pacz roua Thm OSEGOII 8TATEZMA2L Satau Orvgon, Tuesday r-T-.fjr December 23. 1344 Strasbourg Is Gtj Of Eozrowod Ilgit la Shade of War V "... . m r , t Wo Favor Sways If; Wo Fear Shall Awe" -. From First Statesman, March 23, 1831 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher Member of th 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. ator for .19 years,, comes up ' for reelection la " 1945. He will hare to make it clear long be fore the election whether he will stand as a can didate in his old progressive party or whether he will run as a republican. Republican sena tors are concerned about this, too, though not so much as if they had won the election, for La Follette has seniority, and if a republican would rate the ranking republican positions on com mittee assignments. In view of the trend in Wisconsin it is likely that 1948 will see LaFoI-? lette running as a republican. Russia's Dominance As the Russian armies slowly tighten their grip around Budapest, capital of Hungary, an nouncement comes from Moscow of the forma tion of a "provisional Hungarian government' wtih a CpL Gen. Bela Miklos as prime minister. A proclamation is issued calling Hungarians to wage a war of liberatiorTagainst the Germans. This adds another" chapter to the political book of Hungary, The veteran regime of Ad-' miral Horthy was ready to capitulate and nego tiate with the advancing Russians when the . nazis in the capital inspired a coup d'etat and placed Ferenc Salad, a minion of the nazis, in office as premier. Then the Germans poured in troops and defended. Budapest and the line across Hungary. Russia has finally resumed its thrusts in Hungary and has set up this new po- litical regime which doubtless will function as does the Polish committee with headquarters in Lublin. ., So it is that across Europe from the Baltic to the Black sea Russia is building for the future with regimes which will be friendly, to, if not actually dependent on, Moscow. The Russians . already dominate Rumania; their influence is predominant in Yugoslavia (Newswoman Ele anor Packard was expelled from Yugo-Slavia when she reported that pictures displayed in that country were of Tito and Stalin, with scant recognition of Churchill and Roosevelt, though most of the supplies for Tito had come from the western allies). Russia has a treaty with Czech oslovakia arid controls the Lublin Polish com mittee, while it has moved to incorporate the three Baltic states of Esthonia, Latvia and Lith uania into the USSR. This is a natural result of the military power revealed by Russian and by the fact that Rus sian armies, for the most part, are the liberating armies: It does not of itself violate the Atlantic Charter, though where territories' are seized and peoples shifted around, it would. For one thing, the situation in east central Europe will be stabilized after this war. The "cordon sanitarre" raised , against bolshevisra ; after, the first World war will 'become a pro tective moat for Russia. Women and Pipes Tired Wisconsin Progressives Third parties have had scant success in the United States since the alignment of the re publican and democratic parties was drawn in Civil war times. The farmer-labor party in Minnesota, which had considerable state sue- , cess, finally merged this year with the demo cratic nartv in that state. Over in Wisconsin. long under the LaFollettes a state noted for its Dolitical irreeularitv. the LaFolIette nrow-essi to t party is on its last legs. Its leaders are can vassing the situation trying to decide whether u un; isu vi in mm. iwsuciigui lias idigeiy seeped back to the republican party from which it sprang. The Wisconsin decision will have to be made soon because Bob LaFollette, who has been sen- Editorial Comment AMERICA'S RESPONSIBILITY In the course of a dispatch to this newspaper ex- -plaining the political situation in Italy, Herbert I . Matthews, our correspondent at Rome, remarked , that: ''Britain, Russia, and other European nations ' see war as an instrument of politics, but for the - United States it is something purely and narrowly ' military to win the war and then go home." Many Americans not only agree that such a dif ference In national attitude exists, but pride them selves on this difference. They talk as if it were merely selfish and calculating to fight a war for - any reason beyond itself, and as winning the war and then going home were the only altruistic and noble course for us to pursue. But a little reflection will show how " ill-considered such an attitude really is. Every war in which reasonable men participate is fought for a purpose. For America, as for England and Russia,: the primary purpose of, the present war was .to re move a threat to its, national, survival. But once such a threat is removed, a rational people will use their victory to try to insure, as far as possible, that the threat does not arise again. They will try to establish the conditions under which international prosperity, good-will and a .lasting peace are pos sible. We have not spent $400,000,050,000 and sac rificed half a million casualties in order to have nothing to do with Europe. - We did not participate in this war in order to wash our hands of the result That is, what we did the last time. The ultimate . consequence was that we were forced to participate