t! "7. if gtctoeman, tdom. Oregon, Then-Lay. Tanuogry 8. 1850 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY i CH"' W A SPRAGUE. Editor and Publisher j KaUrad at the Mtofflc at Sales. Oreaea, aa HtMd elaaa Matter wUr act of eontreaeCercB S, 117. rabllahed every aseraiag. BaalncM office Hi S. Commercial, galea, Oregon. Telephone! S-ZI4L Justice At Least for Indians I The United States' early dealings with the original owners of this country, the Indians, is one part of our' history of which no American can be. tod proud., Oregon shares in this blot on our national record but now it seems that jus tice, of a sort, will triumph albeit belatedly. The UJS. court of claims has ruled that the overnment must pay for the land the Indians by the pioneers. If congress appro priates the more than $16,500,000 the Indians Claim, the Great White Father will finally be able to discharge a 100-year-old debt. It was a century ago that Governor Joseph Lane was welcomed to Oregon by the chiefs of many - tribes, who came to him willing to sell their-possessory rights to the land. At that time the government could have obtained title peace ably before the immigration trains started roll ing in. But Lane had no authority and no funds. So he wrote Washington that "extinguishment of their title by purchase, and locating them (the Indians) in a district removed from settlement la a measure of most vital importance to them." In 1850 congress authorised commissioners to deal With the Indians. Their task was to secure from the natives their title to all the land west of the Cascades and, if possible, move all the Indians into eastern Oregon. The trouble was that pioneers were staking out claims on In dian land long before any treaties were made. The donation land law granted specified acre ages to settlers who' established residence in the territory before December 1, 1851, without a by-your-leave from the Indians; As Indian Superintendent Joel Palmer ex plained: , . . , :; - . . "Settlers have taken and now occupy within their reserve all the lands susceptible of culti vation; without regard to the occupancy of the Indians, who in several instances have been driven from their huts, their fences thrown ( down and property destroyed . . . (The Indians') very weakness and ignorance is one of the rea sons why we should liberally provide for them. No one .will for a moment pretend that the amount proposed to be paid" them is any con sideration, comparatively speaking,' for their , jountry." . ' . 1 '. -; The Indians realized this, too. Said Peu-peu- BVtt-mox: .-. I ' uppose you show me goods; shall I run up - and take them? Goods , and th earth arc not equal. Goods are for using on the earth. I do not know where they have given lands for goods ... Show me charity. I should be very much .ashamed, if the Americans did anything 'wrong . , ." ... . j "!, ( :; . y. y The chief had reason to be ashamed for the Americans, for they showed him no charity. In stead, congress' neglected even to ratify the treaties the Indians had made in good faith. In return for their freedom and their lands, the Indians got nothing. They were killed off to fuiet title to their lands and those who lived were locked up in concentration; camps called reservations. ''': ' Some protested, as did Chief John: - "Thia jj my country. I was In It when these ' large trees were small, not higher than my head. My heart Is sick with fighting but I want to live ' in my own country . . . I will not lay down my arms and go with you on the reserve. I will fight.- - "I : AnJ they did. There were many, skirmishes, many wars. Historian Charles Carey said "it came to be the practice to shoot an . . . Indian on sight." And later Joseph Lane wrote to The Statesman:' ' :- The Indians have been completely whipped ' la every fight . . . Never has an Indian country been Invaded with better success or at better times ... X had a conversation with a conslder ; able number of Indians, who gave me a terrible account of the Invasion of their country by our r people, that they were now afraid to lay down Super -Bomb By Joseph and Stewart Abes ' WASHINGTON, Jan. 4 The ease for launching another Man hattan District Project in "order to build a "su per - bomb," seems at first hearing, like a Walpurgis night -dream of total destruction. Yet this case is be ing seriously made, at this moment, by Im portant person alities on the highest govern mental level. The worst nightmares