Tilt OHEGOn CTATClIAll, Sclra, Oregon, Thursday Monlng, April 12, 1845 PAGS roua pwiwm mt 4 p- r. tfo TtttJor Svav t; fto Fear Shall A toe" . From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 ' THE STATES3IAN PUBLISHING COMPANY I CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher Member of the Associated Press i . 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. Extend Lcnd-Lease The congress has passed and sent to the presi dent a bill extending the life of the lend-lease administration for one more year. While the act is self-limiting, Senator Taft sought to tack on an amendment to the bill that would terminate furnishing of supplies to foreign nations with the end of the fighting, but the amendment was defeated when the vice president broke a tie with a negative vote. The language of the meas ure as adopted "denies any authorization for the president to enter into any agreement with for eign nations covering postwar rehabilitation and relief. The object is to prevent this coun try being made the almoner for the whole world when the war stops. This does not mean that this country will deny assistance to countries like China, but that any such undertakings must be approved by the congress as relief or rehabilitation meas ures, not put across under the disguise of lend lease for the winning of the war. These ques tions are deferred for future decision, which is sound policy. Lend-lease has cost this country a staggering sum of money, running into billions. But we must admit the goods furnished have been of tremendous value to our nation and to the United Nations in assuring a victory over the axis powers. Our trucks helped the Russians carry on the offensive which destroyed great German armies. Our tanks sent the British helped stop the Germans in Africa and then helped roll them back into the sea , at Tunisia. Our supplies to Marshall Tito in Jugo Slavia and to the resistance forces of France helped defeat the Germans in those countries. Yes, we ' have reaped large dividends in military victory from these' huge investments. It is probable that much of this lend-lease account will be written off the books, when the audit of the war is concluded, Russia may make substantial repayments, which it is able to do, given time. Britain itself may be in such an economic position that it cannot make much repayment. Australia has furnished great quan tities of supplies on reverse lend-lease. The bulk of the account will simply have to be charged to the cost of the war. We should recognize the situation frankly and wind up our inter - government accounts promptly when the war ends, and not have the continuing bickering such as followed the first world war over our "loans' to associated coun tries. This and reparations were a serious in terference with world recovery because the bur dens were too great to be borne except by pay ments in goods which our country refused to accept. There should be, and will be, no ficti tious assets in these lend-lease accounts. We cannot expect much recovery thereon. Our realization has come in the victory and returns will accruje to the indefinite future if the states- men can write a peace that will endure. Sweden Slams Door The Swedes have finally gotten round to say ing "Ay tank we have no room for the nazis." They were stimulated to making this decision by the recent influx of Germans. The Swedes aw that if they didn't put up some bars they would be overrun with chaps with the names of Herman and Joseph and Adolf and Fritz and Hans, who suddenly found they had business in Stockholm and perhaps had a sick aunt in Gote burg. Now the immigrant Germans will be shipped back home unless they are genuine de serters from the army or are in poor health. Switzerland remains a country of refuge and says it will welcome "the Unfortunate and in nocent victims of this war," which is a worthy purpose; but Switzerland says it is firmly de termined not to receive any foreigners "who have trespassed the elementary laws of human rights.'' 1 Der fuehrer Hitler will have no place to go except Japan, and will not be welcome there. A former chief economist of the Deutsche bank of Berlin says that the loss of the German gold to the allies will leave Germany "in a state of financial paralysis." Germany has a worse sickness than that. It has military paralysis in duced by allied shock. Editorial Comment DULLES, INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS ADVISER As preparations continue for the San Francisco conference, there is good news in the announcement that John Foster Dulles, has accepted an invitation to serve as an adviser to the American delegation: Hi$ presence will do much to renew the ideal that America's participation in the conference shall not reflect partisan politics. His ability will add great ly to the delegation's effectiveness. Mr. Dulles was Thomas E Dewey Y adviser on international affairs in the 1944 campaign and, it will be , remembered, international affairs, espe cially in relation to the post-war world, 'were left out, of the campaign controversy. Representing the republican candidate, Mr, Dulles was directly and thoroughly informed on the occurrences at the Dumbarton Oaks meeting, where the preview of the Sait Francisco conference was given. Before that, of course, he was recognized as an expect on international questions. He is chairman of