Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1945)
4 Capita Journal, Salem, Ore.. Wednesday, Mar. 21, 1945 Capital jkJournal SALEM. OREGON ESTABI.ISIIKI) lS An Independent Newspaper Published Ever? Afternoon Except Sunday at 444 Chemeketa St Phones Business office 3571: News Room 3572; Society Editor 3573 GEORGE PUTNAM. FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED AND THE I'NITED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or otherwise credited In this paper and also local news published herein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: BY CARRIER: Weeklv, J.ld: Mnnthlr. I.7S; One Tear. SIM. BT MAIL IN OREGON: Monthly. tM; Months. M.IHI: One Tear. Sl.tld. United State; Outside Oregon: Monthly, tM: months. 3.B0; Vear. $7,28 The News Is Good, Too Good News of Allipd successes in Europe and nf American vic tories in the Pacific these past few days have been Knd, too good in fact to react advantageously to the future prose cution of the war which depends in a large measure upon the sustained efforts of those of us here at home. In the face of reports of crumliliiiK German defenses on the western front, of routed Nazi troops retreating in disorder, of whole sale destruction of the enemy's mobile equipment, and of the capture of tens of thousands of prisoners, it is hard to convince ourselves that the war in that part of the world is not nearly over. Yet President Roosevelt in addressing the nation last night said that he was not one of those who predicts an early end to hostilities in Kurope. And Prime Minister Churchill in his latest ventured opinion foresees that fighting may go into the summer or early fall. The news that carrier planes of Vice Adm. Mitscher's now famous task force 58 has located long sought .lap fleet in the inland sea and has attacked and damaged it seriously, even when coupled with the highly successful R-2!) raids on Tokyo and other war production centers on the home islands, the reoccupation of the Philippines and the conquest of Iwo Jima, fails to bring the end of the conflict in the Pacific into guessing range. There is no indication that even a successful invasion of the home islands would bring Japan to her knees, but might only transfer the bitter struggle to the mainland of Asia. What expenditure of men, money and materiel still lies ahead no one knows. What grief and hardship and sacrifice may yet be demanded of us none can estimate. This is a time for prayer and work, not for rejoicing over victories lhat are but incidental to the whole task and which ure being bought dearly in blood and lives. Combat Engineers The life of a combat engineer may be neither a long nor a merry one, lacks the glamour of many other branches of the armed services and most of the attending publicity. En gineering is the oldest branch nf the military service and West Point was founded for instruction along this line before becoming a training college for officers. Top graduates are still assigned to various branches of engineering. The combat engineer is in the vanguard of every advance of troops and provides rearguard protection and demolition in event of a withdrawal. Diversity of activities is matched only by ingenuity and over any given span of time is not monotonous. Combat engineers were on the job when the Remagon bridge collapsed and it will be combat engineers who restore it for use. It is combat engineers who clear the pathway of assaults, throw up temporary bridges and man pontoon boats to carry the storming troops across a waterway, be it canal, stream or river. "Our troops advanced .... after paths had been opened through mine fields by combat engineers," reads a line or two in a press dispatch. Hecause of specialized training, reports indicate that comparatively few of this branch are fatalities and casualties light. Searching for and destroying land mines is just another job for the men of this versatile service. While not trained to the point of perfection acquired by his brother in arms in the infantry, he is familiar with many small weapons, particularly rifle and sidearm, and in many instances is called upon to fill in gaps left by infantry cas ualties. Hence his title of combat engineer. The combat engineer wears red and white piping on his cap and a castle is his insigia. The Fight on Williams A strong fight in the United States senate is heing made against