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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1945)
Side Glances Washington Merry-Go-Round By DREW PEARSON m &. t ? Hi! ml lis La Grande Evening Observer Frank Schiro, Publisher tyJONDAY KVKNIN(i, MARCH 1 01 n Monarch of A EVENING OHSEKVEH'S PKOGRESS PROGHAM IRRIGATION Complete the Grande Ronde Viilley irrigation project. LA GRANDE A city of 10,000 Extend the city limiU. TODAY'S .TEXT . i ': , If ye tlu'll lie not able to do tlul tiling which is least, whv take ve thought for the rest? 1-tiVe 12:26. . . ' ' THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Our greatest (food, and what we least fan spare, Ls hope: Iho'ltwt of all our evils, fear. John Armstrong ' Two Freedoms However lough" the problems that the San rraneisco conference will have to wrestle with, the American pulilic is at least assured that its own. dele gates will he free to speak their minds, and (hat its press will he free to reMr(: what (joes on. That is an assurance thai makes the problems seem some what less frightening. These freedoms of speech and pres, vital to democracy hut new to world conferences, were promised the Ameri can delegation by President Koosevell. They reflect his apparent desire for a sort of new international deal for this country which isn't the same as an in ternational new deal - that' is nilmiraljji? 'rWl oneotiragiug'. One JikWy result of this Cfrecdotel -i speech and action would lo to leP Sen ator Vunilonlioi'g', a delegate, press his plan for a cheek and review by thecvon- ference of the decisions reach Ihimtmrl'oh Oaks and Yalta,. 11 ficult. to sec anything but merit .1 at dif- I hi: plan, though it. probably will opposed ., .. i. . .. , , ,. '-.. :n t . P lie shouldn't find much ifppositii'fi O - Funny business 1 "He'i the tugar and butter refcroo!" MHKppMWM MvlJ MADGE'S -' i f'ujfc Two 11 Ife Surveys among his American colleagues, since . his plan is a blow at the "perfectionism" that Mr. Roosevelt and administration congressmen have decried. It would subject ' the steps alreudy taken to general, democratic examina tion. It would recognize, the inescap able fact that any plans will have to be amended before they work smoothly. It would help to make perfection the . eventual goal rather than n preliminary . , requirement, to the world's efforts to fi'ganize for freedom, security and peace. V The Strona and the Weak "We may deplore, if we choose," said Prime Minister Churchill to the house of commons, "thai there is a difference between the great and small, between the strong and weak in the world. There is undoubtedly such a difference." Mr. Churchill was speaking in defense of the voting procedure agreed to at Yalta. And he was referring, of course, to great and small nations. " No. one will deny his broad and obvious statement, but it could do with some expansion and clarification. Poes Mr. Churchill grant tlmt great 'iioss and strength carry responsibility as well as power? Does he feel that a monopily of greatness and strength im plies a monopoly of wisdom? lines he beliovo, that smallnesa and weakness iiave no right to equal .iustice, dignity and consideration with the great and .. o o o o o strong .' o o We. trust thht the answer is yes, to thefirst question, nirtl no to the others. We trust that President Roosevelt and Marshal Stalin feel the same way. Snd ' we tjfiall look forward to sefinS their sonjjmenls proved iifVtion at. rt,ho "5'un Francisco conference. 0 O i , O . SO THEY SAY Home Qnliance from this. Must may devtolop of the doners Kills aiiil, .I' many ,-- niarine, pm-keting I',ct, t:iu after a trims fusion, luis ivtnarkeil, "t nm si,n nji that balie when 1 get t.:wy IMitirniaeTStxJMiitefc; r.itwat'il II. ti.Miilui't of Shephl'filshmn, W. Kit-MV lwo. O 'C O G'OiivlMe with tW aftny is tvti? arm laWoiVel that too many SuiMiay-fii'iVers fin to sleep lit the wheel. 1 don't sco what they've got to worry about, just ruling across the bridgi-. They ought to stand out here nil morning. Cn. Thomas Kretchmor Sioux Cit la., diriH'titiR Ke- m.'icon fVfif traffic. Forecasts an- not mathemati cal certainties, but there is Rood evidence for behcvini; that by two years after the defeat of Ja pan," civil aviation can furnish employment of 130.000 persons. .