FAG2T0U3 Tbm OSEGOZI &TATE5MA2L CUem. Ortgocv Sunday- Morning. October 1L 1945 '.. - "No Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Aw" . From ririt Statesman, March 25,1831 .. f TOE STATES5IAN PUBUSHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGU1V Editor and Publisher t , . V - . : - :r - v. , : , . Member of tha Associated Preaa The Associated Pratt la. exclusively entitled, to the use for publication of ail news dispatcbea credited to it or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. Indictment for" War Crimes V ! Revolution at Caracas Jurisprundence blazes a new trail in the in- . More people than usual (50) were killed in dictment of 24 German leaders and six organi- the revolution in Venexuela which unseated 'rations, charging ! them with war crimes. Tha j President Isaias Medina Angarita. Generally jegal instrument itself is 24,000 words in length, j the army does the job with a few scattering ;recmng uu norriDie aeeas perpetraiea on pian , snois imcxing innocaii ujrsuiuuci a. uiucihuc, orders or the nazi leaders. The basic charge the revolution at Caracas, louowea me conven- tional pattern: a group oi army onicers dis satisfied with the political setup strike for the government palace and seize authority. j . Argentina had, a sample of that in repeat edition a few days ago when a group of army officers overthrew the Farrell-Peron-regimei it self an army set-tip. The variation occured when Teron got the backing of. Buenos Aires workers and in turn threw the Rebels out of power. Rare ly in South America does a regime change except at the-army's whim. f Venezuela has been remarkably free from revolutions. Tight old Juan Vicente Gomez ran the show as dictator for over a quarter century. There have been only two presidents since Gomez. - ' , .j;". .. ' i . 'f J ': '! ..' Democracy gets lip service only through most Latin American states. The strong - hand of a president runs affairs and it has to be strong or he gets kicked oufc to be replaced by some new dictator who "sets aside the constitution is conspiracy for conquest, using the tools of j terror and slaughter j and aggressive war-to t compass their ends. h This is a new adventure in the realm of law. 'Never before have warmongers and war leaders 'been accused formally land brought to trial for 'offense! against humanity. In a way the pro kcedure is ex post facto, for no statutes exist for -the general crime of warfare. At no time in . the past has j war , been labeled a ; punishable ' crime. While in ancient times captives were often-put te death, that was the isolated act of vengeance. Modern international jaw is scrupu lous to protect the persons of prisoners, ,with . treatment accorded by their rank. Now the nignest poiiuciu ana muuary leaaers oi Ger many are put in! jeopardy of their lives for j It is a new and offenses had at their i feet. serious undertaking. There is abundant reason if hot codified law to support the procedure. The crimes committed Ik r TTho J Snfotyt Valvp TLETTXX.S ntbu STATESMAN REAPERS ttribuu4 by Kin t'attuna SrAM lr utuiMt vitk Tte WuW(taa BUM It's Still a Heavy Load it is necessary the, established against Jews against Poles and Russians.! and promises elections which he expect to con- xro'i. we wm naye mj wan qunc wuuc American democracy ;' runs into export demand. Interpreting i The Day's News By JAMES D. WHITE- I Awoctoted grtw SUM Vrlter- i SAN FRANC1SCQ, Oct. 20.-iiP)-Peace in the Pacific and the worftlnoay some day depend upon how Chinese and Russians work together, in oper ating a - vital Manchunan rail way under a strange;; and com plex new agreement. The rail system is one of the keys to political and economic domination of eastern Asia. The agreement for its' operation is manifestly designed to interlock the personal responsibilities of both Russian and Chinese admin istrators to such? an extent ?tht anything but cooperation would be unthinkable as long as their governments remain friendly. , This agreement is one oi six against prisoners of war have been fully docu- ! merited and shock the conscience of the world. They are in truth crimes against humanity. If I the Josef Kramers and the Irma Greses are . j brought to the bar of justice for their part in ( j administering death by wholesale to victims! in concentration camps, shall those go free who plotted the whole scheme of carnage and con-r j quest?. . ' ! Yet because this is a new venture in justice that procedures