have a way of coming -true, nowadays. The essential arguments must there fore,' be set down. Ii brief, it is theoretically feas- "ibie- to Duua a hydronen bomb with something :like 1,000 times the force of the uranium - Plu tonium .bomb , that feU on Hir oshima. It may e o s t anywhere 4 v anywnere x from $2 to $4 Y V )illions, tobuild ) wch a bomb in the shortest- Z ' from billions -such the possible spa e eriWr f time. The real issue in debate . a bitter commentary on the' state of the world is whether such bombs can be surely deliv ered to thr proper targets. . To be blunt about it,, the vital centers of the Soviet Union are ' the obvious potential targets, whether for the hydrogen bomb of the future, or for our existing -stockpile of uranium-plutonium ' bombs. Great distances, uncer- tain topography and other factors will always make it ' extremely difficult to hit targets in Russia ' with reasonable accuracy . And ; the chief attraction of the hydro- ., en bomb is that it will reduce the premium' on accuracy in any bombing attack. 0 i . .. . . . ...w.. This is simply because such a . a I -No Ttvor Sweyi Ut, No Ttar Shall itW Ireea First Stati ia. March tt, ltll to sleep, for fear the white people would be ' upon them before they could awake i-that they were tired of war and wanted peace." When the Indians wye too few, tdo sick, too undernourished, and . hounded from place to place, they got peace in the reservations. By 1857 the population of the Siletz reservation on the coast numbered in the thousands and in cluded the (Chec-coos) Chetcos, Coos, Too-too-ta-tays, Coquilles, Tillamooks and certain Wil lamette valley tribes. Their unhappy lot rot ten food, inefficient administration -J- improved over the years and today their descendants are not badly off. It probably won't be long before the Indians are assimilated into (he rest of the population. The payment of that 16 niilion dol lars will hasten the day. i taken from Vandenberg Losing His Grip? ' ' Senator Vandenberg's support, according to a press association story from Washington yester day, of the Taft-Hoover stand on China and Formosa comes as a surprise to many observers. A deep rift over foreign policy betWeen Taf t and Vandenberg had been foreseen, j Does this latest development mean that Vandenberg is conceding party leadership to Taft in interna tional policy as well as domestic? j Taft, up for re-election this November, has gained stature as a result of his seemingly suc cessful stumping tour of Ohio last fall. Labor is opposed to him but republicans have been look ing to him for party leadership on internal is sues. Taft is chairman of the GOP policy com mittee and whatever he says is pretty influenti al on the old GOP hands. Lately, Taft has mora and more spoken out on foreign affairs as well as on, such matters as housing, health and edu cation. His outlook on U. S. participation in world events is conservative and in this he has been joined by the even more conservative Sen ator Wherry from Nebraska. Wherry, republi can floor leader, is' down on the administration's so-called bipartisan foreign policy. Sen Arthur Vandenberg, of course, is partly responsible for that bi- or nonpartisan foreign policy. His approach to international problems has been enlightened and sensible in most in stances. His attempts to get republicans to ac cept the administration's word on foreign af fairs have received the support of such GOPers as Senator Lodge from Massachusetts and Sen ator Morse from Oregon. But Taft has always been the reluctant elephant. In as recent and respected a publication as the January 6 U.S. News and World; Report an open break between Taft and Vandenberg is predicted. The China-Formosa issue provided the opportunity for both sides to make their case the Taft faction to oppose Truman and demand V3. aid to Chiang and Formosa, tht Vandenberg faction to point out. the pointless ness of aiding a lost cause. Now Vandenberg has come out against the administration plan to write off China and For mosa as lossea. Sick, aging, in pain after a re cent liing operation, evidently Vandenberg is giving up the fight. If so, the republican party and the nation are, losing an important voice in the, higher councils. TheMdpper of the U.S. freighter Flying Ar row sounds like character out of a salty old adventure tale. Sail on, says he; full speed ahead and never mind the mines in the port of Shan ghai His crew is not so eager