Friday, July 5, 1940 SOUTHERN OREGON MINER Page 2 Their Motto Is, ‘Be Prepared’ GENERAL HUGH S. JOHNSON i Jour: IM h,— Washington. D. C. BRITISH WEST INDIES AS THEY SWING THROUGH JUNE B aseball form still is somewhat Within a two hour plane flight of muddled as the major league the Panama canal lies the British teams swing along. In the National island of Jamaica, wich is 99 per league, the Reds and the Dodgers cent black and 100 per cent restive. are holding up. but the Cardinals, Intelligence reports from Jamaica heavy pennant choice in some sec­ warn of the danger of a Negro up­ tors when the spring predictions rising. were under way, lag so badly that Jamaican Negroes have never if they are not already out of the been prosperous, but this year has race they are teetering on the verge. been unusually bad. The cane crop In the American league the Yan­ was a failure, the banana crop was kees have come on but not rapidly ruined by a hurricane, and on top enough to fit in with of this, word is being passed around the pre-season among the Negroes that their mis­ schedule that called ery would disappear under German for them to be away rule. out in front by this As a result. British authorities, time. Otherwise, practically deserted by the home the race in that government, are keeping a watchful league is in accord­ eye on their arsenal. ance with the dope, Unrest in Jamaica would create a with the Red Sox, double problem for the United States Indians and Tigers and the other American republics. up ahead and the Roosevelt has already warned Euro­ second division held pean dictators that he will tolerate by the White Sox, Grantland no change of sovereignty in this Senators. Athletics Rice hemisphere. But the situation and Browns. The would be embarrassing if the na­ Browns, it seems, have had their tives of Jamaica were to revolt splurge and from now on not much against England and invite in Hitler. ; is likely to be heard from them. Note—Jamaica's harbor. Kings­ One of the main surprises has ton. is one of the finest in the West been offered by the Giants who, aft­ Indies and just 600 miles from the er a bad start, have moved up into Panama canal. At the beginning the running. At the outset, the of the war, Britain held in this har­ Giants didn't look any better than bor a convoy fleet of 70 ships. they did at the finish of the 1939 campaign. But the return of Joe Changing Attitude. Confidential reports cabled back Moore, the fine pitching of Carl Hub­ to the state department show that bell and the batting of Harry Ban­ the French people have become bit­ ning pulled them out of that early ter not only toward Great Britain season slough. They still don't look as if they but against the United States. Sentiment has been so vitriolic might sneak through and grab the that it was the subject of a conver­ pennant. But they do loom as a sation held by Ambassador Tony threat to the Reds and Dodgers, be­ Biddle, who substituted for Bullitt tween whom the pennant seems to in Bordeaux. Sumner Welles also lie. They can make a lot of trouble mentioned it a little sadly to the for those teams. Unable—or so it French ambassador in Washington. appears—to win themselves, they The French simply cannot under­ can have something to say about stand why the British and Ameri­ who does win. cans did not come to their aid. Only The Reds and the Dodgers their men were killed, their coun­ The Reds naturally are favored. try destroyed, and their prisoners They moved back briskly from their are now seen marching behind Ger­ collapse against the man guards. This has so infuriated Yankees last fall, them that now many Frenchmen al­ lost little time tak­ most relish the possibility that their ing over the lead fleet may be used against the Brit­ and have played at ish a steady gait most Another effect has been a change of the way. Again of feeling in France toward the Ger­ this year two of the Frenchmen, especially in , most important fac­ mans. Paris, are beginning to say; tors in their play “Well, after all we are Euro­ 1 have been the pitch- peans. so let’s be Europeans. To ’ ing of Bucky Wal­ • with the Anglo-Saxons. They ters and the all- can’t be depended upon. Maybe ’ around work of Bill Bucky Wallers the Germans are not so bad, after . Werber. Walters seems headed for all.” a season as brilliant as that which This attitude has been helped by he had in 1939. Take Werber out of the excellent behavior of the Nazis the Red infield and it would sag so in Paris. There are almost no badly the weight of it would drag troops on the street Nazis have the team down. kept out of sight, and the arrests The Dodgers have exceeded the made by Herr Himmler's Gestapo expectations of Larry MacPhail and have been done very quietly. almost met those of the Brooklyn Meanwhile, some of the French fans. Larry said in the early spring newspapers, obviously coked up by he didn’t think the Dodgers would Nazi subsidies, have begun a ter­ be as good as they were last year, rific attack upon the British, togeth­ while the fans claimed the pennant. er with a campaign to educate the And, of course, they remain the French people regarding the better most exciting team in baseball. qualities of the Germans. The French are still inclined to