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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (July 27, 1945)
1 EDITORIAL PAGE La Grande Evening Observer Frank Schiro, Publisher iFRIDAY EVENING, JULY 27, 1945 How About a Little EVENING OBSERVER'S PROGRESS PROGRAM . IRRIGATION Complete (he Grande Ronde Valley irrigation project. LA GRANDE A city of 10,000 Extend the city limits. Calling the Shot The first question put by nn English Hpenkiiifr Jap officer to members of an American boardinif party inspecting a Japanese hospital ship was: "Is Babe Ruth still alive?" It was n natural question about an athlete who at one time was a great hero to the Japanese people. Kuth's reputation preceded him to Japan when he went there with a group of other American ball players in 11)3-1. The Rabe lived up to his advance notices, and ho was trailed by cheering thou sands wherever he went. Tho Japs were great baseball en thusiasts, whether for love of the game or because of their desire to emulate and equal American accomplishments in every field. At any rate they prac ticed the game with a rather amusing seriousness. Many of their players achieved through this diligence a con siderable proficiency in tho mechanics of the game. Hut it was a case of "good field, no hit." They just didn't have the physical power to hit for distance. And so, to them, Babe Kuth was not only a hero, but a symbol of that com bination of strength, ability and auda city which their best players could never hope to attain. They may have shouted "llanzai" when Kuth hit one out of the park, but they must also have Funny liusines? :oH faftv uik Htvicr iK t u tw"tn po"- "frankly, I lhlnSf you'ta ovorequipptdl" Page Two Contribution, Joe? felt a deep envy. Watching him, the more perceptive may have realized that, in other fields besides baseball, Ameri cans could do things better and more easily than the Japs, for all their striv ing. Two years bufore UutU visited Japan he performed 'perhaps the most auda cious feat in baseball history. In the third world series game between the Yankees and the Cubs, he stepped to bat, pointed to the center field bleach ers, deliberately took two strikes, then poled the next pitch precisely where he had indicated it would be into the bleachers for a home run. Japanese fans surely read of that feat and marveled at It. And recent event may have recalled it to their minds. Kor Admiral Halsey has stolen a page out of Ruth's book. The Admiral pointed the guns of the third fleet at Japan as boldly and con fidently as the Babe pointed his bat at the bleachers. lie told the Japs where he was going to hit, and proceeded to deliver, lie dared them to stop him, and they couldn't. So there is dismal assurance to all Japanese ball fans that Babe Ruth and the power and ability that he repre sents are still alive. With nations, as with ball players, power and ability that he represented are still alive. With nations, as with ball players, power and ability don't develop fully over night. But they are potentially there to start with. The Japs must know this. And even though they still have some turns at bat coming, they must also know what the final score will be. SO THEY SAY Confessedly, the Cos pel of Jesus Christ luis in it a saving Ri'iteo, for wherever men have ac cepted il and have lived in ac cordance with it, they have real ized the Kingdom of Heaven in their own souls. Marion. Iril.. Chronicle-Tribune. Wo must stop talking about women as a category and begin to treat and think of them ns in dividuals. Hop. Chase Going Woodhouse of Connecticut. In the past five years, the Unit ed Stales has witnessed the devel opment of the largest emergency traininc nrocratn in history. Llr. Cicorge r ook, president, American Council of Education. When thousands of men are quitting a plant, the manager doesn't sit inside at his desk, ho gets out and around. U I e n n Gaffncy, fchipbiulidng yjul manager. Washington Merry-Go-Round Br DREW PEAMOIt WASHINGTON Secretary of State Jimmy .. Byrnes already has two key men up his sleeve for top jobs In the state department. Unless something changes his mind before he gets back from Potsdam, the new under secretary ot state, replacing Joe Grew, will be Spruille Braden, now U. S. ambassador to Argentina; while this assistant secretary for Latin America, replacing Nelson Rocke feller, will be Norman Armour, now U. S. ambassador to Spain. The promotion of Braden to be under sec retary will be a direct slap at the Argen tines, where crowds