The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 21, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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"No Favor Sways Ut; No Fear Shall Awt"
From Fir it Statesman, March 28, 1831 :
TOE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY!
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher .
" Member of tht Aisodated Press
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the as tor publication of all
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.
VCUUfeE. TKEicE ARC fCQ
w fn ' r rt
I Teles oi IleToism
j Abound la Scti2e -Worn
Teniae 34i
"St i.
"The Real Thing" -
This looks lie the real thing the new allied
attack on the 400-mile front of western Ger
many. After the period of waiting necessary
because of bad weather and for time to bring
up supplies General Eisenhower has released
his six armies in simultaneous assault on the
German defense positions following roughly the
Rhine river from the Belfort gap to the sea.
i - The nature of the plan is apparent: to apply
heavy pressure at all major points, to wear down
the enemy's resistance, to prevent, smiting or
Youth and the State
In the past, Mrs. Eleanpf Roosevelt has been
known to throw, out an idea, and then later on
the president adopts it." Which one incubates,
the idea we cannot say, but that has been a
method. One example is the limit of $25,000 a
year on incomes in wartime. f ; t
Some time ago Mrs. Roosevelt offered as a
"good idea the suggestion that all youth give
a year to the ; govenuneni, and carefully in
cluded girls in the plan: Now we find the pre
sident expressing hope thitj this winter congress
'V C . V I W-C Li
Hi
it.f.n (rnnn fmm one noint to another, and will aDDrove a nlan to reduire of all routh one
w -m m mm i - p y
then to exploit the break-through which will year in government servjice. It wouldn't need
to be all military, he said, citing the CC and
its civilian work as sample of other worth
while activity. J j -
This proposal will meetjvith powerful oppo
sition, not. just from professional pacifists, but
from educators, churches nd political leaders
who oppose the principle of devoting the time "
of all youth for a year to the service of govern
ment. What, they may well ask; would be the
difference except in point of time, with the Hit
ler. Youth or the communist youth bands of
Soviet Russia? '
Instead of rushing through such a program
occur at whatever develop as the weak point
of the German line. Once a gap is opened al
lied mobile armor' will flew to encircle seg
ments of the German armies and to riddle
communications in the rear, f
The prime military objectives now are doubt-j
less the industrialized Ruhr and Saar basins,
and after them Berlin. These are the geogra
phic goals. The military goal is to cut. up and
destroy the German armies so Germany's pow
er of organized resistance is wiped out.
Can the allies do the job in the remaining
weeks of 1944? We think so, if only the weather
stays decent. Germany hasn't the number or
quality of troops to stem the allied tide. Our
air force cripples the enemy supply lines and
has probably cut down German war production
below the necessary replacement level. Once
the westwall is pierced or flanked there are
ho adequate defenses to do more than retard
the allied advance; and when our armies get
well into Germany the enemy resistance if it
does not collapse is apt to be fragmentary and
spuLieu. - ,
It will be a real Christmas present to the
world if Eisenhower and his six great armies
can crack the German westwall and reach be
yond the Rhine. Don't be surprised to find such
a bright orange in your Christmas stocking.
C
The Hypnotists Almost Have Him Convinced
this winter, more time should be taken to "study
it and We . don't believe fjhe people will ap
prove of it after they do gfve it study.
Canada's "Zombies" ; ,
The 70,000 who make up Canada's conscript
ed home army are called "Zombies' and they
re becoming quite a scandal. 1 '
' Under the law the Canadians can be con
scripted but they can't be shipped overseas, un
less they: volunteer. Thousands of Canadians
have Volunteered and have proved brave and
able fighters; but the "Zombies, ' they stay at
home. Target of much criticism, they will con- -tinue
on home guard duty unless the govern
ment changes its policy. -
But MacKenzie King, Canada's premier, is ;
not likely tochange this policy. The opposi-'
tion to conscription for foreign service comes
from the French-Canadians who are centered in
Quebec and eastern Ontario. ? King, a liberal,
depends on liberal Quebec for continuing in of
fice, the more so since the prairie provinces
have gone socialistic. If King lost Quebec his
government would fall. ;.. b "
One way .has been schemed for getting more
of the "Zombies" to volunteer for overseas duty,
and that is to rule they will not be entitled to
veterans' benefits unless they do serve overseas.
