PAGE FOUR Th OREGON STATESMAN. 'Salem. " Oregon. Friday Morning. March 30. 1S4S reaou "No Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall AwtT . From First Statesman. March 28. 1841 j THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. S PRAGUE, Editor and Publisher i Member of the Associated Press i 1 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. Morse Opposes Service Bill Sen. Wayne Morse took the floor in opposi tion to the work-or-jail bill which squeaked through the house with a seven-vote margin Wednesday. Morse declared: ; It will be a dangerous day for our represen tative government in America if the senate ever votes to vest in on man such tremendous . Power. , l . ' He was referring to the authority vested . In Director Byrnes of the office of war mobili zation and executed through the war manpower commission for placing workers in war jobs and holding them there, which the bill would grant. There are those who see in this legislation a conditioning of the American people to the yoke of permanent government regimentation. That is the menace which Senator Morse sees. That fear may be exaggerated. We have already vested in the president vast powers,; which viewed in the abstract are alarming to menas of popular liberty. But the congress has put definite limits of time for all these wartime grants of autnorny. ome, line lena-iease, uve definite expiration dates, though they have been extended from time to time. Others are limited to the war and six months thereafter. At any rate these powers will terminate; and presumably the war manpower act carries a -similar termination date. K Whether the danger forseen by Senator Morse is false or genuine could only be proven by the lapse of time. The fact is that it is unneces sary to assume the risk. The enactment of the national service bill at this stage of the war cannot be justified on any sound ground.. The German phase of the war is moving swiftly toward victory. The goods to sustain the fight ing are pouring out of factories. Already there are decreases in the number of workers en gaged in war industry "due to decline in con- tracts. War Manpower Commissioner McNutt Viimanlf ronnrt a a Tvsitive betterment in the situation. Conditions are not such as to justify legislation of this character at the present time. The contention that this is necessary in order to hold up morale' of the fighting forces is absurd. With our armiea winning sweeping victories in every theatre . there appears to be nothing wrong with its -morale. At home the people have been pushed around considerably of late to demobilize the joy brigades. It hardly . seems necessary to add this measure to the list! just to improve morale either at home or abroad. .. .x It looks toThe Statesman as though govern ment officials had jumped to the conclusion that a service act was needed back in the time of, the. December reverse in Belgium, and now are determined to carry the idea through In spite of altered conditions. , There is an odd inconsistency in the attitude of many left-wingers. It occurs in the whole field of the power, of the state. Traditionally the democratic idea was the retention of liberty in maximum degree by- the people. But the neo-liberals are the .ones who keep piling uuues on me sxaie ana -maKing inaiviuuais yield more and more to the state. The incon sistency appears in English political thinking as well as our own. We happened to listen to a transcription of an English forum on ' the subject of postwar conscription, over KOAC. The conservative member of the dialogue was inclined to favor it; and the socialist member thought it would be a good idea to have every one working for the state for a period. The conservative seemed to see it as a military necessity; the socialist as a social good. So the socialist' though leads to regimentation, which is the very antithesis of our traditional con ception of liberty. That same philosophy seems to affect- the mm King on mis national service act nere. Some favor it because the army and navy say it is needed; others favor it because they think everyone should be working for the government. The latter philosophy is dangerous as Senator Morse points out. And the compelling argument remains that national service is not needed now. General Eisenhower says that he will make formal announcement when organized German resistance on the western front is broken.1 From the looks of the headlines we ought soon to say: "Well, what's he waiting for?" Editorial Comment SEA-GOING AIR BASE .';';: Among naval men the battleship-vs-carrier debate is still warm. And among fliers the