PAGE FOUR-SECTXOIl I Th OESGOIt STATESMAN. Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning. July I. 1945 'No Favor Sitays Us; No Fear Shall Awt From Firsf Statesman, March 23, 1831 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHINQ COMPANY ! i CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, ..Editor and Publisher Membelof th Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all ; news dispatches credited to i or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. be -a WnrH the Few Unknown Dead f One major reason why there will ninSmtim nnivtKAr r$ itnlrriAurn tftoasi in War II is the identification division of FBI in Washington. - The division this year completes 21 years of service, during fwhich time the file of .fingerprints has grown to 07,200,000 cards. All these are drawn into 4ise to aid In service and civilian identification. There have been many , arguments pro and con regarding the federal Bureau of Inv$tiga tion and its methods. That it serves svital purpose is unquestioned. That it might! have served even more! had it been allowed free rein to combat the "underground" in Hawaii with wire tapping : and other means 'prior to Tearl Harbor also is claimed. j .Its fingerprint division Is the largest of its kind in the world Through it, nearly (15,000 fugitives are located each year, and I many amnesia victims are identified. Past criminal records of persons seeking responsible jobs also are" discovered through its use. Working in the national field and in coopera tion with local enforcement agencies the FBI fills an indispenable place in the police system ; or the country. Life Isn't Cheap j There is cheer, hope, just cause for pride, in the skill and courage which found their fruition in the saving of survivors in the jungles So great an effort in may seem anomalous, in some ways, to these days when thousands the three pline-crash of New Guinea. , V the saving of so few are being killed or Final Drive in Minlitv Seventh . 1 C7 ft Today we swing into July and the closing days of the Mighty Seventh War Loan.While the county has subscribed its total of corpora tiorr and" Individual bonds it still lags by half a . million dollars on its E bond quota. The war finance committee is exerting every effort maimed. But in this spirit of mercy lies the secret of strength. The winning of the rar, with I all its cost, could not be -worth while if in winning we lost sight of the value of human lives. It's a long way, in thought as well ? as distance,' from the lime-eaten, bodies.' of. Nazi murder camps to the daring rescue in New Guinea.. Death in inevitable in war. Life at times seems cheap.1 But is should not' be thrown away. And we- see many, many signs of the continuing recognition j of that fact on the part of the nation for jwhich our men fight. It is no secret that oui ships have dared to halt and help, in the most submarine-infested waters of the Pacific, when "man overboard" is sounded. Destroyers follow aircraft carriers Goocl-Bye to Ul That just so they can pick up survivor of the in- ' ; evitable crashes incident to the takeoffs and landings of the flat-top crews. 1 1 f . It is that way because Americans would have it no other way. " I ' i is, . Men must die for their country; they also must be kept alive for it. I i' v Tho Literary Guidcpost By W. G. Sogers LEFT TUN. CANADA." y tt. J. ' CtMwiD DaeU, Slaaa at Fearca: S.7S); "CANADA: NSW WORLD POWK," ky LnIh W. rat (Me- Brw; S3). Nevo Behind the News : . i . ," ' .: By PAUL MALLON , 'A I V ' . y . ' (Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction in whole I or in part strictly prohibited.) Bound in blue, with red i and Our evening contemporary scolds over the use of an army transport plane for a jpyride to sell the remaining block of bonds ly the for army personnel stationed in New' Guinea, white Jackets stamped with, the ef)U 01 inr Dig veicuraiiuu uii rfiujr una iiibi winvir iusi iuc itves wum uw , t'loui is the day Americans traditionally make the . crashed against a mountain. Perhaps if the eagle scream. This year they have a chance 'critic had spent month in the fetid heat of to make the eagle on their dollars scream as. New Guinea he would. be less critical of those the'y hand them over in exchange ,for E bonds, who sought some reliei from the heai and There is no hesitancy in urging the purchase routines of army life byja flight over the high of E bonds because bank reports show! that and cool mountains of that great island. That savings accounts are bilging with money learn ing only about one per cent. Banks urge cus tomers to convert substantial portions of, their savings into E bonds. . ' I Don't wait for a solicitor; don't wait to be . bribed with side attractions. Step up tomorrow or Tuesday and invest as heavily as your ifunds permit in E bonds of the USA. 1 Unique display of frankness: The Pennsyl vania railroad's dining car menu reads: tMeat entree, if available; poultry entree, if avail able.'