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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1945)
Side Glances Washington MerryGo-Round v iuMii.'jiH"i,)Sy fty DREW AJUtON EDITOR! At PAGE I La Grande Evening Observer Frank Schlro, Publisher TUESDAY EVENING, JULY 24, 1945 Page Two Our Changing World THOUGHT FOR TODAY Most men employ the first part of life to miike the other part miserable. La Bruyere. , Farm Decrease Significant '. Information recently released by the bureau of census and published by this newspaper indicated that although Un ion county, in 1941 had 25,000 more acres of farm land under cultivation, 47 r fewer farms were being operated than in 1940. This information is of more than casual interest and indicates a trend, which, if it continues, nuRurs ill for the future of the Grande Hondo valley, its farmers, business men and residonts. Although railroading and lumbering loom large in the business scheme of this valley, the backbone of these and of the entire social structure is agricultural. 1' mining accounts for more than 50 percent of the income, employment and traffic of the area. Without the farm background, every other activity would be of less significance, create less pay roll and traffic. Therefore, whatever happens to our farm structure is of vital importance to every citizen of the area. I,vt's examine the statistics a little more closely: In 1940, there were 471, 173 acres under tillage or cultivation of some sort. The latest survey indicated l!)(i,169 acres being farmed. In 1915 there exist 1,208 farms, but in 1910 there were 1,225. What does this mean? Does it mean that while additional laud has been de veloped, 47 farms are now lying idlo and uncultivated? Not at all. The significance of theso figures lies in another angle of consider ation. The 47 farms under question are now part of other, larger farms. The facts are that we have now in the vallev 47 KEWKll. KAUAI KAMI LIES THAN IN 1910. In our farming population, we have 47 fewer owners or operators of farms ; 47 fewer entrepreneurs, or farm busi ness people; 47 fewer families to trade in our towns nnd communities; 47 fewer taxpayers. The period from 1940 to 1945 has been the most prosperous farming per iod in tho history of the valley. Yet despite the prosperity, 47 farmers have found reason to quit. It can be said that had prices been at a less favorable level, the probabilities would have been that our loss in the number of farms would have been great er. The probabilities are high that at the conclusion of the war, this trend may be accelerated. What are the reasons? Farming prac tice in the Grande Rondo valley at the present time is of the type conducive to large scale operation. Types nnd quali ties and yields of crops are not con ducive to profitable small scale opera tion. On the pre-war scale of farm prices only the larger operators, equip ped for handling many acres at low cost per acre could hope to come out in the black. Even today it is difficult for some. After the war, conditions will certainly again narrow down. What is the answer? Diversified farming of the type conducive to small . scale operation. Irrigation will open up a tremendous field of farming now closed in this valley. Irrigation will double the farm population of the valley ' within ten years of its completion. Irri gation will increase the size nnd pros perity of every community. Without irrigation, the Grande Konde valley will eventually be composed of a compara tively few very large farms. The city populations will shrink as correspond ingly fewer merchants, businesses and their employes will be necessary to serve their needs. Irrigation will reverse the trend and make this valley the productive paradise it should be. Funny Jiusinesv 'A flW V.'t i( ' 1 3L." fc ' I fa o SO THEY SAY No matter what concessions arc made minorities lire never satis fied. We therefore propose the translcr of (German) populations. President Eduurd Benes, of Czechoslovakia. The job thai the newspapers of Hie nation have done In sup port of the Seventh war loan drive represents an accomplish ment for which every newspa ivrman should feet truly proud. Frank Tripp, chairman. Allied Newspaper Council of the Ttcjjury. "Hti going native!" It will be up to FoUnd to har-moni.-e her foreign policy with that cf Soviet Russia, without however sacrificing her political, economic and cultural independ ence. Prof. Oscar Lange, of tho Uni versity of Chicago. Care Is a little four-letter word but it does a ir.igh'.y job !r. pro ve;.'