' . - . " , . ! . ' ; . !--!'" I . 1 - , ' - i " " T PAQE rOUH ' ! ' I . The OREGOH STATESMAH, Salem. Oregon, Tuwdar Morning, May 15. 1945 : j . ' j' y Sm. W "tfv- ! I-. . - ' Ki . ILLS' . 1 tU RU. ,ia, " - f I - I ' k I "Ho The Associated Press news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited No Paper to Germany j The process of reeducating the Germans be gins with controlling their press and radio and barring American newspapers and periodicals from circulating in allied occupied territory. The army's department of psychological war fare apparently thinks their mental capacity is so starved they have to be spoonfed for an in definite time. Goebbela in his day had the same idea, and became the world's No. 1 propagand ist Now our army uses the same tobls but re verses the direction of the line of thought pour- ed into German minds. i It is obvious that military rule will persist in Germany for some time, and 'with it military control of channels of communication within the country. But "it does seem a sorry commentary that the literature Of free America, for example, is to be withheld from Germany. .Even in war time there was the interchange of scientific journals through Switzerland, scientists recog nizing universal freedom for discoveries in pure science. Now with Germany to be reeducated as a democratic state its' people are not per mitted to read the literary and political journals . from this country, i This barring of American publications has provoked widespread protest. It surely will not stand very long. Introduction of American and British publications ought to be a stimulating and helpful thing in this process of reeducating Germany; The longer the German mind is re garded simply as a cistern to be filled there will be competition for ;control of the source of sup ply. When the German mind is given liberty of thought and access to all expressions of opinion it should grow in knowledge, hi self-control and in that sense of freedom which is the true bul wark of humanity; against tyranny, j Coddling Captives We are pleased that General Eisenhower moved promptly to take Herman Goering off exhibition. If all this chatter bout prosecuting war criminals has ! any meaning and the tens of thousands of victims of nazi atrocities in Ger man prison and concentration camps cry out for retribution Goering should be thrown in the guardhouse and treated like a criminal awaiting trial. He was Hitleifs own choice as No. 2 nazi, and stayed with the. nazi gang until Just a few days before Germany's final collapse. If he has talking to do let him o it to the. court, or to experienced interrogators of the military intelligence section. ; With Goering being dined by the generals, validity is given to the German hope! for easier treatment at the hands of Americans. They raced to greet the Yanks as captors in hopes of escaping the fury: of the Russians, j Well, the Americans should hot be softies, either. The al lied court for war criminals should be instituted t once and all those suspected, of war crimes turned over to its custody for prompt trial. The sooner punishment following jjtrial is inflicted the quicker the German people, will realize that this war was not just a practice game. It happens that Maj. Gen! John E. Dahlquist, commander of the 36th division which captured Goering, was first commander of the 70th di- vision at Camp Adair. He and Brig. Gen. Rob ert Stack are called down quite sharply by Eis enhower who previously had forbidden any fraternizing with top Germanjj civil or military officials. The . public statement by the com manding general is welcomed jas a sign there is to be no coddling of captives. j Will Japs Surrender? i-.l-,:- Of the Germans this was tnje, they fought as soldiers following 'generally recognized rules of warfare. They fought hard, and resisted with 'greet tenacity; but when. they were thoroughly defeated they yielded to superior force. If the Wehrmacht commanders had j enjoyed full au thority they would - have surrendered months ago to spare their Country its final agonies. Hit ler, the fool fanatic, wouldn't give up and wouldn't let his generals give up. At last they realized they had to, so they surrendered armies in big blocks, as high as a million men at a time. Thus far the Japanese have shown no such willingness to yield to the inevitable. Surren der by the Japs is always an Individual matter. No officer has capitulated to the Americans, surrendering any considerable body of troops. When it comes toj large-scale fighting which" is expected in China or on Honshu, Mrill the Japa nese persist in these battle tactics, resistance to the death? Probably. Their driving force is ab-' solute devotion to their emperor, counting it ' Editorial I Comment NIEMOIXEK AND THYSSEN I - i In the delivery from Axis prison camps of In dustrialist Fritz Thyssen and Pastor Martin Nie moller, both articulate anti-HiUerites who were im prisoned for their utterances, there arises possibil ity of a confusion Of ideas.' The confusion lies in this: to have been j against Hitler does not neces sarily mean to be in favor of democracy.