-' the flight ended in tragedy does not ; give ground to condemn it i warranted recreation, assuming that the trip : had the necessary of ficial sanction. The wreck was a tragedy; the rescue otthe three survivors a thrilling episode of the war. The experience should teach cau tion, but we hope it does not condemn those stationed in places with abominable climate from some taste of variation and wholesome change. . . ; '-! t . 1 j Three hundred and fifty-eight new laws now J are effective in Oregon, we're told. If you can name just the eight, you're at the head of the - i class. !. - . I ' The Aussies are doing a good job of cleaning up the J aps on Borneo. Just - give them 1 time and some equipment and Asiatic islands of the Nips. they will rid the No one has questioned the intrinsic ability of the personnel in charge of Salem's outdoor swimming pools, but it j appears that a ; more strict surveillance is mandatory if serious in jury is to be averted. Too many reports pf roughness, discourtesy and minor j injuries . al . ready have been received. Unless older children can be kept somewhat in line, it may be es sential to set special hours by ages. The danger of tragedy should be cut to a minimum. Interpreting . . I. : S I ' Plenty of news pictures of returning generals lrl atfln a 4KSr urivoa Tnn Yin A ikaw zion't iVinua privacy in these intimate greetings. Maybe the TflA to live in the background for a long time. , By KIRKE Li SIMPSON AMoclated rrm War Analyst Nevo Poultry breeders are ' going to . compete in developing a strain of broad -breasted chickens. If successful they then might try putting pore meat on a White Leghorn drumstick. I Editorial Comment 1C90 YEAKS OF IT A Belgrade dispatch -reports Increasing tension between Yugoslavia and Greece over Macedonia. - That bit of territory, which could be comfortably ' lost in California; has been the cause of plenty ot tension. Nothing the modem propaganda! mills : can pour forth has anything, in heat or eloquence n the Philippics Demosthenes delivered nearly 1200 years ago in Athens. J ! Philip of Macedon was finding his opportunity 1 tn the clash between the Persian and Greek phi ' loaophies of Oriental empire' and the city tate. i Phillip's first move was absorption of the Greek ; city-states, by '. ceoquest and propaganda. Accord ing to the warnings of Demosthenes, Philipl em I ployed the tactic of infiltratien. We recogniiej that 4 now as Hitler ten. Maybe that is where Hitler got . the idea. " We know-Philip didn't get it "from . Hitter.-' ' j ' .. ' . Philip's son Alexander on the glory road to u eighs .because he had ne more worlds to conquer invented, the encircling . attack on the enemy's First American fleet penetration of the sea of Okhotsk, Japan's far northeastern water frontier, has stirred apprehension in Tokyo that the In vasion of the home Islands when it comes will be from the north as well as! the south. Other things being equal, that is sound strategy as a diversionary measure if nothing else, fit! also is true that prevailing fogs in north Pacifie ' latitudes would provide : good cover for an am- f phibious approach to desirable sites in the Kurile for advance air bases in (the north to match Oki-j nawa's busy air strips in pie southwest. f j For the present, however, operations in the Oksotsk sea look more like - the completion of another segment of the blockade ring being tightly woven around the Japanese home islands by air and sea than an Invasion! preliminary, it matches up with American search plane forays into the sea of Japan itself whittling at-enemy shop com munications with the Korean peninsula., t Actually none of the .seas- that wash Japanese shores north, south, east or west is now forbidden ground to American navaj or air foreea. Even the Yellow sea that lies between Korea and" the Chinese mainland .north of the east China at . is subject to American ; penetration at will but it is of relatively small value. to Japan in main taining contact between the home Islands and armies in northern' China. There is little doubt symbolic maple leaf, these; two volumes look as much alike as Ike and Mike, but they're about as different Inside as black and - .white.