- i iTh SlatesnVcm,' Salem, 'Ongon, tA&ar. November S3, 1US ntt 7flftnn ft fin cS w 'new "So Favor Sways Us, No Ftar Shall Avoy First Statesman. Mare It, tUl THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING C03IPANY . CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. Editor and Publisher ! CXataroS at tb poatofflc at Stkm, Oresoa. m aceond claw tnattor Mnder act of congr March J. lilt. fvtoliahoS mr BMrnlnc except Monday. Business office IIS SV Commordat Salem. Orf on. Tlphoo S-M4L amcsr or rum associated ruts rrcsa la tmtltlatf pari lyaly to tk mm far MoSf M i atUOM local awi prist la as wa aa an ap w ft. Six nawtha. On yar MKMBTR FACOTC COAST DIVISION OF BUKZAU OF ADVTRTXSDfO AoVertislns lUptaaintatroa Ward-Crtfflth Co, Now York. Chicago. San Francisco. Detroit tmtVEK AUDIT BURZAU OF OBCVLATION By Man On Aeaace By City Carrier Orejcoo Elsewhere In U4.A. OB, Month , .... .i j.w . o .M SS. . , 11 JO itfca. The New New Deal PmcMmiI Truman will find it difficult to ful fill all the "mandates that voters think they gave him in the late election; a hard time, too performing to the degree implied on all the as surances he Hrrtsolf gave to the voters. The va ried hopes from peace to profits, ; from high wages to low living costs, from civil rights to national security, from houses-for-all to social gains a big order for one four-year term, big ger even that Roosevelt was able to satisfy. Already we are hearing that the president's program will not be as drastic as proclaimed by the pundits. Instead of immediate and general firings of high officials the word (equally un official) is that Marshall and Forrestal both may stay on for a time, and if Marshall probably Lbvett as well. Civil rights legislation, too, may be watered down to make it something the southen senators can swallow without filibustering, maybe anti lynch and anti-poll tax laws; but not an FEPC. It is pointed out that the southern conserva tives will take over many of the important com mittee chairmanships Senator George finance. Rep. Doughton wys and means. Sen. McKellar appropriations. These will be in position to gar rot a lot of bills they dislike. George has already expressed his opposition to an excess profits tax. Then there is the variability that is chracter istic of the president. Now that he has won his election he may yield to the urging of his cron ies and dilute his askings. All this may be balm to grieving conserva tives, but it fails to take into account the politi cal proclivities of members of the congress. Af ter all. the reoresenta lives must run for re-elec tion in two years, also a third of the senators. They are the closest: students of political trends; and have been sitting up nights since November X doing home work in anticipation of the next session. They want their "voting record" to be ne that will draw voter approval. Moreover, some able and aggressive persons nave been elected to the senate and house who will want to drive through many of the things that were anathema to the 80th congress. They have not only a feeling of social urgency but political ambition as welL And numerous repub licans, left of center, will put their feet on the accelerator to speed up the legislative mills. A better working relationship between the White house and capitol hill is to be expected with Barkley as vice president. He may serve Truman as Garner did FDR in their first term. So we may safely anticipate a considerable volume of legislation to establish the new new deal. It will hardly be spiced with the hostility to business which marked the first new deal, for Truman is no enemy of business, in spite of his berating Wall street; but it will have teeth in it and will all be geared to social and economic reform through government control. Seeger has served Eugene for about four years as city manager. Observing his work there the league decided it could use him to work with all the Oregon cities. Seeger s job will be to as sist city officials in handling their problems and to represent the league at the legislative session. "The league has had to buck its way in some respects to get established and recognized. It has a relationship with the University of Oregon which maintains a bureau of municipal research. Herman Kehrli has long been director of the bureau and executive secretary of the league of Oregon cities. The league is supported by con tributions from various municipalities. Opposition to the league developed when it began its campaign to get a share of state road funds. It finally won its battle and is now recog nized both as spokesman for the cities and as a clearing-house for municipal service. Seeger can find plenty of work to do as cities consultant. The problems of municipalities are many; some of them are acute. One is common to most all cities: finance. That hard question got no clear answer at the league meeting in Eugene last week. There are other problems: zoning, parking, sewage disposal, airports. See ger can work among cities much as a county agent works among farmers, listening to their woes and worries, giving counsel, advising offi