to get their heads blown! off and the state department has taken an interest in their plight. But in the hard tra dition of the sea, the captain's word Is law and if it's mutiny, ye're wantin Til hang ye from the highest yardarm, Mister Christian! ' Project Being Studied bomb should theoretically devas tate an area of from sixty to 100 square miles, in one ghastly det onation. Hence it should trans form what would be a wide miss, even with a uranium-plutonium bomb, into a direct hit consuming a whole city. for convent ional bombing, this is crucially " important. , Furthermore, its im portance may later be increased very greatly, by the development 1 of long-range guided missiles. -' ! Provided a pilotless aircraft Is the type selected, it has been pos sible to build the airframe of a , long-range missile at any time since the war. The most talked about design is a stripped-down, pilotless jet bomber capable of several thousand miles of flight . at just sub-sonic speeds and at very high altitudes. How to guide such a missile has always been the question. In the last year, however, the , basic obstacle to long range mis sile guidance has been success fully surmounted. As was re ported in this space a "non-pre-cessable" gyroscope has been de signed at M.I.T. This almost miraculous instrument is simply -a gyroscope whose accuracy is not disturbed by friction. Because it is dependably stable, it pro- vides the long-sought "brain" for missile guidance systems. -I . V ; - -. I The new gyroscope can, for ex ample, form the basis of a mech anism that will control a missile during thousands of j miles of flight by automatic celestial nav igation. Equally, it can be mar ried to the radar, target locater that will send the missile home In the last stage of its long course. And while these, or other, guid ance methods can hardly achieve pinpoint! hits, they should bring the missiles quite near enough to their targets, if the war heads are hydrogen bombs. v i Already, therefore,' fleets of Inter-continental guided mis siles, carrying hydrogen bombs, are expected in certain authori tative quarters to be the strategic attack force of the future. With all due allowance for inevitable Ksappointments, . some such velopment is certainly feasible In , theory. Those who expect theory to be translated into practice are the advocates of an Immediate, special effort to build a hydrogen bomb. The opponents of such an ef fort, on the other hand, are sharply critical of these lurid vis ions of the future. They do not attack the underlying theory, al though they note in passing that our present, chaotic research and ; development program is unlikely to achieve the sort of result out- ; lined above. Their criticism rests, rather, on their belief that in air warfare, the defense is now being developed even mora rap idly than the offense. - Within the past fourteen months, American Strategic air capabilities have already been materially, reduced, by the ap pearance of an excellent Soviet jet fighter and the beginning of a Soviet air warning net Piloted and pilotless aircraft alike are , already threatened by the pro totype of an effective anti-aircraft guided missile. The whole S resent theory of bombing could e upset by already discussed de vices to jam radar target loeaters. If progress with these defensive weapons really out-distances pro gress with the weapons of of fense, even a stockpile of hydro gen bombs will be largely a frozen asset ; A committee of the govern ment's hi chest scientific advisors has therefore been wisely chosen, to study, the current desirability of a great hydrogen project. Just as President Conant and Dr. Vannevar Bush studied this ques tion immediately after the war. .On what falls within their pro vince, the findings of the scient ists should be filial. Unfortun-. atejy, however, not even the" greatest scientists can resolve the other, far deeper and graver Is sues involved in this secret de bate within the government And these also must be examined, in a subsequent report. -- CopyriKt isse. . Maw York. HmzmkX TtUmna toe ) 1950 Hanlc Applies For Embassy Post in China By Henry McLemore DAYTONA BEACH,' Fla., Jan. 4 Whether or not the United States should recognize the Chi nese Commun- - 1st regime of Mao Tse - tung (who sounds like a bare footed kicking University of Hawaii .half, back,' to I me), is something for congress to decide, j But If r con gress does elect to look at China ! through