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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1941)
r:.zi rem a Edssu Oregon. '-Ccadaj llsxsing, Kcrj 1211 "DvGK:-.'innib:ll)ad ." j . . v 'Sf ' f ' - : - :r-r:T jg iff THE STATESJIAN PUBUSHINC CO. CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President Member of The Axsockted Pres The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all mwi dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Holy War "Strike, for. your altars and your fires' has , been a stirring challenge down through the cen turies, and an effective one no matter to what gods the altars had been raised. This is a "holy war" to those Germans who have been convert ed, as unconsciously as possible, from Christian- . Ity to the neo-paganism which Identifies "Ger many with God and elevates Hitler to a Christ like position. Very effective, especially with the soldiers recruited from Hitler's "youth movement and caught young enough. Some day when it's quieter we'll cogitate upon this : new religion's prospects of enduring. Still, an ersatz neo-paganism cannot have taken a grip upon the whole German people in this brief time, in a manner comparable to that of a long-established religion. So well have to assume that the "holy war" which a nazi-mlnd-ed Iraq premier has proclaimed against Britain, if accepted as such by a sufficient number of Moslems, could be something even more terri ble. Note that we have said "could be." There are about 200 million followers of Islam in the world, and they have a reputation for fanati cism. Still, modern skepticism can hardly have passed them by. At any rate they are broken up into sects and, most hopeful circumstance of all, the brand new premier of Iraq is not, so far as we know, one of their prophets. . The serious factor for the British is that the Moslems have identified them as protectors of, the Jews in Palestine. Add up the blood enmity of Arabs and Jews and the nazis' well-recognized crusade against the latter and you have something that may appeal to the Iraquis. How, much trouble a multiple religious squabble in the Near East will make for the British is a puz zle that contains too many imponderables for accurate prediction. The only certainties are that it is an immediate nuisance in a vital spot and that it was "made in Berlin." As for Iraq's oil supply which is the factor making this skirmish significant, it should be Understood that Britain's problem is not keep ing it out of German hands but keeping it avail able for the fueling of British vessels in the Mediterranean. The Germans could seize it but couldn't transport it So their logical course is to bomb the pipelines, if they can. That reduces the incentive for a nazi drive by land into the Near East immediately, though the British are on guard against an air transport jump into Sy ria. The chance that the nazis might strike there rather than through Turkey is a major consid eration in the British reinforcement in Iraq. ident withheld a commission from a highly use ful officer, in a time when the nation can ill af ford to pass up such talent Of course if General Johnson is needed he will respond. But the in cidenj adds nothing to the promise of effective promotion of national unity from the" White House. ' ; ' " Music Week : , , In some future moment of leisure this de partment is going to make a diligent search for a topic which has no relation to international ' affairs, but this obviously is not the moment. : For music is the "universal language" and harmony is the thing the world needs more, than anything else. ; Observance of music week in Salem may not in itself help to keep the nation secure and at peace and yet H is part of a movement which has that definite objective. In the national ob servance of the week special attention is to b devoted to Inter-American music and the ap preciation thereof. There is a definite need for greater appreciation here in the United, States, of the culture developed in the other Americans, and this is an opportunity to promote it And while it will not stop the nazi plunder ing of Europe, it is worth while to give some attention to the music which Germans of differ ing ambitions have contributed in the past for the world's enjoyment and pleasure. There will be special programs each day of the week. Salem folk will profit by patronizing as many of them as possible. Page Doigenes! Page Ripley! County Judge - CL L. Allen of Deschutes has refused to accept, this year, the $325 salary increase voted by the legislature, on the ground that the money was not budgeted. And page the Taxpayers' leagues of Yamhill, Clackamas, Benton and Douglas counties. Some of their officials have also been voted immediate salary increases which were not budgeted. Marion county officials have vno chance to be heroic. Their boosts don't come un til 1943. Levity aside, the Deschutes county of ficial is entitled to a lot of commendation. Emigration Try to put yourself in their places. Imagine you are a Czech, Pole, Norwegian, Dane, Hol lander, Belgian, Frenchman, Serb or Greek; a Finn, Lithuanian, Swede, Russian or Hungarian or even a non-nazi Kustrian or German or a non-fascist Italian. You could be