PAGE TOU2 The Q3ZGOXI STATESMAIL Jfcuenv Orecst Friday Korx!ag; December 22. 1S41 Wo Facor Stray U$; No Fear. Shall Awe f , ' From First Statesman, March 23, 1831 r ! - w THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COSIPANY. CHARLES A SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher , Member of the Associated Press V 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. Surprise on Western Front ; -' We know so little of the facts about the Ger man counter-offensive in the Belgium-Luxembourg sector that it is impossible for home front commentators to speak or write with any, degree of authority. There has been almost a complete news blackout since the German blow struck. Insofar as this news-suppression may be need ed to conceal information from the enemy,, we are ready fir acquiesce in the censorship. But if It is merely to save the people at home' from bad news and let it seep out gradually, or if it is to cover up bad performance on the part of American officers or units, then we do not like it. The fact that the OWI representative has been working to get release of fuller informa tion indicates that the censorship is not due strictly to desire for security. .- What has been conceded Is that the Germans have launched and carried forward a massive , counter-attack, supporting it with sufficient strength to carry it for 35 miles, through a breach in our lines of some 60 or 70 miles. That is a mighty blow. The preparation of it must have taken weeks.. The real mystery is over the surprise which evidently was inflicted on the firstarmy. . ' , To learn what the enemy is doing or is plan ning is the job of army intelligence. If this sec tion gives accurate information the command ers can dispose their forces to meet the antici pated thrust Intelligence depends on reports ; of various kinds, and now uses aerial recon naissance extensively. Just how Germany i could pile up sucK strength of eight or nine in fantry divisions and five or six armored divi sions without detection is what we do not un derstand. It js true that fog has keptTmr planes 'grounded much of the time, but it would seem that, observation planes could have done patrol work enough to spot troop movements on such a scale and concentrations of armor. .We will be getting fuller reports from correspondents soon, .we hope, "and then may get the full story of the : surprise, sit may not be a pretty one. Americans are warned that this thrust is a 'big thing." While it will not do for us to get ', panicky, .the situation is serious because of its , losses and because it may prolong the war for many months. But ' we must -brace ourselves both for the reverses and for the casualties. We can hope, tod, that this German expenditure will exhaust their strength so much that the war's end may be hastened in consequence. "Dora to Dover" Our ""staff correspondent" in London j writes about a trip to Dover, the much-bombed and shelled city on the English channeL ,From his letter we quote: No Mass Return of Japs There will not be mass migration of Japanese flack to the west coast. Thousands of former residents who were moved from the coast back 'in 1942 have established themselves in other parts of the Country. They will not want to return. A very considerable number now re side in Chicago, running small hotels and room ing houses and engaging in the occupations as ' they did oh the west coast. i Returning Japanese would find it hard to ob- tain housing here, unless they owned houses or had leases on them, which was not permitted to lien Japanese. Moreover, they do not want to come back if they are m physical danger or if the community is set against them. Those who own property here, . and many do, will want to come back to recover their prop erty. This will be true of Japanese farmers; - and if they return their rights must be re- -fpected. ; . .,: . x-y-';: Undoubtedly a question will arise over,, the damages done to Japanese-Americans by the f' evacuation order. One estimate is that, claims up to $400,000,000 will be filed against the gov ernment. Those who were citizens with no rec ord of disloyalty can claim damages for loss of property or business or earnings of same be cause they 'were removed as a war necessity, i Aliens probably have no right of recovery. -No recognition of such claims has been giveiy but without doubt pressure will come for -such recognition. In the end congress may appoint tome agency to examine such claims for dam- age, and ; provide funds to pay .. the approved claims. ,:. ::;x ;: " ,Vv " - - - - There is a growing' realization even in the "hot spots' like Hood River and Gresham that constitutional rights cannot be denied.