This may pry some of them loose.
Meantime, the Canadian army overseas is
calling for more men, and furnishing them is
one great, big question for Canadian officials to
ponder over. ." v ' v f; -
On , the Hungarian front the " Russians fol
lowed up the capture of Jaszbereny with that
of Fdzesabony. These cities seem as hard to
capture as they are to spell.
Editorial Comment
SCHOOL FUND AND THE
' LEGISLATURE ' , .
It is one of the oddities of an Oregon election
that the individuals seeking membership in one
or the other. house of the legislature are seldom"
chosen on the basis of definite commitments on
prospective, trills- which may ; come before them
Qce they are in session in Salem. General pro
nouncements are given and these, .apparently, are
ordinarily ' considered sufficient indication as to
what may be expected from the lawmaker. The
. record of the candidate, if he is up for reelection
is given much more weight, which is probably
as it should be. In requiring no specific assurances,
however, it seems to us that the .electorate, is pas
sing up a qualification which should be of much -
importance. . ...;..-.,..'..., .-,.;-; -L .1 . .- ..-"UT
. Be that as it may, once the vote has been count
ed and the personnel of the legislature determined,
, the advocates - of new enactments, ; repeals or
amendments become suddenly interested in the at
tude ' that representatives and senators may take
in regard to specific issues which have lain dor-
' mant since adjournment nearly two years before.
It is that time now. ... ..v .V-;
Evidence of interest is already being given and it
Is natural that among the first issues informally
presented should be. those which the election it
"self has thrown in; the legislative lap. Reference
has , previously been made in this paper to the
amendments to permit county manager form ot-
a . m a . m M : s
government, reirancniseoicxii ui lorraer inmaies
. vi miw tueMiuwww aiivi -awsw w nwnv vat a wsiv
' erans. These three would be only natural sequels '
to the expressed will of the people. It is logical
- to expect them.. . -:'; -;'
Less logical is the suggestion based on the de
feat of a proposed constitutional amendment, that
one seekinz to increase the state tax fund for nub.
lie school support After the people refused to vote
the amendment, the suggestion comes that - the
legislature should, by statute, provide for the in
; crease.,. ..-:-J-..' 'lv,S':y ''Xi:r.:;''
The suggestion, comes from the Klamath News
and Herald, which argues, that the measure was
defeated because It- was presented as a constitu
tional amendment. It comes from the Oregon States- '
man which goes a bit further in intimating rather
strongly lhat, because, the amendment was beaten,
the statute should be passed. It will probably be
advanced elsewhere and there need be little doubt
that there will be heavy pressure brought to bear
on the legislature from interested sources for Just"
this" sort of thing.;. i " . , -
. Our own opinion is that tlte legislature, with the i
people's decision in mind and remembering ; also '
its own action of less than two years before. in K
providing an 'additional $5,DC3,C00 of state funds :
for redistribution to the districts, might well con
sider that Its time could be letter devoted to other
matters. Lead Bulletin.' - "...
"X :
Community Taw Invalid
Oregon's optional community property law
goes into the Waste basket jby the ukase of the
federal supreme court in 'deciding a test case
based on a similar Oklahoma law. The decision
is not surprising. The purpose of the state law
was so plain escape of aMpart of the federal
income taxthat the court jjiiled it was invalid.
The inequity remains however, for taxpay
ers in the eight non-elective community pro
perty states are still able to divide the joint iri-come-
of husband and 'wife and so obtain the
lower rates that prevail for incomes in lower
brackets, Congress should f emove this dispar--J
ity, either by banning . the division of . Income
or else permitting' it in allstates. .
