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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1945)
EDITORIAL PAGE La Grande Evening Observer Frank Schiro, MONDAY EVENING, MAY 28, 1945 'It Was a Carrier, So Big, Called the V. S. S. Franklin!'- EVENING OBSERVER'S PROGRESS PROGRAM IRRIGATION Complete the Grande Ronde Valley irrigation project. LA GRANDE A city of 10,001) Extend the city limits. TODAY'S TEXT Behold, I send you forth hh ssheep in the midst of the wolves: he ye therefore wise us Hcrpents, and harmless as doves. Matthew 10:16. THOUGHT FOR TODAY In Faith and Hope the world will disagree, But all mankind's concern is charily. Pope. Cancer Control Fund Needs Assistance Underway in Union county at the present time, in conjunction with a na tional campaign, is a drive to raise $575 to be used in the rij-rli t against cancel-. Eric Johnston, president of the United States chamher of commerce, who heads up the national drive, has compiled a number of statistics which show with out room for doubt that cancer is one of the greatest threats to American wel fare and happiness, lie said: "During the first three years of the war, with axis armies, navies and air forces turning upon our fighting men the full force of all the weapons of mod ern warfare, the total Americans killed or to die of wounds did not eipial the number of Americans killed by cancer in any one of the three vears from De cember 7, 1911, to December 7, 1911. "It shocked me to learn that an estim ated (i(H),(MHI Americans rinht now are suffering from cancer; that the annual cancer death rate in this country is 10"i, ODD; that one in every eight Amer Funny Business "Hoorayl Our . list job somebojfo , wiped' Cat W .VyT. 1 - I ! ,..-tk-.i 5$f cA Publisher Page Two icans dies of cancer; that if this ratio continues, 17,000,000 of today's living Americans will die of cancer." Think of that. He continues: "And that means Americans of all ages. For babies are born with cancer; last year 18,000 childr ren under 14 died of cancer; cancer is the No. 1 killer of women in the 35 to C.5 age group, the No. 1 killer of Ameri can men, and is surpassed only by heart disease in total deaths for all ages. "The medical authorities of the American Cancer Society tell me that without the discovery of a single now cancel- fact, 30 to 50 per cent of poten tial cancer victims can be saved. "This means that thru an adequate educational program, adequate detec tion clinics, equipment and training, and periodical medical examinations, 4,000, 000 to (5,500,000 of the 17,000,000 Amer icans now doomed to die of cancer can lie spared the ravages of this disease. With a full-sciUe integrated research program also in operation, cancer can be made a minor cause of death." These are the facts, Union county residents are asked to contribute only $575 to the national total of $5,000,000. Already more than 50 per cent of our local quota has been raised, but it has been gathered very slowly. The local committee, headed by Har vey Carter,' Central school principal is putting boxes in stores of the area, to assist in gathering smaller contribu tions. Those who wish to make larger con tributions can do so by contacting Car ter, Mrs. Anton Freisingcr or at the chamber of commerce offices. Let's put the cancer drive over quick ly. It will be a step toward the welfare and happiness of a large part of our own citizens in our own area. Accord ing to national figures, nearly 13 per cent of our community population will suffer or die from cancer. It must be prevented. o SO THEY SAY Wo need to think in terms of cncoui anuu nd rewarding the tremendous production, hard work and skill of the American farmer rather than paying him to suppress his ability and his skill. (.iov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York. The archaic and obsolete treaty making machinery of the senate is a menace to the peace and se curity of America. Sin. Claude Pepper, Florida. A!. A A V t'nlcfs tNt airplane cen pick up its passenrrs nd cargo from points cloy. to their itfigin, and deliver I Inn) close to their final destination, uir transport canOiA perfm'm its gtoiUcst sOi'vicClo the pvihhr. Civil Aonmauties Aiimitfislra-i tlr T. 1". WYjgjit. n o o Qo --0 vfieis, as J&xl mqfty- O O S Sgt. iiari-r r MSfcy, jr., Cleveland, O. furniluka'" Washington Merry:Go-Rou Br DREW FEAASON WASHINGTON Senator Langer of North Dakota has written a .scorching letter to Sec retary of War Stimson criticizing tin army's secrecy