any one of these, living In your! native land, and still en tertain approximately the same ideals and be liefs and aspirations that you do as an Ameri can. : -;: . . '. ,' What would you do? Well,, that would de pend upon what you could do and what you had to do. Your choices might be extremely limited. What would you want to do? That's a lot easier. If you were a native of one of those lands you might be tremendously attached to its soil. But present conditions and the dimness of any prospect that they might, soon improve would be quite likely to offset that attachment. Odds are 100 to 1 that you'd want to "get away from it all." '!',' 1 V Opportunities to get away are tightly lim ited. Leaving any of those countries except un occupied France is a matter of eluding the Ger man authorities and leaving unoccupied France is a matter of eluding the Vichy government's surveillance. Those Old World governments have a mighty tight grip oh their individual cit izens. If you manage to disappear from your home environs, the routes of escape are lim ited, i , y, ' ; : ..: But that doesn't keep a lot of people from wishing and a considerable number from trying. An American freighter docked some weeks ago at Marseilles with a cargo of food. While it was tied up there, life on board was just one contin- -uous round of searching for stowaways. One morning the officers found 40 of them hidden here and there. Daily they would rout them out and nightly others would steal on board. When the vessel! sailed j the officers were by no means sure they had no "passenges., To a great many Europeans, America looks like heaven. Millions of them would give an arm or a leg to get here. Thousands have been com ing, legally or illegally, openly or secretly. Aside from the lack of opportunity, conditions are, right for the greatest exodus in history of Eu ropeans to the New World. If peace should be made on anything like axis terms, those condi tions would be little changed, but the opportun ities for emigration would be increased. That is 'one answer to the question "what's ahead for the world?" i " - . ; : . The Narrows bridge, a board of engineering experts has concluded, was well built, well supervised in construction and made of materials of quality beyond question. Nor did the board find any fault with the design. The only thing wrong about the whole proceeding was that the bridge collapsed. News Behind fThe News - V By PAUL MALLON i . Personalities Failure of the president to renew Brigadier Gener Hugh S. Johnson's commission in the army r eserve corps after the reappointment had been' recommended by the war department is not a vital national issue in itself but in spite of material differences from the Lindbergh case, H serves as a disheartening reminder of the Roosevelt tendency to take personalities into consideration in his official and political acts. For the reason that "Old Crackdown" has served his nation actively in the past and though an isolationist is not subject to suspicion of dis loyalty, the Incident is indeed simpler and clear er than the Lindbergh incident The sole modi fying question with respect to General Johnson involves his usefulness to the war department Its recommendation, together with the fact that General Johnson has lectured frequently at the war college and has constantly kept up to date the military supply studies which he made jointly with Bernard Baruch, seems to disposer cf that question. - - , l . i The inevitable conclusion is that the pres- ( Distributed by King Feature Syndicate. Inc., re production In whole or in part strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, May 3. The Italian press, which works on pushbuttons from the German con trolled propaganda ministry, has been hinting a surprise i attack on our fleet might result from Mr. Roose velt's stronger sea policy. It may now be told that some thing of a scare developed here in January or February when our people picked up more con vincing hints along the same line. A Japanese air or submar ine attack on our fleet, then partially bottled in Hawaii, was greatly feared. That was when . Mr. Roosevelt suddenly rushed those bombing planes to Hawaii. rati Manoa , Extensive additional air scouting precautions have been taken (not only in the Pacific) which should eliminate the possibility ' of a surprise disaster. j Not even the house merchant marine commit tee has been able to find out confidentially much more than you know about the new pooling of 2, 000,000 tons of American ship tonnage for British aid. The amount involved is more than a fourth of our total tonnage (7,500,000), will affect 250 to 300 ships. - ... . -V Some legislators, partly in the know, expect Britain will get the faster and larger American ships while the ugly ducklings (including seized axis ships) will be used as substitutes in our coast Wise trade. They do hot consider it unlikely that the seized vessels, with a new coat of paint and a new name, will be put Into effective service. Some economic dislocations are sure to follow. Freight rates and shipping faculties for sugar, cof fee, cocoa, and other goods from South America and the far east are bound to be affected,. The in itial removal of 50 