Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, October 02, 1956, Page 2, Image 2

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    Page 2 Section 1
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, October 2, 1956 ,
McKay Cites Demo,
GOP Spending; Morse
Sights Rubber-Stamp
Mautz Takes Poke
At 'Slush Fund'
Charges
By UNITED PRESS
t The Morte-McKay battle for 'he j Dalles last night
most of the verbal fireworks in
Oreson politick today but other
candidates were getting in their
say with the Nov. fi election
(lightly less than a month away.
Douglas McKay, speaking at
Beavcrton, centered his remarks
on the records of the two parties
In national spending.
People "who have seen the an
nual federal tax bill go up from
three billion to 63 billion dollars
under the Democratic administra
tion, should recognize the need for
a senator who will support Elsen
hower," McKay said.
Morse turned his full salvo on
McKay In his speech at The
"By attacking the independence
British Labor
Selects Bevan
As Treasurer
Choice Points Up Sharp
Swing to More State
Ownership . 1 .
BLACKPOOL, England OB -Britain's
Labor Party Tuesdav
elected Aneurin Bevan as its:
sition party's sharp swing toward cy ura"iu ri?hts ,n 'and he
G)iirt Gives
U-Rich Indian
$500 a Month
SPOKANE 11 Mrs. Lucille
Boyd Gallcgos, who was broke
and in jail for drunkenness when
she fell into sudden richs .this
summer, will get $500 a month
from her $157,000 uranium wind
fall. Superior Judge Louis F. Bunge
approved the $500 allocation sug
gested Monday by her court-appointed
guardian.
Mrs. Gallcgos, who got the mon-
: scrvation, had told the court earl-
advocacy of more state owner-chin
of judgment I have shown in the; The fiery Welsh orator scored ,cr ,n ' f.ddlclcd '1 a'001 ?nd
senate, McKay lets it be known ja substantial victory over George. equ k ,, ' urdla- Sr"? h
mat type oi representation ne Brown, a moderate Labor mem
McKay Bucks
Pension Plan
At Vet Meet
PORTLAND (UP) Douglas
McKay stood up to a veterans
group In Portland last night and
said he did not support their pen
sion program.
GOP candidate for the U. S. Sen
ate, McKay, spoke briefly to a
meeting of the Veterans of World
War I and said "pensions for vet
erans should not be a matter of
charity. They should be expected
as a matter of right."
McKay then was asked from the
floor if he supported the groups'
program for $100 "across the
board" benefits for World War 1
veterans. McKay said he support
ed the program outlined by the
American Legion and lhat he did
not support the VWW1 program,
i "1 don't think It's necessary," he
said. ."There are many men who
have good incomes and do not
need such money, I don't feel
am 'across-the-board' program is
correct."
A member rose and told McKay
"Two years ago Tom McCall was
In here and didn't support our pro
gram and I told him 'you will
never be our representative,' and
he Isn't." McCall was defeated by
Rep. Edith Green In 1954 in the
raco for Congress.
McKay replied, "All right, but
I will ne.er make promises I don't
believe In just to get elected.
What do you gentlemen want i
someone who has been for voter-
comes here and makes big piohi
comes here and make bllg prom
Ises? "
would give in the Senate he
would be a rubber stamp for pres
sure groups," Morse asserttd. 1
Republican National Committee
man Bob Mautz, in a television
address last night, blasted Demo
cratic charges that McKay has a
huge "slush fund" behind him in
his race for the senate.
"When a political candidate has
the financial resources for an ex
pensive, all-out campaign, don't be
hoodwinked hy his screams that
ber of Parliament, to regain his
seat in the party's important Na
tional Executive Committee.
Moderate followers of party
leader Hugh Gaitskell retained
their strong majority on the 28
membcr executive, but the Bevan
ite group of left wingers increased
its holdings.
been booked 17 times for drunk
enness this year.
The Judge Monday also approved
payment of $5,419 in bills from the
guardianship estate, including $251
for a television set she bought
tne gins at city jail.
