Wednesday, August 26, 1942 Four The Ccpital Journal, Salem, Oregon CapitalMJournal SALEM, OREGON ESTABLISHED MARCH 1. 1888 An Independent Newspaper Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday at 444 Chemeketa St Telephones Business Office 3571; News Room 3572; Society Editor 3573 GEORGE PUTNAM, FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AND THE UNITED PRESS SUBSCRIPTION RATES: BT CARRIER: Weekly. S 18; Monthly, $.75; One Year, $9.00. BY MAIL IN OREGON: Monthly, $ 60; Six Months, $3.00; One Year, $0.00. UNITED STATES OUTSIDE OREGON; Monthly, $.60; Six Months, $3.60; Year, $7.20. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publi cation of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper, and also local news published herein. "With or without offense to friends or foes I sketch your world exactly as it goes." Yankees of Latin America Tho wnrlrl war and its dcvcloninir events make extreme y timely a book just issued entitled "Argentina: the Life Story of a Nation," by John W. White (Viking.) The au thor was an American newspaperman in Latin America lor 25 years, for 12 of them in Buenos Aires. The book is both a historical survey ana an economic, social auu cmvuiu planation of Argentina to North Americans. Argentina is 2300 miles lone, and has over 13 million in- Tiahitants. Thev have ambition, industry and efficiency. They don't like Americans and a minority rule .of force with to the large German and Italian The Argentines arc handsome, well dressed, cultural and polite, save in public, where their rudeness to each other is habit ual and grim. The Argentine "has no sense of humor, never laughs at himself, and Heaven help the man who laughs at him!" Their worst traits, Mr. White points out, are exactly the same as those they criticize in North Americans. "They arc materialistic, im perialistic, hypocritical, overbearing and insincere.- Like North Americans, they arc moneyconscious and forever talking about the price of things.. Like North Americans, they talk too loudly in public places." Argentina's pro-axis neutrality, Mr. White thinks, has points of resemblance to pre-Pcarl Harbor isolationism in the United States. It represents the policy only of the "reaction ary conservative class which seized the government by revo lution in 1930," which is trying to suppress the democracy desired by the majority. Some 2000 land-owning families contribute the backbone of the conservative party, hence they back Castillo in the presidency, support the fascist and nazi organizations and permit .Buenos Aires to be the center of axis propaganda and espionage in the western hemisphere. An allied victory would change the situation overnight, says Mr. White, and find the conservatives scrambling back in the demderntic fold to maintain power. Regulating Off-Shore Fishing Senator McNary has introduced a bill, backed by the fish and wildlife service, to control all off-shore fishing off the west coast of the United States, the first attempt to extend regulation beyond the 3-milo limit. Attempts by the coastal states have been ineffective because of a lack of uniformity m their laws. Unregulated trolling is depleting salmon, the most valu able of Our fish. The trailers take many immature fish which means a great loss in poundage, in the days at sea before they enter rivers. Federal control in Alaskan waters has preserved and in creased the salmon pack there. Similar measures by British Columbia are increasing the Frazicr river sockeyc runs. The halibut was saved from depiction by international agree ment for regulation, but there has been no effective control of salmon fishing in our northwest coastal waters. The proposed legislation will establish regulation through control of deliveries. A nominal license fee will be impos ed on all boat fishing off-shore, and without such license no boat may deliver fish into United States ports. After a study by federal fishing authorities, regulations governing gear, seasons and areas, are to be put into effect and viola tions will cause cancellation of the license. Whether the bill is enacted invested in the president will all off-shore fishing,' for fish the food supply of the army, Willkie's World Tour 'There are .many surmises as to why Wendell Willkie is going to Russia and the far and middle cast, and many of the political-minded interpret rum lrom participating as titular head of the republican party in the New York gubernatorial cnmuaiirn for nominee Dewey, in whose support lie the candidate s pre-Pcarl Harbor However, there is no reason to believe Willkie is actuat ed by any other motive thnn the patriotic ones he announced, as the representative of tho president to convince our allies of the sincerity of our war effort in behalf of the United Na tions, as leader of the opposition party and representative of a united people his visit will bo salutatory and convincing, an impressive witness to the strong purpose of the United Slates to do its utmost to aid our allies and attack the common enemy. Willkie's visit to England awakened a popular response and