.. r.g ;.'igoiv Memphis, Tenn., Prass-Scimitar. WASHINGTON It may take a long time to find out whether Hitler and Eva Braun escaped to Patagonia. The country is a series of vast Nazi-owned ranches, where German is spoken almost exclusively and where Hit ler could be hidden easily and successfully for years. . .. The ranches in this southern part of Ar gentina cover thousands ot acres and have been under German management for gen erations. Because of absolute German con trol, it would be impossible for any non German to penetrate the area to make a thorough investigation as to Hitler's where abouts. Along the coast of Patagonia, many Ger . mans own land which contains harbors deep enough for submarine landings. And if sub marines could get to Argentine-Uruguayan waters from Germany, as they definitely did, there is no reason why they could not go a little farther south to Patagonia. Also there is no reason why Hitler couldn't have been on one of them. Note On Dec. 15, 1943, this column report ed "Hitler's gang has been working to build up a place of exile in Argentina in case of defeat. After the fall of Stalingrad and then Tunisia, they began to see defeat staring them in the face. That was their cue to move in on Argentina." The same column also cited chapter and verse regarding German trained officials who ruled the new Argen tine dictatorship. At San Francisco, Nelson Rockefeller and Jimmy Dunn insisted that the U. S. A. recognize1 Argentina. Note 2 If it ever comes to identifying Hitler, Dr. Robert Kermner, former German police official now living in Lansdowne, Pa., has the answers. Kempner, who was in charge of the investigation after Hitler's beer hall putsch, says that Hitler's right thumb is abnormally long, his right ear pointed on top, and his mouth is very reced ing. Kempner has turned over his data to U. S. authorities. Army Politics Killed Chennault Under Secretary of War Bob Patterson and air force Gen. Ira Eaker were put on a very hot spot during their secret session with the senate military affairs committee. Not a sen ator present was willing to believe .the res ignation of Maj. Gen. Claire Chehnaultwas caused by anything but army politics. , ; Patterson tried to explain the selectiqri of Lieut. Gen. George Stratemeycr as su preme air chief in China oh the basijj.pl' seniority. ,.- . 'lift " "That was known when Stratemeyer i was sent out there," shot, back hard-working Senator Happy Chandler of Kentucky,""Whp spent several weeks watching Chennault's' operation in the winter of 1943. ' k Aside from that explanation, Patterson insisted that Stratemeyer's appointment over Chennault was strictly a decision on. the part of Gen. Albert Wedemeyer,' theater com mander. Senator Allen Ellender of Louisiana, not a member of the committee but sponsor of a resolutin calling for senatorial investiga tion of the incident, was at the secret com mittee session and questioned Patterson and Eaker about Chennault's military prowess. War department officials did not attempt to argue about the ability of the former "Fly ing Tiger." "' General Eaker, who had been in command of U. S. air forces in England and was shunt ed off to Italy, was well- received by the senators. His own experience, they thought, was part of the same army politics which resulted in Chennault's resignation. The Eaker Incident, however, was not discussed. "Chennault Got Bored" Eaker General Eaker attempted to explain tho war in China has reached a new stage. The important thing now, he said, is not over land operations against the Jap armies and See WASHINGTON . ;. .' Page 4 WE, THE WOMEN By RUTH MILLETT All the while her soldier husband was listed as missing in action and presumably dead a young wife in Atlanta, Ga., wrote him letters she couldn't mail but instead put away in a drawer. ' Her faith that her husband would some day return was rewarded, and the picture of the two taken after the twice wounded soldier was released from a German prison camp showed them reading together the letters that were actual proof of the wife's continued love and faith. It was a heart-warming story. How much happier for all concerned than the stories of the wives' who have given up hope for their men when they have been reported "killd in action," and have gone ahead and married again enly to discover that their husbands arc still living. Waiting Is Duty Faith that results in a wife's waiting for a man month after month when he is be lieved to be dead won't bring him back, if the war department report is correct. But with even the slight chance that the report might be wrong, it seems ae though the wives who are told their husbands are of ficially dead shouldn't try to forget to the extent of letting themselves fall in love a,gain not, at least, until the war is over long enough for there to be no possibility