follow strictly; principles ofscourts of law. The be specific; the accused must News Behind the News I By PAUL MALLON (Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction In whole r or in part strictly prohibited.) evidence, must have counsel and faj&-irialsC verdicts must con form to the weight of testimony. Otherwise we lay up; wrath against some possible later day of wrath. One trembles to think of the 'dangers I Involved in these triali. Will they form a prece-. dent in which the victors of future wars, will , slaughter the defeated after the rules of ancient warfare? Admittedly it is a desperate gamble the more fearful because we realize that our country might lose a war sometime. . : From Russia and from the remnants of out raged peoples come cries of revenge. The soviet press calls "death to the cannibals." Moscow's, Izvestia says "the thirst, for retribution which the soviet people have" been full of for all these years should be and will be gratified. Cannibals Goering, Hess, Ribbentrop, Rosenburg.'Krupp, Keitel and .all war criminals, the soviet people send them their curses, damnation to death:" Vengeance though, is an evil instinct; the victor nations should take heed lest vengeance, which blinds the mind Jo justice, control their actions 7 LA J. D. Whit f highly important I treaties signed between Moscow and Chungking late la August, designed to settle important issues j between these two greatest re maining powers. t: WASHINGTON, Oct. 20. The strike situation has looked worse from' the inside than the way you have been seeing it in dis couraging headline after head line over accounts of vital men being pulled out here and there with jj great .bitterness, mystery and sometimes violence, i The Truman administration has been; working behind its doors the past week trying to get a wage policy Up on which to base ; j solutions, but has found it hard to do. L a b p r Secre tary Schwellen bach t h o u g ht we had one in the oil settle ment! but after back up- the board when they liked its decisions, and strike when they did not -Here again they could not lose. May Bej "Paper Front" The latest administration re suscitation was planned by Mr. Truman land Schwellenbach with their heads together alone, and board chairman Garrison indi cated they would stay on until . January) 1. Industry and AFL wanted toet them out of town immediately. The resuscitation will get. them out of town in a few weeks. That Was all that amounted to and the question . thus arises whether any new board would be a paper front for the same old proposition. . Thus the government has been crowded on all the fronts , It Pbi Malta erected i toward establishing, a the bricks started falling upon- Vorkabfe wage policy to carry difficulties may be better than a bad settlement which settles no thing. j j The administration seems to me to be playing on the assump tion that the longer the question is held open,' the better will be the chance of reaching a stabiliz ing solution. Certainly no former settlement, made in the years of the Rooseevlt administration, solved ;nyUng. ; Those were only surrcnoirj to union leader ship, made in such a way as to promise another surrender the next time the leaders -wanted to start another crisis. " Tho Lit his head for that one, he crawled out of the pile with an aching Behind this -series lies the httle-understood head, aware, no doubthe had haxVtfrmirut nf Sino-Russian relations, echoes I of which can be discerned in the new treaties. I Russians and Chinese first ran into each other --aiMrouble-4at tbout the time the Pilgrim fathers were landint on Plymouth Rock. The em- November 20, the date when the trials begin peror of China at the time was th great K'anf . i .1 ... . . . ' tt t --mm i Kit.t irK. fKiwa ihiMta In old Neurnberg, will be a solemn moment in world history. It may' set up the standards of justice which will restrain the designing of evil men; or it may let loose base passions which will yield a bitter harvest in time to come. Fish or Cut Bait L It is time the city council took action on the application of United, Air lines to rent ground at the airport on which to erect a terminal. It ; proposes to invest about $75,000 in the building ; and for landscaping and to pay the city ground 1 rent for the space occupied. At the end of 20 ' years the building would revert to .the city. The city is asked to build a landing apron at : an estimated cost of $20,000. A short length of ! road would need to be constructed to connect ; with the country road, which in turn should ; be paved to its connection with the Turner road, ! an extension of Mission st. The alternative is ' for the city to do all the building for which its residue of $57,000 from a bond issue is insuffic i lent. To build administration building, apron, I road and all would nm to $100,000. The practical, thing j to do in the judgment of The Statesman is to bargain with UAL. The ! voters will be disinclined to vote more bonds : and the sum remaining in the airport fund will ; 'be needed for minor improvements or" exten j sions. The council could proposition UAL to i build the apron as well, perhaps offering an extension on-the term of the lease. -k The only other prospective regular user line . Is. Southwest Airways, and provision-could be i made for it to use the same terminal. There (seems little need for the city 'to erect an ad-f- ministration building when most of the use of (the building will be by operators and patrons of the airlines. : I I " At any rate the council should fish or cut bait. Either lease to UAL or proceed with build ing. In this air age we do not want to be serving liners with a shack for a terminal. ' 'made a mistake. After all, if you give , the men a 15 per cent increase and then grant tbem the right to negotiate or arbitrate for another 15 per cent, you have not solved much. Another strike for the remaining ; 15 per cent could be called at any time. Furthermore such a temporizing surrender was gen erally labeled unfair. An em ployer could not win anything, even the right to continue opera tions, under such terms. WLB Beyond Redemption "Then some show was made by Mr. Truman of prolonging: the war labor board after blanketing it info the labor -department un der Schwellenbach. This was ! what a puglist would recognize as a hard pass at the empty air, as tar as settling anything was concerned. WLB men had tre mendous power and prestige dur ing the war, but lost it when Mr. .Truman gave top-say to Schwel lenbach. It is now beyond re demption. Both AFL and industry were opposed to" it, and still are, be cause it has. functioned largely as a CIO weapon. Through it, the Murray-Hillman crowd had a nice thing going. They. would Okinawa is the jinx for the navy. In the fighting our. ships and men suffered heavy loss-1 es under the suicide attacks of Jap planes. The1 V-J celebration there was so wild that several men were killed. There were 521 casualties in the typhoon of last week Including 28 killed and 70 missing. Now an explosion at the navy receiving station caused six deaths and 23 in-. juriesTime for a change in luck there. A London crowd, chiefly of women, nearly mobbed the Duke of Windsor (nee Edward VI) when he called on his mother. Sq The Voice isn't the only one who can lay.'ent out in windrows. We don't seem to realize that, some other countries may not like our brand of democracy as described in the headlines strikes, murders,. 'divortfessnd-deftcitsr - Hsi, a Manchu potentate whose Chinese subjects roamed widely through the wilds oi eastern &i beria looking for gold; and for Chinese medicines such as deer-horn, tiger-whiskers and bear-claws. Treaty Result- - j t : i ' i '" Russian trappers,! headed by a czarist agent named Khabarof;; got into serious trouble with these Chinese, j The result was the treaty of Nerch insk, signed iii 1089. The Chinese wanted every thing east of Lake Baikal. The Russians wanted everything down to the Amur river, s Each side feared and knew little about the other, so they compromised, ; setting the boundary considerably north of the Amur, f , This situation lasted until 1858, when a czar ist official named! Muraviev succeeded in, convinc ing the Chinese (with some show of force) that the Amur was the natural boundary between Si beria and Manchuria Later, he wangled mari time Siberia, including the harbor of Vladivostok. The Amur turned out to be sort of a joint river. The Chinese had nominal control, but Russian boats could sail on it, and so-on.. Wanted Short-Cnt By 18M the Russians were trying to complete the Transiberian railway, and wanted to run cut off through Manchurfa which would save several hundred miles. The czar prevailed upon the Chi nese to -let him build It, and later a branchr line down to Dairen as well. 