PAGE FOUV Tb OnZQOI! STATE21ML Ccien. Orrotu Sunday ISexsSa Ajs3 t 1SU MUMM MSI "iVo Favor Stcays Us; No Fear Shall Auf j From First Statesman, March 23, 1881 it. THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher ! Member of the Associated Press ' b. 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. Bonneville Objectives Well or Good . .. , Dr. Paul J. Raver, administrator of the Bon- The recent embrogtfo precipitated by the Ore- neville project which has charge of distribution over the proper use of the verb form of electric energy from Bonneville and Grand "shall'? and "will" having subsided, apparently Coulee power plants, in a recent address in San with aU parties convinced of the correctnesf of Antnnio. Texas, discussed the contribution their own oDinions on crininiarit seems time- which these federal projects have made in fur- jy to tilt another lance with the Oregonian In nishing power to war industries and utilities of the matter of word-usage. ' A few days ago an th- northwest. He also discussed the objectives which the Bonneville administration has and The Statesman reprints herewith that portion of his address. Of particular importance is the fact that revenues from sale of power produced at Grand Coulee will help carry the cost of the irrigation project for the Columbia basin, the whole giving an inter-related push to northwest development. " t The following is an extract from Dr. Raver s address: To enable us to carry out the policies laid i down by Congress in the Bonneville act to the ! fullest possible degree, we have set for our 1 selves certain objectives. Although the demands ; of war have to some extent limited us in carry ing out these objectives, we still hold them be fore us as a guide in the interest of securing the greatest possible'benefit from the resources of the region for the greatest number, of people. Our first objective is to make power a tool for the development of wealth. In other words, to make the chief and abundant electric power of the region the means of opening new oppor tunities for investment, enterprise; and em ployment for agriculture, for new industries, for small business, and for the individual. Secondly, we believe that increasingly large quantities of. power at constantly decreasing . rates should be provided in order to create new opportunities for free enterprise. In industry i and agriculture, the key to the whole power question is price and whether this tool hydro electric power is to be used for turning the wheels in a mill or pumping irrigation water for operating a farm freezing unit, cost to the consumer will determine finally the extent of Its use. A third objective is to make low-cost hydro electric power provide new sources for tax rev enues. New farms and new industries mean 'b taxpaying population. New industries attract ed to the region as a result of the availability of cheap power are providing a broader tax base and increased wealth for the entire North west. Fourth, we believe that the hydroelectric re sources of the Northwest should be the means of. providing asset-building jobs for returning s servicemen and war workers who will have to look elsewhere for employment with the return of peace. A final objective is to return to the people of the United States their investment in the Federal power facilities of the Northwest. That this can be done at the lowest wholesale rate for power in America $17.50 per kilowatt-year 4ias been demonstrated. By the end of the calendar year 1944, our net revenues, after pay ment of all power costs, operation and main tenance expenses, and depreciation and inter- ' est on the Federal investment in the Bonneville-, Grand Coulee transmission system and power facilities at the two Columbia River plants, amounted to more than $12,000,00. All we have to do is keep the generators in use. I might add at this point that final deter mination of the cost allocation for the construc tion and operation of Coulee Dam has been made, and revenues from the sale of power will meet $633,960,585 of the total reimbursable cost : of $781,304,085. This includes all construction costs, interest on the portion allocated to pow er, replacement costs over the repayment pe riod, and operation and maintenance expenses. In pther words, revenues from the sale of power developed at Grand Coulee Dam will repay to the Federal Treasury not only all in vestment in the power facilities at the dam, plus interest on the power investment, but also a very substantial part of the investment in the irrigation facilities. As a result xt the careful