pagz roua T1i OZTOOrr CTATEaiAN. Ccdera. Oregon, Sunday Morning. fpWniber 1 1813 ' i wt m . wm e e . j i "No Favor Sway Us: No Fear Shall ; a ' From first Statesman, March 28, 1891 TOE STATESMAN PUBLISHING C03IPANY CHARLES A. S PRAGUE, Editor and Publisher 4 v Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the tue for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited hi this newspaper. Timing the Surrender News Advance news about the Japanese surrender ceremonies said President Truman would speak briefly hour not known. ' This prompts the thought that President Roosevelt would have arranged it differently. With his keen sense of timing he would have, 'had the time definite. And what is more he would not have staged an . event of such ' transcendent - importance on the eve of a double holiday! As it is, the surrender story will fall pretty much on fallow ground. When folk return Mon day night the show will be over, the papers old. The effect will be missed by a vast number of citizens who on some other day would have .followed the surrender1 news through several columns.- The typhoon and the Japs delay forc ing postponement of the surrender have worked to blank it out for millions of Americans. The story will be reported all right. Somehow or other the reporters go to Japan, after the early negative from MacArthur's Manila head quarters. -For one thing. Admiral Halsey let the navy correspondent go on the first planes. The army correspondents were not long behind. Now by count of bylines there must -be one reporter to every second lieutenant in Japan. Editors have to chop stories to get a fair repre sentation of the stuff that is offered. - It's great news, too: stories of the occupation, descriptions of the Jap cities and people, inter views with rescued prisoners, sample quotes from English-speaking Japs. Too bad the stories come when newspapers still are under restric tion on newsprint consumption. j . Spite ojf MacArthur's bad timing, the situation Is not without its compensation. News editors on a Labor day holiday usually have to milk the wire" dry to get enough real news to fill a front page. This time they have no trouble just turn on the faucet from Tokyo and let it run! Politeness No Screen ; I There 'are numerous- heart-warming .stories now as men and women j&nfined for 'years in Japanese prison! camps emerge from their long: ' night to communwate With relatives. Some like : Major Boyington, air ice, hud been given up for dead. Great is the rejoicing as "relatives learn -that their long vigil and constancy in hope are rewarded.' . :' f;. ' j ;' ' --'- I ' J ,!"? '' Unfortunately, the news is not all good. An American doctor who was 'captured on Guam , estimates that '23,000 of jhm 30,000 American troops in the far east at the outbreak of the war '. have died, most of them J victims of Japanese brutality and neglect, the; estimate seems very high, and we should await official word before -accepting it. But the' stories that are released ' reveal the sadism of the Japs, their .base cruelty in treatment of prisoners pf war. This; fact we must not forget even;aa w are made happy with each report of survival. The politeness now ' being shown by the Japs to our occupying forces cannot screen the memory of this savagery. 31 ass . The Questions Arise Startling new evidence that simple, unadul terated day-dreaming from bottonrTto top was responsible for the tragedy of Pearl Harbor is contained in the statement of Commissary Stew ard Derreil Dirks. At Spokane, Dirks said his transport "passed . through the Jap battle fleet between Guam and Wake'' in November of. 1941 the month before the war begun- There is no word as to whether such information was- relayed to Washington, Dut it seems .certain the . transport would not have kept! the event a. secret. Both Guam and Wake Were . United States possessions. - The .im minence of portentous events was -well known leading either to war or renewed: peace. Failure to take full cognizance of the presence of the Japanese fleet, if Dirk's story is borne out, was one of the major .causes of the help lessness of Oahu in the Japanese' stunning at tack. It seems to be becoming more and , more evident (as pointed out by Columnist Paul Mallon on this page and former Correspondent Wendell Webb on page 1) that any courtmartial of Admiral Kimmel or General Short might throw these men in much the same light as the unwarned and, ill-equipped garrisons ofl j the mid-Pacific bases which fell in the early days of the war ' . , Assuredly, Admiral Kimmel had no. orders to get'his battleships out of the trap of PeaA Har bor and yet the Japanese fleet days before was known to be.between two American islands and within striking distance of Hawaii. There are many factors still to be' explained, about Pearl Harbor, but they point more and more away from the big base itself. Free Enterprise The anti-trust division of the department justice has moved in on suppliers of metal cul- verts in the northwest, securing indictments charging them with price-fixing and conspiracy to monopolize. Several of the companies axe subsidiaries of