FAGS FOOH Tha OREGON STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon; Sunday Morning. December 14. 1941 MUMM MM itatesmau "No Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Atce" From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. CHARLES A. S PRAGUE, President Member of 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. News in This War Zone In that other World war of which we old timers love,to talk, many things were different. Incidentally our recollections of that different war and the false conclusions some of us reached later concerning it, have served here tofore to tonfuse us about this one. But we can forget all that now, and in the press of this war's events directly affecting us, we will InriTAi hnirarav th rw-kinte wo wish tn mfllcp at this moment are narrower and more explicit. In that other war the military threat to America was never both serious and immediate. Today Oregon is officially designated as part of a combat zone. There may be no hostilities here, the chances are against it but then again there may be hostilities here at any moment. Deadly serious preparations to defend Oregon are under way. In that other war, though young Americans may scarcely believe it, radio as a service to the general public was unknown. Today instant sf nAwo i h o moinritv ctf trip populatioru is possible. Most everyone has a ra dio and most everyone has it turned on to re ceive war news and civil defense information. Today the newspapers and the radio are performing a service, especially here in this combat zone, transcending anything they have ever done before in its serious and practical im portance. The radio speeds vital information to the public; the newspapers bring that same in formation in a form that permits of re-reference, verification, amplification with additional vital details, and interpretation. Neither of these services is complete without the other. Newspaper and radio staffs welcome the privilege of performing this unprecedented service; they are also conscious of the unprece dented responsibility it entails. The informa tion they give must be correct and official; there must be no rumors, no false reports pub lished or broadcast for the purpose of creating a sensation. This information service is being provided, to date, in accordance with the normal peace time routine of news-gathering and dissemina tion. Thece is no. local censorship. Dispatches from Hawaii, The Philippines and other zones of actual hostilities are censored near the source. On local information there is no offi cial contrel. No one is telling us what to print or what to leave out. There is however on the part of the news papers and, we assume, on the part of the radio stations, a voluntary censorship. Troops are moving about in this area. You may see them but you do not read about them. Certain other military defense preparations are under way. They go unreported unless news of them is released by the responsible authorities. In this war, as we all have known, civilian populations are under attack in one form or another. Propaganda is one of these forms. Ra dio is its principal weapon. The American people were immunized, by the enemy's mur derous atttack on Pearl Harbor, against per suasive enemy propaganda, but they are still open to the sort of attack whose purpose is to mislead, to confuse and to terrorize. ' In this period when nearby radio stations are blacked out intermittently, people occa sionally listen to unfamiliar stations which they cannot immediately identify. It is well to bear in mind that hidden enemy stations may attempt to spread false reports, and to resolve in advance not to act upon any startling "news" without confirming definitely its source. If an announcement of unusual import is heard from one station, others should be broadcasting it. If it comes from only one unidentified station, the listener should be suspicious of it. The regular agencies of public information are striving earnestly to fulfill their enlarged obligation. The Statesman is being called upon more th&n ever before to furnish information by telephone as well as in its news columns. This opportunity for service, it also welcomes. It claims; no exceptional credit. We are en deavoring to serve. So are you. So are all Americans. sources will most likely be available to the axis this includes only Spain and Sweden add up to 32,346,000. Now the world's population is 2,133,000, 000, and by reviewing the figures above you will note that more than half of it is actually at war on our side, even without counting the small American nations which have declared war but will not be able to do much fighting. We've got the people. Even