j in a war incomparably more costly to us. ' War is necessarily an instrument of political polt icy. But too many Americans think of "political policy only in the bad sense. They associate ifc , with schemes for spheres of influence, dubious mil? " itary alliances, territorial aggrandizement, and with . all sorts of Machiavellian intrigue. But if we do nothing, or merely proclaim our intention not to. "interfere" in this, that or the other local situation brought about directly or indirectly by our par ticipation in the war, we shall, in effect leave the actual framing of policy to others; and we shall be inconsistent if we later complain that the policy "' actually adopted is a harmful one from world point of view or from that of our own national in terests. The true alternative to narrow and short sighted national policies is not no national policy at all, but far-sighted policies that look beyond mi- mediate national interest to, our larger interests as V citizens of a single world. . ' ; But such policies are not to be achieved either . by self -righteously announcing a "hands-off pol-V-icy in Europe or by repeating a few "Idealistic slo gans. They can be put into effect only by specCBc decisions in specific situations. Our war and post war policies will not be decided merely by what we -do regarding the agreements reached at Dumbarton Oaks.. They are actually being decided every day by what we do or fall to do, by what we say or fail to say, with regard to specific situations in Italy, Belgium, Greece, Yugoslavia, Poland, or a score of other points. But if in these specific situations we do nothing, if we fail to make our influence felt, if we keep -publicly washing our hands of responsij bility for what is being done in a situation which we helped to create, we merely leave a vacuum so far as American policy is concerned; and we shaft" ' hardly be entitled to complain if others rush in to fill that vacuum with policies that go counter to our own interests or to those of a durable peace.-- . New York Times. Papers have reported that the females of the species are taking up pipe-smoking because of the shortage of cigarets. In fact, there have been numerous pictures -of women so engaged. The pictures looked staged, however, as though the news photographer had . brought the pipes along as "props." The gals looked a bit awe struck at the undertaking. -. The Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce, in its desire to be helpful in the present distressful situation; comes forward with the suggestion that the ladies fill their pipes with cut plug and1 then take a few whiffs. That surely would grat ify their appetite for nicotine. We pass on the Journal's suggestion: With the cigarette shortage growing more acute throughout the country each day, oppor- ! tunity is surely hammering and hollering at the doors of pipe manufacturers. The ladies, it is V said, are now taking strongly to pipe smoking ' ' but there is too much talk about the shape and - color of the hods that should appeal to women. The shape and color of pipes take it from us should not be vital issues. It is the content of the smudge-pots that is of paramount impor tance the tobacco, if you please. And to the ladies we would say: Get into immediate pos- session of a plug of Navy Cut or Horse Shoe. Whittle off a chunk and after working it into a - mixture resembling stoker coal, load your hods 1 carefully even corn pipes will do 10 cents each at any tobacconist's shop. Then let the match play lightly over the top of the bowl un- til a dense smoke resembling that of burning creosote results. Inhale deeply, forgetting the while all about the audience and the color and shape of the vehicle holding the damnable . mess. i V As we say, it Is the content rather than the pipe. itself that counts. And if after a dozen or so deep draws of that time-tried and extremely potent Navy Cut you have any desire remain ing for cigarettes it will be more than passing strange. There may ensue a sense of extreme dizziness and you may see black spots before - your eyes as the tobacco bubbles and sputters but keep, at it and we are sure you will experi ence a thrill that no cigarette can impart And ' in passing. It might be mentioned that the price -of good, black plug tobacco is still within the price range of all, due probably to the fact that the demand thus far has been hone too strong, no doubt, because so few have had the benefit of our advice in the matter. - . ' ' No one seems to have told Santa Claus not to come this year because of the stocking shortage.1 '' Interpreting The War News ' K1RKE L. SIMPSON . ASSOCIATED PRESS WAR ANALYST ; The war news. from Europe on Christmas day held two elements mat helped brighten the Yule tide season on United Nations home fronts. , In the west the Nazi counter-attack across Bel gium and northern Luxembourg clearly had spent its fh-st force. -Front line observers read the rela tive lull as a sign that the Germans were regroup ing of another lunge; but battle momentum once lost Is hard to regain. Portents were even more encouraging in the southeast The battle of Budapest was close to its end. A vast Russian pincer attack had all but' throttled Budapests last communications west and the twin drive on Vienna up both banks of the Danube was taking definite shape. It