American Rolling Mill company of Ohio, which is a principal supplier of Tnetal for the culverts. The complaints accuse, the parties with dividing up sales, ganging together on bids and restricting the amount to be fabri cated to prospective capacity of market to ab sorb the output at the agreed price. I The principal market was Hvith government bodies from the state down, to counties and cit ies; so if the rice has been rigged the public treasury is the one which has suffered. ! Free competitive enterprise which private business has been clamoring for often gets stabbed in the back by its loudest supporters. But maybe the' freedom they have in mind is to gang up on the public. ! L An Old Nary Custom of Tho Literary Guidopoot Br W. O. KOGUS AMXXICAS FLACI Df TM W0U by N.taaaJet Perfer (Tikis: .?) we Nevd- Behind tho New By PAUL MALLON ' (Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction In whole or in part strictly prohibited.) t. W A . ' I Si: ' iuwn Airporu i l, .. : - :-: Towns over in Polk county have been looking into the matter of local airports. T Dallas folk concluded after studies were made not to go in with Independence and Monmouth for a jo'mt airport. Instead," Dallas would have its own; and the other two communities a joint airport. t. j . 1 Municipal airports are largely proposition of trying to keep up with the Joneses. They are an expensive luxury, serving very few; people and producing no income of consequence. The smart towns will be those that consider care fully whether the outlay tc gratify local pride comes within their-, means, j Most of them can get along with a wide ; field for local air en thusiasts. ' ! United Airlines is 'going to spend a half million dollars to "modernize" their offices. Let's see, just how Old Is the oldest UAL ticket office?:' : i r: - ! . - l Interpret ing i The War Neivo By JAMES D. WHITE Associated ' Press SUtf Writer 'j -4 I It's too bad, this unhappiness of former Pre mier Tojo. The mayor of Yokosuka says he is "worried," and a Domei news agency chief says "we don't care much for him any more." We can believe the first statement,' doubt the sin cerity of the last, and adi the tope that the unhappiness turns into nothing trivial." .' -V.. -I -r - ; -1 ' , A.Japanese spokesman says that his country is ready to pay the price of defeat. Now please don't some one propose lend-leasing this debt away. ' J t ,-. -. Editorial Comment SCIENCE AND NATURE Some of the distinguished reseach chemists, physi cist and biologists who have written for us on the -way great discoveries aire made still harp on nature and seem to think of science In outmoded terms. Like' Clerk Maxwell, they maintain that it is the function of science to discover the order of nature.. Clerk Maxwell's Victorian contemporary, Thomas Huxley, defined science as "organized common sense," which is tenable only if we bear in mind that what was common sense, even fifty years ago . in physics is not common sense today. The men who 1 have given us the new conception of the universe and the atom say nothing about nature.1 According to Niels Bohr "the task of science is both to extend . the range of our experience and to reduce it to or der.r Einstein uses much the same language when ha says that 'the object of all science, whether natural science or psychology, is to coordinate our experiences and to bring-them into logical order. To Jeans the aim of physical science is the discovery of "the pattern of events which controls the phe nomena we observe," even though "we can never know what this pattern means or how it originates." The unanimity of these opinions is striking. Nature is thrown out because it is unknowable. ' , Yet others persist in thinking that It is their task to fit the world, to their perceptions and not their perceptions to the world. Philosophers were trying to tell the scientists all this centuries ago." Now that the great scientists of our time have drilled down to the rock-bottom of the universe, they reach the same conclusion. Perhaps' Eddtngton has expressed that conclusion as tersely as anyone: "Science aims at constructing a'world that, shall be symbolic- of the world of commonplace experience." New ; York Times. , i .. ' : .;;! SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 1 --Allied colonial chickens are coming home to roost after spending years in the nest of the international thief, Japan. ! Some are emerging! from Japan's ''co-prosperity sphere of greater east! Asia" with little more than their pinfeathers left 'None will forget the experi ences of the past years! m a Japanese coop, f - i But none is forgetting, either, that it is re-entering its former coop. i I : j In recognition of this, various allied colonial powers have promised to enlarge the coops in the future put in biggerdoors and windows, and to let the chickens move around more freely.