convinced the British that America was in earnest in an all-out war. History will probably repeat itself, despite the difficulties of language, for Willkie is a vigorous, forceful, energetic man. There arc probably many things he can tell them that our official propagandists l.avc overlooked, and that the Russians, Chinese and others want to know. Bears Would Keep Record Intact Chicago, Aug. 26 M' Chica go's big bad Bears, the profes sionals who never have lost a football game In all star com petition at Soldier Field, nrc taking every precaution in pre paring for their fourth venture against tho Collegians Friday night. For one thing, owner-coach George Halas has decided to keep his starling lineup a secret until game lime. For another, he has had Clark Shaughnossy, his frequent col laborator on T formation plays and a precision expert, super vising drills at (he Bears' Dcln field, Wis., camp. Most of all Halas has had the Bears gelling in plenty of de Editor and Publisher their present government is a fascist basis, due largely population, air. w nue says . as salmon double their weight or not, the wartime powers probably be invoked to control are an important essential in ns well as civilians. it as a political move to keep has been lukewarm because of isolationism. fensive licks. The Bears or dinarily don't worry loo much about what the other team is going to do. Their tactics are based on maintaining possession of the ball most of the time. De fensive drill was designed lo stop, among others, Bill Dudley of Virginia, who ran wild in all star practice last week. EOCE Opens Grid Practice Sept. 17 LaGrandc, Aug. 26 (!) East ern Oregon College of Educa tion will start football practice September 17, Coach Bob Quinn announced today. Expecting a sizable crop of lctlcrmcn back in his lineup, plus outstanding high school graduates, Qulnn said he was at tempting to lino up games with several service learns. Inrlnrilns the Pendleton air base eleven, The Reprieve sxSm By Beck m BUN.KITTyJ JH -f-JfYM i. THC CHILDREN ) BEir VHlliry ,-U&. vJLlS ) THINK ITS ps or By Don We've watched in vain for Art Perry, Medford columnist, to make some comment on a cap tion which appeared under a cut in a Portland paper a few days ago. The picture showed the soldiers at the cantonment do ing their stuff in the Medford neighborhood under what the caption hailed as "conditions ideal for desert warfare." Ap parently even Art has been stumped on that one, he being leading exponent of Medford as being the heart of the Garden of Eden. It seems, aflcr all maybe Medford is only an oasis. We can assure. Art, however, they'll have a heck of a time trying to locale any conditions in this here valley ideal for des ert warfare. They're going to have a hard time up this way to keep the wings from sprouting on the shoulders of the boys as signed lo this earthly paradise. Although we'll admit we've been Novelties In the News (By the Assoclntrd Tress) Good Example Knoxvillc, Tenn. When the Tennessee Valley Authority completes its giant Fonlana dam in 1944, there won't be any Japan that is, Japan, N.C. The unincorporated mountain town will be 50 feet beneath the waters of Fonlana reservoir. Japan is in Graham county near Bryson City, N.C. TVA officials don'l know how the village came by its name. What? Los Angeles An employe re ported to police Hie theft of a 16-gaugc shotgun. From the information desk of Almee Semple McPherson's An gcius Temple. Lure of the Siren Seattle They'll ask the police to make him walk, next time, Twice now pajama-clnd Jimmy McDaniel, 3, has scooted away from home before his parents awakened in the morning. The last time, police found him two miles away on a borrowed tri cycle. Said his mother, "he's thrilled lo death at his ride home in a police car. We're afraid he may make a habil of it." Wonderful Destruction Spokane G u s Diakoumcs read that Americans had bombed his native Tylos, Greece. Ho rushed down lo buy $1,200 worth of war bonds so they can do 11 again, "All Greeks feel as I do," he said. Bond Purchases to Ease Readjustment Portland, Ore., Aug. 28 (U.B Frugal living and purchase of war bonds now will ease the re adjustment after the war, James J. Hunter, president of the Bank of California, advised here yes terday. "We are piling up a govern mcnt debt that will spell travail and tribulation beyond imagina tion when the day of reckoning comes," said Hunter. He said he was sympathetic toward the principles of farm parity but that forces which drive up the basis of parity seemed allied with the move ment, Increasing the cost of farm labor and the things the farmer buys. supper Upjohn around here for a long lime and there are not ,evcn any stubs showing yet. Double Murder (Editor & Publisher) The following letter was re ceived by the Alexandria (La.) Town Talk: "forest Hill, La. "a tempted lo muder and sui cicd a curd at Long leaf, la. at a bout 8 oclock this moring. ben procieu a neggro 45 years old stab his comin law wife 6 lines with a buch kife and when she was sick, up and taken her to doctor. W. c Guntcr, depty sherif was