The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 226, Ed. 2 Saturday, January 29, 1944 Page: 4 of 10
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THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
Saturday Evening, January 29, 1944g
PAGE FOUR
The Abilene Reporter-Arms
A TEXAS 214, NEWSPAPER
Published Twice Dally Except Once on Sunday
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graphical error s or any unintentional errors that may occur other
than to correcs in next issue after it-is brought to their atten
tion. All adva ising orders are accepted oa this basis only.
Victory Fleet
J. The S. S. United Victory, first of the new
i fleet of Victory ships, was launched the
other day at Henry Kaiser’s Portland, Ore.,
yards. And with it was launched an ambi-
1 tious American program of post-war ship-
ping.
The Victory is a fast cargo vessel—fast
enough to sail without convoy and to cut a
Liberty ship’s round-trip time to England by
two-thirds. For all its heroic, indispensable
service, the Liberty is outmoded. It would
be useless in competitive peacetime trade.
So it was very likely the Victory that Rear
Admiral Howard Vickery, the Maritime
Commission’s vice chairman, had in mind
when he told the British Ministry of Ship-
ping: “The United States intends to become
a maritime nation, and to remain one after
the war."
That this is a new, or rather, a revived am-
bition is shown by shipping figures. Not
since the Civil War has as much as 50 per-
cent of our foreign trade been transported
in American ships. At the turn of the cen-
, ‘ tury the figure was about 10 percent, and
- as recently as1939 less than a quarter of our
trade was carried in our own vessels.
But this war has taught us the value of an
quent taxes, unpaid doctor bills or the
thought that you scrimped on the kids at
Christmas.
And we suspect that a good share of that
cashed-in $1.763,000,000 found its way back
into Uncle Sam’s sock anyway, in taxes or
more bonds.
When Spring Comes to Russia
HOME FRONT
s, JAMES MAnLow and MO«M XIELKI
An Egregious Blunder
If American disciples of extreme nation-
alism were looking for a new talking point,
they certainly got it in the much-discussed
publication by the Communist newspaper
Pravda of that Anglo-Nazi “separate peace"
rumor.
Whatever the Soviet government’s pur-
pose may have been in allowing this rumor
to be printed—and subsequent speculation
has not produced a sensible explanation-
the fact remains that Moscow played smack
into the hand of those Americans who like
Russia least.
They are the people who have preached
distrust of England since the beginning of
the war in Europe. They are the people who,
when Hitler failed to overrun Russia, inflat-
ed the Bolshevik bogey-man to twice his nor-
mal size. And since Pearl Harbor, their vio-
lent apprehensiveness has hampered this
government’s efforts toward unity with its
allies in the current fighting and in the peace
to follow. -
The saddest thing, perhaps, is that this
rumor is bound to sow seeds of doubt in the
minds of many Americans outside the iso-
lationist camp, whose feeling toward both
England and Russia has been one of confi-
dence and trust. To be sure, there is abun-
dant evidence of circumstance and logic to
indicate that the "separate peace” rumor is
a phony. And it is reasonable to suppose that
the Russian authorities who sanctioned its
publication knew that such evidence would
be presented.
But the fact that Russia knew the rumor
might be challenged does not make the pic-
ture any prettier. For what choice then does
Pravda’ give the reader? Either to believe
England guilty of an appalling double-cross,
or to believe Pravda guilty of a deliberate
and damaging falsehood.
Either choice offers an example of violent
nationalism, and an invitation to Americans
to adopt a similar attitude in self-defense. In
10 unfortunate lines, Pravda has presented
American ultra-nationalism with a much
more- urgent and persuasive argument than
the invocation of the quotation about "en-
JERMkn
INVASION
%
WASHINGTON Jan 29—(P)Con-
grass, which writes the tax laws,
apparently is trying to pin the rap
for the present complicated income
tax forms on the treasury.
A number of congressmen.
Both in speeches on Capitol HUI
and on visits home during the
holiday recess, have pointed the
finger at the treasury when the
subject of the income tax has
come up. Yet congress usually
thumbs Its nose at treasury
recommendations.
The treasury’s Interns! revenue
bureau says it would like to simpli-
fy the tax blanks if it could.
- The difficulty Ues with the tax
laws themselves. Income tax law
has been buUt up piecemeal Bits
have been added from year to year,
other bits knocked out.
A real simplification job will have
to start from scratch.
fication will be achieved if the
conferees’ plan far a flat 2 per-
cent victory tax replaces the
present system of a 5 percent
gross tax minus an assortment
of credits based on marital •
status and number of depend-
ents.