Payment of $1,897 to L. V. Sig
man of Yakima was approved for
a long list of personal loans. Mrs
Bevan, 58-year-old former coal ' Gallcgos, 30, will also give $125
miner and Parliament's strongest a month for support of her two
sneaker since Sir Winston Church-1 children. She is divorced and the
ill stepped aside, will fill one of ! children are staying with their
his opponent has a huge slush fund the party s most powerful posts granamotner who wall get $7d
and unlimited financial banking,"
Mautz said,
He termed reports that Morse
had no funds and McKay unlimited
resources as "sheer bunk and
falsehood."
Lyle F. Watts, a former Chief
Forester oi the United States, yes
terday was named as a vice-chairman
of the Oregon volunteers for
Stevenson-Kefauver. Watts will
head a special committee of con
sc.vallonists in Oregon.
Gov, Elmo Smith carried his
ca npaign to La Grande last
night and was joined there by
Rep. Sam Coon,
Earlier in the day at Pendleton,
Smith had defended his record
in the slate Senate, which has
been 'under attack by his Demo
cratic opponent, Robert D.
Holmes,
"Keep In mind' my opponent Is
extremely left wing Democrat and
I am a middle of the road Repub
lican," the governor said.
Smith defended his vote against
the United Nations resolution in
the state Senate and said what
hasn't been mentioned by his op
ponent was the fact the state Leg
islature repealed the resolution in
the next session.
Coon told his audience "this
country will enjoy continued pros
perity only as long as tree enter
prise is preserved and encour-ailed."
Sen. Richard L. Nctibcrger spoke
In Woodburn last niaht. calling tor
the election of Jason' Lee, Demo
crat. In the first district, 1
. Neuberger criticized the record
of Rep. Walter Norblad on agricul
ture, timber products and harbor
development anu sulci me lie
publicans have dominated the dis
Irict for too long.
Holmes carried his campaign to
Pnrtlnnn Inst mcht where he sooke
BAGHDAD, Iraq 11 - The dally at lhe weekly meeting of the
newspaper At Akhbar Tuesday Portland Central Labor council,
aid Jordan Defense Minister Th. Democratic nominee reilcra-
Jordan Asks
Iraq Troops
as treasurer.
He recently has been lhe party
spokesman on colonial affairs In
the House of Commons, but polit
ical sources speculated he might
now take over the more Import
ant fields of defense, foreign af
fairs or economic matters. That
would put him in line for the Cab
inet posts of minister of defense,
foreign secretary or chancellor of
the exchequer If Labor unseats
monthly.
Russian Goes
On Job in Suez
PORT SAID, Egypt OB Ivan
Nanov, 54-year-old Russian sea
Prime Minister Eden's Conserv-I "Ptain. Tuesday became the first
niivfj ot in Russians training here to
Bevan, who often is critical of,pilot a "h'P in tnc s,,cz Canal
U.S. foreign policy, is a deter-1 Nanov, whose home Is at Odes
mined advocate of more militant; "a. passed his pilot's examination
socialism and wider state owner-
shin of industry.
Demonstrating the swing to
ward the left was a call to the
conference Monday for more state
ownership of Industry by Frank
Cousins, head of the big Transport
and General Workers Union.
Monday and was on the bridge
of the 6,200-ton Italian tanker An
tonio Zotti on a trip from Port
Said to Ismallia. He had been
training for 15 days under Egyp
tian and Greek pilots.
Three other Russians passed
their examinations Monday.
Bebop Cap at
Slaying Scene
Trips Suspect
NEW YORK W Police say a
floppy bebop cap and an electron
ic camera helped them track down
the alleged slayer of a Queens pa
trolman. Virgil 'Richardson, 28-year-old
Negro, pleaded innocent yesterday
to an Indictment of first degree
murder in the shooting of Patrol
man William G. Long.
The patrolman, 27-year-old fath
er of three, was slain in a d'rnlv
lit parking lot in Queens last Sept.
Queens Dist. Atty. Frame J.