- The case of Thyssen is ' fairly simple. He fi nanced Hitler's early ascendancy, thus making it possible, .for the express and admitted purpose of forcible suppression of the labor movement in Ger many. .Hitler turned on! Thyssen later an experi ence not monopolized by Thyssen and they became . enemies, but this falling-out between suppression ists did not make Thyssen a democrat, and any emo tional drift toward canonizing Thyssen would work a fraud upon democracy. The case of Pastor Niemoiler is different, and rests upon lack of evidence rather Pastor Niemoiler. won the respect of world when he refused to allow religious head of Germany. JHis utterance: - ".Not ..possible very soon you, but God, is my Leaderr is said to have sealed: are expanded and. his commitment to prison. ' But Niemoller's courageous stand in the issue of religious integrity does not necessarily show that he would have taken the same Stand against fascism at large, say in a matter of civil liberties, nor against Deutschland Uber Alles. He served as a U-boat commander in the first irorld war. Pastor Niemoler Is not to be pre-judged in these matters, but the record is incomplete. San Fran cisco Chronicle. Favor Svoayt Vt; No Fear Shall AwtT From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBUSHING COMPANY CHARLES A. S PRAGUE, Editor and Publishers . Member of the Associated Press J is exclusively entitled to th as -"the war is Chinese in Fay of rotaI lunploye l ries There has " for 20 yean basis. Interproii Tho VJcr Ngivo are virtually no . costal area itself Trom its mouth King). than adverse. the God-fearing . Hitler to become V however, that era! Mac Arthur's i i - j i -'j : .1 n w niTT that i: :. i -o ts. . r- -I I for publication of aL in this newspaper. glory to die for him. This gives a gloomy; pros pect, for there are some four million men in the Jap armies and it takes a long time to put that number to death. There remains on chance of avoiding this general slaughter, anil that is surrender by the government at Tokyo. If the Japanese leaders could ever sacrifice their face-saving ideas they could ask for an eh of hostilities and jaceept what terms the allies jpffered them. As we.see it, that is the only way the war with Japan fan be ended short of slayinjg several million Japanese soldiers. This is the real meaning of the phrase not ovfr." 1 Foochw 1 The Chinese are resuming offensives, not only in the interior but it the seacoast too.J They have entered Foochcfw, a seaport on the East China sea, lying nearly opposite the uppers tip of Formosa. Naturally, speculation arises over whether the Americans ill strike at this port to gain their first toe-hold on the China coast. It is doubtful if Fobchow would be the initial point of landing. To!carry supplies to the Chi nese a more valuable port and one muchjcUser to our base in the Philippines would be Canton. With this firmly in American hands, supplies could flow to equip he Chinese armies.; j If .the objective is to engage the Jap armies in jChina or to obtain a Chin4 base for "action igafost Japan proper, then the strike would, be j north of Foochow, perhaps JShanghal. " I j We do not know Whether a major blow will be struck this summeV because we do notj fajow how much additional Jmight must be transferred to the orient from! Europe- of how long that transfer would requufe. We shall surely see be fore the year's end Invasions; of China br the home islands of Japan. The j air raids, in the meantime, are hittin the enemy's capacity jfor war-making. ' I ! ,1 j If Employe The last congress fadjourned without jtaHing favorable action on the bill toj readjust salaries of postal employes.! Unless ex;tehded the temp orary supplemental allowance of $300 per an num will expire on llune 30 jnext. Instead of merelv extendina this the congress should' make . nmnanan i.nwnml f mA iiiotmnt nf nnstal S&la- i . been no change in the pay base probably no otner group 01 any size but what has had, several pay boosts In that interval of time. Thltre has been reduction in working hours, but fon overtime posta Im ployes get no time-and-a-half. By' a singular method of computation they jget 1or trvfrtjme work a little less than straight time pay. Their work, too, has been much heavier than evHrlbe- fow.