Both houses of congress are
agreed on knocking out the earned
income credit, now allowed to fig-
uring the normal tax but not then
surtax That is soother step to-
ward simplification.
Fighters Stick To Almighty God
adequate merchant fleet as an instrument
of national defense. Our shortage of ships,
coupled with submarine sinkings, taught
what was very nearly a disastrous lesson. It „
. is unlikely, then, that we shall again sub- .tangling alliances. .
scribe to the idea that, since other nations It is incredible that this was Russia s in-
fwith lower wage-scales can carry our goods tention. It becomes less credible when one
for less, we should let them do so, weighs the declarations of Moscow and Te-
America’s emergence as a power in mer- heran, and the heroism of the Red army, and
chant shipping, however, carries its own set the sum of Nazi brutality in Russia, against
of peculiar post-war problems. First of all, this incident, or Russia s boundary dispute
there will need to be complete and friendly with Poland, or Pravda s scolding of Mr.
cooperation and understanding among the Willkie.,,
various nations, particular!* between this Probably the fairest explanation of
country and Great Britain. : Pravda story is that it was an egregiously
Britain received Admiral Vickery’s state- stupid diplomatic blunder.
ment, quoted above, in good grace. As this
friendly threat to British maritime eminence TLA O. 1— Corner
becomes a reality, this country’s job will be I ne QUIZ Corner
to preserve that feeling of good grace with- .
out backing down on its own expressed in- Q.—What is the pronounced peculiarity of
tentions. the banyan tree?
These and many other problems are bound A—Yield sacred in India, the tree grows
to come up. Their solution, and the settling aerial roots which grow toward the ground
of similar problems in all fields is going to where they take hold and form supporting
require much of the justice and generosity pillars.
and friendly understanding that now unites Q_Wher, did Bar, in the Ukraine, get its
these several nations in their determination name?
to defeat their enemies quickly and decis- A—Originally the city of Rov, it was re-
ively named by Sigismund I of Poland in the mid-
c n u dle fifteenth century, after Bari, in Italy, his
Saving Bonds
As the Fourth War Loan Drive gets under
way, and people prepare to "buy more in
‘44," it is encouraging to note how tightly
most of us have hung onto the first three is-
sues. From May 1, 1941, until the end of 1943,
Americans had bought more than $25,000,-
000,000 in Series E. F and G bonds. Redemp-
tions up to that time amounted to $1,763,-
000,000 or 7 percent—including the accrued
interest •
That seems to us a remarkably good rec-
i ord. And it is interesting to learn, from
Treasury statistics, that most bonds were
cashed in at Christmas time, during the flu
epidemic, and in, months when taxes were
due. That’s all right, too. It is better to sac-
rifice a bond than to be haunted by delin-
wife’s birthplace.
Q—When was barbed wire first put into
commercial use?
A-In 1874 The first patent was issued to
Joseph F. Glidden of Dekalb, III.
Q—Where did the Barbizon School of
Painting get its name? -
A—From the French village of Barbizon,
where such artists as Corot, Millet and Rous-
seau went to paint from nature.
Q—Where is the island of Bardsey, and
for what is it noted?
A—The 444-acre island, off the western
coast of Wales, was supposedly the refuge
where Merlin the magician descended with
the 13 treasures of Britain.
Harry Hopkins Gets His Break
By RAYMOND CLAPPER
SOMEWHERE in New Guinea,
Jan 29—We were called about 2:30
a. m. to board our P-T boat for the
run under cover of darkness to the
Cape Gloucester front on New
Britain. The weather finally forc-
ed us back, but I got some idea
of what these men go through. The
crew was bleary-eyed when we re-
turned. like men who have been
through a football game.
The F-T crews have remarkably
low casualties, considering the sl-
most point-blank range st which
they fight.
Out of this unit only seven men
have been killed in thirteen months,
and some twenty Purple Hearts
have been awarded for wounds. But
between Sept 27 and Christmas Day
they sank 104 Japanese barges and
damaged 2g.
The F-T boats work close to
shore, where the Jap barges *a re.
sneaking along Their effective-
ness is suggested by the statement
of an Australian General officer
that the Jape had been forced to
spread their artillery along a
stretch of fifty miles to provide
shore coverage for their barges
against the P-Ts, whereas these
guns might otherwise have been
used against Australian troops. He
said the F-T damage to the Japs’
supplies forced them to make three
days ration of rice last nine days,
supplementing with native roots
and even slaughtering their pack
animals for food.
Our airmen work by daylight
sighting the barges, and the P-Ts
st night. They exchange informa-
tion, and this co-ordination ac-
counts for the excellent results,
e s’e
TEXANS TELLS OF ATTACK
During our night mission I talk-
ed with some of the crew, and dis-
covered s strong religious tendency
among them. Ensign T. J. Lov-
vorn, Stamford, Texas, told about
being attacked Dec 27 by twenty-
five or thirty Jap dive-bombers.