the confirmation nf Aubrey Williams as rural electri fication administrator. Mr. Williams is a professional social uplifter; entered government service with the New Deal in lil.'ili with the Federal Emergency Relief Administration as assistant administrator and promoted the loaf raking proj ects nf the depression era. In 1 035 he was appointed assist ant WI'A administrator and also director of the National Youths Administration until that costly bureau was abol isned by congress in l'.M.'i, and has been liquidating its affairs since. Mr. Williams has had no business experience, never met a payroll, and knows nothing about electricity. Senator Willis (U., hid.), who is leading the opposition to Williams' con firmation, said in the senate debale that Williams' .only qualification for the job is his "ability to speak beautiful words." and that his business experience was as "a clerk in a man's furnishing store" but he had proven "a profligate spender, with a careless disregard for the sacredness of public funds" and "a shodder of crocodile tears for the un derprivileged." Most of t he object ions voiced by others were to his "communist tendencies." In the eyes of the New Dealers, especially to such sup porters of Williams as the ('K)-PA(' these are supreme qualifications, especially as be has been "cleared with Sid ney." He has proven his ability to waste public funds on a grand scale. Besides, wbal difference does it make? If Williams is not confirmed, another one of the same stripe will be named preferably some lame duck that knows his way about congress if he doesn't know anything about electricity. "Where ignorance is bliss, 'tis folly to be wise." Cooperation the Key Cooperation in the enforcement of nH-n ivmttviU io tVm key to success of America's home front battle to prevent disastrous inflation: cooperation by everyone concerned, Ihe consuming public, the merchants,' local price panels which apply the regulations and by the higher-ups in the rationing machine who perform the basic function of establishing price ceilings. Kut upon those who fix the prices and those who pay them lies Ihe greatest responsibility. Ceilings thiii jive t,M, low to permit of fair pvofits only Invite attempts at circumvention by merchants whose cost's are steadily mounting, and unprotested payment of over ceiling prices serves to encourage such violations. The lot of the merchant, plagued as he is with seeminglv senseless regulations and red tape, is an unhappy one and the more so if he be conscientious in seeking to comply with them. Hut no less vexing and difficult in the set-up' is the role of the local price panels. I'pon them falls the unpleasant duty of adjusting and applying to varying community con ditions the edicts promulgated by a bureau 3tmo miles away. They must sit in judgment upon their friends and neighbor's. It is a job that must be done, however, lest runawav prices upset the economic balance of the country and defeat an important phase of the wiir effort. It oh n host lie done hv conMTHtion ami liy a determination on the part of every citizen lo cluuyr or pay no more than ceiling price, ami to report. all overcharges to his local rationing board. Editor and Publisher ig$ for SsHpgieir By Don I'pjohn The controversy over the start of spring became a nation al issue today, apparently. Miss j Nean West called us up on the ! phone and advised lhat Ted I Collins and Kate Smith on their jradio hour had a special ccle j brat ion this a. m. to herald this ! as the first day of sprint? and i that the New York Breakfast club did the same thing. Last night we happened to hear the incomparable Hildogarde an nounce on her program that "tomorrow is the first clay of spring." This sounds like pretty incontrovertible evidence when stacked up against the advice of one slender little girl in the front office of our favorite paper who continued to stand like a pint-sized Rock of Gibral tar for her contention that spring started yesterday and not today. And behind the pint sized Rock of Gibraltar, was that good old f u I 1 - s i z e d Rock of Gibraltar, The World Alamanac which advises in cold black type: "The sea sons in 1945 (Kastern Standard Time) begin as follows: Vernal Equinox (Spring), March 20, 6:38 p. m." There you have it, Ted Collins, Kate Smith, Hilde- garde, Sips and the others to the contrary notwithstanding. Wa guess