- J : . i ; :-: :' h-t '" Loyalty to the service permanence of enure and provision for retirement pay tam kept most postal employes' on the job; but the people of the country should not wear that loyalty thin. Congress should pass legislation to correct the injustice to postal employes, on permanent n rr By KIRKE L. SIMPSON AMoeUUd Trem War jAMlyat j f j .j --( - The Japanese, who expect mf Americans j event ually to launch amphibious operations along I the East China coast have counted largely upon For mosa as an air base capable of warding off ah at tack of that kind. I j f . But now Formosa isfto a great extent neutralized as such a bulwark by Sustained American bembing from Philippines basef. Striking evidence jofithis la afforded by Chungking's report that the Chinese have reoccupied foochow. :j ; Foochow lies on the jiorth bank of the Min Chjang estuary well up from fie river mouth. It is' within easy striking distance from th norm end pt For mosa island where heavy Niponese air concentra tions once dominated he whole! sweep of the Chi nese coast to westwarjjt . : j The Min Chiang river offers the most promising route for an Allied larding on the last China coast aimed at a junction with Chinese troops driving eastward in Hunan. Such a move would split -Japanese force in north and south China aparti Thera east-west roads in the East China but he Min Chiang is navigable S fort 100 miles to Tfen Pint i 3 v , , r ; At Yen P'ing the enjy east-west highway in south central east China follows the west bank; of the north fork of the Ma Chiang, curving broadly northwestward through gfangaj province. It leads indirectly to Heng Chow, obvious ultimate objec tive of the Chinese ctfunter offensive in Hunan al ready threatening Paoching. Heng Chaw is the leuthern end of a bottleneck span of the Japanese orridor bisecting China from north to south.; It lies gome 350 miles crow flight west of Yen P'ing. ' Use of -the Min; Chiang river as a supply r!oute would put the main potential beachhead in eastern China a full 100 miies beyond the seacoast While Formosa's powerful jUr installations were; intact that would not hare ibeen possible and a landing anywhere else on the!; East China coastal! hump would have been faced with extreme transportation dificulties. ... i ; . ' if :- pifv::;;: Whether the Min Chiang Isactoally wilierj Al lied consideration for landing operations ftof join up with the Chines in Hunan remains to be seen. The intensive bombing of Formosa and resurgence of Chinese offensive Activity both in the Foochow area and farther north In southern Chekiang as well as in western Hunan can leave Tokyo in little doubt; such a move is possible, or Will be as American air forces in China, heavy reinlorcemenls reach Gen- command in the Philipplnesi Chines reports that the enemy is already; falling back northward for'tl concentration north! of the Yellow river in northeastern China are not con vincing as yet however, it would mean virtually abandonment of the China-Indo China corridor and leave all enemy forces in Sooth China, Indd China, Thiland, the Malay peninsula and the Dutch Indies to their fate, cut of by land as well as sea from Japan and from the main Japanese armies iri China. .W tRMtHMM Mtk TW Waktaflw a.- I . - --' -; - I ' ' " " ' A Whale of a Catch ' : . ' ; f ; j : '-':. News Behind the; News By PUL MALLON v l j : ' j -(Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction In' whole or in part strictly prohibited.) M ! WASHINGTON, May 14-inThe way the tax trimming program was announced made It sound colossal, but it of that ; When busi ness corpora tions paid their excess profits taxes (running up to 90 per cent or more) these war years they did so un der a provision of law which promised a 10 fn Mauoa per cent refund within -three to five years. ) j All this HSW program does IS 4a aaw thM h.lra 4Ka1 1 II -1 - . . trM.,lW)n result Business will merely get its refund sooner. j The notion behind this major feature of the program is I that business may use the money at once for reconversion, some; will need this help. Others have ac cumulated cash reserves (com mon corporate war practise),. The other important change will be of considerable lielp to. small business. The lift in j ex emptions on excess profits "Uxes (not normal rates which run above 40 per cent) from 310,000 to $25,000 will, in effect b solve businesses earning ! less than 25,000 from the profit confiscation tax rates 'of war. ' But there is another provision of law which enabled corpora tions to deduct from certain normal rate payments certain allowances if they paid high ex cess profits rates. jj - Thus the announced relief