i ( The) OZEGOIt STATESMAN. Sclem. Oregon, Friday Morning, December 21. 1945 1 1. 'IV Favor Su?av lit; No fear Shall Af" From rtrwt Statesman. March It, 1131 THE STATES5IAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. 8PRAGU1 Editor and Publisher j 1 I ' Member of the Associated Pre i! ,1 The Aseactated Press to exclusively entitled to the use tor publication of oil new dispatches credited to it or not other wis credited in this newspaper. I 4 -I ST Ml 1" V tact-finders Stalletl 'The fact-finding panel seem to have stalled on the fint hill. Remember the oil strike of several months ago which President Truman ended by ordering the navy to take over the oijl company operations? A fact-finding panel has been working on that dispute for some time, but now it is held up waiting for instruc tions from the White House as to whether it should consider the question of prices with re lation to wages. And the General Motors panel is' hung up on the same obstacle, pondering whether it should look into General Motors prices and profits in its effort to find the facts. Tpe UAW insists on opening up the company tyoks, while CMC says that profits and prices are not at issue,' lying in the province of OPA. The motor company says it will withdraw if the board takes up this subject and the UAW may withdraw if it doesn't. ' Since the fact-finders are purely extra-legal boards at present, they can go no farther than the parties are willing to let them go in their probing. It will take legislation, which the president has asked for. to give such panels real authority ;and both labor and industry dinivian birth. It is heartening to know that Bergi, Affleck and Mengucd, who claim Salem as their home, may come home to a Salem where there is opportunity for them to serve, and be respected whether their ancestors land ed at Plynuwth oratplisisland. ; j Gas Company Wants Increase r The Oregon public utilities commissioner has the rare duty of passing on the application of a public utility for a raise in rates. The Port land Gas & Coke company is asking for an increase of 10c per thousand cubic feet in its charge for space heating. It claims that ; the fuel oil it uses costs 43 per cent more than when the rate was fixed and total production costs have gone up 60 per cent. lr For most of the period since the first world war the cost of utility services has declined. Even since the present war there have been decreases in electric rates orrebates to cus tomers. While costs have increased, the added volume of business has resulted in higher net profits. The gas company has! also enjoyed a large increase in gross volume but now com plains that even with the greater volume of .V0U THINK YOU'RE HOLDING tWav resist allocation of such authority to con- business its net is inadequate. The public utility duct probes into disputes. commissioner will have to make his investlga- Our government seems to be in about tne 'II t I f I . I I ft. ', . M m m . SBst 1 k ? B m mm m mt-z vm a "- a ksw i s r i i. mi v - a Ma 'I "w To Disaster (Continued from page 1) 1 id f4 let same stage it was in 1940 and most of 1941 trying to do everything "short of war. It has held a labor-management conference which proved futile. It has tendered its conciliation scvice to disputants -but its conciliators get nowhere in the big disputes. It is now attempt ing fact-finding by a panel of disinterested citizens; and that is slow motion and not very promising. Maybe if the strikes continue the government will get mad and "go to war" against industrial tie-ups through measures for compulsory fact-finding or compulsory arbitra tion or for labor courts. Meantime, President Truman must feel like old Noah in the ark. The White House is afloat on a flood of strikes and the doves he sends out haven't yet been able to pick up an olive blanch. tion and enter his decision. The point to be noted is that in spite of general inflation utility rates have largely; re mained stationary or even declined, which of- A Pack of 1 roubles News Behind the News By PAUL MALLON national public at fers some evidence to dispute the assertion that (Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction In whole rate regulation is impotent. Just because we f or in part strictly prohibited.) do not have prolonged and generally futile rate cases we should not conclude that the public authorities are asleep. j They follow closely : the financial reports of operating utilities and are prompt to note when a fair j return is being exceeded and to move for rate reductions to consumers. The public has been tremendously benefitted by vigilant regulation of utility rates. i'. ? : : Berpl, A f fleck 'anil Mengucci When paint Is once again readily available, a goodly quantity 'should be used to obliterate a sign which advertises to persons arriving here by stage that 98 per cent of Salem's popu lace was born in the United States. Various business concerns and organizations have at times been credited or blamed with responsi bility for that table of statistics, which is prob ably no longer accurate if it ever was. What ever its source and inspiration, it is now not even funny. Did you read the names of the