The P-T’s shot down four of them
We suffered four wounded, but all
the P-Ts got back One had fifty-
eight strafing holes, but no one
aboard her was hurt
•That makes you believe in God,”
panist for Gladys Swarthout.
picked up the piano for $50 in New
York and fought It through all the
way out here, with everybody try-
ing to swipe It en route. Now it
He shores of New Guinea. It is the
only soft touch of civilization in
gives a bright touch of music in
the damp, dark jungle on the
this rugged base, where the latrine
is a ladder made of small tree
trunks laid horizontally out over the
water at the end of a 200-yard
jungle path.
However, the extraordinary com-
plexities of this year’s tax blanks
won’t have to be repeated.
The shift to pay-as-you-go piled
complication on complication.
When congress declined — under
threat of presidential veto—to go
along with the Idea generally cred-
ited to Beardsley Rumi of skipping
a whole tax year in order to start
pay-as-you-go, it got snarled up in
more and more knots.
It canceled 75 percent (of $50) of
one years taxes. That left 25 per-
cent, ordered paid in 1944 and 1945.
This had the effect, roughly, of in-
creasing taxes by 12 1-2 percent
for each of these two years—an ef-
fect which would have been obtain-
ed by skipping a tax year and ad-
justing new tax rates. But some
feared such a boost would become
permanent
The loudest argument raised
against the Ruml plsn was the con-
tention that some persons or large
income would stand to gain huge
amounts. As a result, congress
wrote in a so-called "anti-windfall"
provision intended to catch some
taxes on the otherwise forgiven’’
part of some large incomes.
And now?
Senate and house conferees
agreed yesterday to eliminate this
“windfall’’ provision from the law.
Patton Victor in.
Fight for Plant
WASHINGTON, Jan. 29 — (PP)
A three and one half year struggle
by Rep. Nat Patton (D) of Crockett.
Texas, to establish an Iron ore blast
furnace world at Rusk, Texas, has
finally borne fruit.
Last night the Defense Plant
corporation gave final approval •
to plans for ereeting the $3,-
500,000 structure, Patton an-
nounced, adding the blast fur-
naces should begin operating
within eight months.
During the past : 1-2 years, the
project had been several times R0
the point of final approval only
to be referred back to various sub-
divisions of the War Production
board and the DPC
The WPB had previously given
priorities for the furnace but cong
struction was delayed by financial
transactions between E. F. Me-
Crossin Engineering company of
Birmingham, Ala., and New York,
which is to build and operate the
project, and the DPC.
Two existing blast furnaces, one
In Pembroke, Pls . and the other in
Wells, Mich., will be removed and
reassembled at Rusk, with little new
material to be needed, said Patton.
The Texan said that chemical
by-products resulting from the us,
of charcoal will be almost as im
THE WAR Today
By DEWITT MACKENZIE
Ab Foreign Affairs Analyst
What explanation is there to this
twentieth century for the horrible
atrocities which have been per-
petrated wholesale on helpless
American, Filipino and British
prisoners of war by the Japanese,
ss exposed-by Washington and Lon-
don? , . .-
The Japs are barbarians—literally
barbarians. It’s less than a century
ago that our own
Commodore Ferry
opened the Mi-
kados domains to
ths outside world
and civilization.
Since then the
Nipponese have
made considerable
progress, but their
instincts remain
the same as they
were to the rav-
age days of pre- MeKENZIE
historic times. MHENCE
While they have s veneer of civili-
Milon, their instincts are primodial.
-’But." somebody challenges, “the
Germans have been committing
similar atrocities. Do you also claim
that they’re uncivilized?"
The reply is that Hitlerite Ger-
many—the Nasi portion of the
population—has deliberately revert-
ed to barbarism under the fuehrer’s
lead. .
boys for the days of slaughter which
he proposed to inaugurate as soon
as he could. He encouraged the
young girls of the reich to Indis-
criminate breeding of boys. The
youth whom Hitler got hold of ten
years ago, today are dead upon the
steppes of Russia, or are in his
armies. The younger ones are com-
ing along, ready to serve their mas-
tor.
You will note that Japan and Ger-
many are the only nations which
have been engaging in atrocities
against prisoners of war and civil-
ians. True, Mussolini also glorified
war and practiced aggression but he
didn’t introduce paganism into Italy,
in order to brutalize his people.