will not be as great as the 'cited figures have indicated. Wlthj the normal tax hand the govern ment will take back some of the balm it is offering with the ex cess profits hand. jf This i afceut all there Is in the "tax reduction." ; Behind its announcement, however, the participants in-, dulged themselves in a little light and fancy stabbing. - Sen ate Financa Chairman George had announced two days earlier that he thought the government should promise a real reduction to begin next January 1, Whe ther or not Japan was beaten. Kext day from tta treaimry came an anonymous statement that George (whom some I; have martianed as possible successor GRIN AND BEAR was far short .:,r: IT . i , - eA- t .x f ' X : T . "11 ' " : : What? GiTe my eld campaign posters t the scrap drive, with another election only S years off?" p ; to Morgenthau) had reversed his position on this. f An official; of the treasury de partment had 'given that! infor mation to newsmen suggesting it be published j without credit as off-the-recordj inspiration. The newsmen did not think George had changed his mind and the charge was hot printed, at least' not generally! s . This was not the only piquant savor of the jdeaL After George end house jways and means Chairman Doughton had been at the White j House discussing .taxes, with president Truman, the newspapers were able to" carry an .authoritative statement that Mr. Truman had told con gress to go (ahead and handle taxes in its own way as he was too busy to bother. .1 This sounded very much like Mr. Morgenthau was not to have his usual annual soul-stirring presentation pt tax programs to congress (none of which have been adopted in late year). It also somehow encourages people to; believe j the reports that jGeorge might get the treasury secretaryship : My own information Is that nothing is likely to" be; done about a cabinet change In the treasury until after the Bretton : Woods agreements sink or swim in congress! ij . -j , j Other than; that it can be said Truman appreciates Morgen thau'! good New York financial connections, but on the other hand, George would take the job If offered.' j- . Certain senators whom I greatly respect , think Morgen thau will go': in a few months and the job (will be handed to Truman's Misao u r i banking friend, John Snyderr j' From this!' series of inner events it if plain the adminis tration is not going into " any real tax reduction forj some time. It . will not accept the George program promising ac tion in 1946 and is content to rest with the faint trimmings presented last week. 1 1 AMERICUSL G. Ethel' Patricia Davis, first child of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Davis, of Amer-: icus, was born Sept 4, 1939 the day England and France declared war on Germany. " J V Shortly after 8 a. m. yesterday, as President Truman announced. Germany's unconditional surren . der, Mary Francis Davis, second child of the couple,-was born. j "O T ' I I DV LilClliy DTP- TTronmrs (Continued from page 1) 111 luck! of the, numerals mark ed the day. Nature did not smile, she spat in our faces with a be lated storm. Nevertheless 12 gathered ' at the starting post, mildly hopeful that the weather might -clear later in 'the day, which most decidedly it failed to do. W drove to Freres mill on the sid.of the mountain a few miles above Taylor's grove, park ed there. Logging operations have cut up the old trails, so we followed the logging road, slog ging through the steady - down pour, crossing the feeder forks of Canyon' creek. Except for the map which Mr. Ware at the mill had sketched for me, the route was largely guesswork, for clouds hung oyer the treetops. Finally we left the road and headed up the trap-less mountainside. We . worked through the heavy tim ber, up to the young growth, then to the twisted brush just trying to extricate itself from its very recent burden of snow, on up through the patches of huck leberry whose buds were just beginning to show color, and where the grass was still numb from winter, and then to snow patches! At last we got on top of something, and found the visi bility zero. j Did you ever hear of a lost mountain? There are Lost riv ers ah4 Lost lakes in Oregon, but here was a lost mountain, ' Utterly llost in the fog. The fa-' miliar; jface of House mountain was nowhere' to be seen. But Adolph Greenbaum discovered a sign: f Bouse Mt We couldn't see the mountain, even though it was under our feej. Fortified r frith that identification we push ed on through a thicket of rhod odendron until we came out on thereat?. A howling gale blew across its edge.; Clouds shrouded the face of the cliff and all the surroundings and the rain, now. kept faUing. : There was t0 - toen t turn i slog down the mountain, all feel ing as amphibious as the marines. 