pagz roux Th OBEGON STATESMAN, Satan Otjoel Sunday Morning. Dwtmbw 7, 1941 MUNMt MM tfltCSTttUU Events Leading to Present US-Japan Crisis "No Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Awe" From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CC. , CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President Member ol The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. Wages and Inflation Railway labor was granted wage increases all around and immediately there is talk of in creases in freight rates. It is averred, indeed, that the president in anticipation of these wage increases suggested, before they were granted, interstate commerce commission studies looking toward the boosting of freight rates. Your or dinary layman, recalling the serious financial plight of the roads publicized widely three years ago and doubtless little ameliorated in spite of its eclipse by more pressing issues, is likely to concede that higher transportation charges are In order. But if freight rates go up that automatically increases wholesale prices and presently re ' tail prices; it is just another inflationary step. Some congressmen in discussing the price con trol bill argued that it was not necessary to put a ceiling on wages, and you might suppose that a majority of their colleagues agreed, for they didn't do it. It's hardly necessary to sug gest that their real reason for rejecting wage control was something else entirely. Neverthe less it has been a stock argument with labor and new dealers that price control would serve to control wages. It's something like the chicken and egg argument, but anyway here we already have the answer. If prices go up, wages have to rise; if wages rise, prices must go along. Their interrelation is the reason for using the word "spiral" to describe the general process. But there is an other factor involved. If a railroad or an in dustrial corporation makes a profit, govern ment is in position to take most of it away again. But if the workers are the only ones who profit well, they may think in a time like this that government is taking it all away, but that won't actually be the case. Government doesn't dare take a really healthy slice out of men's wages, no matter how liberal those wages may be. Wages being so largely tax-exempt, government has more than the normal diffi culty in making ends meet it hasn't managed it for more than a decade, you know and the wages burn holes in pockets and create demand that forces prices up inflation again. Actually no one begrudges any individual a reasonable advance in income. It wouldn't be so very bad if all prices and all wages and 11 other types of income went up together. It's the non-uniformity of the whole process that hurts; the inequality of the various shifts. Or ganized labor will always be in the front row when the jackpot is jarred loose; in the back row unorganized labor, white collar workers, persons living on income from investments, will Buffer increasingly in the order named. Every time a wage or a price is raised, someone suffers or is drawn Bearer to the spot at which he will begin to sufer. ages 20 and 44, and a 20 per cent increase in marriages. Other possible factors have not yet been determined. There was also an increase in deaths, so that the excess of births over deaths was around 169,000. Census bureau officials are not optimistic over the chances that this more rapid upswing in population will continue, since the marriage rate increase can scarcely be permanent and there is no certainty of a net immigration. For the immediate present, the birth rate decline has been halted. Old King Cole is threatened with a labor shortage, according ,to the latest reportissued by a leading institute of musical art. Young people aren't taking violin lessons as numer ously as they used to. The institute offers var ious possible explanations such as the instru ment's difficulty and a possible failure of violin teachers to keep pace with the streamlined methods of piano teachers, for example. Re calling personal struggles with a violin, we are of the opinion that this is the real explana tion: Too many parents today lack that degree of control, over their children which formerly enabled them to enforce drudgery. In "The Seventh Trumpet," a war-theme play which opened on Broadway last week, there are seven characters. All of them are killed before the curtain goes down for the last time. War is a great problem-solver if, like a playright, one is able to direct the bombs to the proper targets. The Tribune's "Expose Chicago Tribune, always bitterly anti-new deal and now vigorously isolationist, has pub lished excerpts from what it describes as secret correspondence between President Roosevelt and certain war department officials. The Tri bune chooses to describe what it has disclosed, as evidence that the president and the war de partment are methodically moving toward cre ating of a five-million-man