red -colored glasses, I would like to 'apply, here and now, for the Job of Ambassador " to Peiping. My qualifications are scant X am the first one. to admit that. Ambassadors usually are rich. Very few of them repair their own flats on the road, buy re frigerators on the installment plan, or suffer because they are not able to buy their wives fur coats. I am not rich. My wife Is lucky to get a cloth coat with a collar made of dubious fur, I always do my own vulcanizing, even when it's raining, and it It were not for the installment plan we'd still be living almost the same Way that cavemen and cavewomen did. Ambassadors usually have a habit of kicking in $25,000 or so to the war chest of the party whose head names them ss am bassadors. I have never given so much as a penny to either the Democratic or Republican war chests indeed, if I had $25,000 I wouldn't care who was president I'd be living in style on some little island, which politics reached only by occa sional steamer.. I have no kneebritches, and I don't have a turtleneck sweat er, all staodard equipment for GRIN AND BEAR -tP!p7 FA r ArA PeV ' iP . And If ye want bely with year tax retarn, yecH have to T step Insisting that yea gotta live " . GAME SHORTAGE NEVER ambassadors. Neither do I have a daughter of marriageable age who Is photogenic and anxious to prove it. But I do have one qualifica tion, for Peiping, seat of Mao Tse-tung's government I have a great love for Pie Pn V In many ways it is to me the loveliest 'city in the world. To me it comes close to offering more than any other city on earth. I'd like to spend two, three, or four years there. No matter who is in charge, a man would have to be without almost any sensitivity to coma away with out benefit . It Is a town of a culture so eld that It settles about you like a cloak. A week in Peiping is better than four years In a uni versity. A week there teaches one who wants to listen that only a few things are steadfast the .hills, the ocean, the plains, and old, old cities. Men come and go with each day, but certain things are eternal. It does something to a man to eat in a restaurant where Marco Polo dined, and there is not one such restaurant in Pei ping, but several. It does a man good to know that he is walking the streets which centuries have trod, because It teaches him how small and unimportant he, or any man, Is. Yes, Mr. Truman, name me to Peiping when and if the time comes to select an ambassador. You may not be doing Peiping a favor, but you'll be doing me one. (Distributed by McNaught SjrodlcaU. toe.) BUSY GOT i LAWRENCEBURG, Ind-,-(INS) Having trouble making hours meet? If so, consider the dexterity -required of CoL Robert H. Nanz, 63, vice president of Schenley In dustries, Inc., who, in addition to running distilling plants employ ing some 4,000 in Indiana and South Dakota, is an active mem ber of 38 business, civic, church and charity organizations. IT v By Lichty t7T) C 'EM SO SCARCE CRT ITOEDDEI (Continued from page 1.) In fact administration friends have been conceding that the Taft-Hartley repeal will not be accomplished at this session, that the national: health insurance program (socialized medicine) will not be adopted, nor the Brannan plan for agriculture. The November elections will be in a measure a referendum on these bills and osthe Truman policies. What this congress must face up to are the hard facts of fin ance. Pressures for reduction in excise taxes are strong, as the president himself recognizes. But revenues must be maintained in large volume for at best spend ing will be on a big scale. Re turning senators and congress men will bring back the definite impression that the people are concerned over continuing defi cits in peacetime. They must do their btMt to cut down that defi cit for the next fiscal year, by reducing expenditures and by avoiding tax cuts that would re duce treasury income, though it certainly is time the heavy war time excise taxes are lightened: Initially the senate is due to take up repeal of the oleo tax and civil rights bills. These may tie up that body for a consider able period of time. Dairy in terests maintain strong lobbies and will insist on preserving yellow as the butter color if the oleo tax is to come oft And southern senators will filibuster on bills like the fair employment practice requirement In effect congress takes up just where it left off when it adjourn ed in the fall: the same bills be fore