old Question of whether land-based -planes e'xeel carrier-based planes is good for a verbal battle any day. Both debates are likely to be practically influenced by a powerful argument in steel just set i afloat at Newport News by the United States navy. The Midway, 43,000-ton "flattop," is twice as large as the carriers which won the battle from which she takes her name and if successful in action may Iter several aspects of modern war. General Doolittle's heroic Tokyo raiders did the "impossible" in getting two-motored bombers off the old Hornet. Who knows but navy pilots will be taking. Fortresses off this new sea-going airport? liar runways will be long enough to hurl winged bomb loads- far heavier than any projectile fired by guns." The success of American carrier planes against Japan has not finally demolished the theory that , land-based craft should be better; but has left it badly in need . of reconstruction. Against a floating airfield bigger than many a small town's the landlubber's advantage must taper off. . In the debate with the "battlewagona" the car riers have less concrete evidence. Most opinion holds that carriers and battleships are both neces sary, the latter to carry the brunt of attack and maintain heavy firepower. But we have only begun to hear of the firepower that rocket-equipped planes will carry to ranges far beyond the 18-inch gun's. Even a fighter plane armed with eight five-inch rockets' packs the same broadside (for one shot) as a light cruiser. Add larger bombs and torpedoes to the offensive power of a Midway's planes, and It looks as if the battleship men will have to launch new coun ter-argum en ts .-Christian Science Monitor. is Sturdy Dutch 1 - I While our eyes are following the arrows racing from the Rhine into Germany we forget there is a section of the map omitted from current pictures of the j western front. That istfhe Netherlands.. Actually the most of The Netherlands , is still occupied by the enemy. The allies- have liberated only the southern portion of the kingdom of Queen Wilhelrniruu She visited her. native land the other day, still was unable to go to The Hague, to Ams terdam, Rotterdam or Haarlem, great cities nf hr mnntrv. I The sturdy Dutch are still holding out against the invader; of that we may be certain. But they suffer severely. A Salvation Army officer who was interned in Holland in 1940 recently arrived in this country j in an exchange-of nationals. He reported: I "It is hard to 'realize that Holland as it is now can be put on its feet again. The condition of the Amsterdam people is more than pitiable. All they can buy are the meagerest of rations; neither clothing nor any of the other com-,' modities of which there used to be abundance ! in prewar Holland, are to be had. People patch and repatch their clothing and even then there are great difficulties because to find darn ing cotton or wool is no mean task. "Many Dutch people tried to get something ; to eat from the country but the Germans Were constantly frustrating them by confiscating what food they had been able ' to obtain. German guards were posted at strategic cross roads; whenever anyone approached they would ! search him and take away any foodstuffs he might carry, including a few potatoes for -which he had doubtlessly paid a high price." This spring, rations have been further re duced and the people have only bread and potatoes and little else to live on. j There is anxious concern for the early libera tion of The Netherlands lest the people suffer permanently from the malnutrition imposed by the "master race' the Germans. The im mediate objectives of the British and Canadian forces which operate! at the lower end of the line along the Rhine seem to be to get into the Ruhr. The idea is to destroy the German war-making machine there and defeat its arm ies. The expectation is that if this is accom plished Germany will hftve to evacuate Hot land. So far the nazi rule has been not to yield ground except under necessity. Thus they Germans ;still scatter their armies in Italy, Austria, Holland, Denmark and Norway. So it may be that the allies will have to turn north and clean the nazis out of The Netherlands. The freeing of the Dutch ought not to be delayed a day longer j than necessary. They ; have been a stalwart bulwark; against nazisnv and should not be allowed to suffer any longer than can be helped. Nor should we be so greedy of ample food supplies that we withohld foods that are so desperately needed by the people of The Netherlands. I ' ".V HENW4CWA80UT fT-j?