News Behind the News
(Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction In whole
j or in part strictly prohibited.) 4
Ml
A recent best seller wfJ entitled A Tree
Grows in Brooklyn. It seeSns that other things
grow there besides a treefpnd a rowdy base
ball club, and that is town pride. Brooklyn mem
bers Of New York City's council want Noel Cow
ard's books and plays banned from Brooklyn
because he wrote disparagingly of some "mourn
ful little Brooklyn boys" bflhad come on in the
middle east. It's worth noting when a big city
demands respect the samejes Sauk Center.
Brig. Gen. C.m. Easley, ported wounded hi'
action on Leyte island, is well remembered here
for he was one of the first f Officers to arrive at
Camp Adair to set up the 9th division in which
he continued serving. 5 He was colonel when he
came to Adair and got his general's star shortly
afterwards. ; We don't beffeve a Jap sniper!
bullet will keep jovial energetic Claude Easley
down long. j ' H 1-
WASHINGTON, Nov.
George! Bernard Shaw bas set
forth upon the front pages' his
conception of the coming world
which seems to
be about half
way back to
Methusalah and
halfway ahead
to superman.
It is to be a
place where
'somewhat sav
age ideals pre-'
vail. Indeed he
thinks that
time already i
has arrived when women get
their men "like the Danakus,''
the Ethiopian tribe in which he
says the males were required to
show four scalps on their belts
before being considered for mat
ing. I;
Mr. 1 Shaw . must have seen -some
unusual women lately, as
those requirements do not seem
to be in effect around here.1-
The important and disturbing
dream of Mr. Shaw's future
world political mating has equal-''
ly great dramatic possibilities
for a play, but is equally .un
realistic. He conjures up
sphere dominated apparently by gion as dope for. the. minds
S So Seattle is going to get! on the map, final
ly. The Great Northern announces it will run'
streamliner trains between Chicago and Seattle
on a 47-hour schedule, aftejij the war. This will
please Seattle which has been irked because its
people had to commute to Portland to catch the
UFs streamliner.
. - 1 i - . .. .
Interpreting
The War (iJevs
K3RKE L. SIMPSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS TAR ANALYST ;.
A surprise French first irmy dasH through
the Belfort gap ; to reach the upper Rhine to the
Swiss border seemed likelyf to force a German
retreat in the south for a riew stand behind the
Rhine itself. f ' . v
The southern end of the fwest front would be
, the logical place for. such a rjthdrawaL Reputedly
powerful fortifications of te Siegfried -line , lie
east of the Rhine from the Svviss frontier to Karl-
ruhe. They offer the enemy an opportunity to find
' reinforcements in; the south for his hard pressed
(troops in the Saar area and the Aachen sector,
where the main weight of tr allied six-army of
fensive is striking, without Weakening his lower
Rhine front ' j ' v . 1
Such a "disengagement" moVe on the south flank
would not greatly shorten thP21 defensive front
It would, however, release flfst line field troops,
now deployed to guard the passes of the .Vosges,
for support of those battlihi the American third
army's wide-fronted thrust af the Saar basin gate
way and grudgingly giving ground before the com
bined British-American three irmy advance toward
- Cologne. ; i . '::-;J-L--
Secondary troops, (independable for field oper
ations, could offer stubborn Resistance from the
Rhine fortifications along the jupper river. It seems
obvious that the supreme need of the foe as the
allied winter " "break-throughjT campaign develops
is adequate first line , reserves to meet the Saar
and Aachen af ea attacks without weakening 1 the
still . dormant , but critical Nier. Rhine front In
Holland.- : It -I'?