A Quick Comeback look upon their conquerors as Ger­ The robustness of the Dodgers’ mans. not as members of the Na­ spirit was emphasized by the man­ tional Socialist party. Few French­ ner in which they threw off the ef­ men seem to realize that this is a fects of the loss of those two games revolution, not a war, and that Hit­ to the Giants on Memorial day. ler is conquering Europe for Nation­ That, it must be remembered, was al Socialism, which has made more more than just the loss of a double­ far-reaching changes in the capital­ header. It was a bitter, humiliat­ istic system than Russian Commu­ ing and total defeat suffered on the nism. home grounds at the hands of a hat­ Hitler’s Tactics. ed enemy and with all the fans who It has become increasingly obvi- 1 possibly could be packed into Eb- ous that the smartest thing Hitler bets field looking on. It was enough did was to knock off the countries to have thrown them off their stride of Europe one at a time instead of for a couple of weeks at least, but permitting them to gang up on him. j they bounced right back from it as When Hitler took Czecho-Slovakia, ! only a thoroughly game outfit could. Once more Leo Dnrocher is dem­ for instance, the Poles were en­ couraged to take a small piece of onstrating his skill as manager as he Czech territory. Then after they guides the Dodgers past bumps had taken it, Hitler took back the ' such as that defeat by the Giants little piece of Czecho-Slovakia plus i and the loss of Pee Wee Reese. The Brooklyn players—and this is one •one-half of Poland. One reason Hitler was able to take I of their main sources of strength— Poland was that he promised Russia think he is the greatest manager the other half. And now Stalin, re­ the game ever knew. I can’t go alizing his own peril, is frantically quite that far with them but I will say there is no manager In base­ defending his Polish-Baltic border. One year ago, talking to Ameri­ ball now who is doing a better Job. can diplomats in Berlin, Nazi lead­ Yankees on the Way ers made no secret of their inten­ The Yankees, though they have tion to employ the same strategy lagged, may be on their way at last in the Western hemisphere; in other —not yet with the smoothness that words, to isolate the United States is characteristic of them—but in a from Britain and France, then pro­ fashion that makes them still look voke revolutions in South America ' and take those countries away two ' like a fair bet to smash precedence and win a fifth pennant in a row. and three ai a time. The United They have got over their bewilder­ States itself. Nazi leaders said, [ ment, brought on by early season would be relatively easy. Social i setbacks, and are hitting again. In | revolution was sure to come in a Marvin Breuer—they have the best year or so, at which time all Ger- I first-year pitcher in either league. many needed to do was to aid the They have had days recently such as revolutionary party. they usually have at their peak. • • • The Red Sox, holding first place, MERRY-GO-ROUND aren’t going to be overhauled eas­ Erudite Senator Wagner of New ily. Even the Yankees know that. York is the author of most New Cleveland, with Bob Feller swinging Deal labor legislation, but his choice along and a fine second-base com­ diversion away from the senate is I bination in Mack and Boudreau, and strictly top-hat. He is the senate's Detroit, with a lot of power, are leading grand opera fan; buys a dangerous, too. The White Sox are season ticket for the Metropolitan going to be troublesome from time every year. to time—as they were last week, Senator Josh Lee of Oklahoma is not only one of the senate's most I when they took two games out of three from the Yankees—but they accomplished orators, but also is a scarcely are contenders and the rest hot Wild West movie fan. Three j of the clubs do not matter, either. nights a week he takes in a ride-’em- , That's the way it looks as th» cowboy thriller at a 15-cent cinema. > teams roll through these weeks. J «*' Washington. l>. C. WHY A FRENCH ROUT? "Something is rotten In the state of Denmark"—and now perhaps, in France. Not enough facts have come out of that stricken country to give even a shadowy opinion of what it is. But. regardless of the un­ doubted superiority of the German strength in guns and equipment and giving due regard to the crushing power of the new mechanized and motorized equipment, the collapse of all French resistance in so short a time simply can’t be explained ex­ cept by soft spots in the French i command. The territory over which this headlong rout took place is unlike many areas of campaign. It has been a path of conquest and a battle­ ground since the beginning of re­ corded history. Every hill and fold of ground is known. Its military strength or weakness proved over and over again, its features mapped in intimate detail, not only on pa­ per but in the minds of every com­ petent officer in France. In this re­ Hearing posterà demanding a atrong ustionai defenae "lo prcacrvc thè frredom won (or u« by thè («und­ spect it is more like a checkerboard er« of our nailon," thesc live girla, drexacd In Kcvoltitionary war aoldlera’ uniforma, rode up Flflh avrnue, New than a battlefield. There could be York city, In