Salem men who were among the first of the 96th division to return to Fort Lewis? Bergi, Affleck and Mengucci might have come straight from an All-American line may be native Oregonians. We don't know where they or their parents were born, but we do know where this trio of, men has been. The ancestors whose names they bear weren't on the Mayflower, but the v y men of this generation have completed a series of ; adventures just as American as any under taken by the Pilgrims: In the far. reaches of the Pacific they bore arms beneath the Stars and Stripes. In the newspaper reporter's code, the place of a man's birth is usually the least important ' fact In his life. Tying together all the portions of a career in an obituary, it seldom rates more 1 than mere mention. We can't speak for the 93 per cent, but we could call attention to the fact that a Salem merchant who was born in Holland has done one- of Marion county's biggest jobs in the war loan campaigns.! There- U a beautiful State street store, built with the years of effort of ' a ' Russian-born American. That fine portrait you display so proudly may have .been' taken by a prominent Salem photographer of' Scan- Editorial Comment A; REUNION ViTTJ HATS ENJOYED ' The Associated Presa carried a story during the weekend from Miami Beach, Florida of the reunion of 54 of the famous 79 fliers who took part in the d'ytiajht raid on Tokyo April 18. 1842 all of whom with the single exception of the leader. General Jimmy Doolittle, had trained at Pendleton Field from Pearl Harbor night to early February, 1941. Pendleton people knew all of those 79 aerial crusaders, and moat of the families in this city knew one or more well enough to have them in for dinners or parties or some other similar occasion. Some of them are dead now; and some of them are crippled, but most of them survived the raid and the subsequent ordeal of escape, and now are together arain. "We've been renewing old acquaint ances." said CoL Stanford Chester, one of the raiders. 'The bunch has a great deal to talk about. There's time for fun later on." j So went the story from Miami Beach and it mentioned, also, that Sunday the "bunch went deep sea fishing, and also paid homage to two comrades who died hi crash landings in China Immediately after the raid," three who were put to death by the Japaaese, and others who suc cumbed from treatment in enemy prison. camps. It must -hare been a-grand reunion, one that rone of those present ever will! forget just as riwe of the 54 surviving: ever win forget those tMrty seconds over Tokyo." And wouldn't it have been even grander if the reunion could have been held here in Pendleton, hre those ladj were liked almost as much as i i their own heme towns? . V. e d bt very r i h if there Is a single other r!to in the U. . -vb ere those 54 men in the re im n would have n-ceived such a sincere welcome n-i it I A hv hen fnrtunat ma ii I .'r .r ; i 1 1 1 L c . " - ---- at . t m About the only remaining exclusive function of the British house of lords is to sit as a court of last appeal in cases 1 involving the death sentence. To the peers as a cout William Joyce, Lord Haw Haw -of German radio fame, tap pealed from his conviction, and Kieath sentence. The house of lords voted to sustain .the verdict and stentence, so he will be hanged for treason. The British, whose accent Joyce mimicked over the radio, will get the final haw-haw. " WASHINGTON, Dec. 20 The republicans are being pinched and pressed by a de mand for a for ward - looking platform-which will rouse the people to en thusiasm. The news has caused them to look weak on this score. A state ment of prin- l i: - iipics p.,. Malloa : i t sir f I f Interpreting The ayfs News By John Roderick (Substituting for James D. White) YEN AN, China, Dec. 20.H"P)-Chinese commun ists' national aims which certainly will come tin der close scrutiny at the forthcoming "peace talks" at Chungking never have veered from MaoTse tung's oft-repeated program. I 1 Mao is chairman of the political bureau of the Chinese communist party. His report to the seventh party congress a few months ago proposed: I Firstly Establishment immediately of a provi sional coalition government;- , Secondly Inauguration of a regular permanent coalition gov ernment through "free and unre stricted elections." P The peoples' political council, which includes elements ; of . tne national communist, democratic Safe LETTERS READERS Wenld Net J. D. White league and youth parties, could name the interim coalition govern ment. Any deviation from this gen eral program will run into head' on opposition from the commun ists. ".?!!; "We cannot scree to any or all so-called measures, proposals or other empty talk," Mao said, ?which diverge from this" general fprin ciple no matter how beautiful they may sound." Waal New Assembly j ? Nor . will the communists approve a meeting of the national assembly,: whose representation , they assert was "fabricated" eight years ago . by ; the ly j accumulated and then watered down for full agreement among republican members of congress, failed to: please the national committee at Chicago, j A number! of national com- mitteemen, thought there.' should