more preponder antly, we've got the resources. Cost of Blackout Actual, formal, all-out war enhances the danger of inflation. When things calm down a little we'll go into that matter at length. For the moment, let us say that essentially, infla tion means a reduction in the purchasing power, in the value of money. From another view point, the relative v?lue of money is reduced immediately when war occurs, or in any other great crisis affecting life, because other val ues. So it is almost with apology that we point out not by way of complaint but solely as a matter of interest the rather large financial impact of so simple a thing as the blackout. Power companies are losing sums which would loom large in any individual's account ing, whenever lights are turned off. Someone else of course is saving an equal amount. On the other hand some homes and industries are using more electricity to light, in daytime, rooms permanently blacked out because they cannot be blacked out quickly in an emergency. The purchase of black paint, oilcloth, blue cellophane involves in the aggregate huge sums of money. Because of the problem of getting home after the show as well as the general uncertainty, movie houses "took a beating" early in the week. And outdoor advertising firms' business has suffered major casualties. It's the war. IC77MS OF OSK 7 zr fe" urn J xX'" a pt AA Z i7zz ) "Einiueralldl Embassy" The "Memorandum" Pen, Mightier Than the Sword Bits ffor (Breakfast By R. J. HENDRICKS U tsf Paul HaDon Lineups of Today's War The reality ... is that a state of war exists between Germany and the United States, as well as between Japan and the United States. It is equally a reality that a state of war exists between all the German allies, declared and undeclared, and the United States. All these weasel, regimes (but not all their people) such a Vichyfrance and Spain, better get over on their side of the fence in a hurry. They better themselves divine the reality, that this is a civil war. of! mankind. Whoever isn't with us is against us, be he a French Admiral with rib bons or a flea-bitten peasant of Tibet. There will be no holdouts. Only death will release any man now living from fealty to us or to them. That Is the kind of war this is, the kind it is going to be right down to. the last gasp of the vanquished. That's the reality facing us. ..This is! Armageddon at last. Royce Brier in San Francisco Chronicle. Whoever isn't with us is against us. Ev erybody! Is "included in." And here are the lineups for today's war, with the weights" in numbers of popoulation, furnished to us promptly by the United States census bureau: Our side: United States and possessions, 150,621,000; British Empire, 500,774,000; China, 411,700,000; Russia, 170,467,000r Netherlands East Indies, 69,435,000. Total of actual belliger ents on our side, 1,302,997,000. .Their side: Germany including Austria, 76,181,000; Japan including Korea and Formo sa 101.573,000; Manchukuo, 43,234,000; Italy, - v 45,303,090; Finland 3,659,000; Hungary, 9,078, 000; Rumania, 19,470,000; Bulgaria, 6,720,000; - Albania J 1,063,000. Total of axis belligerents, 308,181,000.- The? populations of axis-occupied countries, -'a mlxecl or questionable asset, "add up to 167, ' 978,0OpJ Populations of countries friendly to . our: side, or whose resource will jnost likely be available to our side, add up to 166,650,000. This includes all of North and South America f except those small sections actually controlled by axis; or axis-friendiy nations, jropuiauons News Behind The News By PAUL MALLON (Distributed by King Feature Syndicate. Inc. Repro duction in whole or in part strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, Dec. 13. It is said the small investors were the ones who got fluttery and sold their stocks, sending the market into a tailspin at the outset of the war. The lar ger and wiser investors (banks and insurance companies) held on. They well knew that if this country is '.going to win this war and who doubts it me investments they had, were just as good as any they could get. It seems, however, a great many people, upset by the shock of war, cannot see the woods for looking at certain falling or leaning trees. Certainly, taxes are going higher. Surely, some lines of business are suffering. Autos, for instance, may not maintain their recent profits during a change-over to defense armaments. But their earnings will be restored later when they get going in their new line, and after the war they will have a bigger world market than they ever dreamed of in the past. (So also with all our business in some degree). Public utilities may suffer from costs rising against fixed rate limita