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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1941)
' ' FAGS FO03 . thm OZSGOn STATEC34AIL Scdaxa. Orarjon. Friday Morning, October 24. 1811 Wo Favor swayt U. No Feat Shall AwT from ITrst Statesman. Marc M. 1831 THE STATESMAN PUlHING CO. CfiARLES A. SPRAGUlVPrcrideat Member of The Associated Press Tb Associated Press Is exclusivelv co titled to fho tuw far publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Fresh and Salt (Water) Pork Inclusion of the word "omnibus' in the title of a congressional bill invites attention to the probability that the measure contains a large percentage of pork. In the case of the perennial "omnibus rivers and harbors bill probability Is transformed into certainty. To the credit of the house rivers and har bors bill it deserves to be mentioned that this year, though the measure contains as usual every item which the army engineers have designated as feasible and justifiable, the com mittee has recommended that appropriations be voted only for those which serve defense needs, withholding the others until, if ever, the defense emergency has passed. In the bill is an item of $3,600,000 for navigation improvements on the Willamette river as far south as Albany. A minimum six-V- foot channel to the mouth of the 'Santiam and a five-foot channel the short remaining dis tance to Albany, are the objectives. This part of the job calls for only $1,100,000; the re mainder is for reconstruction of the locks at ' Oregon City. This is a project for which Willamette .' valley groups have fought for years, with the help of their representatives in congress. If completed it would to some degree serve de fense needs. It is our expectation that there will be an appropriation in some amount for the channel work which has been under way for several years approved more for the sake of avoiding deterioration of the existing im provements than in recognition of. the chan nel's possible contribution to defense. 4 Even the most rabid Willamette valley booster will concede however that navigation of this river is not a tremendous factor, as things stand, in national defense. We supply some lumber and, regrettably, a great quan tity of unprocessed logs, as well as an impor tant volume of food products. But we have had no insuperable transportation problem and none in sight. So we will not have much room for protest if assuming that congress does follow the committee's advice and delay ap . propriations for the less defense-connected projects if it includes the Oregon City locks in this category. Included in this bill also is the Great : Lakes-St. Lawrence Seaway and Power pro ject. In the material which has just come to hand our government's expenditure would be $200,000,000, which isn't hay. However, the" Joint Canadian-United States board of engi neers set the cost in 1926 at about 427 million of which this country's.,ghare:was to have been 250 million, and some items were left out of that figure. A responsible planning board which favors the project, has estimated the cost at over a-billion and the United States' share at 623 million. Federal outlay would be 90 million less, that figure representing the contribution of New York state. Canada's share would be only a little less and Canada is in this war deeper than we are to date. It may readily be conceded that this water way ought to be built sometime, and will be. It may further be conceded that if it stood completed now or could be completed next . year, it would be an aid to defense industry and particularly to lend-lease deliveries. But if dirt started to fly tomorrow, it . would be 1947 or '48 before it would begin to pay dividends in the form of power and transportation. This may- be a long war but we don't really anticipate that it will be that long and if we did, spending a billion dollars and a comparable amount of man-power to dig a big ditch wouldn't be our idea of the proper procedure for winning it. The St Lawrence waterway will be an ideal project for some later period of unem ployment. But this is not the time, either for gratifying a whim of our too-whimsical presi dent or for distributing pork in billion-dollar - packages. . 