tankers wfll surely cause in creased use of railroad tank cars and pipelines, with possible effects on gasoline prices, -i Maritime commission is trying to create as lit tle dislocation as possible by substituting some thing, for everything they take away. '- ' The Germans did not bomb the Yugoslav and Greek airports as was done in Poland, the lowlands and France. They used machine guns instead. Rea son: their bombs so devastated enemy fields earlier in the war that weeks of German restoration were required to put them to nazi use after the conquest Machine gunning saves them the trouble of fining In the craters. f t " ; By the third day of the attack on Yugoslavia, they had destroyed 50 per cent of the air force. By the fourth day they had destroyed 73 per cent ' ' I ' An American-developed answer to the German tank may be furnished by the "blitz buggy." This is a miniature truck with four-wheel drive, no ar mor, and no gadgets, capable of carrying three men and towing an anti-tank gun. They cost only $600 and can be turned out by thousands. '. Tests suggest they are capable of swarming over panzer divisions, affording little more target than a mosquito. -jj, , The British have been bewildered by the tank opposition on three occasions in the mountains of the Balkani, the desert of North Africa, and the lowlands of Holland, Three times within a year on three different types of terrain they have found it impossible to stop the plane-tank team. Their trou ble has been that they cannot tell in advance where : the tanks are likely to break through, and the scat tering of anti-tank guns along the long lines of de fense leaves them weak at every point The blitz buggy would permit rapid concentra tion of anti-tank guns at the point of break-through. By BARRETT WBLLOUGIIBY ;; i "No favor Sways Ut; No Fear Shall Atct ;1 ' " ' ; ' ' - ' - " - From First SUtesman, March 13, 1831 j N ' ' 'V ' ; X I !TK01 J j AOOtVi m w4 (C - : &s) in in i - M i , i I i r in ", i - ; tfyr. , i "Pillar of Hercules?"-r Can Der Fueher Blitz This? (Sifts for B ...... t. . ' ! By R. J. HENDRICKS War as it was fought i S-4-41 between Union and Rebel , j fighters compared with the r . Hitter blitzkriegs of ,1941: S S y (Concluding from yesterday:) Copying further from the "Blue and Gray" history: Resting on one knee at his side, "General Gordon! in clear tones but with tearful eyes, read the letter. It was the missive of a noble wom an to her worthy husband whom she knew to be in daily peril of his life, and with pious fervor breathed a prayer for his safety, and commended him to the care of the ! god of battles. As the reading of the letter ended. Gen eral Barlow said: Thank God, .General Now please tear them all up. il would not have them read by others? j s;; f "General Gordon j tore them into fragments and scattered them on the field,1 'shot-sown and bladed thick with steel. Then pressing General Barlow's hand, General Gordon bade him good-bye, and mounting his horse dWkly joined his com mand. He hastily penned a note, resting on the pommel of his saddle, 'giving General Barlow's message to his wife, stated that he was still living, though ser iously wounded, and informing her where he lay.; Addressing the note to Mrs. j Barlow, at Meade's headquarters, he hand-, ed it to lone of his staff, told him to place a white . handkerchief upon his sword, and ride in a gallop toward the I Union line and deliver the note to , Mrs. The officer promptly the order. He was not fired upon, and on being met by a Union officer who advanc ed to learn his business, he pre- Barlow, obeyed tented the note, which was re ceived and read, with the as surance that it should be de livered instantly. ! i "Let us turn from Gettysburg to the capital, Washington, where! 11 years later, General Gordon held with honor a seat as senator of the United States, and was present at a dinner party given by O. B. Potter, a representative in congress from the state of New York. "Upon Mr. Potter introducing to him a gentleman with the title of General Barlow, Gen eral Gordon remarked: 'Are you a relative of the General Bar low, a gallant soldier who was killed 1 at Gettysburg?' ! v a ': . The answer was: 1 am that General Barlow who was killed at Gettysburg, and you are the General Gordon who succored me!' S "The meeting was worthy of two such brave men every inch America nsoldiers.' ... . : . j "I (Captain Mackey) should add that on receiving General Gordon's note which had been speedily delivered, ; Mrs. Barlow hastened to the field, though not without danger to her person, for the battle was still in prog ress. She soon found her hus band and had him borne to a near by farm house where he could . receive surgical attend ance, j "Through her devoted minis tration he, was enabled to re sume' the command of the 'Ex celsior Brigade,' and add to the splendid reputation which It achieved under General Sickles Yhb Safety Valve Letters from Statesman Readers L NO-WA PROMISES To the Editor: Recently Mrs. Roosevelt spoke at a meeting in Los Angeles. She j was asked, "Do you think the president will keep his-promise and keep us out of war?" She promptly re plied that he had not made any such promise. Another j listener said to