The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Van Zandt County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Van Zandt County Library.
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Thursday, March 14, 1946
THE CANTON HERALD
PAGE TWO
V
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
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tensive looting in Manchuria, for-
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Churchills bid to the U. S. for an
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comnmonwealth
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Republican*
time romance. .
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Gen. Franco—Allied target.
viet code clerk
tegic resources in the province Con- attached to the Reda’ embassy Ln
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SeMOOLFORVTRRAUGIAWHERS
43
a.
oats, 2 cents a bushel; and grain
sorghums, 9 cents a hundred pounds
of transportation equipment Hos-
pital and medical supplies, cath-
the U. S. with tremendous stocks of
materials on hand. Originally cost-
ing over two and one-quarter bil-
ice to the Fascist cause, promising J
to enter the mar and seal off Gibral- .
2 Maintenance of bog ceilings at
present prices up to September 1.
1946, with consideration then to be
given toward lowering the top for
heavier weight butcher hogs after
The third set-aside boost in less
than a month, the latest government
order is independent ot reservations
Ge
m Foster, chief of the U. S Commun-
" 1st Party, issued a rebuke to a
•4 headline writer on the local commy
b-
of 650,000, a navy of 175,000 and
air force of 275.000
Despite the maintenance of
CANADA:
Bare Bed Intrigue
Frightened when ordered to
-
LABOR:
Kill Case Bill
will be increased by 4 cents a bushel
when the grain is put under regu-
lation on June 1
said that by pursuing an independ-
ent foreign policy, we might better
bring pressure to bear on all na-
tions for correct relations.
Churchill spoke even as the U S
joined Britain ID protesting against
Russia's failure to withdraw from
Pushed through the house by a
258 to 155 vote, the Case bill re-
stricting union practices received ---
Britain pointed up the question of
the course to be followed in pre-
serving world peace.
While declaring that a combina-
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at descriptions for manufacturing nniTitv
the A-bomb, information on U S. BRITAIN:
turn to Russia. a
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TOGETTHE J
DIRTY POLITICIN
Out or THE SCHoL
r BOARD"
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epig
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in addition, ceiling prices on rye
it
the Russian spy ring operating in
the dominion, the code cleric’s story
disclosed that Moscow had instruct-
ed its rnilitary attache at Ottawa
to obtain samples of atomic materi-
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Hughes’ new Constellation planel
‘'before you columnists wake uP
tomorrow I"
defense policy difficult, Attlee en-
visaged an eventual British army
tion The shortage of supplies and
skilled labor added to the termina-
tion of priority procedures have
sent the costs of public works con-
struction to a new high.
With cities reporting construction
bids ranging from 10 per cent to
138 per cent over engineer’s esti-
mates, consideration is being given
to essential construction only
that date. However action may be
taken to cut the subsidy on heavier
bogs before September 1
3 The 58 cents a mundred pound
subsidy paid cattle men to encour-
age feeding of certain types of ani-
mals will end on June 30.
& . P0 PacKtoapu
popawu, .
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k • ' di
SCHOOL FOR VETERAN FATHERS . . . Designed ta wenare r i aT
for coping with situations that may arise when they Gl dads
spring, a "bumdies from heaven" class is held in Newyn-ges, their ef,-
William Carey is the student with the dance can i« u « .1
nurse Vivian Percival, who explaihs th correct 4P. He H listening to
The baby is Carey’s 20-months-olaidaughteOpettechpigue - diapering.
i really enjoy the job. Nine says he must
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Though the government has
disposed of almost 400 million
dollars of surplus goods is the
U. S., the army still has over
1% billion dollars worth in stor-
age. Brig. Gen. Theodore M Os-
borne revealed. Among items be-
ing carried are 671,999 band tow-
els, 438.819 one-pound packages
of powdered laundry soap. 248,-
513 whisk brooms. 263.799 screw-
drivers, 7,723 alarm docks and
6,328 rubber boots.
ing their troops out of the north-
east section of the nation, it was
reported that Moscow was bargain-
ing for oil concestions, tied up by
the U S and Britain.