'i , Railway Wage Demands . Perhaps in. accordance with the usual stra tegy of attorneys who, advise their clients to sue for a huge sum in the hope of getting a much smaller one, the railway .brotherhoods demanded wage increases amounting to about SO per cent or some 900 million dollars. The cases are not comparable, however, for the railways, unlike defense attorneys, have been able to cite the enormity of the increase de manded as an argument tending to show un fairness on the part of railway labor. For that matter, recognizing that the gen eral public will be the jury in case of a dead lock, both sides have been quite free with , their charges oi. unfairness in this controversy. On both sides we have received reams of f propaganda. For quantity the carriers have a substantial edge but for quality we must hand the steam-headed water wings to a newspaper size page broadcast in fine print from the president of one of the brotherhoods, which starts off substantially like this: Railway management' is on the march again in an attempt to carry the field against the just demands of the heroic legions of labor .". . . The smoke of management's mis- . -guided propaganda is already threatening to oesmircn in pnguiemiig uurizons ox laDOTf aspirations to maintain -itself in the demo- . cratic community of decent self-respecting 'Americans. . ' v" ' " , Just at present a fact-finding board of J which Dean Wayne Morse of ;the University cf Oregon law school is chairman, is scanning 5000 pages of testimony and evidence present- . vf in th rrnlonf hearing, iust closed. The v brotherhoods have rejected a proposal that the v Lzue be mediated and the mediators' findings, be binding upon both parties; so now the fact- iii-i "Sl '' Pmal MaDon finders are seeking a compromise formula which will be in its opinion equitable; its mem bers can only hope that it will be acceptable to railway labor and management. Of course railway labor and management, in spite of their present grimacing, are about 20 years ahead of labor and management in other occupations in their possession of a workable formula for settlement of such dis putes. In most any other occupation, there al ready would have been a tieup. Despite sev eral discouraging setbacks to date, these nego tiations have not yet gotten to the point at which a strike is imminent or may even be considered probable. Until the fact finding board makes its recommendations there is little point in ven turing an opinion. At the hearing each side fought for every inch of ground. Management made a particular point of opposing vacations with pay. Just to state what we rather conceive to be a viewpoint held by a great many inno cent bystanders, the railways could well afford to concede vacations if the brotherhoods would give up their present right to "feather bed" employment pay for hours spent largely in "just sitting," theoretically to compensate for work eliminated by labor-saving inventions. If men are going to "just sit," why not fix it so they can have fun doing it? John Cudahy, former ambassador to Bel gium, is Indirectly quoted in an Associated Press dispatch as having told the senate foreign , relations committee "he thought Hitler 'was a nice fellow." In one paper this headline appear ed in the next column: "Fifty more Frenchmen to die in reprisal." News Behind The News By PAUL MALLON (Distribution by King Feature Syndicate. Inc. Repro duction In whole or in part strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, Oct 23 Hitler is throwing every war energy into Russia as if that were his only front But the items of news slipping out from the various other European quarters suggest his greatest obstacle to ultimate success lies in other directions. A nazi general is killed in the streets of France. An uprising in Greece provokes slaughter that cannot be concealed. The newt that the Italians are for tifying the Brenner pass has now been officially confirm ed. These and similar devel opments lately disclose the fact that Hitler in his suc cesses has brought cm the con dition he most dreaded and desired most to escape encirclement The nazi system has developed many new methods of bringing reluctant nations, peoples and forces to its own service. The idea of holding the French army in "prison to force the coopera tion of the French government and people is an example. But Hitler is finding that oppression and con quest cannot be maintained successfully through fear and force. There comes a time when con quered peoples will resent and fight oppression more than any punishment that can be brought to bear against them. The breaking point is reach ed when their enslaved condition becomes so un bearable that they are willing to risk their lives and safety to express their resistance. Thus the battle line which the nazis face has been extended in every direction. To survive and maintain a living German nation, Hitler cannot get along without the voluntary cooperation of the nations he has conquered. He cannot get oil , from Rumania, iron from Norway and grain from the Ukraine In quantities he requires on the basis , of fear and force that he has established. Sabotage cannot be stamped out by this method and it is bound to expand and undermine his military con-" quests. These obvious conditions belie the new line of propaganda that several public men including' Admiral Byrd and Interior