tions. Little business will be squeezed. But look at the woods as a whole. Taxes are not going to be raised to the point of confiscation or elimination. Probably $150,000,000,000 is to be spent by the government if the war lasts long enough, and all this will go into business. Cer tainly this economic expansion will partly offset the increased taxes. Although profits are not likely to increase much, they cannot decline as much as the sagging stock market has been suggesting. Dozens of stocks were selling at prices this week to bring 20 per cent annual return to stock holders in dividends. All business earnings, after taxes, this year are supposed to be 25 per cent over last. Distributed dividends will average 10 per cent higher. Naturally the large investors, unperturbed by the sinking of a few ships or an air raid alarm, are hanging on to what they have. The only threats to our ultimate financial sta bility are those which have been widely adver tised inflation, the big federal war debts, the vague possibilities of state socialism If inflation comes, cash is the worst thing to hold. The econo mists say common stocks are as good as anything. If we win this war, as we will, the new world economic possibilities opened by victory will cer tainly provide unprecedented wherewithal to serv ice an unprecedented debt As for state socialism: This government, it is true, has made a few feints in that direction in a few past specific instances (public utilities) but it has renounced the idea as a general policy. We are fighting for democratic liberty and against the national socialism of Germany and Italy. Socialism might well be expected if we lose this war, not if we win. All these dreadful economic spectres of the past and present will be laid like ghosts if we just achieve one thing victory. That is all we have to worry about Mrs. Dye writes of the 12-14-41 Boone in the Mexican war, of the '48 wagon trains, who went to Yaquina, and to Medford k S (Continuing from yesterday:) "The beach was lined with wickiups when we came. It was an old haunt for sea otter. The Hudson's Bay traders would set slides where the playful otter like school boys would slide all day down to the water. Old Jacques Bamber the French man told me he used to take six or eight in a night on the sloughs. And sea lions, Mr. Bamber said he once had a bat tle with sea lions when taking furs down to old Fort Umpqua. "The Indians used to go out in canoes and kill sea lions crawling over the rocks, throw them into the water and let the tide bring them ashore, sea lions as big as a cow. Beds of sea lion bones and mussel shells 20 feet deep show where Indians feasted in ancient days. Thick as leaves on the trees were Indians then bot the 'cole-sick' (influenza) swept them off by thousands. Bamber said forest fires in the fall of 'forty-nine made the land so dark they had to eat by candle light. s s s "In 1864 I helped survey the first road over the Coast Range to Yaquina where the railroad now goes. Before this we had blazed a wogan-road to tide water. In 1870 we built this house, for many a long year the best on the coast, and with George Collins, descendant of that Collins who journeyed with Grandfather Daniel into Ken tucky 100 years before, we help ed hew and haul timber for the most western lighthouse on the continent. "No knowing how many ves sels have been lost at Yaquina. Jack Bamber said that early in '49 a silk-laden ship from China was wrecked here. The cargo drifted ashore and Coast Indians wore shawls that would have sold for $100 apiece in San Fran cisco. Bamber's Indian wife had a shawl. She used to wash for us. An Irishman got 1800 yards of silk. S "As to the lighthouse terrific was the toil of dragging lumber up that high promontory and building on the rock in a wind that fairly blew the saws out of the men's hands. "But it saved many a storm tossed ship whose distracted master had cried, 'See! See! Cape Foul weather Light!' shooting its beams thirty miles out on the water." S . Other old Kentucky friends came to Oregon with the Boones, the Van Bibbers and Whiteley, undoubted descendant of old Colonel Whiteley, one time com panion of Daniel Boone. Old Dan made friends and held them, moving in companies across the continent. Merchant ships rode at an- Editorial Comment Don't laugh too hard at these east coast air raid precautions now. Hitler has now acquired some production in long range bombers, modeled after our flying fortresses and capable of a suicide bombing flight from France.No one knows how many he has, possibly not more than 50. These could fly the Atlantic, drop their bombs, and their crew could either bail out or head for some frozen "on its