we'll have to string along with the little girl in the front office and the World Al manac, let the Kate Smiths, Ted Novelties In the News ' B the Aaanrifttrd PrfAS) Just Kids ! J. t'olnian, an ex-jap prisoner, says inai me iip is a lougn fighting man," but he's tickled ' pink if he obtains a Yo-Yo. j The major asserted that Yo- I Yos to the Japs were "the most precious of all," and they would "strut around" playing with the ! toys. Hungry Goat Kansas City In the Kansas City police station, a room is set aside for bicycles lhat have been picked up on t ho street. A sergeant says the job is to gel I he bicycles hack into I ho hands of the rightful owners, adding it's "a difficult job at best." Today, a wayward goat, cor ralled temporarily with the bikes, chewed the identification tags off the recovered vehicles. "Now we don't even know where we found the bicycles," moaned the officer. Ach Tung Cheyenne, Wyo. Tile Wyom ing department of agriculture ; doesn't know who woo the ar gument hut it dcs know thai Adolf Hitler never did, doesn't i now ami never will own a ranch i in W online. I It so ad ised l.orene Harris, , Folsom. I'alif., who asked the I department to settle a "hot nr ! Kunient' 'on the subject. ROOF LEAK? CALL Mm? Dial KKI'AIKS FREE DISSEMINATION OF CUD INFORMATION iStZZl ESSENTIAL LET cm w3 MEWS FLOW E CZZ3 FREELY "Passed V Collins and Hildegardes fall where they way. Anyway, we thank Nean West for calling to back us up in our earlier prog nostications which fixed today as the glad and gleeful time. Our little pint-sized expert on spring explained it this way: Due to the fact that last year was Leap Year with an extra day in it. spring comes a day earlier than usual this year. Next year it will be vernal equinoxing at the same old date, she says. Doggone, we don't know how one mite of feminin ity can be smarter than all the big shots. A lot of towns in Germany seem to have the word "Bad" as a prefix. It could be made general. Experience Indicates (Art Perry in Medford Mail Tribune) The public has started to wonder how long the current ration points for food system, will last after Germany has surrendered. A conservative guess holds it will prevail, un til about 60 days before the congressional elections next fall. Happened across Andy Han sen, the planing mill magnate, on Stale street. Andy had n saw and was sawing a piece of alum inum window molding. He looked al. us kinda disgusted like as we stood (here and look ed Ht him, and then he remark ed. "How come, here 1 have to j work like a dog all my life and all you do is just walk around i and watch people work? It ain'l : fair." Aha. Andy, but just think You have a planing mill and all we have is a 1!M2 typewriter and two top notch sets of vario cose veins. Maybe that evens the situation up. Disqusred Robber Gives Victim $20 Seattle. March 21 (U.RiA hold-up man was so annoyed to find a near-penniless victim that he stuffed a $20 bill in his pocket. Charles Hope. 64-year-old janitor, said the thug, a navy sailor, attempted to rob him yes terday. Hope had only AS cens in his pockets. The sailor swore vigorously and then shoved the bill in the janitor's pocket. r OE3QE IOE3Q 1 Shop WOODROW'S for UNPAINTED FURNITURE Chests of drawers, baby chests, end tables, wall shelves, linoleum top desks, bedside chests, twin beds and bunk beds, plate mirrors. Liberal Terms WOODROW'S n 3:5-34.1 Center St. I' IOC3QE tonoi 375 Chemekeia NKYV HOOFING .wttMHMflS dj US, Censors, Drum Majorettes Contest March 29 Tom Hill and Vernon Wis carson, co-chairmen on arrange ments for the annual drum ma jorette contest which has been staged by the local Elks lodge t for several years with drum ma-' ing without which the re jorette entrants from various gime must perish, and CI) de parts of the state participating, ' terioration of the German mili have announced that this year I lary machine to the point where the contest will be held Thurs day evening, March 29 at the armory instead of at the Elks temple. Heretofore the contests have been held in the Elks' hall but due to lack of space there and general demand for accomoda tions to handle a larger crowd, arrangements have been made to secure the armory. Already 16 girls have entered from a number of districts in the stale and several more are expected. An additional feature will be a 100-piece high school band under the direction of