of a mistake being made. It is, perhaps, in some ways easier for a human being to make himself accept the in disputable fact that a loved-one is dead than to live on the fodorn hope that he might somehow, somewhere still be alive. And yet, it seems from the stories of mistaken, death reports that have already come out of the war wives should keep faith until after final victory. For it would be better that a thousand wives wait within reason than that one should mistakenly marry while her husband is still alive. Waiting is the duty of women in wartime even when it seems they are waiting with out hope. Behind Scenes in Washington Br PETER EDSON, La Grand Evening Observer Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 24 Has the Tennes see valley authority "experiment" paid off? Or is it, as charged by the combined lobby of 31 land and water users' organizations, something which should not be repeated in other parts of the United States? Only answer to that must come from TVA's own records. TVA's annual report for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1945, is not yet completed. But taking the 1944 re port and adding to it those figures which are available on recent operations, these facts stand out: First, the cost. Congress has appropriated $868,000,000 bonds. The net income from power operations after payment of all cur rent expense but before depreciation, is $75, 000,000. In addition, TV A took over from the war department the old muscle Shoals and other World War I developments at a book value of $36,000,000. That makes the total cost of $844,000,000. Where has this money gone? $560,000,000 has been spent on the completed plant, and another $188,000,000 has been spent on the construction work still in progress. Of these sums, approximately $460,000,000 is for pow er projects, the rest flood control and navi gation. In addition, $47,000,000 has been spent for non-income producing develop ment of the Tennessee valley. Two million dollars worth of bonds have been retired and there Is $41,000,000 intheTVA treasury. Loans to municipal power companies arc $3,000,000. Inventory is put at $7,000,000. De preciation of $4,000,000 balances the books at the above mentioned $844,000,000. On the basis of operating experience up to the pres ent, TVA estimates that us income from the sale of electric power, which is its only source of income, will be sufficient to retire the entire investment within 60 years, with out interest. For the pa.st year, TVA's gross income from power sales has liren $38,000,000. With operating expenses of $20,000,000, the ne; income has been $18,000,000. This is tbc equivalent of a little over 3 percent interrs: on the powr. flood control and navigation Invjtment It is nearly 4 percent n the in vestment in power ficihtits alone. The charge that TVA can make this return because it doesn't pay taxes does not bear up In lieu of taxes TVA is currently paying $.2,000,000 a year to state and local govern ments where it owns property and does business. TVA's elx'.ric -aver generating system of 24 water and II sieam plants has been .greatly expanded for war production of alu minum and chemicals. Three-fourths of its present 2,200,000 kilowat capacity goes to war plants. In addition TVA furnished power to over half a million consumers through 130 locally owned municipal and co-op distribution sys tems. More than 20 percent of the consumers are rural. One of the big brags of TVA is that its average non-industrial consumer uses twice as much electricity as the U. S. average. The TVA yardstick has been used in many communities to force down rates. The consumption figures arc cited by TVA supporters to show that the standard of liv ing in the Tennessee valley is higher, meas ured in terms of consumption of electricity. This, however, is not the only thing which TVA claims to have done for the people of its region. TVA is charged with flood control. It has 19 water storage dams in operation. It flatly denies charges its flood control operations have not benefited flood conditions on the lower Ohio and Mississippi. On the Tennessee river itself, TVA claims to have lowered floodcrcst levels at Chattanooga by six feet In dry weather these dams opened to release water at a rate that will maintain a nine-foot channel depth for navigation on the river's lower 650 miles. Ton-biles of traffic on the river have been increased seven times over 1933, with 18 barg lines now carrying grain, coal, petroleum and war materials. TVA's chemical plant at Muscle Shoals has turned out a quarter of a million tons of fertilizer shipped to 31,000 farms in 28 states. TVA has promoted forestry, planting 152. 