O'Connor said yesterday a size 7
bebop cap found near the scene
was a pivotal clue.
Detectives traced the cap to a
Brooklyn sporting goods store that
employs an electronic camera to
photograph check cashers.
O'Connor said an examination of
8.000 negatives on file with the
Prairie Schooners to Retrace
Route of Pioneers Next Year
SEATTLE A modern-day
caravan of lumbering prairie
schooners will leave from Sea
side, Ore., next summer to re
trace from West to East the route
of pioneers who settled the Pa
cific Northwest.
Julian Morgan -of Portland said
Monday night plans for the cross
ing were made during .the week
end here by members of the Cov
ered Wagon Caravan Assn., whose
camera manufacturer disclosed
that Richardson cashed a $337
government refund check in the
store July 16.
He bought a size 7 bebop cap at
the store, O'Connor added.
The district attornci said the
negative showed Richardson's
wile was with him ana otierea an
identification card. The card led
police to Richardson's address.
She torn ponce ne nao gone xo
Atlanta. Ga. FBI agents seized
Richardson as he stepped off a
bus at Atlanta Sept. 12.
nAelnr Xfnraafi M. Were the
trailblazers of the great westward
movement of the 19th century.
The trip, Morgan said, is being
planned "as a tribute to the
grandparents who blazed the trail
West."
On their way east, the covered
wagons will pass through Idaho,
Wyoming, Nebraska, Missouri, Il
linois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvan
ia and Virginia, arriving in Wash
ington. D.C. "seven or , e i g h t
months after the start."
Twelve wagons will be In the
caravan, Morgan said, and each
will be drawn by four horses.
The wives and children of the
drivers will go with the wagons.
In addition to himself, Morgan
said, others In the caravan will
include Gerald R, Mylen, Seattle:
v-rn P-Hrtirnrrf. F.vprett: D. J.
Rystad and Dick Nelson, Sno
homish, wasn.; w. u. morgan,
Salem, Ore.; and Leonard Brad
ham, Madras, Ore.
Severe Penary
Asked for 3 in
Poznan Trials
Dn7Mi PAlanri tR The PoZ-
nan trials prosecution demanded
Tuesday a "severe penalty" for
three youths accused of killing a
security police corporal in the
June 2B Poznan riots.
Under- Polish law the penalty
can range from 10 years imprison
mnni in Heath for an attack on a
state official or members of the
armed forces. Tne prosecutor am
not specifically demand death.
In a second trial against nine
other Poles accused of rioting,
storming public buildings and
stealing arms, the defense created
a sensation. '
It asked that the workers dele
gation of the Zipso Works, which
trnvalAit In vain In Wai-caur In .Tuna
to work out workers' grievances
wim tne rousn government, oe
called as witnesses.
It was after this delegation was
refused an audience by Warsaw
authorities that workers at th"
Zipso plant went on strike, touch
ing off demonstrations which
turned into the "bread and free
dom" riots. Fifty-three persons
were killed and several hundred
wounueu.
The two stale prosecutors Im.
mediately opposed the move to
call the committee. They claimed
it would be unjust to "put legitl.
mate members of the workers'
class in the dock" with alleged
criminals and hooligans.
The Communist government
holds that the defendants in these
trials are criminal elements
BUSINESS MIRROR
Suez Seizure New Deterrent
To U.S. Investment Abroad
Omar Miliar wants Iraq to send
troops Into Jordan to help resist
any future Israeli attacks.
The paper said the Jordan min
ister recommended this move In
an Interview with its corres
pondent in Amman.
Reliable sources In Damascus
aid 10 days ago that Iraq had
already stationrd a mobile divi
sion near the Jordan frontier with
the idea of moving in it called
upon.
More than half of lhe 26.000 re
tail lumber dealers in tbe United
States are located in towns of
under 8,000 population.
ted his challenge to Gov, Smith to
campaign on his record.