second American Expeditionary Force to fight Hitler on Euro pean soil in 1943. In contrast, some defenders of the presi dent's foreign policy have sought to describe what the Tribune dug up somewhere, as just one of those voluminous "war plans" which the war department prepares "just in case" and has on hand covering invasion "of countries with which the United States is on the friendliest of terms. The truth as we understand it is some where in between. If the documents are genuine, their existence probably indicates that the president foresaw a possible necessity, in 1943, for such an invasion, and that someone in the war department actively urged the shaping of "defense" preparations toward such an offen sive. As a "war scare" the expose can be dis missed with a reminder that the authority to declare war still rests with congress. We have less need to fear the president's and the war department's possible war-mindedness, than to watch our own emotions. That leaves only the role, or plight, of the Chicago Tribune to be considered. It seems fair to charge that publication with two of fenses; publication of confidential government documents and these are times in which gov ernment ought to have the privilege of keeping secret any documents It chooses if they relate to foreign affairs and secondly, an attempt to mislead the public. Even if .this double-barreled indictment . proves well founded, the public has no reason to be shocked. It is typical of the Chicago Tri bune. The Incident occurs Just as the "Sun" rises with an ambition' to eclipse the Tribune. The chances that it will do so are slim these are not the times, when a new newspaper can . readily make the grade. .But if it does, no one . will shed tears for the paper which years ago spurned the -ethics of good faith which are recognized b the great majority of newspapers. This column confessed surprise that the house of representatives passed as tough a de fense strike curb bill as it did. It's a comfort to learn that President Roosevelt was also sur prised not to mention a considerable number of representatives. News Behind The News . By PAUL MALLON (Distributed by King,' Features Syndicate. Inc. Repro duction in whole or in part strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, Dec. 6. Not aU the railroad strike agreement was put on paper. Mr. Roosevelt had to pay a heavy price to avoid a walkout. In his secret negotiations, he found the unions demanding a wage hike which would cost around $800,000,000 a year. His emergency board recommended an increase of IVi per cent to cost around $270,000,000. The unions flatly told him they would not take a small increase, arguing . that CIO organizers were already burrowing into their unions and would take ad vantage of their failure. They claimed the CIO has been getting wage increases of from 10 to 15 per- cent. When the 10 cents an hour "increase was fin ally worked out by Mr. Roqsevelt, he called in Chairman Joe Eastman of the interstate commerce commission and suggested freightrates be increased somewhere around $55,000,000 a year to pay part of the costs. Eastman, however, was non-committal, saying this was a matter for the whole ICC. The president also asked Eastman to expedite consid eration of future freight rate increases, but East man only promised to do what he could about it. The cost of the final settlement will run about $325,000,000, and the tone of the negotiations broad ly suggest that the public will pay the whore bill in increased rates sooner or later. This was certainly one occasion when the ad ministration's claim that wages have nothing to .. . : ' ., - -J-- " . r4iFjSER a-r7-3- " luff ' i ' I i i ii i t-iilii v i u 1 1 in ' "EmeiraW- By .FRANCIS GERARD Emlbassy Chapter 14 Continue "A Japanese nobleman!1 said the Premier quietly. "I didn't know that Tell me," he went on, "do you think this . . . this attachment on the part of the. countess is . . . serious? "With a woman of her tem perament it is difficult to say, but the Dwan informed me that the affair had been going on for at least two years. "I see, said the Premier. "Possibly our future policy In the Far East might be affected by the whim of an alluring little lady like Madame de Vassig nac. There was a long silence when the Prime Minister had finish ed speaking. Mr. Laud stared solemnly through the window. Yves glanced curiously about the room in which so many fateful decisions had been made, while Sir John watched the Premier's fingers beating a tat too upon the table. Presently the old man who held England's destiny In his hands pressed the buzzer and his young secretary appeared. "Oh, Calthrop,. said his chief, "would you get Sir Anthony at the Palace on the telephone for me?" At .1 View of the Banna road, top left; Premier To Jo, right. Docks at Rangoon, Burma, center left; danger sones on map, right. Below, President Roosevelt, center, dining at Warm Springs. Critical Japanese-US