be something stronger, more flashy, and they extracted a promise for the creation of a committee on development of national policy. This committee is now ap pointed, one a member of con gress who is a national com mitteeman; two others who are lawyers and state leaders (but no governors); and three wom en. The committee has no intra partisan complexion which is noticeable, except that all are representatives of the big . states. It is to be a permanent committee, to - function as a platform declaration board from time to time, consulting, they say, with members of congress. Publicity Stunt Frankly, nothing flashy- can be expected. My information suggests the wiser, heads at the highest desks in the party were thinking of publicity more than anything else in this move. They see Mr. Truman holding fre quent press J conferences from J of? it all is! issues generally, in least. (He has been saying some things about Mr. Truman I jwhich I are getting around, bi tt not in the news papers.) j The republican? position is presented; only in : congressional speeches I irhich are read only in the congressional record, which is o say hardly at all. The hue and cry for a stirring platform, therefore, may bring some balancing publicity. Votes Con it But actually, the real plat form has been written, not in the watei ed-down declaration of the conj pressmen, but in their votes. Yo l hear people say these days there is not much difference between a republi can and a . democrat, and when Valve FROM STATESMAN 'Spare the Red1 which his every word circulates throughout the nation. The titular head of the re publican party. Governor Dew ey, not only j suffered a political impediment of speech through defeat, but has chosen - volun tarily to- remain tongue tied on To the Ediitor: I am just an ordinary citizen and a subscriber to your paper. I haven't been near, the boys training school except for driving by it. But t am in thorough ac cord with Mr. Eugene Prescott's piece in thf Wednesday morning paper. j jf it takps a strap to control six foot husky boys I should say use it Fori some of them they need it now-a-days. I i sometimes think our youth are very unruly .especially the teen-age boys who have fallen to petty thievery and stealing purses and' stealing gadgets off of Cars and even stealing sugar. Maybe the cause- of strap, when they were at the government. (Chiang Kai-shek has ordered the assembly convened May 5 1948, but the com- h . munists want it postponed until Oct. 10, to permit f'lonV AlVri JJ7 AR TTP election of new represenUtivesA f f f111 -f1 P12- f.f "Getting to the root of this matter, if they do convene this packed national assembly they will only drive themselves along the road to death and create a situation of split and division,? Mao predicted. 'ft,: I " tl'; He said if the present assembly is called it would pass a constitution "which in reality sup ports dictatorship and; opposes democracy entirely without a popular basis." The communists j will bring to Chungking their draft proposal for a new liberalized constitution, i : f s . . Communist views on industry in the new 'gov ernment envision use of an enormous amount of capital coming from two - sources: funds accumu lated by the Chinese, and foreign loans. ! ' Seek Fartlfa Leans j: ! ? .- V "Foreign loans are 'welcomed because they will be beneficial to both: Chinese, and people abroad to develop large-scale light and heavy industries' and modernized agriculture," they said. "On this basis the field for foreign investments In1 China will be extraordinarily large." As for labor, Mao's program outlines an eight . or ten-hour work day, unemployment relief, social insurance; rights of trade unions combined with . protection of interests, : private and cooperative enterprise. ... - j ;1 : If The land program calls for ownership by the tenant of the land he' tills, as well as a plan for transforming a large -section of the rural popula tion into an urban group for: running future fae-'' torie. Mao estimates there are 380,000,000 peasants ' in China. - J ' ' j When a new democratic coalition government appears, Mao intends to hand over the communist eight route army with a proviso the government do likewise t with its forces.! The latter are in ' "serious condition 7 he maintains. He urged re- the republicans attempt 1 to get ' together to compose honey-dew- ! ed words into broad generalities, ; which will be agreeable to ev-j. ery person and offend no one, ; this seems to be true. Actually, it is not The re-;-publicans have made a ' record of ' Opposition to the Truman administration in which the ' cleavage between the two , is clear. It could be accurately ex- j pressed in lone sentence. The; republicans are against the CIO I economic, political and interna tional theories of government; the Trumarj administration is against them; only in exceptions and not as a rule. (Full employ ment ; spending, unemployment compensatioii, labor control leg- islation.) The republicans vote against them in such complete; majority as to establish a party character, i : l .. .; Waste of Time It all seems a little extran-i ecus, therefore, to talk- about soul-stirring j platforms, and