the federal council of churches commissi6n on just and durable peace, he was secretary of The Hague peace conference in 1907, member of the reparations " commission and supreme economic council in 1919, legal adviser for the Polish "plan of economic stabilization in 1927, American repre sentative . at the Berlin debt conference in 1933, counsel to the American commission to negotiate peace in 1918 and 1919. He is a writer and speaker on international affairs. " It is all too evident that extremely difficult ques tions will have to be resolved when the delegations of many nations assemble this month. To say that all will not be smooth sailing is understatement In deed. Complications growing out of the tentative agreements reached at Yalta could, of themselves, blight the San Francisco meeting, America's best brains, most expert knowledge will be highly es sential if results of the kind that this nation and the world must have are to be forthcoming. Choice of John FotsU-r Dulles is in line with this need. Bend Bulletin, The Winnahl Once again John L. Lewis emerges victor in his bout with the operators over renewal of the contract for the mining of coal. Already he had busted the Little Steel formula as it applied to . miners; and now he has "(lone it again." He has won a basic wage of $10 a day for his men which contrasts with the $5 a day of the famous Jacksonville agreement back in 1920. The in crease amounts to $L50 a day. It does noj come as a direct increase but by working the "fringe," as it is called. In this case the overtime is com puted on each day's time over six hours in stead of on the weekly basis of overtime after 40 hours. There is little doubt that the agree ment will be approved by the war labor bdard and Stabilization Director Davis. These people didn't have the guts a year ago to face up to John L. Lewis. All of them wilted but Wayne Morse. They will have no stomach for renew- ing a test of strength this year. - K Lewis was able to prevail by virtue ot his monopoly of labor. Only skilled labor can mine coaL Coal is absolutely necessary for industry, transportation and domestic and other heating. . By dint of the country's present necessities Lewis was able to drive his hard bargain. His demand for 10c a ton royalty was just a fringe demand of his own that he readily relinquished when he got the increase he was after. 4 f This will put the coal price at a point where it will again suffer from competition of other fuels, especially oil, when,the war ends. Wheth er, mechanization of mining can offset the wage . increase and keep coal competitive will prob ably depend on other cost factors. Some mines can operate; others cannot. What may build up as a result of the increase is future trouble. Un less the mines can sell their coal above their costs they will have to shut down. So we may be merely deferring the showdown until the war is over. But that is better than having work stoppage in coal mining now. As the negotiations close, John Lewis can look back over his shoulder with a leer at his arch-foe, FDR, and say, reversing Kipling, "I'm a better man than you, Gunga Pin." - j i' ' Jones and Shipsaw , The senators are jumping all over Batt of the war production board and Clayton former as sistant to Jesse Jones on account of the Ship saw aluminum plant deal. They are showing that northwest development was stifled and pri orities granted to Shipsaw and the money fur nished by this country to build the power plant and aluminum plant up in Canada. And our pay was to come in aluminum at ,17c per pound, which is higher than the domestic price. This of course was one of the deals made by RFC when Jesse Jones was Us boss. Jones was the great financier whose retirement drew forth such loud enconiums from senators. . ; Henry ' Wallace talked some about encouraging some of the heathen to drink milk, but we don't recall that he helped the aluminum company build a big plant up in Canada'. Perhaps the difference comes in who gets the "milk." . . 'Hard Scrabble Farm The Literary GuidepoGt Br W. O. Stagers Beachcombers at Seaside found a "new dish on the table when the ebb tide set their table one morning this week: cartons of fresh beef in stead of clams. And it was labeled Armours and Cudahy, so it wasn't sea cow. Presumably the meat came from some vessel at sea, though no wreck in the vicinity had been reported. There is never any telling, though what the great ocean will spew on the shore. That's what makes beachcombing so interesting. Interpreting The War News By KIRKE L. SIMPSON ASSOCIATED PRESS WAB ANALYST I Hard charging American Ninth army tanks are on the Elbe river, last water! barrier on the road to Berlin a scant 64 miles away. At Magdeburg, Elbe metropolis. General Simp son's leading elements also are within 115 miles or less of the nearest Russian armies poised in mighty strength on the Oder-Neisse line. The moment for combined Allied-Russian action to split - Germany apart appears at hand. That impending United Nations junction of for ces in the heart of Nazi Germany is the beginning of the end. Coupled with, the British drive in the . northwest already knocking at the gates of Bremen and Hamburg, it will turn all north central Ger many into an heroic scale repetition of the Ruhr trap and shatter last Nazi hopes of any orderly re treat into the prepared Alpine last stand redoubt in the