War crimes will be punished, but
there remains a far greater problem
for the Alites. That is the inaugu-
ration of an educational program
that will complete the civilization of
the Japanese and re-educate the
Nazified Germans.
We must note that not all Ger-
mans are Nazis. There are many
at the older generation who abhor
Hitler and all his works, but are
portant as the production of pig
iron, which will be the principal
output of the Rusk project.
Patton said the Bureau of Mines
The most complicated feature of
the income tax blank is ths section ,
desling with the victory tax, which | had estimated 100,000,000 tons of ore
certainly was the most involved was available in the vicinity .
revenue-raiser congress hsd created Rusk and, that the wood to be
within memory, used in production of charcoal was
Per the future, some simpli- I sufficient to last 100 years.
Reporter-News Ration Calendar •
Jan 29— Expiration date for brown stamp R. 8, T and U to book three.
Valid for meats, fats. etc.
Feb 20-Expiration date for green stamps O. H and J to book four. Valid
for canned goods since Jan. 1.
Feb. 1—Green stemps K. L and M become valid for canned goods. Good •
through March 20. Tokens will be given in exchange for them uns
they expire but they will retain their present point value.
Feb. 26—Expiration date for brown stamp V. good for meats, fats, etc
Feb 27—Ration tokens go into use. Blue stamps to book four become
valid at 10 point value each for canned goods.
March 21—Exniration date for gss coupons 10-A good for three gallons
each since Jan. 22. B and B-1 and C and 0-1 coupons good indefinite
for two gallons each; B-2 and C-2 good indefinitely for five gallons
each.
March 31—Expiration date for sugar stamp 30. book four. Good for five
pounds since Jan 19
Book one, stamp it and book three, stamp 1 on “airplane” sheet good
indefinitely for one pair of shoes each. -
Taylor County War Price and Rationing Board located on first floor CE
Alexander building to Abilene.
a
DAILY RADIO PROGRAMS,
Schedules are onset no latest information and are often changed without nettes
and without opportunity for new.peper.forreetion.-----------------------------------------
SATURDAY. JANUARY 29
AFTERNOON
e
12th Aids Infantile
Paralysis Campaign
The final phase of the drive
among 12th Armored division mem-
bers for funds for the National
Foundation tor Infantile Paralysis
is under way this week, with a good
showing expected when the final
proceeds are counted.
Hellcats wishing to contribute to
the fund can choose one of' two
ways of making a donation Contri-
butions can be turned over to com-
peny representatives at any time
during the drive, which ends Jan.
11 For the men who prefer to wait
until pay.day, contributions will be
accepted at the pay table next
Monday
PM—KRBO
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3:30 Mark Weber
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Hugh Waddin
Hugh Waddill
Headlines Story,
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Curt Massey
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5:30 Hawaii Cello
s is Juke Box
torcod to do his bidding by the bru-
tal Gestapo. They execute people
in Germany these daya for even
talking out of turn.
Hitler, whom Winston Churchill
has described as ‘this evil man XIX
this monstrous abortion of hatred
and deceit has turned back the
clock in his country to methods
which make the barbarities of At-
tila the Hun look like the golden
rule He had to do this In order to
impose his master race" on the
world by force. 1
One of his earliest steps was to
disavow Christianity and introduce
said Lovvorn.
Others who never attended church
at home go to services here A
regular Navy man, long in the ser-
vice, said: •
"Only the hand of Almighty God
saves us sometimes.”
The same thing was Mid in al-
most identical words when I saw Lt
Gen Walter Krueger commanding
the Sixth Army Krueger was born
in Germany He rose from buck
private to senior Lieutenant Gen-
eral He has commanded every-
thing from rookie squad to an army
His men say he is a precisionist
a strict soldier.
prenid.nt Henry General Krueger Mid you can
Every time. Vice President Henry have the most perfect organiza-
Wallace makes s speech, which is tion, your supplies and everything
often, be bobs up with an idea that else can be ready and you can
have an advantage over the enemy
in everything, but still the time
comes when you have to fight and
that is the teat He Mid sometimes
he knows Almighty God has laid
his protecting hand over his men
and brought them through
s a e
Secretary Stimson couldn’t an-
swer, or at least he didn t answer.
