I-Tha Strrtfrarnrrn. Salem Oregon, Wadnaa day, gapt 9. 198 ' "Vo Faror Swayw Us, No Fear Shall Aw" From First SUttcmu, March U, Itil . THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRACUE. Editor and Publisher I, Member of ike Associated Press The Associated Press Is entitled exclnsJvely U the se I sr repsbB--eatiea m mU the local am printed la this newspaper, aa well as sll AP Mm dispatches. Ru$s Escapees :Iee Westward i ! By) I Thousands Br Joseph sad Stewart Alsop WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 A Russian who deserts from the So viet occupation forces in Germany knows that he will be shot if "he is caught- He knows that the ruth less ly I efficient lice, the MVD.V. is more thinr Not In the Public Interest likely ? to He catch w a - him -Ta Vnnurc that his family f V i . in the Soviet un - ; The. sale of 280 acres of timber land in Deschutes county ton will almost j I :. , a u .... . . KAVT9iniW! f 1 1 Tiar bearing a fine stand of Ponderosa Dine violated a rule adopted by w" a former state land board to retain forest land and Sell Ohlv the I i..-. 4. i , i ui ma unfi uuu. timber on iL In this case the land board sold not only the land I He knows' that I the drsrvl half wvstu ub Msuvciy 1SU ruiu t en. SB iiu vswau ,va oats a u nv ,a.ua waa i - ; 'a a sealed bid or auction, and at a price $2.00 per thousand board iJtJT8ZZ& feet under the minimum recommended by the state forester. js jst he can hope for if State Treasurer Scott opposed the sale but Uoyernor riau ana he succeeds. Yet it can now oe Secretary of State" Newbrv nut it throuch. : . revealed on undoubted authority - I a.i a.' :l A..W cm avla a . UUL eclCIl 1111H1UU UIUIC WiaiJ es The tract will bring over $104,000 to the state, which is thousand Soviet soldiers and ci tempting; but the method of sale followed was wrong and not vilian officials are risking death in the public interest. The state forester's recommendation should to flee to the American zone of have been followed. On auction the timber itself should have rJ"umjF . W1 . . . . i ..-w u , ton - ai . a -a The astonishing total of desert the state should have retained the land to grow successive erops of timber on. era to the American zone in tha last 12 months is just over 13, I vv a I I r'2r- If 000. Of these about 4,000 were officers, includ Jing two generals. lone a lieutenant general on Mar shall Sokolov- sky's staff. Ap proximately 6, 000 were enlist ed men, and 3,- a000 were Russian The value of the land to the purchaser is this: since it is pretty well surrounded by federal forests he can make an ex change with the forest service whereby the latter "will get the land but he. will get cutting rights on a similar tract of federal forest lands. So the purchaser stands to earn two profits. There has been some finger-pointing because Ralph H. Cake, , republican national committeeman, represented the purchaser, s though he were mixing politics with his law practice. As far as Gov. -Hall is concerned we doubt if Cake has any influence at all. Secretarv 'Newbrv though ought to cet awav from being 1 t Zlvwutt AlsoiH workers and" d a carbon copy for the governor. While Hall appointed him he ri' .TL "Lc,,als: made the. grade himself in the spring primaries arfll so should certainly on the' low side, simply leei on ms own now. because tne - total inciuaes omy Some months ago the land board sold a small tract of tide- .jS10 Jti" ,, A . . . , from the Soviet occupation for- land on Coos Bay, Treasurer Scott objecting, for a sum which cej There is no doubt that many looked large on the basis of the small acreage involved but was more Russians have crossed the mall in comparison with the lease value of the land. Now an- zonal borders and quietly faded other instance has arisen where it does not appear that th. land SSSSS. board has exercised proper business prudence. It must pj It sets a bad precedent to sell timber on a negotiated price figures listed above apply only to basis when timber is in as crreat demand as it is at the Present Soviet desertions to the American time, and then at a price less than that recommended by the erman They dor not State forester. Why call on the state forester at all if his advice Lted ito the west in Austria and Is to be discounted so heavily? j I elsewhere, nor do they include In this instance the purchaser wanted the land board office , have fled to the Bri- ftake his cruise. The office had a cruise made by the state for- j - j t rr aster's office which showed 50,000 more board feet than the Also j in British Zone ether cruise. This became the basis for the comrutation. If the I British figure on Sov iet deser- .. j..: vj i n i i i u u I tions to the British zone are un iulc r. i w. obtainable. Yet it can certainly would probably have obtained $10,000 