. By every sign 'it "is in that! Northern sector that
the German command expects the culminating al
lied attack to come in,due'coufse. The Rhine front
itself is vulnerable at that point Only extempor-
ized defensive works lie east bf the Neder Rhine
and the Arnhem gateway. Thats too is the short and
direct road to Berlin and great German north coast
Ports. j: , . '
It is there, guarding the Dutch extension of the
Siegfried line, that aUied reports have indicated,
the cream of German shock troops In the west are
concentrated. Yet the massive drive launched by
f General Eisenhower along virtually the whole nazi
line south of that Dutch sector as making such pro
gress that no nazi recourse but; Retreat or the bring
ing in of heavy reinforcements ifrom the east or It
aly remains. Vf , :;j.-:.- II '!' ''.';;' ' ! -'. -':
Taced by that dilemma the!
may elect to retreat behind the!
or if necessary, along; its whole length, ratter than
shuttle troops westward from the Warsaw front
on the Vistula in Poland. For there can be no
t doubt that heavy Russian forces have been massed
there for a major effort to match the allied win
ter drive in the west ; ,S ..
communistic ideals and Catholic
ideals, I but with the communist
ideals ' Obviously dominant be-'
cause man is to work for the
state, or least not be guided by
any democratic theories. -I
: This all seems to be some
what confused in Mr. Shaw's
mind, but essentially what he
wants, or thinks is coming, is a
super-world state. j '"Y
The best official eyes here or
at least those sharp enough and
close enough to the , situation to
see everything going on inside
have failed to discern anything
like that kind of a world in im
mediate prospect There will" be ?
no superstate in the coming
peace. Youinay bejpire of - that
The resistance here to the "
mergingj of sovereignties is evi
dent in state department policies,
and really has not been brought.
-- up seriously since Mr. Wallace
tried out the Same vague idea so :
- unsuccessfully in Isome speeches
a year or two back advocating
a peace that would take us half
way to ' communist : and bring
communism halfway to us. .The
trend of the Dumbarton Oaks
agreement completely discards
this old land highly Imaginative
theory. ' .
Also' Mr. Shaw does not seem
. to have read Mr. Roosevelt's
campaign speeches, pledging
himself to free enterprise and
the democratic! system, which
has done about as well in this
war as any other, since it is
supplying the world and pro
ducing the wherewithal of vie- .'
tory. Russia clearly; could not
have won without our. help.
The philosophic Mr. Shaw
evidently is looking at the mat
ter the way most communists
and" radicals seem to - see it
without recognizing the superior
job democracy has- done and
can do. - ; - ;
But Mr. Shaw has presented
at least a correct discernment of
the forces evident behind the
news of current international
developments. He speaks of
both Catholicism and commu
nism in the philosophic sense
that Christian idealism springs
from the Bible as the opposing
communist ideal springs irom
Marx. '.v: r--
He has merely overlooked the
fact that the Bible, in its philo
sophic essence, also represents
the democratic ideal of the in
dividuality of the human soul,
.of the personal being of a man,
and it is not compatible with his
enslavement Ato the state as in
fact, Marx himself recognized in
his characterization of all reli-
Of
orr
mpnmre
i)
These two ideals are just as
far apart as the savagery Shaw
mentioned in relation to mating
as he calls it and marriage as
the Bible conceives it to be. You
cannot ' compromise, them in
statecraft any more than in the
social relationship between men
" and women. .;.
Hitler whotborrowedmost of
.his fascism" from communistic'
'theories also conceived marriage
: to be a relationship to be en
couraged primarily , in the hiter-
est of the state. ;
Christ i a n i t y conceives mar-
riage to be an individual com
- pact primarily for the good of "
; the- individuals involved in
!:. their human relation to'God. But -
even . from a non-religious
standpoint marriage is justified
by natural law. It has proved
over many- thousands of years
to furnish the best way to raise
children. Mere mating , hardly
offers the required permanent
and serious guidance, or en
courages parental responsibility.
The Marxian-Hitler and com
munist philosophies recognized
this also by trying to supplant
the lack of individual parental
discipline with discipline by the
state. 1 ,. .
Mr. Shaw obviously is stni a
dramatist and has taken his
customary long stretched license
with realism.