Rep, Harris Ellsworth, Republi
can, carried his campaign to Jack
son county yesterday.. He Is sched
uled to deliver atmajor address in
Ashland Wednesday.
MIKE GETS MEDAL
VERONA, Italy UH - Brig. Gen.
John (Mike) Michaelis of Lan
caster, Pa., outgoing commander
of the all-American Southern Eu
ropean Task Force, Tuesday was
awarded the Order of Merit of
the Italian Republic and a gold
"souvenir" medal.
Relax With Your Friends
whil. watching th.
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By SAM DAWSON I foreign discriminations in various
NEW YORK lav-Does It pay one shpes and torms a(ord p8or in.
duccmenl for outside people to
nation to seize the property o( oth-
ers? home seem to think so, but
the question is whether they can
run it themselves. Also whether
they'll scare olt further outside fi
nancial aid,
Seizure of the Suez Canal is the
latest example of the natlonoliza
tlon that has been gaining strength
in various areas. Users of the
canal arc meeting in London to de-
cide how they can get along under
Egyptian nationalization of the
properly. Meanwhile foreign min
isters of Egypt, Russia, Britain
and France are heading for New
York lo debate before the United
Nations Security Council.
But on the purely business and
Investment front the debate is
largely one of dollars and cents.
Americans have huge sums Invest
ed abroad more than 19 billion
dollars worth of property and se
curities.
No one knows when, where or
how the next blow will fall, says
risk either their tax money or
their private savings in areas that
do not recognize a code of fair con
duct in international financial re.
lotions? Who wants to throw good
money after bad?
On the question of whether na
Hons really profit by seizing the
properly of others, the bank notes
that "in general, the record shows
where nationalization has been
tried not more, but less reproduc
tion has resullcd." It cites two
examples: the seizure of the
Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. wells and
lhe great Abadan refinery by Mos-
sadegh In 1951 in Iran, and the
nationalization of the tin mines by
Bolivia in 1952.
The next nationalization step
most feared by American business
at the, moment involves lhe oil
fields in the Arabian lands. Rut
American business can take com.
fort from an Associated Press riis-
ih. Fir.i National niiv Rank -.r ; patch from Iraq saying lhat so far
New York in its October letter out me Amman, no ixn oi iui-
today. lowing Nassers example.
Nationalization of foreign as
sets, repudiation of debt and anti-
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DOES WAYNE MORSE PUT
PRINCIPLE ABOVE POLITICS?
Read the Opinion of Ex-Governor Chas. A. Sprague
Reprinted from his column "It Seems To Me" in the Oregon Statesman, Sept.. 26-27, 1956
Senator Wayne L. Morse is a can
didate for a third term as senator
from Oregon, this time on the Dem
ocratic ticket. He demands that the
contest between him and Douglas
McKay be fought out "on the issues."
Very well ; but remember that Morse
himself is the major issue.
Morse It the Issue
Morse makes himself the issue. He
personalizes whatever subject he is
discussing. His speeches are chiefly
in praise or defense of his own con
duct in office, his own votes, his
own opinions.
Morse makes himself an issue be
cause one of his outstanding charac
teristics is his egotism. ' 1 am not
ascribing to him vanity, but ego
tism, defined as "the practice of
referring overmuch to one's self."
Morse is definitely egocentric,
striving to make the world re
volve around himself and his
ideas.
Now this trait of character might
be passed over as a fault, an evidence
of the frailties to which all human
kind is heir. But in Morse it has
developed into a dangerous form of
self-righteousness. He is always right,
whoever is opposing him at the mo
ment is dead wrong. And he throws
a blanket of moral sanction over his
actions which confounds the public
and which I think results in his de
ceiving himself. Yet he has re
versed himself so often, altered
his own course, joined what he
rejected, spurned what once he
endorsed, that his, own actions
belie either the purity of his
motives or the value of his judgment.
Moral Arrogance
Another effect of this moral arro
gance is that it has led Morse into
, intemperate utterance. He is extreme
in denunciation. In 1946 he branded
President Truman as "ham actor." ,
Yet in 1952 he praised Harry Tru
man in a ixTsoiul telegram: "Yntir
record is an indelible one in the
history of our country, while that of
your detractors will soon fade away."