in connection with Jap balloons in the west and asking whether innocent per sons have been killed, and if so, whether this was what finally caused the war depart ment to lift its censorship ban. Last January the North Dakota senator addressed a letter to Stimson calling his at ' tention to the arrival of Japanese balloons in the northwest, and asking Stimson that the American public be notified in order to be on the alert regarding them. "Long experience," Langer told the secre tary of war, "has shown that the people, when 'aware of any danger, arc the first to help the armed services guard against it." , . However, Stimson sent an officer to see Langer and pleaded with him not to say any thing about the balloons. Langer finally yielded. : . Langer now takes the view that the war department's policy of secrecy is mere face saving, and the public should have been warned long ago to look out for these bal loons. . t ! 'There is naffieed to tell the enemy the exact location where these balloons drop so they can measure the drift of air currents," Langer told Stimson five months ago. "That can easily be :Jtept quiet. But it is import ant that thepinblic be warned to look out for the balloons and report them to the prpj per authorities." Meanwhile. aU sort of weird reports have' spread through. the west as a result of these balloons; andairone time the schools in one big city were nearly disrupted by exagge rated rumors. , Actually, there Is nothing very mysterious about the balloons'. They are believed pri marily aimed to set fire to western forests. Several months ago when they first started coming over, if was rainy, and the rainy sea son has continued all winter. With ap proaching summer, however, large areas in the west are bone dry and there is more dan ger. ' It is believed that the balloons are not launched from submarines, but from Japan proper and float all the way across the Pa cific, carried by the regular trade winds which blow from west to east as a result of .the earth's turning on its axis. . Had the allies needed to use them, similar WE, THE WOMEN By RUTH MILLETT The serviceman, many months overseas, listed some of the typically American things he was getting "good and' homesick for: The corner drugstore. ' ! Magazine advertisements that can be read at a glance, instead of having to be labori ously translated. A nice thick steak, smothered in onions. Breakfasts of bacon and FRESH eggs. Thick American newspapers. Why disillusion him by writing that a lot of those good old American institutions aren't what they used to be? That the cor ner drugstore is now just the place where you can't buy cigarets. That the magazine advertisements still look good but the fine print usually says something like: "You'll have to wait until Behind Scenes in Washington By PETER EDSON. La Grand Evening Observer Washington Correspondent SAN FRANCISCO With from four to five times as many ships now operating in the Pacific ocean than before the war, one of the big riddles to west coast shipping men is how much traffic there will be to carry after the defeat of Japan. The first few carloads of hemp from the Philippines came into San Francisco recent ly, to mark the beginning of restored U. S. trade in the Pacific but this was only a tok en. Most freighters hauling war supplies to the orient still come back light because there is nothing to carry. Foreign economic ad ministration has several missions in the Pa cific making preliminary studies, but thus far no reports have been made public. First difficulty is that none of the big raw materials producing areas of the Pacific has as yet been liberated. And how much of a scorched earth policy flie Japs will carry out as they retreat can't be measured. There is an American demand for what the Pacific can produce which may take several years to fill. Tin from the Nether lands East Indies and Malaya. Rubber from the same areas. Vegetable oils, palm and cocoanut. It may take several years to get the world properly soaped up. Spices. Su gar. Quinine. Hemp and jute and silk. Australian wool. Copra. War-time America has been able to get by without the usual supplies of all these things which the Pacific used to furnish. Ration ing plus synthetics did the. trick but the mere development of these substitutes may mean a revolution for Pacific shipping when the war is over. What, fur instance, is itoing to happwn to the one profitable silk trade with Japan? Wll Chin or the Philippines get it? Or will the development of nylon and rayon put them all and the silk worm completely out vf businc.