PAGE FOUR ffce OREGON STATESMAN. Satan. Oregon, Tuesday Morning, March 13. 1S43 rej&ott "No Favor Swayt V$; No Fear Shall A we rrom First Statesman, March 23, 1831 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY fr CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher .3 Member of the Associated Press i U ' 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. Transferred Transylvania The impotence of the smaller nations was shown again when it was reported over the week-end that , Marshal Stalin ' of Russia in- formed tne new premier r-eiru uroza i Ru mania taht 17,400 square miles of northern Transylvania was being returned from Hungary to Romania. The population of 2,500,000 had nothing to say about it: in fact they have never had much to say about who should rule them. f X CLX fc V liUilgOl J fcVV- mm - ----- ' garian monarchy, Transylvania was given to Romania after the first world war, when the old Austro-Hungarian empire was being broken up and when Romania wanted reward for having sided with the western allies. In 1940 Hitler, the new boss of Europe, gave northern Transylvania to Hungary as reward to Hungary for its easycompliance with nazi demands. Now Hitler is Europe's bum and Stalin is boss in eastern Europe. Hungary and Romania go "thumbs up" or "thumbs down" as Stalin tells them. The transfer may be quite just; the significant thing is that neither Hun gary nor Romania seems able to act on its own but must await the favor of some greater power. It shows how, as a practical matter, the small nations are dependent on some powerful patron. An interesting sidelight on the situation is the fact that soviet newspapers, hailing the transfer as proof of Russia's faith in the new regime of Premier Groza, declared that sabotage and terrorism in the province under the recent government of Premier Nicolae Radescu had made it impossible to restore the province earli er. Radescu has been out of office only a week and it hardly seems that Groza could have ac complished such reforms in Transylvania in so short a time. Could the disorders have been inspired from the outside on purpose to upset Radescu? Premier Groza promises to "look after the rights of nationalities living there, being guided by the principles of democracy, equality and justice for the entire population." That is a M' a "CTT211 1A. - - A A 1 ime prospectus niu xic carry n ouu Ana wax he be permitted to carry it out? Two Measures in Senate Action of the senate Monday in approving the house bill to tax premium income of domes tic as well as foreign insurance companies saves to the state the sum of $2,000,000 per biennium. Previously only out - state " companies were taxed, but a federal ruling forbade the contin uance of the discrimination. The Oregon com panies of which the DrinciDal ones are Oregon Mutual Life, Oregon Mutual Fire and Oregon Automobile Insurance co. volunteered to submit to state taxation so the state would not suffer this great a loss of revenue. It was found that a rate of two per cent instead of the former two and one-quarter per cent was adequate. The bill has passed both houses and will be signed by the governor without much doubt. While the local insurance companies enjoyed this free dom from tat tnr fnr mjinv vsan. fViv ws loyal to the state and were willing to yield their exemption so as to save this income to the state. Saturday the senate killed by a tie vote the bill to permit clubs to dispense liquor on a script system. While some of the established lodges urged passage of the bill, behind it also was an element which saw the chance to set up clubs that would become veal drinking saloons without the regulation or scrutiny of the old drinking places. This liberalization of the Knox law had been strongly opposed by past liquor commissions and the senate committee on alco holic traffic was unanimously opposed. Never theless friends of the bill got 16 votes to reject the report and place the bill on the calendar. On the final vote Senator Fred S. Lamport, con vinced that the bill would open the way to worse conditions, joined the 14 who had sup ported the committee's report, so the bill was defeated. It was a real victory for the control principle and Senator Lamport deserves com mendation for his courage in changing his vote said thus defeating the attempt to loosen liquor control 'in the state. " - - " ' Editorial Comment THE TEACHEK SHORTAGE Lillian Van Loan, director of placement for the Oregon State Teachers association, has written an illuminating article in the