The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 07, 1946, Page 4, Image 4

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    Tf-V Qrgfrj gtatman. Sqlsm. Ortyw. Friday. Tun 7, 1948
: " "No Favor Swaya Ua; No Tfor Shall Aw"
, Frsea Tint Statesman. March IS. 115 1 .
TtlE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY
i CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher
Member ef the Associated Preae
Tha Associated rress la sseliislTety entitled ta the sa far publication
ef $JJ sews dispatches credited to it or nat etherwiae credited tn thla
Don't Cripple the Bus System
j The. city council made a serious mistake at its last meeting
when it granted permission to operators of a new suburban bus
line "io do an intercity business also along its route, it one sub
; urban line la given this privilege others can justly claim itj and
' the result will be that the finances of the Oregon Motor Stages
. v city system will be impaired.
r4-It is quite essential for Salem to have a good city bus serv-
SceC Oregoni Motor Stages has furnished that through the years
' And the new owners are making a heavy investment to provide
the routes with new and more comfortable buses. The company
r-'caflnot prosper if its revenues are cut into by competition. The
u council ought to reconsider its hasty action and restrict the new
i 12th Street suburban line to suburban service.
- The explanation is offered that the matter did not come
Wore the council, until toward the end of a very long session
. of budget committee and council meeting Members merely ac-
: ceptea tre lavoraDie report ox me utilities commute wiinout
' realizing that the application sought' permission for intra-city
"2 operations. The subject should be brought up at the next meet
ing and reconsidered; and the council should adhere to its prev
ia kr-is policy of granting only one franchise for intra-city bus
- l operations, v , -!
Tfcje Statesman's only interest Is in seeing that Salem con
i, tinue to have a good transit system; and I know that wilt not
; be maintained if revenues are divided among several operators.
' The bus patron aTe! the ones we are concerned fpr.
.. ; sssssbjbsubbS sunsnsMPnssj
Vinson and Snyder
' i V The general applause which greeted President Truman's
J nomination of Senator Warren Austin of Vermont as represen-.
' "tative of the United States on the UN security council will not
; attend his nomination of Fred M. Vinson, secretary of the treas
ury, to succeed the jlate Harlan F. Stone as chief justice of the
" I supreme court and pf John W. Snyder, present director of re
. 'Conversion, as secretary of the treasury. Vinson has been an
able congressman and has served competently as secretary of the
treasury. He was judge -of the circuit court of appeals for the
District of. Columbia for a few years. But he seems quite inade
quate to fill the seat of Stone and Hughes and White and
- Marshall
' As for Snyder, he has already proved himself one of Tru-
man's mistakes. One of his Missouri friends, he has been an inti
mate adviser of the president's -and the consequences are ob
' vious to the whole country.
"k An Astoria pastor had his watch stolen, while preaching a
' sermotiL A sinner wh would do such a trick would drop a pant's
'""button in the plate and take out 85 cents in change. Art Perry
' in Medford Mail-Tribune.
Surely no One in the congregation would steal the preach-
: srs watch.
. - - - - ?r
. The Eugene Register-Guard attributes Secretary of Agricul
' ture Anderson's unwillingness to give the northwest some chick-
- enfeed to his being from Indiana Where the poultry business is
not major industry. The R-G was napping. It was Claude
' , Wickard who was from Indiana. Anderson was born in South
. ' Dakota, has lived in New Mexico since 1918.
; JFIIA Director Folger Johnson says he is "freh out" of
- priorities for houses for sale to veterans. That will cause little
embarrassment because suppliers appear to be fresh out of the.
: stuff that goes into housebuilding.
Behind the
(Distribution by King Features Syndicate. Inc. Reproduction in whole
I - or In part strictly prohibited.)
'r WASHINGTON, June 6 Messrs. Bern, Mototov and Byrnes
nave dow sposen inerr peace pieces, or ine conference tnienm ana
are packing -their bags for the June 15 resumption in Paris.' Mr.
" Brmes spoke with hope. Mr. Bevin with chagrin
and Mr. Molotov with frecriminations. The hopes and
chagrin of the United! States and Britain therefore
Tt are facing the recriminations of Russia for the. new
meeting. Of the thre. Molotov spoke least hope-
fully. Indeed he ignored hope entirely. Therefore
-'the council of the ministers wijl be resumed with
-- a rhetorical affirimnc of the stalemate he caused in
the previous meetings;
Various interpretations are being prominently
Z. exposed to the American people. The moist sedate
American newspaper presented the Bevin speech
r ar. "a picture of gloom, bewilderment and resent
: ' tnent against the soviet union," although it seemed
. exactly the opposite to me. and probably was a eni MaJion
stronger statement of determinaUon to resist "handing every country
. In the world over to the soviet system" (his interpretation of what
Russia wants) than that of Mr. Byrnes who only refused hope with
: out furnishing any .substance for it. 'This may be due to the longer
; ' experience of (British and socialists in dealing intimately and un
i successfully' with communists for many long years, whereas we have
- only latery been required to take up that tak.