- :.. ; " -1 ' We're back right where began 1 17 years ago, says Pef- - fer In; this bopk en important addition to the lengthening list of profoundly helpful studies of our foreign affairs. j 1 We washed our hands of Eu rope when we- revolted, against - England, but they have. not stay ed washed. A complete break In the ties with Europe, eur fore fathers though V would; end in- . volvement in Europe's j wars. If for a time that worked,' the time was short Beyond arty doubt -whatever, this writer asserts, America is now inescapably a part of the world, sharing in I world peace and also in world . war. Two wars within one gen eration ought to be proof enough, he says, especially since we en tered both despite the most dili gent efforts to stay out k . He sees two main paths pen to America: "to prevent war1 or to make itself strong enough to win wars when they come,": pos sibly with a system of alliances. In agreement with other recent , writers, ; he favors prevention and urges us to make up i our I- minds to submit to the sacrifice i of our so-called ' sovereignty to 1 whatever extent international I cooperation necessitates. For in- ! stance, if a new invasion of Ethi- i ! opia threatened we should have to give! up some of our oil ex port trade, . vote money, send ; men and arms to punish the ag gressor, ' and all this by direc tion of some world league or congress.; . . The alternative would be! the creation; of .a monstrous military state, costing fabulous sums,! re quiring two or three years out of the lives of our youth. l Europeans and Asiatics Ure better informed about interna tional affairs than Americans; tney have had to be. So the fell, ing points registered by Peffer will bej more - readily accepted abroad than -at home. It i we really Hope to be good neigh bors, w need to be understand ing neighbors, and willing to lend a hand In emergencies. The au thor thinks intelligense in this field more efficacious than our traditional idealism. . !. ml raat Halloa WASHINGTON, Sept T Too much already has been written about the Pearl Harbor reports but yet nothing which would establish a 'clear public under standing of what happened, j This is because the reports themselves are incredible. The facta offered are generally true and run, but they have been presented as if 23 lawyers and clients were all. shouting at once their indi vidual accusa tions and de fenses' in a mass trial. 1 For in stance, War Secretary Stim son generously covers Mr. Roosevelt from blame with evidence that the late presl ; dent predicted what ' happened 13 and again 11 days in advance. It nevr enteaed Mr. Stimson's mind that if Mr. Roosevelt had ! sutn information or belief, and did not advise General Marshall and Admiral Stark, he was -culpable beyond their guilt What is the - all-too-apparent fact; of the ;wattert 'Mr. Roosevelt ex pressed many hunches and ' be liefs at many times, and this, hap pened to have ( been . one ex pressed twice, upon which nei ther he nor anyone else acted. Now this double-scintilla of evi dence is magnified to create a picture Which is not accurate. The report is all like that Mr. Stimson says ! army intelligence had inside information Novem ber 17 the Japs were to attack five days later, and he congratu lates that service on thi incor rect information, which, having proved false at the time, may t have led the army chieftains to be suspicuious of that source and relax vigilance (if any). The navy blames State Secre tary Hull claiming his ultimatum to the Japs November 26-provoked -the attack, whereas the army and navy had advised the government two weeks earlier it was not ready yet for .war, as . the Japs were superiory Thia , seems to be the common! service conviction, and is in accord with the theme of all the reports In -: which everyone involved blames . But to the chickens, it Will still loo nxe Demg . cooped up eco-J nomicany and politically ( by an "owner." ij - il ', : . . Japan offered most of them an ersatx freedom during the time they were in her imperial gunny sack, and did a great deal of talk- .V-..4 14 J .1- -1 in a. tug iiwui ii ana wnai uoerauon I.D.Whit .from the white man was going to mean. - ... j : It would be silly to think that this did not take hold in many colonial I minds. - That it did rot ag gravate existing content Human nature wants free dom and responds to talk about it, regardless of . the source.-; : ' j r - Some of Japan's departing conquerors have got in some nice licks which will not lessen-the con fusion in the colonies and other dependencies they are leaving. : . . ; '-''':.,'.; '';;'-:: 'i r; In. French Indo-Chtna, the independent state of "Viet Nam" has been set Up in the state of Annam under an "emperojr named Bao Dai. .1 In tHe Netherlands East Indies another Japanese sponsored "independence; move is afoot This is not new, but after starting it when they conquered the Indies in 1942 the ; Japanese kept it well squelched. Now It blossoms just as the Dutch are about to move back in. j-; tf . - The British have moved back Into Burma with no fuss reported, and probably will encounter the same reception in Malaya. At Hongkong, the sovereignty of China is not le gally involved, because; It became a British 'crown colony .