February Oregon Jour nal in which, after showing the acute shortage in Oregon, she produces the evidence to show that the teacher shortage is a national problem. From her survey- she finds that Oregon needs 417 teachers right now and will need 1637 in the falL But. an inquiry sent to all states brought answers that show other states are in a similar, predicament. Some states are worse off than Oregon. The teacher shortage In some respects she finds is a blessing in disguise, although those are not her words. The blessing is that the shortage Is bringing educational problems to public attention and con sideration. It is resulting in some work being done to offset the inadequacy of teacher preparation and : the improvement not only of the teachers' status but of their preparation. Illinois has issued 2800 emer gency certificates and Pennsylvania has 4000 such teachers, a patent that some of the teaching in that state is low in the scale of preparation. In brief there seems to be no state from which any other states can now attract teachers except on a basis of salaries paid. . In Montana it is expected 60 per cent of the teachers now educating the young people will drop out after the war. Many "who are eligible for retirement are still teaching. ," ! - Mrs. Van Lcanjcites the "gains'' thus far accru ing for the teacher shortage as pointed out by Art ton Thompson, acting director of the bureau of rec ommendations at the University of Minnesota. Be sides salary increase these gains include better teacher morale with better public appreciation of the work, teaching ' combinations Improved,, more democratic school administration, fewer one-room schools, less emphasis on age and greater public re spect tor tne teacner as an individual urezon i,iry .Enterprise. , . . . . .... - War Weariness - I An Associated Press dispatch from Washing ton says that authorities there are apprehensive over the attitude of the public as the war in Eu rope approaches an end. The military leaders fear that a kind of war weariness wiir set in af ter the first outburst of joy over victory oer Germany, that the people at home will explct' an early demobilization of troops in Europe, and may be disposed to drop ar production id hurry into production for civilian needs. ? Somehow we grow tired of Washington's fears about the people of the country. The "authof i ties" in Washington have guessed wrong about the public mind right along, First they feared "complacency" but the record shows that fhe public has met virtually every call. Then they have feared how the public might react to bad war news.- Now they dread the end of the War in Europe lest the people drop their war tobls and go on a prolonged .'celebration. The "au thorities" are dead wrong. ; The people of he United States are determined to see the wars, both wars, through to the end. If anything trey are more bitter against Japan than German they haven't forgotten Pearl Harbor and Efa taan. Workers in war industry are not going! to drop their tools immediately after V-E day; most of them will want to hang on to good-paying jobs. . ' -J . . . I '. There is no need for Washington to condition the minds of the people. The people readdlhe 'papers and follow the war.news and expect, to continue ot make sacrifices Until V-J day. And they do not need to be wet-nursed as to tifeir thinking by Washington "authorities.' As tar as war weariness is concerned, why the Ameri can people are just getting their muscles! in good shape. - "1 Vote-Trading Trading votes in ing days is as yisib loting as though it I the legislature in these clos- e in some of the recent bal- was announced on the floor. There is no other way. to explain some of the votes which members have cast. They may? be able to explain things away to the satisfaction of their constituents, few of whom track down just how a member votes anyway. But how they can live with their own consciences after some of the deals ! they have made, is known only to themselves. Even : God would have a hard time figuring jthat out, I ! The state makes a profit on liquor sales. j It shares in pari mutuel betting and gets license money from pinball machines. Now a cigaret tax is proposed to help! finance the schools which are required to teach the harmful effects of stimulants and narcotics. Only one mjor vice remains "untapped" by the state for rejve nues; but give the state time, give it time! i Interpreting J The War News I By KIRKE L. SIMPSON J ' i ASSOCIATED; PRESS WAR ANALYST j m - ..... g German reaction