is a fair de duction that the uncertain breathing space attained at high cost in the west did little to abate the appre hension with which the Nazi high command watch ed the . evolution of Russian strategy in Hungary I and Latvia and above all on the still ominously s quiet Polish front ; . h That the moment is close at hand for rested Rus sian armies of the center astride the short road to ' Berlin to Join in.theattack German military experts cannot seriously doubt What happens in the east particularly in Poland, within the next week or two could go far toward shaping events in the west ' " '"' ,The savage but risky German counter-attack be- ' tvreen the Roer and the Moselle has attained its first objective bringing the Allied advance toward the Rhine in the Aachen bulge to a halt and diverting much of the American Third army from the Saar basin offensive. There has been no bint of Allied withdrawals, on either stalled attack front however, to cope -with the Nazi power drive between them. A critical decision must soon confront the Ger man commander in the west. His loss of momen tum westward, as well as his failure to make pro gress, northward and cut communications sA the Aachen bulge, probably is traceable to his neces sity of diverting troops from offensive to defensive action. He must hold open the neck of the great sack in Belgium into which he has poured such strong forces.-' . The Nazi commander must decide whether to at- tempt to hold' the Belgian bulge almost to the Meuse as a leverage to keep the Allied offensives above and below it in continuous check, or to with- , draw again within Siegfried line defenses from which the saQy was started. To hold that ground securely more troops must be committed in the sack. Even to attempt withdrawal would require a massing of troops to keep the dangerous neck open again First army punching from the north and Third army attacks from the south. Otherwise that "worst defeat which General Eisenhower told his troops was possible as a result of the Nazi "gamble" could come.' - There is "a definite limirto the reserves available to the foe for west front action. The German high est military command dare not- pare down east front dispositions in the face of poised Russian le gions in Poland. .. ' . . - . . . pJL ;J w j If By Wade Werner Substituting for Kenneth Dixon STRASBOURG, Dec 23.-(De-layed)-ff)-Thls has! become m city of brrowed light In the shad ow of frontline war. ; . ; f Am rl ran . troops patrol its - streets, French flags float t serenely over$i'its " roof tops. But no more uxan uve , , s v 7 from German,CMBfth u 1?f guns. Most of it isr closer, and its waterfront on .the Rhine is undo- machine gunj and mortar fire from the opposite bank. So it was a simple matter for German artillery to j knock out .a municipal power plant. The only surprise was. that jthey waited v three days before dping it after the Seventh army drove them out of town. I Since then nearly a month has passed and army civil affairs - detachments j collaborat ing with French authorities have managed to borrow enough elec tricity from towns vell beyond the artillery range to Illuminate all Strasbourg. . . J , ; 1 ; There also was enough for pumping the city's water supply and operating refrigeration plants and hospitali electrical Only street cars still ! are idle. Strasbourg's food' situation Under the Mistletoe The Literary Guidepost By -John Selby 8Jt.O- edited by Bcanett Cerf aa , Vaa H. Carunril (Oonbleday, Dor aa;l S3.15); -THE BEST PLAYS, 1M3-1M4," by Boras afaatte (Ooda, Mead; S3). The only play collection I know in which the vague con siderations of "art" played no part is published this month by Bennett Cerf and Van H. Cart melL with a most appropriate title. f" This Is JLO." and S.Rlb." is the second book Mr. Cerf has published this fall through another publisher than himself. He has, as Is well known, .a very prosperous firm of his own. Anyway, the plays were chos en because they knew how to win friends. There are about four -plays among the 14 includ ed which would justify the ad jective "good," and even there one must usually add, "of its kind." It takes a really active and willing imagination to wade through a play like "The Old Homestead," a work which nev ertheless! supported Denman Thompson from 1875 to his death in 1911. "The Man from Home," which was perpetrated by Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wilson, both of whom must have . known better, is another exam- -pie. Probably the finest of all is, however, Anne Nichols "Abie's Irish Rose." It is beyond belief that anybody could read through the play, except as an exercise in theatrical history. That, most likely. Is what Messrs. Cerf and Cartmell intend it to be. But "Life With Father" reads welL so does "Arsenic and Old Lace," and so does "Oklahoma," which last is surprising'' since musical plays are notablv dull on paper, as-a rule. I enjoyed ; dipping into Mary Roberts rtine hart's "The Bat" (Avery Hop good's, too), and found the suc cess bf Erskine Caldwell's "To- bacco Road" strange, as usual. And John Chapman's introduc tion is filled with information. Burns Mantle's. .The Best, Plays: 1943-1944'; is ready also, and Mr. Mantle's friends will be ' a little shocked, quite likely, to see mat he flatly calls the season of 1943-44 a "war