(Continued from page
a member of parliament A band
of irate constituents called on Mr. "
Gregsbury, M. P. . Its spokesman
was Mr. Pugstyles, who said; j ..
, "I am very sorry to be here,
sir, but your conduct, Mr. Gregs
bury, has rendered this depute-.,
tion irom your constituents,; im
peratively necessary,'' jj
"My conduct Pugstyles, J said
Mr. Gregsbury, looking round
upon the delegation with gra
cious magnanimity "My icon- '
duct has been, and ever will be,
regulated by a sincere regard for
the true and real interests of this
great and happy country. Wheth
er I look at home or abroad;
whether I behold the peaceful in
dustrious communities of our is
land home;. her rivers covered
with, steamboats, her roads with
locomotives, her streets with
cabs, her skies with balloons, of
a power and magnitude hitherto
unknown in the history of aero
nautics of this or any other na
tion I say, whether I look mere
ly at home, or stretching my eyes
farther, contemplate, the bound
less prospect of conquest and
possession achieved ; by British
perseverance and British valor
which is outspread before mej I
clasp my hands, and turning ,to
the ,- broad expanse above my
head, exclaim. Thank Heaven, I
am a Briton! n- -
Nothing daunted by this out
burst of campaign oratory, post
dated, Pugstyles pressed his m-,
quiries ,to ; the uncomfortable
Gregsbury; :. J '
First if he had not pledged
previous io the election to fput
down the practice of of coughing
and groaning in the house !of .
commons' only to submit to the '
same in the .very first debate of
the session and since? I
Second, if you did not pledge7
to support your colleague on ev
ery occasionr only to desert him
"the night tjefore last?" ; , :
Third: "Whether you, sir, did
not state upon the hustings that
it was your firm and determined
intention to oppose everything "
proposed; to divide the house'upt
on every question, to move for
returns on every subject to place
a motion on the books every day,
and in short, in your own words,.'
to play the very devil with ev .
erything and everybody?" . . ,
. "Mr. Gregsbury reflected, blew
hi nose, threw ; himself further
back in his chair, came forward
again, leaning his elbows on the
table, made a triangle with his
two thumbs and his two fore
By William B King 1
WITH THE FIFTH ARMY IN
ITALY, Nov, - (delayedM)
Take . a . puddle - jumping jeep
through the slick mud, fog and
driving rain of the northern Italy
battlefront and talk to just any
one in the 34th division 'and
you're bound to hear a tale of
heroism. , . .-
These warriors who wear the
sign of the red bull on their arms
have been through some of the
bloodiest fighting in North Africa
and Italy and still they are
punching the enemy.
Just recently, there was. a
house on a hill that both Ameri
cans and Germans were anxious
to hold. Nazis were in it and the
American wanted it The job
fell to a small group led by Lt.
William M. (Campbell, Jackson
Heights, NY. and 2nd Ut Gordon
J. Wehner, Baltimore, Md. ,
- Four times they tried and thea
on the fifth attempt they drove!
Into the building and stuck. Dur
ing the next 5$. hours they stay
ed there although tiie Germans
attempted to blast them out with
direct tank fire, artillery and
mortars. The Germans made six
separate counter - attacks but
each failed. ' ;.r -
'At one point; the Americans
held one room while the Ger
mans still fought in another. The
' German fire was so heavy that a
part ot the house collapsed burying-
tour Americans: Still they
Held.
only 17toen In their assault unit
; but in the battle which raged for
that isolated house they killed at
least IS Germans," wounded oth
ers and captured 31. ; i
Capt Harvey J. Brodsky of
Sturgis, SD, in a recent j push
made a personal reconnaissance
into enemy territory to plan a
flanking attack. -Although seri
. ously wounded about the head by
mortar fragments, he refused
medical attention as hie led his
men into an attack which result-,
ed in the capture Of a village.
