Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1924-1994, December 05, 1946, Image 6
< y«im MORE DUPLICATION WASHINGTON. President Tru man is a sincere, hard-plugging ad vocate of unified armed services, but he should persuade his army to obey the policy of its commander-in-chief. At present the army is building a special wing to Walter Reed hos pital at 12th and Dahlia streets in Washington which will exactly dupli cate the navy’s. This wing is to take care of the President of the United States. Simultaneously, the navy also has a floor of its Bethesda Naval hospi tal reserved for the President. It is all set to take care of him at any time. However, medical officers have changed in the White House and a navy doctor isn’t in command any more. The army now runs the show. Roosevelt, always partial to the navy, appointed Adm. Ross Mcln tire White House physician. But Tru man, who served in the army, se lected Brig. Gen. Wallace Graham as White House physician. And of course an army doctor does not like to practice in a naval hos pital. Therefore the army medical corps, wanting to avoid the humility of sending the President to a naval hospital, authorized a new wing to the Walter Reed Army hospital. Thus, at the expense of thousands of feet of scarce lumber, tons of strategic metal and several thousand bricks, the special wing for the President is being built. • • * U.S, VS. U.S.S.R. DEMOCRACY Secretary of State Jimmy Byrnes has been telling the fol lowing story about the differ ence between democracy in Rus- I sia and the United States. “An American soldier,” he re lates,. “was talking to a Russian soldier in Berlin. The American said that in his country, he could go to Washington without a per mit, go to the White House, wait his turn, get in to see the Presi dent and tell him that he doesn’t like American foreign policy. ‘That’s democracy,’ said the G.I. “ ‘That’s nothing,’ the Russian soldier replied. ‘ln my country I can go to Moscow, knock on the door of the Kremlin, walk in, wait my turn, see Stalin, bang on the desk and say, “Mr. Stalin, I don’t like Truman’s for eign policy either!” And noth ing would happen to me. That’s real democracy.’ ” ♦ • ♦ SUPPRESSED REPORT While President Truman and oth er high government officials con tinue their enthusiastic- support of the now Philippine government of President Roxas, there remain locked in the files of the White House and Attorney Gen. Tom Clark two copies of a report which, if made public, has explosive power nearly as great as that of the sup pressed Rogge report. The Philippine report was written by a special investigator sent to Manila last winter to determine what action should be taken against islanders who had collaborated with Jap occupation authorities. Inside fact is it pins guilt on nearly all the leaders of the present Philippine ad ministration. Documentary evidence of collaborationist records of a large part of the present senate, cabinet and President Roxas himself is in- < eluded. The charges include such crim inal acts as aiding the Japs to wipe out patriot guerrillas, conspiring to seize food from famished Filipinos for use by the Jap armies, in addi tion to the declaration of war against the United States in 1944. Although the vast majority of the Filipinos hated and resisted the Jap*, corruption spread through the top layers of political and industrial leaders. Result was that the justice department investigators recom mended that the most important col laborationist clique be tried not in the Philippines, where it would be difficult to find a native court com pletely free of bias, but in San Fran cisco. Reason this recommendation was never acted upon, officials say, was largely Gen. Douglas MacArthur. • * • UNDER THE DOME Speaker Sam Rayburn doesn’t want the job of minority leader. . . . Southern congressmen are not en thusiastic over continuing the lead ership of Massachusetts’ John Mc- Cormack and they have the votes to put him in or out. . . . One fixture in j the capitol regardless of political | turnover will be the Rev. James i Shera Montgomery, the house chap lain. Appointed by the Republicans in 1921, he was continued by the Democrats. * * * MERRY GO ROUND All cabinet members are strength ening their legal staffs, knowing they face the most exhaustive series of congressional investigations in the last 20 years. . . . Retiring Speaker Sam Rayburn tells friends that he will serve in the house only one more term. Sam has been a con gressional fixture for 35 years, now wants to retire. . . . Nine members of the new senate are former news paper men and publishers; three are teachers. Sixty-four senators nare lawyers, the largest group. - v . Hf ''tOTafi THREE NEW U. N, MEMBERS . . . Seated in front of the dais at the U. N. general assembly are the representatives of three nations ad mitted to membership in the United Nations. They are shown as they listen to Paul Henri Spaak, center on dais, as he welcomed them to the fold. Left on dais is Trygve Lie, secretary general. At right is assistant secretary Ivan Kevno. Seated in front are Oesten Unden, Sweden; Thor Thors, Iceland, and