more for the timber and be assumed that at least as many Still held title to the land. j Russians have fled to the British zone as to the American zone. In deed, the total may well be high- Efficiency for DPS ' 4 t er. This is for a very simple rea- v j I son Two months agocongress authorized entry into the United L.Sf LJ' States of 205,000 Of Europe's more than 850,000 displaced per- can zone cf Germany were hand sons. Not one of the would-be immigrants has yet reached these ed over to the Soviet authorities, hbres. ' and thus to certain death, as a re- Isui i ot a post-war ooviet-American agreement. The agreement has their labor could have been easily absorbed during the sum- now in' effect been jettisoned. De- mer harvest season Europe's modern Les Miserables have re- serters! are returned only if the mained in idleness, growing daily more discouraged and more vid TitjaZ difficult to rehabilitate. It where he can be found and It will be another month before the DP program actually 'or obvious reasons this happens OUT! We Fear the "Woret"! gets going and the innocent victims of war start coming to Amer ica. exceedingly rarely if at all Nevertheless, the fate of Rus sian sdldiers who escaped earlier to the American zone certainly be came known to would-be desert ers in I the Soviet zone, and al- ;The reason for this delay, of course, is that everything has to run like clockwork in this country and sometimes it takes a while to get the clockwork together, "Channels"- averything has to go through chapels. Rules, regulations and -jded Ed Official directives form the channels. So far, the plans made for serters lover to the tender mercies th DPs are still somewhat tentative because, you see, the U. S. of the MVD. Therefore Soviet de- DP commission, appointed by the president when congress ad- serUoni to theBritish have very Journed, has not yet formulated all the rules and regulations. though; ; American 'policy has - i ii a x m 1 I rhancpd J tha mmnrr linvpn nn wie uiuuusixtMiiu ui uui cctuciakiu iraicm, i " :. . . " J ----o - Shipping a couple hundred thousand strangers 3,000 miles probably been higher than to the American zone. oc nnn t?:.,i. r .1. away to Ellis island and communities all over the country is not Y tt f as simple as it sounds. It involves fingerprinting, verifying re- tion M'ooRLsTansrt'the cords (a monumental task because a lot of filing cabinets got very least, have risked certain blown to bits during the war), checking birth certificates (a lot death to escape the iron grip of Of people canal prove they were born at all) and digging into enyj'et nTh Americaai2 police records. Also a DP's political beliefs must be scrutinized SoritieLfareeat lJt awaked the Since communists are now barred from entering this country, fact that this army of Russian And every emigrant has to have a medical examination. deserters is a gold -mine of in- ... ,. , . , , . TT . . vamaoie.' miormauon. Many are. Meanwhile, the plight (and expense to U. S. taxpayers) of of course, unlettered neasants and the DP's in Europe gets desperately worse, .but perhaps if the I workers, and. these are merely al DP program is stalled lon enough, it will not be necessary to I lowed fa find what place they can have it at all. The DIs will have died off or have fallen into JOIS1hef'saeJ,t wo thirds" Ire Russian hands or been taken by other coOntries. And that would woTinir n GermTn farms L a be so much more convenient than doing away With red tape on ricultufaj laborers. V4" their behalf. ' ' I As ell as the two generals al ready mentioned, however, many ! responsible officers (including a Labor Vote to Divide IMfUS VL? tl1? While President Truman was making his strenuous effort 1"- 'fn to capture the labor vote in a Labor day drive through iindust- tion otherwise wholly unobtain- rialized Michigan and a big speech at Detroit, Uncle Dan Tobin, able, both military intelligence, long right bower for FDR in the labor movement, and his team- and m?rp general but equally val- . . A. t 7 j t uable information on the inner sters were getting set to stay (officially) neutral. Instead of mak- workingi of the Soviet system, tng any endorsement the union isn't even going to hold a political r 1 . action conference; and its magazine gives its million members a "u experiment rails pauis to vote as they please, though Tpbin urges support for con- ?r gressional candidates who opposed the Taft-Hartley bill. nlace is itself an immenselr Kis- Despite all of Truman's efforts he, is not going to corral all nificant j commentary on the So- f the labor vote. The CIO is pretty well lined up behind him, "ei Iar more meamngiui . ,. . . ' . , . than the occasional individual es- bamng the Wallace splinter section. But Dewey is going to ga- cape ofp; Kravchenko or a Kasen- ther in a good measure of support from AFL. kina. For the plain fact is and For one thing, labor leaders are politicians too; and they " rtlJ"!, plaitner ?.)er d know a bandwagon when they see one. The Dewey vehicle has penmen is a ghastly and tragic the popular calliope now and enough AFL. leaders will get a ride failure.) This fact is attested not on it to have a foot in the White House come next January. j only by the utter desperation a t- . - . - . , , . ... . . . 