Meanshile, the U S formally ob-
jected to the Russian looting of Jap-
anese industrial facilities in Man-
thana and Red proposals that China
join with them Ss operation at stra-
AGRICULTURE:
Feed Program
Aiming to move short feed sup-
plies into market and at toe same British and Canadian armament de.
time gut down on the heavy fatten- < velopments, and disposition of U. S
ing ot meat animals, the govern- , and Canadian troops.
ment established a three-point pro- " — ~
tion of toe U S and fee British
*
TEXAN STAR . . . Jack Robinson, since 1933, no? You are back homs
18, Fort Worth, Texas, who ha* in your beloved Germany undt Herr
scored about 350 points while sery- Dies is back home in oblivion,
ing as forward on Baylor univer. -------
sity’s basketball team. Young Rob- Sounds in the Night: At Leones
inson is considered one of the most * 1 love to stand at 42nd Street and
promising 1946 players. Broadway and watch the frauds go
by!" ... At the Blue Angel: "They
have a lot in common—they are
with a tri-partite agreement drawn
up between toe tore* countries in
1942 As toe Reds stalled on pull-
STATE AIDE.. Maj. Gen.
N. T„ Hl Rochelle. Manhattan Mural: The "tent
President Truman Ennamed by house" on Fourth Avenue where «
am secretaryumano be an assist war vet and his wie have pitched
drin served „ diteatGeneralHil their tent 0n the rot of an »e“*
, partment civi afairs. bldg.
that Spam could conduct its own
internal affairs and any outside
inference with seif-rule would
arouse toe resentrnent of the proud
Spanish people.
k sale. A home is on the grounds. .
5 Interesting observation: That big
E page ad in which the N A M. at
4 tacked Bowles was prepared by the
■ Benton & Bowles advert agency, ot
■ which he is vice-chairman .One
■ of the best informed State Dept
■ officials complains that too many
11 of the top men in Washington are
g fiddling while the world burns—that
: | World War III has already started
i in the Eastern Hemisphere! . . .
- Mr. Justice Douglas of the Supreme
i Court can, if he likes, be Assistant
President of the United States.
Sgt. Stanley Volcbok forwards
the U. S. Army paper (The Lud-
wigsburg Sentinel) from Germany
in which Fritz Kuhn was inter-
viewed. They quote him as finally
admitting: "All the reporters start-
ed muckraking me They wanted to
build me and the German-American
Bund into something sensational sc
that their papers would sell! Even
my good friend Walter Winchell
spoke against me, and then the
Dies committee investigated me.'
Investigated him’ It advertised
him as a good American and de-
nounced me as "the leader of a
sinister propaganda bund"!
Ach. Fritz! How times change
wide - sweeping authority to ex-
amine company books as request-
ed by President Truman
liance, continued effort should be „ ,
made to develop international co- —on. doar3 the surpluses are con-
cperation through UNO. It was also centrated i nine disposal centers in
France and Belgium, where 146,000
workers ecosisting mostly of Ger-
Face* About Town: Walter Pid-
geon, Nancy Guild. Keenan Wynn
and other Hwood notables tat the
Stork club) observing that they wil
be back in Movietown (via H
little, oil-rich Iran to accordance .
man prisoners are maintaining the
stocks.
Of toe total of 100 million dollars
sold, the major share has gone to
the United Nations Relief and Re-
habilitation administration, which
has taken 70 million dollars worth
Nylons are ne longer the top
black market item. A $5 white shirt
in many spots brings 20 bur ... Lli
St Cyr of the night clubs can't
wear nylons. Allergic! . . W. z
cerning the looting, tote U S was
said to have agreed with China that
a.. Nipponese installations could uA
be considered booty, while opposi- .
tion to joint Russian-Sino operation *
U. S. Diplomacy Facing Review;
Act to Ease Tight Feed Supply;
Canada Bares Atomic Intrigue
I.. . Reased 0» Western Newspaper U non ..........—.
(EDITORS WOVE when epnbans are expressed fa mhese ealamas they are thmse at
•twrt Xusnaset Cold mews analyscs and set nteessary at uais newspapet .»
mer Prime
_ ---
. for the army amounting to 30 per |
cent on choice and good grades of l
beef in effect for all of the states “ #2
SPAIN:
Press Franeo
Though the Franco government
took precautionary measures against
internal uprisings, the allied world
awaited the Spanish people's re-
action to the U. S., British and
French plea that they overthrow
the pint-sized generalissimo and
establish a representative interim
regime.