- But here is the interesting an-
The Literary
Guidepost
By JOHN SELBY
gle.to the story: Capt Brodsky
would not be on hand if it were J
not for the heroism of one of, the
sergeants.' 1 " "' - " .
" Approximately a month ' ago
the captain ' was checking the
area in front Jof his troops when
a patrolling jGerman rifleman
surprised and; captured him. As
Brodsky's captor turned toward
German positions SSgt Everett
C Knight of Utica, Miss, also on
patrol, saw what was happening.
A j well - aimed ; burst from
Knight's tommygui toppled the
German and Brodsky raced to
join this sergeant Together they f
returned to their positions, v r
' A I regimental commander of
Rochester, NY, rose higher in the
esthnation of Ms men when he
recently led nine of them on one
of the War's most brilliant pa
trols. With Lt Myer Kastan of
Glendale, NY, and eight mud
caked GIs, he probed more than
two mUes ahead of his frontlines
to capture the strategic town pf
' Monteplano on the Prato road. .
They captured five vitally im
portant bridges north and south I
' of the town which is in the Ap
ennines northwest of r Florence,
and killed at least 10 Germans,
rounded up 20 others and scat
tered the rest
Tho
1 r
CampbeU and Wehner had SafC tV VU I VO
rmenin their assault unit Z.' .
"THE YOUNG IDEA? By Mossier ers, and tapping hi, nosetwith
1 ' J. , the apex thereof, replied (smilinx
nazi command Well
Rhine in the south.
111 j 1
a 11 .
1 vA
4 -L-r
mm 1 . i i I . l mm i - r mT . I iKrt r 1
Hf7
Caar. tU kr X3hm4
Top's letUag me nse the tar for our date toaifht but we wont
! ! the garag wtta U i . . he's eut.ef gas stampsr
be
apex thereof, replied (smiling
as he said it), T deny every'
.Ihing.'" - - . . .
:.r- v-"-C --;;!: ... .;:fc :; ii
. That was over a century apoj
So the necessity-tor the people to
"keep continually alert" and to
police their representatives in
the legislature or in congress is
not of recent origin. The Gregs
, burys are not politically extinct
But is there no word to be said
- for the officeholder? Must he be
continually hoisted on the pitch
forks of 4 hostile J constituents
whose ideas or whose whims he
''may have deserted? Surely there
is. Simply-this: being an office-'
holder and being a candidate are
- two different things. As one gov
ernor ot Oregon remarked after
he had been in office a short
while: "Things look different on
the inside than they did on the
outside." Times change too; the
; catchword of the 1916 campaign
was not purposely betrayed by
,Pres. TVibon; the German declar
ration of unrestricted submarine
- warfare. Wasj what ' forced our
country into war in 1817. k:
All the same,, there remains the
duty of constant vigilance on. the
. part of the people themselves lest
their genuine, mandates be not
abandoned because of altered
conditions but betrayed by
. faith!?? representatives. .1; .
By Joha Selby I
"NODS AND becks." ky rnmkUa
r. Atfaxai CWkltUesey; S2). .
Each Monday, careful listeners
along the Lyons Plain road in
Weston, Conn, can hear ' a
swoosh - on the black-top j road
service, and can know that it is
occasioned by Franklin P Ad-'
ams, 'rushing . for his train. He
; rushes because he Is usually late,
' and worries because he has one
of those wonderful one-day "In
formation Please" jobs and does
" n't want to be late. If he chooses,
he can come home "that same
night and stay there for a week,
doing chores. ;' 'j.
One of his recent : chores has
been to go through his , past
newspaper product for nuggets.
- He has found a lot and the re-r
suit is "Nods and Becks.'
