Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, September 21, 1944, Image 6

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    Southern Oregon Miner, Thursday, September
N ews
B ehin
t i «: N e
1944
The Liberating Yanks Again Enter Paris
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ANOTHSK I ’
7, A General Quiz
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T /ie Q u eetio n a
1. What section of the country
once sought admission to the Un­
Washington, D. C.
ion as it stute named Franklin?
aul allon
NEWSMEN ANO EOR
2. How many Justices sat on the
Most important college of amateur
first Supreme court bench of the
Released by W estern N ew s p an er U nion.
physicians anywhere in the wcrld,
United States?
approximately 200 strong, now
3. Has u shark more than one
ALL SMALL NATIONS MUST
meets
Tuesdays
and
Fridavs
at
th
e
;
brain?
BE GIVEN VOICE
White House. . . , These are news- i
4. What department of the gov­
WASHINGTON.—The Democratic men assigned to cover the Presi- i
ernment deals most directly with
senators chirruped choruses of de­ dent. They assemble, make careful
individual citizens?
nunciation at Governor Dewey upon scrutiny, w rite lengthy analyses of i
5. Why is a candle fish so called?
his demand for small nations* pro­ the President's complexion, ner-1
6. Garlic belongs to which fam ­
tection in the postwar world—then vousness, every facial expression; j
ily,
the rose, lily or poppy?
suddenly they went quiet.
try to interpret these in relation to
The A n iu /tr i
Tom Connally, their foreign rela­ his health. . . . Actually the Presi-
1. Tennessee.
tions chairman, had said at first that ident looks thinner, not too well
2. Six Justices sat on the first
Dewey had staged a luftwaffe at­ tanned, but calm and fit, though he 1
Supreme court bench.
tack upon the Dumbarton confer- shows obvious sign of wearying a t ;
ence. A few days later he was the scores of questions thrown at i
3. Yes. He has one for the nose,
beaming benignly upon the Repub- him during press tussles.
ears, eyes and skin and one for
. FDR
licans, and saying in a senate speech s till knows how to turn charm on
taste.
they had been exceptionally coop- and off, calls newsmen by their
4. Post office department.
Just as in 1919, when Gen. John J. Pershing led the victory parade past the Are de Trtomphe on Bas­
erative on foreign policy.
first names, teases them about tille Day, a new generation of Yanks have entered the city of Paris. Behind General Pershing Is 1st Lieut.
5. Because it is so oily that a
The change is attributable to State “ dope stories." . . . Since his return W. J. Cunningham, bearing the General's standard, followed by MaJ. Gen. James G. Harbord, chief of staff, wick may be run through its body
Secretary Hull. Mr. Hull was the from the Alaska trip, Roosevelt is A. E. F., and on the grey horse, Gen. George C. Marshall, present chief of staff, who was then Colonel and it can then be used as a can­
first to realize—indeed he seems the seeing more people than in the last Marshall, aide to General Pershing. Insert shows the first U. 8. Hag brought Ir.to Paris by the liberating dle. It is a small smelt-like fish
only one now firm ly to insist—that a six months, is growing more aware Yanks in World War II. The U. 8. troopers carried the flag through the streets.
found on the north Pacific coast.
peace imposed by a m ajority w ill of domestic issues.
0. Garlic is a member of the
not endure even among the United
• • •
lily fam ily.
Nations: that the opposition w ill one
DUMBARTON OAKS
day get into power here, perhaps
Secretary Hull's message to the
soon; that unity at home as well as opening Dumbarton Oaks peace par-
among the nations of the world is ley had whole paragraphs parallel­
essential if anything constructive is ing Woodrow Wilson's statement of
to eventuate. He has been the lead­ January 16, 1920, on the eve of the
ABOUT
ing force for restraint in an emotion­ first League of Nations council
al world debate.
meeting. . . . " I t is our task here,"
KEEP ON HIGH PLANE
Hull said, “ to help lay the founda­
o
But the matter is constantly being tions upon which, after victory,
pushed off the plane he wants, into peace, freedom and a growing pros­
politics and confusion. Comes now perity may be built for generations
the Foreign Policy association, for to come." . . . Twenty-four years
Sorting the contributions to the
Instance, thinking to defend him ago, Wilson said: “ It w ill bring the
notion'« »crop rubber drive h ot
against Dewey.
League of Nations into being as a
been q tremendous |ob. There
ore more than 75 type« of rub­
living force devoted to the task of
In an involved and circuitous
ber scrap, but most reclaimed
assisting the peoples of all countries
collection of assertions, it seems
rubber tonnage Is derived from
in their desire for peace, pros­
to conclude Dewey is wrong and
ares.
perity and happiness."
small nations can only be pro­
tected through domination by
Rubber plantations covered
INDIAN TYPHOON
ev er eig ht m illion acres e t
the big four powers.
the outbreak of the w a r
When Amb. W illiam Phillips’ fa­
Furthermore, two columnists
and had a p aten tlal produc­
mous letter advising Roosevelt that
who are supposed to be out­
tion capacity of 1 ,6 0 0 .0 0 0
I
India
was
a
U.