to the surprise breaching of the Rhine defense moat at Remagen by American for ces has been on too restricted a scale thus far to in dicate enemy plans for dealing with the situation. No sizeable counterattack nor even a concentration of depleted Nazi air power has been reported since the first American patrols reached the east bank. (-That might be due in part to desire of Nazi fonv manders to await clearer evidence- than is yet avail able as to just how; and in , which direction Allied leadership would attempt to -exploit what certainly was an unexpected success. For the first three daysaf ter the east bank lodgement was gamed, First army efforts appeared aimed more at widen- . Jing the bridgehead than at .deepening it Pressure seemed greater northward;; upriver, also, fhan southward although more favorable terrain for ex panding the bridgehead liesdownriver.. In any event, Nazi sensitivity to the extreme north flank of the line along jthe Rhine is obviously unrelaxed. It is in that arejTfrom Wesei to Einme rich or Arnhem Berlin broadcasts now locate' the missing British Second- army, unmentienedf for many days in j Allied official reports or field! dis pitches. ; .. j , " ' , . - ' Nazi commentators say J a tremendous Allied build-up for new Rhine crossings in the north Is in progress,- which may be true. The flat, fopen ground of the Hanovarian plain east of the lower Rhine offers better prospects of maneuver warfare than the hilly, largely wooded terrain back of the Coblenz-Cologne stretch of the river. With thefodds in numbers, motorized equipment and particularly in air all in Eisenhower's favor, maneuvers to cpme to grips with and destroy German armies ht the field must be a prime Eisenhower objective, j It is likely, therefore, that the German command ; is unwilling to pull "heavy forces out of the line in the north to meet the Remagen bridge threat mtil convinced that the Allied success there has brought about a complete revision of previous plans.! An even more dangerous situation could result from an Allied crossing of the Rhine in the north where no . natural obstacles exist to help contain it tha has yet developed from American seizure of the Re- magen bridge. ' , . . j , That bridge is too vulnerable to sustain securely a. powerful striking force c the east bank. Judged by field reports, the first immediate need after Its . seizure was to rush sufficient troops and guns over to widen the east bank footing up and down stream in order that numerous other means of crossing the "river by boat or by pontoon bridges could be es tablished to supplement the bridge. . , Nazi reports credit the first army with having put up to two divisions east of the Rhine ik the first three days. That would imply a total o any where up to 40,000 men with auxiliary elements. It would take much greater forces both to Secure and consolidate a bridgehead now substantially a dozen miles wide and three to four miles deep and also to furnish ample striking power for strategic exploitation of the; unexpected opportunity, j . . If Nazi military commentators are to be taken at face value, however, General Eisenhower, Respite the Remagen crossing which changed the whole tac tical and strategic picture on the Rhine overnight, has not yet abandoned his, original plans tot forc- .int ititt rtyer in the mouthy ... .....-.,,. .V LATER. S . j i . mm . wj mCTim mam n naMwtn Ont of the Frying Pan Tho Literary Guidepost By W. Q. Kegers "POBT PHYSICIANS - by Mary L MeDenonsh (Charles G. Thomas; S5) . This "anthology of medical poet ry written by physicians" is a curious and unexpectedly inter esting "compilation. Doctors, it seems, though scientists, have souls, and more than 100 of them have been bared by Mrs. Me Donough, wife of Capt Stephen J. McDonough, AP science writ er now on leave. " ' f Some physicians put perscrip tions In rhyme so they could be memorized easily; others, per haps tired- of ailing, bodies, sought relief in poetry. Their subjects include ''Dissecting Room,' "Paranoia,' "Tuberculo sis," "Before A. Corpse," "The Way to have Handsome child ren." . f It is to be hoped that some were better doctors than they are poets. But some could not possibly have matched in. medi- , cine their poetical achievements. Among them Oliver Goldsmith, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Francis Thompson, Keats, Smollet and, among : contemporaries, William Carlos Williams. -- f Tk BEDSIDE TALES," iatr4ac tiea by Peter Arae (WlUUm Ttmn; S1JS). There are 54 stories in this omnibus. Those