Mr. Adams has been so long
on Information Please that peo
ple have , almost forgotten, the
many years . he . was an extra
ordinary - newspaperman. They
may have forgotten the day, .too,
when columnists were - urbane
and amusing fellows, not slug-
: gers, out to conk something or
somebody. In the "Conning Tow
er Mr.' Adams used to slap peo
ple on occasion, but he did it
- with fineness and - a surgeon's
scalpel. It reads a lot better than
some other products I could
name. ', " - r ;-'
Most of the material is light
F. P. A. has a violent allergy for
female poker players, one that
crops up here and there. He
lapses ; into allegory once in a
while, !; and sometimes 'he eveh
takes a fling at his first rlove,
' the newspajer business, for some
of its more callous performances.
As a story-teller in print there
are few equal to F. P.. A4 and
his gift for light verse is unique,
because all of; it has anJAdams
esque and unmistakable flavor.
"Nods and Becks" is therefore
the kind of book you should put
on your bed table and take by
the dessert, spoonful ; each night
until consumed. Then it should
be removed' to the guest cham
ber for the benefit of visitors,
whose ' giggles will be audible
through any. but the most sub
stantial walls. They'll probably
steal the book, however.
Letters trta IUUn lo4
SAFETY IN DRIVING
To the Editor:
1 I take exceptions to one large
class of drivers, those Over age,
meaning over 65, left behind the
driver's wheel and cjften are
hazards on highways, in extend
ing driver's licenses. "
: It jwould not say that neither
is it (a fact whether a driver, is
16 or over 6S years of age,
doesh't iin the least prove his'
driving ability. It is all summed
down to whether he obeys traf-'
fic rules, speed limits; is careless
of his own life, thereby threaten-,
ing jothers; can gauge distance;
dimf his lights in time; shows
highway courtesy and is a care-
ful river; keeps his car in good
operating condition; does not mix
alcoholic drinks with driving.
There is no measure of age
governing this. If the individual
is noV sick, and at any age one
can m sick, an insurance com
pany, lias these standards. How
ever that does not save lives nor
property. Let's not discriminate
against our fathers, mothers, sons
or , daughters. This' is a free
country. All of us must become
past B4 of age.
C. E. McKEEHAN
Routo T
Salem, Ore. I
Oreg
To
on Blind
Be Trained
PORTLAND, Nov. 20-iip)-Five
hundredj blind Oregonians will be
trained land placed in new. jobs
within' five years, the new direc
tor of Me federal-state vocational
rehabilitation service' for the blind
predicted today. )
Clifford ; A. Stocker, who de
scribed his goal as a job for every
blind person in the state, said
sightless j j persons have proved
more skillful than the average
workers in such difficult job op
erations! j as milling i "machines.
drill presses, and grinders.
They Would fit in special jobs
in ice jcream and candy plants,!
iaundrie4, i bakeries, machine
shops, j and, airplane wing assem
blies in 01
egon, Stocker said.
WLB Sugar Panel Will
Hear Labor Dispute V
JJtxiVEK, Nov. 20-VA sugar
panel of the national war labor
board !decided today to open hear
ings Dec, 12in Denver to consider
labor dispute issues involving six
beet sugar companies
The firjSns are the Utah-Idaho
Sugarc6ikipany of Salt Lake City
and its subsidiary, the Gunnison
Sugar! company of - Gunnison.
Colo.; the Great Western Sugar
company of Denver; the Holly Su
gar company of Colorado Springs,
the National Sugar company of
SugarjClty, Colo., and the Ameri
can Crystal Sugar company of
rw. 1 ,: vl
1 1 m m : .
If
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v
5 Diamonds Watches' Jiweby . .
Give vIIiri" A;lllornfcj
V
We engrave gifts
in our store.
Place a masculine Cam
eo, Signet or Lodge ring
on his finger this Christ
mas. Stevens & Son of
fers 'an extensive selec
tion for Yuletide giving!
December 1st
Last day for mailing
packagaes larith assurity
1 v i Jk S t.. . -
f 7 .A i ueuvery oy.
i Christmas.
-i. . , . mm.... mA
. A . ..vreow u 1
- - m a m l l r m . . , . . J I
1 '
Credit If
Desired '