PAG2 roua The-OniXJOII STATESMAN. Satan. Ono. Sander? Ifcetag. December SX IMS mNo Favor Stray Us; No Ftar Shall Atae From first SUtesman, March 28, 1831 . 1TJE STATESMAN PUBLISHING- COSIPANY r - CHARLES A. SPRAGUK, Editor tod Publisher Member of the Associated Press Th Associated Prats la exclusively entitled to tha usa for publication of all . news dlapatobea credited to It or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. Return of the Japanese Tha' returning" 4900 Japaneaa tailing, from Portland on fha transport Gen. W. H. Gordon art by no means as disconsolate as might be supposed. While Mm persist in believing that Japan has won the war, others who admit the truth arc not reluctant to return to the land of their ancestors. They may be going to a country with a standard of liring ,far lower than our own but they will be withl those of their own race and look forward with relief to escaping the race prejudice which has pursued them in America. There are values other than creature comforts: the spirit of man has claims aa well ai his body. . The parents remember the discrimination -against members of their own race who may have been qualified by education for profes sional work, and discrimination ' against Japs except for the Jobs the. whites did not want. . they prefer to take their children home where the environment is more friendly even if the labor is harder and the returns meagre -' Fear of hostile acts or of discrimination has forked to keep many of the relocated Japs from returning .to this coast. According to fig ures of the War Relocation authority, of the 112.000 Japanese who lived on this coast prior - to relocation only 40.6 per cent are back in California, 33.6 per cent in Oregon and 26.9 per cent in Washington. The agitation raised by the hooligans' thus "paid offMn frightening Japa and preventing their return, though those who have come back have generally suffered little abuse. Not all of the relocation it due to fear of re turning o this coast. Many found homes and employment elsewhere and are satisfied. Others . know of the housing shortage here and do not care to buck it. While it is better to avoid con centrations of foreign population it does the coast no credit that the redistribution is partly forced by racial intolerance. Though the relocation centers, except Tule lake. are closed, we have not heard the last of relocation. Secretary Ickes last week proposed the Japs should be reimbursed for their losses because of the involuntary transfer of resi dence. These claims will run into hundreds of millions of dollars. Added to the cost of main taining the centers it makes the country pay a heavy price for west coast safety. atom bomb was adopted (which passes the buck to that body). The powers, agree to continue their backing of Chiang Kai-shek, and call for a unified and democratic China. We made con cessions to meet Russia's demand for a voice in Japan's bossing. An 11-nation commission is to determine policies, but General MacArthur . remains the single executive in charge. A four power council will "advise" the general and review his policies. This seems quite compli cated and will probably hot work very well, but we can afford the concessions if the other gains stick. Other points of friction seem to have been discussed but not decided, like Iran, Russo Turkish relations. However a great deal seems to have been accomplished in this conference. Now let us .hope the powers do noil start dis agreeing on the terms of their agreement! River in Flood If the weather bureau's prediction proves correct the Willamette river here will be at flood stage today. The estimate is for 31 feet of water above the low water mark, or about the same as three years ago. Those living in the floor of the valley won der where all the water is coming from. While it was rainy for days, the total downpour was not unusually heavy. The answer is that melt ing snows in the Cascades has swollen the Streams to bring them to flood stage: A real flood is always a devastating thing; but like other great catastrophies it has a cer tain fascination. The broad expanse of water, the surging, tawny currents, the logs and stumps and debris racing along with the cur rent or tossed in a whirling eddy draw thou sands of' spectators. Man and his works seem quite helpless when nature's elemental forces break loose in wild fury. Thanks to careful preliminary organization both of warning and of rescue service, it is not anticipated there will be the-loss of life or of property such as was experienced in 1943. The disaster group of the Red Cross and of civil reserves was geared for prompt action, and evacuated people and livestock from the low lands. Once we know that safety is assured for those who live along the river we can enjoy, as . spectacle, the scene of the great river in flood. Many will visit the river bank today. ? Tar .f? ( A IO Qjp ) ZWKLi U ?tt syOO' ;3Sv3fc'. $'&Zr L"! r , ! 'I- " - T...-. , ,.J G Agreement at Moscow- 4 In the past the enthusiasm accorded initial reports of international conferences faded as subsequent understandings or misunderstand ings developed. So the public it a bit chary about tossing a hat m air over the reports of agreement among the three foreign minis ters who have just finished their meeting in Moscow. It Is dear though that Byrnes and Bevin are much more cheerful than they were after the Londan conference which came to a dead end. The text of the agreement would seem' to confirm their optimism. At least the new mission to Moscow has improved the tone of our relation with the USSR. The question of procedure in preparing the treaties lor Romania and Bulgaria, which made the road bleak -at Landon was solved about on the lines of Byrnes' proposal at the former meeting. The big. powers will .prepare the treaties with the enesnjrtaiea other .than Ger many but all will be -submitted .to m .general peace conference next spring: This marks progress. Items en the agenda which were inched with political high explosive the atom bomb. Chine and Japan were kept wet down. The previous proposal of the United States, Britain and Canada for a UNO control commission for the Editorial Comment vsivmnxD criticism j It Is matter of regret with citizens of the com munity to .ase the agitation stirred up about a recent lacssnti tha state training school for boys. '. The incident' refmed to was the chastisement ot two of therlnmetea .deserving punishment Wof tbis -eoanmwmtf who have observed the school rfreaa the thwe it was first located ka this vicinity, jaad have seen the trials and tribulations of tha vstssMS superintendents working with incor rigiblebejsiawd undermanoed staff and at times very poor baipart, have always been sympathetic wtth tba head ot ths school. On account of our prmimiir So tba instltH4Mi we know what Is going on there asxl whan sa account of a justifiable pun . Ikhmantiottwo ot the Wai hue and cry is raised for She aaalp ttf M. TJ. Tasller, tha superintendent it It .petfarlly uaviamiaudabie why the local dti ans teal autaed. It k ra&Tattable that ttwe daily papers have to put on their sobsktar aeta when they know so little stnhe facts, aadrby ths4r actions are helping crests wmfwlon end fwssswaya. at the school. The power of the prase, ah saia be used constructively Instead t destructively as tn tha present case. As It U, their readers la this section suspicion that someone want a job and they are taking this means of setting It ! " Dn Woo2y is hell la the highest respect In this enmraunitr; We think he 1 doing the best possible with what he has to week with and are very pleased to see the state board of eoatrol standing by him. Voodburn Independent News reports indicate that we may join France and other powers to cancel recognition of Franco in Spain. At the same time we are preparing to recognize Marshall Tito as boss in Yugoslavia and the soviet set-ups in Bulgaria and Romania. Tito fought the Germans while Franco is a legacy from Mussolini and Hitler. Both are totalitarian, and the bird of democ racy loses a few feathers in the deal. Market news: Prices of pickles to rise slight ly. That's a sour note for just after Christmas. Newer Behind tha Woiv - i; By PAUL MAIXON -(Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction tsi waoie .or in part strictly prohibited.) - aaassBaBBBSBBBBBBBBBBBaaBsssaaasssassaasaasa sa- be-up,, but bow many w"'. , The administration wants, high nriM hut how can it move them higher than now .in the face of the coming restoration of com petition? ' . ' 4. Will people - pay the prices asked? Will, labor's human-leadership strike on and hold back production? 3 Will the human leadership ot the -administration accomplish its purposes, and. to : what degree? ' ; . With a congressional eiecuou ahead, how far will the spending faucets of Inflation be turned still- further? V These are matters no - human WASHINGTON, Dee. SO The business prophesies for 1946 aae taking a common line predict ing prices will go higher, and all the rest of tha business picture- will fit into, that inflation-' ary pattern, witlv higher " general , public earnings, a continued sell-, ers' market, v and a high - le- - vel free flow of : money. The 8nly ' thing I know t for sure about it is that always rin the past, when the great bus- J I can possibly now know. iness- prophets unanimously fi- SaMS agreed on the future, it seldom- flO aUIIClUry turned out their way. - . " When Mr. Hoover was elected, ' falUQCPOGX au were sure were wouia oeiwi; cars In every .garage and two chickens in every pot; yet with in histpresidential span we were at the depths of all time. By W. G. Borers KODm. hw raura m. ass; degas. uuua or; es- HelPs Kitchen ER7 The Safety Valve LETTERS FROM STATESMAN READERS Depressiaa, "Cared . " Mr. Roosevel.t we all thought' at first, would surely cure the depression, but: it never got. cured. Then later, wa all thought it would never get cured, during, the latter part of the Roosevelt regime, and along came the war and pushed us yo high out of it we cannot yet i' see the. ground through the economic strato . sphere. "', ' . - ' Thereafter during the war, the .great prophets all agreed there would be a terrific crash at the end, with great . unem ployment Now here we are at the end, with our Christmas sales much higher than last year dur ing the war, with more jobs un taken than men unemployed, and we. are 'now thinking of a higher plane ahead unanimous ly, as usual. I wonder: w&r AMca Jewn sMlsb kT imria Frew. awtrtSst a, stosa " '" , Consisting of about 40 pages of reproductions, some- eight or -10 of them in color, and aShort," authoritative text, these' books appear handily just in time for " last-minute gifts. : V" - - But they're more- than hand- . some volumes for a library ta ble. The subjects are two hn- portant' painters and one sculp- tor. Degas and Rouault represen tative of a new creative eca and Rodin of an old one. The 'texts, though sharply condensed de scribe the place of each man in the art of our time and the re productions, which are" identi fied as to title, medium, size and provenance, . are an aid to the student and a delight to the art lover. - . ' Jewell clearly faced the most difficult task in writing about Juvenile delinquency, results. Boost often, because of too much time on the hands of youth which is not directed along proper lines of endeavor. By the same token, adult delinquency is largely the reruU ef such an abundance of spare time. Most everyone has more leisure because of these times of horter work weeks, labor-saving appliances and IN trend toward more personal liberty. Tha r.L'ow who is busy at his Job, playing with M hotfcy. ending in healthful recreation and fvo'Jrs tiae to a aohadule-of study or self m- rrovemrnt isn't .getting inio smwu. 1 just doesn't have time.-Orefon City Banner- C. j ier. , interpreting Bay's News By -sUehard Bergbab . Wubrtttmtna for James D. White) CHTNBSIXN, Maachuris, Dec J0-(VMora than 1000 Chinese eomraunists In a -prison camp :hare -are -being igiven intensive: "political training' to aw thair nranunkt philosophy and instill theories at use .Kuominteng central government, national army Italian .report. The .prisoners, -who -range from piping-voiced youngsters to anarled, toopcd- old farmers, are haaring. lectures -awery : -nwrning-, and sitenwon ttesujneu to create, faith in and allagiance to the' Chiang Kai-shek government "Our main job here is re-educa tion." MsJ. Gen. Liu Kuang-Ylng told me. He Is politics! adviser to the Central government army in Manchuria. Nat Rada at Heart . "Most of these people will most likely become- good' citisans, he said, "because- they are- not really communists at heart. j. wast General Liu, who is in charge of afl communift prisoners In Manchuria, operates this camp .far what was formerly the Chinese district jail. Most et the prisoners live in barred cells. , I saw many cells i ' that housed six or seven men. And in one small cubicle I counted IS men. - The general ordered all the- 1158 prisoners aut to stand at attention on the drill ground for my visit and agreed to my request to select individuals at random for questioning. He remarked, however, that all of them disclaimed any, particular ffilia tion with communist ideology or the communist party. . ' ' . . One youngster said he was Kwan Hsing-Hua, 17, a farm-bred boy who had been working as a clerk at a mine when he -joined the communist police guard. '' ' Taii VJL Na Oaad. Kwan said ha had-been given two weeks of train ing by the communists, mat they armed him with a Japanese rifle, which they said they had obtained from tha Russians, .and told him the communists were fighting for a greater China and that the Central government and the United States were "no good." - . - Another prisoner with a typical story identified himself as Liu Cheng-Wu, 30, a former peddler who was drafted by the communists north of Tientsin and had fought against the Japanese.- He said his communist superiors told him the Central govern ment was corrupt and that the United States was supporting it while the Russians were supporting' tha communists. ' - General 'Liu said he was giving the prisoners mass instruction in "spiritual cultivation, ethics, Chinese history, world politics, comparative study of political principles and general citizenship.' One af the text books, he said, was "Destiny of China,"; by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek. (Continued From Page 1) began its work. Millions lived in wretched slums, - in utter de- : pravity. Vice, crime, disease flourished. Youth grew up as street gamins. Men and women were debauched. Times have changed. Living conditions have greatly im proved. Laws regulating light and air and sanitation in tene ments have rescued families from the foul darkness in which "the other half" once lived. Bet ter wagea have lifted them from utter poverty. Parks, play grounds, recreation facilities re lieve tha monotony of their ex istence. This transformation has not come Just because of the Salva tion Army. The Army perhaps did lest than such social reform ers as Jacob A. Itiis