'r ; . ' . The line was chartered by Russia as the Chi- a tvTta rir a t TrrV nese eastern railway! It had a Chinese president, GRIN AND BEAR IT and Russian and Chinese - stockholders, ana was operated by a Russian board, of directors. Joint control again.:. " 1 When Japan won her war with Russia in 1905, she grabbed the' southern stem, and in 1935 she "bought, the northern cross-line fromf soviet Rus sia, a purchase Which China protested as illegal Now Russian troops have reconquered j the whole works, and the crossline and the stem down to Dairen are to be known as a single system, the Chinese Changchun line. It is to be administered as a joint Sino-Russian commercial undertaking, reverting to China without charge after 30 years --just about the time set in the original czarist agreement which covered 80 year Chinese to Furnish Police Chinese will furnish the police to protect the S line, which will be administered by a joint board of ten, half of them Chinese and half Russian. The chairman of the board will be a Chinese, the dep uty chairman a Russian. . ' ' . . :A Responsibility is divided and carefully distrib uted, clear down to station-masters. These are3to be chosen on a 50-50 basis. . If the master Is a Rus sian his deputy must be a Chinese, and vice-versa. The line supplies and serves Manchuria; thr breadbasket of Asia. It is the shortest route to the sea, to Vladivostok, to Korea, to the free port of Dairen.-. " . . .. v i Whoever controls - the rail system -controls Manchuria, and j there is an old saying that who ever controls Manchuria sooner or later controls China. .'-: 5' ') " ' f China and Russia have scrambled and inter locked control of Manchuria for the next 30 years by treaty. Cynics will call it a Chinese face on a Russian reality, but It is, an agreement which could function in much the same way as the Inter locking technique which Britain and America evolved during the war in the joint command or- the current interim until labor ana management can get togeth er in the big conference, now set for November 10. The inside of that S conference would make a column in itself. "Save the World first i It should have been held be fore any of these strikes, develop ed, and : was scheduled originally for October, but the labor lead ers had to go off to Europe to save the (world first. When the arrangers for the conference gave the great labor power bellows, John L Lewis, only one delegate and one vote In this j national meeting of in dustry andabor. Not only this, they imposed upon him an under standing reached among them selves that his solitary delegate could not be on any committees. ' The telephone workers, who tied up all communications in the country one day recently just to "test their strength,"' were at first eager to join the confer ence, itnd asked for a place. Later they said they would not participate. ! Naturally then, the question has arisen as to how effective the proposed conference can be. ' Difficulties to Continue . The accumulation of all these inside facts points directly to ward continued difficulties but terary Guidopost By W. G. ROGERS MOST SECRET, ajr NrU Skate (Merraw; SZ:M). : The British j Admiralty delay ed publication' of 'this novel for months, evidently because there is so much trutfilin it, or per haps because jit'seuch a rous ing story about the war that the entire Admiralty had to -read it first j It's really a tale of two cities, Plymouth with the once charm ing harbor bordered in green and across in France, quaint ' Douamenez. Charles Simon, Ol iver Bod en, j Michael Rhodes, John Colyin, an old French fishing craft named Genevieve and a flame-thrower . . . these are the : ingredients which, stirred once, explode Into' a sure-fire yarnj. Shut makes his characters real enough for the purposes of the adventures he has to relate, and handles his plot skilfully. It's a long book, and you'll be sorry it isn't longer. ANT tyJXBER CAN PLAY, ky U wari Varrii Beth (Harper; 12). ... Charity King has gambling in WAGES AND riOFITS ; To. the Editor: - The - great number, of strikes labor is now staging seems to me to indicate a high- degree of foolishness on the part of labor union leaders, and. those stand- ing 1ehind them" In . supporting their action. It seems to me that labor unions are using little or no judgment in their actions and. demands upon employers. . : , Labor has overlooked the fact that laborers themselves re greatest consumers of the pro- ducts and 'manufactured, goods they help to - produce and turn out- What is labor going to gain if all laborers demand higher wages and the price of the goods they produce rises by any equal amount? Their added wage; will .not purchase any . more. 