- - j i ' ' H . Mrs. Peat, wearing rosercplor ed jspectacles, traveled through Canada and she's all for it Though she writes carelessly, she Is chatty land Informative : and above all enthusiastic. She sees .trouble spots, for instance, in an un wieldly form of federation, in religion, in political matters and in labor questions, but she's con fident they'll be solved. Canada, she, declares happily, "is at a be ginning f , -1 -. ; Coldwel writes without bene fit of spectacles. "It is impossible r not, to view with grave misgiv ing the future of Canada"!, as serts this leader of our northern . neighbor's Cooperative Common-: wealth "Federation, the political party which has been growing rapidly despite severe attacks . from left and right. j ! !i Coldwell, one of Canada's rep sentatives at San Francisco, de scribes the beginning of CCF in j the early years of ;the depres sion, (Lscusses the conditions' out of which it grew and defines its program. It's a kind of New Deal plus; it is precisely what It claims to be, both democratic and so cialist; it aims frankly to replace; the capitalist system. ! li Both writers note Canada's ex-' traordinary war contribution; both appreciate the fact that the U. S. could help but might ham per; Canada's development, i ' raaJ iltallee TKACTICAL MABKSM ANSHIPl Tii TCCHMiqea or noD rnu WO," r Cae. -f . kfl. ruiana, ir, Uv S. Marts cr Btaerve, satre eacttoe ay MaJ. Geo. XmUaa C Snuth, V. S. Marine Cerpt (Mar. , fw;' fSJS). j. . . :. A manual about shoulder weapons, for sportsmen and sol- , ' ... I ..- ;! "CINCSONA TS AVA: Til 8TOBT or QUININE- ay Naranut Tayler .Caretakers; $tM). - v , i This Is the story of malaria. . . I "no disease has killed so many L says the author . .f. and anti malarial quinine; illustrated with drawings, and photographs, j DES MAmES-Vey-VrvL Allen: Csaf ton of the University of Kansas described his home state at an .-ad club aaeeting today. He I aeld: I give you Kansas,-The .. .. . v . .. .. - - ; . ' -state where there are more-riv-' where you can look farther and ersfnd less water,; moreHUy tee. less i than any .place in the voting and leas dry living . . . world except Texas." ' i S WASHINGTON, June SO. Two senators were talking over the San! Francisco peace j form ula., j " V . . f ! One wondered what steps the i d m 1 n i i- tration would take to sell it to the people, observing that if Mr. Roose- . velt were alive there would no doubt be a great pressure p r opaganda drivel organ ized to herald t h e : document r as the greatest advancement, of man since the ten command--mens -J -and perhaps even greater, j . f j The second senator correctly concluded that Messrs. Truman and Stettmiust are modestly put- -ting forward' their program, laying no great claims for it, and allowing fl to speak for it-, selL' ! ' i ' Indeed, the inner congression al sentiment seems generally- to run to the theory that i while this formula certainly does not guaranteed either peace or se curity, no alternative improve ment is possible now. Thus, the ' majority opinion concludes the document might as well be rat- . ified to seevwhat Mr. Stettinius and the other world organiza tion leaders can work out of it. The San Francisco conference did not; materially, alter the Dumbarton Oaks scheme. ' Its main work was the building up of the economic and social' coun cil and adoption of the trustee- -ship system. Basically the peace- keeping i project was left with out change,, to wit , The security council.) backed by the chiefs ot staff of the five big United Nations, will not have an international police force. , To stop , an" aggressor, it will -order nations, te take mil ' Itary measunas.. . i " : . The council itself may take economic stepsjto isolate an of- fender, but' the big flve nations specifically retain the , right to ' veto any action rand an objec tion by any one of them can break down the whole ; peace foraaula. . . v' This veto tight was. retained 7 at San Francisco over the pro test rof small' nations, because the big; three (Russia, fBrHain and the United States) have the only formidable sea, air and land forces and they did not want the other eight smaller na tions on the council ordering their armies around. The formula, then, is purely tentative, and how much it will amount to remains for future events to determine. , Surely, it should stop little wars, but it does not" even pretend anything more than hope for avoiding big ones. Indeed,1 it recognizes realistic ally the facts of international life and is far away from the fancy projects advanced earlier in the war by some officials of this goyernment to promote "one world," a-quart-ol-milk-a-day, etc. . j