allocation and re payment studies which we have completed in cooperation with the Bureau of Reclamation, it has been determined that at present rates revenues from Bonneville-Grand Coulee power will be more than sufficient to meet all finan- - cial requirements and assure repayment to the Federal Government nf th full invuimort u w - -- lUIVdHUdll 111 the Grand Coulee project. Not only does pow er pay a major part of the cost of irrigation but the low rates attract new industries to sunnort an increased population, which, in turn, pro-, vides new markets for the products of the new ' ly irrigated land. Thus, power and irrigation . are not opposing developments but rather com plementary. - Uncle Sam believes in doing his holiday shop ping early. Orders are now in effect setting aside all turkeys marketed in the west for mili tary use for Thanksgiving and Christmas din ners. The government will take about 120 mil lion pounds out of a total production of 515 mil lion pounds. That would figure out about 10 or 12 pounds of turkey per man in the armed ser- in.c. . iiuit vu&uk w ue ciiuugu vu iiu up even marine on a holiday. -- '-- An adhesive cement is being made which it is claimed may take the place of needle and thread in clothing manufacture. People will need to be convinced, however. They can im agine the embarrassment in being at a party wearing clothes that have been glued together and then having the adhesive give way. Arthur Greiser, former president of the Dan rig senate, where he did Hitler's bidding, to be rewarded with the post of nazi overlord for Poznan in western Poland, is now a captive of the Russians. It's easy . to say of him "he's In , good hands." : , . k Admiral Suzuki, called by Hirohito to form a new government for Japan, is suspected of being tapped to tender en olive branch to the USA. We are not looking for olive branches. What wc will take Is the sword extended hilt first. 1 - Several ex-premiers of Japan are included in the new Suzuki cabinet.' He sort of searched the second-hand shops for material. But who ever heard of an alumni team defeating the varsity? . Oregonian editorial tendered its "well wishes" to a man. The question irises over this use of "well" as an adjective, iyould not the proper word have been "good"? Or the paper might have "wished him well" (adverb). - Webster's dictionary notes the use of "well" as an adjective in the sense of "good" as archaic, though it lists the compound "well-wish" as a noun. " - ; A minor point in grarnmar to be sure; but with the war going well on all fronts editors are driven to combing thej minor items for their own material. Commissioners Reappointed Governor Snell and Treasurer Scott acted wisely to reappoint Earl Fisher and Charles V. Galloway as tax commissioners. We have an idea that Secretary Farrell's objection is made largely "for the record that he may appear consistent in his fight against the commission. Truth to tell, the opposition against the com mission, largely directed;;! against Fisher and Galloway, has largely died out. It had no prop er foundation in fact. For the state to have lost the services of these abl public servants at a time like the present woiild have been shabby tratment of them and cosily to the state. It is now to be hoped that this lone negative, like the shot which the foe was "sullenly fir ing" is the last echo of a lost cause, that was in large measure the attempt of disgruntled tax payers to vent their opposition to paying their fair share of taxes by trying to ovist the com missioners. Is 7MARSW.SrAUH,l HOWlSar i "flU Daft THINK m I fiSSj S3, I f v '- ! ; j i - j f i . i " If- .-: Former Prisoner Of Nazis Amazed Over Allied Arms W uniflMtt with Th WMhiactoB 8tr Eliminating the Negative Pacific Shipping Total dry cargo shipped from, Pacific ports to American fighting forjpes in the Pacific and to the United Nations was 15,236,309 tons in 1944, which constituted 21 hi per cent of the to tal from all American ports. The distribution of this export business among the ports was as follows: Area: l Tonnage Columbia River 1,856,997 Southern California 1 : : 2,481,620 Puget Sound .1..