PAGE FOUR Thm OREGON STATESMAN. Satan. Orecon, Thursday Mining. August 23. 194S refidtt "No Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Aw" From First Statesman, March 28, 1831 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY t CHART. F3 A. S PRAGUE, Editor and Publisher Member of the Associated Press 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. Cateh-as-Catch-Can Reconversion Those who fought wartime control agencies and declaimed against regimentation have prov en false prophets. For the government itself is setting a fast pace in throwing off these controls. Censorship is gone and ihe office closed. OWI has cancelled half of its work and will wash out the other half very soon. The war production board has lifted over 200 limi tation orders on goods. The war labor board clearly is in retreat. OPA is removing restric tions on many commodities. Gasoline is unra tioned, also fuel oil. The fact is that this headlong rush to go out of business may have damaging effects. It lets the door swing wide for. inflation, and signs point to the unwinding of the spiral ; of wage-price increases. While WLB says that wage increases are permitted where price in creases are not asked for, anyone with practical sense knows that prices will follow or precede wage increases. The explosive material of inflation is on hand: Money in the hands of the people; scant supplies in the hands of storekeepers. The bigger the boom, the bigger the bust. The war labor board seems to be on its last legs. In the wage dispute in the lumbering in dustry it remands the controversy to employers and unions for fresh attempt at settlement. WLB simply is bowing out of the situation which is quite acute, with a strike vote auth orized. It might as well fold its tent and go out of business and let labor and management fight things out in pre-war style. That clearly is in sight in the immediate future. The danger is that if the release of govern ment controls is effected too fast, with damag ing results, then the advocates of government regimentation will say " told you so," and devise new and tighter or more permanent halters. What we think we are escaping from we may run into, and be unable to help our selves. . Maybe we can take it, however, and emerge all the stronger. At least all who have advocated free enterprise are getting a break. The current scramble for materials, prices,. wages, etc., fol lows the old rule of every many for himself and devil take the hindmost. It was always the hindmost who raised the howl. Now we shall see .where the complaints come from, in the government's plan of catch-as-catch-can re-Conversion. it possible for them to get food at eating places. So when the impulse come to "eat outvthink twice, and don't go if you will crowd put a service man. This applies particularly on jweek ends. If ! '!'.",-'! f Manila Censorship America heard the plans for allied occupa tion of Japan first from Japanese sources. The Domei new agency in its broadcasts told of the dates and places where landings of Ameri can forces would occur. This news was con firmed on Wednesday by announcement from Manila, made by General MacArthur. Just why this news should be retailed to the American public through Tokyo is hard to figure out. No element of "military security" was involved. The conditions were told to the Jap envoys on Sunday that was why they were called to Manila. Only the indifference of the Manila command to giving the news gatherers there the facts at the same time they were delivered to the Jap envoys can account for the delay. ; There is an easy disposition on the part "of B persons in public positions to withhold informa tion from the public and to" give it out at their own sweet pleasure. General MacArthur has held a tight censorship in the Philippines, and evidently keeps it working even when the war is over. , j Memorial for Ernie Pyle . Hats off to Mrs. (Ernie Pyle who rftoved promptly to squelch grandiose plans for erect ing a memorial to her late and greatly beloved husband back in Indiana, where he was 5 born She bluntly requeste4 that the plans be aban doned "entirely and immediately." Her request, ! supported as it is by the fine sense of the people, should be sufficient to blow the ambiti ous plans of the Hobsier promoters skyihigh. What evidently was started as a proposal for a $35,000 memorial library in Dana, Ind, ex panded to contemplate a "landscaped, (lake studded park and cemetery to which gyle's body would be moved from fie Jim a." A New York public relation concern was hired to put on a money raising campaign with a goal 6f a million or two dollars. Mrs. Pyle was correct when she said "This proposal violates every thing that Ernie was." She. also stated that Ernie lies where he I would fwish to liej with the men he served arid loved. , j ,;" The whole conception seems so foreign to the character of Pyle, who himself was humble in spirit, a friend of the private footsoldier, that its promoters deserve the rebuke which Mrs. Pyle has thus given them. No doubt a large sunfcould have been raised, under forced draft, and "with the deep sympathy felt by the public for' the war's ) most famous correspond ent; but it would have been a sorry climax to the life and character of Ernie. j ; On Ie Jima, Pyle's body will long be a shrine, visited by many, remembered and respected so long as any GI's remain alive. In an elabor ate memorial in Indiana it would be principally a spot for ignorant tourists to gawk at. B; Interpreting The War . News By JAMES D. WHITE Associated Press Staff Writer SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 21.