- Instead of organizing to resist the return of Japanese ' these communities might better form commit r ' tees to study the question, endeavoring to pre-. ; vent such concentrations as would prove so i cially offensive, and to absorb into community life those who do return. - ? Editorial Comment V ; : : TIME TO SPEAK UP If the Army and Navy Journal purports to speak authoritatively though not officially from the view point of the armed forces, and it does, it has cer- tainly performed a most egregious disservice both for itself and for the Army and the Navy whose in- ' terests it presumably has at heart The allegation, published recently, that th Allies have failed to break through on the Western front largely be cause of British and .Russian preoccupation with political considerations in the Mediterranean and -. the Balkans, respectively, would have been in rath er, poor taste and inexpedient, to put it mildly, if uttered, by a strictly civilian commentator. Com log from a source which implies some reflection of ' Army or Navy views, it is inexcusable. - Such a statement could put the American armed forces under the suspicion of disclaiming responsi bility for their own difficulties and hastening to lay the blame on other shoulders. That is not in - accord with the Army and Nary tradition of sports , manship; it is lika blaming a team-mate for delay ing a touchdown.. The American public under- stands the difficulties which the Allied armies have faced on the Western Front and there has been very little disposition to criticize the military leadership. Even if there were; we believe, the overwhelming majority of Army and Navy men would wish to ac- "' cept their fair -share of the blame and defend them , selves directly against any excess. ; ; r But the statement has been made and stands, un fortunately, in black and white. It seems up to the Army and Navy now to officially repudiate the Journal's -viewpoint and thus free themselves, as well athe country, from its somewhat shoddy implications.- Christian "Science Monitor. , ."Yesterday, more or less in a mood to get" out of town at any cost, I took a train for Dover in pouring rain, j which continued until I got there or; .rather, went through there.- The . ticket said there were two stations, 'Priory and Marine.' i I decided f d like to get off at Ma rine, but found myself five miles out of town on the way to Deal before I realized we weren't going to "Marine.; I inquired about buses at a v nearby pub, then legged a mile or so along a wet asphalt road through fields to the nearest village of St Margarets, which lies in a swale - : about a mile back from the lip of the chalk .. cliffs. : There, in an inconceivably musty old hotel, I " had a not-too-bad lunch with, by chance, a British chaplain of captain's rank who happened to come in. -. He remarked about having some ribs broken In an. auto accident in Belgium in September. I asked about life in -the army, and we had a pleasant chat. ... "Anyway, from St Margarets I went by bus to Dover, where on general principles and to see the town best from the height I first vis ited the castle. It's a military establishment of course, as all castles are in this country, but the sergeant-major , sentry or officer' of the guard took a fairly good view of my navy card and an Admiralty pass I had along, -and let me in. Once in, I could beat around as I wanted to; and in fact found the castle deserted com pletely. I wound up in a medieval stone star , ' way in one of the towers,' and finally came out on the roof, quite the finest sightseer's perch in the neighborhood. ' "You coiild look down on the town and see the sad sight induced by four years' off-and-on shelling from the French side, which was, by ' the way, invisible. Later, after looking about the castle a bit more, and at the still standing Roman lighthouse at the edge of the bluff, I came, down into the town and saw the rows of . musty, caved-in houses, chipped and torn-away walls, and littered piles of mouldering plaster and pulverized brick which the-Germans had left there, without ever themselves having seen the place except from the air and that at their imminent peril. . X1 "The town is knocked about and more than one street had hardly an inhabited building, but instead the sort of decaying remains of once , reasonably stout business- and shop-structures. There was even a smell, as of disintegration, still lingering in the damp, mildewed interiors. "Like all British towns, the place didn't have, so far as I could find, and I tramped about for three hours, a single hotel open for tea on Sun day, and nothing else, either, except a cinema after five o'clock. : I did finally find a bakery shop that was serving food of a sort, and had a t meal before getting on a train back, where I . chewed the rag with a couple of British offi cers on the subject of small arms.'' TTo holders ' of A ffasalin rnrd- t rwlav ( Christmas, because the No. 14 coupons become valid. - - ; . ---J -t : .XX- -v. XX, ,X.-X Interpreting "The War News K1RKE L. SIMPSON - ' ; ASSOCIATED PRESS WAS ? ANAXTSW N-ir' f V Official Allied 'disclosure that the Nazi counter attack in Belgium had stabbed to within 18 miles of the vital Liege communications hub has an omi nous sound unless it is recalled that the news was :'. . two days old. f -.