assistance program. The beach in the Canadian wilds to refuel from fifth system encourages as a result columnist ana attempt w escape nome. meir ny ESTATE RECOVERY A man in Brownsville is en titled to have his name go into some hall of fame to be estab lished to honor the relief clients in the state of Oregon. Although since last June the state public welfare commission has had no claim upon estates of public assistance beneficiaries, this Brownsville resident made a will proyiding for the Linn county public welfare commis sion as the first beneficiary to be paid from the settlement of his estate after death. The re sult is that the Linn county pub lic welfare commission will re ceive the returns from liquida tion of an estate estimated at $685 value as a return payment for $1123.70 which the county had given the man as old age assistance during his lifetime. Previously, state law permit ted the county welfare commis sion to file and collect on claims for assistance grants when an estate was being probated. How ever, legislators with more sen timent than sense weakened un der pressure and changed the law. The change in the law as it works out defeats its purpose. The county is without substan tial recovery made from settle ment of estates after death and therefore has less money to spend ACf xoun'rics friena to thSWfcw .whose re-; V thing; ing ramus is someuiing nice aouu miles with a bomb load. Furthermore (although no one Is supposed to know it) the nazis have been biding one aircraft carrier at home and had another one stQl building 60 days back. .These two could be sacrificed in a foray against our coast This much Hitler is known to have. No one ' knows ' whether he has anything else. "While it seems unreasonable to suppose he could do any important military damage or cause any fear , among our people, this is no time tto : take any - thing for granted. Remember Pearl Harbor in that respect, too. Fear nothing. Prepare lor every- smaller grants to aged people. Assistance budgets take into consideration allowance for hous ing, whether it be in the form of rent, taxes on a home already owned, or in some 1 cases pay ments on a home being pur chased. - . It is for the latter type of as sistance cases that the relief com mittee makes particularly care ful scrutiny of budgets. It is good social', service theory to leave aged people in as nearly their - normal surroundings as possible. This means making it possible for the aged person to remain in the home to which he or she has become accustomed. The problem comes when the payments on the home under purchase run somewhat more than the average rental costs of other assistance clients. A relief committee can hardly be criticized when it critically examines a budget provision for payment on . a home which is more than rental averages and reduces the budget accordingly. A relief committee is further inclined to be critical when the case record indicates the aged relief clients are the parents of a number of sons and daughters who decline to discharge their responsibilities to their parents and leave it to the state to care for their parents in their declin ing years. Too often these same children who deny their parents support are entirely willing to take whatever estate, is left by their parents rather than re funding to the county welfare program the money which it has paid. Under these circumstances, the county welfare committee has to exercise care that it does not find itself aiding home purchases by : aged and building up an estate for children Who are either un able or unwilling to care for their parents. It is not hard to believe that with the previous condition operating, permitting ' the welfare commission to make claims on estates, that the aged would benefit with some more liberal grants and the taxpayer be less inclined to begqidge bis support to the assistance pro gram. With the situation as it is, the Brownsville man who made pro vision to the best of bis ability to meet the welfare committee of his county more than half way, is-indeed an exception to go into the records in large red letters. -Washington County News-Times chor before Boone's house on the Pacific and an occasional whale sported in his very dooryard. S S "Once a black fish, a species of whale ?5 feet long, played for a week in front of the house, spouting ten feet high. We thought he followed a school of fish. "In August the bay is alive with sardines; in March and April alive with herring; in August, September, October, No vember, the air is full of salmon leaping, jumping right out of the water. Scow-loads of sal mon are taken right in front of the house. Thousands of cases are canned close by. We can our