-yP)-To the Japa nese, one of the great anticlimaxes of this war must be the ignominious surrender to the Russians of the mighty Kwantung army in Manchuria, j? This special garrison force existed for years with the main purpose of fighting Russia. Its conscious ness of that purpose was so keen that its trigger- happy troops got the empire into- thousands of border incidents withf Soviet border forces 1 along the 2000 mile frontier between Man-1 tHn-ia and RiVtArio i : 0 t It got the best men and wea pons Japan had. It ran its own empire of nearly 40,000,000 people and frankly enjoyed the jobi It staged the Mukden incident! in 1931 which won Manchuria and its troops helped with the (con quest of China in 1937. j All along there' was a struggle over its exac role between Tokyo J. D. White Give Soldiers a Break Local residents should v give soldiers from Camp Adair and navy men from the naval hos pital a break at restaurants. Complaint is heard that so rhany local people who could prepare meals at j home eat out that soldiers can's get proper service at restaurants. We ought to show these guests full hospitality, and at least make Editorial Comment WINGS OF AN OSTRICH "His imagination resembled the wings of an ostrich. It enabled him to run but not b soar." Macaulay, "On John Dryden." With respect to the war in Europe things have now reached the stage of erstwhile secret agents' memoirs, which as always make lively reading. Itj is disclosed that only the fortuitous seizure of a German order, blueprinting the German plan to cut through the Calais region and seal the corri dor to Dunkirk, made that historic evacuation pos sible. There are other stirring ; disclosures. Once, because American intelligence had seized German attack plans, the Fifth, army was able to create the battle signal for the luftwaffe, and that prompt and thorough organization bombed the German position instead. And so on. The intelligence story we like best, which is not widely known, bears upon the notor ious German lack of imagination: in this case lack of imagination was just what the German intelli gence officer should have used. In the days when the historic Casablanca con ference was being planned, German agents were swarming over Spain and Africa, and inevitably one learned of the impending meeting, a piece of information which in German hands might have had disastrous consequences. In the light of results, here is what presumably happened: The field agent dutifully sent his coded report to headquarters, but somewhere In the, chain of communication oc curred the fatal play of imagination, As a conse quence, German agents in Africa dozed through what may have been their sinister opportunity, and Berlin radio jeered to the world that, to Berlin's knowledge, Roosevelt and Churchill were meeting in Washington, D. C. 1 What had happened was that someone, in de coding the original message, had not been content to accept the word Casablanca literally. It means ."white house" and the German agent so translated it -a 2000-mile error. San Francisco Chronicle. Nevo Behind fiho Novs By PAUL MAIJ-ON (Distribution by King r.atur-Syndicate reproduction la whole t br to part strictly prohibited.) , - t WASHINGTON,!' August 22 The unity Mr. Truman estab- . DUtrflmteJ V Kinr Ft tarts EnJirmU fcy wrtBfwMBt with Tfc Whirtta St Full Measure! and Hsinking, where the Kwantung commander in chief doubled as "ambassador? to the puppet state of Manchoukuo. ; .: 1 ;. While Manchuria was used as a springboard for conquests in China, Kwantung officers usually were not allowed to Ireap much of the spoils. . Until the European war, the Kwantung army's main energies were turned toward the "defense" of Manchuria, but behind that facade its , staff mapped thoroughly the strategy it -would ' follow in conquering eastern; Siberia should the chance arise. - . ' i ,) : ; 1 :j ' The Kwantung army did not take part in the first of the two most serious border incidents with Soviet Russia. It was the Korean garrison force which fought a month at Changkufeng in 1938 before Tokyo could get in tq pull back. But the Kwantung army was, waiting nearby, ready to spring. One of jits intelligence officers told me exactly what this - Kwantung! army would ; do-l-it would strike, eastward) across the Transiberian rail way and cut off (Vladivostok, f : j i The next summer, however f , the Kwantung army thought it saw its chance, and engaged in bloody fighting at Nomonhan on the border of Soviet dominated outer Mongolia. The Reds surprised the Japanese with their mechanized strength, and 18, 000 Japanese soldiers died before an imperial prince flew in from Tokyo to order a settlement The Kwantung chief of staff, LL Gen. Rensuke Isogai, was cashiered and entered oblivion until Tokyo, three years later, made