- 2,976,467 San Francisco Bay area. - 7,921,225 The statistics show that the northwest gets the short end of war-time shipping. The! Literary Guidcpost I By W. G. Rogers g "A WINTER IN GENEVA," by Aaat Goodwill Window (Knopf; S2J0). i American and European moral codes cross and clash dramatic ally in i the extraordinary title story of this volume of ejght short stories. A Kentucky woman, her cfuld with her while her husband is in the Near East, winters in Geneva.? Possessed by the Ame rican idea, romantic and virtu ous, of love, she interferes in the very real, practical affair of a young Frenchman with an Ital ian widow. Virtue proves to be anything but its own reward. Among the other stories, One Above and For Ulisse in particu lar show almost equally well the special, in some ways unique merits of this born writer. Sler leisurely, rounded style, herj in sight into character, her sensi tive treatment of material f re mind you of James or of "Pass age to India." News Behind the News By PAUL MAlioN l j (Distribution by King Features Syndicate! Inc. Reproduction In whole or in part atrictly prohibited.) - ' v ey from news PI NIGHT,' (Dun, suu a fcy John O'Bara Furco; S2J0). There is a hint in the news to the effect that the mine operators and mine unions will agree on a new contract by Monday. Keep your fing ers crossed though; but what a relief it will be to effect a peaceful settlement of this annual knock-down and dragoutin the field of indus trial relations. Other industries get along with out such an ordeal. Whyfcan't coal-mining?; The Third army has captured the German gold reserve, several billions in German reichs marks, arid hundreds of millions in foreign cur rency. The soldiers foujid the pile in a salt mine. Hitler thought he'had "salted it down." Interpreting The War (News By ELTON C. FAY The inability of either Axis member to cobe with, much less recover from, the deadly blows being struck by the Allies is apparent in the news of the past week. German attempts to reestablish a cohesive west ern front have failed. The'Nazi fight now is com posed of a series of organized groups of divisional or army strengthioperating Without any strategical relationship to each other. iThey have taken up po sitions at transportation network centers to impede but not stop the prongs of American and British for ces probing across the reich toward the Bussians on the east. . Each day's battle is fought, with fewer men. The wehrmacht's. losses are enormous 141,758 lost in prisoners alone in the first five days of this month. This, of course, does not include the additional losses in killed and wounded. The Germans, however, continue to fight fiercely. Within their means, they are launching local coun- Thesej are masterly short sto ries. They are' about people with whom something goes wrong, people vho" are good machines though I sand gets Into them. They mean well but it doesn't come off; or on the contrary they don't mean well 'and it does come off. f ' O'Hara can make you despise his characters, though you rare ly hate them; and while he; has a reputation for being tough, there are some of his men and women whom you respect or with whom you sympathize, though jthey rarely draw your tears. f O'Hara writes in i a sorfj of middle "ground, never climbing up to ecstasy on one side or tra gedy onj the other. He's sort of between two stools. In jthat chosen area he is beyond doubt our mst brilliant writer. I know no one so deft at wringing out of frustration, infidelity land disappointment the last drop-tf 6 drama. I Of the 31 stories in this book, 20 first appeared in the New Yorker, j four in Collier's. J KANSAS CITY -UP)- There will be some new and young erfaces around the city desk. T. Leslie Johnson today bought for $1 the old city desk off the defunct Kansas City Journal at an auction. - It will be used as a game; ta ble in Viking Village, a teen age club in northeast Kansas City. : l .. .' t ' WASHINGTON, April 7 "We cannot have prosperity in the United States if the rest of the world is sunk in depression and poverty," said State Secretary Stettinius to the Chicago council on Foreign re lations. He ad vocated among other things an American trus teeship for Pa cific islands. The very same nisjhtjnd at al most the same hour in New York, the Carnegie Peace Endowment dinner heard Admiral King and other influential speakers say (quoting precisely accounts): "World security depends upon American security and world prosperity depends upon Amer ican prosperity." He advocated that we keep bases in the Pacific, in line with making our own security first. This direct conflict of view point was advertised as a cleav age in the "cabinet" between the navy-war departments and fctate, but behind it was the new move .ment running through the whole government for a change of front. Altruism is facing a gradually opening opposition. The theory that if we first save others we may save ourselves is hitting up against the doctrine that if we first save ourselves we can keep others safe. This