-Commerce Secretary Henry A. Wallace. O WASHINGTON Maj: Gnn. Norman T. Kirk, efficient surgeon general. of Ihe army, whoso mcdut'nl corps has done sie h a mira culous job of 'saving the wounded, has just come back Cum the Pacific theatre, boiling mad. ' General Kirk was on an Inspection trip of hospitals and army medical units to make sure they were on their toes, talk with per sonnel, sue what else they needed to give the wounded. -the best possible treatment. But wheh'lte'an lved at I.eyle in the south-' erti Philippines, Genera) MacArtliur refused to 'permit General Kirk to come to Manila, The army's most important medical work fey that lime hud passed from Leyte and the sofith WMa'pjtlu, but diispitc the fact Mac Arhur flatly 'refused S) let the army's high est ranking" firclor and chief, of the medical corps inspect, the hospitals in Manila or set foot there. ) i I q .' MucArthur ';k this flat stand despite the fact that his own wife and son were in M:yi ila, so obviously it could ni$ have been con sidered too dangerous. Furthermore, General Muflxrlhur lias, re fused to permit Brig. Gen. Guy H. Denit, the commanding officer of the medical corps in the Pacific, to remain in MB'ntia. Mac-Arthur has permlttecl General Denit Ho visit Manila several times',', but requires that he go buck tojeyle fori.permanent heaxluuai leu. Top medical corps officers are burnt up ovpr IhiS, and say th at MacAvthur's adamant stand is 'seriously; interfcrin gwith' their op-, erutions. Some of them even go so f6r as to say that it is costing "lives. While .the com manding officer in any theatre has a right to choose army personnel in that area, they claim that MucArthur is going loo far when he prevents the chief of the medical corps from visiting Manila on an inspection trrp.. They also say that the .wife of the com manding general is supposed to set an- ex ample tb othev B'ives who also would like to be wilh their husbands, and are critical of the fact that MaoArthur flew his family back to Manila when there wasn't a chance in the world of any other officer's wife join ing her husband. The entire matter is being taken up witli Secretary of War Slimaun. Note Army wives are still smarting over the fact that .MacArthur took a Chines? nurse and a lot of wicker furniture out of Manila in 1942, using valuable space on his small escape ship instead of rescuing Gen eral Wainwiifiht or some of the other high ranking officers who were left behind. WE, THE WOMEN Bf RUTH MILLETT ...The army .has at, last .made up its mind ''that a ' wife's first 'responsibility is to her marriage even if the wife has gone into uniform for the duration. The war department has announced that any woman serving in the army overseas may i-ccpiest rind obtain duty in the United Stales if her husband is returned home from permanent overseas assignment, whether for reassignment, hospitaliation or honorable discharge. Hold Back" ' It is too bad that women were hut prom ised that much consideration early in the War. For if they, had been, many a young war wife might have been interested in (Jet ting into uniform and helping to fill the quo tas of women needed overseas as WACS, army nurses, dieticians and physical therapy aides. Behind Scenes in Washington FETER XDSON,, I,a Gvundt Evrtiing-Obamvfrr Washington CarfBapamlan) o WASHINGTON, D. C:, March 26 Every tradt hai'uib; tricks, and in gaining suprem acy over the iruu'h vaunted German Luft Wafe, U. S. npmy air oforce pilots have thought up nqmrous shifts and razzle-daz zle formations; which me iiow in u;1 east of the Rhine. A few offlhese tactics on whjch arniyoccnsoiiowill iy3 permit (ibwlosufe, are llft-se: S o o " ' o c Kiq0'.tly, Germans aAot hold "of a Flying Fortress which landed .safely it) their terri tory witftnuk Rilot or s,;n of life. Tho plane, yn,s however, loitoVd with bombs ;ut ex plosives. Hy some im9aeKPit had not 'own itself up on hittingQilu' ground as was in tended. That crash laiVling lined tho veilO el' si'Qecy on one of the most novel employ ments of "w-ar weary" plan yet rj" be devised. Iivstead of being scrlfgiped, these veterans of many raids are tilled with explo sives, taken W?ofl q- their civws, who set llie autiiTiuitic pilots to fly the planes against German target's, and then iQl out. Q The big Fortresses, like work horses head ed Mr tlu barn, do the rest themselves, guid- ed only bv the robot brain hi-jhe automatic p,lt o O O O J"51 Like Sitting Ducks One of the tactical trick used by U. S. air f'''ees m knocking out t ie Gein)in Luft waffe has loen achieved through sending along more "fgliters than are actually needed to protect bombing missions. If 5(planes are nec.g.1 lo protect the bombers. tiOO are sent. The extra 100 stay upstairs or lag be hind until the German interceptor planes 0 make their rnws jit lli.i h.