his tory rather j indicates it is a waste of time. No party in my time has won an election with a ; declaration of principles. In my 30 years of modern po litical experience, the ins have always remained in until the people got tired of them and voted them but What was said afeout issues never seemed to make much; difference. In particular, platform decla - rations havej been the least im portant phase of politics. The leaders get together and haggle over J language for weeks and months. Finally they come out with many thousands of words which have ibeen leveled to the lowest conimon denomination of appeal, and the day after they are issued no one ; can re member what was in them. ! j This 4s necessarily so. Look at the democratic party exper ience for proof if you need it While Mr. Truman has taken one position j on issues as a-titled leader, his democratic congress men have generally taken an opposite stand, as they did with Mr. Roosevelt : (Story also on page 1) WASHINGTON, Dec. 20.- lacked and our own pouucai I Adm. Richmond Keiiy Turner, ies aneUbinders aenerously fed our tifring , before the . Peart Harbor i American ego. At last the old committee today described an or 1 world has doffed its cap to the der sent to Rear, Adm Husband new, though not without a feel- Kimmel 10 days before Pearl Har . ing of regret, as though an age bor which was aimed at preparing ) had passed. the fleet for war. It is true that the. United On Nov. 27 1941, Kimmel was ! States has set the pace for the sent a dispatch which advised it , present age, with Jts emphasis was to be considered "a war warn ! on industrialization, on the harn- ing? and instructed that he "exe- easing of natural energy to ease cute an appropriate defensive de- the labor, of mankind. Blessed pioyment preparatory to carrying i with rich resources and peopled out the tasks assigned in WPL i by men with inventive genius 46 : i and organizing ability, our coun- rhe letters j and figures stand try forged the weapons of vie- for! war plan No. 46 which was j tory in two -wars and provided part of "Rainbow 5," the general a standard of living -for its peo- plan for operations in a war with i pie which is the envy of the rest Japan. . : . ' of the world. ; . - Turner said defensive deploy- i An added reason for overleap- ments under, the plan, had been ing the Atlantic is the growing worked out in detail and should : importance of the far east, par- have sent the fleet out ready to ! ticularly China.' The : defeat of fight, extended reconnaissance, i Japan ended one threat but and dispatched submarines for ( solved no other problems. In- surveillance and possible attack : stead it left others in its wake, on Ian approaching enemy. ; The far east becomes a sensitive Deploying Required . political spot on the earth's sur- "Instead of being concentrated,1 ; face, and the UNO wants to be Turner testified, "it (defensive de- located where its seismograph pioyment) meant that the conv ? may record the tremors and mander.in chief of the Pacific j quakes in Asia as its political fleet could take operating stations 1 "crust" settles. 1 fori the most probable attack." Though the sceptre of power That, he asserted, would have : may have passed from the coun- sent fast ships northward, the I tries of Europe, it will be recog- direction from which the attack nized as the nursery of western actually came, to cover an area in culture of which our own is but which there were no islands from an extension. From the Mediter- which enemy could be reported, ranean 'basin and from Europe 'Against such a fast force as came the arts and sciences which might be expected to make any compose most ' modern civihza- attack, he said, the American bat- tion. What of the older cultures tleships would have been of "no of Egypt and the near east sur vives came to us through the filter of Greece and Rome. From Homer -to Housman, j f rom Phi- use except to combat landings. He; added that the proper disposi tion for that sort of action would have been at sea, where they deas to Rodin, from Pythagoras could move in on landing forces. to Einstein, from Plato to Ber- pM( Carht i ' trand Russell, f com j Galen to fleet six battleships, six Pasteur, from St. Augustine to cruisers and a dozen destroyers- John Wesley, from Aristotle to was ught m the harbor. the Curies, Europe was the , .. . . ... . cradle for man's inteUectual and ? Re,atm 8 '"Pectaons as to moral development! Europe's fa,pne? contribution is part of the herit- at fcdrop around Nov. age of aU.humanity. : 25, or 26 in the vohime of com- Nor should we conclude that nunicauons among Japanese fleet Europe is a spent force. Wrecked "mtsKcfwUSe? f condude tha though it is economically, ruined b f Japans navy was at as are its cities and factories and '' - . "-' ,r.nh it ma5- i From other information, he spiu, ii was ppicui pan oi uie fleet would be used in an am phibious movement into the south China sea. He declared -the re mainder of the Japanese units j "could go - only two places" to versities and scientific research, defensive deployments in the Jap- aucw uMuiudm uuiiias ana 10 raid Hawaii. Turner said it was his some 400,000,000 people west of Russia, rich in varied natural re sources and abundantly rich in human skills. If it will only let Wars, alone and concentrate on its industries, its arts, Its uni- there ia no reason why it cannot continue the ' intellectual and spiritual center of the world. Tho Literary Guidcpost ' By W. G. Re-aers SOLDIEK OF DEMOCKACT; A BI- was ms own opinion that there was about a "50-50 chance" as to which of those two places the. Japanese would move and that "a lot of other officers felt that way too." Curiosity Gets Best ogkafbit or d wight cissM- Of INcw Jewelry Qerk DMttlMty, Draa; U4). how a normal boy, a scrap- j WACO, Tex-, Dec.' 20.HP-Po- Itr-a rt. C r W- i ' nr Sw1 In TTane.. n 1 w' - MO Seven ' . 