south. And it well may be the signal for a three power proclamation outlawing continued re sistance in Germany. Yet American arrival on the Elbe is only part of the fast developing pattern of an Allied assault that is slashing inner Germany into mopping-up areas. The Oder-Neisse Russian front east of Ber lin is the only inactive sector of the whole vast front encircling the dying Nazi reich. Even in It aly, the long forgotten front has flamed to life at both ends. There is small chance that any of the score or more German divisions in Italy can escape, except in fragments, to Alpine passes or ..through them. " There is some indication that the Russians on the Oder-Neisse line have been withholding (heir final effort to reach Berlin or outflank it to north and south either until spring thaws diminish or until Allied forces reach some pre-determined position to the west where close tactical as well as strategic in tegration of operations would be possible. The Elbe In the Magdeburg area would seem to fill that geographical requirement and if that is true it will be only hours until the well rested and pow erful Russian armies strike out to effect a Junction. Frontline advices report American engineers with river bridging equipment moving up already on the heels of tank spearheads. : The Elbe is Germany's last hope of any protract ed stand to delay physical dismemberment of the reich and isolation of Nazi troops in successive pockets "for annihilation or forced unconditional surrender.; It has been reached by the Americans under circumstances that make it utterly improb able that the foe can muster any semblance of for midable organized resistance even ther. "SAN MAE TIN: KNIGHT Of THB ANDES,- by Kicard Kojas, traaa xt kr Hmehcl BrtekcU n Carlos VUela (DvaMeaay, Doraa; 3.50). This biographer of the liberat or of Argentina, Peru and Chile is a welcome addition to our growing North American litera ture about South America. Jose de San Martin was born In 1778, on Feb. 25, three days after the birthday of George Washington, to whom the south ern hero has been compared. He died in 1850 in France, for more than a quarter of a century an exile from jealousy and hatred in the lands he had freed. His parents were Spanish, and took him back to the mother country when he was a child. At 13 he enlisted in the Spanish army, fought in Africa and France as well as Spain and is said once to have confronted Napoleon . . when he cast his lot with Argentine revolutionar ies he was consequently a train ed and proven soldier. In Guay aquil, in 1822, he met Simon Bol ivar, .who seems to have been possessed of ambitions which the selfless Argentine did not share. Toward the end of his life he saw Sarmiento, future liberal leader of his native country-It. was a long and monmentous span, during which the political ties which bound Latin America to Catholic Europe were broken, ts the ties binding North Amer ica to England had been broken in 1 the preceding century. San Martin's role in those historical events is eulogized. To the usual fervor of j the fond biographer, the ardent and worshipful Rojas adds the romantic j exaggeration and over-statement which lift San Martin into the ranks of the gods; he becomes St. Martin, i But this is less to be criticzed than inadequacies of another sort To SoUth Americans the background of this story is fa miliar; for us it ' should have been filled in, perhaps with a brief chronology or a historical summary. Without some such aids I found the book confusing. And if I hadn't consulted a map, though there is none in this vol ume, I would have been lost In some places. British Medic Taken At Dunkirk in 1940 Tells Fantastic Tale By Wm GftlUftter (Subbing for Kenneth 14 Dixon). - - i LEMGO, Germany A British prisoner who recently was in Danzig, then met the American advance through the Hannover plain reported seeing eight German soldiers hinged in one group from telephone poles because they had refused to fight any more. The prisoner, taken at Dun querque in 1940, had a fantastic escape tale. He was a medic and had been working four years un loading coal in East Prussia. He escaped, fell in with an 3English speaking German woman with four children who had relatives In England. She befriended him and obtained false Wehrmacht papers for him which stated that he was assigned to work for her, helping to take care of the chil dren in fleeing from Prussia to Lage, near Bielefeld. In the full uniform of a British soldier he traveled through Danzig to Lage just in time to meet the Americans. I I He said Danzig . Germans wanted to declare the city open and let the Russians enter, that German forces were in confusion and that many soldiers were hanged for desertion. He said he saw many hanged publicly. Both he and the German woman re ported seeing a great number of German troops on the .eastern front and almost none on the western front in I the Hannover area. Hannover, they said, was a city of the dead, with not a single factory working 3as a re sult of American air raids. The prisoner's story of many Germans being hanged for de sertion or being AWOL Was ver ified by a German soldier at a Russian prisoner of war "camp who was a clerk In military court. He said more Germans were tried by the court and shot in recent weeks for deserting their Jobs than Russians. "The SS also punished their families,' he