new theory (particularly on the point of bases) first de veloped in the services .many months ago. The men who went into those islands in the Pacific have seen' British, French, Aus tralian and French administra tors move in to take civilian con trol as soon as the firing ceased, or in some cases the civilian ad ministrators actually went in with the troops and exercised ci vilian control. Airports our men conquered, and so vital to the future secur ity of the world, became the civil property of those nations which owned them before the war. A check of the islands in the far Pacific - under army control shows none outside the Philip pines definitely established ' as postwar bases for us. : We still have use of them for military opertions, but the property of our Allies remains theirs. They have given us nothing. -, New Guinea has officially been placed under Australian and Dutch administrators. Bougain ville has been taken over by the fch."f 4atiaTT arlr Tn er mi Aral 4Ka mrif a A t. lied forces showed some flight signs of slowing THE YOUNG ! IDEA" Rv Mossier down as the week wore orii f Part of this, probably .1 , J fUB8IW the major part, may have been due to the length, ening supply lines of the Allies. To a lesser degree, localized resistance by the enemy was accountable. The Japanese had the blackest week since they started out to conquer the orient The imperial fleet, cornered in Japan's pnlaad sea, sent out ita biggest and fastest ships, (ipparently to scurry for new cover to the northward. An American carrier task force closed in. When the battle was over aa American naval spokesman estimated that 25 per cent of the remaining major naval combat force, of Japan had been sunk or put out of action. This naval battle rounded out a week which started with the American landing on Okinawa, only 325 miles south of the Japanese homeland. Hard on the heels of this came another bit of bad news from Moscow the Soviet government's de nunciation of Russia's neutrality pact with Japan. There followed the naming; of the co-leadecs for the final phase of war. General llacArthur and Ad miral Nimitz. jc. The progressive disintegration of the German front kept alive speculation over the Imminence at Nasi defeat. And the swift developments about and within Japan gave rise to speculation about possi bilities In Nippon. These were heightened at the weekend. when Tokyo announced formation of a new cabinet, head ed by the aged Baron Suzuki who has the repute- tion of being i moderate. He kept for himself key - non-military cabinet portfolios. Relating the cabinet assignments to Japan's trou , bles in foreign relations and military fields, there were many who saw sign f a bid for negotiated . peace. But there were none who looked for an ena m ine mcinc war short of unconditional sur . "She's ne spring ehkkea. If she remesaeers back U the Pearl nDder' j i. IZarber eptseder Australians (who incidentally j murmured in the press against doing it on the ground that the ; Japs: held it so long they had created civilian difficulties.) I In ! the navy area of the cen-' fral Pacific, the British admin- j istration is supposed to have ; gone! back in most places but the ! na vj refuses strangely enough to j give kut the facts of the situation, : saying: "We cannot speak for the Brit-; Whatever that means.) $ The service people who have fought through these campaigns1 know these situations, although they are not generally known ori observed by our public. From ; Such; beginnings, I think, has i sprung the position which Ad-! miral King is now' openly press-; tog-1 ? If a vote were taken upon; Stettinius or King in the senate; today, King would win overf ! whelmingly,. at least upon the single issue of whether we should own! those bases which are essen tial Jto our postwar cause of a peaceful world. A superficial camrass shows little sympathy; fpr mandates or "trusteeships," lhiejh might prove insecure or, embarrassing. Even Foreign Relations Chair man Connally, an administration manj thinks we should have New Caledonia which was French.: However, he has not gone so far: yet Ss to permit hearings for the McKellar resolution which would take! practically all the islands: we are conquering including the Japs, I Aferage senate opinion strikes firmly to the line that we should ;j have as many bases as we need for pur own security and thus! for World security. Also as allf thes nations all eur friends: ewe) us more money than they; Can J-epay in cash xr goods, it ap- j pears a bargain for bases might1 not fje out of line. j Thus a more enlightened and; practical