In February, 1952, when he said he
was "strong for Kisenhower," he
wrote: "1 know him to be a very
intelligent man with complete in
tellectual honesty and a marked im
partiality." The Congressional Rec
ord for March 20, 1952 quotes Morse
referring to President Eisenhower as
"a man who in my judgment is com
pletely lacking in political morality."
We must allow a man the privilege
of revising his appraisal of men and
of issues; but when he indulges in
such radical utterances and extreme
reversals of opinion and does it so
often we are justified In challeng
ing either hit motive or the
soundness of his judgment.
Burned Out Usefulness
in attempting to analyze Morse's
claim to reelection and entering my
opposition I am not doing so out of
personal antagonism. I have no per
sonal quarrel with him. I recognize
he is a man of superior intellectual
endowments, but regret that he has,
in the opinion of many who were his
friends, pretty well burned out
his usefulness and effectiveness
save as a persistent harranguer
to a nearly empty Senate cham
ber. With many of the positions he
has taken in his near 12 yeas of
service, I have been in agreement;
with others strongly opposed. Morse
deserted the Republican Party under
whose banner he had won his office
in 1944 and 1950 to become first an
Independent and next a Democrat.
He did not merely move across the
political aisle, he wound up on the
extreme left wing of the Demo
crats, not very welcome to those
of the older Democratic tradi
tion. Tht of course wis his priv
ilege. Morse justifies his move on the
1 ground of principle and "conscience."
"No. 1 Hypocrite"
Certain it is that Wayne Morse's
conscience is both well worked and
abundantly advertised. Others who
know Morse well have a different
view, however. For example W. M.
Tugman editor of the Port Umpqua
Courier and long-time editor of the
Eugene Register-Guard calls Morse
"the Number One hypocrite in Ore
gon." It is therefore timely to in
vestigate Morse's claim to strict
guidance of conscience and firm de
votion to principle.
Funds Above Principle
Go back to 1944 when Morse first
considered running for the U. S.
Senate. When he returned to Eugene '
after resigning from the War Labor
Board a group of local Democrats
interviewed him to see if he would
. become the candidate of that party.
Morse turned down their bid. Some
yeara later Tugman learned of the
conversations and published in the
Register-Guard' of March 27, 1953,
the substance of the report by Mar
vin Warlick who was county Demo
cratic chairman at the time:
"I invited Morie to come to my house
to meet a number of prominent Democrats
and we felt him out on the situation. He
told im (list his sympathies were largely
with the New Deal but that he had always
been registered as Republican and that in
any ease there was the problem of funds for
his campaign. He doubted if we could pro
vide adequate nnanrial support whereas he
was sure the Republicans would. later wt
..had a telephone conversation in which he
repeated the same sentiments."
When Morse made this response
to the Democrats of Lane county
was he actuated by conscience
and principle, or was he moved
by expediency campaign fund
expediency?
Come to 1952 when Morse's con
science really underwent great strain.
He came to Oregon early that year
and introduced his colleague Senator
Dull of Pennsylvania at a dinner of
the Multnomah County Republican
Club in Portland. Both were boost
ing Kisenhower for the Republican
nominee for President. Morse con
tinued a strong Eisenhower booster
and denounced Republicans who
chose to file as candidate for delegate
by petition so they would not be
legally bound by the party preference.
Political Ethics Changed
After the convention, Morse be
came soured on Republicans, on
Eisenhower and Nixon. At first he
sulked in his tent, later he came out
lock, stock and larnyx, for Adlai
Stevenson, the Democratic candi
date. This decision was announced
as based on "principle" and pre
sumably on conscience. Previously
he had declared that for one holding
office to bolt his party violated his
conception of political ethics. Some
where along the line that concept
of political ethics underwent
change. v
Why the Desertion?