1 There were occasional rewards in the way of clearing skies when the valley scene opened. The lighter, green of the budding al der arid maple' in the lower reaches merged into the heavy green! Of the firs on the moun tainsides while the crests under Heavy tcloud cover were ' deep blue. L Wisps of cloud like white down ' in thecutover lands the "dogwood stood out ; in bridal , whrteijr-.v : ." -. , -? ! And ;so back to the mill and . lunch and hot coffee in the shel ter' Of the 'machine shop , while the returning rain beat a tattoo on theiroof. ' '.i'"!'vv';'';, ' Why; do they do it - climb mountadns to get the view which -often isn't thereT Well, that Is a secret known only to those who love the hills and cherish the woods ind the mountains even in their, rougher moods. ... , iDECATUR, IlL-Cat Waggoner, 85, who says he has bet for the last 3ft years it would 4 rain on May 10 and has won 31 times, has only one taker . for tomor row's performance. ' ; f'Maybe Til get. more before the day is over," said Waggoner, a former banker, "but I'm about . out ofi business they're scared out." ! , Last; year there was only light '- rainfalj in one section of the city and four of his bettors re fused to pay: , ; ' " NAMPA, Ida.-5VA JJampa farmer dangled the following in ducement in ' the help ' wanted column! of the Idaho Free Press: . "No milking ori irrigating, hardly anything to do and lots of shade to do it in." ,;ATtii?r.o:ni:;. GERMANY -iff)-Two sports minded American officers have started , reconverting one small portion of Germany's; erstwhile war industry. j , Capt John Pfitsch, ! of Tyler, Texas, and Lt Cassius M. Lev of Fenton, Mich, are using a former German 88-mm shell fac tory for production of baseball bats. ' .' ' I Tn th mnall towtr of Tunger- hutte the two officers of the 35th division were 1 V I n through the -factory when t h e y saw a number of woodwor king machines and a sizeable ' stock pile of hard wood. Their 448th y antiair craft warning i. ,3 ed. baseball equipment now . that the shooting is over, j ; j Soon a makeshift production . line was working and the first :- bats began appearing-j-ones that . would be hard to beat even back 1A aha a ft aw waia 44 j4 AfM k 1r skkf4 tiyiwai Aire irvif tauuiaiavw a - mwn . am . r am raiscn tiea ivngernuue oai wmcn aamitieoiy is ipieniy oi : trademark for: any bat t Three first class privates In the U. S. 320th infantry regiment have just about decided to start spreading some proper propa ganda about Americans to coun ter the' erstwhile nazi (output When Henry H. Tremaine, of Allerton, Mass., Gerald A. Peace of Williamsport, Pa, j and Wil liam J. Dubs, of Dallas, Texas, entered a German home the oth er day they wound the whole family kneeling in prayer, j i The doughboy trio sfcod quiet ly waiting for the prayers to end before taking up business with the Germans. Finally r one member of the family stood up, Tho Literary Guidepost By W. G. SOGERS CITY DSVFXOPMKNT.H hy. twls MmfrS Hareoart, Brftcc; $2); -A MILLION HOMES A TEAS,- y Dwrethy Iwwiii (BUreeart, Brace; SMt). . Devoted to the subject of what we're going to live in, nd where it will be, these two, uncommon- ly valuable books are jwritten by v experts. They deserve a wide " audience; they require little -technical knowledge f - on i the, reader's part end are so aptly, so intelligently phrased that they make pleasant reading j - " They're for the man, in the street Mrs. Rosenmah wants to v get him out of the street into a -comfortable, efficient; inexpen sive home: Mumford wants him in a less crowded street j Few people have the information to argue with these authors. 1 Mrs. Rosenntan, chairman of th National Committee! on Housing, quotes fromj the 1940 census to show that of the 37,- .000,000 dwelling units in! this country,, 14,000,000 had no flush toilet 12,000,000 n private bath tub, 11,000,000 no running ' water. .(.- ' To build, homes for people with incomes under $2000, she believes there must bie cost re ductions all along the line in .materials, labor, taxe, interest land values; improvement . in zoning regulations ; stable, ! effi cient neighborhood control.; , Mumford's book consists of six republished essays: : fThe City The Metrop4Utan i Mi lieu," "Mass-Produ cjion! and Housing," "Report on! Housing,? The x Social Foundations of Post-War Planning" 'and "The Plan of London," the last two printed for the first time in the vs. -,- .vL;-;.