him 'military governor of Hong Kong. .. . :j y :.i ,- if -Fewer border incidents were reported after" that, and the Kwantung army settled down as ; an im mense training organization: Xor imperial troops needed in China and, elsewhere. Units moved j in and out, but always the great garrison force was maintained in full strength, possibly with as high as 500,000 of the empire's biggest, toughest fighting men. . Tokyo's policy changed. The neutrality pact was signed with Russia, and Japanese eyes turned to southeast Asia and the Pacific When German at tacked Russia: in 1041, th imperial command's influence was firmly enough established in Hsin king that the Kwantung army did not Jump on isolated Siberia as many expected it to. f i How this was effected is becoming plainer; as the Russians announce the names of the Kwantung army commander who are surrendering to them. They are all Tokyo boys, their loyalty to the throne proven on the field to China or at home. a i The Russians have reported considerable fighting in their advance through Manchuria, but their progress has been so swift that it seems unlikely that the Kwantung army resisted with anything like its real potential. On the face of things, the conservative, weU-disciplined commanders which Tokyo has moved into Manchuria since 1941 have succeeded in keeping their once-bloodthirsty troops inline. . . . , f .The Russians say there Is little suicide among the Japanese although much talk about it-fas one crack army after another lays down Its arms to a foe it trained yean to conquer. . - The Literary Guidcpost By W. G. Rogers SLOW TRAIN TO YESTERDAY, fcy i Archie Rohcrtsoa (Honttaton Miff lin; S3). : Every once in a while along comes a book that's American to the core, as American as succo tash and Gettysburg and covered wagon and Yankee Doodle Dan dy. Here is another, unique, de lightful, with facts, personalities and legend about short-line rail roads. I 1 The New York Central includes 400 former short lines, the Penn sy 600. The author lists more than 200 which carried passen gers and were still operating up to two years ago, among them the Blueberry Express, Tweetsie, the Footsore & Weary, the God For got and the Ma & Pa. ) : Robertson writes of these old dinky ; roads with a fervor that suggests Thomas Wolfe's roman tic passion for the railroads, though this book is marked more by intimacy and less by grand eur, j- The life that centered around the short lines, the little towns " they served with surpassing loy alty, their ardent defenders against bus, truck and plane, the hotels which grew up at whistle stops, the drummers who patron ized them (and some of their more hilarious tales), the poets who have glorified them from Whitman to Anon, the toy rail road fans and clubs . . . all these are properly included in this fas cinating volume about a disap pearing way of life, j I The; few surviving short lines get their business front an occa sional passenger, organized farm ers who require a transportation outlet which they can pontrol, or some isolated mill or factory. Since the start of the war, with rubber and gasoline J rationed, their revenues have j increased. Some o! the lines are narrow gauge; as against the standard four feet, eight and a half inches. ; Engines run both- ways, the I caboose is a coach, the; seats may be ordinary kitchen chairs, and j the conductor still gallantly gives i a hand to ladies burdened with j lunch: boxes, umbrellas, suit ! cases and children. j 1 It was a grand world, and Rob ; ertson brings it back vividly. , --i'rf - Big Moving Day S mUiXXUl Project Underway By Helen Camp Subbing for Kenneth L. Dixon LONDONH-One of the big gest combination housecleaning-inventory-moving day projects in history is under way at sal vage depots n England as the VJS. army prepares to move it self bag and baggage from the island, i. Every item from shoe laces and instrument needles to ar mored tank transports and radar sets has to be sorted, cleaned, repaired, inspected and proc essed e i t h e r for occupation forces, return to the United States, or sale. At the . Toddington vehicle storage depot the only one in the United Kingdom base Capt. B. L. Graves ! of Dublin, Ga., is in charge of 14,500 ve hicles in a space originally planned for 5000 and is getting more at the rate of 6000 monthly. "We're already operating 500 per cent over capacity." he de clared., "Why, we've got 2,300 jeeps alone. And every vehicle has to be checked." At the Ashchurch Ordnance depot, Ma j. Charles Grosvenor, formerly of Scranton, Pa., and East Orange, N. J., is in charge of 18,450 tons of signal corps equipment divided into nine classes and 11,000 items. "Every time an air base closes up we get 5,000 more tons of equipment and the walls just bulge,"; he groaned. "If I ver get on' a boat for home they'll probably yank me off and say "wait a minute, another airfield just folded up'." . In the ordnance maintenance department of the same base,' Maj. Harold Beavon, Martins Ferry, Ohio, supervises the pro cessing of 500 bicycles daily and now has 35,000 on hand, all scheduled for occupation forces. In the ; only remaining ord nance repair unit in the United Kingdom base, Capt. Victor