a horse-drawn vietorta, to obacrve thè IGSth annivcraary oi thè Batlle of Bunker Hill. i no "surprises of terrain." Army Was Strong. The French army, except in the air and as to some classes of equip­ ment, was very strong In its com­ plement of highly trained profes­ sional soldiers, many with war ex­ perience. it was much stronger than the German army. Some of our amateur military commentators say that the key to the puzzje is mistaken French re­ liance on the fixed fortifications of the Maginot line and that the cam­ paign proves such lines worthless. That is wrong. There was no as­ sault here until that line was out­ flanked and taken from the rear. The Germans built and successfully relied on the somewhat different fortifications of the Siegfried line. It is true that this aspect of the case shows a terrible blunder. But the blunder was solely in relying on Bel­ gium and other nations to the north and leaving the left flank of that line bare to assault as the “paunch of the purser's sow.” Then here is an added lesson for us—among dozens of others in this war. In this double-crossing, treaty­ breaking, lying world, no nation can risk its existence on any other or on anything but the strength of its own right arm and the courage, uni­ ty. loyalty and devotion of its own people. War Planes Stalled by French Peace Why the Collapse? But, even with all that said, we are left still groping for the cause of this complete collapse. For one thing, it shows the weakness of any democracy not based on a two-party system. There were more than 20 parties in the Reichstag—and in came Hitler. There were several in France — and in came Hitler through another and bloodier door. That is a lesson for us. We still retain two parties, but one of them has degenerated into a group of gimme pressure groups. The principal cause of French weakness is beginning to seem to be its half-and-half division in both its army and its legislature between men with Communist and men with Fascist leanings. There is as yet no news of outright treachery but it is hard to explain the mushiness of French defense on any other basis. Columnar Poison. There is a third and false conclu­ sion for us that is being preached by some of my columnar colleagues, and it is pure poison. It is that this war proves that democracies won't work in war, with an implica­ tion that we should forget this elec­ tion, give autocratic authority to the power-seeking group of incompe­ tents in Washington and perpetuate Hopkins, Morgenthau, Perkins, and Ickes to stumble, fumble and blun­ der us into war and they to run it tor us. We proved in 1918 that our de­ mocracy could out-Hitler any Ger­ man in war efficiency, but you've got to have competent leaders to do it. There is much also to be learned from the astonishing, almost mi­ raculous, German teamwork as be­ tween fifth columns, air, armored and mechanized land battleships and close following masses of old fash ioned infantry. But to swallow tha' whole for our defense would be ai stupid as to return to the World wai for all our lessons. FARIS BELONGS TO WORLD In a sense Paris belongs to th« world and nobody wanted to see it a mass of smoking ruins. In cold military science, neithei the capture nor retention of a city is of primary importance excep' as that city may be of strong de­ fensive or economic value. Failure to see this point clearly has cost more lives and lost more campaigns than any other single hoary blunder. For the first two years of our Civil war in the East, both the Federal and Confederate governments seemed to think that all that was necessary to win the war was to capture Richmond or Washington. In the West Grant saw the matter much more clearly. The reason he insisted on ram­ shackle Vicksburg was because its site controlled the Mississippi and its fall would cut the Confederacy in two. These formpr U. 8. army Northrup A-I7-A fighting planes, destined for Canada, Io be shipped to Europe, are shown at Mitchell field, L. I., where they are held pending word from the British government. The planes were for France, but the British may take them over. Another Notch for a Nazi Flyer More Airplanes Like the gunmen of America’s wild west pioneer days who notched their guns for every killing, the pilot of this German fighting ship has a white stripe painted on the tall of his plane for every enemy shot down. The stripe Is topped with the colors of the nationality of the vanquished pilots. This Nasi now has a "score" of eight. A worker al the Wright Aeronauti­ cal factory In Faterson, N. J., uses a J-fl cylinder head for a hat and comes to a salute to "mass produo. tlon," as vast new plane-motor man ufacturlng unit Is opened. President Visits 4-H Boys and Girls Heads Committee President Franklin D. Roosevelt is here shown visiting with one hun­ dred and seventy boys and girls from forty-threu states encamped at the fourteenth annua* parley of the 4-H clubs. The 4-H club members are, evidently, keenly enjoying this visit with the Chief. Josephus Daniels, United States ambassador to Mexico, is sitting in the car with the President’ Dr. Vannevar Bush, president of the Carnegie Institution of Washing­ ton, has been named to head a na­ tional defense resources committea of eight members.