-1 1 i , .' yf STORTING THOSE SKTY (Ik 12- i . . . . AT ilE FRONT! Tank GI Has Tooth Shot Qut But Won't Got Purple Heart j By Robert Wilson (Substituting for Kenneth L. " ; 1 Dixon) ' ON THE WESTERN FRONT -(ff)-The latest humor harvest miles across Germany and fired 60' rounds at fleeing German tanks. Then he stopped to resume getting breakfast Not an egg was, broken. -Two treasure hunting PFC's DMrifcrtai hr Ktac T br inMimM with TtM WatWastoB Stae First Man on the Line along the western . front turns of the Eighth division spotted a up a G who lost a toom 10 enemy action but didn't get a Purple : Heart-n MP whose pocket was picked by a Nazi prisoner, and a tanker who put all his eggs in one basket. Mrs. Ida Mae Kelly's son, who left home at Holt, Mich, to be- come a private first class in the 10th armored division, is out In front of i the 1945 - hardluck Gl derby. German shrapnel knock4 ed out one of his teeth. The medics informed him he was Ir eligible for a Purple Heart be cause the tooth was false.- What happens, to policemen in old jokes actually happened to Sgt William Tox of Ridgewood, L. I, who was frisking a group of captured Germans: Brother MP's called him into the office and handed him his wallet, right out' of the pocket of slippery, lingered j Nazi" in . the prisoner cage. i Sgt. William Shake of West. Terre Haute, Ind, was getting breakfast when the call came to arms. He put a dozen eggs in a basket, but the basket on the heavy iron. safe in a pile of rubble. Licking their lips' in an ticipation, Mario ' Chiriaco, De troit, Mich, and PFC Kaden (no first name given), Elizabeth, N. J. attacked it for an hour .with hammers, axes and crowbars. Inside the safe they found 12 neatly stacked packages of K rations. . - The 30th infantry division boys thought they had nabbed a Nazi genenu, ne was uecKea out m such highly ; polished gold and glittering braid. But grilling by Capt '".Roy Avis; Council Bluffs, Iowa, unmasked him as a rail road station train caller overrun in! a German retreat ' jit may not be funny to Paris bartenders, but Brussels soon is to become the' largest rest center in the European theatre with the formation of the Belgian leave section commanded by Lt. Col. Frederick Kraschel, Harlan, la. " One of the attractions is a mammoth dancehaU where a bar, commanded by Lt Victor Spence, Detroit Midv dispenses beer, soft drinks and ice cream with News Behind the News f By PAUL MALLON j (Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction in whole I ' , or In part strictly prohibited.) Ml Faal fttaUaa Over at Corvallis an Easter egg hunt is sched uled for next Sunday. All week there will be a nation-wide hunt for Easter ham. ; i Interpreting The War I News By KIRKE L, SIMPSON ASSOCIATED PRESS WAR ANALYST ' Despite a tactical security news blackout vir tually all along the flaming west front in Germany the broad pattern of the Allied attack is beginning to take shape. j . , '- I It could be seen clearly in consolidation j of the American First, j Third and .. Seventh army, sectors beyond the Rhine into a single huge knife, cutting its way into the heart of the great central German plain. It cart be discerned, too, now fin the swift development of an encirclement threat to the whole congested Ruhr area and the difficult terrain south of it where stiffest Nazi resistance has been met j .... j f. I .- - - The news blackout' on the First army front was raised sufficiently to disclose that 'its tank columns had wheeled suddenly:: northward above the Lahn to leap 40 miles or more toward a junction with Field Marshall Montgomery's1 arniies slashing eastward over the Westphalian plains. "While the exact whereabouts of Montgomery's most advanced elements was unrevealed, field country around Munkter. It seemed certain tihat 1?? Putin one man in j WASHINGTON, March 29 The manpower matter did not come out in final form from the Congressional negotiators exact ly as expected. The labor draft was j de featedand buried, true enough. Mr. Roosevelt's j re commended course was lost But in its place, i a new pro g r a m ! was devised which is popularly advertised as a la bor freeze. t The: title; is not exactly accu rate. It would freeze all labor excepting strikers, the ; ones whose labor is apt to matter most in war production, (ac cording to the bill's sponsors Who should know.) j They proudly and officially proclaimed that exemption in .both houses j of congress. !They say strikers do - not terminate their employment at least not legally, and therefore are be yond freezing. : r You would think then that the union leaders would be cheer ing. They are not AFL's Green calls it "a slave bill,' and CIO Is also against it as well