By FETER EDSON Obtaining direct evidence on these
- I Reporter-News Washington missing details may be extremely
----President adviser Harry Hopkins, difficult, for there were presum-— -
who has been the target for more ably no witnesses About the only WALLACE ORIGINALITY
personal abuse and hatred than any way in which the whole case can
man in the administration, got one
of the best breaks of his career
be cleared up will be by full and
open confession by the prepetrator
or perpetrators of the hoax
through the publication by Akron’s
Mayor C. Wilson Sparks of the let
ter purported to have been written the motive behind the forgery
Prune by Hopkins to come out at the same time If the
duett Dr Humphrey idea was to discredit Hopkins, it has
• w backfired For Hopkins, when he is
If a confession is made perhaps
makes good reading and good head-
lines, whether you agree with what
he has to say or not. Too many
people however, have the Idea that
these theories of Henry’s are all
—— —.---_ „ .----.brand-new stuff—new pipe dreams,
confidence that as he undoubtedly will be, can dis- 1 new economic pancakes hot off what
used to be known as the New Deal
Lee expressing
again subjected to personal attack
Willkie would be miss the charge by saying It la
the Republican merely another phony letter
candidate in 1944 DILEMMA or FARMER’S
The letter la DAUGHTER
griddle, new schemes for a planned
economy, regimentation, specializa-
tion and all the other old bugaboos
and bogeymen Aa a matter of rec-
now known to be A new hypothetical story about a ord however many of the ideas
a forgery. • farmer’s daughter got injected into which the vice president has espous-
The typewrit- the record when Secretary of Wared in the last year are old stuff
around Washington. p
- - er on which it Henry L Stimson appeared before
EDSON 6 was written la the Senate Committee on Military
known to have been one in the outer | Affairs to give his statement in sup-
office of George, N Briggs who has port of national service legislation,
been indicted), speech assistant and After the formal statement, the
chief grammar corrector to Seere- senators took turns In questioning
tary of the Interior Harold L Ickes Secretary Stimson, and Senator
The handwriting, or rather the
hand-lettering or printing of the
name and address on the envelopes
in which the letter was mailed to
Major Sparks, has been studied and
the identity of the man who ad-
dressed the envelope is believed to
have been established.
The missing links in the chain
of evidence are establishment of the
identity of the actual writer of the
letter and proof of the connection.
If any. between whoever wrote the
• letter whoever addressed the en-
. velope, and whoever mailed the let-
Mr to Mayor Sparks
Chan Gurney of Yankton, 8. D..
posed this one
We all know that work is limit-
ed In war time," said the senator
But supposing we get this national
service act and some farmer’s
daughter from the northwest is
drafted and sent down to Chicago to
work in a war plant.
“After a time she writes back,
‘Dad, they don’t need me down here.
You do more work before breakfast
than they do down here in a full
day.’
What asks Senator Gurney, “is
going to happen then?”
The vice presidents December
speech at Chapel Hill, N. C . In
which he lashed out at cartel mo-
nopolies controlling the production
of medicine was right out of the
Department of Justice anti-trust
division, and so was his October
speech in Dallas, when he swung a
mean kick at "integrated transporta-
tion system," and his September
speech st Chicago attacking Inter-
national bis business
His speeches during the South
American trip were pretty much the
original New Deal line of ending
poverty,’ ending great fortunes for
the privileged Earlier in the year he
was merely endorsing the :
Freedoms calling for better living
conditions for plain people pro-
moting everyone to the middle class
for the post-war world.
GOOO LUCK TOKEN#
Almost every individual has some
little religious charm or other good
luck token Many wear a little
image of St. Christopher, the pa-
tron saint of travelers. Often these
are gifts One man, a non-Catho-
Be, wears one given him by his
wife, who is a Catholic
I m not a religious man, but I
find myself frequently taking out a
tiny brown bear which my daugh-
ter gave me as I was leaving last
year for the European theater Over
here seven war correspondents have
been killed, mostly In the last few
months, and I never get in a plane
any more without checking in with
the little brown bear
paganism.
e
He stressed the glorification of
war and killing He savaged the
Now a Buglar
Those thrill whistle blasts that
now break Hellcats’ slumbet in the
dawns early light will soon be a
thing of the past.
A special 12th Armored division
buglar’s school has been started and
will continue for several weeks to
assure that each company will soon
have one experienced buglar.
THE THRILL THAT COMES ONC 9 IN a LIFETIME By WEBSTER
mm,40m0N
P. M -KRBC
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10 15 Celebration ..
10 30 President a Birthday
10:45 Presidents Birthday
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II 15 Jerry Wald
11 30 Blue Barron
11 49 Sign Off.
The F-T crews are living a very M
rugged life They sleep on their
boats when those are tied up How-
ever. they have cut a fair camp
out of the New Guinea Jungle
Their mess hall as an old piano
probably the only one in New
Guinea. When I arrived for mess
It vE haine played by one of the
men in the unn Ensign Roger
Bordman, a concert plane, sir
New York who used to bi accom-
- 5
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 226, Ed. 2 Saturday, January 29, 1944, newspaper, January 29, 1944; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1635988/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.