two ranches recently sold, a hotel and restaurant on G street, and the "OK Rubber Welders," a tire- recapping establishment that is owned in partnership with Wallace's son. These were some of the facts confronting courageous Gordon Dunn, the Stanford University athlete, after he found himself elected mayor of Fresno last April. These facts also may have been one reason why he promptly fired Police Chief Wal lace and Lieutenant Meek, own er of the Club Alabam, and re buffed the proposals of his cam paign manager, Robert Franklin, to open up the city. Crackdowns Approved Mayor Dunn also clamped down on a long string of tawdry hotels and houses in Fresno's red-light district, and, in addi tion, cracked down on every gambling club in Fresno. A few citizens, who consider gam bling and houses of prostitution proper ways of keeping migrant workers' money in town, have complained. , But the vast ma jority highly approve. Probably Mayor Dunn didn't dream, at the time, how ramified was the network of California's underworld. Nor did he realize that he was acting in advance of one of the biggest narcotic arrests in recent history. But three months later, an Armenian named Abe Davidian. speeding up the central valley In the dead of night, was caught with one kilo of heroin, enough to last the Fresno underworld for months. He was driving so fast that part of the heroin blew in to the back seat of his car and had to be collected with a vacu um cleaner. That midnight drive later brought the arrest of Mobster Joe' Sica and 15 others, showing how closely the world of nar cotics, prostitution and gam bling is knit together. Still to be shown, however, ii the identity of the big boys who give the protection near the top, (Coprrliht io Efficiency Expert POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER "? Elderly People Feel More Fun In Life Between 1900 and 1910 By HAL BOYLE New York VP) Look backward 50 years look forward 50 years and which period would you rather live in? The right answer to that lies in what kind of a world is being made right now, from day to day and year to year. But as the century rolls into its 50th year many elderly people dou b t fu 1 wHssm'Kmmmtai of security Is probably just the glamor that memory usually throws over the past. But there is also undoubtedly a hard ker nel of truth in these reminis cences. In the world of 1900 to 1914 America was a young self-confident giant just realizing his power, certain he could stand alone and whip all comers be cause he had always done so. But in ths world of IPSO it is more customary for her con- America is midrilp-appri einnt.. temporaries to complain that even stronger in adulthood, but this is a lazy, pleasure-seeking realizing now the responsibility generation. I asked her why she 0I his power and that he does thought as she did. And her an- n't stand alone. swer surprised me even more. "Well, we didn't have all the labor-saving things around the home that young wives do now," she said. "But I think we had more real uiose oays man ! eBm u. . invading his homeland and held h, ..mi-.. Mh iih only 8 vaSue contempt for Eu to live, and I dont think they faecause u had to worry so much about t! ,., ., , ,... ' e are that life today holds as much fun or security as it did be tween 1900 and 1910. My moth er is one of these. "I think young people today have a much harder time of it than we did when I was a girl," she told me. This surprised me, as Security in 1900 for the aver age American meant a home, a job with opportunity for ad vancement, and a chance to edu- o , , cate his children. He had nA didn't seem to have ,,Atna M. um?,,J ., what would happen next." And she added placidly: "I really feel sorry for the young people today, and I wouldn't want to trade places with them at all." ting mixed up in battles. Today the age old insecurity caused by poverty and unem ployment has been reduced in the United States by a half cen tury of social progress unknown before in history. But the new insecurity created by two world Other people her age tell me wars has increased tenfold. The that they are sure they got a shadow of the atom bomb hangs bigger kick out of life than as heavily over the American young folks do now, because home as it does over the Rus they had more real zest for liv- sian. ing. They say they have found it is hard to see how America the subway no real improvement or the rest of the world, for we over the horse car. And they are all knotted together in that are even more certain that pic- problem, will ever know real nics and hayrides held more so- security again until we learn, as cial enjoyment than an evening h. G. Wells said, that "our true at the movies. nationality is mankind." "We used to enteftain our- if the goal is reached in 50 selves," they say, "we didn't years, then the world of 2000 look to others to entertain us so will be as much fun and as safe much-" to live in as that lost world our Some of this fun and feeling mothers loved as girls. Capital jkJournal I Using In the London Bi&?TL 4 fTO A stMnlM-laAlr arhnm Using In the London Tlfaes for an appren tice tried to tell all the bad features of the work. But the $80-a-week Job still seemed so attractive that 1,600 young am appuedl Ancient Rome's "SI Qui" notices were the Want Ads of that time. Never Saw Diploma Detroit, Jan. 24 (P) One member of the suburban Grosse Polnte high school graduating class never attended school a day In his life and won't be able to receive his diploma at graduation exercises next Thursday. Karl Fredrickson, 17, was stricken In childhood with an Incurable disease. He never could go to classes but got his high school education from a tutor. The Detroit board of education ruled this fall that Karl had completed graduation requirements and should have a diploma. But th plucky youth never will sm it He died last OoC t. T.H. SaL V. a FBI M. Your Ad Will Get Results, Too. Dial Result Number 2 2406