have been booing Bra . den and hand-bills have been posted all over Buenos Aires denouncing him because of an. accident in the Braden copper mines in Chile. Braden Is a diplomat with plenty of career experience. He workeS on the fringes of the old Roosevelt brain trust ;in 1932, and FDR considered appointing him ambassador to Chile in 1933. However, there was too much resentment from Chilean labor because of Braden's heavy copper .interests there and he was given one of the hardest diplomatic jobs in the western hemisphere instead. He was made' a diplomatic trouble-shooter to iron out the Chaco war between Bolivia and Paraguay, and other troubles in the western ' hemisphere. Later, Braden became ambas sador to Colombia and Cuba where he did an A-l job. . , Norman Armour, slated to succeed Nelson Rockefeller,. is one of the outstanding career diplomats, having been ambassador to Ar gentina and Chile, and minister to Canada and Haiti. When Braden leaves Argentina as ambassador, his post will not be filled a slap at the Argentine fascists, and also indirectly at the state department group who rushed us into Argentine recognition at San Francisco. England's Ex-King There were half a dozen empty chairs last week as High Fulton, formor consul for the Truman committee, hosted a luncheon In Washington's swank 'Hotel Statler for the Duke of Windsor. Fulton, whose New York WE, THE WOMEN By RUTH MILLETT An American service man returns to this country and is shocked to find that some thing has happened to American girls in his absence. They have become in his words, "man crazy." He' doesn't like the way the girls have taken over the hunt, do the telephoning in stead of waiting to be rushed, etc. Perhap3 American girls are unbecomingly forward these days. But why wouldn't they be? All they hear about thj girls of foreign countries is'how they chase American serv icemen. And naturally they get to thinking that if they don't want to be completely overlooked themselves, they had better use bold mothods of makipg themselves noticed. In all likolihood, it just hasn't occurred to American girls that American men might be fed up with being chased and fought over, and that the best method for landing them at this point is playing hard to get. Then, too, American girls are worried about thc'po'ssibility of never getting a hus Behind Scenes in Washington By PETER EDSON. La Grands Evening Obntnr Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 27 Not all the war criminals are in Germany and Japan. Right here at home, the records show that almost every day for the past four years, an av erage of one major war fraud against the U. S. government has been caught. An expense item in a cost-plus-fixed-fee contract is padded. Competitors conspire to enter fixed bids for government contracts. A government procurement officer is brib ed. An inspector is persuaded to pass de fective war supplies. Raw materials furnish ed on government priority for war produc tion and diverted into commercial channels. Not all these defraudcrs of the govern ment get caught. Unlike big fish, the ones that get away you never hear about. But in many of the fraud cases a patriotic sec retary with a sweetie at the front won't like what the boss is trying to get away with and will report what skullduggery goes on to the FBI. Or maybe it ill be a vindictive cuss who gets cheated out of what he considers a fair share of tho graft and gravy and squeals on his pals. Or a bidder who loses a contract will reveal how fraud beat him out. Or somebody's conscience will bits him hard enough to make him confess. Or army and navy inspectors will catch crooks rcdhand cd. Or congressional committees will uncover dirt which is passed on to the department of justice for prosecution. When reports of these kinds come in, they are first investigated by the FBI, then turn ed over to the war frauds section of the de partment of justice. 