The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, March 29, 1946 Page: 6 of 8
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• ■ V' l.fj-i-* —
IT*
THE CROSBVFQN jtEVlEW
Oft to ihsL VbodL
tipnjnpJfaJunanL f ~
A SUPERINTENDENT of schools
visited a night-school for Negro
adults. He was called upon tQCOiv-
gratulate an old Negress: She had
enrolled at the start of the course
with a single, avowed intent—to
Jearn to write her name. She had
v Succeeded, and the course >was at
an end, and she was leaving
visited the same school. The old
woman-had enrolled again. "Why?"
he asked her. * -' •• • "
"Ah*s goin* \o learn to write
jnah name." she said.1" . „
"But you learned that last year."
"Ah' know? dat. But now'*—and
she swelled with pride—"now Ah
jgone got married." ^
-WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS.
Conservative Bloc Fights OAArJj;
G. M. Strike. Settlement Spur to
Ail-Out Automobile Production
.Released by Western Newspaper Union.
(EDITOR'S >(OTE: When opinions are expressed in theee columns. they are thoee of
Western Newspaper Union's news analysts and not neeessarlly of this newspaper.)
CONGRESS: '
Conservative Coalition
Having first shown i\s strength in
passage of^the Case ant£strike bill,
a coalition of southern Democrat*
and Republicans is being organized
in congress to loosen ^government
regulation over the nation's econ-
omy.- --- ",.v ' • '
Led by Representative Hartley
are eased, sticky
F~-f-
i due to colds
i loosened up,
| passages are
■ [Vicks
back
= | (Rep.. N. JT.y. 100 congressmen al-
ready have joined the coa '
a- strategy committee composed of
Hartley himself Crawford (Rep.,
Mich.), Smith (Dem,, Va.), Barden
(Dem., N. C ), Camp (Dem., Ga.),
Roe (IJem.,.. Md.), Jenkins (Rep.;
Ohio), Buffet (Repi, Neb.), Pace
(Dem:, Ga.) and Sundstrom (Rep.,
N. J.). -
•• Though the coalition Strategy calls
for an attack on OPA pricing regu-
ellers .to
•tledtime.HIessed reliefas VapoRub ~ latinns fiiiQb._&s.. rfiamJi.ng_S
u absorb..part, of increased costs of
production and distributlSKT" the
group will seek modification rather
to upper bronchial
ith its special medicinal vapors,
STIMOIATES chest and back sur-
faces like a wanning poultice.
Often by morning most of the mis-
ery of thecold i3 gone! Remember—
ONLY VAPORUB Gives You this
dal double action. It's time-tested,
home-proved... the best-known home
-renedyfor reliev- ^
GM/VP
FO&M
8*m<r
fl^es4Wais
V Grand tor -•••-
Ml
m
v X
** O ^
;4.S-phOSPHA^
'^ING POWDE"
wider "constituencies;"* "Rfefiecting
this more cautiousapproach^* the
"senajg greatly watered the', strin-
gent CS'Sfe*"bill which restricted la-
activities. •
WAR CRIMES : .
Hermann Brags - - -
Attired in a baggy untforrrT with?
a red scarf tied around his neck,'
Bennann-ttngring «hnwed all of his
old cockiness in being the first of
the Nazi war criminals to testify in
his behalf in the historic Nuernberg
trials. .
With a noose staring him in the
face, the rumpled former Reich air
marshal! proudly boasted that he
had been Hitler s right-hand man
and striven mightily to. strengthen
the national Socialist party rule "to
Pi
u
*i
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-why i Flr t. PAZO ointment aoothee
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lubricates hardened, dried part*—
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*
than- outright' abolition of the
agelicy. Support -would be given to
a one year extension of OPA.
to head the coalition in (fie sena?'eT
where support may be slower in de-
■ing because of the need for
merfibers to canvass their"positions
i:ABOR"r—
Auto Wages
^Emerging- haggard and bpwhisk-
ered from the conference room after
it hours of continuous negotiation-
between CIO-United"""Aytomobile
Workers and General Motors jjgS- '
crfalS, UAW ~Pres. R. J. Thomas
muttered;../,.'Considering everything.