7 . " Ti J 1 Policemen dashed to a local iew- student with apparently no ab-l7 "4 Jrw k;- -i i3.V - . elry store after the emeriencr bell rang twice, urgently, today. "The store was covered front, and back," said Maxey. "Nobody came in; nobody went out Tie -mm aa w told in this detailed biography. I Z l w. Born in Texas, where his fa- r """7 wn" oeu . - I buttnn was fnr n sorbins goal, porn of ancestors with pacifist religious convic tions, grew into the general in command of the armies which defeated Germany In the -east is correctable! that Mr. WooUey should be left alone to run the : school. Mrs. W. H. Thomas 415 Pine St. Salem, Oregon. By Lichty M ::il K -w -i ni i , -iii age. And I believe T KaB Qwh Records ' A republican tells me none of the Truman program has been enacted by jhis congress except the bill to abolish war' time. I . have not checked' this, but I have - heard authentically that the democratic congressmen have met and decided they will , net attempt! to' draw up a state ment of party problems for the v coming race, but will let each man run on his own record, using" the Truman coat tails or not, as each chooses. There is be no democratic "platform " : My ideaj is that unless yon have, a single man heading a ticket you j can't get a concise and j worthwhile declaration of principles the people can un ; derstand. Only in the expres sion: of individual personality ; can such cleavage be expressed i clearly to the people. . i Now I know many fine polit icos believe that a strong asser - tion at Chicago would have electrified j the people, and are. sincerely hoping one Will now eome from the -new committee, t In theirj fond hope, wey re- . sVund me ; of popular public thought ' during the- depression. Nine out pf -sen men then-believed that if some particular economic device could be cre ated the economic faults of civ ilization ' could be perfected". 'They thought mere was such'a thing as -a panacea. They coo- : eocted all , manners of such . schemes, many oft which were - - put! into -effect. v-J ir - i j They were just wrong in their original premise; it was not true , - that there ! could be such ; a t T V-! Choc TiM fca. ther held a poorly paid lob. Dwight was taken back to Abi lene, Kans., to live on what was definitely the wrong side of the tracks. Uncles, aunts grandpar ents were fairly well to do, but Dwight's own father -never made much money. I By contrast " the six sons were markedly success ful and two of them, Dwight and Milton, achieved international reputations. ; i Dwight learned the need for hard work, the value of money. He won respect with his fists, and on the football field. He went to West Point somewhat by chance, his scholastic record was undistinguished and, because of a bit of violently unjust disci plining, he suffered a- knee in-; jury barring him from football. In World war I he proved too valuable in camps at home to be sent abroad. Later he served in the Philippines, Washington, France and the Panama Canal Zone where he was inspired by then Brig. Gen. Fox Connor to : dedicate himself to his profession with a seriousness new to h?n He rated first in his class in the army's toughest school, at Lea venworth, and was notably rea dy for war when war came.- . I Ardent admirer of his subject, Davis presents his case with el oquence. He correctly lays -great -emphasis- on Eisenhower's suc cess in creating unity in the in ternational command; makes - a laughable-figure out of Giraud; aligns himself with the many who have criticized the state de partment's treatment of de Gaulle.'' i - ::l - - An exhaustive study, this will remain an essential book In the history of America's role- In World War VL A . BELGIUM RATIFIES PLAN BRUSSELS, Dec IQ--The Belgian chamber of deputies and the - senate today unanimously ratified the Bretton Woods mon etary stabilization plan. ( . ', h . r.avt had IJii Hwtwar, "79" reunion. formation of the conscription .system which he "WeU, they ft aice rton East Ore;:a. terms "rotten to the core" la back ef the ater, bat they wen'i rent nnless we-bay jthe sierefT A bridein Morocco sits motion less, eyes and mouth closed for thing." I do not believe there five .'days after the big -event, can be sutfi a thing a an elec- while women passing by come in ' trifying political platform. ' i . to look at her. ..) : -. " : At Slovens ffd SoUUIraa, Wed- sf vmf T Matched Sets. You will find our Collection CkmpleteT ChriteM Rtving . now. ; '' e4 raynteaU CeH tt -: