pact roua Thm OJtEGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday Morning, April 2. 1948 f rejgon MMN9 tatesmaa f "No Favor Sway It; No Fear Shall Awe" ! From First Statesman, March 28, 1831 THE STATESMAN PUBUSHING COMPANY ! CHARLES A SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher Member of th Associated Press v Tba Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this newspaper. End of the Milk Strike In terminating the milk strike the dairymen axe making what might be termed a strategic retreat. They do not admit defeat and maintain , that their original demand ! of an increase of 29c per lb. butterfat basis was just. They in tend now -to reorganize their lines and renew their fight. ; ' j -, The "error of the dairymen in calling the strike lay in the fact that it hurt the consumer who generally was innocent ef any responsibil ity and lacking in power in the matter. It was the OPA which limited the price increase to six cents the OPA at San Francisco or Wash ington, unaffected by the strike and apparently uninfluenced by it. The strike caused resent ment on the part of the consuming public; who were cut off from milk supplies.. ' " As far as price is concerned we are confident the .consumers are ready, willing and able to pay a fair price for milk. They want good, pure milk and know it cannot be produced except , at considerable expense. But since pricing, even ' beforet)PA, had been removed from the market rule of supply and demand, the consumers have had to depend on a government agency to set the price. They expect that price to be de termined at a level which "will allow a fair profit to the producer, but are without means themselves of determining what that price ' should be. The way is open for the producer . to prove his case to the public as well as to the pricing authority. One thing; is evident and that is a lack of proper agreement between OPA and other gov .' ernroent agencies, for instance the war food administration. It does not seem right for i powdered milk to provide a higher return than jmilk for. the bottle and can trade. Again the ; butter price seemp to be held at too low a level In comparison with other dairy products. "The whole structure.seems to need revision, and that calls for better cooperation between the government agencies concerned in the matter. M j. ; I - Ilope Die Hani , .Disclosure of the existence and subsequent destruction of the German youth movement's ; attempt to rebuild Nazism should be sufficient answer t to those persons who have become ; increasingly impatient to "get the boys jail ' tome." It is 'apparent that our job is not yet finished.; , , Rumblings of a resurgent malignancy have beer apparent for some time, and in recent weeks when jit was discovered that Winston - Churchill's speech in' Fulton. Mo., was surreotj- ' tinilv rinrifttH fnr Histrihritirm am KaTTPkTJssue SO awkwardly. . X. t,.- v... - w More AdhuIbx Than Exciting dered American Power tc Light may soon di vorce its northwestern subsidiaries: Pacific Power it Light, Washington Water Power, Mon tana Power, North western Electric and Portland Gas Ac Coke, since the parent company elects to continue in business in the Dallas, Texas area. Holding companies in many cases were a source of evil. Pyramiding of companies andj dilution of values in stocks and debentures re-; suited in huge losses to investors. In the deals write-ups of capitalization occurred which have had to be wiped out. Unfortunately as a result ; of the purge legislation heavy losses were in-! curred by persons innocent of wrongdoing. Stocks and bonds were depressed to very low J levels, far under the true values. The speculators! came in, bought the securities and have profited j greatly on the upswing. The drastic cure however has left the private utility companies stronger, if leaner in capitali zation. Controls of accounting are strict; rates are closely scrutinized by regulatory bodies; siphoning of profits to service affiliates is pre vented. As far as service to the public Is con cerned the private utility is now pretty decent.. The legislative face-washing may have been resisted; but at least it cleaned up the industry including the area behind its ears- Cleaner and healthier, now it can go ahead. Behind the News By PAUL MALLON (Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Re- production in whole or in part strictly prohibited.) NEW YORK, April I.-The common popular in-' terpretation was that Mr. Gromyko spoke like a j spoiled child when he walked from UNO. "Because : my proposal has not been accepted by the coun cil," he said he could not participate further. On that basis Russia could never participate In co- operative peace except when her proposals are accepted. The only possible plan of world, peace roust then be Russia's. i ' Such diplomacy seemed to skilled diplomats a I little too simple to be true. The ? way Moscow told it to the Rus slan people, indeed, was slightly different. Tass told the comrades at home that after Gromyko had been voted down he said "due . to -. reasons placed upon t him from 1 higher up," he could not discuss ; the Iranian question. Stalin, thus. gravely accepted the blame, but this only accentuated the interest the professional diplomats as to why Russia chose to draw the eDtotrBMrtai fcy Iin Paatara Sr4icmta Si UTn with Tk WhiK SIM Can't You Walk a Utile Faster? Police Probe Several Small Theft Cases Police Monday were busy In vestigating several cases of minor pilfering from Salem schools and business places allegedly . entered over the weekend. In nearly evf ery case entry was gained by breaking the glass of a door or window in order to unlock it. More than $50 was taken from a cash register at the. Peacock Cleaners, 485 Center st, Satur day night and, apparently . at about the same time the adjacent Nite Hawk cafe was entered, but nothing was taken . there. A white table radio was taken from Garfield school and some small change from teachers desks at Richmond school. About- $30 rwas removed from a cash regis ter at W. W. Byerly'S service sta tion, at 1090 S. 12th st Also entered were the Top Hat Cafe in the 1200 block of State street and the Stevenson- Me fiord service station at Court and Church streets. Nothing was taken either place. A window was broken but entry not gained at the Marion Feed Co. on Ferry street, police said. ' . Tho Literary Guidcpost Br Bab Fries I lot raal, Halloa tim4. .There can be no. weakening of our position In Oermany until the day arrives when a free election has placed in power an administra tion sufficiently conscientious, able and strong . to-combat and restrain the fanatics whose minds ' remain' warped with- the teachings of " super - General Sibert ha announced that "the back . J of the (Nazi) movement has been broken," but I erven j General Sibert would not say the blow to, the movement yet had been mortal. So long . as there is no strong central German govern -f. . men there will be efforts to mold that govern u merit's development along the lines of the ideo logy against which the war was fought. Hope dies hard.' . ; ,; . .k j , i ' "Drath Sentence" Upheld . . j The supreme court has handed down a de cision upholding the constitutionality of the death; sentence provision of . the public utility , holding company act. Scarcely anyone in the country will be surprised at the decision. At . best the suit j was a rear guard action on the j - part bf the utility . concerns which challenged the act. Mostj of the holding companies have been working out deals for compliance with the. law and some reorganizations have been 'completed-'' ' 1 1 The law did not abolish holding companies. It did require them to integrate their operations geographically. Those which sprawled over the country are required to choose the area where' '. they Will serve and divest themselves of other holdings. Thus ' Idaho Power co. has become Independent of the parent Electric Power Sc light organization; and Puget Sound Power Sc Light is no longer a subsidiary of Engineers" Public Service, Now that this decision is ren- Editorial Comment rxmisniD Bt sixtss ) Franco i- ""Unfinished 'business on the Fascist T side oiL the ledger. And the French may be par doned if they do not understand why the wiping of -" democracy's slate clean of the effects of appeasing Fascism w not quite as appropriate for TJfNO efforts sis the efforts to halt what some call appeasement of Communism' today. f To My that Comiminit pressures are absent from the picture would be-naive. But to say that UTe-y are the only considerable motivation' for the French political moves between the Anglo-American and Russian positions in UNO is to ignore certain funds mentals ef French security. For example,, the French demand that Fascism be removed from its southern border now is con ' atsteni wrOi French demands that the Rhineland - be separated from' Germany to insure France's east " Ci u borders. ( ' f in any ra those in the United States and Britrin who accuse France of playing Communisms game might well be asked whose aim is being .served by Anglo-American policies which help to ." keep Spain safe for reaction, for clericalism, and -presently for Fascism. "", - An honest answer to this question, and vigorous' action by the American people on the basis of that answer, would not be appeasement of Russia K But ' It would 6e a great deal to improve Soviet-American relaConsv--Christiaai Science Monitor. The explanation I hear is Stalin was caught In an extremely awkward position, which amused the close followers of the security council, far more than It excited them, although the delicate' points of the matter were not published or explained. Stalin thought he owned the Teheran govern ment as he had weeks back installed a premier sympathetic to his purposes and brought the pre mier to Moscow for a conference. When the of ficial protest of Iran against Russian absorption was first presented to the council, it was placed on the list of provisional subjects. But the Iranian ambassador to the United States judged his gov ernment meant what it said, and so did Mr. Byrnes. The "maybe" subject became the first subject Stalin then hastily announced he had an agree ment for peaceful settlement with Iran. This tha j they were unappreciatively filed iniuin minister iin w ociucu. oianu una -waa GENERAL, CKDRGI CROOK, BUS AUTOBIOGRAPHY, 4U4 aa aa BoCatcS ky Martin r. Schraltt (L'bI verstty f Olhoa; S3). George Crook was one Civil war general who-didn't win his reputation east of the Missis sippi. To him, the conflict with the Confederacy was just an in terlude. Before and after, he was an Indian fighter. Crook fought the greatest of the Indian chieftains; served at frontier posts from the Colum bia river to the Rio Grande, from Illinois to the Pacific. Yet he was as good at defend ing Indians as he was at fighting them. Crook Understood and sympathized with the red man. He spoke plainly and often against injustices! of Indian. trStment. "The American In dian is not half so black as he has been painted." he told West Point graduates of 1884. "He is crel in war, treacherous at tirhes and not over cleanly. But so were our forefathers. ... It is not; impossible that with a fair and square system of dealing with him, the American Indian would make a better citizen than many who neglect the duties and abuse the privileges of that prdUd title." And when Crook died. Red Cloud, the Sioux, gave him his epitaph: "He, at least, had never lied to us." This book, an absorbing story of frontier days, is a valuable, contribution to Americans. It conies to print by lucky chance. The existence of the autobi ography had not been even. sus pected for more than 50 years. It was among Crook's personal pa pers that were presented in 1939 0 the Army War College where DTP I 0S3ODQ0 caught in a web he had woven too flimsuy. There was little defensively he could do except to tell Gromyko to take a stroll. Many Natural Questions Raised Similar inner doings of past months bear an odor as the Hitler methods diplomacy "according to plan"-r-which brought on World War II. Russia wants a country. She starts a communist revolution in it. She installs her own premier, summons him to Moscow to tell him what to do. Are we,;going to go through Austria, Czechoslovakia, Danzig all over again in the names of Iran, Iraq, Turkey, Greece, Manchuria? Has " Russia a time-schedule as Hitler had, that she calls for delays of specific time? Six weeks she wants In Iran, numberless weeks in Manchuria.; . These are natural questions raised in the minds of our people by her tactics. How should we answer these moves? They are asking also. I think some government authorities have come to a conclusion which one government official not a diplomat put to me tersely: "If we are going to protect small countries, ; we had better protect them." J- Likened te League of NatienS The UNO walkout crisis is the same which the j Jeague of nations did not face in Ethiopia and Manchuria and it disintegrated for that reason. You will recall the league discussed Japanese ag- ' gression in Manchuria until too late to do any- ; thing, then appointed a commission which spent a year or more traveling around the subject be- - fore reaching conclusions which "were apparent to the average newspaper years earlier. Similarly Mussolini was allowed to. walk aWay with Ethio pia. These initial . aggressions led into the late Hitler acquisitions, and ih each Case cooperative action in the interest of thV small nations became an abject nullity, and could not survive its im potence by pretenses. The UNO is at the crossroads the league first met with the Japanese invasion of Manchuria. Its power and prestige will follow the course it now plot. It it is unable to bolster the resistance of small governments, jf it does not provide a plat form upon which they can hope to stand with success, they will fall at the first prodding, and some may come running in advance, as they did with Hitler, anticipating that they were next oof the list. Tactics Change With Power . When Russia was a small nation she thought rightly about such matters. She bitterly ehided the league-on Manchuria and Ethiopia. Now that she has grown great and powerful, her tactics follow, steps she formerly criticized. It" is within the power of UNO ta bring the international era of wonderful nonsense to a. close and establish a peace based on professed principles. That is the question mark behind, the news from the college gymnasium Jbete. away, to remain buried and un known until Martin Schmift, an army sergeant on War College duty, stumbled across them in 1942. Srhmitt knew what to do with his discovery. . He wisely has pre sented Crook's Story in all its or iginal flavor, even to some eccen tricities of spelling, and enhanced it With a thorough job of annota tion to clarify Crook's references to persons, places and events. More, he completed the stpry which Crook left unfinished at hisdeath. Thus the reader gains a broader view of what, in some respects, are the absorbing years of Crook's life when he . was (Continued from page 1) . given a boo6t to promoters of additional dams. The power re quirement for the tunnel is said to be 500,000 kw, which Is to be sure an enormous amount of power. While its demand would -be irregular, still that supply would have to, be on tap unless X energy would be diverted from industries, homes and farms. The World claims that the site which is favored for the wind tunnel is in the neighborhood of Grand Coulee where there are power and much rough waste land. So it thinks that Foster creek is the .logical location for the next dam. Meantime there is an under current of opposition to more dams. The fishing Interests of the lower Columbia are hostile because they see in the erection of more dams the doom to salm on runs. Private power interests are not vocal in opposition; nei ther does the hand of the rail roads show though both groups may dislike to see the ' dams come. Dr. Raver of Bonneville asserts the present glut of power is temporary and that the north west will be needing additional supplies of electric energy by the time another dam can be com pleted, along in 1950 or 1951. It looks very much as. though the McNary dam will go forward now. It would be built by the army engineers and the power would be marketed through the Bonneville administration. Meantime great things are stirring in central Washington Final plans are being perfected for putting water from Grand Coulee dam on the thirsty acres of the Big Bend district and south to Pasco. Ephrata on the north side of the area will be the center for the staff of en gineers headed by F. A. Banks who supervised the construction of the Coulee dam. It is antici pa ted that 400,000 acres of land will be under water within five years. The first project is a pumping project near Pasco, drawing wa ter from the Columbia. Later the water required will be sup plied from the big canals from Coulee dam. The area of approximately one million acres whose irrigation is planned has been divided into three districts. The first major unit to be complete will be the Quincy district with 260,000 acres of deep soil. Next will come the east district and last the south district. , The 400,000 acres to be under water by 1951 equals in area all the irrigated lands of the Yak ima project, now one of the richest agricultural regions in the nation. By next July contracts will be let for $40,600,000 worth of work; and additional contracts are scheduled for letting m 1947, '48 and 49. The transformation of the arid lands of central Washington into productive farm lands will be a miracle without mystery. It will lead to the economic devel opment of the whole northwest. "Keep your eye on Pasco" is a weathered slogan which will gain new life. fighting by word and action for the Indians' rights. GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty . - iSt1-'? -55T: -and It Would be nice. If you'd go en strike sometime, Smedley! spend air' evening with me in the living reom!" State Prison Convict Freed Ted Mocamber was ordered re leased from the Oregon state peni tentiary Monday by Circuit Judge. George Duncan on a writ of ha beaus corpus. Mocamber was convicted in Polk county of grand larceny and in 1939 was sentenced to five years in prison. Following his sentence the Polk county district attorney filed information under the habi tual criminal act and convicted Mocamber of three felonies which carried a sentence of 39 years. After serving five years for his original crime Mocamber sought release through habeaus corpus on grounds that the proceeding and sentence under the habitual crim inal act were void. Judge Dun can upheld his contention. Aurora Jersey CattlcRated The registered Jersey . herd of C. E- Eastman and Catherine Eastman of Aurora, was recently officially classified according to a report from the American Jer sey Cattle club. New York. The official who went over each cow in the herd individually compar ing her to the model of the breed in type was Professor H. M. King of the University of British Co lumbia. Twenty-three animals in the herd average 80.76 per cent on a score card basis. Included in this average are three Very Good, 1& "good plus" and nine "good" in dividuals. The animals Scotty Pearl Blacky 1315565. Amber Gwen 1416569 and Come Aim Prince 429388 were rated "very good." Rainfall High In Salem Area During March March continued the above- normal-rainfall record for 1948 established in January and Feb ruary. A Jotal of 5,72 inches, com pared With the normal of 4 inch es, of rain fell on Salem during the third .month of the year,. US t . a. r a . - weainer Bureau oincwis ai mc Nary field announced Monday. Combined with January's 6.37 inches and, February's 5.77, the March precipitation brought the total for the year to 17.86. ' com pared with an average of 14.29 Inches for the same period and 17.93 inches recorded during the first three months of 1945. : Rain was recorded 23 days of the month, with the record of 1.47 inches on the 12th. One inch of snow on the 27th was the fim measurable snowfall since Jan. 2, 1943. and the first to occur fn March since March 29, 1938. L Mean : temperature for the month was 46.1 degrees compared With a normal of 46.4 degrees; av erage daily maximum was 54.8, With the highest temperature (69 degrees) on the 9th. Average min imum was .37.4 degrees and the low was 29 on the 16th. ' Frosts were noted on the 16th, 20th and -31st. but no material damage resulted in this area, the weather bureau reported. Nine teen cloudy days, 1 1 partly cloudy and one clear are on the weather bureau record for the month. Pre-i vailing Winds were from the south, with, no extremely7 high velocities recorded. UAL Training Stewardesses More stewardesses currently are being trained by United Air Lines than ever before in the company's history, according to R. M. Wain- right. ; superintendent of steward ess service. When the present class of 134 young women graduates early this month from schools in Chicago and San Francisco, the company will have trained 248 stewardesses in the first quarter of 1946 as com pared with 277 "during the entire year of 1943. Wainright said. . Acceleration of the training! program is to provide steward esses for United's rapidly-increasing fleet tf 44-passenger, four engined Mainliner 230's now in service, and its ' 52-passenger Mainliner 300's due later this year. Each of the planes carries two stewardesses. ' On Staff IRVING F. BRYAN j Rehabilitation f Service Names Two New Agents" Kr - Addition of two rehabilitation : agents to the personnel of the state vocational -rehabilitation service was announced Monday by C. F. Feike. state supervisor. Irving F.- Bryan, recently re-" turned to Oregon ai tee two years as a lieutenant In the navy, will be headquartered at the state 11--brary building here.-While In the ' navy, Bryan was aboard the USS Custer, on which craft he partici pated 'In the' amphibious assault. at Leyte, XJngayen,' LaPas- and . Okinawa. Before entering the service, he was principal of Leb- ! anon high school for five years. Herbert A. Ketelhohn, who for. 11 years was with the Portland public schools and for four years was co-ordinator in the war pro duction training program, has as sumed his duties as a training of ficer in the district office in Port Board Drive " Aims to Ciit ': . Shipping toss. Shippers throughout the west ern states have joined the, tenth annual - "perfect' shipping j cam paign of the regional shippers ad- ' visory boards to be conducted throughout - the nation . during April in an effort to reduce losses; which last year reached $90,000,- 000. : . . v With retail stores and customers clamoring for the scarce goods of America's industries, E. W. Pow ers, superintendent or xreignt protection for Southern Pacific, said the purpose of the Campaign on the part of the railroad lines will be to - intensify interest of shippers, carriers and freight re ceivers in improved packing, load- Ing and handling of merchandise in transit. "Perfect shipping is the', con cern of tne entire community ,7 Power said. "The waste from careless packing, marking and handling of valuable and scarce materials has reached a tremend ous figure, and the wits of all are challenged to reduce this loss to. the minimum." .. ' Legion Probes Check Delay A reported delay In the receipt. of veteran's administration checks by Willamette university student veterans brought . action " from American Legion Post .No.-,' 9 Mon-, day night in the form of a com mittee to Investigate the situ ation, and suggest further moves. The legionnaires , were told that many - veterans who filed claims as early as list October still have not received' paymenti. . Other action by th legion In- t eluded the voting of money to purchase post colors . for the new women's post, and ' si discussion of legion participation in Salem war memorial- plans. Snell Speaks At DAR Dinner PORTLAND, April 2-VThe 32nd annual conference of Ore gon Daughters Of the American Revolution went into . its second day today, after a banquet speech by Governor Snell yesterday, Snell outlined the history of constitutional government and de clared he was convinced that "a vast majority of the people of this country are determined that theT capitalistic free enterprise system must continue." He urged a minimum of restric tions and full encouragement to competition and individual initia tive. State and chapter officers made reports today. il Whether you wish a. diamond 'soh tadro, wed- tjl dinj ring 6V matched set you will find Just ' 3 what Vou prefer at Stevens. See. tho -gems '. . selected by us for their outstandinigr bril- J llance. shape and color. I - v. Hill I rJOff M-!M i Pay menu CAA. 3ssfJ,SfrAj 3J Oart St r 1 1 '9 S