'Over the past four years the department has been piling up a record of convictions, fines and imprisonment for U. S. war criminals. Today it is preparing to move in on frauds uncovered in the bus iness of winding up the war effort, cancelling contracts and disposing of surpluses: The war frauds section of the departmen' of justice is small. Some 20 lawyers in Washington and another 60 in the field. But they have the help of t U. S. district at torneys and the FBI investigators. Tom C. Clark, the new attorney general, was head of the War Frauds section when it was firs: organized. John Darsey. who c;tmc into the section with Clark in the spring of 1942, heads up the work today. The result of all this activity, projocutyng war frauds while tlusy'ic at ill fresh instead of ttaitir$'9 clean hou.c after the War is firm represents the Duke's interests in this country, had invited a small group of high Washington officials and the entire member ship of the Mead committee (formerly the Truman committee) at the Duke's special request. Half a dozen busy senators found time to rush to the Statler for' the luncheon, which they described as a pleasant affair with no particular signifance. High spot of the luncheon was furnished by Wyoming's Senator Joe O'Mahoney, who produced a letter from an Episcopalian min ister in his state. The letter related the plight of an Englishman who had married an American woman and settled in Wyoming. The Englishman now wants to be natural ized, the minister wrote, but is running into difficulty because his wife is determined to press charges of assault against him. If he didn't beat his wife, he should have, the minister wrote O'Mahoney. The letter was shown to the Duke, who remarked: "I can testify that the church of England is peculiar about domestic life. Here is' a minister of the church in apparent approval of domestic disharmony. Yet when I decided to marry, the church of England insisted that I step down as king because my wife-to-be had been divorced. "The amusing thing to me," continued the former king of England, "is that the church of England was originally founded by Henry VIII in order to provide clerical sanction for his several divorces." Soldier Slap-Down? Another Patton soldier slap-down on a lesser scale has just been settled by Gen eral Eisenhower, resulting in a reprimand for Brig. Gen. Julius Slack. General Slack, an artillery commander in Patton's third army, was reprimanded for "intemperate and reprehensible actions and language" toward 22 enlisted men in an al leged rape case. Slack had accused three enlisted men of See WASHINGTON . . . Page 4 band. They know there aren't going to be enough young men to go around. So current idea seemst o be, "Get a man quick and marry him while you can." That is why so many girls are marrying at 17 or 18 girls who in ordinary times would have gone on to school for a few more years, and would have taken a while to pick and choose a husband. Then, too, there is this point that men especially those who have been stationed in the Pacific should understand. The girls are fed up with dateless nights, bored to death with the last few dull, drab years, and so glad to see the servicemen returning that they are in no mood to feign indiffer ence. They probably are making a great mis take in giving the men such a rush. But it isn't hard to' sec why they are so "man crazy," and under the circumstances they should be forgiven for .their lack of reticence. . over, js that World War Two will have a record of less fraud and more criminals caught than any war in U. S. histotry. In the last war, most of the profiteers and per petrators of war frauds got away because no prosecutions were begun till after the war was over. Then witnesses disappeared, company records were lost or destroyed and the statute of limitations ran out. In the general public post-war apathy only 37 in dictments against war criminals were ob tained and only two were convicted. The government contractor who deliber ately tries to commit a criminal fraud is of course the exception. Today out of the mil lions of war contracts let and out of tho millions of citizens now on government pay rolls, only a mall fraction of one percent shows evidence of fraud. The war record to date reveals 9600 com plaints of fraud referred to the Department of Justice. Of these cases, 7,700 investiga tions have been completed and in 1,160 roughly one case in seven sufficient evi dence was found to file criminal indictments, charging fraud. These indictments involved 1,250 individuals and 95 corporations. In the cases disposed of, over half "of the accused plead guilty 623 individuals and 46 corporations. In the cases that went to trial, 153 individuals and 13 corporations were convicted. These being criminal indictments, nearly all the sentences carry imprisonment and fines. Sentences vary from three month? to 12 years, with a year f,nd a day being a common sentence. Fines imposed total $1, 272.000. Among the more sensational cases in which convictions were obtained arc Anaconda Wire and Copper, for furnishing defective signal