I think we've got a pretty good
contract.''
Settled after a bitter 113-day
strike, the pact did provide sufa&taiuJ_ whatever: hopes Pauley nourished
for confirmation, were
shaken with former Interior Secre-
Cs£j£r Xcfc6sv ri^T
-tial-~wirge~ and other concessions to
the union,^though falling short of
Hermann poering; on stand.
make Germany free." Though the
- Nazis had .come- into powcr through
free elections, he said, every effort
was made to retain their leadership
even to the elimination.,®! all politi-
cal opposition.
In recounting the notorious blood
purge of 1933, Goering clahried that
Gen. Kurt von Schleicher and Gen.
Curt von Hajximerstein-Equord had
sought to overthrow Hitler shortly
'before the Installation of hi first
cabinet. Irt a quick Nazi counter-
move, the putsch was crushed and
von Schleicher murdered.
FOREIGN AFFAIRS:
Russ on Spot ~—_
Russla~was put on her honor by
high Ai^erican and British officials
in th«-.. midst of reports that re-
inforced Red armies were fanning
over northern and western Iran and
threatening-Turkey and Iraq.
In Washington, D. C., President
Truman openly expressed confl-
uence that the U/ S. and Russia:
^ffirreiswriherr^^
ing over Iran and the Recls^strip-
ping of Manchurian industry" through
diplomatic procedure. At the time
Mr. TrUman spoke, Russians only
answer to the state, department's
protest over continued Red^ccupa-
tion of Iran in violation of a tri-pa r-„
tite agreement w^,5^.an unofficial
Moscow radio broadcast that re-
ports df Russiani froop movements
fti Irah wer^inaTcUrate.
Coincident with President Tru-
man's expression of belief, in Rus-
sia, Foreign Minister Bevin of Great
Britain stressed premier Stalin had
Unequivocally assured his major war
allies that the Reds would -respect
Iranian territorial integrity in ac-
cordant^. with*'"tri-partite agree-
ments. Foreign Commissar Molotov
reiterated IWSshj's intention tb pull
out of Iran during, the LondoiTcofir
ference of foreign ministers, Bevin
added. ^
Behind the political tension,' re-
ports persisted that the Reds were
exerting the strongest pressure on
The British have extensive petro-
leum holdings in the south as well
as in neighboring Iragi^-where a na-
Uve movement for s^Lf-rule backed
by the Reds is feared.
POLITICS:
Bad Mixture ^,
ffiough stubbornly lighting tor-'
last, Big Ed Pauley finally conceded
that oil and politics don't mix, ask-
ing for withdrawal of his nomina-
tion as undersecretary of the navy
despite President Truman's deter-
mined support in the face of strong
congressional opposition. - j
A millionaire California oil-man
and former treasurer of the Demo-
cratic party, Pauley faced rough, go-
ing from the start, with astute politi-
cal observers terming the nomina-
tiftn, fit f"V petlfltttoum, Operator for
a navy job' a blunder in view of
past scandals over navy oil.
u.PTJ J SUNDAY
1!Si7FSCHO0I;
LESS SlurtwaUt
Rv H inni.n 1. LUNDQUIST. D. D. /« -
Bv HAROLD t. LUNDQUIST, D. D.
Of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for March 31
Lesson subJpcts 'and Scripture texts se-
lected and copyrighted by International
Cornell of Religious EducaUon; used by
A NATION DEMANDS A KING
LESSON TEXT—i Samuel 8:10-22.
MEMORY ^ELECTION—Blessed is Uie
nation whose God Is the Lord.—Psalm
83rl2.
Edwin W. Pauley (seated) reads
missive from President, als broth-
t lopllff ftflr-"- in
$1.12 to $1.30Mi cents an hour, still
below the Ford and Chrysler pay
rates.
By. obtaining important conces-
sions from thg company, however,
UAW officials claimed^ that the total
financial gain would exceed the 19Ms
gents' an hour sought. Gains in-
cluded adjustment of inequalities in
wage rates in "certain plants, -im-
proved vacation pdy up to 4\4 per
cent of gross income of employees
oi-.flve~years~Mrmore, double time
for the seventh cor^^cutivg day on
the job, and eq^al compensation for
A major crisis has come In the
life.of a nation when it is ready to
change its form of government- ifiSt
was especially true in the case of
Israel, for they were about to throw
Dfl the direct rule of God and de-
mand a king.