In joining in the tri-partite blast
at the Franco regime, the U. F.
state department released captured
documnts revealing Franco's axis
would present a
Minister Winston
hated by the same people." --A
the Latin Quarter: " 'Charming' u
a word that means the joke was
lousy but told by a very deat
friend." ... At the Penthouse:
"Whata snob! Holds her nose w
high she nearly drowns when i
rams!" ... At WJZ: "Like all
bigots. that Congressman has yet t
learn you can't lynch the truth!
. . . At Club 78: "That Runyon « a
Damon in the rough" ... At the
Cub Room: "Nice feller. He'd give
you a bottle of milk for a cow."
MEAT:
Booft Set Aside
Acting to provide meat rjpphes
for shipment abroad, the govern-
ment toereased the amounts of
pork beef, real and mutton federal-
ly inspected packers are required to
set aside and extended toe order to
37 states Eleven southeastern
states are exempted from the pro-
visions because they do not produce
sufficient meat to fl their own
needs.
Under the new regulations, the
packers must reserve 13 pe cent
of their pert output; 30 per cent
of the commercial grade of steers
heifers and cows, 40 per cent of
fee utility grade and 50 per cent of
canner and cutter grades: 40 per
cent at the utility grade at veal and
X per cent of choice, gar-jd, com-
of certain industries was based
upon fears of closing trade oppor-
tunities to other nations.
: hotels are offering permanents as
‘ high as $500 to move out . .
Black market butter is selling it
81.10 the lb. .. . Three-fourths of
the people in the world could not
. read the Atlantic Charter if writ-
XOTKEES PICKET SCHOQL BOARD. C Protestine the schosl bpards refusal to appotnt Ml” Ruth D Mor. ton mucheimmteraclensergtsitat”
r.. veteran teacher, „ principal of the Center school, Everett, Mass., mothers bearing placards and „v. _______
eralrounpupilsspicketedithe school. The school board had previously named , war veteran to Backstage vignette: It happened
Chicago group is demanding inTalulah Bankhead s undressine
room. ... An old bore got by the
doorman and found Talus retreat
. . . Before she could say: "Now
looka here!" he brought forth one
of those spellbinding ant villages
in which the ants build tunnels and
whatnot . . . The star was fasci-
nated by them. . . . "They are * on-
derful little things," he kept saying,
“they really are They neve- stop
working. always doing something-
always keeping busy. They have
their own police force and their own
mercial and utility grades of mut-
ten.
»
L
h a f t
A
ing and construction material.
France and Italy have received sub-
stantial supplies along with Bel-
g. An. with a reverse lend-lease cred-
it at 45 million dollars.
-7
l / .
/
Armed Force 54 FE828582 562222
’’ 32255282 E223
nhecdece-ce-ggg- condtohscugpermmetacing
gram, including: tae Canadian government was abie of any risks. Prime Minister Attlee s ““9222222225221228268225285882
-= -======
clerk in the departmnent of external xearwould total almost fve billion m _______ _15-o5 "ront
affairs; Kathlyn Mary Wilsher. 41 doyars „ ,
deputy registrar in the ofce of high While stating that atomic develop- l
commissioner and Capt. Gordon ments made planning of long-range |
Lunan. 30. of the information board.
Central figure in the Russian es-
pionage ring was Col Nicolai Zabo-
tin, military attache of the Soviet
embassy in Ottawa, since recalled Despite tne maintenance of an •
to Moscow Using the undercover army of one million men, four out K
name ot OM. Zabotin directed the under arms.onV-E Day a
activities of the network of spies, will be demobilized by the end or ■
including Col Peter S MOtinov, now this zear. Attlee said. Continued ■
, assistant military attache at Wash- peacetime conscription will afford ■
1 ington, D C. necessary replacements to prevent ■
depletion of tne forces 2
PUBLIC WORKS:
The outlook for municipal public 52
works construction in 1946 is unset- H
tied, according to a report of the ■
American Public Works associa- ■
Theodore Drriser’s "The Bul-
wark" (his testament novel on the
decline of 20th Century morals will
I be published by Doubleday next
| month Original publication date
I was the fall of 1917 It will be the
I April Book Find Club selection. ..