her, "Tell the president we will not give our lives any place except In America." Again her answer was prompt "Any American who will -not fight any place his country asks him to fight is not an American." In each case, her quick reply served to shut the mouth of the common man who dares ques tion the right of the president to deal with the life of the un recognized American citizen in whatever way suits his arrogant wffl. y-: j h; But what about the president's before-election promises? In Philadelphia on October 23, 1940, he said: "We- are arming , ourselves not for any purpose of conflict or Intervention In foreign disputes . . ; we will not participate in foreign wars and will not send our army, naval or air forces to- fight in foreign lands outside of the "Americas except in case of attack." In Boston, October 30, 1940, he said: "And while I am talk ing to you, fathers and mothers, I give you one more assurance. I have' said this before, but I shall say it again, and again, and again, your boys are not going to be sent Into any for- eign wars." . i' ? - Oh, I know there are loop holes of expression he can get out through. He can cause an : American boat to be fired upon in this far-flung sea patrol he has commanded and so call it an attack. He can call the wars raging; in Europe and Asia "our wars" land so get around the sec ond promise. But before elec tion, When he was dependent upon the will of the common people to return him to the pow er of the presidency, he made those statements with the . defi nite intention that his listeners should; take them at face value as promises that we would- not become involved in either of the foreign wars. And upon that faith in his word the American people' broke an age long prece dent and. returned him to the White! House for another four year term. How could they do otherwise, believing his assur ances land desiring peace and democratic living as they do? Should a nation so little trust a man of so high station, so trustworthy an office, that it must force him to qualify hir every statement, explain in iron bound, unmistakable terms v ery word he utters before a peo-. pie dare believe and trust his solemn pledge? Yet Mrs. Roosevelt has just said he never made those prom (Daniel E. Sickles), its first com mander. : "At the first reunion of the Blue and Gray,' held at Gettys burg July 1st 1888, General Gor don, then the governor of the state of Georgia, and General Barlow, a prominent attorney of New York City, met upon the same spot where they first met in battle." So ends the article in the "Blue and' Gray" history. it: ;! v It is interesting and coinci dental that John Brown Gordon was the baptismal name of Gen eral Gordon; remembering the John Brown whose soul went "marching on," though his body moldered in its grave. Gordon was born in Upson county, Ga, Feb. 6, 1832, so he was only 31 when in the battle of Gettys burg; had become a major gen eral at 29. One of his ancestors fought in the Revolution; the family was Scotch. John B. was without military experiences, but was elected captain of a com pany on the Confederate side, when the Civil war opened; so was on his way to becoming one of the greatest figures in the history of Georgia. fRaccoon Roughs" the com "pany he captained named them selves. In September, 1854, . he had married "Fanny Haralson. - She went to the war with her husband; remained with him throughout - the whole struggle. Nov. 1, 1862, he was a brigadier general, heading the 2nd Army Corps, one wing of Lee's army. He was dubbed "the Chevalier Bayard of the Confederate Army." -." When the war was over, Gen eral Gordon practiced law in Atlanta; in 1868, at 36, he was a I candidate for governor of Georgia; was defeated at the polls. His state sent him to the U. S. Senate, term 1873-80, de feating Alexander H. Stevens and Benj. H. Hill; made him governor, 1886-90; ent him again to the U. Si, Senate, 1891-7. He was the Idol of his people. From, its beginning tin his death, he was commander of the United Confederate Veterans; died at Miami, Florida, Jan. 9, 1904. Let the reader consider such a record with the things now go ing on in Europe, under the war directed by the head Hun, Hit ler, and his mated megalo maniac. Mussolini, harking back to the grandparents of the monkeys. Chapter II eontlnaed Her nerves, grown taut with the concentrated intensity of her ' effort seemed ready to . snap when she heard a faint splash ing sound far. out Holding her breath, she strained her, eyes through the clear, amethyst - dusk. Was something moving out there 'between the twin N islands? . . . It was . . a dim canoe gHdfag out from the shad ows. It came to a standstill. Jean! "Hey!" Behind her Liane'a voice shattered the silence. "What's ' the big idea, mooning - up here by yourself? I've been looking all over for you. Sondra turned. "I oh I came up or for a breath of fresh air," she stammered, weak with sudden panic It was five min utes to nine. She must get rid of Liane before Jean began to speak. But how? "Well, old dear, your boy friend's arrived With your pres- ent.. He" 1 j -.'-V -. "Hi, Sondra!'