-;-.;:r':- His observations on jUie nature of cities delve so profoundly as to suggest why Americans, and perhaps British, too, entered, this war with reluctance, j The big city, London, I New York or Chicago, has been built, " he claims, for oorionyc and in dustrial purposes, hot jfor human ends; that is, people gather in New York to make money, not to enjoy the full, happy and nat ural life. American cities of over-; 25.000 do not reproduce .- them selves, he points out v and the larger the metropolis, the lower the birth rate. His mam criticism of ' the London County Council plan for rebuildin i is that it . aims to keep the capital's pres ent enormous popula He favors the "garden city." For all his : radical i attack on huge urban centers, ! he is just 'an old-fashioned man who wants family: life revived. ', . , DEB tllll FOB r Sportsznlnded Tonics Produce Ball Beds 4 I In German Factory . came over and asked, heavily:' "When are you going to shoot us? ' x-TV "We are . not going to ' shoot you," said the startled Tremaine. "Are you going to hang us then," said the German, paling. The three privates' finally con vinced the German family they had no intention of killing them. "Then," said the father of the family in one of the war's great est masterpieces of understate ment, "Hitler hasnt told us' the truth about everything. Plenty of S3 troops are trying to avoid surrender by slipping into civilian clothes. Some of them may be getting away with it but not' anY--;-i- - r-rv - Pvt Frank T. See, Chicago, was : standing guard the other night when he heard shuffling in s parked truck. He found two bare feet sticking out of a pup tent Tickling them gently with his bayonet, he persuaded their owner to emerge mua surrenucr. . At first he looked like just another half - dressed civilian, but questioning revealed another SS trooper trying to sneak home and become a civilian. - . A different slant was tried on PFC Clifford Busse, of Rock Rapids, Iowa, who had been or dered to question all suspicious looking persons. A bunch of freed slave labor ers came drifting by. There was nothing to distinguish two of them from the rest except that they looked mighty husky and healthy to Busse, considering the undernourishment of the major ity , - : Suspecting they had been liv ing entirely too well for slave laborers, he turned them over to military police.! A short time later Busse received congratula tions for capturing a couple of confessed SS troopers. : . PFC Homer R. Kirkpatrick of Cove Creek, N. C was just fin ishing a hurried search of a house when he heard a noise in the cellar. He surprised a trio of SS troopers busily engaged in changing their uniforms for ci vilian clothes. To prove their guilt beyond argument, Homer marched them in just as . he caught them, half military clothes and half -civilian. , Tho , Safety Volvo WORK FOB NAZI -BOSSES To th Editor: Hi - W ar now . about to winess the trial and punishment of the war criminals, those evil men who indoctrinated a whole gen eration in the glory and glam our of war, in th lust for pow er and in the cunning use of cruelty, hat and every known form; of barbarism. Having at tempted to rule-the by force, starvation and slavery and hav ing failed, they are to answer for their crimes. j The question now arises: will these men, who started the most horrible of all wars be treated as criminals - and punished as such, or will they be considered as soldiers according to the estab lished code wherein the generals live in a castle and the privates behind barbed wire? If Prussian militarism is to be stamped out or even discouraged and Europe is to be cleansed of Nazism then let us .reverse the usual methods of dealing with a conquered nation. For example. If 1,000,000 or 5,000,000 Ger mans are to be used in repair ing the destruction, they com mitted in Europe, let the mar shals and generals and admirals and commodores and high, rank ing Nazis go first and leave un til the last, th fifteen to eigh teen year old boys of the "lost generation," boys who never had a chance to know or experience Liberty, Freedom br Christianity. If the death penalty is not In voked, then 10 years at hard la bor in Russia, France or Hol lad would be a fitting end to the career of many a Nazi war lord. , This is not sadistic revenge; it is justice and it is the kind of Justice that will take aU the glamour out of war for this gen eration of Germans at least. To permit the, "officer caste of th. German army to go free so that they might! fight "another day"; would be to forget the sac rifice of our honored dead who gave "life itself -: in order, that freedom might - be restored to mankind. This Will not be the last war unless it is also the end of Ger man militarism. iC' V C H. R, PICKETT 060 Center St, Salem. GDADUnTIOII - ENGRAVING A LETTER TH OUR OWN SHOP Divided Payments - ; J- - f , :