-'iihers Then llio of ex'.ra 100 follow the Germans back to their home bases, catch them :is they slowly land, or while they are on tho ground being re fueled, and destroy them by the thousand. In tii'.hter plane raid- en railroads and highways, similar mass destruction tactics are employed. Instead of concentrating on strafing individual trucks and locomotives, allied fighters hold their fue till they create blocks. Knocking out a tiuck at a culvert Can Congressmen Read? Government agencies have just received an order to cut down the size of type used in official publications, in order to conserve paper. There are two exceptions to the rule: Agencies printing material for school chil dren or illiterate immigrants are permitted to use ordinary typewriter-size type. There is also no limit on the size of type whicn agencies can use in making reports to con gress. Puy-off came last week when OPA, per haps thinking congressmen can't read as well as school children or illiterate immi grants, sent two thick volumes printed in very large type i each congressman. A New Jim Farley Usually a big national election is followed by a lethargic vacuum. Democrats and re- . publicans both want to forget politics. But this time, leaders of both political parties are alread ytalking about the congressional elec tions svo years hence. So far as meets the eye, however, Demo cratic Chairman Bob Hannegan is wy out ahead of the republicans' when it comes to translating words into deeds. Hannegan has 'become just as active as Jim Farley at the peak of his political power, is working at his job 18 hours a day and is determined tlmt Roosevelt roll up a stronger democratic ma jority in 'the congressional elections two years hence'.'. ''Shortly after Roosevelt returned from Yalta, Hannegan called on him, outlined de tailed plans for keeping fha democrats in power Hannegan complained, however, that ' he wasn't getting much help from some cab inet members, pointing out that few cabinet me.mbers pitched in to help the party. The president then suggested that Hanne gan call together all the, cabinet members except for the secretaries of war and navy, and lay down the law to them. So a few days later, Hannegan threw a small lunch eon for the cabinet at which he put his cards on the table. Even the stiff, usually un bending state department, which tries to walk the political tightrope' and has more republicans than democrats in its lush jobs, was represented by Assistant Secretary Dean Acheson. Other cabinet members present were Post master General Walker, Secretary of Labor Perkins, Secretary of Agriculture Claude Wickard, Under Secretary of Interior Abe Folios and Secietary of the Treasury Mor genthau. (Continued on Page 6) But tuany of them were heUl back by the thought, "I might find myself stuck in a foreign assignment while my husband was back in the United States." Nobody can blame a woman for letting such a possibility deter her from serving her country because women have always put their marriages first and have been taught it is their duty to do so. ' Women are needed in modern war and they can perform valuable services. But they can't be treated exactly as men are treated. r Not unless they are educated to think as men think that in wartime duty to one's country must be put above even marriage responsibilities. But the present generation of young wo men have had no such training nor do their men feel that they should put any obligation above their duty to their husbands. cftuses tl$V next truck to slow up fof deduc ing, fde'jing tbot one and tlfe next one creates a traffic jam, and after tifl.it every 0 truck that citjiu along can be picked off. Goittg af'(.'r li'iilroads, fighter-bom bers drop o bombs every half mije lortg 00-iliile stretches of track. That cre'ates real -trap-fii.to-ups which caS easily be knocked out. When work crefis come out to repair the mamliift'S, the fighters strttfe the work "crews. They cause n lot of absenteeism that way. PnlyDGcrnuin defense for such tactics is to movj' up all suppliSi at night. To date, ' -no effective .mearwi of ni;iit low-altituds r .milling and strafing has bpeti worked iut. 0 Tanks, Planes Co-operate ( Close ccf-operation between air forces and Srmy ground forces inlurofie, for securing close flir support on the battlefield, has been achieved by creatiri); "fighter-tank teanfs." The co:nanding officer of the fighter planes, instead of riding high in a fast pur- suit ship, rides in a t.