W. Deacon, of Dearborn,; Mich., de cides whether vehicle? should be repaired or salvaged! if they need 40 to 50 per cent new parts they are , "canibalized" and the metal scrap is sold to the British. r The engineering department handles all types . of supplies from nails and emery paper to plumbing supplies and telephone switchboards under Capt. Cary Wintz, Houston, Tex. In the tube and tire shop 350 tires are re treaded and repaired daily. . Not the least of the headaches is the disposal of thousands of tqns of excess British material unused lend-lease all marked "frozen" and untouchable- with out a directive from the ministry of supply, which says no de cision has yet been mad as to, disposal of the goods. Among the 100,000 tons of e quipmerrt at the medical supply depot at Honeybourne, Capt. T. J. Baumann, of New Orleans, La., has charge of scores of British X-ray machines which are all excess. It would be impractical to use them any place outside of England because there would be no spare; parts. "Just call; me 'essential' Bau mann," he said. "Ill probably be the last man out of here." Maj. Richard Freund, of Chi cago, who has charge of 4500 tons of excess British ordnance ma terial at Sshchurch, has his own solution: "I know what I'm going to do," he said. "I'll get all the American material sorted and processed and shipped out and then I'll lock the doors, hand the keys to. the British and run for home." : DtP SSSDOS irnnnmra GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichly ! - . !" i i ...... i : !!.; 4XT U V1 irii" . -1.1 3 mLh O 1M ill 7 : , 1 i (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) seems to have made liberal al lowance for such decline in its budget estimates. It anticipated a decrease of about $18,000,000 in sales during the biennium. Its budget; shows further' ac cumulation j is contemplated, for it puts down $7,427,173 as the estimated balance at the end of this biennium. The chances are that its ' balance will be con siderably larger than this esti mate, j What I am getting at is that the state is salting away profits in concealed pockets. True, the money will probably come in handy, and it is good business to "get while :the getting is good." However, the general rule based on long experience is to discour age hoarding of public funds. ; - Cities are complaining because of the burdens they have to carry. They have a very legit imate claim to a far larger share of liquor revenues than they are getting. Decisions on disposal of liquor revenues . Test with the legislature, j not the commission - or budget i director. The next legislature should review the sit uation and not just let funds pile up, unused. from the scene upon which It was first evi dent, and most effective in congress. - The prelimi nary peacetime haggling is evolving Into the same old bitter, uncom promising and Fai Mn destructive struggle for control, and the natural backwash of such political wars in times of crisis, elements of uncertainty and confusion are beginning to appear. It may become the new deal all over again if it runs the course upon which It is begin i t What started it is discernable. The end of the war brought all the patent remedies and 'isms Of the new deal days out of Pan dora's box, winging freely and fluttering loudly, as if they had (never been defeated or caged. Even the old-age pension groups (as announced by California's Senator Downey, the Townsend advocate) considered peace the occasion to start what is known as "a drive" for its fandangled economic ideas. A social secur ity fight is the second planned step of ' the assembling ; session (hearings next week) and be hind it is the cooped-up pro gram to kill free enterprise in medicine by socializing doctors, provide golden spoons for all mouths from the cradle to the grave, and such. But the essence of the re-developing struggle appears in ' stark simplicity in the compara tive ways in which the full em ployment bill and the Burton-Ball-Hatch bill are being han dled. The full : employment measure is a labor unions bill re quiring the government to fur nish jobs while the Burton-Ball-Hatch measure calls for a rea sonable pro-labor reorganization of the unpopular Wagner act system. The unions bill, under the leadership of new dealing chair man Wagner of the banking com mittee, is being launched with a promotional campaign, while the union reform has been hidden, with trumpets, under abuse heaped upon it by the unions, i It is true Mr. Wagner's show did not get off to a sensational start. The first day's parade of witnesses broke down with an epidemic of flat tires. The new dealers had planned to get it of! to a rousing start by having General Omar Bradley, fresh from victorious fields in France, promote the idea. He made it rather plain he did not know much about the bill, as he had been at his veterans post only a short time. Advocates from Veterans organizations talked most of promoting free enter prise and employment (rather than unemployment), although one endorsed the measure. f Ohio's Senator Burton says his thus-stymied biHto inject logic i fcto e Wagner act has met a good response from the rank and file of people, even in the unions, where many workers