! Kemp came briskly into the cupola. His eyes were bright in his eager face. "I've got It the Russian plaque. Ifs downstairs. I knew "Oh, Kemp! The plaque!" Son dra hoped the hysterical tone in her voice might be mistaken for joy.- She ; acted f instinctively, scarcely aware of what she was saying. "Come : along, you two, let's go right down." She caught their hands and drew them, to the door of the cupola. "Hurry, darlings! I can scarcely wait to see it!" . When Sondra managed an ex cuse to absent Herself from the drawing room for- a few min utes it was five : minutes past . nine. She raced up the stairs, hoping desperately that some thing had delayed Jean's talk ing. But when she stepped "out into the cupola she heard his guarded tones blurred for an in stant by the thumping of her neart. men ms words came clearly, referring, obviously, to something he had explained dur ing her absence. J "... had me puzzled from the first But after T left you this afternoon, I placed it Then the situation here, with Its im plications, became all too clear. X don't want to frighten you, little one, but it might lead to anything even murder. I don't dare say more now. But I beg of you, be on your guard. . , , ; About myself, now that I've told you my plans,' and you under stand, I'm hoping for your trust and friendship more than any thing else. But with or without that, I'm pledged to go through with what I have to do here for ' Aunt- Jack. There's no alterna tive. :!"';' j ' ;- ' "If, knowing that you still have faith in me, prove it to morrow when I come to see your grandfather. 111 be there early a quarter to eleven. Meet me at the door. Before I go upstairs well arrange for a later talk about this other matter that has me worried. If you are not there well. 111 understand that it's thumbs down. Should that hap pen, I beg of you once more watch. Be on your guard against " . j. The break j was startlingly abrupt Then, as if he were sing ing to himself, his voice came across the night making Sondra Surely the American people are not fools, are not "dumb," as the president has called some of them. They, have the right so far, to express to him, and to everyone else, their opinions and should exercise that right before it is taken away for good. Tell him, and demand attention, that we expect him to make good his promises made before the ; election. . D. R. SMITH, i - . ;, Canny, Oregon. forget momentarily, everything he had been telling her: "Wild geese cry, flying high. Where silver spruce and hem lock sigh. The campfire's glow lifts high, drops low, f My heart goes out to you.T The old Thlinget song of their 1 childhood signaling an inter ruption! ' r ' . The i words were the same yet not the same. The boy's voice had become a man's, rich, deep, poignant It vibrated in her heart It put new glamour into the northern night It made her feel the freedom, the enchanted .loneliness of the wilderness. It made, her feel the beauty and the : longing that only lovers know. J ';' When it ended, she stood, won dering at herself. Was she be ing foolishly romantic again or had he sung the verse not only as a signal, but also a love song? Chapter Elerea . rl 1 ) . The morning following her ex perience in the cupola, Sondra woke, with ; vague feeling that , something; momentous had hap- . pened. Then, swiftly, the events of yesterday clarified in her mind the arrival of Jean Rey nall and the Glory; the discovery that Miss Jacqueline was the old ship's owner, as well as the pow er behind Baranov Packers; Jean's strange fragmentary mes sage which had come to her across the night waters of the bay. v -': Certain remembered phrases of that message she found no less bewildering now than they had been last night "Menace . . . even murder. . . Be on your guard, you and your grand father." On guard against what? What menace could there be in ': dreamy old Sitka ' that would justify a warning couched in such melodramatic terms? Darn Kemp and Liane! If they hadn't kept her from reaching the cupola last night in time to hear the first part of Jean's message, she'd know what all this Was about - V Jean had told her. "I must go through with what I have to do for Aunt Jack." That meant he intended to defy Dynamite and operate the Glory as a floating cannery. If he did. Dynamite certainly would declare a war that would fill the lovely sum mer with a 'merciless conflict she shrank from contemplating. - . . Jean could not know what a fish war in Alaska meant Nets slashed, boats rammed, men sacrificed. "Nothing too dirty to pull." He might be overestimat ing his seeming advantage in finding Dynamite .crippled and house-bound, unaware, that the old sea-fighter's least command .would be ruthlessly and effi ciently carried out by ' Young Chris Sandvik, hard-boiled sen ior captain of the 0Moore fleet If he really understood this, perhaps he might try to per suade Miss Jacqueline to make peace on Dynamite's terms. ! (To Be Continued) Copyright by Barrett WUloughby; Distribute by King Features Syndl- ; ! ., cat, Inc. ffiadio IPirograinnis KSLM SUNDAY INI Kx. ' . SO Melodic Moods. S JO Flowing MclodUa. . M-Waltz Tim. . S JO Popular Concert 10 .DO Sunday Reverts. 11 AO American Lutheran Church. 13:00 Singing Strings. - ll:15-Newi HiUshU U the Week. 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