future-visioning theory; of world peace is fast gaining; grouhd. Practical Religion J bjr Kv. John L Kntght. JT ! Ounsrlor on - Religion Ufe. WM'mWt tnlvr!Mf ' y: I Mnimum load 8,000 lbs. ' ! I Maximum load! 20,000 lbs. j I All of us read and understand -such signs as this indicating, the amount of weight a certain ma-' .chine or vehicle should handle.' The I words "mlniinu m," (the least), and "max i m u m," (the most), have become-a part of ev-j eryday usage. I Wjs ; need to revive another i word and place it with these two ; 4 - bptimum," (the best). The! real; test of efficiency and the real jtest of life itself Is not whe-: ther;we do the most or the least,: but whether we do the best ! r tt en nouse On Tuesday at High School Aa4 open house for parents of students and : fall-potential stu dents; of Salem high school wfU be held from TiO U 130 p. m. Tuesday, April 10, at the high schooi building,' Principal Harry B. JohJMon announced Saturday. J ADj departments wiH.be open for ItispectioeLead teachers will be on hand. The open house, .which will avt no specific program. Is designed te give a basis for the registration of courses in the falL ;The hospitality committee of the newly-formed high school Parent Teachers' association will be pres en j and" new' applications for membership will be accepted. Re freshments will be served in the school cafeteria. i (Editors: Godfrey H. T. Ander son. AP- war correspondent, was , rlued tast wk by AlllJ for ces from more than three years ot Axis Imprisonment. In this story h describes his Impressions ot the tremendous Improvement in the quality and quantity of Anted weapons.) ; .: By Godfrey IL P. Anderson (Subbing for Kenneth I Dixon) LONDON - Returning to active work as a war correspona- trees whenever they dare move at alL -j . " There seem nearly jas many jeeps and peeps as men; with the American armies t today. The first jeep had Just appeared In the desert when I was taken pris oner, and It was a source of won- liMiail wloiwMi It intvarml I iii " m mw g r t Rations,. too, show a vast, im provement to the man who has North Africa, Italy and Germany these are some of the things which most Impressed me about warfare in 1945: j First is the total mechanization and improved equipment of all Allied forces plus the enormous ly increased fire power of com bat units. When Field Marshal Erwin Rommel bagged me at. Sidi Re segh near Tobruk on Nov. 23, 1941, the tommygun still was a weapon which drew a crowd of admiring and envious riflemen though the Germans already had plenty. Now nearly every offi cer and enlisted man seems to have one. i - Tanks, about which there has been so much controversy, seem to me to show unbelievable im provement in size and efficiency. One pf the things which most astonished me was the absence of dispersal measures among the vast concentrations of Allied transport one of the results of the new air superiority. ; J One German said that Nazi ve hicles all are old and badly worn and have to be carefully con cealed in woods and thickly cam ouflaged with the branches of SjQQjOS rnrnrm ent after years as a prisoner in . come back. We used! to carry oread ana pgiawa ut uui sack and eat them with canned bully and consider-we jhad done well wnea mey aianitxasie too badly of sand and gasoline. ' , My first K-ration, neatly wrap ped In cellophane with a com plete meal down to chocolate, chewing gum and cigarettes, seemed like a soldier's dream come true . .- i j ; Other sights which made me rub my eyes like Rip Van Win kle were the apparently smooth ' efficiency with which masses of supply transport were; handled, v the smartness and helpfulness of the ubiquitous American mill : tary police, the excellent sign posting of roads (in the desert we often had to search all day1 for a unit and then failed to find : it), the cheerfulness and good driving of negro chauffeurs, the sinister 'look of the new Ameri- . -can steel helmets . and ithe prac ticability of American; combat suits, the unruffled cruising over head of scores of Cubs and other army' cooperation planes undis turbed by the enemy, j 111 never forget an American colonel who roared with laughter when I asked "What's SHAEF?" -;'( American advertising methods were another novelty for me. The notion of affixing a sign to a bridge saying which engineering company built it is in marked contrast with the early days of the war when troops were not al lowed , even to wear Identifica tion tags. ! The greatest sense of relie'f I have had since leaving the Ger man side is the complete absence of air bombing and gestapo spy