Aboul Hosayn Aziz, Af ghanistan, new delegates. WINNERS OF NOBEL PEACE PRIZE ... Dr. John R. Mott, New York, left, secretary-general of the World Student Christian feder ation, and Miss Emily Greene Balch, Wellesley, Mass., president of the International Wopien’s League for Peace and Freedom, who were awarded jointly the 194 G Nobel Peace prize by the Norwegian par liamentary committee of the Nobel awards commission. Four other Americans won awards in physics and chemistry. WELL-DRESSED SOLDIERS . . . Clothing for use in heavy winter conditions is being tested at “Task Force Frost,” Camp McCoy, Wis. From left to right are Pfc. George R. Deal, Big Stone Gap, Va., in ski mountain boots, gaiters and cotton parka with liner; Pfc. Alvis Goins, LaFollette, Tenn., in Arctic shoes, overwhite trousers, parka and winter mask; Pvt. Eugene Tranthan, Springfield, Mo., in mukluks, pile lined parka overcoat; G.I. in air forces parka B-7; and Pfc. Robert Wentermute, Newton, N. J., in sleeping suit. TWIN NURSES CARE FOR TRIPLETS . . . Student nurses and twin sisters, Georgette, left, and Colette Dussault, St. Albans, Vt., hbld the Skicke triplets, all boys, born at the Brady Maternity hospital, Albany, N, Y., to Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Skicke. The triplets are the first chil dren born to the Skickes. All are in excellent health and thriving. So far they have not expressed themselves about their good fortune in having the twin nurses take care of them. THE HOUSTON HOME JOURNAL. PERRY. GEORGIA OFF TO COLLEGE . . . Roy Fox, 11, complete with bag and Rhode sian college hat, is shown in Lon don ready to depart for Rhodesia to attend Fairbridge college at In duna. He is one of 700 recruited from British families. ‘JIMMY’ WALKER DIES . . . James J. Walker, New York City’s most colorful mayor, who died as the result of a blood clot on the brain. The ready-witted politician and former song writer was ill only three days before he passed away, - Hi ,slk a SIGNS COAL ORDER . . . Federal Judge T. Alan Goldsborough, Washington, D. C., who signed temporary order restraining John L, Lewis, head of the UMW from terminating the Krug-Lewis agree ment and calling a strike of all soft coal mine workers. \ ■ c \ lIIiJK* ! \ ! FIRST G.I. BABY IN JAPAN . , . To Mrs. Melina Rita Dugas, wife of Chief Gunner’s Mate Robert J. Dugas, Milwaukee, Wis., goes the distinction of giving birth to the first child born to navy personnel in Japan. CURES BY MUSCLE POWER . . . Mrs. Estrid Dane has won fame throughout England for her cures of baby deformities. She does it by a series of exercises in which the baby’s own muscle pull is tha factor. Infantile paralysis is among her cures which include most children ailments. j GOP Sweep Frees Truman Of Burdensome Program By BAUKHAGE News Analyst and Commentator. WNU Service, 1616 Eye Street, N.W., Washington, D, C. WASHINGTON. There is a feel I of Christmas in the Washington air which is prompted by more than the j evanescence of the joyous spirit of Noel just try Ito get onto a P* 1 ; Connecticut ave- F jp : 1 nue car headed i I I i for the F street %w|p|§r • shopping district. ing, the chief ten ant is, believe, ■ *% Missouri Christ- jk> * ’ mas among his friends. Baukhage Whether he spends the holiday beneath his own rooftree or the one which Uncle Sam so generously provides, it can be said that it will be a far merrier occasion than a year ago. He will i be among his friends as well as his family, and as one of his official circle put it, with his “professed” ' enemies (the opposite party) in pow er his “unprofessed” enemies (offi cially his friends) having no further opportunity to toss brickbats or bandy threats about his head. I recall another crisp, cool winter day last February a year ago, when we wended our way to the Presi dent’s weekly press and radio con ference. Bemused pansies (I re corded in this space) showed frost bitten faces in the garden of the White House grounds. We were discussing the difficulties and differences which President Truman already was encountering at the hands of his own party in congress. “Congress has to be realistic in an election year,” I quoted some one as saying, “They are facing real issues. And the President’s pro gram isn’t realistic.” “Whether or not it is realistic,” another member of the group re plied, “it isn’t his program. He in herited it. It’s New Deal and New Deal is Old Hat now. It doesn’t rep resent Harry Truman’s ideas at all, but he has to go through with it.” As we look back, it is plain enough that whether it was New Deal or what it was, the program of the President was one that the people rejected on election day, the moral obligations of the past, the ef fect of the pressure groups, the ukase of the party of bigwigs were swept away and Harry Truman, who didn’t want the job that was thrust upon him when death com manded, was made a free man. The President’s satisfaction springs not from any spirit of “I told you so” hurled at his alleged supporters, not from any lack of loyalty to a cause well lost. It was ; simply the weary but happy flood of relief of a man who, having