Secretary Ickes have been shifting into lately, namely, that Hitler must be defeated on the field of battle. The truth seems to be he is defeating hirnslf. There are no battlefields upon which a new AEF could venture with any reasonable expecta tions of success. The problem of transportation alone would prevent us from attempting to throw an army In behind the Russians, for example. The same difficulty has thus far prevented and will no doubt continue to prevent any American move to establish a base for aggressive action in Africa or in Europe; Hitter has made his real battlefield, a polit ical and economic battlefield at every point of conquest and there is where he will be. defeated. Napoleon also failed from too many victories. He could conquer but he could not manage his conquests. His system was to establish relatives or authorities securely bound to his interests to exert his will over conquered peoples. But neither he, Hitler nor anyone else has ever found, nor ever will find, a way to maintain a successful dominating control over reluctant people for the long run. -.: .:. The only possible way in which control might be exerted successfully is to establish a voluntary, 'desire for cooperation among them. It could be done, for instance, if Hitler could create a pros perity beyond that which the conquered people previously, have known. He could do It if he could offer conditions of living which they would con sider more desirable than what they have known. Then he could, dm w from them the spirit and co operation necessary to make his system operate 8U(xessfullyi - - . : . '.:7 : VA,--v7. That Is impossible now. He has taken the opposite course. He has chosen to dominate rather than rule by reason. Thus by his own tactics is der fuehrer gradually defeating himself. , Jw DEFENSE JMj Introducing the Unpopular "Handcuff King" ;ifts for By R. J. HENDRICKS Question of Grant 10-24-41 school sixth graders about the children of Dr. John McLoughlin, pioneer: S x A letter, dated 845 Gaines street Salem, Oregon, October 16, 1941, arrived the day it was written to this columnist by Florence Brock, and attention to it has beep delayed by matter already in hand. The letter reads: "Mr. Kuescher'a sixth grade at Grant School has been studying about early Oregon, including some about Dr. John McLough lin. One question we were un able to answer about him is that we didn't know whether any of his children are living. If they are, where and what are they doing? We would like very much to have you answer our ques tion." V m No; not one of Dr. McLough lin's children is living. However, numerous descendants, down to great-great-great grandchildren, and perhaps farther, are living, but scattered far and wide. Dr. McLoug Win's children were, ac cording to Bancroft's Oregon History, volume 1, page 37: "Joseph, who settled at the mouth of the Yamhill river and died there. His widow, who was a daughter of Mr. McMillan of the Hudson's Bay company, in early Astoria days married (was married to) Etienne Gregoire, a French settler. S "David McLoughlin, the younger son, was sent to Paris and London for education. . . He , returned to Oregon, spent his in heritance, and became a resident of Montana. "William Glen Rae (turning to page 36) . . . was employed as trader at the different (Hudson's Bay Company) posts, and was then appointed head clerk at Fort Vancouver. In 1838 he mar ried Marie Eloise, daughter of Dr. McLoughlin, soon after which he was appointed chief trader. . . In 1841 he was sent to The Safety Valve Letters from Statesman - Readers ' PHEASANTS AND FARMERS To the Editor: Now that pheasant-hunting is again in season, I should like to appeal Xo hunters to be careful when hunting in ' this valley where the country is , well settled. I often wonder why people from town are so lackjng in courtesy that they never deem it necessary to ask the farmers whether or not they have objec tions . to their hunting on their. premises. I think most of the farmers would not object as mere are so many pheasants feeding upon the ' grain fields but they should know when hunters are there. I have " . seen, times when one would hate to go out in the pasture for stock, especially where there is . brush, not knowing when shot j will fall around one. 7 , ' - ' , " I know people in town who. have beautiful shrubbery prob ' ably , would not object to any one coming by to admire them , . If they spoke to them about if but, at the same time, would ' strongly resent one's walking in- -- to the yard uninvited " for the same purpose. Here's hoping some people will think this over. A FARMER. Breakfast California to take charge of the company's business, which con tinued under his management until his death by his own hand in 1846. S "John McLoughlin, Junlqr, second son of Dr. McLoughlin, was .... was murdered by his own men, Canadians and kana kas at Fort Stikeen, on Stikeen river, (northermost outpost of the Hudson's Bay company fac ing the Pacific ocean.) "Mrs. Rae had three children when she returned to Oregon on the death of her husband, a son and two daughters. The son in herited a large property in the Orkney Islands, but died early. The daughters became Mrs. The odore Wygant and Mrs. Joseph My rick of Portland (prominent in that city.) Mrs. Rae was mar ried again to Daniel Harvey of Oregon City, who was in charge of McLoughlin's mills at that place, and by whom she had two sons, Daniel and James, both be coming residents of Portland." I So ends the Bancroft matter. The history class at the Grant school may conclude that no children of Dr. McLoughlin are yet living, and few grandchild ren that are well known. The most prominent great great grandson is Simeon R. Winch, who has a very impor tant position in the Pacific Northwest being business man ager of the Portland Journal. There are two great-great-great granddaughters, who are daugh ters of Mr. Winch. One of them was recently married. 7- V. V Some old time readers of this column will remember the story of David McLoughlin, third son of Dr. McLoughlin, and Trottie Dring, daughter of Captain Dring, skipper and owner of the English barque Janet which did business with the merchant firm of Pettygrove, ; Crosby & Mc Loughlin, Portland, when that place was all but a forest prime- . val; all but a few small shacks and clearings. David liked Trottie's curls or her hair-do, and the rest of it and there was a reciprocal feel ing on the part of Trottie. V But the Whitman massacre came at that time, and hard headed Skipper Dring objected Lotds DohntVar- According to U. S. navy department announcement' 11 members of the crew of the U. 8. S. Kearny, destroyer torpedoed near Iceland, ar mlsring and 10 others Injured, one critically. Among the misstar Louis Dobnikar, water tender, second class, of Cleveland. Ensign Roy NoreUns, also shown above, was one of those aboard the de stroyer, being assigned there shortly after graduation from taa midshipmen's schoolat Northwestern tBUveraUy last December. - to his daughter casting her for tunes with a fellow in such a God-forsaken dump as Oregon, where the Indians might kill and scalp her at any daybreak. So the stiff-necked skipper with his daughter, slipped away, hurried to Astoria, and put out to sea on the wide Pacific, which he proceeded to put between Trottie and David. Wrote Eva Emery Dye, in the last paragraph of the last chapter but two of the latest edition of her great book, "McLoughlin and Old Oregon:' "From that day the veneering of civilization fell off from Da vid like an egg-shell. He lost all Interest in the store. Indian im patience of restrains, Indjan In stincts and inherited tendencies triumphed over the Scotch of his veins. He roved continually. He gave himself up to- dissipation, and was happy only with his red friends In the forest He wooed the daughter of a chief." (Continued tomorrow.) Today's Garden By LILLIE L. MADSEN S. F. asks if I will name a few shrubs which attract the birds because of their fruits. She wants to add some shrubs and birds to her garden. Answer Cotoneasters, haw thornes, huckleberries, Junipers, Japanese honeysuckle, flowering currants, mountain ash, coral berry, weigela. G. A. writes that her soil is very light and wants to know what evergreens win thrive in it Answer Some of the pines and the cypresses do well in a comparatively light soiL Red ce dar (Juniperus Virginia) will also grow in a light soil. - L. B. writes that she recently read an article about blueberries in a Sunday Statesman, and wants to know what time of the year to plant these and where they could be obtained, also when to plant figs. Answer I imagine if one wrote to Mrs. James Drury, Ag ate Beach, one could find out where to obtain the plants. I be lieve February is considered one of the best months in which to set out these berrying shrubs. February is also considered the best month in which to plant figs. I 0'- Si Enstga Boy NoreUoa 3AM By MARYSE BUTLEDGE Chapter 32 (Centtased) Her teeth gripped her lower lip as she tried once more to open the door, controlling her shivers. ' She must hive been crazy to tell Garrison. Why hadn't she remembered hints Carlie -had let drop? This bril liant attorney, this courtly man-about-town, was something more than he appeared. He would track down Carlie's murderer. And he would never spare anyone, even Carlie hus band, from the consequences of a grave and treasonable enter prise. She gave a last twist to the key. The door opened. It was frightfully quiet in the foyer. Fan drew her white wrap closer in the sudden chill that en veloped her. Her round blue eyes stared at lights in the liv ing room. Someone must be here. "Doremus!" Her choked voice was drowned in space. Then she remembered Doremus was out with her Selinda. "Mat!" she cried, her tall body swaying in the; shadows. She had often known fear, but never like this. "Mat'" He wasn't here. Fan forced her golden san daled feet to move forward, step by step. At first the living room seemed empty. No, not empty: Mat was there. Fan's mouth opened on a frozen scream she never utter ed. She saw his body drooped C$ac9io (Programs KSLM FRTOAT tt9t Ke. 6 JO Sunrise Salute. 