1 wiucn musi mouvaie ine mass ae- Another distinguished neutral this year is John L. Lewis. w He will have no truck with Truman who broke John L.'s pick by the! almost equal desperation with a Goldsborough injunction twice: but the GOP isn't angling which the Russian rulers are for a LewW endorsement such as he gave Willkie in 1940. hSyfiSf .to isola,!f wh?If Truman's hope of political salvation lies in labor. Tobin's This ! does not mean that the on-the-fence stand indicates that Truman isn't going to get the structure of power which the So- massed labor vote which four times stayed with Franklin Roose- . "af f.PLni.u"y con' Velt. west there are thousands who Dr. Edward Benes had tha misfortune to live too long too a T long for his own peace of mind. Disciple and successor to the Russiaii soldier has always fought. great 1 nomas jviasaryK, ur. oenes. one 01 tne aDlest statesmen in cas of war. Yet clearly there of Europe, sought to preserve Czechoslovakia from the nazis and is a deep inner, weakness in the to make it a mediator between east and west. His hopes were Soviet -system. For only a system . , , . . . 4 ,. , . ... . . .i. . . rotten - at the core could produce dashed with the communist coup which he validated with his tne maye and incredible phe- reluctant signature. Hi3 memory, though, will serve to kindle nomenln of the flight to the west jsveof freedom among Czechs who kept it alive through cent- f whichls! now. going on. UTies Of SUDJUgatlOn. ;, (Tribune! Inc. Dlr (Continued from page 1) it is pertinent to inquire, When do company profits become "high enough?" Or "too high?" Consumers of petroleum pro ducts as they review oil company earnings can't help coming to the conclusion that prices have been ' raised faster and higher than Is justified. It is true that demand continues strong and re finers are overbidding posted prices for crude but there ought to be some degree of restraint when it comes to taking profits and not merely the limit of what the traffic will bear. On thing certain: consumers do not want this strike prolonged to where essential services are curtailed, or even when less es sential service is seriously im paired. And they do not want to 'be made the gpats of any wage settlement There is cushion in current earnings so the wage in creases should not be rolled along to consumers. Jaycees Hear Rosebraugh Elimination of corner trees and shrubbery as traffic hazards was recommended Tuesday by W. W. Rosebraugh, former, member of the Salem city council in a talk to the Salem Junior Chamber of Commerce at the Golden Pheas antr Rosebraugh pointed to the new telephone building on the corner of Winter and Court streets as "a violation of the set-back ordinance," predicting that "the building will cause the death of more than one resident In traffic accidents." He urged the Jaycees to cooper ate with civic planning organizations. Thieves Enter Offices, Homes; Money Missing Several thefts and attempted thefts Monday night and Tuesday morning were reported Tuesday and investigated by city police. During the lunch hour Tuesday a thief entered the Oregon build ing, office of the Camp Fire Girls and took a money bag containing about $10, Mrs. H. G. Nelson told police. During the same hour an attempt was made by a prowler to enter the Catholic Charities and Oregon Child Evangelism Fellowship-, offices in the Pacific building across High street. A screwdriver was found by the building manager, Ed Amman, but the attempt to enter the offices was not successful, police said. Mrs. Joyce Davis, 1180 Jeffer son st., reported to police that someone had taken a purse from her car parked at 870 Shipping st., Tuesday morning. The purse contained $6. Larcenies Monday night were both from rooms, police report. Andrew Creech, of the Beilevue hotel, reported $23 taken from his trousers while he was asleep in his roon. S. F. Webber, Clare mont hotel, told police that $47 was taken from a wallet on a small table in his room while he slept. The wallet was still on the table, he said. The Safety Valve Toastmasters Start Season First Salem Toastmaster's meet ing of the fall season was held Tuesday night at Nohlgren's res taurant. Announcement was made that meetings will be held there each Tuesday evening during the fall and winter months. Desmond Long was toastmaster during