added, i : near Bielefeld under command of a fanatical one-armed Nazi Their total effort did not equal that of one well-trained soldier. ! American authorities are puzzled about what to do with such youths. They don't want to treat them as regular prisoners, nor turn them loose. State legislative Committee Appointments Near Completion Committee appointments provided for by resolutions adopted by the 1945 session of the legislature were virtually completed here to day, following release of a list of personnel here Wednesday by Senate President Howard Belton and Eugene Marsh, speaker of the house of representatives. . - i Legislative members of the tax study committee are Sen. Earl T. Newbry, Medford, and Rep. Giles French, Moro. This committee will be tomposed of IS members, most of whom are to be selected by the Armored warfare Is hazardous for liaison officers and those who must travel on their own, includ ing correspondents. After the main body of tanks of a com bat command pass through, the Germans often flock back over roads because armored forces never bother to mop up. j : An executive officer, Lt. Col. Lindsay Herkness of Philadel phia, Pa started back to divi sion headquarters the other night and had his jeep shot out from under him. He made his way to a telephone, called his commanding officer, Col. Sidney Hids of Nashville, Tenn., and said: "Sorry, sir, but I have not enough strength to make the trip back to the division." The colonel sent & tank to car ", ry him through. Court Names I Budget Group Lay Members Lay members of the county budget committee were named Wednesday ; by the county court to meet requirements of a 1 new state law which requires mem bers be appointed for three year terms. To set the newly, designed machinery in motion the members this year were given staggered terms, Ray Glatt, Woodburn, old est member in service drawing the one year term, M. G. Gunderson, Silverton, the two-year term, and Leo N. Childs, Salem, the three year term. In the future appoint ments will be for three-year terms. - j : Tuesday and Wednesday, May 22 and 23 were tentatively set as the dates" for the meeting to fix the budget for the 1945 fiscal year. Two items of legislation of the last legislature will probably come before the committee, Judge Grant Murphy said. One of these provides that the state shall set up an information service for return ing Veterans. It also provides that counties may name a coordinator to work jointly with the state in handling local problems. I The committee will also be con fronted with the fixing of a sal ary for a county watermaster. A watermaster was appointed by the state engineer following the Ad judication of water rights on San tiam river and Mill creek. Irri gation interests want the county to assume a $1200 salary for the new officer, equivalent to about $200 a month since the job is not a year round proposition, v County Judge Grant Murphy said many counties In the state pay for only part time service of a watermaster, using that official in some Instances on other work. U U M i V fJ Hungry slave workers in Ger many worry American soldiers more than battle. There are so many of them and the sight of gaunt skeletons scrambling for food shake the Americans. Cpl. Woodrow H. Harris of Jaspera, La., and PFC Eugene Ford of Los Angeles, Calif., both of the Second armored division, looked around the cellar of a Wehr macht training school and found a good quantity of food. "They loaded it into a jeep and started a relief mission of their own. "You never saw anyone ' so happy," said Harris. "It made you feel good." The second armored division hit a new record low in German prisoners when it took an 11-year-old Hitler youth, s He was one of the , 200 found fighting "THE YOUNG IDEA" By Mossier The best biscuit maker in the army, PFC Claudie Jackson, 24, of Dyeisburg, Tennn who cooks for the Second armored division, wants no part of cooking in civil Ian life. He want" to own a portable skating rink. f . In the same kitchen is PFC George McCerry of Philadelphia, Pa., who used to cook in his father's restaurant but spends all his time washing dishes in the army and does it by choice. "No cooking for me," he said. "There are too damn many com plaints." Trylng ta kiss me ea our first date Norbert Smith,- yoe're an . . . -" old reee!" Camp Expert Gives Advice Members of the Pioneer camp committee. Cascade area council, Boy Scouts of America, Wednes day night were given some expert assistance for their improvement program by Ray Bryan of the en gineering service of the organiza tion. . Bryan, with headquarters in New York, is touring western states. The meeting Wednesday was held at Pringle park and was called by Harry Scott, camp chairman. Details of the present tamp with the proposed improvements were discussed. : Attending the meeting were Bob Elstrom, chairman of the Pioneer improvement committee; A, C. Haag, Bill Phillips, Lou Amort and camp chairmen from the four area district including Donovan Kelley, Wesley Sherman, O. P. West and Monte Russell. (Continued from page 1) results. They are inclined, and quite understandingly so, to say, "Well, if this is where we Want to go, let us go there. Let this be the order. Let us get on with the business of getting out the goods. Do it this way. ; They fail to recognize that byr great historical tradition in America there has developed