(like Gibraltar) by treaty more than 100 years ago. But in the minds of some Chinese,; Hong kong means something! like British possession of Manhattan Island would mean to the United States. So Chinese prime minister T, V. Soong is jon his : way to London for negotiations, probably concern ing Hongkong although that haa not been specified GRIN AND BEAR IT By .Lichtj--- every other one except himself. What are the known - (and omitted) facts about that? Usu ally in these matters, I would grapple with the 200,000 words Of the documents, and then set out to find the answers; but this time it would be a waste of eye sight and footleather. 3 The Jap attack on Pearl Har bor, any military man will tell, could not have been organized in less ' than , three months.; The whole Jap campaign of war, as It skillfully developed against us, with perfect timing pf the Seizure of Guam, invasion of Malaya, conquest of Singapore and Invasion of the Philippines, took six month to organize and 12 months to plan. No American, official 'men tioned or unmentioned I knew about this, oc, did anything about it All officialdom f ailedJ The nation -was caught flatfooted. And now in reports all official dom is trying to say: "It was not I who failed, iV was the other official." f r In my opinion, the Japs had been planning thii war for 20 years, and the attack actively for a year, and seized the moment when we were getting deeper and deepec4jrivolved in Europe to stab u in the back. -They chose- the .moment when our European commitments had reached, such 'proportions we could - hoj . handle them and reached for the knife they' had been whetting so long to just the precise point' This, I am, sure, will be the judgment of cool his tory. Yet in one election cam paign, the responsibility of Pearl Harbor was successfully laid by the Rooseveltian democrats up-. oh those who had a few years earlier voted in congress against an appropriation for Guam. Such Is politics. , The report makes at least one thing clear. Any observer reed ing of the superficial stories must now know- why Kimmel and Short were not court-martialed and tried. -.They had the goods on higher-ups in Washington, ' and a trial would have given them the opportunity to present ' j There is no porticularly inside story being handed around here on the matter, except that Mr. Truman was advised to delay the reports until the Japanese occu paion quieted down. Congress men told him to hold it until oc cupation was complete, or pub lication could serve some pur pose. He does hot seem to be "the political timing kid," as he chose- the day of occupation of Japan to do it. jr ' 1 Also many congressional auth orities were so displeased from - the-ontset that a joint congress ional Investigation seemed cer tain, r .;"! No investigation is needed to show Pearl Harbor was the greatest failure of the Roosevelt government the whole govern ment from top down (for they could not find a goat to hang It on) and petijaps the greatest failurt In Americaa history, i White House, Still Restricted; ( Uniform Ride" May Be lifted; Back to Farm Move Studied - By the Washington gtaff ef th AMocUUd Prass .,i WASHINGTON, Sept l-iifhlf you're hoping to make a tour of the White House during, that long-deferred trip to Washington, you'd better forget it for a good long time at leasts Word around the White House is that the mansion probably will not be reopened to the public until next year, if -then, j , ; . - ., - -, . f : . . . . - . n.t ml utm MthWIU; The armr and navr are reported to be considering relaxing tneir- reguiawona wm wearing uniform off duty. JDuring the war, servicemen liv-1 would offer a good opportunity ing at home were obliged to wear tor man-toman contact between their blues or khakis even if they Americana and their erstwhile en- just had a couple of guests in to j enrue, and even some of their play gin rummy and woe lime-understood allies, such as them if they were caugni wearing Russia. slacks to the neighbornooa movtei I The Japanese, for example, are ereat lovers of baseball. Ambassador er sporii: liook tor . top-ranking sports autnonues xo Japanese Ships: The guess In put a bug In Secretary? of-State us .hipping circles is that Byrnes'1 ear about setting up a CSxinm wm com out of the peace special division to promote inter- ulkg with most of the Japanese merchant fleet or what remains of it This would help China establish herself as a trading nation. The UJS. wont need Nipponese ships. felf-Serrke: Another guess by aue shinninv mn MacArthur win let Uve Japanese use weir own snips, mannea oy their own seamen, to pick up scat tered garrisons and - haul .them home. This might take as. much as a year. TKai TT 9 - la sanvaAasei tn mm leu i nirxy-eigni volunteer woritn, mnA mmrl M, vmt who served an aggregate total of 1 v, - - over 700 hours per month pro cessing applications and attend national goodwill through ath letics. ' ; Sportsmen maintain that sport Volunteer OPA Workers Get High Praise j erans home. Leber Pie tare: Most labor lead- era sa tv1 Sliiilsis lilllsieit ttHtl mm ha. rZTllZ r U transition to peacetime commended Saturday by ueorge I ,m j i. XZSTa - ? strikes but they're keeping their SSJ1I r S HJV w I W-, SmMBy eanl m i . gram; which has been under the m , 7 w,u SrSion of the boaTd's