There were good reasons for their
desire. Samuel was old. His sons
to succeed tijm weT®^not-f.-
honest (I Sam. 8:3).~But there"were
other motives not so good; for ex-
ample, their , desire to have the
pomp of a kingly ruler and a wish
other peoples (v. 20)
Their"r??tM£st was made kn^wWto
Samuel (I S&t >- —ffe was
grieved, but the I^ord showed him
that it was not pis rule they were
rejecting, but God'* rule (v. 7).
The matter came to a crisis
SamueT "was sent to reason
them (v. 9).
etio Words (vv. 10-18).
There.!*-always a price to pay H
ow the styles
bickering, : the company granted" 'told him thatl^oSCUlUU COliW b« fftlseil
only • 18Vfr cents an hou^ lnstead of fmm - nil m n tnr thg Demo*
the 19& cents demanded, .and_..the .oratio-oampaign if the government
average G. M. wage was set at from Would withdraw its suit for-title over
underwater petroleum deposits in
eager "to
Ortdr-
king with an attractive court and
a mighty anrry llke thetr neighbors,
the other nations, but they had not
realized that such things ~are not
provided out gObe king's pocket
A word of warnipg may be in
place here for Christians who have
fallen for" the temptation to keep
"paSSf with their ungodly neighbors—
uu -all-'-T--ft oi if
women. •
In winning substantial pay con-
cessions for the future, the strikers
paid a heavy price in lost wages
of between 138 million and 150 mil-
lion dollars.' The company was
estimated to have dropped 600 mil-
lion dollars in unfilled orders-while
distributors lost 150 million dollar
in sales commissions
Production Prospects
With the settlement of the G. M.
strike, the auto industry hoped, to
clear the decks for all-out produc-
tion to meet the tremendous pent-
up ^demand for new cars. Because-
many parts suppliers still" Have to
negotiate wage demands, however,
the threat to full-scale output re-
mained.
In any event, • the auto industry
will be unable to meet the goal
of six million cars set for 1946-. With
reasonably clear sailing, it- is ex-
pected. Jhat three million passenger
vehicles* will be turned out during
the remainder of the year.
---Indicative of ilhe -hifh- .gear into
worid.«conditions,-it~Wa s" revealed
*that plana called, for an- army of
California, .
In asking the President to with-
draw his nomination, which was
done, Pauley declared, that ,fi'e"had
been cleared of all charges-, ^gainst
him. Commending him
irom the fight. Democratic ymem- [is sometfanes puC
bers of the senate naval affairs com- j Government has a right to call on
mittee upheld his personal integ* the governed for its-'«support, but
rity. who will deny that the tremendous
military establishments which the
rulers of the earth have maintained
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS
ms
mi
1-6 yr*.
8874
-♦444
Pattern No. 8874 is designed ( t
Mr 1«. 18. 20; 40. 42. 44 and <5 j'
Jakes 3>g yards of 3.), ur-aflA^
H
CONSCRIPTIONi
Prospects Brighten
have been both burdensome
provocative of war.
and
Tot's Play Dress,
ERE is a perky little play
dress your tinj)" tot will adore.
Self ruffles forfri the brief sleeves,
the bottom is cut all in one piece."
Sa easily and quickly made you'll
want to run. up several, in gay
s-ur. ilaral..print s..lQr.
fun in the sun. , -- ■. '. ——,. ■ '
• • •
Pattern No. 899L .comes in sizes 1. '2,
3, 4, 5 and 6 years. Size 5 requires 2'*
yards of 35 or 39-inch. material; 3 yards
machine made ruffling.
Smart Shirtwaister.