and Jane Adams and Florence Kelly to re deem humanity by aiming both at improving conditions and at removing some of the causes by which those conditions flourished: low wages, political corruption, no recreation. The Salvation Army has always kept in mind the "salvation" of the individual, regarding his person al redemption to decent living as fundamental for an improved world. But its open espousal of interest in those who were down-and-out drew attention of other groups to social problems. In the present state of very general prosperity, the "other half or the "submerged tenth" or FDR's "one-third ill-fed, 111- clothed, ill-housed" has been greatly reduced in number. One wonders if the Salvation Army . ha sat lost its "customers." The "poor and lowly" are by no means as numerous ss they were 15 years ago. Perhaps not, but still there are THE ARMY'S "REASON" NOT APPARENT To the Editor: ? I note with interest your edi torial of the 27 December, "We Can't Blame Them." I would like to make soma comments. For the entire-duration of the war tha army has hidden be- j hind the excuse that it couldnt divulge its plans or intents. This has been true. However, behind mat simple, , irrefutable argu ment lies a multitude -of sins. When I was first inducted I was told that the arms had a , reason for "everything. It didn't take long to find out that any- that they were moved only for the most . efficient operation of the army organization. You suggest , that the army keep them busy. You have newspaper office.' You have a man who' sets type. Now sup pose you put two or three men in his place. All would have an easier time. But now put 20 ' men in that one man's place. Keep them busy? With what? ' I was an instructor of B-29 pre gunnery at Lowry field. When the school closed down last July about 100 instructors were left without jobs:. From July until November when I was discharge Let us look at the facts we Rouault . . . still alive and in his thing the army did was done in , ed, I performed no useful work. the slowest, most inefficient manner pssible. When the boys came back from overseas - with 50 combat missions to their credit and were made instruct ors, they were not allowed to teach what they knew would aava other lives, because such material didn't agree with the army manual. Countless, other things were' the same. Any GI could tell the same story. ."The army has a reason for every- : thing." So personnel on the west coast are shipped east, antiper sonnel on the east coast are shipped west Is there really a -reason, do you suppose? That is, a reason that contains one iota of good sense, Too many' boys have seen too much coun try to make it seem plausible GRIN AND BEAR IT .'.t.' ' 'ivr; V'-'u .'-3. - r if ,J ) - ; . . ,vt ,2.), .. '-rw.wrrt, w.- I was made clerk in the arma ment school. If I worked half heartedly, .my work took two hours a day. Two more men were brought in to help me. Keep busy? It is no wonder that men become restless. Men .with families at home who need them. Men who have an educa tion to complete. Men who can see years slipping- away never to be regained. I wasn't a solitary case. There"- were hundreds of men on Low ry field who did nothing but sweep the streets, pick up.ciga ret butts or do KP. The other occupation was lying-in tha good old "sack." All tha while tha discharge- center was operating at 50 per cent capacity. .The -discharge of these men could have in no way hindered .the dis charge of high point overseas veterans.- The demobilization program has reached a disintegration for a very simple and obvious rea son. The original high point men held key positions in all units. When they were dis charged tha replacements were- -the men- in the next lower ; bracket Next month the score was ' lowered and these men were discharged. WeekL after ' week, month-after month this proeess continued. Disintegra tion te a fitting word but it ia - " hardly a- necessary condition. T f i ' After VJ day the army com ty ijlCIliy plained that their discharge maenmery was nor, running smoothly and hence accounted for the slow? rate of discharges. And yet veterans of 50 or . more missions had. been in the states for eight or nine months daing nothing. They should have been home for mat entire time. They . had plenty well dona thair share, of the fighting. ' Peacetime military education is being -. advocated. Naturally, our officers would like to keep their jobs. They pay better than do those of the ordinary en listed man of the lower gradesv However, it is too bad that not more ordinary people cannot know the waste that is made of men's lives in tha army. A year many whom fortune has played ill, many who have not had the strength of character to stand prosperity. Then there is moral wreckage in society which does not arise out the state- of the purse. So there is still work for the organization which the Booths founded; and perhaps mora in years ahead than mere has been recently. Miss Booth's recent birthday brings her into the news, - and serves to refresh the public mind on the work of the organization in whose growth she played a very Important ; part " "': "' ; ; have, atom by atom, and behind the atoms. They say there will be "higher prices." Prices xn erally are baaed on the avail ability of goods. Shertage New When there are ahortages any amount can be charged for . goods, and collected from the ; people, if they have money as they do now.