ing. The joy is almost indescrib able when one can first hear the drone of aircraft without having to dive into a ditch to dodge the bombs and machinegun fire. The fear of the gestapo, too, is something only those who have lived in Nazi Germany in the last year of defeats can under stand. Every German, whether in the whermacht or a civilian, runs the gravest risk if he even dares breathe the thought that maybe Germany, after all, is los ing the war. That's whir so many Germans unburdened their hearts to prisoners. j Judging Basis For Campbree Is Lxplaincjd The basis of judging Boy' Scouts in camporee competition to be held at the same time the Cascade area circus at the Oregon state fair grounds May 11, 12 and 13 has been announced by Harrjr Michel son, assistant scout executive for the Cascade area. The three points of judging the camporee which will be open to inspection by the public Friday evening and Satur day morning of the circus Week end are kitchen organization, . camping standards and camp citi zenship, i ' The kitchen inspection will in clude how well the cooking facili ties consisting of types of fire places are constructed, menus which are submitted arid actual ' sampling of the food by scout com missioners to determine! its qual ity.. Neatness' and cleanliness, sys tem in I the patrol and methods of food preservation will be consid ered in the judging. ; i The scouts will camp in patrols which wHl be allotted specific areas on which to constjruct their camp sites. In the pamng stand- (Continued from page 1) held chiefly in the Veterans' War Memorial at the civic cen ter. Hotel ; accommodations are being reserved for the dele gates. Plans for provision: of transportation are being r ' ar ranged. Special attention is be ing given to provision of com munications. . With the eyes 'of the world on San Francisco all channels are to be kept open for com munication and for the flow of information. There will be fthe private wires of the governments carrying messages to their home governments and in some cases to their Washington embassies. The largest "task force" in his tory of reporters for newspapers, magazines and radio will des cend on the golden gate to; tell the world what happens ; there. It is estimated that there will be a gross output of 750,000 words per day from ; the news correspondents stationed at San Francisco. The domestic press services, the foreign press ser vices and the correspondents of Individual papers will all pouring their stuff onto wires or the wireless with be the de mand for immediate transmis sion to all parts. j ' This puts a big load on j the communications companies, tele graph and telephone companies, cable companies and radio com panies. Western Union fortu nately has a new miHion dollar relay plant in Oakland with a capacity of 450,000 words an hour. It is bringing in 150 tech nicians and expects to handle the most of the press copy. The Pa cific Telephone and Telegraph co. is putting in two new cables containing 900 pairs of wires, and installing . a switchboard with 10 operator positions.! The Radio Corporation of America will have direct radio circuits with 52 countries. Telephone and telegraph operators will have persons able to ' handle calls in English, French, Russian, Spanish, Chinese and Portu guese. . j The magnitude of the mechan ics of the communications Is an index of the importance - of j the meeting. It represents a desper ateeffort on the part of weary humanity to find escape from the grip of periodic wars. Sec retary Stettinius correctly warns us to have patience and not ex pect too much all at once. If we can only make a start, and keep the door open for modifications and improvements then the con ference will justify Itself. Fail ure would be a colossal calam ity. J arua category are included j con struction of shelters, either tents or scout approved leantos, their ef fectiveness as shelters ahd Insoec. tion of trails and paths construct ed in the area. The scout will be given additional merits for camp' saagets sucn as xurniture which is built and used and' for displaying the patrol name. ' ,-' I Under camp citizenship for the 1000. scouts taking part in the camporee are spirit ef j accepting work and responsibility, getting along with others and living up to scout oaths and laws. Special at tention will be given conduct of the campers between taps and re veille. , . i STEVEilS Diamonds ' FOR MEN. ..... v ii ... Smart Ctrle to choose from at the ricjht prices. " See Onr Seleetiea ef ' MEN'S WEDDING KINGS -. Divided Payments lit Court St J ";;.:.:r--':-;..:J..';