-AAf: . . ? ;V - '.'ir-'.l-I What happened, in . the subsequent 48 hours is what really mattered. Military security still cloak- -ed the details except for piecemeal and more nearly up to date bits of front line information from cor-. respondents drifting back from the American First army command centers , . Checking those advices on the maps, there is nothing to indicate that the 35-mile deep puncture in American lines there is wide enough to be men acing. Key towns along its whole northern flank have been held or retaken, by American troops.' That First army "counter measures" reported in -process ..relate particularly to that front covering the southern perimeter of the Aachen bulge and the Liege and Maastricht crossings . of the Meuse goes . without saying. That stretch of the counter-attack front from Monschau east of the reich frontier to the point 35 miles to the west where, a Nazi arm ored spearhead has cut the Liege-Bastogne-Arlon highway in Belgium to come closest to Liege prob-, ably holds the key to the ultimafe result Of the bold and risky German venture. ; " i- ; ti ' ..... Along that front American forces currently are reported holding an : important towns and "villages : including ; Monschau, i Butgenbach, Malmedy and' Stavelot The line appears to conform generally . to the route of an eastern feeder of the Iieg-Lux-' embourg railway most if 'not all of which' is in' American hands to provide quick lateral communi- cations at the front l .1 The- second day Nazi penetration southwest of Stavelot, disclosed, by a further limited lifting of. the Allied news blockade, was westward, not to ' the north.. It is to the north that the danger to Al lied communications with the Aachen bulge lies and ; it is there also, within the bulge,, that the whole - American Ninth army and the left wing of the American First army are concentrated. i - Due south of Malmedy American troops also held St With at last reports. If so the base of the Ger- " man salient driven across the Liege-Bastogne high way is less than 5 miles in width at that point It is dangerously narrow for its depth, obviously ln- : viting cutting off attacks from the northern flank. r Loss of the use of the-Liege-Bastogne highway along the northern section of the front Is the most serious result Of the new two-day-old German pen etration. It was a very useful link connecting the two wings of the First army; but not an indispensa- , ble one. The Liege-Bastogne railway and a west ern loop of the Liege-Bastogne highway running bj way of Marche still closely oin the north and south elements of the First army, well behind the active front. a - t Press reports front Allied main headquarters tp . pear to reflect Allied staff acceptance of the view . of most military writers that the German counter- - attack is being contained but still has not been defi- - nitely checked. There is little doubt remaining, however, that the ' foe. has accomplished his chief indicated purpose . and brought the great Allied winter offensive drive . at least to a temporary halt General Eisenhower's plans will have to be recast even if the Nazi drive in Belgium and .Luxembourg is finally sealed off. 41 Yank Sarcj Trades Sus XMvIag Job For Soup Making . ST ttwimni wtta Thm Wrakifitoa tu t A Tip From Uncle Sam THo Literary Guidcpost By John Setby SITCATION NORMAL,"- ky Arthur ,, MUler (Beyaal Httchcoc.fc: rr ; Quite a while back a cetn movie producer sent Arthur Mil ler out into the world of the mil itary camps with an idea. The idea was that it would be nice to produce a movie that really did express the soldier the kind of movie that could be shown in Army camps without rousing horselaughs all over the place. - Mr. Miller was a good choice for that sort of assignment He's not very old, he had some expe rience knocking about the world, and he has a certain amount of what the universities still call education! There were two more qualificationstoo. One was that he has a ready sympathy which he is not ashamed to show, and the other is that he can write. Really write. This does not mean that Mr. Miller is one to whip adjectives all over the corral. It means that: when he starts out to describe a man or a situation or an emotion, the thing stays de scribed. -. I He was interested in the en- News Behind the News By PAUL MALLON (Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction ' In whole or in part strictly prohibited.)' ! : .WAS HINGTON, Dec. 21, war to save Poland. That Is how Mr. Churchill's cold cutting of the this war started.' While the Brit Curzon line through Poland came fah and French were in Moscow as a shock to the public, but not trying to . make a deal with Sta lin, Hitler announced a non-aggression ' pact "with him' (August 21, 1939) to run for ten years whereby neither would oppose the other.. This no doubt called for division of Poland because Rus sia' moved mi-and took! her half less than a month later. ! Meantime Hitler invaded his half of Poland (Sept 1) and Brit ain declared war two days later when Hitler did not 1 answer Chamberlain's ultimatum : to with draw hazi troops from Polish soil (Britain had a treaty with the Poles undertaking . to protect them.) ' h But the Bntisn do not now feel or act disillusioned. to the diplomats involved. A year or more ago , even the newspaper me n in London knew Britain had an understand in g with Russia for this very Stalin acquisition of pre-war Polish territory They were not per- '. i . . mitted , to write Jt publicly, but they discussed it freely . among themselves. The deal was Reached long back before the recent Churchill and Eden visits to Moscow, perhaps as far back as the Tehran confer ence, as now reported. ..h--z- ..... "4.