The idealism of the document is centered largely, In the econ omic and social council, but even there, restraint is noticeable. The. charter gives 'this council the obligation - of promoting "human rights and fundamen tal freedoms for, and without distinction as to race, sex, lan guage or religion.' I It does not mention freedom of: press, which certainly is a fundamental freedom; Of what good is - freedom of language without freedom to use it? .It seems a full pledge for our con stitutional liberties was avoided, Eric W. Allen Memorial Fund Set Up, ONPA EUGENE, June .30-WVA. me- . :.i hMiorini we xaie mm Eric W. Allen, founder andj dean 6f the University of Oregon journalism school, was set up by the Oregon i Newspaper - Publish ers association j today at closing of the 58th i annual convention. Research in newspaper prac tices, scholarships, and purchase of equipment for the School of Journalism will be financed through an; endowment fund to be known as tfte'Eric W. Allen memorial. 1 V'-- t A board which will accept voluntary contributions to the fund will i include - the ONPA president, the university's presi dent, Oregon press conference s president, dean pf the journalism school, editor of the tMtMAiu, student newspaper, and one trustee each from the OPC and ONPA. ONPA j trustee will be William M. Tugman of the Eu gene Register-Guard. I Tom Purcell,! editor of the Gresham Outlook, "was elected ONPA president succeeding E. Palmer Hovt publisher of the Oregonian. Other officers: Charles A. Sprague, Salem Statesman, vice-president; E. G. Crawford, Heppner Gazette-Times, treasure er; Carl C. ' Webb, Eugene,- re elected secretary-manager. Di rectors: Merle Chessman, Astoria; Walter W. R. May, Oregon City; Giles French, Moro; R. IIL Hay den1 Lebanon; ! Frank Jenkins, Klamath Falls, and Frank "Schiro, La Grande. . Hoyt and George Turnbull, act ingdean of the university's jour nalism school, were named ex of ficio directors. . I ! Admiral H. M. Miller, head of navy public relations, told dele gates last night Oregon publish ers can expect a not-tqo-far-diS' tant day when jail news of Pa cific theatre - operations will , be released for publication. Although Douglas Warns Young Democrats Of Depressions . PORTLAND. Ore- June tHJP America's foreign policy of dis dain for conquest and belief in freedom for the rest of the world offers the greatest hope for peace i in future years, Justice William O. Douglas said here today. . The U.S. supreme court justice told the annual convention of the Young Democrats of Oregon that "our oceans are no longer bar riers against a possible enemy. He warned America's only pro tection is the wisdom and.imagi- it nation with which we meet the "inevitable problems that : will plague us." ..---... -.v. - t V--' ."We cannot be strong abroad if our "economy is weakened ; by depression and unemployment, he said. "Equally, , we cannot be strong abroad! if : our ideals of justice ' and understanding are absent ' from ojjr national life." New Zealand Pays . Back "Lend-Leasc" ; WASHINGTON, Junt 80-()-: The United SUtes has provided $204,693,000 to New Zealand in lend-lease aid and that country has reciprocated with about the same amount of help to American troops.-!. -., 1 '-j Stockman Vote To Discontinue OPA WASHINGTON, June 3H&) The roll call vote by ' which the house passed legislation extending fprice control for another year in- - eluded: ; for. Angel, Ellsworth, Mott; against, Stockman. a. blanket of absolute secrecy was required early in the war, the al- . lies are now so strong that the Japanese could do little even though they knew about a plan of attack, he rjt&vt4Ui & v -----1 ' IV By Robert N. Stardevant (Substituting j for Kenneth L. .. Dixon)e ,'f j - BODOE, NorwayrA-ln this ; I community 60 miles north pf the arctic circle, a! handful of Nor- wegian members of the British ' : liberation a r in y, assisted by home guardsmen and police, are ; disanning the j entire- 14th luft- waffe division of 12,000 men. ; ? ' Some 60,000 rifles, pistols, ma l chineguns and Ismail arms of all descriptions lie in a Norwegian j weapon depot at Fau-ske, 20 1 miles east of Bodoe on a mag I nificent salt water fjord. : ' ; German camps speckle this ' rugged countryside. .From this " area the Germans based their offensive against the allied con- possibly for fear of embarrass- ; voys bound around the north rear which, wiw modern attachments, Hitler used .that American submarines prowl in waters and GlillH AND BEAR IT pihoi wti rooguivt Trail. "I The seat of the world-empire Alexander 'created, Macedonia gradually decayed into a . provinee - as ft passed through the rise and fall of Greek 'and Roman 'imperial power; then the Byzantine land Ottoman eras and now. modern Greet by World War I title to Macedonia except that part designated as South Serbia. Whatever . its title, Macedonia still, has a status for tensions. It Us a sort of Sudetenland for either Greece or Yugo slavia, with the Bulgarians wistfufly eying ft as gome time theirs. San Francisco Chronicle. HOME FROM WARS ON .DISEASE The Klamath Falls marine barracks, in contribut ing mightily to the defeat of malaria and "miimu" j bugs among the veterans of the Pacific fighting, has steadily shed its personnel to the point where there are now approximately 1500 officers! and " men on the post ' j The great success -of the program is shown by the fact that total personnel stationed here since activation is 4851. , ' I - Most of these men came here with what were widely supposed to be incurable tropical diseases. ; Virtually all who have gone out have returned to full duty status. ' .. . . In the midst of a bitter war, where every I: man ; eounts and where the marine corps is playipg met vital part in the fighting, this is a significant -achievement for the Klamath installation anc!. all... woo nare naa a part ta its program.' or that any sign of important sea traffic between Korea and Chine would j bring American Manes down upon .it. i J ; Far to the south isolation of the great oil rich island of Borneo is in progress. Official con firmation from General MacArthur of the pres ence of aa American fleet ' in Makassar strait confirms similar Japanese reports of the last week or two. Borneo is being cut off from by-passed Japanese garrisons in other Dutch island as well as mopped up in the north by Australian elements of MacArthur's armies, ) I British sources estimate the total enemy strength on Borneo at 30,000 men or less. It is spread "too thin" in so vast a space to offer effective" resistance in the" opinion of General Sewell, of ficial British war commentator. Since Australian troops took over from American forces in Me lanesia, he said, they have killed some 10,000 Japanese. : - : j ' . General ' Sewell also notes, hwever, that in recent Derations between Burma and Singapore British East Indies fleet elements have raided air fields and rolling stock on Sumatra and stabbed I at Japanese shipping deep in - Malacca strait be tween ; Sumatra and ; the Malay peninsula "un challenged by the Japanese." Enemy failure react against -these incursions "is an admission of weakness he said, adding: "It amounts of virtual surrender of the western sea -approaches to Singapore.' j Oviously 4ighteniag allied net is 'bein wqvr, 1 , It has won deserved recognition throughout the about the Malay peninsula as about Japan's home untry. Medical authorities, military ieaders,;iedur islands in the north. Meanwhile Br country. cational leaders, and public officials bave landed the outstanding training and medical program headed by Colonel George O. Van Qrden ofj the marines end Captain Lowell T. Coggeshail of the navy. ITalccIui Epley. in Klamath ' Falls Herald 1 .fV, British redeploy ment in the - Bay of Bengal : theater of action proceeds with every indication that the end of the wet monsoon season there will see the trap finally closed on Tokyo abandoned Japanese garri sons in Malaya and the great Dutch islands to me soum. m , to , : LS-" 'f " h' J A;S f ' ' ing contrasts;, with the Russian system of ' political use of its press under dictatorship. The navy seems to have caus ed . Mr. Stettinius to moderate his trusteeship notions to some vague extent not clear in the text. It; appears a special cate gory for bases in "strategic areas' has been created, -but whether he will get ownership of the Jap islands for ourselves is not plainly settled. There are many other apparent defects in the scheme which may lead to fyture troubles ! A" possibility of conflict be tween the general assembly of all the nations and. the security I council is apparent, although the council will dominate - and can force any important action. Most of the voting is to be done by two-thirds, which raises the prospect that action desired by the majority conceivably could fait and no decision may be reached in some cases. Certain ly action is likely to be .limited to .what everyone wants. This Is not a particularly new world envisioned by the . char ter. It Is merely a continuance' of the - war world .' cooperation w i " Policy -of the United Nations Into By Ijicllty Ptc providing them with J .a very loose working arrange ment.' . The really Important : influ ence for peace