it the same lineup of fair dealers and opposing republicans and southern democrats, and about the same attitude on the part of the public. One thing is evident that leg islation can be considered in less of an atmosphere of crisis than for a decade. Foreign affairs are less angry and will be less ab sorbing of the attention of con gress. The China situation wOl occasion much debate, but prob ably little action. Congress should have time and take time for serious consideration of our domestic problems of which pub , lie finance is most important , Better English By D. C Will lama 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "Us boys have found that there isn't but one left" 2. What is the correct pronun ciation of "incognito"! 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Moveable, admis sable, expendable, coercible. 4. What does the word "aus terely" mean? S. What is a word be sinning with sr that means "impressive of imposing"? v ANSWERS 1. Say, "We boys have found that there la but e left" Ac cent eeeeaJ syllable, not the third. 3. Admissible. 4. Severe ly; rigidly; sternly. "The doc trine was austerely logical." A. Grandiose. Grand Jury Indicts Maragon Oh Four Charges of Perjury WASHINGTON, Jan; 5 -WV Jaunty John Maragon, who used to associate with people in the White house, was Indicated Tues day en four charges of lying about his financial and business affairs. A federal grand jury accused him of committing perjury at a senate investigation last summer. Maragon said here he has no comment to make on the Indict ment at this time. Should a. trial jury convict the gabby . little Greek-American on aU four counts, he could be jailed for as long as 40 years. The pun ishment for perjury is two to 10 years on each count. For one thing, Maragon denied to senators that he ever made any money by representing private companies in business deals with the government. The Indictment flatly labeled the denial "false." The senators were investigating five-percenters, men who try to line up government contracts for businessmen for a fee of perhaps five per cent. ! Maragon will have a chance to Witness Claims Bridges Attend Communist Party Meetings SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 4-AVA new government witness testi fied today he saw Harry Bridges at three "dosed" communist party meetings, and again at communist party headquarters in San Fran cisco. : . ; : Bridges, head of the CIO Longshoremen's union. Is on trial for perjury, accused of falsely swearing he was not a communist at his IS43 naturalization Hearing, and. had never been a communist The witness was Lawrence Ross, 46, who said he was a paid func tionary of the communist , party from 1932 to 1937. He testified he has been a newspaperman since around 1925, and presently is man aging editor of a trade paper in Memphis, Tenn. Ross said he saw Bridges -In communist party headquarters here in the early fall of 1938. He remembered it well, he stated, be cause "I t had a feeling almost amounting to shocked surprise, that Harry Bridges was ' present" Defense Attorney James Macln nis objected vigorously but the court permitted Ross to answer a prosecution question as to why he was surprised. It was. he said "be cause there had been so many pre cautions taken to conceal his iden tity" in connection with the com munist party "that I was surprised to see Kim at communist party headquarters.1 ;i ; ! :. I j il The headquarters session was 'M closed "communist meetina." he testified, at which, Bridges "made a report of an hour perhaps long er about the situation on the wall ter front and the advisability o preparing for a strike." I jj The other meetings at which he saw Bridges, he declared, also were closed" communist gatherings, j j Just before the noon recess he told of attending a national . con vention of the communist party. Me said it opened June 24, 1938, in the Manhattan opera house, New York City. He said he was one of the California delegates, i j F. Joseph Donohue, chief of gov ernment counsel, asked him who was nominated for membership on the communist central committee. The reply was "I remember Bill Schnelderman, Comrade Rossi who was Harry Bridges possibly Walter Lambert and possibly Ani ta Whitney." "Wert any elected?" Donohue asked. . j'il "I remember Bill Schneiderman was elected and I remember Rossi was elected. I believe Anita Whit ney was, but I can't be positive," : Other prosecution witnesses had testified that Bridges used "Rossi" as a party name. ! Two other longshore union of ficials are on trial with Bridges, accused of conspiracy, because of appearing as his witnesses in the naturalization hearing. They are Henry Schmidt and J. R. Robert son. ''-! 