4 Fred Allen and his agent are mak-t
L ing a money settlement after a long
Ottawa sought the protection at ter in return for substantial sup- %
Canadian police and then divulged plies of arms, food and fuel which a
an espionage plot worthy of the Germany did not see ft to furnish. |!
most theatrical thriller. Though backed against a wall |
Revealed in the Canadian gov- by the allied declaration. Franco d
ernment’s official announcement of curtly told the U. S. and Britain I
army, too!” . . . "Hmmmmm,"
hmmm'd Talu with her straightest
face, "no navy, I suppose."
rd,’
Kew York Neusboy
Frenchmen here insist DeGaume '
“ is being held prisoner in his own
i house in Paris by order of the com.
my high command. ... Rep Ran. I
kin's report on Hollywood (to his j
- Un-American Committee) has been i
| sent back for re-writing So poorly (
’ presented, etc. . . . Sumner Welle
: former Ass't Sec'y of State, has an
, old farm near Babylon <L l.) tot
U. S Speeds Up Jap Repatriation in East
—---------t——---------
To speed-ug evacuation of nearly 3,400.000 Japanese from
China, Manchuria and Formosa, the army is making available
approximately 100 Liberty ships and the navy over 100 surplus
LST* for operation with Japanese crews under strict American
control.
It is estimated mat ther are about 3,000,000 Japanese in
China. Manchuria and Formosa remaining to be repatriated. Of
this total about 1,700,000 are troops and approximately 1,600 000
Japanese civilians Already nearly 239,000 Japanese troops and
। 128,000 civilians have been moved under the program to clear
k them from liberated areas
3
r* e,
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_
1152
13.2′4240
IddufKuEi
powerful unifed front against the
"growing challenge and peril to
Christian civilization" at commu-
nism, Churchill said that continu-
ar.ee of Anglo-American wartime
military co-operation would lead to
a common welding at arms and
greater assurance of security.
Despite Churchill’s ringing plea
made before the faculty and student
body of Westminster colege in Ful-
ton. Ma, a President Truman's
presence, U S senatorial reaction
to the proposal remained coot Con-
census of the sokes' opinion was
that instead of the U S tieing itself
to another country in a military al-
E66862 222 J . E E ME short shrift in the.senate "here CLiLD STAR WINS BROWNIE AWARD . . Beverly Simmons, seven-year-eld movie star, may not win an
nn., yo,u, ,,,, stm,tn tm,, q,s0 ,, n, ugaom. a committee quiet, Ei- ed t -Oscar" this year, bat she has already been awarded a "Brownie" from her Girl Scent troop in appreciation
Despitethechearinzlabor.sitga pnepptnarstrikesoerspazreads mea sure and set to work on the ot her fne screen portrayals. She is shown in the center as Janice, left, and Phylis Jones, right, pre-
aim .ere atstea ft? UH same to M to weseefdElecttie pian atdntntarcpeacgstation ~ hez the -Erosnie." The presencatios u. place « of -Three Klds and • Queen."
In Kearney, N. J. As passed by fee house, fee Case ■
FOREIGN POLICY: ' SURPLUS: gonnEmn.Preds 3
Alliance Bul Oversea, Disposal ana
Coming in the midst ft Allied pro- One hundred million dollars ft liability at both labor and manage- I
tests t Russia over tailure to with- army surplus already has been dis- men: tor violation at contracts. I
draw its troops from Iran and ex- posed at in Europe and the quantity None cf the senate committee mem- i
is expected to increase substantial- ten considering the bin favored it a
ly pending completion of credit and ktta attacked it as unduly pen- l
____ _______ negotiations betmeen fee U. S. and alizing labor.
al-embracing military alliance wife Russia, Czechoslovakia, Poland, In writtog a new later bill sen- I
Fmland and France. ate leaden are expected to I
Because of the need for alter.- strengthen voluntary procedures for I
live shipments at varied items to settling disputes. While some sort I
support allied war operations ct fact-fnding machinery may be |
against the Germans, V-E day found set up to assist in fee clarification I
-------------------------------------- at issues, it would not possess toe 9
sympathies. At the same time,
however, the papers disclosed that
re- Franco had cleverly paid lip serv-
I who planned spending ood es for
~ radio time have held up their plans
since the Demmys started slugging
each other. Lucky stiffs. . . Some
I paper for "stupid journalism" ...
I Doris Lilly (no dunce, she) insert-
I ed a classified ad in a paper adver
I Using for an apartment and got X
I replies next day. And an apt ! . ..
I Sgt Chet Skreen observes that the
I le gend about British women hav.
I ing no sex appeal tock a terrible
I debunking when H‘wood hired two
I British actresses to film the most
I amorous women — Amber and
I Scarlett!
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The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946, newspaper, March 14, 1946; Canton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1516004/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Van Zandt County Library.