7 :00 Newi In Brief. 7:05 Old favorttea. 7:30 News. 7:45 The Esquires. 8.-30 News. 8:45 Mid-Morning Matinee. 9)0 Pastor's CaU. 9:15 Popular Music. 9:45 Four Notes. 10:00 The World This Morning. 10:15 Prescription for Happiness. 10:30 Women in the News. 10:35 Gene Krupa's Orchestra. 10:45 Dr. R. Franklin Thompson. 11. "00 Maxine Buren. 11:15 Value Parade. 11:45 Lum and Abner. 12. -00 Ivan Ditmars. 11:15 Noontime News. 13:30 Hillbilly Serenade. 12 :35 Willamette Valley Opinions. 12 a5 Song Shop. 1:15 Market Reports. 1 -20 Isle of Paradise. 1:30 Western Serenade. IKX) News Brevities. 1:05 US Navy. 130 State Safety. 2:45 Del Courtney's Orchestra. 3:00 Concert Gems. 4 0 Russ Morgan's Orchestra. 4:15 News. 4:30 Popular Music. 4:45 Tea time Tunes. 5:00 Popularity Row. 5:30-M)inner Hour Melodies. 6:00 Tonight's Headlines. 6:15 War Commentary. 620 String Serenade. 70 News in Brief. 7.-05 Interesting Facts. 7:15 Football Prophet. T JO Jimmy Allen. 7.45 Popular Music. 8 00 World Headlines. . 8:05 Vocal Varieties. 30-Wes McWain, Piano. 8:45 Tango Time. 9:00 News Tabloid. 9:15 Popular Music. 9:30 Oldtime Music. 10 .-00 Let's Dance. 10:30 News. .10:45 Music to Remember. ' KOIN CBS FRIDAY ti Ke. 9M Northwest Farm Reporter. :15 Breakfast Bulletin. 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KEX NBC FRIDAY 119 Ke, " 00 The Quack of Dawn. 70 Western Agriculture. 7:15 Amen Corner. -T:30 Breakfast Club. :15 Viennese Ensemble. . 8 JO Whafs New. 8:43 Keep nt with Patty Jean. 90 Hollywood Headliners. 95 Four Polka Dots. 9:15 Stars of Today. 30 National Farm and Home. . 190 Keep Fit With Patty Jena. 19:15 Toley Ac Glenn. 1930 News. 19:45 Charmingly We Live. 1130 Musks Appreciation 18:09 Orphans of Divorce. 12:15 Amanda of Honeymoon HUL -1239 John's Other Wilt. 12:45-tJut Plain BUL 10 Your Livestock Reporter. 1U5 News Headlines end High , lights. - SEVENS skewered by the sword whose ebony sheath lay In a spreading stain under the pedals. . 4 . .Chapter 33 - Fan got to Mat pulling at him; calling. ; He was stiH warm. ' "Please please not this. Mat not this" She couldn't scream. She had no voice. -Then, her frenzied face staring blindly down, she saw the en velope. It was fastened to the under side of the overturned bench; the bench Carlie had al ways said was her dream rug. She could go anywhere on It she used to say to Garrison. Impulsively, Fan snatched up the envelope. It felt like another pulse beating in her hand. It was Carlie's last message to Mat or to Richard Garrison. Yes, to Garrison. For on its surface was written in Carlie's dashing hand: "For Dick,' in case of my death." Fan listened, tense, and in the silence other ears seemed, also, to be listening as the night slid away. She gazed out of the window, as Breanu had done an hour ago. Central Park drowsed uneasily under an October sky. How had he got back here? How had he escaped? Where were the men who would pres ently knock on his door, de manding entrance, and find her here, splotched with his blood? What did it matter? (To Be Continued) These sen ed ales are supplied by the respective stsilns. Any varis dons note fcy listeners are Ih te changes made by the rtatfna with, et notice te this ewspaper. 130 Market Reports. 135 Talk, O. M. Plummer. 15 News. 20 Charles Dant's Music. 2:15 Curbstone Quiz. 330 The Quiet Hour. 30 Between "the Bookends. 3:15 News. J JO Prescott Presents. 40 Elmer Chips In. 45 Jean CavaU, Singer. 4:15 Hotel Biltmore Orchestra. 430 Stars of Today. 4:45 Voice of Prophecy. 50 Adventure Stories. 5 US Flying PatroL 30 News of the World. 5:45 Tom Mix Straight Shooter. 0 The La.-tons. 6:15 Radio Magic. S 30 Michael and Kitty. 70 Carlton Hotel Orchestra. 730 Aloha Land. 7:45 News Headlines and High- lights. 0 Romance St Rhythm. 30 Gang Busters. 90 Pigskin Party. t JO Moonlight Sonata. 100 The Eavesdropper. 10:15 Hotel Sir Francis Drake Or chestra. 10 JO Broadway Bandwagon. 10.-45 Pasadena Auditorium Orches tra. 110 This Moving World. 11:15 Florentine Gardens Orchestra. 1130 War News Roundup. KALE MBS Friday UN Ke. , 30 Memory Timekeeper. 70 News. 7 as Musical Clock. 730 Memory Timekeeper. 755 Miniature Melody. 80 Breakfast Club. 830 News. 5,45 As the Twig Is Bent. 90 John B. 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