Etnm TUer ar Weak Pelicy
1 Behind all this is the major inside question of whether a strong
a policy. or a weak one is best in negotiations. Actually we have tried
j both Without any material success. But our officials and . the people
now 'are troubling themselves about such .matter as fear of war,
and in 'their desire to avoid any possibility of it. are falling into
fearful misconcepUona of what the situation today rily and truly
' 1. and have lapsed into some general degree of "gloom, bewilder
; : ment and resentement' 1y any estimate. I venture to suggest they
: ars misreading th inner actualities, to wit:
Russia wants war leu than anyone. She is merely playing upon
;t our desires and fears for her owp diplomatic end. She cannot feed
tt or equip her own people for some years yet. She cannot even think
r of anything military except a short campaign which could not long
. be successful against United Nations planes and navies. War is really
unthinkable for her now but nrtt for three, five or ten years from
now,. . ' j
Tusse to Take SUad is New
The time to take a stronger! diplomatic stand against advance
ment toward a communist empire of the world is now. This is the
tiro to stop the war by fullest diplomatic firmne. not later when
, her empire has grown strong and Us able to store and equip itself for
. work) conflict. Instead, we are promoting a tendency to advertise the
futility of hopes without substance, to yearn for some sort of corn
; promise or appeasement to atisfry" RuKia, and gain time, whereas
tune: will-work her way, '.eventually giving her the atom bomb for
Instfenre.
i This is the very thing Ruia wants us to do Her adamant and
' belligerent foreign policy is 4 tmiliar communist diplomatic tech-
riue. inrieetv is the same theiiry twrl by Hitler before Munich and
' afterward, when he played himU up to war making strength .upon
' " our fears and hopes for. peace, although he could have been slopped
: by a ftrns stand mnt where along that way.
: . In short, ws have worked ourselves into a state of mind rjpc for
Russian plucking, or have bet n worked into it by her adamant and
. belligerent resistance to our peace hopes. If it gains her compro
smses which will afford powe - in those nations which have rejected
er at the ballot box. or in other nation where communists are am
, bilious or even enough power in them .to get a communist in as an
interior minister where he wiHl have charge of the secret police and
furore elections, she will win. But if she if ails to scare us into appease
mer.t, as Hitler did, and merely succeeds in preventing a Joint peace
' snd causing us to mope about the "failure of the peace, and .to be
i "bewildered and "confused." she will have won her alternate desire.
: namely the weakening of our foreign policy, by undermining it at
t fcoase. . !, : . . -
That's her Inside game. Our people just have not dealt with the
. comSBunlsta long enough to know them. On the other hand, if we can
Cget Off the defenstw and away from confused sorrow about lost
hopes, and -make a few demands for ourselves as to bases and our
r'cts t we should he demanding more than we want) and otherwise
aTtmf ersetves affirmatively, we might loosen the bonds which
a: keeping us from aUbilizing a peace end yes, even get an agree-
aasf
News
By
Paul Mallon
1 -' 1
"s bbsbs..
m
I fITtTN AND BEAR
(-Si J TAMP
T.
I den't care what Easily
says
besfness Is vital and
Tho Literary
Guidopoot
By Belt Price
STRATEGY IS THE CIVIL WAS. ky
Rrrn DaSrlck (Military Ser
lr rllbln(: S2 M).
The generals who run a war
are governed by (certain basic
principles of strategy, no matter
whether their armies fight with
stones, or with rbckeuv Surprise,
concentraUon of combat power,
mobility, security--on such ten
ets are battles woo and lost.
Barron Deaderlck has taken
these principles laid down by
Napoleon, Clausewitz, and oth
ers and as true today as when
they were written and used
them as a yardstick of appraisal
for the strategy of the principal
Civil War battles and cam
paigns. He tells the battle's sto
ry, simply and tersely, then
shows how the opposing cap
tains won or lost by the degree
of their adherence to the fun-
da mental rules.