' jT\ ESTINED for' a bright future L~;
is this smart phirtwaist frock _
Because of the precarious inter-
national situation * aggravated by
Russian moves in the east, congres-
sional support grew for, extension of the unruly, but think how much bet-
the selective sex-vice act beyond j ter would be our lot if we like Is-
May 15. < t rael could, have been under the
r; With war department . officials 1 direct rule of God.
calling for maintenance of military | They did not wantjt. Are men any
strength in the face of unsettled l etter today when they_ reject the
.We live in a sinful world, and we that' oonios
may as well fkee the necessity of. sizes. Cool cap sleeves make it a
protecting ourselves -and policing [ style you'll -live in all summer.
1,500,000 officers and men by July,
1946, and 1,000,000 by July, 1947.
Pending determination of the aims,
policies and programs Of other 'na-
tions, and the efficiency of the UNO
in resolving disputes, no decision
can be made about „ the permanent
size of the armed forces, - it was
said.'
General Eisenhower declared that
one of the principal arguments for
the retention of selective service
was that it acts as a spur for voliin
tary* enlistments. With
permitted to specify
II.
The
beneficent, rule or the Son of God
over their lives? ,
Persistent Wilbi' (vv. 19, 20).
people refused to hearken.
Their stubborn rgply'was, "Nay, but
we will-have-* king over, us," and
one can "almost hear the "emphasis
On the word will. —
One' might have expected that the
j leaders of , the people would liave.
j sensed the folly of their plan and
'asked God to continue to rule over
them forever, but the stubbornness
■ of the willful human heart is al-
long. Not§ the neat set in beltj
graceful panelled skirt.
the'
Send your order-to:
CIRCLE PA1
530 South -
Eneiose ZS-cehts in coini i
patterntlestrerf.
Pattern No.
M""' '
Address
X.
idMoiifi
GET A 25'
SCRATCHING IS L
Don't scratch dry 1
scalp Help remove 1
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MOROIINE HAIH
--A
vbTurifeer s^
what branch
of service they prefer, many young
men act to pick their -spots before of God.
most beyond belief. "When its deter-
tjrnrfatian Is~ coupled with pHde^antT,
unbelief It becomes an even more
appalling barrier to the blessing
which the industry must be thrown
to meet production goals. Ford has'
assembled only 76,000 cars thus far:
.Chrysler, 53,000; General Motors,
under TDOiW^ ^lTys-Overland, 62,.
000; Studebaker, 38,000; Nash, il,
000, and Hudson, 4,000.
Other Strikes „
E>espite settlement of the Gener-
al Motors strike .and the agree-
ment between General'Electric and
thfi_£JO-TJnit£d Electrical "Work-
ers, strikes continued to cloud the
postwar economic picture; with the
^dispute between International Har-
vester and the CIO'Farm ' Equip-
ment Workers the most serious.
With International Harvester and
the union deadlocked over the com-
pany's proposal that an 18 cent
wage raise be conditioned upon gov-
ernment grant of an offsetting price,
increase, Secretary of Agriculture
Anderson called upon management
and labor to co-operate, in the pro-
dagflbn^-urwamy heeded equipment
to .meet the big crop goals. Unless
farmers are able to step up the out-
put, he said, this country will be un-
able to furnish -sufficient food to
avert mass starvation abroad.
Termination of the General Elec-
tric strike, with an 18^ cent an
hour wage raise bringing average
weekly earnings to approximately
$42, opened the way toward large
scale production of home appli-
ances. Previously, General Motors'
electrical division had_made~f>eace
with the CIO union on the same
terms. * - "
being drafted and made subject to
•compulsory—placement..— In—five
months, 600,017 volunteers enlist-
ed, with 67.07 per cent being World
War II vets, 18.7 per cent recruits
and 14.83 per cerrt~prg^I5earlHarbor
enrollees.
E World Hog Numbers Show Big Drop
Showing , a sharp—decrease * of
5,000,000 head, world hog numbers
dropped to 244,000,000 at the start
of 1046 in comparison with, the year
previous. Reductions' in central Eu-
rope, Canada .and Argentina were
offset only partially by moderate in-
creases In the U. S., Frahce and the
Soviet Union, and gmall increases
In other countries.