the meeting and William Hill, table topics chairman. Speak ers were Glen Bunight, Harlan Pearson, Wally Carson, Ernest By berg and Ralph Nohlgren. Peor Lishtln at Intersection To the Editor: After driving a number of times over North Capitol street and Fairgrounds road I am con vinced that the lights are the reason that so many outside drivers are running through the red lights at that intersection. The driver does' not come into the beam of the light until the light is so near overhead that he misses seeing it. While the lights are there they show dimly to an approaching vehicle. This is caused by the curving street at that point. Either brighter lights or lenses that spread the beam sidewise might remedy the trouble. Lewis Judson. GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty 1 1 I Morse Terms ERP Dollars Tor Defense' The European relief plan dol lar is a defense dollar and is well spent, U.S. Sen. Wayne L Morse, Oregon's junior senator, told mem bers of Salem Kiwanis club and their guests Tuesday noon at the Marion hotel. Possibility of a war with Rus sia today is exceedingly remote but in the first week of last March the possibility was very close, the Oregon senator said. Subsequent passage of the Euro pean relief or Marshall plan and adoption of the selective service changed the picture, he said, add ing that be believes Russia now regrets the fact it left the Pans conference and lost the chance to help shape the future of Europe. While the United States had little over two divisions ready for combat last March, Russia had 71 divisions ready for combat service, the Oregon senator said in telling of hearings, before the senate military affairs commit tee of which he is a member. Regarding the ERP, Senator Morse said, "We cannot ship great quantities of materials to Europe without affecting the do mestic economy here and I believe we should tell the people why prices are higher. Speaking of his attitude toward national legislation, the speaker said he asked only that the peo pie of Oregon wait until he- had , all of the facts . and then ask j themselves how they would have 1 voted if they sat where he sat. "I assare you that the Senator intends to fnlflll all his campaign pi taxes ... even the ones he's made to the public" 20-30s Hear Harvey Scott Harvey Scott, of the engineer ing department of the Oregon state board of aeronautics, Tuesday night discussed air markers with members of Salem 20-30 club meeting at the Gold Arrow res taurant. It was announced at the meet ing that the local club, in coop eration with a national 20-30 pro gram, will install an air marker here. The marker is to be in huge white painted letters and will ei ther be placed on the roof of the Oregon state supreme court build ing or the roof of the Bonesteele building on Lana avenue. It will bear the 20-30 insignia and an ar row directing air traffic to Mc- VNary field. The city's name will be accompanied on the marxer with the altitude of trie city. Fouf new 20-30 members initi ated at the meeting are Ronald Patten, Dwaine Hewitt, Richard Wherley and William Troth. Institutions' Budgets Rise 67 Per Gent The Oregon state board of con trol Tuesday was advised by Bud get Director George Aiken that the tentative budgets of 10 state institutions have increased ap proximately 67 -per cent for the 1949-50 i biennium. Aiken said these compared with actual appro priations covering the current two-year period. Budgets of other state activities have increased 22 per cent, Aiken said. The budget director indica ted thai a number of institution budgets probably would have to be reduced materially to keep the expenditures wijthin the state's es timated revenues. . r"i At the same Urn. the board of control was advised by Roy : X. Mills, board secretary, that the value of state property Increased from $52,892,000 a year ago i to 158.476,210 this! year. Mills said that there are prospects of a fur ther increase to! $70,000,000 within the next 12 months. j -i Mills presented the increased state property valuation in con nection with fixing the state res toration fund Jeyy starting July 1 of next year. The rata of assess ment required to raise $100,000 annually, the amount designated by statute, is 17.1 cents per $100 of value. Last year. Mills indica ted, the assessment was a trifle more than 18 cents per $100. The increase in thje value of state property during? the past year was . due largely to (the uuilding con struction program now in progress at the several state institutions, , The state . restoration fund is used by the state in lieu of com mercial insurance. , 1 FARIIERS IUSURAIICE GCOUP ! Anlo - Tire - Fire PLEASE NOTICE! Our New Telephone Number 3-5661 4SS Court SI. Salem, Oregon Phone 3-5661 ! 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