relations, boiiins to the breaking: point, take the news spotlUht. Military moves were many in the danger spots in the Far East as the Japanese cabinet met in extraordinary session at the Tokyo home of Premier Tojo, who stated that Japan must do everything- possible to wipe out British and American exploitation in the Far East. A larse contingent of British and Indian troops landed at Rangoon, British Burma. Thailand troops took np positions along the frontiers as new Japanese forces poured into neighboring Indo-China. A disclosure from Manila was to the effect that an all-American air unit composed of American planes flown by American pilots under the Chi nese flag; will help defend the vital Burma road from Japanese air attacks. Bits for Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS wm'jmi w" Paul Millon do with prices was refuted by its own action. When the congressional leaders strolled into the White House the day after the house passed the strong anti-strike bill, Mr. Roosevelt lifted his eyes and asked with some amazement: "What In the world happened?" . It was easy to tell. him. The house became in volved in a peculiar parliamentary situation where by it had to take the strong bill or nothing. Also the congressmen were encouraged to take the dras tic bill principally because the CIO and AFL were against any legislation. The common saying in the cloakroom was "We might as well be hung for sheep or goats." Of the 129 democrats voting for the bill, 100 were from southern states. The result was as much of a shock to the con gressional leaders as to the president. The morn ing of the vote, Speaker Rayburn thought his house would sidetrack the bill by sending it back to committee. The senate will tone if down slightly. Hitler's failures around Moscow lately can be attributed to the weather and the brilliant Russian use of land mines. The weather has been the worst in many years. Alternate freezing, thawing, rain and show have caused the German tanks to bog down. They have started out in the morning on firm frozen ground only to run into thaw which creates muddy footing for the rest of the day. But even more troublesome to the. Germans is the vast network of land mines the reds nave planted across the whole center battle line. These automatic explosives; touched off by tanks rumb ling over them, are being used on a greater scale than ever attempted in warfare before. Then, too, the reds have planned out thor oughly , a defensive system' based on tank traps, concrete fortifications, pillboxes, trenches and barbed wire, adroitly taking advantage of every Poet laureate takes 12-9-41 note of a new comment on the greatest question as old as is civilization: v" s V John Steven McGroarty, Cali fornia's poet laureate, in a recent issue of his generation old page in the Los Angeles Sunday Times, called attention to a let ter he had received from a friend telling him of an article in the Pathfinder Magazine of Oct. 11, 1941, the author being Wilfred J. Funk, president of Funk & Wagnalls Co., famous publishers. It is worthy Sunday reading. It reads: V "I personally can't quite get the reasoning of an atheist. An agnostic is something else again. When a man says, 'I don't know,' I can go along with him quite a way. He seems human and friendly to me because there are so many things in this diffi cult world of ours that I .don't know myself. On the other hand, an atheist knows. Or says he does. And I am not trying to go into any sarcastic religious rou tine when I say I envy his cour age. It takes real bravery to affirm. But in this world of miracles it seems to me it takes a whale of a lot more guts to deny. "Here, for example, I can sit in my home, spin Aladdin's own dial and pick one voice from the ten trillion radio waves that are circling out to the far shores of infinite space. To be able to The Safety Valve Letters from Statesman Readers FOLKS ACROSS THE 8EA Since my Mama's gone to heaven And my papa, has gone, too, I think when Christmas comes The thing that we should do Is to send their Christmas pres ents To the folks across the sea And so that Is what we're plan ning " To do, both Claude and me. Population Gains Despite the worry of sociologists and statis ticians overj&e evidence of a long-range decline Mtural blrrier They have even gone to the ex- in the United States birth rate and population, there was a gain of more than a million in the 12 months from the 1940 census date, ! April 1, to Aprfl XlHU a gain estimated at 1,148,730 to an estimated total of 132.818,003. t -v.The year's gain exceeded the ten-year av erage gain by an astounding 30 per cent. Of the approximately 280,000 excess gain,, about dne ' third Ts accountable to the fact that there -was a net immigration of 83,488 persons, In contrast tent of bringing in dirt to build mounds vln flat areas as tank obstacles. For there's- folks across the waters That are old and poor and cold So well send a little cheer