in our peo ple, fortunately, such a love for freedom that free I men resent and resist dictation, whether that dictation comes from men in the navy or in the military relating to civilian affairs, or whether it comes from an administrator in the executive branch of the gov ernment Further, I think it would be most unfortunate if American management and American labor were led to be lieve, if the bill Were passed, that the - senate of the United States in passing it accepted the argument of the military and the navy that it ought to be passed in the interest of military I mor- ale." -'J, Morse did a neat job of po litical surgery in laying bare the distinction between the ! mili tary mind and method and the civilian mind and custom! Of course we all want to get on with the war. Of course we want to back our commanders. But just as we must depend on our military leaders to plan the strategy and then to apply it in the waging of the war, so the military must yield to the jcivil ian authority in the government of civilian matters. It becomes then the job of the president and the congress to supply effective ' leadership of the people at home so their contribution to victory may be adequate and timely. The late action of the i army in ordering cutbacks In produc tion is good evidence that the senate was correct in its ap praisal of needs for manpower and in rejecting the administration-support service bill. ; governor. Purpose of the commit tee is to conduct a study of Ore gon's tax structure and submit report to the 1947 legislature. Cre ation of this committee was asked by Governor Earl Snell in bis mes sage to the legislature. . i . An appropriation of $20,000 was authorized by the legislature to defray the expenses of this com mittee in conducting its investiga tion. Te Study Districts M The committee to investigate and report on reapportionment of Oregon legislative districts is com posed of Senators Marshall Cor nett, Klamath Falls, and Lew Wal lace, Portland, and Representa tives Alex Barry, Portland; E. W. Kimberling, Prairie City, and Ned H. Callowayj, Brownsville. ; The committee on executive ap pointments, geology and mineral industries, is comprised of five senators. They are Lee Patterson and Irving Rand, both of Portland; William Walsh, Coos Bay; Rex Ellis, Pendleton, and Earl Newbry, Medford. - . ; Other legislative committee ap pointments: , ! i Statutory -revision Senators Irving Rand and Paul Patterson, Washington county, and Represen tatives Carl H. Francis, Dayton; Robert A. Bennett, Portland, and W. W. Balderee, Grants Pass. Delinquency Stady ' Child delinquency Senators Thomas Parkinson, Roseburg, and Joel C Booth, Lebanon, and Rep resentatives O. H. Bengston, Med ford; J. O. Johnson, Portland, and Paul Hendricks, Salem. . r Veterans welfare Senators Lee Patterson, Portland, and Ern est Fatland, Condon, and Repre sentatives Harvey Wells. Portland; Frank J. VanDyke, Ashland, and C L. Lieuallen, Pendleton.! Prison investigation Senators Frank Hilton, Portland, and Fred erick Lamport, Salem, and Repre sentatives H. R. Jones, Salem; Pat Lonergan, Portland, and Jack Bain, Portland. I One senator and two representa tives were named to prepare the voters pamphlet argument in fa vor of two bills to go on the bal lot at the special election June 22. These! include Dean Walker. Inde pendence, Giles i French, Moro, and: W- W. Balderee. Bills Explained i One bill proposes a tax to raise approximately $10,000,000 during the next two years for construc tion of new buildings at the state institutions and at the higher edu cational plants. Of this amount, $8,000,000 would be expended by the state board of control and $4, 000,000 by the state board of high er education. The tax would be offset by surplus state income tax revenues. ! The other measure- proposes a two cent tax on each' package of cigarettes sold in Oregon to raise approximately $2,000,000 annually for support of the public schools. ' suspension Ureters Against Stores Stayed PORTLAND, April ll-G-p)-Sus- pension orders against four Fred kMeyer, Inc., stores here were stay ed today by the OPA until an ap peal hearing is heard by a na tional OPA hearing commissioner. Attorneys for eight Safeway grocery stores have filed similar appeals from 30-day business sus pension orders resulting from sale of ration goods I for which the stores accepted expired ration points. School Society Meets To Plan for Work The Oak Point school society met at the school house Friday night Mrs. Ellis Lauderbach and George Kanuppe iad charge of the program which consisted of games and music by the school children. Mrs. C C Comstock and Mrs. Grove Peterson Were hostesses. Mrs. Charles Wilson and Mrs. Z Battel are on the program com mittee for the next meeting. Seven-Day Worki Week Ordered at Shipyard PORTLAND, April 11. -(p)- A seven day work week was order ed today at Oregon Shipbuilding corporation yards where Kaiser officials said the need for com pleting pontons for army bridges dictated- the speed up. ; A call for 2500 workers needed to rush the work on aluminum pontons was piling up applications at the labor employment office but only 800 are on the job today. The teeth of the wolf agree in every structural detail with those of domesticated dogs. STEVEIIS I Exquisitely fashioned dia mood combination. Blue white. Perfect ; f Divided Payments' ' 239 Court St.