- 7 Pael MaHoa History may measure j Church- Hi's conciliation against the Brit- for practically the past two years r' T t t.:. J7-j ,u: impressed with. Russia's subse-. listed men, but writes well about toward working the exiled Polish sucfss in Jtir nazi in- their officers.: He finds a great government in London around to number of little things that nev- acceptance of the Curzon cutting, er seem to get into print the re- " There was not much' deception sentment - between paratrooper in Churchill's position.. Last Jan- and ordinary air-borne man, for tiary and' February he .publicly one small illustration. The for- imDlored the London Poles to ac cept the western Curzon slice The sensational way he pre sented it to parliament as a cold as me bored men sitting around hav- KZn inentr . rfiffAt European peoples without outside in the blackout smoking with T r, influence. ? mer gets twfee the pay of the latter. Miller can go out on night maneuvers,! and draw from them a set of wonderful, pictures, such vasion of her own soil and have come to accept the theory that she deserves anything reasonable on her Western frontier, although the concession violates every American position on the war from the Atlantic charter to the Stettinius announcement a few weeks back urging free determi nation of their governments by their heads drawn down into their overcoats; such as a clever ' colonel handling his erring lieu tenants so expertly that not one man even (flushed' when i cor rected, f: ':: V Boys being outfitted, mum bling about camp in the vague . state between civilian and sol dier, boys fwatcbing expert' ac tors show them how to do things and how not to do them, lonely boys,- young racketeers, praying boys and cussing boys all of them are drawn in all kindness. Mr. Miller does not do - much conclusion findings, but whenhe does, they are good conclusions. tion which was pressing him on the Greek affair. His own liberals, laborites and trade unionists (and : our new dealers) hid been reprimanding him for opposing the left wing and communits elements in Greece so he presented ' them with the Polish case in which he had sold out to those elements. Such adroit politics rather nullified their campaign .against ' him on the' Greek matter. ( " ? MT ; l r'xhl Here no one knows what to . say (see state department announce ment of Monday). Or rather they He thinksf for example, that our know what they are eager to say. was Issued in. respect to Italy and Greece,- where the British were Interfering, but no exception was mentioned of Poland which - the Russians are taking. ; . : Now "freedom of peoples' Is a policy Which the United States can permanently defend. - It has solid moral background. But Churchill and Stalin are working toward something contrary divi sion of spheres of major-nation influence over people. That Is a course of expediency. Justifiable by present day facts, but without any moral ground whatsoever. For example,' it is quite true the war's about men should know better.what but doubt If it would do any good -.SJSIS its overpowering L army. , exists alongside her. Thus it is physical ly Impossible to have what we want at this time. It also may be physically im- :.'" By Rata Cowan ix -'(Substituting for Kenneth I Dixon) NAPLES, Dec 12-(Delayed)-(jp)-Sgf Frank Kauffman heart a woman is driving the bus he used - to ; drive ' back , in New port, Ky, but thafa okay with him,, for he feels he has invaded the feminine field and . hat done quite well thank you. . nine Jul r. Kauffman has -l,J,-uV.-J supervised theKenncth U Dixen making of 2,896,400 quarts of gOUPA " . The sergeant has charge of a kitchen that feeds 16,000 to 21,-. 000 persons daily. Most are Ital ian civilians employed at a port operated by the US Eighth army , port of embarkation. - j The members of the . house military affairs committee vrere " taken, during their visit herei on a tour of this port commanded by CoL John Hines, of Wilming ton, NC. ' ':;x'.r: Since the army, took over In Safety Valve LETTERS FROM STATESMAN READERS i To the Editor: " f . , . There have been a blast and a counter-blast irf the local press regarding the recent serious fire at the Capital City Transfer com-. ' pany building. The most import ant item of news was entirely left out of the criticism, namely, that the fire was put out;; and secondly, that the fire was con fined to the original building. For your own Information at tend the next good-sized fire and watch the chief for, say, thirty minutes, get up close. j The writer-. also . makes' no , claim ' to being a fire expert; 1 however, it Is high time that the 'following facts be considered by Salem residents as to our fire . department: ' , "" " : ' The Salem fire department has almost a dozen of its younger men in the armed forces at the present time. . ' . k '-X : By all standards, the four local fire houses are very much uhder manned. , . Much equipment Is or obsolete," : The Salem fire department la an excellent one from a person-; nel standpoint Composed mainly j ' of responsible, intelligent jand courageous citizens, with long,, experience, and training with what equipment we have. jTheir , business is to fight fires. Chief Buck Hutton is neither a diplomat nor a politician jthank God ! His job is fighting fires and , commanding his department end . brother, he does both. He jknows every building, hydrant Vehicle and bit of equipment power line, and person or thing related to fighting Salem fires. He will go quickly to the most ' , dangerous and vital point at a fire, and his men naturally fol low such leadership. He as al- ways been on the Job, attends all fires. Is honest and courageous . to a fault '- - . ' He will say yes or no loud enough to