or war will be wielded by the big three in the development of their future for eign policies. Inside or outside this organization. - cape to Murmansk. The huge airfield at Bodoe, with superb runways of timber, served, as ' headquarters. j I . Today this -airfield Is being -used by American transport ; planes which- daily ferry medi cal supplies -and other needed materials from Sweden! to suc- cor an estimated 80,000 Russian : prisoners of war who were used by the nazis as slave laborers (Continued : From Page Practical Rclision by Rev. foha L Knight. trm Counaelor ee Bcllrlnus Ufa. WMlarmetfe mHrrrnitv : One night last week I waa set ting in some new plants in my small garden. The following morning when I looked over the dozen or so plants, I found that , two or three of them were bent and wilted and should be prop- . - ped up by- a small stake. With : the help of these "crutches', I now find that the flowers are standing as strongly" as any of the others in the garden. If they . had not had the support of those putting up hay by hand meth i ods must be excessive. Dairy men cannot Justify operating cost based on antiquated sneth- ods, and milk prices should not bav fixed on- a . basis of extra ; costs due to such methods. ; This feed cost is a limiting factor in the.expansicn of dairy production in western Oregon. Our summers are long and gen 1 erally dry after the last of June. 'Pastures dry up and dry-feed must be used.;. Hence the ne cessity of low cost hay, and the ; great value of irrigation to keep jup green pasture. (Grazing is still the cheapest means of pro ducing meat and milk). There is more to the hay prob ' lem than machinery for har- vestingV however. The state ol ' lege has done some experiment? Jing wilth artificial drying. This does away with the risk of showers when the hay is down. .It alsaj offers the possibility of 'controls which will improve the quality of the Cured hay. - Feed ers know there is a big differ ence in feed value of hay de ; pending on when it was cut and show well , it was cured, and whether it got' rained on after "being cut The experiments made , so far are . not very satisfac tory from a cost standpoint, but ' they have not been abandoned by any means. : "T Y " j - Looking ahead to postwar ag riculture I believe farmers' will have to sharpen their wits and small stakes, ho we verv they Would have been ties ton info the sand and would have ' disap- itheir pencils in order "to bring r,T "'dawn production costs. Use ot "And with the -shortage easing, shall we continue te bock' the tig name branv er ge-bacCte rtl!i r''-Wy r'-xV - pea red. life is somewhat like that Circumstances sometimes bend peoples: spirits and wilt their aspirations, but if through us a helpful-word of encouragement or act of assistance is offered we, find tvat ti rm people power machinery to substitute for so much hand labor in hay ing presents plainly visible op portunity for cost-cutting. can then go on to effective and triurrrrit livfrj.- m northern Norway. The huge labor force was a measure of the' ambitious nazl scheme" to extend Norway's sin- gle west coast railway from its) present terminus at Mo to Narvik- and eventually all the way to Kirkenes on the Barents sea. The primary purpose was mil itary, but such an extension also would have Increased the Ger mans ability to loot the rich sulphur deposits, iron ore and coal fields in northern Norway. Norwegian ' authorities said that thousands of Russian slave laborers died of starvation and other privations as -a result of the brutal nazi treatment Mass Whom were shot after digging their own graves, are liberally sprinkled throughout the coun tryside, (-. j Norwegian and Russian auth orities, assisted by tho Swedish Red Cross under Count Folk Bernadotte, are,' ministering to the sick In numerous small hospitals.- . A Swedish doctor said that 40 per cent of the Russians are suf fering from tuberculosis and re- i ported that he had encountered many hopeless cases. Others were-recovering from malnu trition and beri beri. , Meanwhile the transfer of Russians homeward by way of Sweden was reported to be pro gressing rapidly.' One shipload of L500 singing, happy former prisoners sailed from Fauske for Narvik June 28 aboard a Ger man vessel with m Germa n crew. They will travel by train from Narvik r through Sweden and . Finland to Russia, tf . . Norwegian civilians- are. very friendly with the released pris oners and attend Russian camp ' shows with: greet delight J , Just Arrived STEVEIIS LOVELY NEW LapoIPins i n. Sterling Silver, Yellow er Coral Geld AO Celere , ' 1 m. SBa I tit Cenrt Street