you will remem ber, or ought to, include Sher wood Anderson's "I Want to Know Why," Ring Lardner's "The Love Nest," John Stein beck's "The Murder," William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily." There are selections; for fun, for shivers and for sex, with sex predominating. As "Peter Arno says, "There are nights when you want to go to bed with a book." ; "THE COMPLETE WORKS OF WIL LIAM SHAKESPEARE" (BUMstoa; S3J5, This is Shakespeare in 1500 pages, a type easy on the eye, two columns to the 'page with the Temple notes, glossary, in dices and a synopsis of every .play; ornamental and handy. "THE SELECTED WORK OF TOM PAINE,' edited by Howird past DaeU, Sloaa Pearce; SUS). Paine was a "good and a great man," Fast declares, and proves it with this collection of "Com mon Sense," "The Crisis Pap-' ers," "Rights of 'Man," The Age of Reason." In these times when we are reassessing democ racy, Paine's brave and brilliant definitions should be familiar to us all. News Behind the News By jpAUL MALLON (Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction in whole or in part strictly prohibited.) L WASHINGTON, March jlO. Mr. ' Roosevelt? reorganization for the coming fourth (?) new deal has developed into a mere shift of name plates on! office doors. ; : Not a single fresh figure has in the hands of a patent attor ney who has made a career of coordination and labor concilia tion, William H. Davis. The union chiefs were glad to get rid of Vinson. In RFC he cannot, block their wage increase been brought in. Only one of the - plans. They think Davis ' will long familiar faces has disap peared the mobile counte nance of the banker Jesse Jones (now re ported in the market for a Washington or other newspap er in which to express 'his ideals and wounded feelings.) The un-announced part j of the shakeup .has definitely brought the Tammany-schooled ward boss Edward Joseph Flynn to the president's right hand in place of Harry Hopkins. After the Malta-Yalta-Livadia confab, Hopkins went back to the hospital and Flynn went to Moscow for more detailed negotiations with the Russians in the namexf the pres ident . . j Flynn was only an assembly man, sheriff and city chamber- follow the same conciliatory lab or course as stabilizer he follow ed in the war labor board. As a matter of fad; he will do whatever Mr. Roosevelt wants. He will up, down or hold as orders come from ! the White House, for he is essentially a Roosevelt man. I He has lately acquired some political finesse, is regarded in the inner circle "brilliant," and is ambitious.; His name will become better known. In his old place at the i head of the war labor board, Dr. George W. Taylor, a young col lege professor, (labor, economics, etc.) will follow the established DaVis-Roosevelt line. He gen erally voted with Davis, who in variably followed; the president's purposes. All these moves were recom mended to the president by the generalissimo of domestic affairs, James F. Byrnes. He go Speaker lain around New York ! before Rayburn, Vice President Truman Mr. Roosevelt, while governor, appointed him state secretary of state, and eventually raised him to chairman of the democratic national committee for the third term election. , I Now apparently he is to han dle both international diplomatic and domestic matters, taking the load which rested too heavily on the ailing Hopkins. He will bear it with more of a political and less of a social lift The change represents the substitution of a consummate politician forj a soc ial worker. j . The announced part of the shifts bear less significant meanings, ( aside from the striking disclosure 'that Mr. Roosevelt has not want ed any fresh blood-or new ideas in his fourth administration. Oth erwise the changes suggest only that labor and the leftwing have improved their position at the inner council table. - j " , Fred Vinson, in . the place of Jesse Jones, is a man who knows Washington ropes, and he win , pull them adeptly. The $40,000,- 000,000 -mortgage' empire built up by Jones will be quietly ad ministered, i - j Economic stabilization will be Signed Corps Men Set Up Telephone ' System onilwo Isle By Hamlltcti Fares (Substituting lor Kenneth I Dixon) , WITH THE FIFTH MARINE DIVISION, Iwo Jima, Feb. 25-(Delayed)-vT)-A telephone" system comparable to that in the average town of 65,000 popula tion in the United States grew from' nothing in the first five days ashore on this little, island in the Volcano group. ' Signal corps , men operating under heavy artillery