'Higher wages win help to bring, about inflation, which .can easily lead to economic disturbance for some years to come effecting not only themselves, but also farm erf, small businessmen, non union labor, etc. ; Labor union leaders are plead ings that employers can afford to pay, such high wages because they have made such an enor mous 'profit -during, the war. : Here, again, labor has failed to use .good judgment I believe. Labor seems to have forgo'.ten the high excess profits and grossincome taxes levied against corporations and other large employers during the- war. It a large amount pf profit was made the largest share of it has had to be turned over to the govern ment when these corporations and other employers filed their tax returns. ; Without outside, governmentalcaid, these employ ers, in nearly all instances,, are going to use millions of dollars of wartime profit in reconvert ing their plants and factories to - peacetime civilian production. Imagine the millions it will re quire to pay the costs of re equipping Ford or General Mo tors plants so that they can re sume manufacturing as they were doing before Pearl Harbor and before the 'armament race began. Labor, not only in the United States but all over the world, , seems to have-; the opinion that it can live on? a high standard ' with high wages and short hours. . Where is - the money coming from to pay such , high wages? Mostly from the pockets of la bor itself,4 if it has the money to pay with. Who will produce, enough goods for such a high standard .of living if men and women only work four- days in ' -a week? It can not possibly be I . , 'I Vi - -i . . mm m ... 1 i 1 . his biuod. He loves his wife Lon, who loves him, and his son Paul, who doesn't but cards, dice and roulette matter most. By a Stroke! of the; luck he be lieves in, he Is enabled to open his own place where theAown's elite dabbles in the thrill pro vided by games of chance which, win or lose, don't hurt them. Charley reserves his respect for gamblers who; stake all. . : Despite some tense monKtiu, especially a crap game in which the reader can share the excite-" T l ment without risking his shirt By LlCllty this seems to: me rather a cap- i J able than ,a good novel. I can't decide whether Heth is trying to win my approval of gambling, or persuade me it doesn't pay; as a matter of 'fact he does neither. ' This is the j second recent no vel on this subject-and the sec ond to miss a literary jackpot' MY FAVORITE WAB STOItV,if om plleS ky Look editors (Wkltwy House; S2.M). i Thirty-four; correi pondents here pick what each regards as 4he most engrossing' war sto ry he knows. They are short and illustrated; youH enjoy particu larly one about a fellow named Roosevelt, another about what must be the only "flier ever to land on a ship's bridge. r ' Recommended Reading In Salem last week, Dr. Ver non Nash, speaking to the Knife and Fork club: If you would un derstand problems of . modern Asia, read these three books, preferably together. Snow's "Peo . pie on Our Side," Lattimore's "Solution in Asia, and Rowe's "China Among the Powers Dr. Cliffol-d E. Maser, address. ing Salem branch,-American As " 'sociatidta of University "Women: For an understanding of geog-. Dtp (Continued from page 1) divorce courts force a contrary conclusion. Are men and women living longer with automatic heat patent breakfest foods and bromo seltzer? Again statistics fail to prove the affirmative. The life expectancy of a man or woman of 45 is no greater than it was before we put the "accent on" living." Industry cuts the work week to allow greater time for leisure to be used for what? For gard ening, recreation, reading, hob bies? yes. Bu. also for partying, boozing and 1 afing. j - ; I have a' suspicion that in many cases the concern over raising the standard of living is prompted by other motives than welfare of the masses. The manu facturer may want expanding production not to benefit his customers ' bu' to increase his ' profits. The politician may want v'ffull employment", for fear of political repercussions. ' ; It is true there is a vast need fr? better foods, more spacious living quarters, home sanitation. We err in making them the end all of effort I recall visiting what had been one of the most beautiful and costly homes in the northwest; but r it was a broken home. Love had gone, the home was a bare shell of a building. ! Should we not put more em phasis on a standard of life? Are there no other values in living thaVufianveniences of locomotion, plumbing and communication? Omar the poet liyed lustily jfed happily, though he craved little: "A Book of Verses under neath the Bough, S A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread and Thou 1 Beside me in the Wilder- 1 ness Oh. 