hear, on any Subject -. you wish, walks on both sdes of ' all street, and will tell any or ' all to go to hell, and more, at the slightest provocation, if any. Folks, we've got a good fire chief and fire department Amen. Paul Herdinkfr November, 1 1943, the- port has handled nearly 8,000,000 tons of . shipping, i ' - , . Lt CoL Paul Oizeaux, of Tow gph, Mi, port labor, control of- ' . ficerj said that one month the port surpassed the tonnage han dled in the port of New York. .The .harbor facilities have luuy. ;Hed up to 14,00a tons daily. . Much? of the supplies destined 'for . the Italian .front comes through this, the 'second largest port in the. Mediterranean in peace-time. Supplies also"' are ' (Continued on page 14) rnj worn ou' Republican Senator Vandenberg walked around all last week with Oregon Ship to Launch Peech obviously sticking out t . pi . xvr V t on his chest He could barely re VlCtory Ship West Linn strain, himself day by day, saying PTIRTTlAVn T.aM ft : fK9i - ISsk, waa silawtnir MAaefeltA 0 Oregon Shipbimding corporation his views because he did not know P?81 to taX? 'r! today labnclied ' the West Linn, whether It would help or hurt the ?le Geee Itfly elsewhere first of two victory ships to situation to offer them and he be named for Oregon towns, delivered only half yesterday, x v Launching of the La Grande Is - The disillusioning fact of the planned for January. , matter was that Britain went to because leftism is a world move ment, non-democratic Russian and dictatorial m nature i but be cause this is so, temporarily, should we abandon what we know "THE 1 YOUNG -IDEA" By Mossier" "c'-T ' -i . , ' -' v In short, should we abandon , the American game of freedom of . peoples to condone or accept the . ; European game of spheres of in fluence? . , , That is the case and the issue. ia7,732 Apply For Stickers A total of 137,732 appUcations for. 1945 motor , vehicle registra tion stickers had been received at , the state department here up to , Wednesday night Secretary of State Robert S. FarreuV jr, an nounced Thursday. Farrell said more than 100,000 stickers have been mailed to ap plicants or issued over the count em in the Salem and Portland of fices. He estimated 440,000 motor vehicle- registrations for 1945 as - against approximately 425,000 this year. " ' ' The 1942 license plates will be retained. - . ' .- ; r- Learnlnr this stnffs il"y. mom. what wilh the earning of the ,x , postwar kltchenf ; Salem llzn Elected PORTLAND, Dec. SH-Lloyd Riches, Salem, has been! named first vice-president - of - Columbia Empire Industries. The new pres ident "will, be Thomas' C I Young, Portland. : ' ' (Continued from page 1) es in so exposed a political situ ation as the northwest In Ne braska, American is selling its operating; company, with its Om aha system, to a group which will divide it for public owner ship and operation. Undoubtedly if Bonneville administration had the money and the1 authority it would pick up all the electric companies of American in the northwest for similar disposal. - With early settlement of the affairs of Portland Electric Pow er company, bankrupt, in sight its chief subsidiary, Portland ' General Electric, might Consider this a propitious time to acquire Northwestern Electric However,1 such a. merger was voted down some 18 years ago and will hard ly be revived. It might touch off a fresh campaign for municipal ownership in Portland. - The recent defeat - in Wash ington of the measure that pro vided machinery allowing PUDs to combine to take over private systems will prevent Washington PUDs, "which pretty well blanket that state as far as legal or ganization, is concerned, from taking over American's subsidi aries there, though deals might be worked out by negotiation if 1 American really wants to sell to such organizations. In Oregon the PUD movement . has been slow, and there s is nd adequate machinery in the way of municipal corporations to take over the Oregon units, although the Hood , River. PUD t had an ambitious scheme which, if. car ried, would have permitted wholesale acquisitions. ; American Power c Light is still resisting SECs dissolution order In the courts, but has pre pared Its plans in event it losses its case. While it would be given plenty of time to dispose, of properties it cannot retain, the fact that these companies have "for sale" signs on them will start a lot of speculation. Bank ers will seek to- get, some busi ness, and financial and utility operators will seek to get control of ' these valuable properties, if not directly through American, then through accumulation of stock in the operating companies when it is on the market Sup porters of public ownership will see tiie golden opportunity i of getting hold of these established utilities without the agony and uncertainty of condemnation proceedings. . It is pUiiwto see that the util ity situation in the northwest, if the American goes through with Its program, will become, as the military men say "highly fluid." I Stevens 1 w i Diamonds - Watches - Jewelry . .' , - I x x " Only-2 SHopplntj Dccysl r t i r w We have enr exceptioncdolloction 61 oosa dla- ( monds; Make your selection and well place tn a mounting ot your choioe right here in our storel - There is tull time to have your gifts purchased here, engraved by Chrisbnas. Credit If Desired Credit If Desired' ii - . K.