as the Manufacturers association: and the chamber of commerce (ac cording to a house member who polled them all.) What the bill actually pro poses is to give War Mobilizer Byrnes authority to freeze men in certain areas (not defined) mnder "penalty of jail for a year for $10,000 fine and to do cer i tain other things, but the bill 'itself neglects to -- say j union j strikers are exempt j Hence Byrnes might not agree -I with (the advocates of the pro I gram in congress and might try I to use the legislation to freeze j workers against strikes in I which case a court would have I to decide, after the strike is over,! no doubt j ' But Byrnes can and probably I will I delegate the authority to j Manpowerer McNutt who might j have: other ideas. j ; Thus the most important an- - gle of the legislation is still un j decided. If strikes, are exempt ! then; the government could look . ment action, if any (war labor board, plant seizure, etc.) In short the measure merely hands Mr. Byrnes a lot of strong sounding but not very clear powers. It furthermore tells him to handle them for the follow ing purposef (Section tA): "In order ade quately to support the army and maintain the navy during the present wa and to carry into effect the purposes of the decla ration of war pledging.all the resources of the nation to bring the conflict to a successful ter mination, every individual not in the armed forces shall have an obligation, when called upon, to serve the nation in an activi ty essential to the war effort But the bill does not do that The powers do not fit that pur pose. It does not propose to draft anyone or in anyway rally new workers. It does give Byrnes power to regulate hiring, rehiring, solici tation and I recruitment of labor by employers. He can alsb put ceiling on any plant and there fore, put any, plant out of busl- IMJIQ3 back of his tank, rumbled 23 ''chocolate cauce. fused - stuck in the radiator of McEyoy's Jeeper. ' (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) falls into enemy hands, just as Hitler's' autobahnen are for Ger many now. This fact was a mat ter of grave concern in Oregon in the early stages of the war. It was realized that our numer ous paved highways leading to the coast would be most con venient for Japs to use in ! ad vancing inland if they should ef fect landings on the coast. It may be disclosed now that very careful plans were laid for i de nying to the enemy the use of these roads, and fortunately the country through which ihey passed was such that this could have-been accomplished without too great difficulty. . Engineers of the highway de partment studied each highway. They had locations set for blast ing off cliffs in narrow portions of canyons and for- blowing up bridges.. Experienced woodsmen CHATTANOOGA, March 28.- (P)-W- W. McGhee, Chattanooga timberman figures he was stung literally for $10,000. In a circuit court suit he asked that amount of a railroad, claim ing he j suffered permanent in juries from more than 100 stings by bees: which escaped while in shipment The Literary Guidcpost By W. G. Rogers were also enrolled in the state ness or put it on a small scale guard with the special duty of or large scale business. Yet he falling trees across . roadways. that vast industrial com- "TITI? ?VniTTJr! ! ini? A" 1 ml stone-built factory, cities. I wmux -t jjy ifiussicr Montgomery's armor was swinging southward also. and that the actual gap 'between the First army in the south and British-American tank forces in the north was Jess than JO miles. ; A junction would cut off the whole Ruhri It might completely trap many thousands of Nazi troops still deployed in jnunity of overlapping. Their encirclement probably would leave exposed a wide and virtually unmanned gap along the canal connected Ems-Weser river line. :- : I - The northward wheel Jot then First army tends I to verify the impression that frontal attack! on the great Ruhr " industrial hub was never - con- j tempi ted in original Allied plans. Defended even f by secondary troops, jit represented another Aachen t. or Casino on an heroic scale and the casualty I cost of clearing the j foe out of those miles upon i miles of naturally strong defense positions must I have been very great if'1 Instead the Ruhr; valley has been by passed I both north and south.! Now it is. in immediate I danger of being pinched off in a matter of days 1 if" hot hours with minimum losses. Entrapment ! of so large a Nazi garrison as i apparently still I clinging to the Ruhr salient could be the final I knock-out blow In the jwst i Just ahead of the First army lies stem of the I Coblenz