fire, har assed by snipers, laid more than 700 miles of telephone lines. ' Those lines; said Lt W.SK. Ro gers, Jackson, Miss reached so far into the fighting areas-that "we could talk with the Japs if they would put their phones in to the switchboard. They did just that on some occasions, but merely to eavesdrop or to tan-1 gle American communications. , Nearly two score 'phone ex changes and more than 200 sub exchanges were tied in with the two central switchboards. Back- stopping the telephonic com munications were scores of ; radio-equipped Jeeps, hand radio seta and other transmitters and receivers. .' Maintenance was carried out under fire by a staff under di rection of TSgt John C Wayne, Baltimore, - Md, who told of . some of his men fighting snip ers and pillboxes, to keep the wires in service. ' One example of fighting'' to lay lines is the story of Marine Pvt. Robert P. Hann, Spokane, Wash., as told by Maj. Howard M. Conner, Patersen, N. J, f "Hann," he related, "was as signed to laying a line to the 28th marines at the foot of Su ribachi (extinct volcano that was one of the most heavily fortified positions). He picked up a BAR (Browning automatic rifle as did most of the linesmen and started out Before he had gone far he ran into sniper and ma chine gun fire. Hann dropped his line and! went to work with his rifle. He cleaned out two groups of Japs then went ahead and laid the line." J Each of the linemen, Conner said, carried approximately 135 . pounds of equipment ,on the long climb up the beech. Radio repairmen under the di rection of Marine Gunner ' Hu bert Thomas, 'Knob Lick, Mo, also were praised by Conner for their job in keeping "shot up" sets in working condition. In the big repair shop set up In ; dugouts while - shells still were falling all about 128 sets were reconditioned and return ed to service during the j first five days of the invasion. ; - Boosting morale of the entire! signal group, f was "Tim,", a black Belgian shepherd dog. Tim has been used many times to deliver - messages; to forward posts, but his I proudest accom plishment is laying wire. A small ; harness has been devised which permits him to carry a reel of light telephonej wire. - "He's always? calm under fire ! now," said Conner, ; "and . knows when to jump into his own fox hole." J Tim also knows how to ferret out snipers if tfiey begin to har rass his master Cpl. Charles r. Hablesreither, .Santa Monica, Calif. I Steely Cbpper Not Available " WASHINGT6N, March 12-W-The war production board ' has cancelled all, allotments of. both steel and copper for "spot" civil ian goods manufacture j through : April, May and June. I ! Officials said f the action, taken last week and dues for announce ment shortly, will permit comple tion of "very little" of the $195, 000,000 worth of spot civilian pro duction approved for the coming quarter. j ".-'" WPB previously had announced that steel miCs now behind schedule, beset by floods, and ap prehensive of aj coal mine shut downwould bi able to fill only a small part of the low-priority ci vilian orders. The spot allotments are honors by mills only after all military and other essential de mands are filled. . :. . ,) FIETARtLA APPOINTED -' t Appointment pf Jacob W. Pie tarila as justice of the peace of the Astoria district,; to succeed Arthur W. Miller, resigned, was announ ced by Governor Earl Snell here Monday. j "THE YOUNG IDEA" By Mossier C. IWM fttbin Sprftita. U. and the other inner circumlocu tionists together on them, which means his prestige i and wishes will be higher from these ap pointments. Indeed, it has; not been an nounced, but Byrnes has received -carte blanche on domestic affairs from the president From these changes I would expect more politics and j labor in coming decisions, and nothing much new. -Definitely I think it means no job will be done on reconversion to peace comparable to the initial war; production job in which new business leadership ; was brought in wholesale, j ' - Everything is to be in the hands of the old-timers,; the tried Roosevelt friends who will no doubt follow the! line they have been favoring, f , What the coming of Wallace to the stripped commerce 'de partment will mean, few will guess until they can see! what ; he does with it He is supposed ' to be angling to. get control of the federal trade commission, (now conducting investigations " f of bigness in business), and" the " federal power commission (which I ekes is not likely to release without a struggle.) However, the irumors that he also wants the