- But in the next year ahead ' we are planning to get back to our peacetime mass production. We' havemore machines and. men thanever before. War has developed manufacturing short cuts, for production. , As production brings goods to -the market competition will be restored. This means not only competition in quality but in price. It is quite clear then that the expectations of expanding pro-, duction ahead will work against higher prices. Indeed, mis will work gradually as production swells Jn theJatter months of we., year toward lower prices. Uaieas Seek Raises But tha unions are 'wangling great unprecedentedly- large, vage- increases from industry, V and this development coupled with tha announced intention of the government I to maintain a high price . level, will surely force- prices higher, they say, Yes, certainly- this would seem to force an increase of the price of union-made -goods. On tha other hand, people have grown, during the war, to-be satisfied with patches, with old things, with repaired machines. . If only the unions get these tremendous wage increases, and the rest of us must plod along on our same.aalaries m the face of higher prices for union-made goods, the common" foresight of the business prophets may not prove true.' ' " There has been every other kind of strike in this country, except a buyers strike. The con ditions being created may force one:. , Therefore, I believe the hum an element will determine the course of business for 1949. We know the economic factors. We do not know how the people will react to them. Wage Trends? We- know the ahartages of goods wilT not be completely cured by next year, but a plenti f d supply will be restored in : ny lines. Union , wages will middle 70's. Degas and Rodin hava won general ' acceptance. In the nearly three decades since they died, they have fallen neat ly into a fixed position in art histories. Tha painter's laun dresses, dancers, nudes and race track scenes, though sometimes brutally frank are recognized as an aspect of beauty, and the painter himself has. become something of the same tart leg endary figure as Whistler. The' sculptor, so utterly lifelike that he,never perturbed, the lay pub lics as French, modernists hava done, is beginning in fact to. lose the edge of his reputation among connoisseurs who ask where- his sculpture begins and where his copying stops. -t-.r Rouault is more-of a problem. He's n expressionist; what ha feels in an object rather than what he sees, is what he tries to express. The good American public is apt to-demand -.of a painting something it can identi fy, and to -shy-off raimily- from emotion; so Rouault' s roughly drawn figures, his bold black outlines, his strong color have failed so far, despite several big exhibitions devoted to them, to make much headway with that ultimata judge; tha man in tha street. - On top of this Rouault is in terested in social .problems. He satirizes judges, he ... but read for yourselves.. Jewell is art editor of the New York Times. Mauclair was for merly art critic of Le Figaro. Adams is director of the Colum bus GaDery of Fine Arts. WHEAT PRICES 80UD WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 OPA said yesterday It had no plans for Increasing- wheat ceiling pric es -at this time., t r - If. - 1 Sbvcns Distinctive Styling Practical Hclision fcy ev. John U Ralght Ir. Cowaatlar aa RmUiAaom UtL. jmrarsity. . "Oh. eaeaa en. PraC 8aodrrass--Its New Year's Era let's teach aft a aaaall one before we gar of "military eduction" would Every good picture or paint" ! , , "i"? In fcouW be mounted in a andt4 weeks of KP. Is that frame compatible with its tone what we will wish upon our or meaning. Nothing Is mora yomnr ; detrimental to a good pieee'ofart 1 am.OUt n0,i V : than for it to be poorly or im- iuw-Kin iui lursw ; -properly frasned "Jf, lov oi my muwies Consider the ways in which are still in. They want out too. tha figure of . Christ has been .What transportation ahortage- is framed In creeds, in cclesiax- hoiaingiip the boysstattoned in cal orders, and in aocial systems the states? And yet they cant, entirely incompatible with his get out character suid his teachinea. mv v u mtiur .:,: Mouung nss Deen mora detri those who like It and let oth- mental to the Christian eauae ers out? Some men like to make : than that! It is high time -that some use of their Uvea. ,we begin to build a framework -r- . David F. Bases ; c living which win properly ; ; Roate Box - - ,diitply the character nd will of hi ' 1 . Not just another ring but aa entirely new design, skillfully usnionea la 14kt. Rold. A worthy setting- for- a Stevens flawless diamond. Payaaeata X2t Ceart St 1