notifed of the a fair and the oficer went to the sean. he screh the neggro home findin him gon. the oficer was told lha the neggro was seen leav the hous goin lo a swamp behin his hous with a gun. the oficer went in the swamp an foun the neggro iin in a pool of blud with a bucher kife in his hand, he had stab his self 8 lines with a large kite, the sherif' call the chcrity hoslillal at pineVille and sent ben to hospitlal. no hopes held by the dr. for him. stabed in the lungs and also throt." If Adam and Eve could only have known what would be hap pening in 1942 the apple prob ably would have rotted on the twig. Our battalion of sidewalk swecpersoff on the south side of Stale street slopped work and stared with envy the other a. m., when Fay Rice, acknowl edged sidewalk sweeperoff for the north side of that street ap peared with a new broom about three feet wide, took about 10 swipes at his section of sidewalk and disappeared in his store, the job done for the day. That's about the first stroke of real pro gress we've seen in sidewalk sweeping oft hereabouts for a long lime. Now the other guys are wondering where he got his priority. Cliff Lewis informs that he was standing In his yard out on State street the other afternoon when a big crow landed on an cave not more than 20 feet dis tant and began to talk to him. "Crows aren't very sociable as a rule," says Cliff, "and he kind of surprised me with his friend liness. I didn't understand ex actly what he said, but evidently he was trying lo toll me some thing. Maybe somebody has lost a pet crow in these parts." Police to Enforce 40 Mile Speed Limit Governor Charles Spiague, criticizing the apparently apa thetic attitude of many Oregon motorists toward Hie 40-milc war time "speed limit," said today he would ask state police to "crack down" on speeders. The governor, concerned over the misuse of tires by fast driv ers, said motorists were in need of a reminder that their tires would have lo last for the dura tion and that the reminder would be furnished in part by stricter police supervision. RED-ITCHY-SCALY edema Effective Home Treatment Promptly Relieves Torture! First appliratlona of wonderful tooth Incmrdu'AtcHl Zcmo a doctor') formula -promptly relievo tho inlenjo itch" inR soreness and start of oni to help heal the red, scaly skin. Amasindv iuc rraalul for over 30 ycaral Kirat trial of marvelous clean, atainless liquid Zomo eonvlnceal All druj atom. Only ,1S(. ZEIflO Kelly Says Soldiers Not Given Leave to Pick "Hops DeWilt Against Hiring of Japanese Campaign by Unions Faced by Alcoa z By John W. Kelly Washington, Aug. 26 No sol diers" will be given furloughs to pick hops in Yakima valley or Willamette valley, says Henry L. Slimson, secretary of war, and anyone who has entertained such an idea may as well forget it. The business of a soldier, sapiently observes Secretary Stimson, is soldiering. The same reply goes for the orchard isls of the northwest, who have been suggesting that soldiers be granted permission to pick fruit. The soldiers, it is asserted, are willing to pick up a few dollars on the side working in hop fields, orchards or even kicking polatocs out of the soil cast of the Cascades. Heretofore migratory labor has been used in the northwest to handle various crops, but this year while some migratory la bor camps are available, there is a shortage of several thousand workers. Mexican labor is now permitted to enter the United States, under arrangement with the department of state, but Mexicans although common in California and the sugar beet fields of Idaho have never pene trated into Oregon and Wash ington, No for Japanese There is persistent and con tinued demand of some ranch ers that the evacuated Japanese be employed in the harvest. Gen eral DeWilt, in command of mil itary operations on the coast, has said no with emphasis. For in stance, in the Pacific northwest there is a relocation camp now occupied by 16,000 Japanese, with the number increasing. Several thousand of these aliens and native born are experienced agriculturists and would wel come opportunity to work. Near by is one of the largest potato acreages in the area. Some 3000 or 4000 people will be required to dig the potatoes and they are not available. The department of agriculture . -oposes that, rather than see millions of bush els of spuds rot in the ground at a time when food is so valu able, it will make an appeal lo General DeWilt to permit the hiring of Japanese. In that vicinity lives a ranch er well known and respected by his neighbors. He has three sons in the service, boys .who grew up in Ihe district and were popular. One was killed by the Japanese at Wake island, a sec ond was killed on Bataan pen insula; the third is in the army somewhere. Father of these dead heroes has sworn that he will shoot on sight any Japan ese he finds outside the reloca tion center. There is the mak ings of a bad situation, with bloodshed, for the father has neighbors who sympathize with him (their own sons are in the service) and the Japanese evac uces are unarmed, all firearms having been taken