Though we cannot send them . gold; And to little children left alone So lonesome Christmas night Who may be cold and hungry With no Christmas tree to light One of this nation's unexposed defense defic- ... iendes is m land mines. All we have are now oby Let's each send Christmas pack- " A 1 - a - . m - .s a teciea Dy any sunpie magnet, war auinormes nave j. recognized this and are now working on new types. do such an incredible thing as that even yet stops me with amazement. Personally, after the scientists pulled that pretty little trick on me, I'm not going to be. surprised at anything any more. The atheist seems to have it all worked out. He has ex amined all the theories of the theologians and he is high-brow enough to have studied the com parative religions of the world. It's all the bunk, says he. What impresses me is that he must have acquired a deep trust in the clarity of his intellect and in the accuracy of his five senses. These senses of ours and this intellect we possess are the first points where my faith in atheism opens up a seam. I haven't much faith left in my own senses. They've fooled me too often. "Just for instance: You have eyes. And what do you see? In the narrow range of visible light your eyes can run the gamut from the short waves of violet to the long rays of red. There are waves beyond violet and waves beyond red which are in visible to us. Therefore there are two infinite worlds of color above and below these points that you and I can't see at all. What are these other worlds? I don't know. Do you? You don't? Then your sense can't be so infallible, after all. "Then there's the matter of sound. These two ears we have can catch a little of it. Not very much, though. We run the range of the pinaoforte from low A to high C and a bit beyond. We don't put in any strings for the other sounds we could hear. A lower register would give a rath er rusty and unpleasant tone, and the higher peep-peeps would be irritating. Our real range of sound runs only from 20 to 20,- 000 wave lengths. Beyond and at each end are vast worlds of silence. There are untold num bers of sound waves existing that our ears can't hear at all. despite megaphones and amplifiers.. W "Feeling? Taste? Smell? Our primitive faculties scarcely touch these vast shores. Shall we come closer to the things of mind itself? We live in a stream of .' time. Your - finita intellect cer tainly can't think of such a thing " as endless time, can it? And yet you are equally incapable of marking a beginning or an end to it To make our foundations even more insecure, modern Zin- 1 steins doubt the very existence of time itself. Space is an equal ly, impossible problem for us. It . must end. It can't end. Our inadequate minds grasp pitiful segments of these vast circles. They are not even competent to appraise this-world we live in. Should we trust our judgments instinct by. the trite name of re ligion. This instinct, this emo tion, has often been more pow erful than any other. It has con quered love, at times. And even fear of death. It has built civil izations. It has set the spires of churches in the valleys around the world. S "If this religious business is fiction, it's a tough little fable ' to kill. They wrote it off the books in the French Revolution, you know, and it soon sneaked in the back door. They liqui dated it in Russia. It is filtering in again. They buried it in the catacombs. It escaped and cover ed the earth. They crucified it. It was born again. "Yes, sir. Like it or not, atheists or otherwise, it looks as though you and I and all of us were going to have to deal with re ligion for the rest of all time. s s s "It would seem so odd if such a profound desire as this should not have a factual realization. All our other instincts have. It would be the one great ex ception. Why should there be one great exception? Why should our logic break down again and deny satisfaction to this one? Mondav Rarlin Should it do this? I'm all out "naa7 11811,0 of answers. You tell me." On Page 7 CHAPTER FIFTEEN Half an hour after their inter view with the Prime Minister, Meredith and Yves Blaydes Steele found themselves in a small dressing room on the ground floor of Buckingham Pal ace. Sir Anthony, Assistant Private Secretary, was a little grey-headed man with the fig ure of a jockey and a face the color of old parchment He listened while Meredith recount ed the disappearance of the Sulungu necklace. He was about to comment at the end of Mere dith's long recital when the door opened and a tall, slight figure appeared framed against the wall of the passage beyond. The three men rose hastily to their feet. "Sir Anthony," began the new comer, "I wanted to . . ." He broke off as he caught sight of the baronet's companions. "I'm sorry," he said, "I didn't know you were engaged." "Not at all, Sir," said Sir An thony. "If I might be permit ted, I would like to present these gentlemen since they are here upon a