-yik along with the armored forces Commander. The command Vuin ln Iiml communication wun nis (J l'hmes, andlls in his fly boys to drop out of t(ii) sky and attack where it will do the most good. (T)i prevent ground forces commanders from asking supporting combat plaiies to perform impossible tasks, air forces officers have devised a little jingle as a guide to target selection. Don't nsk us to go after anything, say the air forces, unless it is ci) "fmdable, hittablcQVulnerable, flable.' Whn H C fiuM.,,- arnim rnrms.Unc When U. S. fighter group formations were cut down from 18 to 12 planes, the air forces found they achieved a number of highly de sirable factors. Enemy fighters were divid ed up. ln return, the bombers got more firepower because there was less danger of .-.hooting into each other and more open space in which to shi(g) The smaller number ofolanes in the group made a smaller target for anti-aircrat fire and. conversely, they got more targets with loss dispersion. pon im tt nu evmcc. me. t. to. u... pat, err. 3-27.'. ci "I thought at first I was going to like school, but it's getting pretty dull I guais I'm more the outdoors typp of majil" P McKENNEY ON BRIDGE By WM, E. McKERNEY, America's Card Aoiboriiy PSYCHIC BIDS BUY I HEflflT CONTRACT In the early days of contract, Dorothy Sims made o.uite a repu tation for herself with psychic bidding. Every once in n while 1 sec a good woman player pull off a line psychic kid against ex perts. Adelaide Neuwirth, in the re cent eastern championships, made today's physchic bid against two of the country's outstanding life masters. I know that you are going to say both East and West should not resist the chance lo double that. Now Mrs. Nuwirth quiet ly bid tour hearts and bought the contract. .' ; , i You can see that there was, no way to defeat four hearts, nor was there any way to defeat four spades. Even though you cashed the ace and, queer! Of clubs and tried to give your part ner a ruff in clubs, dummy could ' ruff with the king of spades. O IN FORME YKARS 30 Years Ago The D.-class of the junior sec tion of the YMCA elected six captains. These captains will pick their teams, dividing the membership of the class into as many teams for a continual con test in a variety of work. Elect ed captains were Robert William son. Waldo Stoddard, Frank Tuckey, Philio Heideftrich, Irwin Johnson and Frank Black. If. H. Weatherspoon returned from an extended trip into Kans as where he marketed several carloads of apples grown in "Grande Ronde valley. ' 1 ' ' The 2ft0 acre form of William Hill, 5 miles south of Elgin, was sold to F. E. Smith. AJ74 V J 103642 J 93 K Q 0 9 vge 0 A K 7 5 2 83 ' N w e 8 : Deafer . a to e Non Q 10" J975 ' A K 7 5 3 i 4 l" A Q 10 6 2 .at: Neither vul. North Et r jublc 1 A Double :0 2 A Double wss Pvm .ins ft K. 27 1 V i have bid spades hut they did not or there would r.ct have been a story about today's hand. Now of course Mrs. Neuwirth knew when West doubled a heart that ih all probability he was asking his partner to bid spades, so she beat him to the gun. She bid the spade. Well, East's dou ble of one spade actually said, "Partner, that is what I was go in to bid tiad North passed." However, her best bid came in over West's two diamond calf. She still had those six hearts but she knew that she hail to keep the opponents from bidding spades; therefore, her second spade bid. Of course East could Questions & Answers q What do RAF pilots Kill the British jet plane Gloster Me teor? A-aThe Squirt. 0 Q How limny elctrtc motors,, go into a superfortress? A About 150. o o Q Where, ctjd the hot dog originate? o 0 0 A-esJn the Rhinelandv 13 Yeart Ago . Enrollment in Eastern Oregon Normal school was 458. About 50 members of the Odd Fellows and Rebekah lodges of La Grande attended the district association meeting in Union, with about 250 persons fiom Summerville, Elgin, Cove, Union and La Grande present. Major R. R. Huron presented the $10 prize to Sgt. Murray Jen sen, the national- guaretsrjtan at Union having the highest indi vidual score in mnrksifjanship. Jensen had an average .score ot 214 otit of a possible 230 rtoints; If) Ya Ago If. W. Guthrie drew every clufe in 'the deck giving Wo) a double royal plus both nine-spots, when a group of friends were playing pinochle. The perfect' hand brofce otipithe gaJi. , o 0 At the 11th anniversary ot Comply M, 186th oinfantry,' Itf. Andrews was elected Captain bjr 0a unanim6us vote of 3he 53 en KlPd men. The election Iras conducted by-Col. Alvin g.JBak er, rcginSenlal'comftiefnder. , TJ This Curious World CCPR. IMS B HIA SERVICE. INC 5, T M. REC. U S. PAT. OFT, 1 -. O o stK.y i y T i iBi ) CAN JUMP ( o. lfVjl!l o A INTO THE AIR. '.g o IVV. jViiiKS;. )& " 15T IP,1 A txrwEsTm DOE RABBIT MAY SUPPLY ABJVT J? XiMCS OP CSEiSED KABBIT McAT IN A YEAS. ANSWER: Teheran, capital of Iran. NEXT: Homes of paper. O O 'if " - L i