S.
problem
leaked
standing international experts,
long tans a ye ar, according
into
print,
the
British
government
have entered a radio debate
to robber experts. O ur syn­
sent instructions to all British con-
which whirls the whole issue
thetic rubber plants, soma
I suls in this country to inspire let­
of which have alre a d y e x ­
into vortex.
ters to editors, plus editorials in the
ceeded ra ted capacitlae, a re
The ousted Hull assistant, Mr. local press. One man in New York
expected to turn out ever
Welles, and Mr. Hull's constant
1 .0 0 0 ,0 0 0 lo n g tens a y e a r
alone wrote 76 letters to different
kibitzer, Mr. Lippmann (whose rec- |
w hea operating a t peak.
newspapers. . . . Later. British con­
ommendations on international a l­ suls sent copies of editorials, etc..
fairs have never been followed by
. .
. .
to the British Embassy, with accom-
any government in any instance as I
panying notes, showing what a good
fa r back as my memory runs though
job they had done. . . . In the Em-
he sells them to the public three
times a week and in books annually) ■ ... . ,
,
...
,
. . .
,
u
v
public relations man for India, left
—these two, as I say, have become „ „
. ..
.
, , .
, . ,
. . . . off the accompanying notes, sent the
Map showing general direction of the twin drives of the U. 8. Third army toward German territory. The
hopelessly involved in such techni-
...__. .
„
....
..
..
,
. editorials to Sir Olaf Caroe in New arrows drive through the battlefields of World War I, where the fathers of present-day doughboys wrote a
cahties as the respective
degree
of
.
c
m
»
u
-
r
B
i Delhi, so Sir Olaf could see what a brilliant page of American military history. The column driving from Troyes (1) is believed to be headed
sovereignties of Japan and Ger­
good job Heunessy had been doing. for Luxembourg. The push that drove across the Marne from the 8eine (2)' might yet spring a surprise and
many in postwar.
Sir Olaf then sent them to London. flank the rocket coast (3) from which the Germans launch their robots. Except In case of complete col­
These developments take a sim­ . . . Sir Olaf also cabled London that
ple proposition and stretch it to mon­ he had been able to keep the Phil­ lapse, the going is expected to become tougher as Allies enter German territory.
strous incongruities. The proposi­ lips letter out of India so far, but
tion, ^before all these stretchmen "under existing conditions” It was
pIRST IN RUBBER
took hold cf it, was and still is this: sure to be smuggled in. in which
PROTECTION OF SMALL
case it would be published by the
Dewey urged that the interests of Indian press and there was nothing
small nations be better protected he could do to stop it. . . , By
and suggested a specific way to do “ existing conditions,” Caroe meant
it. He recommended that the Dum­ anti-British subversion on the part of
barton Oaks conference keep the Indian officials who smuggle news
m ilita ry world setup separate from into India despite censorship. Once
economic agreements. He and Mr. inside India, the British can’t pre­
Dulles, in their conferences, started vent publication in Indian news­
Go easy oa yourself I Gently, m ildly, move
searching for a way in which small papers.
“ in iM in s l left-overs" out of the way with a
• • •
nations would not be over-ridden by
cup or two of GsrSeld Tea, the popular all-
herb
"im c rn il cleanser." Garfield Tea is i
the power of the Big Four, and they WASHINGTON PERSONALITIES
a "cure-all," but if you want t m t t
h it upon this formula.
relief from temporary constipation
Breath-taking Bob Gros, California
«-ftSear draaie drugs, cry a cup of
lecturer, has the faculty of coming
Their reasoning is rather ob­
Shia fragrant, 10-herb tea, at directed
on package. Y ou’ll fr rf better, fe e *
to the nation’s capital every year
vious. A small nation is a small
better, sreri better I At aff drag and 1
and interviewing more big-wigs per
nation and no one proposes to
Seaf/6 feed stores, lO t-ift-iO t.
make them all big. The military j hour than anyone else in the U S. A.
m i l SAMPLE THM. PACXACC!
He has just finished one of his
might of the world will remain,
Write far stnersas tamslr. eoouoti
far 4 suss. Is: Carlisle Tea Cs„ 41st
breathless trips and sizes up per­
after the war, largely with Rus­
at 3rd. Brooklyn 32, S. Y. Oast. 0-42
formers on the Washington merry-
sia and the United States, not
go-round as follows:
with small nations, and not
even with Britain and China. No
Wendell W illkie — "The thinking-
peace can change that.
i n siSTLi uuu nw linnut «tucniHUi
est, guttiest guy on the merry-go-
Also Russia and the United States round; politically unastute ”
British Ambassador Loid Halifax
w ill have the greatest political pow­
er in the world. This is a fact of —"W orst dressed, but one of the
geography, industry, raw materials, most charming. His sleeves were
manpower. It cannot be altered by patched with red thread, he had
the peace either.
on almost threadbare gabardine
Now Mr. Hull proposed to protect pants.”