matter deeply affecting the Empire's relations with the Dwan. of Sulungu." "Certainly," said the young man smiling, and Meredith and Yves were presented in turn. Sir Anthony briefly outlined the delicate position, the young dignitary giving an occasional quick little nod of the head as he listened. "I agree entirely with Sir John M e r e d i t h's suggestion," the young man said when the bar onet had finished. "The Dwan must lunch here as usual. An excellent suggestion! Tell me," the young man went on, "what you propose as a means of get ting the necklace back." "I hope to buy it back. Sir." The young man's eyes twink led as he asked, "Have you ap proached the Chancellor of the Exchequer?" Meredith laughed softly as he observed, "The Prime Minister seemed to share your doubts on the matter, Sir." He watched the finely drawn face opposite him grow serious again as its owner asked quietly, "What sort of figure had you in mind?" "A million, Sir." "I very much doubt," said the other frowning, "whether I could . . ." "If you would forgive my in terrupting you, Sir," said Mere dith quickly, I f eel sure that there is not the slightest neces sity for you to do so. Mr. Blay-des-Steele assures me that he and his brother could about manage to . . "Ruin yourselves?" queried their vis-a-vis smiling. "I see that the 'Honour of the Emer ald is no empty phrase." Be turned once more to Meredith and said, "Would it not be better to learn whether a monetary of fer for Its return would be con sidered before going into the - question of where the money was to come from?" "That was my intention. Sir," responded Sir John. "If they are prepared to deal, the raising of the necessary money can be con sidered later." The young dignitary nodded and rose to his feet as did hJi three companions. He held out his hand to Meredith exclaiming as he did so, "Forgive me if I leave you now! You have my best wishes for the success of your enterprise. Sir John. And you, too, Mr. Blaydes-Steele." With that he left the room. Meredith and Ives Blaydes Steele drove straight from Buck ingham Palace to Scotland Yard In their taxL They secured a prompt interview when Sir John remarked that he had just come from Buckingham Palace. Col onel Anson rose to his feet and shook hands with his two visi tors. Meredith talked rapidly for several minutes. . . . I shall have to have confirm ation of this, of course, Mere dith," said the chief of the Spe cial Branch who had known John when he was still in the C.I.D. "In the meantime Just write the names down on this pad. You say they're at Paul's Hotel? ffmrn, Paul's isn't very helpful. They don't like our fellows nosing round. Still well do what we can. It may take a lot of men." Meredith nodded. "I'm quite certain. Colonel, youll get orders from the Home Office to exer cise the fullest surveillance pos sible." Colonel Anson leaned back in his chair and glanced at the names Mc.cdith had written on the pad. "And we're not to know the reason as to why we're watching them?" asked the As sistant Commissioner. "I'm afraid that's the situa tion." said Sir John. "You've come straight from Buckingham Palace?" asked Colonel Anson. (Tp be continued) Editorial Comments AIRLINES COME TO SALEM Salem took its place today on the United States air map, when United Air Lines inaugurated service there. i Four plane runs, two north and two south, will make daily stops at the capital city. Salem is a good sized town in its own right today, and deserv ing of city services. But it should be pointed out here that after this war emergency is over and the airplane assembly lines are cleared of military orders and the US forces are trimmed to their peace-time size, airplane transportation will be extended to towns of the size of Grants Pass from one border of the na tion to the other. And if we hereabouts havt the airport facilities to offer, Grants Pass will be one of those towns of the size of Grants Pass to get airline service. Grants Pass Courier. l&adio Programs , .'.-..Cagey old "diplomatic strategists of this gov- Amntsami KMflrKaflj asma wVm 4V Thm ? &i am a w a aman eynsnwu ineir Dig snips,, the Tatuta Maru,: sail for San Those so far across the sea , There were about 2,722,700 births, approxi' Francisco, to dock. December 15. They consider ; And will say "As you have' done Wtely 183,000 in excess ci the ten year average, it a sure" sign the Japs did not expect war be- to them This increase is attributed largely to a 5 -.per - fore .the, first of the year when the round trip You've done It unto jat;-; To the ones so sore in need And i I'm. sure the One who ,-tob much on the possible things ; watchesv . t to come, when things present are And records each nassin tel mconiDrehensible? .' . . ' .' Wm be glad that we remembered rThere-Is no savage tribe, no- l -SISS wTr 11:15 Portland Art Museum. 13.D0 Naw York PhUharmonto. 1:30 Pause That Refreshes. 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