OPA, WLB and a few other top bureaus, seem to have been concocted by his spoofers who thus have already ; started kidding j his efforts to f : build up the commerce depart ment ' into something leftishly powerful. . I " - In his first move he appointed people who really know some thing about small! business to investigate that 'subject, hut so many commissions have been (Continued from page 2) extends dates so installations are dragged out for years. The plea in the recent past has been that the railroads lacked money. Most of them have been in straits for funds and their credit has been low. But how much did the Utah wreck cost the Southern Pacific? A guess might be $1,000,000 which seems conservative. If the roads would capitalize their loss from wrecks ; that sum would finance very ex tensive installations for safety. Experimentation has shown some very practical methods of train control. I quote this from the annual report of the Pennsylvan ia railroad:', I "The field of electronics has produced improvement in many types of automatic signals, in cluding the 'cab signal,' which reproduces inside the engine cab the indications of the external s signals, rendering accurate ob servance of the signals entirely independent of outside visibil ity. The same field of science has produced an 'inductive train tele phone, permitting communication between the ends of moving trains, and between trains and wayside towers, looking toward increased efficiency of opera tion. This device," after being experimentally tested in opera tion for several years, is now being installed for actual operat ing purposes on an important part of the system." V The Southern Pacific has done pioneering in automatic '. train control, in which a panel in the dispatcher's office shows ' the exact position and movement off all trains within his division. In its February Bulletin the SP re ports on its experimentation with radio, including "wired-wireless" but says fas yet no definite con clusions have been reached." This "wired-Mrireless" is what the Pennsylvania referred to as "inductive train telephone. In its operation a transmitter aboard a train sends out waves of elec tric energy which by induction create corresponding waves that will travel along any wires that happen to be! strung on poles alongside the right of way such as telephone Or telegraph fires, power lines, or even wire fences if they are insulated from the ground. These waves are not powerful enough to leap through the air for distances greater than 300 ft, but khey will follow wires for manylmiles. This wired wireless transinission does not interfere with 'other electric cir cuits, such as telephone conver sations, that may be in the wires. The receiving .apparatus must be located within 100 ft or so of the wire along! which the induc tion waves a-e moving. The sounds received are amplified and transmitted by wire to regu lar telephone receivers. Because its wave length is longer than usual radio Waves, this wired wireless does hot interfere with regular radio broadcasts. ; This induction radio or wired wireless Offerl excellent pros pects of promoting efficiency in train operation. But it is not the automatic stopping device which is the one needed. That should be the automatic train-stop or train control Jsystem. The cab signal system (is not fully auto matic, but is j probably far less expensive. lit is clearly, the duty of the interstate commerce commission to get a move on, and to lay down safety requirements for roads withou letting them get away with procrastination and delay. The roads are in the money now. Some of it should go to protection of life and limb of passengers and trainmen. started by the small business government on without results, r1' terrible likeness makes me loek like a gawky, gangling little enthusiasm attends this six teenth or seventeenth effort Yet' Wallace win have to ac quire something important aside ' from patents, census, etc, to which his management now is limited, else this springboard to a 194 presidential candidacy win sag and break under his weight Wait on this one to see- what develops.- i Thus are the lines being drawn in rather than out-fcr the fourth! term, solidifying and tightening the-personal Roosevelt controls -over everything, with greater emphasis on political considera tions and labor, directed by an exclusive White House clique, new in form but nevertheless familiar v ' - ; " 1 rnOJCi .-' f'-.v fin ' jclj ' ri vjf" : 4i., I 4 umm exqvisHepias wenders fa year new; Easter salt , er 3