Leipzig super military highway. It leads -jto junction with the mam Ruhr-Berlin autobahn j just south of Hamm, less than SO miles distant I ! from the last officially reported First army spear- i head at Langwiesse. That would be a two-day J march for General Hodges' armor at the pace it is moving against indicated feeble Nazi resistance. Whatever the geographical layout of the Allied attack, however, its prime objective is entrapment f and destruction of enemy troops in the field. The ' fast closing Ruhr pocket; bids fair to yield an ; even greater toll of Nazi prisoners and casualties ' than did the swift clean up in the Saarland and ; Palatinate west of the Rhine. That cleanup paved the way for the mass victory drive into the heart I of Germany. j jail for a yea? somewhere for quitting his job, and letting : thousands! of men strike beyond I the penalties of the bill, and re t strained only by other govern- cannot enforce the obligation to serve "on every individual." How this new program hap pened to spring up is a secret of the congressional conferees who h a v e done little talking. Only two 1 opposed it (Dewey Short, the! Missouri republican in the house, and Joseph O'Ma honey, the? Wyoming democratic senator, both of whom thought it un-democratic.) My - information is that the guiding sponsor of it on the in side was Sen. Warren Austin, the Vermont republican , who favors much more - a labor draft I think he got his. main inspiration! from the army. The army has favored a youth draft (fof peacetime military training) as well as labor draft for war and has the draft solu tion in mind for practically ev ery problem or as much draft as possible. Congress overwhelmingly re jected the notion, so it put the draft ideal into this "freezing-in-certain-areas -except strik-ers-or-is-it?" bill. No doubt it expects the ideal to be imple mented later.. -. This explains the confusion still existing in this latest pro gram as to exactly what should be done. I It was an effort to All this was designed to slow up enemy progress until our own armies could reach the valley for counter-attack. The scheme was carefully worked out with the ap proval of army officers respon sible for coastal defense. Fortunately it was never nec essary; to pull the defense plan "VICTOaiA THKOUGH THE LOOK INO GLASS: THE LIFE. Or LEW IS CARROLL,' It FlercBC Becker Ltaaoa (Slmaa g chaster; $3JI). Alice; "tried to fancy what the flame of a candle is like after it is blown out" With this rash quotation which in effect ac knowledges that the task she has set for herself is impossible, Mrs.- Lennon begins her last chapter. But lf; Alice, to . conclude, the quotation, "could not remember ever having seen such a thing." sheand Lewis Carroll should be with us today, for in this book we see the flame flare again as much as it's ever likely to. C. Li Dodgson was a man of many facets, all of them oddities which indubitably added up to genius.! He was reverend, artist photographer, writer, mathema tician, lover of little girls, and he was Lewis Carroll. He used card board mats to save table linen; he kepi his means so he wouldn't out of the files; but U should be; ZtZZZi Vent 1IT nil rmxriamii fwun kept up and reviewed from time to time as part of our defense policy, j In construction of future high way the military phase should not be overlooked. Such roads should be designed with a few to their use by our own; forces and so they might-be rendered useless to an enemy if in his possession. Hitler's experience shows the need for considering the dual problem of roads in war-time. : i Flashes of Life ROCKVILLE CENTER, N. Y.-(JPy-The family of Allan J. Cam eron was startled by a loud hol low thud. I . Cameron, thinking a boiler had exploded, dashed to the cellar. Nothing seemed amiss. Running upstairs, he looked out of a front window and saw an in- " flafawt full aMittinnMl lif raft compromise two opposing ideals, , m the of Smit y Six of the neighborhood: chil dren were already -in it J j Army officials at Mitchell field retrieved the raft, explaining it was jettisoned by an airplane. - and the result could not be oth erwise. the kettle in a 10-minute walk up and down his room; he en tertained young : guests with a kind of Rube Goldberg - Sandy Calder gadget Thought there are an occasional sophistication and polish which do not precisely match the sim plicity' of thei strangely naive Victorian,- this book interprets sensitively and imaginatively the author) of "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland." The biographer introduces Ellen Terry, Gilbert and Sullivan, Tenniel, a 'pair of Alice's; She notes the left-hand-edness! that : inspires a stanza about the White Knight Dodg son's birth in ; the Cheshire of the Cheshire Cat the .learning by rote which sets Alice wrong on what is the capital of what This is relevant p rotund : ob servation. If it doesn't carry us quite to the tum-tum tree, or lift us to j the rare level of ufflsh thought that must be blamed on the recalcitrant Carroll, not on Mrs. Lennon. "FIRST WHISPERS Or THE WIND IN THE WILLOWS7 wltk iatro anctlo by EUpeta Grakaa1 (Lip. plcU; SLSS). 