from them. Who Flashed This Light In The I Blackout? San Francisco is blacked out Suddenly a light flashes from a home high in the hilly resi dential district. Is it a signal to enemy air craft? Is it the work of a fifth columnist? How much docs the fifth col umn endanger America? You'll find the answers in one of the most dra matic stories of the war, the new serial Don't fall (o read this thrill ing serial, starting In today's Capital .Inurnnl, Turn - to Page Nine. L This is another angle of the problem of permitting Japs to gather the harvest. Oregon Gets Industry Washington lost a new indus try to Oregon a few days ago. This is a large dehydrating plant for processing potatoes. South Dakota lost the plant to Wash ington and then, in one of those mixups, Klamath basin was se lected as the site for the opera tions. Needed priorities are al ready approved and construc tion is under way. Last year 12,400 acres were seeded in Klamath basin, producing a crop of 4,519,580 bushels, or an av erage of 364 bushels to the acre. Lend-lease and military services are in the market for the de hydrated spuds. Persistent effort is being made to cause the Aluminum Compa ny of America at Vancouver to adopt a "closed shop" policy. Some workers have joined the union but the plant is still "open." Union organizers are reported as- having informed employes that they are "suck ers" for working in Alcoa plant when they can get higher pay in the shipyards nearby. State ment is made that unions are attempting to force Alcoa to meet shipyard wages and if the Vancouver plant adopts ship yard scale and the closed shop the plan is to force Alcoa to up wages in all its plants throughout the country. It is estimated that if the union pro gram is successful it will cost Alcoa about $50,000,000 per year in additional wages. The company is selling its product to the government at a flat rate of 15 cents a ponnd and cannot protect, itself against the in creased cost of labor. Alcoa is also to operate the aluminum plant at Trouldale. Molalla Clay Tested Government is now having laboratory tests made of a de posit of clay near Molalla in a pilot plant in Utah to determine the alumina content. Pending the official report, to be made by federal bureau of mines, it is alleged that the Molalla clay is richer than the extensive de posit at Castle Rock, Wash. Sinking of merchant ships with if -'Iff"! 1 What a SWing! Others set a high mark to shoot at . . . but all along we had the whis key to top 'em all! For Imperial gives you expensive-whiskey aroma , . . costly-whiskey smoothness . . . premium-whiskey flavor . . . all at a popular pricel 1. wfej Jfii(kG o 1 ijtVHfil 1 fffil Eighty-six proof. 70 rOW IMPERIAL IS GREAT M 'rXST I ;..Ve,wteo"for extra smoothnMil IMPERIAL S to io. Salem Shelcli 81 i'r . of the Silverlon Home Guards got six bulls eyes, four ducks and- a Jack Rabbit. May we cook the latter for supper?" Wedding Day Not Determined Spokane, Aug. 26 W) When Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Vaughn get together after the war is over they will have the problem of deciding which day from July 13 to July 30, inclusive, is their wedding anniversary. Records filed here yesterday by County Clerk Frank C. Nash revealed that Vaughn, of Lib by, Mont., and Eleanor Lucilc Granhmd were married by cable between Australia, where he is serving with Ihe U. S. army, and Spokane, her home town. The 17-day marriage cere mony went something like this, cargoes of bauxite from Dutch Guinea is causing a search for substitute clays in Washington and Oregon, heart of the alumni num ingot industry. For ten years the Molalla deposit was known, but no one was inter ested in spending a nickel to de termine its worth. U. S. rot. Off. lei By Will Danch wnttn cir Cant. Frank Powell the records show: On July 13 Vaughn cabled to Miss Granlund: "Darling, will you marry me hv rablp? Todav. I. Benjamin Vaughn, take you, Lucile Gran lund, to be my lawful wedded wife." Three days later she replied: "Darling, I marry you by ca ble today. I, Eleanor Lucile Granlund, take you, Benjamin Vaughn, to be my lawful wed ded husband." That was about July 6, but Ihe bridegroom didn't receive the reply tntil July 30 (which would be July 29 in Spokane.) An army chaplain testified to Miss Granlund's acceptance andtj Nash was notified of the wedding. Guest Gaffcy Home Silverlon Mrs. B. G. Gaffcy of Portland has been a guest at the home of her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Gaffcy, for three days. Honduras is the greatest banana land in the world, ex porting more than 12,000,000 stems a year. 2 What a Climb! But even we wera surprised how quickly IMPERIAL rang the belli Listen! in one test-state alon where Imperial got its first big featur ing, it shot ahead of 332 long-established brands to first place . . where it has stayed ever since! 3 What a ringer! And it kept right on ringing the bell in state after state. It's the fastest-growing whiskey in all America! Taste why.. .ask for Imperial at your bar, or take home a tryout bot tle of this great whiskey tonight! QUART