cials as to practical ways of licking their prob lems. As city manager in fast-growing Eugene, See ger has gained a lot of experience in four years. He has done a good job there and the council let him go with great reluctance. There is need for a man of his judgment and experience to assist Herman Kehrli in work with cities. And when a man can be got with the fine personality of See ger, it's a real find. Cities9 Consultant The league of Oregon cities is expanding its staff and has hired Duane Seeger away from Eugene to become consultant for the league. The Old Guns Co Dismantling of the great 16-inch guns in the harbor of Fort Hancock, N. J., just about com pletes military recognition that static warfare is a thing of the past. For many years, the huge guns at Fort Han cock and nearby Fort Tilden were regarded as major defense units for New York. Their 20 mile range was adjudged sufficient to throw a panic In any attacking force. But they were stationary a Is the ill-fated Maginot line. They couldn't prevent planes from landing at their rear. They couldn't prevent carriers from get ting within easy flight distance. They couldn't mow down a parachute army on their flanks. They would have been of considerable aid to the Germans at Normandy, however. And they still could withstand a lot of battering from a shore-bound enemy in surface craft at sea. So it Is not to be supposed that the military is in tending immediately to scrap all such installa tions on the American coasts. i Perhaps all the removal proves, for the time being anyway, is that New York and its environs are now regarded as sufficiently protected via air and mobile armament. We hope that status is reached by our other vital and vulnerable points soon. Soviet Funds Go to Encourage Chaos By Joaevh and Stewart Also WASHINGTON, Nov. 25 Every reasonably well-informed person knows that, the Soviet union gives financial support to the world com munist move ment Yet very little has been known of just how this is done. It is this which makes so 1 n t cresting the specific de tails of Soviet financial r sup port for. the French com which came to Mrwart munist party light during the recent French coal strike. Some of the facts were re vealed a few days ago in the French assem sembly by the left wing So cialist Jules Moch, the French minister of the interior. Others have become avail able since. The facts cone ern the role played by a peculiar financial insti- 4 I ', Jotwpli AlftO tution which, is known as "the Commercial 'Bank of Northern Europe. Ostensibly, this is Just a bank like any other bank. In fact, ft Is the main channel for money given to the French communist party by the government of the Soviet Union. It is organized as a French company, and it occupies respec table quarters in the Rue de 1' Arcade, In Paris. -However, of Its 100,000 shares of capital, 99,700 are owned by two Soviet banks, which means of course that the bank is owned by the Soviet government. Its manager Is a former Russian citizen, Charles Hilsum, now naturaliz ed, and it has a select board of directors, consisting of a Rus sian, one Ostrovsky, and two French communists. The bank is capitalized at only 50,000,000 francs, but it has as sets in France of 1,000,000,000, francs. Largely through : this bank, the Soviet government has made an investment in the French coal strike of upwards of $100,000 a day; Some of this investment was made public. The Soviet miners of the Donbas, Kuznets, ' Ural and Moscow coal basins, for ex ample, made a large "voluntary, popular" contribution in oth er words they were taxed a proportion of their wages." Tho rubles thus collected from the hard-pressed Russian miners were then exchanged into francs by the Soviet government (which ordinarily guards its for eign exchange like an anxious mother) and turned over to the French communists. The Soviet satellite states obediently fol lowed suit, and the total thus contributed came to a little over $900,000 in the franc equivalent. This sum is by no means a measure of Moscow's generosity, however. Far larger sums . were delivered secretly to the com munist leaders. In certain cases the details were handled direct ly between Soviet diplomats and the French communists. More often the French communists drew on the Commercial Bank of Northern Europe. These secret transfers were concealed by the communists by a simole device. The communists repeatedly announced very large donations to the coal miners from the comrades in other French unions and labor groups. In fact, the French workers were not so free handed. Much the greater part of these "dona tions" consisted of drawings by the communist leaders on the Soviet-owned bank. o o The fact is, of course, that the coal strike was in many ways justified by the desperate economic squeeze on the French miners. But this should not be allowed to obscure the fact that Tr.u0 bank, the Soviet government in tervened drastically in the in ternal affairs of France. Tho coal strike is now over. But in terms of heavy pressure brought to bear against the French gov ernment and the partial wreck ing of French recovery, the So viet investment in the strike no doubt paid off handsomely. Moreover, similar investments will undoubtedly continue to be made in the future. There is every reason to believe that Soviet financial support for the French communists will con tinue, and that the campaign of "rotating" strikes, ordered by the Kremlin for the purpose of bringing French recovery t6 a halt, will go on. The pattern of Soviet inter vention in the internal affairs of other countries suggested by the facts reported above is not confined, of course, to France. It is interesting, for example, that the Commercial Bank of Northern Europe has had on de posit in the United States up ward of two and a half million dollars. It may be safely as sumed that the movement of this money is very carefully watched. But in a free economy such supervision is difficult. And a study of communist finances made some years ago indicated that out-size profits allowed certain businessmen in their fi nancial dealings with the Soviet government eventually enriched the communist party's treasury. Clearly, this kind of thing is one of the Soviet Union's most useful weapons in the cold war. The only possible American re soonse is to continue the great effort to build a non-Soviet world in which miners will not starve, and the communist par ties of the continent, now o menacing, will become hardly more than a nuisance, as is the communist party in the United States. This effort will not suc ceed overnight. But already in France and western Europe there are signs that it is be ginning to succeed. WHAT WILL IT BOIL DOWN TO? I J ! W i S f III Mn Jacrr Editorial Comment From Oar Contemporaries GENTLEMAN DEFINES GULF There was an obscure but sig nificant clash between political philosophies at the United Na tions social committee, meeting at Paris to draft a Declaration of Human Rights. Delegates from Colombia and Costa Rica proposed that the declaration Include the amend ment: "Every person has the right to make opposition to the government of his country di rectly or through his represen tatives, chosen by free and per iodic elections which shall be. by secret ballot." The amendment was opposed by the Russian delegate, Alexei Pavlov, who pointed out that the Fascists and Nazis appeared first in Italy and Germany as opposition parties. Inescapably, he was arguing that opposition parties cannot be allowed. It is true enough, of course, that Fascism and Nazism began as opposition movements in Italy and Germany. But It is Just as true that Fascist sym pathizers are not repressed in older and sounder Western de mocracies, and have not made a dent. For that matter, it is also true that Bolshevism began in Russta as an opposition move ment. The Soviet delegate, therefore, can not logically ar gue, either from Western history or from his own viewpoint, that political opposition is of itself wrong. The fact that he seeks to do so, choosing convenient analo gies, testifies again to the real formlessness of Soviet political outlook. Soviet leaders do not really believe in political prin ciple at all; what they believe in is the infallibility of them selves. Totalitarianism is not wrong in principle; it is wrong under a Hitler, right under a Stalin. Repression is not wrong in principle; it was abominable under Mussolini, right and pro per under tho Russian secret police. What is emerging is a sort of Slavic neo-Puritanism, substi tuting a militarized oligarchy Hollywood On Parade By Howard C. Heyn HOLLYWOOD -JPy- Two hours with Liza be th Scott pack a terrific wallop. ' Her is th most intense star In glamorvill. She charms you and knocks you out at th sam .time. If she describes her home aquarium, you feel as if you had been socked in the eye with a handful of wet fish. Under the spell of her imagination, tiny tropical marine pets become my sterious, colorful creatures in a strangely fascinating world. Lizabeth, the day I saw her, had arisen at 6 a. m., worked on the set until 6 p. m. (with ward robe fittings between scenes), rushed home to change into dungarees and a cotton blouse for th stern clergy. Man in th mass is incurably predispos ed to evil and error. Given th chance and he will embrace heresy; therefore he must not be given the chance. As to rights and wrongs, once a gov eminent is convinced that its own intentions constitute th highest - right, it concedes no wrong in whatever means be come necessary to accomplish them. Since every manifestation of the Russian government clear ly shows that this Is its view toward its own people, it is foregone conclusion that they regard all other peoples as pro per candidates for th same treatment. For more than a century and a half, the Atlantic Community has been proving exactly th opposite thesis that man be comes mora and more trust worthy, that free communication is far less an agency of heresy than for its recognition and re jection. The Atlantic Commun ity now, finds itself up against men who see nothing grotesque in arguing that the world should underwrite a totalitarian, im mune oligarchy in a document dedicated to "human rights That is th