Donald Nelson—“ Determined that
the small nations by safeguarding
their sovereignty. This is largely a small industry shall have a chance
The muzzle of a German gun
negative guarantee, but a powerful to reconvert now, before the ar­
makes an ideal socket for the flag
one. It would transfer the Ameri- i mistice.”
Truk atoll still remains a formidable Jap central Pacific bastion. staff as American soldiers raise
Economic Stabilizer Fred Vinson This photo was taken from one of the Seventh AAF Liberators attack­ “ Old Glory” over the battered cita­
can conception of individuality to
—“ The best balanced.”
the world.
ing the air bases on Eten, Param and Moen, and the naval and sea­ del of St. Malo. It was here that
Secretary of the Navy Forrestal— plane bases on Dnblon island. The 25 miles of bomb-run over Truk is the German “ Mad Colonel” held out
No private telephone or back-of­
for 11 days after St. Malo fell.
fice appendages were involved in “ Quick, likable, expounds this phi­ one of the most hazardous of any in the Central Pacific.
the Hull-Dewey front page jockey­ losophy: ‘Administration consists 95
ing on world peace. The participants per cent of smoothing out human
spoke all they had to say in head­ frictions. The secret of American
lines, but the refined politics, the success is driving, restless energy
subtle parry and thrust, were neg- . that makes you have ulcers.’ ”
lected in the reports, although these ' Secretary of War Stimson—"The
established Dewey in a new inter­ most a rb itra ry.”
Business
Adm inistrator
national character and w ill be of ' Small
Maury
Maverick—“
The
most two-
inestimable importance in the cam- ■
fisted and dynamic.”
paign.
Jim Farley—"The most realistic
KTTPS |>
W /lir
The administration’s campaign J political analyst, the most bluntly
policy has been to play Dewey to and disarmingly frank.”
the public as a barefoot boy in in­
New eream potMvefy stops
In general, Gros found Washing­
ternational uffairs, without experi­
•underarm Pertpiratlon Odor
ton taking the war in its stride;
ence or ability for leadership. To
officialdom much more settled down
tear down this conception has been
1. Not »tiff, not messy—Yodora spreads Jolt
than last year; less excitement, less
like vanishing eream I Dab it on—odor gone I
a most difficult technical task.
hysteria, more efficiency.
• • «
X Actually soothing-Yodora can bo used
• • •
right after shaving.
Hull proposes there w ill be no mo­
MERRY-GO-ROUND
A Won't rot delicate fabrics.
nopoly of raw material and econom­ «, Senator H iram Johnson, who rare­
ic and financial domination by the ly appears on the senate floor any
4. Keeps soft I Yodora does not dry to Jar. No
w aste; goes far.
Big Four, but Dewey says this Hull more, still occasionally attends
Yat hot climate teats —made by nurses—
hope is too vague (indeed financial night baseball games at G riffith sta­
prove thia d a in tier deodorant keeps under­
domination already has been hinted dium. . . . Other ball fans are Sena­
arms immaculately sweet—under the moat
by the Breton Woods conference,
tors Chandler of Kentucky, Walsh
ssvsra conditions. Try Yodora I In tubes or
although the oil agreement might of New Jersey, Stewart of Tennes­
Jara—lOf, «Of, «Of. McKeaaon A Robbins.
possibly develop more in line with
see, and Mead of New York, all
Ine., Bridgeport, Connecticut
Air raid wardens and volunteers bring out casualties from the
Hull policy).
frequent box-holders at the ball ruins of a block of flats struck by a German robot bomb in South Eng­
A bare-footed old lady peeks over
Dewey goes farther and says the park.
land. Part of the building is still blazing In background. Recent figures the* shoulders of other Chamaroo na­
Hull way w ill not be effective, that
<L John L. Lewis faces the greatest released said that 17,000 homes are destroyed every 24 hours by the tives on Guam after the U. 8. ma­
a more certain way to accomplish
rebellion against him in years when flying bombs. The total number of casualties caused by robots Is not rines took over most of the Island
the result is to keep the arrange­
the United Mine Workers hold their given.
and the natives joined the Yanks.
ments for world security separate.
DEODORANT CREAM
annual convention In Cincinnati.
By P
M
^
Allies Passing World War I Old Battlegrounds
SNAPPY FACTS
RUBBER
I hmvim peace
Truk Remains a Tough Target
Raising Old Glory
DON’T GET W 9U with
CONSTIPATION
G A R FIELD T E A
After a Robot Bomb Struck
Shy Guam Natives
Zl
P /ir
YODORA