casualty." The fact that none of the season's plays is given an unqualified News Behind the News By PAUL MALLON (Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction in whole or in part strictly prohibited.) , WASHINGTON, Dec 25-A strong, generally thoughtful' editorial writer who is against the Roosevelt, particularly Mrs. Roosevelt regime spoke - out in several met- Terrors ropolitan pa-' pers recently: (note. I think the radicals called him fas cist - minded during therlast ' camp a i g n al though the charge - was Jof a political na ture and there- Faal Halloa fore not Intended to be believed literally): "There is only one way to as sure ourselves of military strength, whenever needed. That way consists of a system of com pulsory military training." ; That Is simply not true. There are many ways of assuring our selves of military strength, whenever . needed. A logical, straightforward way consists of putting V military training into Jthe high schools and colleges' to develop, and keep trained, the necessary officer DersonneL and enlarging and modernizing the y nists, national guard, giving it wea pons, including ' airplanes and tanks, artillery, ammunition and ' commissary to develop a private personnel. - That would be the' more effi cient way, because it would be constant, always up-to-date, al ways ready to handle the latest implements of. warfare scienti fically, and efficiently, although there ere of course many other things which must be done, in cluding; the maintenance of a greater permanent military in ventors' council with laborato ries, continuance of West Point and Annapolis at war size or larger, and an alert, ever watch- fulv and efficient w a r depart-" ment to see that we do not fall asleep to dangers from without! - ' " - i- cheer does not lessen the book's value as part of the Mantle se ries, which for 23 years has,, in turn, beene, part of theatrical -history. - . 5 These are democratic ways. The taking of a boy from his. home,' work and career for a year of service in the army is a Prussian method instituted by Prussian militarists after ' the war of 1870. It must be an inef ficient way of developing an ar my because the Prussians have' never won with it, nor has it produced results in France and some other nations which took it up. . On the opposite side of the same fence a radical Editorial . writer in a metropolitan daily, (I .think he is the very one who. called tny above friend fascist-, minded" and certainly he thinks the Roosevelt regime, and par-, ticularly the Mrs. Roosevelt re gime, is just about "right on ev erything), wrote recently: . . , "The only way this country can get away irom maintaining ' a very large army and develop- -ing a militaristic caste system after this war is by compulsory' military training." Is this not the strangest col lection of bedfellows upon any world mattress? Radicals, con servatives, people, who think eacn other fascists or nmmu. Mr. Roosevelt - and the "THE YOUNG IDgA" By Mossier seaswMMaMBMMaMaaMSswaiaMaaaaaa- " ' chamber of commerce. PM and the NY Herald-Tribune, Mrs. Roosevelt and "the fascist mind ed," an enjoying this same de-lusion-insistenUy. - For there is no more truth in saying this is the only way to "avoid a large army" than that it is the only way to maintain an army. It . would be a large army of more than a million youths 17 to 21 years old, a new large army each year. But it would hardly be what we would call a skilled, army. We would have to mainn an other one for older men fori de fense. We would have to nave an air force constantly alert, a corps bent on nullifying the ef fect of rocket bombs, and what other nes: weapons, daily, a whole war. department o Just as much -Strength as if we did not have compulsion in train ing. ::; - ; - 'r These trainees would only be reserves reserves that mteht .... . - . . ... oxnerwise be obtained more ef ficiently, by a real national guard. As a friend of mine puts ifc i "We must be a military, but not e militaristic nation," and we need a national guard which literally must be "a guard of the. nation." 1 , But a. great many other peo ple are saying daily m the pa pers a year of national service . would cure Juvenile delinqtien- ; cy, promote youth-health, make better ciUzeni. These are all non-military excuses for a mili tary step, which lacks, sound military grounds.," Well, this war - has : cured ' crime. Would these same people .: advocate continuance of this I war forever in order to cure crime? Of course, not We handle crime otherwise. ' Well, why not handle our non " military problems in a non mfliUry way, or at least' in - a democratic way? Ltt's amaze everyone by elorlnr Portland Radio Station Plans Farming Service PORTLAND, Dec, 25.