own salmon. Norwegian herring (pilchards) are caught by the bushel, so fat they break in two like a stick. Bears come down and eat small fish and windrows of spawn that lie along the shore. Crabs we take with and without nets. Elk and deer come down to drink right in our front yard more shy of late since the Corvallia and Eastern railroad came through." S Mr. Boone became silent, thinking perhaps what next to say. "Grass grows waist high here in Yaquina, finest hay in the world. Stock feeds out the year round; great chance here for cattle, sheep, turkeys, geese, ducks and poultry of all kinds. Never cold to amount to any thing. Great place for vege tables and small fruit." And yet the old gentleman was wishing to sell. S "No market no market for all this abundance. When I was a little boy in my father's grocery at Jefferson City I saw prunes By FRANCIS GERARD Chapter 17 (Contlaned) An unshaded electric bulb cast a harsh light over the untidy 4 kitchen with its plied packing cases, its litter of new cooking utensils, its boxes of groceries and vegetables, but it was at none of these things that he was ' looking. Sitting on one corner of the enamel-topped table and twinging a slim leg, was a girl. Horton frowned and said, "Did you want to see me?" The girl's eyes searched his face eagerly. "Do I look so aw ful, Philip," she asked, that you don't even know me?" His mouth came slowly open as he stared incredulously at her. . . . She slid from the table to her feet "I have changed, haven't I, Philip?" "What on earth are you do ing here?" he asked roughly. She made a weary gesture and frowned down at her bag as she extracted a cigarette case from it "Don't worry," she said, "No one can see into this kitchen and I came In the back way. IVe been in Weyland for some time, you know," she said, the bitter ness in her voice plain for him to hear. He shrugged. "I still think it is risky for you to come here." "You don't make me very welcome," she said, her eyes on his face. "Perhaps if it had been Anne, you might have been a little more effusive." At the mention of Countess de Vassignac's name a mask seemed to drop over his fea tures and the girl went on, "So you're still infatuated!" "I find this conversation ex tremely distasteful," he replied coldly. The little laugh she gave held no humour in it. "Why, my poor Philip," she said, her voice more gentle, "can't you see through her? Don't you realize she'll just use you as she has used so many others? When she's got what she wants from you, youH be through." He made no reply and she continued, her voice growing in vehemence. "Through, I tell you! Finished! Like that wretch ed little Billy Harding who shot himself. . . . Oh, Philip, Philip, how can you be so blind? Why, you don't stand a chance of making the grade with her!" Something in his expression halted her speech . . . some little flicker at the back of his eyes brought her up short . . . her hand going to her shaking lips. He did not speak but she guess ed. "Philip!" she gasped. "Have you . . . ?" She caught him by put up in candy jars shipped from France. I thought them something very fine, little dreaming that one day I would have the finest French prunes going to waste on my own farm on a bay of the Pacific. "I came to Oregon 58 years ago. Here at Yaquina we have thousands of wood; wood all around us; apples in the orch ard; clams on the beach; cows and pigs and chickens; pure mountain water from a living spring in the Coast Range piped underground right into the kitchen and a spray for the lawn." S . Just as behind him on horse back over the mountains he had brought his bride, so later he brought a grafted apple-twig and set out the first orchard on Ya quina Bay. A thousand bushels of apples fell annually from Boone's orch ards, two orchards now with 100 to 150 trees each, faultless, with out a" blemish. (Continued on Tuesday). the arm, her fingers digging into his flesh. Her eyes searched his frantically. "Be quiet'" he rasped. "You're making an exhibition of your self!" She laughed hysterically. "An exhibition of myself? Thafs rich, Philip!" she retorted. "It doesn't matter about me any more. I've served my purpose and I can get out of your life now." The gtri collapsed against the kitchen table, bursting into a storm of tears. Horton, frown ing, crossed the room and stoop ed over the case of whisky. There came the opening of a cupboard door, the clink of glass, and a moment or so later he was back at her side. "Here," he said, "drink this and pull yourself together." Awkwardly he laid a hand on her shoulder and gave ft a little squeeze and a shake. This unlooked-for friendly gesture had the effect of increasing the girl's