measure of the gulf between the East and the West. (San Francisco Chronicle.) and dashed back for a dinner interview. A shrimp cocktail, a $4 steak, baked potato with two orders of chives, mixed green salad and several cups of coffee only ad ded fuel to the flame. Even th rugged Victor Ma ture Is Impressed. "She isn't as big as Boulder dam, but she's just as solid." Ambition, a dynamic ambi tion, propels her. However, fev erish the pace, sh thoroughly enjoys being a movie celebrity. Th blond hair, th husky voice, the gesturing, the hand on your arm for emphasis, the flaring nostrils all are reminis cent. TaDulah Bankhead, whose understudy ah one was, un doubtedly had lots to do with setting Scott's course. . Despite her effusiveness on first meetings or perhaps be cause of it Lizabeth makes friends slowly. She has few inti mate companions. Becoming her close friend, says Burt Lancas ter, is "a long stretch at hard labor.- GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty '" ' f) IX! aa mm4 TtaM Ca. ... he through th Moscow-eontrolled I Copyright. IMS. Mow York Herald I ean't enderstand the trouble yee're having with Junior started school completely ans polled by any training at ho Thaiiksgiving Day Popular as Qari Birthday LONG BEACH, Calif, Nov. 25 WV If certain family group in this city should 'make too big an occasion out of future Thanks giving days, you'll know they're the Smith - Sullivan - Schlotz hauer clan. Born this Thanksgiving morn ing was i six pound, 11 ounce Bruce, son, of Mr. and Mrs. Charles L Schlotzhjuaer. On his j mother's side he has two aunts j Ruth and Vera Smith, 14 and - 12 respectively, of this city, and great aunt, Mrs. Letha Sullivan, 38, of nearby Clear water. All were born on various Thanksgiving days. Like his relatives, Bruc will mark his first turkey day with a strict milk diet. CQHHECTIOII Dutch Boy Wonsover was er roneonsly advertised la Thars daya Statesman at tte .C The Correct Price Is F. Oj REPINE CO. X5SS Portland Kood Literary Guidepost By John I Springer The City and the Tsar: Peter the Great and the Move to the West 1848-1782, by Harold Lamb (MacMillan; $4.50). The story of Russia begun la Lamb's The March of Musco vy is continued here for more than another century as the Ro manovs enter the vast scene, stride madly across it, and leave It to Catherine th Great In 1648 Alexis, son of the Mi chael Romanov who was called to be the Great Prince of Mos cow and Tsar of All Rus, took the wife Maria selected by his advisers, lost her after she bore him six buxom daughters and two near - Idiot sons, and was married again to a com moner, Natalia, mother of Peter th Great Feodor succeeded his father Alexis, and his redoubtable sis ter, Sophia, with "hairs on her face and tumors on her legs, succeeded, him, and then came Peter, a young giant, stupid, says Lamb, a sort of roughneck, interested in weapons, learning early to drink, lounging along th waterfront and fascinated by boats. But by the accident of birth, th incalculable resources of two worlds, Asiatic and Europ ean, dropped in his lap. His sub jects, either at the Romanov be hest or in flight from Romanov anger, drove into Siberia to drain it of its wealth In furs; and wer taxed to support a fleet and the armies that dealt a resounding blow to Sweden's Charles XII at Poltava and suf fered a terrible defeat on th distant Pruth. Lamb doesn't pretend that his picture of Peter is definitive. 1 But at least we can now forget ToltahVs Idealized portrait of the humble Romanov carpenter- ing In Holland. Peter didn't know his own mind, didn't per- 4 haps have a mind. He threw his ' tremendous weight around I blindly, well . lntentioned It ' iwmi but uninformed; he broke ' into Europe, or anyway let Eur; opeans break Into Russia. The misery which be permitted his l people to suffer, th lust that ' surrounded him with illegiti- '' mate offspring, th rages he in dulged, the i ferocious punish i ments be Inflicted on his ene mies, the illimitable and, unbe- llevable confusions of his chao I tic century, whether they pro j vide us with a lesson, provide ; us with an exciting book. I Lincoln The IL W. Ashfords I were hosts at a Thanksgiving din- f ner with th guest list Including i Louise Anderson, George Strach- ' an, Ed Wildfong, Jason and Gene- vieve Ashford, all of Oregon ' Stat college, Grac Ashford of ' Willamett university, Mr. and Mrs. Frank DV and Linda and Frank Ashf ord 7C "flu" ST UUViJS w (by Exkxcee) t to IS Sls v Salens, Oregon j S ' Smart Shop 111 Nortk Liberty St ! 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To introduce this superior bleach to the many newcomers j in the West the makers of White Rose have literally t put five pennies in this piggy bank for you! s : r expires If your grocer doesnl have It ask him to stock WHITE BOS? for you I Dee. 15 141 f Worth fytiVZ, A y Teke this FREI Ceeeeoi te yer I '"Xa f racer it's worth 5 es eert r f seym sat any slse nettle e . i y whitiiosu Uiiaia will i thia up a ar TO THC OBAXXB: Oar Se provided ru and taw Inai of tula after. WhMo lilia, Or will kava taiylt wit tM co, an so, ma. ! . "f 1