-a? And how successfully wilt synthetic rub ber be able to cimipcJc with thv natural rub ber formerly imported trom Indonesia by the rtiliiion tons? Indianutc for bagging is aOither big pf r import with an un'ciitam fflvre HttoCW the development of nuide-in-America sub stitutes of cotton anpaper for bagging and burlap. balloons could have been floated from Scot land to Germany. The winds blow from -the Britsh isles across the channel to the conti Dent. ' '. ' .,' Connelly and Red . .!'. ',' Texas' Senator Tom Connally ..recently , held an important off-the-record ' meeting with the various advisers to the American delegation to discuss two important points at the San Prancisco conference! (1) the veto power; and (2). the world .court : , k' Only organization which Wanted tp retain the old world court were the National asso ciation of manufacturers and the Ameriqan bar association. Other organizations repre- ' senting labor, farmers, religious, racial and women's organizations favored the new sys tem of regional courts, similar to our circuit ' court of appeals. ' ' . The manufacturers association find the bar . association also took a stand against the veto power given to the big powers of the secur ity council. "It seems to us," said the national. manu facturers' spokesman, "that the veto gives great power to Russia." "Of course," he quickly added, "1 don't want it understood that we're unfriendly to Russia. As a matter of fact, we've been do ing a lot of business with them." To which Tom Connally shot back with a quizzical inflection: ' ' "And profitably." , Other observers roared. ' ," ' The Chase' bank is extending a brand new loan of $10,000,000 to the Soviet government. Backstage fact about the Joe Davics' pil grimage to London is that originally he was picked to go to Moscow for an intimate talk with Stalin, but his doctor forbade it., . Davies was slated for the Moscow trip be cause he is the only U. S. ambassador since the United States recognized Russia who has been welcome at the Kremlin. This was primarily due to Joe's book, "Mission to Moscow" and the film by the same name, which gave a sympathetic portrayel of So-' viet progress, .Therefore, it was planned to have him impress on Stalin that recent dip lomatic snarls had alienated American pub lic opinion. . When Davies was unable to go to Mos cow, it was decided that Harry Hopkins should do the job instead; while Davies would go to London and urge Churchill to stop needling Russia. after the war to buy our product." Or, "Don't become discouraged if you can't al ways find so-and-so on your dealer's shelves." : ' " ' " :"' ' As for a nice, thick steak. Well, that is just a pleasant dream of the past even in this country. ' ' Hens are still laying eggs but try to get the bacon tq go with them, unless you are a personal, .under-the-counter friend of the butchers. But we still have American newspares, of pre-war standard, unrationed, not hidden for favorite customers, even delivered, and with the comic strip characters getting in and out of as many jams as ever. That's one "American institution" rn his list that the homesick serviceman wouldn't find disappointing. Will the resumed import of vegetable oils formerly produced in the Pacific put a stop to war-increased U. S. production of pea nuts and soybeans on American farms? There are a couple of revolutions in that. Or who gets the trade in cheap cotton tex tiles which Japan formerly peddled through out the Pacific islands to keep the populace in sarongs? The whole pattern of Pacific trade is in for a major reshifting in just such fashion as this. Not only that, but what happens at the San Francisco conference and at the peace conference afterward, with regard to dis position of Pacific islands formerly man dated to Japan, may have important bearing on post-war trade routes. Germany made a good thing out of those islands when they belonged to her. Japan didn't allow their resources to deteriorate, though no one really knows what the com mercial resources of those islands may add up to. Some have rich phosphate beds which will increase the Pacific supply of fertilizer. - Saipan had big sugar plantations. But will Hawaii and the Philippines stand for their development as competitors on the U. S. market? And hnw will Louisiana and the beet sugar areas of the west like that? All these challenges offer an exciting though uncertain future to west coast ship ping interests who arc meeting tliem with characteristic emrgy nd initiative. Automobiles, machinery, manufactured goods of ell kinds ait; not expected to build up ny great volume of freight for some time to come, due to U. 3. shortages. Passenger traffic offers onthir with a more immediate future. Though alljthj fighting men in the Pacific want most des perately to come iime, many of the people Who have h.i to stay !M:ie throughout the war want to ginptoces. Hen the greatest i(S ponderable of iliem all how many passen-g.