attempt ed what he knew was an impossible task, saw that task ended, and friend and foe forced fairly into the open. War Terminated Honeymoon With Congress My mind goes back to another scene shortly before the death of President Roosevelt. I sat in the of fice of the vice president talking of days when the caissons went rolling / along and both of us many miles apart rode beside them. We talked also of the then forthcoming San Francisco conference of the United Nations and Mr. Truman’s theme was what he felt to be his function. Paradoxically enough—as it turned out later—it was helping establish liaison between congress and the White House, complement ing the highly successful effort of Secretary of State Hull which re sulted in the forging of a bi-parti san foreign policy. And in so short a time, after Mr. Truman became President, that liaison between Capitol Hill and 1600 Pennsylvania i avenue snapped in twain, never to [ be reunited. ! Three months after the President ; took office I recorded: “The politi cal armistice in Washington will i end shortly after the President’s (Truman’s) return from Berlin— by that time domestic discontent will be crystallizing, the honeymoon j will be on the wane. . . .” ; And I then had the temerity to predict that if . . . “the Japanese war should end . . . within the year . . . President Truman will be stripped of the protecting armor of the Commander-in-Chief. Then 1 | 0 BARBS . . . by Baukhage Madamoiselle, magazine for smart travellers, advises, “Take along a spot remover” even for the pleasure spots. * ♦ ♦ Five years ago, says the Aircraft Industries publication “Planes,” al titude was measured in feet. Now it’s miles. How about applying the same measurement to prices? the slings and arrows which even Roosevelt’s enemies were wont to deflect to congress and other g ov ernment agencies will be aimed squarely at the man in the White House.” That prophesy required no gift of the occult. Mr. Truman knew it then—or I wouldn’t have. From now on the President is his own man. The legislation he of. fers, whatever its fate may be, will be moulded to suit his own heart’s desire. He has fought the fight to the best of his ability, assailed from the right and the left and the rear as well as the front. Now he will write his own ticket, be it good or bad. Few Presidents have had such an opportunity or faced a more severe test. * * * Presidential Bee Hums in Capitol Dome Washington withdraws from offi cial activity for the holidays with out getting any real impact of the advent of the new regime. There has been the preliminary hurly burly of reorganization on Capitol Hill but the same old faces are evident and the same old voices speak. The active Republican lead ers in both houses of congress have been so much in the limelight for the last year anyhow that they merely appear to be stepping up, rather than stepping in. It all seems quite routine and casual. There was just a touch of the excitement of the beginning of a new era when house and senate steering committees had their first meetings and made their first offi- Senator Taft Politically Cautious cial statements concerning legisla tion and policy. Most of the steps had been foreshadowed and the change of venue was not fanfared. The last 14 years make up the longest period of lean years that any party has suffered. I witnessed the end of two 12-year drouths through which the Democrats thirst ed; close of the one that began with William McKinley and ended with William Howard Taft, when Wilson accompanied the “new free dom” to the White House. And the next, another 12-year period, when the New Deal followed Hoover’s exit. The Democrats had only a short interlude at the pie-counter between Taft and Harding and their return in 1933 came in the midst of such a domestic crisis, with the mad days of the NRA following on the heels of the bank holiday, that our attention was diverted from poli ics. But what the Democrats did to the Republican officeholders “wasn’t good,” as one Republican put it recently. He added: “We are going to do the same for them.” Congress begins with the Repub lican Presidential plum within eas ier reach than any which have dan gled in many a year and it is no wonder many hands are reaching hopefully for it. In fact, Senator Vandenberg early sounded the warning that more thoughts should be concentrated on the responsibil ities following the victory of ’46, and less on the possibilities of ’4B, for the good of all concerned. The battle between the Taftites and the anti-Taftites began even before election and the Ohio sena tor himself is so determined that this time he will win the nomina tion that he leans over backward to avoid criticism. He refused to go on a broadcast for even a three minute statement of Republican policy and he took off for Central America shortly thereafter. In order to avoid noise, the Pull man company has developed a head bag made of cloth-like paper. Now if they’ll get a nose-bag for the snorers. * * * Why is it that when a party is sure it’s going to win a presidential election, it tries to pick a candidate with the least popular appeal?