There are i exceptions. Lee
practically threw away the book
at An tie tarn and got away with
it. Grant forgot about security
at Shi 1 oh and yet escaped dis
aster. But these show only that
something besides : a knowledge
of the rulebook gpes into the
making of a military leader. Ia
the main, it ia amazing to note
hew persistently the neglect of
one or more of these time-worn
maxims decided the outcome of
a battle.
There is nothing really new in
this book. Indeed, the author ov
erlooks some new material of
fered by Douglas Southall Free
man in "Lee's : Lieutenants-
which might have; softened his
judgment of Longs treet's delay
on the second day at Gettys
burg. But it ; is an interesting
and valuable presentation, none
theless, and one that will be ap
preciated by any one with more
than a passing interest in the
Civil War.
ASCHITECTS r C H vai.ESTOK.
by BWatrtrr St. Jtaltrn SLavraal,
K4rph. by tart J lie. Crs-
a Art Association; S3.
The author furnishes a val-
able record of some of the men
whn Knilt nitftiircsiiie rnmantir j
lantie
Tid
Charleston, and the Moorish
Greek, Roman, English
whatnot styles of their work
mot styles or tneir wors.
shown, often screened by
are
South Carolina's lush foliage, in
the photographs,
SHADOW OVKt ATHENS, ky Ptt
kton DrmrUtUM (Rinrhart; SI).
A Greek artist sets down
here with passion the horrible
record of German occupation;
there are 77 drawings, 77 In
dictments. rtpfEOro use:
fLECTRtC UtSHT rilAMSMTi
AMOJG OTHER IWH&S...
PEOPLE. -
SHELLS ,
LIGHT...
2
XOO, OOOrOOO
l OF SUM
Peet
a sf in nH
By Lichty
yew tell theea la Washington ear
aa4 we denssd lsmiber yrtertUesr
Hope to Hop
To 29 Cities
Within 31 Days
ev
SPOKANE, June -(-Comedian
Bob Hope tonight opened the
first of a series of shows that will
take him on a hop-skip tour of
the nation by air with showings
in 29 cities in 31 days.
The strenuous schedule of
showing one city one day and an
other the next will be met by
flying in chartered planes. Hope
said he -believed the tour is unique
In show business.
Two DC3s, chartered from
Transair of New York, will re
main with the party of 40 through
Out the month.
The itinerary calls for them to
visit this imposing list of cities
during the month
Tacoma, Seattle. Portland. Oak
. land. San francisoo, Denver, Tul
sa. Oklahoma City, Dallas, Fort
Worth. S4n Antonio, Houston4
New Orleans. Uttle Rock, Mem
phis, Nasfcvillfy. Atlanta. Louis
ville. Cincinnati. Columbus. In
dianapolis.? Chicago, Milwaukee,
St. Paul. Minneapolis, Des Moines,
Kansas Cit?y and Wichita.
17 Vessels to
Unload Today
By th AuociaCrd Fjr
More than 1200 service person
nel are scheduled to debark from
17 vessels at three U. S. ports
today. Ships arriving:
At New York
Sheepshead Bay 'Victory from
Southampton.
At San Diego-i-
LCIs 640. 1012. 638. 673. 41 and
455 from Pacific areas. LC (FF)
679. patrol craft YP 638, YP 628
and YP 618.
At San Francisco
LST 485. LET 275 from Pearl
I Hi hor I XS BS from Pearl Har.
. ' . , m,
hor. Edward Victory from Ma,
1 nila, LSM 102 from Pearl Harbor,
Turrialba from Yokosuka.
'
I Upstate Bread
- "T"V a
llOrtailC 1? Clt
PORTLAND. June 6-(yP)-The
bread shortage is being felt more
sharply in upstate Oregon than in
the Portland area, the department
of agriculture's food distribution
advisory committee reported to
day. The committee, holding its
monthly session, said some larger
bakejies were halting upstate
shipments and selling their en
tire output to city retailers.
Some upstate towns are getting
only half their normal supply, of
ficials, reported, while 75 per
cent of the Portland demand is
being met.
The group passed a resolutios
opposing any return to food ra
tioning. Wholesale and retail
dealers make up the committee.
Army's New
IT
Imr - - r - - . - tt .
y ... -v-"V-':''i'-'t; "
LOS ANGELES. Jane g The arasy has dlscleeed details ef the new fighter plane, the Northrup "Flying
sUaa" (above). The weird craft. deigne.led the XP-79. Is iei proneJIed and has a horisonUI cockpit,
the pilot flying la a prone position. The plane's w ag spaa Is 33 feet and It is only 14 feet long. The
two Jet nails speed the ship at better than 59 miles per hour. AP Wlrepbete).