'M Earlier today Ross declared be saw Bridges in a communist party meeting in Fresno. Big Field for Cars Noted PORTLAND, Jan. J A great field of uncultivated new business awaits automobile dealers who are properly organized for intelligent selling Bruce K. Steele, assistant general sales manager, Plymouth Motor corp., told Plymouth deal era of Oregon. The dealers met in a preview meeting of the new Plymouth car, which will go on public display January 12. Steele estimated that there are 14,000,000 cars over 10 years old in service today, nearly three times as many as In 1941. The general increase in income has made it possible for many of these owners of old. cars to buy a new model car tor the first time in their lives, be stated. DELINQUENT PARENTS KANSAS CITY, Mo. -INS)- Juvenile Court Judge John F. Cook of Kansas City says neglect of children by parents is the main factor In juvenile delinquency. "The pitiful thing is that the Ju venile court has no real power over parents, he adds. Conscientious, Dignified Service .'' . uiuuuuiL $45 North Capitol dead ruiltv or not mntv Perjury charges when he is ar raigned. Assistant U. 5. Attorney Charles B. Murray said that prob ably will be Friday. Murray said si a guess that Maragon might be irca m m apnng, perfcaps by March. Specifically, the grand jury charged Maragon with falsely tell tna the senate lnMHM Jy is that: . . . 1. In 1949 and 146 he had only one bank account, here in Wash ington. 2. From IMS to the middle it 1949, he "did not negotiate any government business" and got no money for any work connected with the government. 1. He. had "discontinued his employment" with the Albert Ver ley Perfume company of Chicago' and wasnt employed by anybody else when he took a state depart ment job and went on a mission to Greece. - 4. He borrowed $5,000 from his mother-in-law last spring. He Saw Harry Three Closed i Yoijng GOPs Name Holmer To Committee A. Freeman' Holmer, professor of political science at Willamette uni versity, Wednesday was appointed to head a Young Republican club committee studying proposed re apportionment of the state legis lature. The appointment was announced by James Collins, national Young Republican committeeman. ' An open meeting to discuss the Young GOP reapportionment pro posal is scheduled Saturday at f p.m. In the Senator hotel Committee members iWclude Margie Bullard and Philip Roth, both of Portland; James Rodman, jr Eugene; Melvin Ireland, Mol alla; Vera McCallem, Baker; War ren Cooler, Salem and Charles Reynolds, La Grande. Forestry Unit Qffices'Now in Main Building Keep Oregon Green association and the rehabilitation division of the state forestry department both of which lost their toffices In a fire on the forestry grounds Sun day, are now occupying offices la ' the main forestry building. i It was not known Wednesday whether the burned building which housed the offices will be salvaged, said State Forester George Spaur. Spaur said it was up to the state board of control to decide if the two-story, $15,000 structure should be rebuilt or torn down. The board has asked Spaur for his recom mendation in the matter and for estry engineers are investigating the wreckage this week. ; Address of the two offices wQl now be at 2S00 State st Economy Mo ye Voted By Portland Council PORTLAND, Jan. 4 -tfp)- The city council voted today to adopt ; aU : economies possible "without interfering with basic dry ser- vices." '- ' . : The resolution, an attempt to make expenses meet Income, was, criticized by Finance Commission-' er Ormond R. Bean as being, Just "a gesture . . . I dont think it Is going to save us any money." . Bean had wanted to cut the city budget 10 per cent bat that pro posal was voted down.' i ;v ' 4 ! .' , . ' ' QUICK TnnT DENVER-(INS) - Three Denver women called police almost at the same time recently to report they had been robbed. Investigating of ficers were baffled when none of -the three was able to give a clear description of the burglar. Income Tax Returns . Mad Out by J. W. Coburn '"''" Consultant 1570 Market St. Ph. 2-o569 Dotrt wait Come now! wmm TeL 3-3672 A ' J . U ...... - Mtaitseeeees 4h-- a I - t4eietetoosets i aiets.l -M m m- rm t