-fls)-T h e first radio farm service in Port land wfll be established next month by station KALE. Burton S. nutton, former staffer at sta tion KOAC in CorvaUis, win be in charge. J - (Continued From Page 1) result, the flow of money at race meets in 1944 broke alj records, amounting to over $300,000,000. . The same expansion was noted in Portland for the dog races. Some of the war activities like financing of the war bond selling campaigns were supported by proceeds of special race' days; also, the George A. White serv ive men's center got j big lift from this source. The state gen eral fund gets only a trickle of the many millions 'posted as bets on "the dogs; but ten per, cent goes tor county fairs and certain ' live stock shows and the Pendle ton Roundup. Since most of these events have shut down for the duration, they have accumulated a lot of money fir postwar spending. These fairs will not suffer from the suspension of racing because of their ample credits, but the Portland special agencies will lose quite a chunk of money. v-?:-'- ' - By taking the state or units of government into j partnership for the sharing of the patronage of man's vices, sponsors of race ' meets and paii-muiuel betting have made themselves quite im pregnable from' attack .on. moral grounds. In Oregon1 there has been no move to abolish pari, mutuel betting since Senator Staples led his ! gallant but un successful attack in the 1937 leg islature. . , ; The war boards are not hesit ating now to crack down sharply as they see the necessity for add ed restraints. WPBj has frozen civilian production, stopping the trend toward reconversion; the manpower commission has im posed fresh controls over labor to hold workers at war jobs; the OPA is renewing raUon controls on meats and canned goods, with' higher point-fcost forjmany terns. The people, in thejir chastened mood following reverses on the' western front, win accept these new orders without complaint, as it were in' token of jtheir contri tion over premature celebration of victory. I hope they win not be so quick to throw off these restraints when the next news of military success ! comes in. Let's stay oo the job this time until it really Is concluded. esti- presently is satisfactory, too, largely due to the fact that re ' treating Germans left so much , 1 behind. A'- "- "! i-;"f!t"if'"V;,v Major Robert A. Cish, former Cheyenne, Wyo, engineer and x now commanding officer of dvH , affairs detachments, i estimated the stock was sufficient for eight weeks with the city's present population of HOfiOO.) Under German occupation Strasbourg was the distributing center for Alsace, hence the size; of the reserves. Additional succlies of - various kinds win be available a. . . m ve a wnenever vne uennani iau uacjc and the waterfront and its ware houses are freed from close range " fire.," y ":- :,-: :'j-f . Meanwhile, Strasbourg citizens ration in France - 300 grams dally. Property damage was rel atively light, many shops and a - number of restaurants have op ened and retail trade has been , resumed with German marks and French francs both drculat- ; teg on the basis of 13 francs' to one mark. The movement of ci vilians stiH is sharply restricted, however, and passes are required to go from one. part of the city to the other. v " ' There is no refugee problem here in fact it is just the re verse since many thnands of German nationals fled across the Rhine while bridges still were available leaving the city's popu lation below normal There still are 5000 displaced persons here, however Dutch, Polish, Czech and Russian workers who grad ually are being moved rearward for eventual repatriation- On the other hand it is mated that 130,000 German na tionals still are living in Stras bourg. Whit to do with all of them is a political problem com plicated by the emotional reac tion, of the French who live un der German occupation. For the time being the Germans are be- ing closely watched. ; ' The city looks so near normal during the daytime that it is hard to get used to a 530 p m. curfew.. Churches have asked permision to resume midnight mass forbidden during the Ger man occupation but authorities hesitate to lift the ban too soon. The curfew was established be cause of the proximity of the Germans and the Germans still are near. The Germans themselves take pains to remind the liberated city that they are Just j across the riverrnightly using hogcallers to broadcast across the Rhine: r : "Take down those French flags you people. We! are coming back." , : 1 ..." ; if ;r. ' However, that is just what American . troops on this front dont intend to permit The ,: Safety Valve LETTERS FSOM STATESMAN 1EADEE3 -j i . POSTWAK FLAMS BY SEKVICEMEM - The Statesman publishes the fol . ' lowing communication from pvt. Donald C Ritchie, now to New Gui nea, who writes in behalf of himself and two other graduates of Salem high school, aettinf forth their ideas on "Postwar Planning" (or Salem. FSOM A TENT Df NEW GUINEA There bis been an over-abun-, dance lately of loose - talk and - wild , speculations grouped under , the mass heading of "Postwar Planning." There has been talk of helicopters, and cooking elec- - trically, : and gleaming homes 'with, little activity other than button-pushing and artery hardening. Yes, there has been too much rainbow spinning. , . To many of us serving over seas, all this Utopian chatter is a serious waste, of time. Most of all, we want to return hornet and because you are our par ents, wives and sweethearts , we 1 feel you Want this, too, most of alL But, indeed, this is not ' enough. Salem is a wonderful city. It I and its people and its Institutions have endowed each of its sons with a peculiar brand (Continued on page 11) JEWELRY Craftsmanship ; Frankly u . . we're proud of the excel lent Jewelry manufacturing we are now doing for the people of Salem and vi cinity! 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