Good Weather
Aid to Crops
PORTLAND. June - Fa
vorable weather in the week end
ed June 4 gave Oregon s crops
substantial improvement, the
weekly report of the weather bu
reau said today.
Showers were general ahd fol
lowed heavy rains the preceding
week.
However, the report said, the
earlier drouth had been so pro
longed that full recovery of all
crops and pastures was not ex
Ipected. The week's summary Straw
berries improved markedly; pros
pects good for s normal crop of
tree ant cane fruit; cherry fly
dusting is under way in the Salem
area: sugar beet and lettuce thin
ning progressing in Malheur coun
ty; potato planting completed in
Deschutes and Klamath counties.
Enlistment by
June 30 Urged
Men who Join the! new regular
army after June 30, 1946, will
not he. guaranteed family allow
ances during the period of their
enlistment, but those who enlist
prior to that date have the as
su ranee that the allowances will
be ' continued during the entire
period of their enliktment, the
Salem arm recruiting staUon
has been notified.
After June 30, too, men who
wish to re-enlist ' In their dis
charge grade will have to do so
within 20 days from date of dis
charge. They have been given
the privilege of waiting SO days
to make up their mi$ds.
Lumbermen
Seek Surplus'
PORTLAND, Ore., June 6-0P-The
executive vice - president of
the West Coast Lumbermen's as
sociation charged today the west
coast lumber Industry i ham
pered by "a labyrinth of delays"
in .release of urplus war equip
ment. Harold V. Simpson, referring to
federal funds recently allocated
for access roads, said the govern
ment would "be more realistic in
making war surplus tractors, pow
er shovels and dump trucks avail
able for purchase by logging oper
ators, who could then do their
own road building with their own
money."
COMET TO VANISH
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz , June 6 (IF)
Astronomers at the Lowell ob
servatory here today announced
that a new comet travelling at a
high rate of speed across the skies
in a southwesterly ; direction is
now leaving esrth's visibility area.
inner
Mrs. Katie Bowman. . ef 2231
S. Whiter si. (left) was delight
ed te fly to Los Angeles there ,
i" ' r V" V
I V f
te receive a gift from Radle ment to the heavy cruiser Co
Personality Tesa Breneman ef iumbus. He later served on the
aa alrfltcht ticket for the rest
ef her Journey te Dallas. Tex..
te visit relatives. Bet she cant i
forget that Oregon authorities
cancelled her operator's license
and wouldn't let her drive soeth.
she told reporters In Los Ange
les, where this plctare was
taken.
Fighter Plane: 'Flying Ram9
They Are Winners in the French Balloting
1 i
' , I v I'll'
PARIS. June Leaders af.the French pepalar repabUcaa tnavement, winner In the French electlena,
stand an steps af ferelgn affairs ministry In Parts. Left te right: Maurice Schumann, party rhalr-
Bsea; Geerges Bidaelt. French
AP Wlrepbete vU radU frees
Pride, Patronage, Politics
Jeopardize Congress Raise
By Alex Slngleten
WASHINGTON, June 6 -(A)-A triple threat - - pride, patronage
and politics - - jeopardized today senate passage of a bulky bill to
overhaul the nation's lawmaking machinery.
Tjjne question of pride centered upon proposed reduction of senate
committees and consequent eliminaUon of a number of highly-prized
cnairmansnips.
That of patronage was raised
over the provision thst a person
nel director - - rather than com
mittee chairmen - - would control
appointments to well-paying jobs
as legislaUve experts. I
Political Fear 1
And in this election year, the po
litical angle stemmed from tile
fear that .proposed increased ben
efits for congressmen would be
used as campaign ammunition by
their opponents.
The measures supporters pri-
Project to House
Naval Personnel
ASTORIA. June 6-w?VThe na
vy has appropriated $4,300,000 for
construction of 375 dwellings here
to accommodate personnel of the
19th fleet group, to be berthed at
Tongue Point, the naval station
here said today.
The money will provide for
purchase of land, installation of
streets, wslks snd utilities ss well
as for houses.
The project likely will get un
derway within two months. It
will not take care of all the 3000
naval personnel to be stationed
permanently with , the 500 inac
tive ships to be berthed here.
Keep Oregon Green
Campaign to Begin
Individuals in various c o m
munities of Marion county will
be visited by Judge Grant Mur
phy shortly and asked to take
responsible part in the Keep Ore
gon Green program this summer.