'Wilderness were Para dise enow!" . r We need not revert to the primitive, to throw out the elec ;tric percolator and hot water tank, to maintain a high stand ard of life. We need merely to readjust our sense of values -and to realize that life is more than food, drink "and raiment The molding of character, the'culti vation ofthe mind, the rearing of families close-knit in 'ties of affection, the appreciation of the rts. the recognition of com- gfenizatidnsV- raphy as it relates, to living, . fj mrnnty-iponnbuiues bere are "I though peace weald end ear worries! New I have to try to suggest reading .the works-of uniev'hnarks. on tteTam- figure eet what sJierUges 'aaf'develsv'frem laber tm L . 1 . : - 1 . . ' . '-i ' ....... ! . $ont, apd under the present sys tem of supply and demand, prices will be so high due to scarcity that money will be near ly worthless. ! '-, . As it is, the greatest portion of . the price of anything pur chased goes to pay the laborers who help, to make ' or produce the article through use of their skill and energy. If . profit is nearly wiped out - for the prop erty owner and the employer who is taking the business re sponsibility and risk for return on bis investment our system of free private enterprise and ini tiative will soon perish, j And, not only the property owners and businessmen who are employ ers, but farmers and laborers as well, together with their life, liberty, property and -happiness. True!. Profit does mean that labor sacrifices m ' little immed iately, but labor gains freedom and liberty in the end by mak ing it possible for private enter prise to exist In the countries where private enterprise do?t not exist neither does individ ual, freedom and liberty. Our economic system of. profit mak ing is a method by which the thrifty, ambitious ; and those possessing initiative and other success-making qualities are given an opportunity to show themselves and are rewarded accordingly by others. j Another major j point is to be taken into consideration. Bil lions of dollars of profit by both corporations and individuals are turned back into the investment -and purchase of bigger and bet ter facilities for the manufac turing of a product which Will benefit the public ? in general, which is made up of labor more than any other economic group..! Labor's main problem is to se1 that ! certain local situations are corrected where men and women are not being paid according to the wages other men and wom en in general are receiving for similar tasks. Labor must also see that the following fallacies are eliminated: The government must support the people instead of'th? people the government. 1 1 ' That an economy of scarcity can create abundance. That wages can be increased 30 per cent without an increase in the sale price to the consum er and subsequent inflation. . . That deficit governmental and private spending will ultimately balance a budget and create prosperity, and that themore you spend and owe in debts, the wealthier you become. That shortening ! the' work week increases production ' and makes the country wealthier, or that idleness benefits anyone. . Labor can only succeed, make our country wealthier' and hap pier, and save American democ racy by practicing common sense and by abandoning its at tempts to "get something for nothing. Signed, Ronald E. Hoveu ! Jefferson, Ore. KILLED IN ACCIDENT ' BEND, Oct . 20 Mrs. Ha Scott Brown, 32, died in a truck car. collision 50 miles east of here today. Hospital attendants re- BBfted her husband, Raymand A. Brown, a Culver City teacher, Raymond, 11, and Judith, 5, in serious condition. ; HUNTING ACCIDENT GRANTS PASS, Oct 20-(P)-A hunting accident near Selma on Thursday night cost the life to day of 10-year-old Jimmy Hows ley, wounded in the abdomen by a gun discharged by Joe ' Neal Lee, Selma. . " - kSTEVEIIS Where i , Quality Never Varies DIAMOND SOLITAIRES, WEDDING RINGS OR MATCHED SETS . u . 'Always a Large . Selection at Stevens : ... "" ''-. Budget Fayneata ' ...... , . '. i m eurt Street - ' ! .1 ... , r t