chairman, l 'T?t" m, n T.h,m aZ thrown open on wages and other Robert Craig, saying that approx- 7 ,7. imately 71 per cent of the work w!,fc " , rT Lf " 1 1val wa -arrimA v tKm mJ weapon wnue . . ... - lolants are reconverting, but must au Doaras in uie oaiem area i . , . . will be consolidate and . located wai mP1oy" at the ChemekeU street office in DC"1 "viiian proaucuon. Salem. The nId staff in Saim u However, i the labor-management r I M ?ia 1 1 i a a a 4 a a to be reduced from 11 employes to e wui oe neia aooui xnai - I tune. . Labor leaders can be ex- Volunteer members who have I pectea wtryto how a Ught rein served at the Salem board In- while agreements -with employers dude K. E. Wilkinson. G. E. Ed- r possiwe wards. E. J. Scellars. J. X. Foler. I ' s KAsneth Wilonn Kinth Ttur - Baek te the Faraa! Farm leaders c.m r-im-t.. t v c. t a tare worried that there mar be Lewis, C, H. Byrd, M. E. Canfield; another. "back -to-the-land-,. move- A. C. -Baker. W. R. Mefford. Mrs. : I menu uerore tne war, they say. K. E. Wilkinson, Ronald Blische: Grover. Hillman, Paul Irwin, J. W. Nash, W. A. Reeves, Dr. R JD. Blatchf ord, Frank ' J. Spears, Ar thur Rahn, Anita V. Paxson,', H. 9. Pearson, Glenn L. Rice, E. A. Miller, Hunt Clark, Robert M. there already were too many per sons dependent on farm income and per capita income was dis-. couragingly low. ' Department officials have quer ied representative' farmers in ev ery section of the country." Most Fischer, Mrs. Fred Gast, Donald of the farmers questioned say they McCarger, Warner Brown, H. L I believe fully 75 per cent of those Staver, Qiarles Heltzel, Sam who left rural areas during the Chambers, Mrs, Axelaon, Mrs. I war will return because of unem- Robert Craig, Leone Michels and I ployment and crowded conditions Herman Jochimsen. in cities. 63330003 TTrnrmrg Practical nolisiori. "New that the war's 9 ever, Mr. Fotaik. which dm vm tiink m - s. ana il irst uie cucaen or me erf ' r ev. John U KjUght. Jrn : -a Couaselor ea EelicK, Ufa, 1 ' ' WUUmette diversity. "Bettw is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith." (Prov. 15:17). Many an hour Is spent ! by some people in despising . the luxury of the rich. Yet centuries ago the writer of the above proverb knew. th secret to real happiness-real happiness dwells where love is. It is not the meaL i( rfnor the house, nor the occasion, (Continued from page 1) as a commodity. The unions de mand a living wage and; expect the employers to furnish it They demand also a rising standard of living. This haa come; partly through the needling of - unions but primarly through the tech nological developments of the age. . 1 .Unions have now entrenched themselves in power even be yond their numerical ratio. By political alliance in which labor furnishes the votes and politic ians furnish the laws and the , court decisions, the United ! MX. A M at A I amies ior 12 years nas had a j labor government, without., the ' label. It is not surprising, then. i uiat some unions haveTrown ar i rogant until collective bargain- ; ing in many instances Is .merely tne presentation of ultimatums by the unions. j Some unions are run as tight monopolies, gathering the usual j evils of monoply. They are ex- 1 elusive as to membership, re gardless of skills or character. Officials of some unions cut the swag for themselves and sell out ' their members without' consci- lence. Abuses are protected in j which workers suffer and pub lic interest is Ignored. I The country ' wonders now whether it is in for a renewal of struggle between unions and employers. Probably but the odds are largely with the unions t ; prtscnt As result the -strikes may not be as numerous or as serious as is feared. The urgent need i' not for truckling to employers so much as reform within . organized labor's j own bouse, installing 1 seme I real democracy in midline unions, bringing e better sense of re sponsibility to members and the public, , and seeking jn expan sion ; of ( production the true earning of. real wage. ; 4 1 , but the spirit which exists at the meal, in the home, during the occasion which really counts. ..-W might paraphrase the old proverb' in these words: "Better is a bowl of soup where love is, than a T-bone steak and hatred therewith.,, Carl H. Cover Is Now Commander Carl H. Cover of Salem, has been, promoted to commander in the U. S. naval reserve, at naval air station, Seattle, where "he; is on duty in the executive depart ment : t Commander Cover, whose wife is In Seattle and whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter L. Cover, live at 484 N.E. Laurelhurst Place. Portland, Ore., has been on active duty in the navy four years and nine months. Before Joining the navy, he was a personnel' director for the Ore gon state unemployment commis sion. He is a graduate of the Northwestern College of Law. - - J W1UU HU1I1I QWI sits in the water is called her trim. ! i, STEVEIIS MAKERS OF FINE JEWELRY $125? -, -i) " ,. - 7"" r wmeaateel . n&FECTLT MATCBED . . ,FA1K quautF r " , O STYLE -' ' ' - - , , o quanttty; , Expended payments . S3 Court SL LaBeaseWBsseasseiBBaaeaeaaaBaaseaBaaasi , ' . -