corps wire; Antonclli Fireworks com pany of New York, for underloading bombs and prcnades w ith explosives; Samuel Buck el and company of New York, for furnishing 650.000 pounds of defective fried eggs at a dollar a pound; Sullivan Dry Dock of Brook lyn, for making false claims on repair of ships. , The War Frauds section has a record of better than 90 percent convictions on cases brought to tril. And after the criminal ' guilt has been established, the Claims Di vision of the Department of Justice moVts in 'to recover some of the money Uncle Sjni got cheated out of. ' ' - Side Glance few, imhtw img wtrtru wo. .t. or. 7-tft "Dad's crabbing because he can't get tickets to take Up to a nice vacation resort this year. Mom is it safe to ask him to give us the money instead?" O McKENNEY ON BRIDGE By WILLIAM E. McKENNEY America's Card Authority LETTING FOES MAKE MISTAKES WINS HANDS Quite often you will get your self into a hopeless contract, but occasionally, if you will give your opponents a chance to make a mistake, you may swinde them out of a trick. Now, believe it oi' not, I actually saw one pair AK7S2 V AKJ76S2 63 4b None A 109 10 974 4k Q 10 8 7 43 4)43 Q843 AQ108 5 J9 W E 8 Dealer 4QJB8 K J 2 AK652 Rubber Both vuL South West .North Eut 1 Pass IV 2 2 Pass 3 V Pats 3N.T. Pass 4 Pass Pass Pass Opening 9. it get into seven hearts with this ,hand. .Ot course, it, , was doubled and well beaten. However, I saw one pair get into four spades and handle the play very well. The opening lead was won by East with the ace and a diamond re . turned. Declarer went right up with the king and led the jack of spades which was allowed to hold. So now a small spade was played, and West reluctantly O BARBS It's strange how little kids like to eat green apples. Their tum mies just ache for them. Too many reformers who set out to right the world's wrongs wind up wronging the world's rights. '. Oh for the good old days when the neighbors' chickens used to stray into our garden! We're more interested in what our bombers are spreading in Ja pan than in the peace rumors others arc spreading. One of the hardest, yet best, things to remember is to forget your troubles! Butter has been dropped eight points. Whee now maybe we can have it on Sunday! nome in La Grande until middle of August. This Curious World STUDY OP THE AIR,,. AND ADAPT ING HIMSELF TO IT. ADAPT ff! com. wigTir srtwcf . me. H'HAT TWO COUNTRIES SHARE 1 THE LONGEST COMMON 6OUNQAI0H LAS, YEAR PAILED TO HIT ATLE4Sf WCHUNDBED HOMK RUNS i- -- - -asst. I OtJTHEPlRsr TIME IN , ANSWER: Russia and China. NEXT: The world's olden tain reccrdln3. went in with the ace. A dia mond was returned, and this was trumped in dummy. Declarer than cashed dummy's ace of hearts and, when West's ten spot dropped, he decided that the four missing hearts were in the East hand. At this point he led the jack of hearts from dummy, hop ing East would make the mistake of not covering. That is exactly what East did. He. played a small heart, so declarer discard ed a small club. , West trumped, but now you can see that the de clarer will be able to ruff one of his losing clubs and discard the other on the king of hearts. O IN FORMER YEARS 30 Years Ago, July 28 A party consisting of Senator George E. Chamberlain, Mrs. C. B. Shelton, his secretary, and Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Skiff, motored from Hot Lake to the head of Wallowa Lake, returning to La , Grande later. Senator, Chamber lain departed for-Portland the evening of his return. , W. A. Barrett, state deputy of the Knights of Columbus, today gave out the appointment of J. H. Peare of La Grande as district i deputy of that order for Eastern Oregon country. This makes the fourth successive appointment of Peare to this office. The district comprises all of the state of Ore gon east of The Dalles. 15 Years Ago, .July 28 The La Grande U. P. Athletic club took three of the most im portant plaoes in the junior track elimination events at the O.-W. Bonneville picnic yesterday, at tended by around 3,000 people. Fifty railroad employes went from La Grande, Corwyn Berry won first place in the 100-yard dash -with Willie Torrence sec ond. Paul Walker won the high jump. 10 Years Ago. July 28 The La Grande Tennis club, victor over Pendleton and Boise recently, added another scalp to its collection this summer when it defeated the Baker team on the local courts 10 matches to two. Dr. and Mrs. C. E. Branner left on a vacation tour of Alaska. They plan to be away from their the 9r