Church groups, 'Boy Scouts,
press, radio and other interested
organizations also will be asked
to cooperate, as the Izaak Wal
ton league has already declared
it will do. Murphy said.
The announcement followed p
meeUng between county judgv
and a group of representative
citizens to determine what meth
od should be followed in cam
paigning against forest fires this
year.
Lt. Arthur (lase
Entta Terminal Leave
I Lt. (jg) Arthur C. Case, home
i in Salem for the past month af
ter three years naval service.
completed his terminal leave on
June 5. He plans to attend Ore
gon State college this fall.
Case started his training in the
Willamette university V-12 unit
i n mil I n put
I ill 1914 Biu w ii irvj at ui
cagQ and Boston before assign
War Hawk.
AGREE ON LUMBER WAGE
KLAMATH FALLS. Ore.. June
6-P)-AFL Lumber and Sawmill
Workers and the Pine Industrial
Relations Committee, Inc., Xodrny
reported agreement on a 5 -cent
hourly pay boost for Klamath ba
sin workers.
... .-.
fereUa - jnlsiister, and Francisqee tisy,
Psrisi.
vately counted these factors as
the chief obstacles in the way of
their plan to streamline congres
sional machinery.
Despite this, however, the plan
attracted bi-parUsan support in
the first full day's debate after
Senator LaFollette (Prog - Wis)
outlined it and termed it neces
sary to avoid a "constitutional
crisis."
Product of a year-long study by
a joint congressional committee,
the measure would:
1. Limit the number of senate
committees to 16. There are now
33 standing and ten special com
mittees, an average of six seats
for each member.
Previde Staff
3. Provide the committees with
a staff of four experts each.
3. Give each member an admin
istrative assistant to handle con
stituents requests.
4. Tighten fiscal control by pro
viding for adoption of annual fed
eral budget controls by joint ac
tion of the revenue and appropri
ating committees of both houses.
5 Eliminate some of congress'
routine chores such as acting on
each separate bill to build a
bridge or pay a damage claim
against the government.
6. Boost the pay of members of
congress from $10,000 to $15,000
a, year.
7. Permit pensions for members
of congress by authorizing them
to contribute to the federal re
tirement system and to share in
its benefits.
Hr. Boberl DnBarry,
President of the French Bible
Mission and for the past 43
years paster of the Baptist
church of Nimes, Southern
France, will speak of the trials
and works of the churches dur
ing the last World war at the
Inmannel Baplixi
Church
Ilasel and Academy
r
Friday, Jane 7ih
at 8 PJI.
Come and hear him
and are now. located and operating in our
new building at
Chemekela and Church Streels
Watch for the
of
Formal Opening
Sboclc FvflDftDir(3D.
Phone 7923 CORNER CHURCH A CHEMEKETA Phone S39X
J- Service
ALSO
a
Service for Other
Hakes
LB
MtlTsttSttst
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APPLIANCE & FURNITURE !
160 SUts 1 Salem ! Phone 9149
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vice chairman ef French cabinet.
Linn Pioneer
Reunion Slated
At Brownsville ;
BROWNSVILLE. June 6 (Spe
cial )- Thousands of visitors ' will
be welcomed . in Brownsville at
their centennial celebration and
59th annual Linn County Pioneer
Re-union on June 13, 14 and 13.
Entertainment for three big
days is scheduled with parades,
barbecue, programs, baseball 'and
sofiball games;, flower show,, an
tique displays,! style pageant from
1846 o 1946, dances and carnival
attractions. j ' j w
Th Polly anna club will j be In ,
charg of the children's parade
to tal e place Thursday at 1 1 p.m.
F r i d i jr'i highlights are- the
"Feat;on Roast Ox" at noon and
ty!e pageant in the afternoon.
The servlcesof two expert bsr
be'eue chefs, Art King and Hi rney
Mi Phillips of McMinnville have
been secured. j
Saturday's big event wiU be
the pioneer parade, sponsored by
the Chamber of Commerce. It
will feature entries of floats, cov
ered wagons, horses from' the
Calapooia Round-up and Sweet
Home buckeroos. Sweet Home
high school band and marching
groups.
S TE VE II S
Always Dependable (
Each diamond is a blaze of
fiery splendor set in s mount
ing that is a masterpiece of
artistic ctaftmanship. Buy
reputation when you select
your diamonds at STEVENS.
339 Court St
New Store Hears
9:3 te 1:39
announcement
our
on Easy tf
s V
IRnttTsQ
"S .
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