want la- - bor to assume its responsibilities. But. he and other moderates have secured no place for them selves on the congressional a genda, although they think some thing more punitive to the un ions than they want an anti Closed shop bill or drastic labor - curtailment measure will come unless a moderate reform course is followed. The tendencies in these events t. "We gave It the final test. Boss, and It's a success! By Christmas weH have a 'Tiny-Tot-Atom-Smasher' in every toy shop la the eeuntrjrP Evidently the liquor commis sion has had to cut some of its prices to move some of its mer chandise. ' JThat seems the only way to explain the showing that while there was an increase in ales of. $6,045,700 last year, $5, 610,605 was absorbed in cost of goods sold. The commission must have sold a lot of stuff at less than its regular mark-up of 40 per cent. ' How much of this stuff may still be on hand is not .reported. It does seem that the commission should move to de crease its heavy inventories, es pecially in view of the expected resumption of normal distillery operation. - - - - Leag Isaak Walton ue Asks For Park Strip The Salem Isaak Walton league, represented by Chris J. Kowitz, petitioned the county court Wed nesday to set aside, a narrow strip of, county owned land alonsr the North Santiam river above Gates for a public park and recreational area. .-;".. '..', , The land is about a mile and a half long, and is situated between the highway and the. river! The league's application states that the time will soon come when citizens ins the area of Salem will not be able to get to the river because of trespass signs unless the proper ty is reserved for toe benefit of the public The petition also ask ed that in event the county re fused the request, and decides to sell the area in question, that the club be given, first chance at the purchase, i. . v ! A memorial was also presented which asked that when the county in the future sells any lands a butting on a stream or lake stock ed with fish and where the lands are adaptable to park or recrea tion purposes that an easement or right of way for use of the pub lic be reserved, f have frightened many congress men. One senator, whose name I withhold, has been led to be lieve socialism is thus coming up rampant to seize this govern ment also, or work some kind of revolution' in it, fresh from its war victory, I do not think his is a common viewpoint yet in congress but all are aroused by the efforts of class groups to wresi economic iwiuwi uw mvn own hands and destroy the pat tern which brought victory and few congressmen profess to see the outcome. ' One thing is plainly visible Mr. Truman has a Job on his hands, lest be lose the reins of control to pressure groups as Mr. Roosevelt did. He is getting to the time when he must fight to defend the unity, he first a-chieved. IT r ':!. '' 1 ; Heed tor mas Club Theme of Rotary Speech ' .i If the men of World war I had had a Dads club to back them up when they returned they would not have become the forgotten men of their generation.' This was" the opinion - expressed by Arch Stafford of Omaha, representative of the American Dads club at the Rotary luncheon Wednesday noon. Plans and aims of the organiz ation were outlined by the Omaha member of the 'Rotary who has been visiting all parts of the Unit ed States in the interests of the organization. While many veterans organiza tions are working for; the welfare of the returning service man, many fathers of .these men, are not eligible for membership, he said, in stating the clubs aims. He protested the plan of tax supported state educational insti tutions that plan to charge serv ice men non resident tuition fees. W. H. Baillie, vice-president. presided at the meeting in the ab sence of R. L Elfstronv who is in the hospital. Dr. Egbert Oli ver, coordinator of the local can neries, spoke briefly on the value of the cannery business and urged Rotary members -to encourage members of their staffs to help pn night shift work in coming peak months. - Guard Reveals 7 Promotions, Assignments Seven promotions, appointments and assignments in the Oregon state guard were announced by acting Adjutant General Ray F. Olson here Wednesday. They were: First Lt William J. Pendergrast, Jr., promoted to captain. Inf., and assigned to troop A, cavalry, with station in Portland. Charles E. Fitch appointed ma jor, inf., and assigned to head quarters with station in Portland. Lt.! Col. Frederick H. Drake pro moted to colonel and assigned to state staff as, judge advocate gen eral, with station in Portland. N.. R. Gilbert, president Rim Rock riders. Bend, appointed a member of the armory board of control with headquarters at Bend. Whiting F. Martin appointed 2nd It inf., and assigned to Co. G, 2nd battalion, Portland. Captain Wallace J. Ehlert, Co. ' --t iUMVi W HIQ i reserve list upon his own request LOAN KATES ANNOUNCED 1 CORVALLIS, Aug. 22.-(JP)-Lban rates on the 1945 crop of Oregon oats will average 48 cents a I bushel, AAA announced today. Lane county's rate is 48. Marion's 1 Match her beauty : with a dicanond - I : from EVEIIS Impressive S-diamond I engagement rings. ' . . . v- Extended Payments S39 Court Street i