Vernon Wiscarson. tff! FIRST MIMBIR The War Today By DeWitt Mackenzie An Interpretative analysis of war developments by a fam ous Associated Press war correspondent. So let's talk about war's end in Europe and peace and all that sort of thing this being the beginning of spring, which not only is the season peculiar to hope but is the inspiration of great deeds. Of course we aren't supposed to discuss peace not right out in the open because that might stimulate over-optimism. I'm well-aware that I shall receive letters, written both in sorrow and in anger, accusing me of coddling complacence. However, this isn't a bad time to give peace the "once over." and not wait for the war to blow up in our faces without warning. Surely we don't need a sooth sayer to tell us we are near the end of the European war. In deed we are so close to it that the nazis might quit at any time! Having said this we mustif we are to justify discussion of early peace at once recognize that the fighting might continue for a considerable time if Himm- i ler and Goebbcls cling to their mad scheme of battling to a finish. Even so, it will be sur prising if it goes further than late spring or early summer. No Delusions for Nazis The nazi leaders have no de lusions about their defeat. De spite their typically Prussian effort to bully the allies into a compromise, the Hitlerites have been fishing for peace and that is official. When the armistice comes, it may arrive out of the blue with out warning as the result of sub-rosa discussions of a "semi official" charcater. Hitlerdom is cracking up fast, both militarily and politically. Always have thought and have so indicated in this column that the collapse of Germany would be premised on one of two things: (1) The loss of Hit ler's personal leadership since 1 hp ha hopn nnTicm'c irprv main. the allies would be able to crash through the last great barrier of Hitler's inner fortress the Siegfried line and the Rhine in the west, and the powerful Oder defenses in the east. Tearing Them to Shreds We are on the verge of ful filling the military requirement. The vastly superior allied ar mies are tearing the "invulner able" defenses to shreds. We have breached them on both sides and are ahout to pour great armies through them into the open plains of central Ger many. We've done more than that, for the allied air navies have so blasted the resurces ifcu need money . . TBam Ep& E9I BS9B9 Ess rand tmva siaW kb eIj da Ja Bolio,w from (he FIEST NATIONAL BANE Becuue, It costs' less to borrow from a bank. You establish Your Credit for future use. You have a full year to repay a loan of any amount from $50 to $1000. ' EEMEMBEH!...IT'S THUIFTY TO BORROW FROM THE FIRST NATIONAL Any Branth NATIONAL BANK OF PORTLAND ''Merchants of Credit" for SO yars f I O I R A I OIPOSIT IMSURANCI CORPORATION of the reich that the Hitlerites are living off their own fat. Once the Russians and the western allies are sweeping ac ross Germany, organized resist ance will collapse quickly if it lasts that long. The other requirement loss of Hitler's leadership already has been fulfilled. He is re ported to be a brokpn shell of a man for whom Himmler the hangman and propaganda min ister Goebbeis are ghosting in an effort to keep the facts from the German public. But truth will out. and the people will quit, despite Himmler's rule of death when finally they realize Hitler is finished. Pay Increases to Portland Teachers Portland. Ore.. March 21 Ol.tt Pay increases totaling $2,800. 000 over a nine-year period were voted for Portland teach ers last night by the school board. Reversing a stand taken a week previously, the board by a four-to-three vote approved a schedule submitted by the su perintendent's office, which was a combination of recommenda tions by teachers' committees, the administrative staff and the plan submitted by Dr. John Al mack, school finance expert at Stanford university. The immediate effect will be to increase salaries for starting teachers, while under the long range plan the chief beneficiar ies among the city's 1600 teach ers will be the veterans. erne. tiriHe?-, -tahtZ VALLEY PACKING Salem, ''in south in camfoinia Kp I MONEY BACK Mg$ ilkfefe iTH-irrinw iwt GREET EASTER in your very best I.ockcls, Crosses, Smart Costume Jewelry Lustrous Simulated Pearls Tfrmi Gladly foAMsZ& -ncr -taMi. CO., DISTRIBUTORS Oregon fry V if f r i