sobbing. With a helpless shrug he put the glass down at her side and moved across to the window to stare moodily out Into the garden. Presently he heard the click of the glass held in an unsteady hand against her teeth, and soon after a husky voice said, "Pm sorry, Philip, I'm terribly sor ry, Pip, but ... " "Thafs all right," he said awkwardly. "Only . . . I'm sorry if I appeared ... I mean . . . well, confound it" he went on desperately, "I didn't expect to see you, and what with the sur prise and one thing and an other ..." "That's all right Philip," she said, keeping her back turned to him, busy with a handker chief, powder puff and mirror. "You don't have to apologize. I'm the one who should do that . . . but I hadn't seen you for so long and . . . you see, Pip, I do love you ever so much." There was a short silence dur ing which she heard the man move restlessly. She gave a ghastly little grin as she stared miserably across the kitchen. "It's all right, Philip," she said quietly. "You don't have to say anything. I know you don't care about me." "You're wrong," he said, his voice not quite steady. "I . . . ' I do care about you. I ... I like you enormously. We've been great friends and ..." "Yes," she said steadily. "Great friends. Shall we leave it at that Pip. and just call it a day?" She turned round to face him, her features once more composed, her eyes lumi nous from her recent tears. Her smile was very sweet and gen tle. "Life's a rotten mess, isn't it. Pip? I'm crazy about you. You're crazy about Anne, and Anne well, I suppose if she's capable of such a feeling is . a: I i -1 . . Hicnj we-w uta up m r lKti. Silly, isn't it?" "I think 111 have a drink too," he said. When he came back to her side with his glass in his hand, she said, holding up her own, "All right Pip. Ill give you a toast Here's to us and may we never be more unhappy than we are at the moment! After all.i the dead don't care, do they?"' "Oh, please," he said, "don't let's have this cheap good-fellow stuff. I can't stand it" Her face felL All the courage went out of it She stared mis erably at the floor, her teeth gripping her lower lip to pre vent its trembling. "I think," she said uncertain ly, "you lost more than your army commission, Philip, when you were cashiered." (To be continued) ESadio Programs KSLM SUNDAY 13M K. 8 :00 Flowing Rhrtnm. 8 JO Melodic Moods. 9:15 Popular Concert. 9 .30 Symphonic Swing. 10:00 Sunday Reveries. 11 00 American iAitheran Church. 11:00 Slnfing Strtafs. 12:30 News HUights. 12 :45 Song Shop. 1 0 Deaconasa Hospital. 1 JO Hawaiian Serenade. S :00 Organalitiea. 2:15 Voice of Restoration. 2 .30 Marimba Melodies. 3:00 Sweet Swing. 3:15 Western Serenade. 3 JO Boys Town. 4.-00 Gypsy Orchestra. 4 JO Symphonic Swing. 8:00 Variety HsO. :00 Tonighfs Headlines. :1S Sacred Music. JO Operatic Arias. 1: HO Eton Bot. 1 JO String Serenade. S0 News. 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SAO Blue Echoes. 5:15 Book Chat 5 JO Cinnamon Bear. 8:45 Pearson Ax Alien. !:22Srml?,PPy and His Pals. 8 0 News Headlines At Highlights. S-Songs by Dinah Score. - T AO Good Win Hour. SAO Inner Sanctum Mysteries. 8:30 Jack Benny. 9A0 Dear John 9:15 Eleanor Roosovs.lt, 9 JO Highway Nigat Express. I2td,wmur cfa Hotel Orch. tJ5 News. , J25t:?!?UI?B Bpom Orchestra. 10 JO Amen Corner Program. 11A0 Bal Tabarln Cafe? 11 JO War News Round Up. atOW CBS SUNDAY-7t Ke. T:30 Wings Over Jordan. SAO West Coast Church. SAO Syncopation Oioce. 9JO Salt Lake Tabernacle. 10 AO Church f tn Air. iow This is the Ufe. 35 William Shirar. News. 3:00 Silver Theatre. 3 JO Melody Ranch. 3A5 TJearUom. 4:15 William WaHaoa. 4JO-NCWS. 4:43-SmUinf Ed alxConneU. :O0 Columbia Workabotv S JO Dr. Karl Brandt. 8 Elmer Davis. News. AO Sunday Evening Hour. 20 Take ft or Leave It 7:30 Helen Hayes. AO Crime Doctor. 8 J News. S JO I Was Tbera. AOLeon F. Drews. 9:30 Baker Theatr-a. 10 AO Five Star Final. 10:15 Cosmo Jones. iiVTZ Owes Orchestra. 10. 45 Marts Corps. 11 AO Grounds Ac Carter fBS CNnAT U3 Ka. Reviewing Btaow 11 AO Ni 11 1 :15 Mak TTn Tour Wiivf 11 JO Th World Today. 13A0--Ncw York PhUharmonie. 1 JO Pause That Refreshes. SAO Family Bour. Monday Radio On Pase 8 8 JO Songs for Sunday. 85 vote of Prophecy ZSTr5 TOT Sunday. JiiS?Ba?e th m-wars. "Th Hymn Smgsr. ,1?-fnary Chorus. HAO Children's Chanel. Uftto m Swing time, uewToo4Whlw RfPlr for Defense, "ruV&oT' Pta-1-Uithran Hour. 3 JO BihwrnJllZ:- 2Hvn of Rest. 4:15 Rabbi Marnin. ' V,YlUOoB Watts. 5-Around th dock. 8 AO American Forum, -9 Norman Thomas. - " orSSr. JOS-Bands iard. '5? KP Tm Rolhns. - -yoice ef Propnecy. i52fc5 8rudr 11:45 Ton Tim. " , 11 AO-Sunday Night at Coeoajrct. UIVTf. ; -HV rf t;;M!dl.BvacVB Hawaiian.,.'