Because of the -crlUcil world
shortace of crains. further decline
4nw hog Jiumber# outside the U. S,
is forecast" in 1946 despite a de-
mand for meat Well above the sup-
ply. ' —■
Canadian hog numbers continue
to declipe and at the beginning of
1946 showed a drop of "1.8 million
head below the year before, Or 38 per
cent below 1944, whilfe in the U. 6.
they rose 4 per cent, thus recuperat-
ing part of the loss shown on Janu-
ary 1. IMS, compared with 1844.
WORLD RELIEF:
Sharing Burden
Assuming the honorary chairman-
ship of the goVenpnent'j emergency
famine committee, former Pres.
Herbert Hoover called upon South
American nations to join- with their
Big Brother of the north in con-
serving cereals for feeding of the
hungry, in \tfar stricken Europe and
Asia.
Prior to leaving for a first-hand
survey of Overseas
Hoover told a news conference that
he believed both North and South
America could save upwards of 1
million tons Of? cereals during the
next 12Q days to help fill a need for
about 9 rrilllion tons. The year's re-
tjtriremwvts "wtli tot h2t rmHimr ton**
he said, but only 12 million tons
Will be available without the under-
taking of broad Conservation meas<
ures. • ' ■
Of the total of 7 million tons thai
the western hemisphere could fur-
nish within the next four jnonths,
South America could contribute 6
million tons, -Hoover- 'g{itdv,«. wyhi4
amount could bt made available by
cutting doWn purchases of foreign
goods requiring payment in grain;
reducing consumption., abd turning
over all surpluses to: famine Tffreat,
ened areas.
MILK: •
Per capita
consumption of milk
and cream jumped,.ta.MI pounds in
1945, the highest-total ever "reached,
and l52 pounds more than the pe
capita consumption In the five year
period from 1935-39, government fig-
ures^ show. • :
Translated-into housewife's tehns,
these figures meant that an aver
age of about 206 quarts of milk In
.1049,-almost four quarts a week,
was consumed for each man, worn,
an and child in the nation, in thi
form of milk and cream.
Therein lies the outstanding lesson
qno
of these verses., Let us beware that
We do not sin Ulrr Tnrnr|; yri, nln
even - worse than- They did. Joseph
PArker In the People's Bible (vol.
6, p. 287) makes this acute applica-
tion of the truth:1 "Do we condemn
them? Let us not be ready with "re-
proach; nor urgent in condemna-
tion. We are doing a deadlier thing
it may be .than the elders of Israel
did In this case.- We are told that
God is 8ngry with the wicked every
diy+that the wicked shall be driven
into hell, and all the nations that
forget God. We are told that the
liar shall have his portion in the
lake which burneth with fire and
brimstone, that no drunkard shall
enter the kingdom of heaven, that
anything unclean, defiled or corrupt
condiha 11 not pass Into the city of God's
"light; we are told thaT'hbthing""f^"
-• nfe?
msw.
*CT! MtTf
«tay« mum
maineth for the sinner but a fear-
ful looking for of Judgment and'
fiery Indignation.
"What is the result? Men can go
immediately from the hearing or
rwaing * ar uirmw'f. tiifrMrfrfflr
ments concerning the future of the
wicked and can throw themselves
with unbridled license, into all the
diabolical enjoyments which stimu-
late but never satisfy the corrupt
soul." i-j--"-—* . ^
. III. Providential Willingness (vv
-ztrtsrr
Reluctantly, but Inevitably, comes
the divine expression of willingness
to let man go the way he wants to
go. Israel shall have a king, says
God. In fact «e-irad^opHesi<?d this
day long before (see Deut. 17: 14-
20). -• -—.
So it is true (to quote, Parker
again) that "we can force OUr way
through all solemn warning, all path-
etic entreaty, all earnest persuasive-
ness . . . We can go to Hell if "we
will".-'. . There is
but love, grace, mercy, tenderness,
God. That is- all. There is a cross—,
hew it down I There is a way around
it. a way .through it. a way over it
—you can get there!"
May we, neither as individual* nor
aa a nation, thus thwart God's love
and reject His warnings; and go on
our own stubborn way Into aid" and
sorrow.
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Brown, Nugent E. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, March 29, 1946, newspaper, March 29, 1946; Crosbyton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth256182/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Crosby County Public Library.