1 .: " SAN FRANCISCCH Muni cipal Judge Edward Molkenbuhr fined a cab driver $50 for re fusing to take a fare where he wanted to go, closed his 'desk, stepped from bis -office and hail ed a cab to go home. . '" . "Sorry," said the driver, f'can't go that far." . i The judge .wrote down his number. ; r . ; j : . Now almost 40 years old, "The Wind in the t Willows," which was the pet of many readers, in cluding the Roosevelts. the other Rooseyelts, is traced back to its sources: home,' farm and, family of the; English writer. The author's - widow recalls that the animal's adventures were told first in letters, to Gra hame's son. Her book, a loving tribute, includes some previously unpublished Grahame pages. "I wander if year pay digs what we have In mind, Tommyf . -GRAND COULEE, Wash.--An expert looked over the Grand .Coulee dam. Jle was a beaver. . ' . Captured in the- main power house, the eager beaver was toss ed back into the Jake and when last seen, was paddling rapidly away, probably full of new: ideas about dame. ; ' " i . f ''-"'- f r LUZON, P. L, March t7P Returning to ma advance; com mand post a.fter desperate night Japanese banzai charge had been repulsed, Sgt Bernard J. McEvoy, former West Orange, N. J4 mQkwagon driver,; $nd a colonel, were hailed by the driv er of another vehicle, j f i - "Hey Mae, what are you 'doing with that hot cargo?" ; s j A hasty inspection showed four sticks of Japanese dynamite Chiiia Seen As Postwar . The Chinese empire is a nation of many divisions but is not a nation "divided against itself," Prof. R. T. Johnson, head of the animal j industries department of Oregon; State college, told mem bers, of the Salem Lions dub at their noon meeting Thursday in Hotel Marion. . t "Passing from province to pro vince in China Is not like passing from state.to state in this coun try," Professor Johnson said, "be cause each province has its own government and levies taxes on everything coming across its bor ders. After irninr tn fhinn sn aide to the U. S. ambassador I was loaned to the Chinese government to assist them with their animals. "I learned : that although Gen eralissimo Chiang Kai-shek is tha head of the government other pro vince heads had minds of their own. The further I got from Chunking, the looser was the em pire affiliation. There are 435, 000,000 people in China. Of this number, 85 per cent or about four, out of five are engaged in agriculture and it takes that num ber of agricultural workers to feed the populace.' In the United States it takes one out- of five to feed us. "The . JTananei inrl rc&rmona l - r . " uuiuuk halve made inroads into parts ol China's trade and when this war is over we must contend with that influence. The Chinese have not forgotten that while thev wera our alley we were sending their enemy, Japan, scrap steel for tools of ; war to be used against them. We must overcome that fThe Chinese government is sending representatives to this country to study or methods. Re member when one of these agents' shows up in your community and ao tne best- Dossible hv him ka. cause he Is a selected man and is; a really big shot in China. "At present the Chinese ara having a hard time eating. Tha Japanese have about all the best land under control. The Chinese are pushed to the mountainous area. And remember, in China there Is more land above the 10,- vyu ioot level than In the rest of the whole world. Through 4000 years Of civilization, and subse quent cultivation of the land China's earthy is worn out It has, naiurat resources untold, unde veloped.' A market lies there, but we must learn where it Is and what it is and then go after it" Security Plan Needs Provision for Change WASHINGTON. March -Herbert Evatt, Australian minis ter for external affairs, urged yes terday that the world security or ganization make provision for its own "orderly change." I There should be oeriodical re views of the charter, which the United Nations plan to draw up at their San Francisco meeting Evatt said. STEVENS The jewel of everlasting beauty and loveliness. Choose and wear it Proudly. Th birthstone for AprU. -I -