-rs will want to go by air and how much of a competitor to the slower ocean-gW.ng ships is tho airplane going to be? Anyone who can ansuer all these riddles tas a steady job waiting for him in the ttW? fic departments of west coast shippers. , Side Glances ' 0!)Q :; COm. IMS BY WEA SEftVICE. INC. T. M. REG. D. 8. PAT. OFF; ' S-9 "I've been driving this bus for over a year but my husband' still doesn't trust me to back our car out of the garage!" . o McKENNEY ON BRIDGE By WM. E. McKENNEY, America's Card Authority SQUEEZE PLAY WINS THREE OVERTRICKS (This is one of a series of hands from the recent world's championship masters' individ ual tournament.) Losing a world's championship title by one-half point after five sessions of play is indeed very heartbreaking. However, Al Weiss of Chicago, who finished second to Charles Goren in the A Q 10 8 2 984 972 K52 Duplicate N.-S ,vul. South West North East Pass , 1 V Pass 2 4 Pass' '' "PiSss" S"1 Pas 3 V Pass 3 N. T Pass Pass Pass Opening 2. 29 individual, proved a real sports man and was immensely popular among eastern players. He is a great player and a fine partner. While his contract was only three no trump, he squeezed out Questions & Answers Q In addition to being Italy's greatest p;rttwhat other distinc tion dots '.;.e city of Genoa havo? A Its Bank of St. George, founded in 1407, is believed to have been the first corporation of stockholders established in Europe after the "fall of-the Ro man empire. ' , sr . Q What is -the-area protected and managed by the .U. S. forest service? A Around 200,000 000 acres, many of which are patroled by planes which are important aids in controlling fires. Q Who was the first woman registered air pilot? A Baronne Raymondc de la Roche, who received pilot certif icate No. 36 from the Federation Aeronautique Internationale on March 8, 1910... This Curious World A974 V32 J864S Q6 I 1 Wels J6S N 4.K3 VAKQJ W E V105 7 6 8 4AQ10 5 174 DalerAj983 I OF WMflLS THHCU6M .fcC S5vVlfi'l '. I StTTJNSTHtWHEElS )fjl KjafSiA jS AT RttMT ANCLES, f?Ma;::C HAS NO TAL. GO. IMS trie STivKt imc r. K Kd u. ft. QfF, S-29 ANSWER: Rumania. NEXT: If all lho humans on earth got together. six odd. North won the opening spade lead with the ace and re turned a spade which Weiss won with the king. He then cashed dummy's king of diamond's. He returned to his hand with the heart ten and cashed the ace and queen of diamonds. Now dummy's long heart suit was run. North could not. pro tect the jack of diamonds and the queen of clubs. At the same time South found it impossible to hold Xhs queen of spades and protect the king of clubs. In duplicate bridge, match points are won by making those over-tricks. e IN FORMER YEARS ;: 30 Years Ago ,: Schools in La Grande1 closed for thj summer vacation."1'' Pat Foley went to Elgin to try to add another bear to his collec- Mrs. R' R Sehilkp and' tipr" daughter, Fredericka, went to Portland. Aside from ...visiting with her daughter, she y,ill at tend the national club.'.council convention. . 15 Years Ago Cecil Posey, Wallowa, athlete, was elected president of the East ern Oregon normal school student u"uJ m vntr luuutvuig jwi. wiu er officers elected were: Lowell. Fuller of Imbler, vice-president; Juanita Crawford, Athena, secretary-treasurer; Rulon Elvanson, Union, and Grace Herr of Free-, water, memoers of senior'council. .' Miss Amaryllis Knight, was elected assistant Mimir editor at . c aiuui--iii uuuy election; .rjv ' f , 10 Years Ago' -V j Word was receivedi-'b -.J. H. Blunt, high school instructor in La Grande, that four of his stu-. dents in the high school received ' a grade of "A" in the competitive examination on the leagu&.of na" tions. The Oregon rommitea'q! the League f Nations,; IncC awarded Betty , Bohrlekamp, fourth Dlaco in thn'sbltri-l:1;': Miss Enid HappersetvaeStf on a trip which will include iiMSils ni '- rj,.-,rl,, TVT..U.. -U: jifiis- iuefty, wneie snevwui- Mipr rela tives, vviti km a -