After bolting the Republicans
Morse became an Independent. Al
most weekly during the sitting of
the 83rd Congress he arose to make
his weekly "report" of the Inde
pendent Party. As late as July,
1954 he denounced as a "lie being
spread by my enemies" that he
would enroll as a Democrat. But
after being warned by Monroe Sweet
land, Democratic national commit
teeman, that he would get no sup
port from Democrats if he remained
an Independent Morse, well in ad
vance of filing time for the senatorial
race in 1956 flew out to Oregon,
drove to Eugene and registered as
a Democrat.
The question I want to raise
la this: Why did he desert the
Independent party? What had
gone wrong with It, with its lead
ership, with, its principles? What
writhings of conscience preceded his
walking out of the Independent
Party? What purification of the
Democratic Party had occurred to .
make a comfortable spiritual home?
it should be recalled that in the
1940s he was a veritable Saul of
Tarsus in flaying the New Deal and ,
the Democratic Party.
Loyalty Questioned
Was not his conversion to the
Democratic Party the conversion
of expediency? As an Independent
he stood to fall between two stools
in Oregon. As a Democrat he would
have a readyrmade statewide organ
ization to support him. Morse had
no desire to become a dead lion, .
standing by his principles of Inde
pendency. He boarded the Demo
cratic bus hoping that it would be a
vehicle to carry him through another
election, just as he boarded the GOP
bus in 1944 when he thought the fat
cats of Republicans would finance
his campaign as many of them did,
even rallying to pay off the deficit
caused by his free spending. .
Now how loyal is Morse to the
Democratic Party? I am going to
quote again from his interview with
Kimmis Hendrick:
"I'm telling people," Senator Morse ssid.
for his own part determinedly, "that I'm
going to remain an independent that it's
the only right way to represent them in
Washington." .
In other words, let the Demo
crats provide the vehicle .(and
the campaign funds), but let
Morse vote as he pleases after
he Is elected!
However, it is only fair to quote
from another columnist, Joe Alsop
who observed Morse at the Clacka
mas County Democratic picnic and
reported: When the chairman pre
sented Morse with a check for his
campaign fund Morse returned it,
telling Chairman Groener to "spend
it as he thinks best, for the benefit
of the entire and mind you, I say
entire Democratic ticket in Clack
amas county." That was when he
was wearing the party coat.
Morse bases his stand on public
issues on principle and he seems
to have so many principles that he
can call up one to support each
stand he takes. Thus in 1946 when '
he was new in the Senate he voted
to confirm the nomination by Roose
velt of Henry Wallace for secretary
of commerce, basing his stand on
the principle that a President is
entitled to name the members of
his cabinet. However, when Presi
dent Eisenhower nominated Charles
E. Wilson for secretary of defense
Morse pulled out, another "princi
ple" I don't know just what and
in obedience to that principle he
voted against confirmation.
Now I do not believe that a per
son should be a slave to consistency.
Different times, different relation
ships call for different judgments.
But I do object to this parade of
virtue and exploitation of "con
science" as a cover for all the
gyrations of the Morse career.
I credit Morse with acting many
times out of genuine concern for the
public interest. But I think also
that he Indulges In rationaliza
tions until he suffers from the
Illusion that he Is always right
and drapes himself with the
clonk of "principle" and "con
science" as a protective colora
tion. Conscience Unreliable
Let us have done w ith this exces
sive advertisement of the Morse con
science, w hich if it is truly his guide
is then remarkably unstable and
unreliable.
N kit. Ibjovtou Bt.H Cratrtl Cftssts Wmm
VftlU Ckma Ceotnl loihnt NtUd4 i. Or.
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Exciting Co-Hit
' w m m M
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ENDS TONIGHTI
THE FIRST TRAVELING
SALES LADY"
and
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STARTS WEDNESDAYI
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Adventure Co-Hit
TOM TRYON. JACQUELINE BEER
ENDS TONIGHTI
"THE SEARCHERS"
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"GOOD-BYE MY LADY"
STARTS WEDNESDAYI
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