000 seedlings to sustain yield on timber lands which cover half the valley. It has done research on minerals in this area, turn ing up a firebrick clay that formerly had to be imported from India. It has experimented with new uses of elertncity on farms, new farm machinery, new methods of food pro cessing. It has worked for the control of stcn pollution and malaria. In all ths rt-i-carch, TVA goes af'rr the development cf .ill resources in their relationship; to each other rather than in segments, divided along the sharp lines which separate government departments from each other. The whole list adds up to an imposing record which the TVA enemies who art cut to stop the spread of the 'authority" id. a to other part o! the country will have a hard time shouting down. "Of course he doesn't like you he's a wolfhoundl" O McKENNEY ON BRIDGE Br WM. E. McKENNEY, America's Card Authority MOST IMPORTANT? COUNT YOUR TRICKS! I have been running this bridge column now for more than 15 years, and if you were to ask me today what was the most impor tant lesson to learn about bridge, AA1094 KQ AK93 K72 4KJ5 Q1084 A1098 N W E S Dealer AQ862 V 10753 J76 43 73 V A9882 0 52 . QJ65 Rubber Both vul. South West North Pass Pass 1 IV Pass 1 East Pass Pass 1N.T. Pass 3N.T. Pass Pass Pass Opening 10. 25 the answer would be: "Learn to count your tricks." People spend weeks studying ;queczes, end plays and coups, and you know those plays are ..just .natural, if you count your tricks.'-. I was kibitzing one of the rub ber bridge games at the Mayfair Questions & Answer Q In what two cities does nearly half of all Missouri's pop ulation live? A St. Louis and Kansas City, whose metropolitan areas wtihin the state contain some 1,500,000 or over 40 percent of Missouri's 3, 800,000 people. the other night and I saw de clarer blow this nice hand. He won the first trick in dum my with the king of clubs and, without hesitation, cashed the king and queen of hearts. Now his contract was lost. If he had counted his tricks, he would have overtaken the queen of hearts with the ace, thus conserving a club entry so that even though he had to give up a heart trick, he would still make one spade, four hearts, two diamonds and two clubs. O IN FORMER YEARS 30 Years Ago. July 24 The huckleberry crop will be extremely light this year. In some sections there will be about one third of a crop, but it is the late variety, the early kinds being en tirely destroyed. L. M. Epling left yesterday for Kentucky points. Celebration of the day when the Mormon immigrants landed in Utah was observed in this city today with a big picnic and pro gram at Riverside park. Members of the LDS church from over the entire state assembled to combine a Sunday school program with a fitting observance of the day set apart each year to honor the ad vent of Mormonism in the west. Q When did Hawaii come into the possession of the United States? A On July 7, 1898, when Pres ident McKinley signed the Con gressional resolution of annexa tion. Ceremony transferring sov ereignty took place Aug. 12, 1898. Q Who is Sean T. O'Kelley? A New president of Ireland. 15 Years Ago, July 24 F. L. Meyers, who recently at tended the International Rotary convention in Chicago, gave a de tailed report of the meeting at the La Grande Rotary club lunch eon today at the La Grande hotel. The club also enjoyed two flute solos played by Dolph Siegrist, accompanied at the piano by Mrs. J. Donald Meyers. A set of chimes, purchased re cently for the pipe organ of the First Presbyterian church, are now in the building and will be installed soon. . Q Where is the Wright Bro thers first airplane exhibited? A It is displayed in the Sci ence museum, South Kensington England. Q What duly elected Congress never met in plenary session? A The Congress of the Philip, pines, elected in November, 1941. Japs attacked before they ever had a full meeting. 10 Years Ago, July 24 Hildcgarde Rettig has gone to Portland where she will remain until school opens here this falL Robert Kingsley left yesterday for Vancouver to spend a week visaing his SJ-anHmother, Mrs. O. L. Kingsley. Rev. and Mrs. Edwin W. Bra cher and family were leaving to day for Bingner's cabin at the foot of Mt. Emily where they will spend two or three days vacation. This Curious World im. -v it 7ltmAH TEMPERATURE OF RUSSIA, IS ABOUT THE SAME , '-, WINTER AND SUMMER, AS THAT OP GosroA. SERVICE. INC COW ms BY HI SERVICE INC. MP .IT IL-iTW VENUS'S C( v TO A a SSAPS -ITS LEAVES SHUr TO CATCH INSECTS Fc?R FOOD' THE POINTED HAIRS INSIDE "' IJtlJ?''3" TRI&OESS ,.TO SVAP THE LAP TOGETHER. IC U. . MT. if ' HOUSEBOATS ARE NOT FOR , MOUSES , Sjta- WAY, C..,U.SV.R. NEXT Why it the Dead Sea so sally?