Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 76, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1945 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
m mn < •>«•*-; wm-mt
llt.lUllM!UM
THREE YANK ARMIES STORM ACROSS RHINELAND AT
MILE AN HOUR CLIP: NAZI RESISTANCE CRUMBLES
American 1st, 3rd
Sweetwater Reporter
DEDICATED Tit HKKVIf E
48th Year
“Went Texas' Leading Newspaper”
Sweetwater, Texas, Thursday, March 29, 1945
urv IT IN SWEETWATER
No. 76
DAMAGE 19
JAP SHIPS
AT OKINAWA
HIC lil'N'S ROLL <»\ El! RHINE—Heavy gun* nimlile across
this hi'iilgc of the Rhine in support of the Third Iriny drive
Innards Eeankfuil.
(Signal Corps Radiotelephoto from NEA
Telephoto.)
® Reds Stream Into
„ Austria; Qermans
Leave Oder River
( H.v I Tilled Press)
'I lie I'u i:m~ are urging into
still another Nazi rnleil country
t oilay.
The "Eree An .-Irian Railin''
reports that Soviet troop- anil
tank- are nvaming over tin
bonier into Austiia alsnil lo
miles soldhea-t of Vienna.
Several An Irian village; al
First Voluntary
Surrender Of
Nazi City Told
LONDON (ITi The A i. !
controlled I,iixeinhonig radii re
ports that the Mayor of Mann-
heiin. iiernmnt ha 'irt'einh-i - d
tin city to Aiie i -i an Si entit i
Army troops.
The re) ort -ax till- Is the fii -t
voluntary eapitulalion of an.
major t ierman < lty.
An earlier hroadeast from tin
Mi'll i-ll radio ,i al the in, m
rendered to the {merit-mis h\
telephoto The nffiic.d i aid to
have telephoned ’o American nl
fleers in a lotil>litrr i a the i it -
and infornn d them that tin i
wen no (icrinan - ddiel • left in 1
Mannheim
Mannheim is on the t h oik
i I the Rhine "P|n O' 'In i,!:i
ed elietnn al erir. r <*t I on wl"
haft'ii. h i the eeond lain -i in
land pol l m Germany i mikii ..'
itehlnd IHtisImrK
It had a pre war population - f
more than l’no.ixXi p< i h and i
t In ■ large.-1 - • ' • 1
Vet captured IiV the We.lei II
AI lie
BULLETIN
WITH THE I NTIT.I) I'ATES
NINTH ARMY - I' IM Am
erlean Ninth army leadei hav-
clamped a rigid • < nr it s black
out on the advanci r the Ninth
In and north of the Uhitr Auth-
tallies permit only the dlselo-iin*
that the Yank have "lined a
much a- in mile today
Radio I'okvo reports a In a* v
A merit oi raid on the two oiith
el nmo t island- ol .lapat)
More than .AfN) plane are aid
to have taken | art
The unconfirmed enemy broad
e.'i-l tine not ;iv whether the
raid on the .Ian home i land
Kyushu and Shikoku ua ear-
riel! out by Slip* rfoi't . other
iand-hiised nlane . oi c at h r
plane Ihlt If the .lapane e radio
I telling the truth it one of
the hii’t’e t American laid- oe
the .lapane e honie t land
President 1! evelt ha re-
tlirnei1 to I lie While I louse aff • i
p font ilav \ i d to Id I Ivd"
Park home
Almost immediate!v, the pis i
dent nhinged Into a Iteavv wort
schedule A few hours after hi ■
soeelal train hroughl Mr Ron e
velt to the capital, the president
called a mannower conferen* e
With the -enate leaders
A l Itli air fore eomnumhitie
reveal that a .1 ■ .ilfeso column
ha- advanced to within five mile
of Lnohokow. silo of an Amer-
ican air base In northern Hunch
province The enemy last had
been reported 2.r> mile; from
Luohokow.
MAN’11.A i CP) — The Tokyo
radio says the decisive battle
of the war in the Pacific may
take place soon in the Ryukyu
Islands.
Since la-t Friday the enemy
I has dcscrilied Allied landings in
j the ehain of island- ;tso miles
southwest of the Japanese home-
- land. I tut so i n \dmiral Niue
j itz has ignored tlu- lap invasion
reports.
However, I’aelflc fleet
lirailquurlci-s lias issued a
preliminary n-port of the
damage inflicted hy our war-
ships and currier planes.
During the first three days
of this week our naval for-
ces — ranging over a (ion-
mile area of the Ryukyus —
hoinhed submarine pens on
I file Island of Okinawa and
niilil.il> iiisl,illations on oili-
er Rvukyii islands. Nine-
teen Jap ships were damag-
ed.
Tokyo say the American
I have landed mi three Island- oft
! Okinawa The ciion
Japanese hid tic 'n
planes have si ...........
I American In,, in the Okinawa
j area.
A Japanese imperial head-
quarters communique describing
defense preparation* of Okinawa
says fierce fighting Is in pro-
. ., gross on the neurhv Islands west
fnillation of the Austrian report of 0kinawa aml lhal American
l"! V Vt,ouf 11 transput" are lylr;- off okinov.
it. Marshal Ddhukhlns force— itself*
the one report! d across the Isird-1
ci wa only nine miles from
Hie frontier ami la miles from i,,re,)ared fight In the liatth
I for Okinawa Island—along wit!
j the Japanese army and navy
And Tokyo adds that the force
Mhtmt
ArnkCf" /* U
Rhine It •_J
GERMANY
©
Pfeiwlow’
Bcrlmf
ftonkFu*
Coitbui •
Mode X
* \
•Tepoq .
la ads are I'eported to have been
I ihei ali'il
Tin An irian (ation whieli
i hello ed lo lie emit t olled hy I
tlu Rn Ians adds — and We ,
* 11 ti »t i - "a further break-1
^ through in the direction of Vlen-!
' ua is imminent. The hour of lih-
| elation i dawning."
There i- no actual official eon
TODAY'S St SR MAI*—Allied nlmirs are over the Rhine a*
llic I ri in ti I ii sl liiillles iii HarMf'ulie and the I . s. 7tll crosses
the Rhine and rcaelied Mannheim. Tile t . S. Jed Army I' under
a security Iduckuul presumed In I" m ar I ulda and Mrurnlierg.
'Pile I . s, | i| s| eeaetied near Olcssrli, .M-iliiles pasi Hie Rliiile
.....I (lie I aliadiaii Ell si. Iteifisli L’nd and I . S. Hill al e geiiid-
ing down on German* in Hie Ruhr and nn the SS rslpli.iliaii
piaihs. (SEA I elemap.)
Special Committee
7"'mires Into Food
Shortage; Cattle
Nazis New Weapon
Could Wipe Out
England Overnight
LONDON OTi (beat Uric
ain, which ha, endured more
than five years of war with Gcr-
I many, is determined to impose
; a tough and realistc- pcai......
tile Nazis
I uited I res. War ( .rrespond-
• ■lit Virgil Rinks". b.i ii a.le a
. lirx i/v that res. 'hat the Ic-
| s.m- learned in this -<• mil world
j al' are not to lie a : gotten
■ with man; ton-ranking
! I h it i -It diplomatic and gi'Xi-I'll-
inenl ■ .Ilieials pene that tlies
an very much aware of the
damage and tni-erv inflii ted mi
IIrit lin's cities and villagc-
Ih it ish leatlei hfe f. arfnl le -
the Americans permit sympathy
or their -porting in-thu't to get
the upper hand, or |icrhaps even
continue
allow tile (iertllhl
their proptiganda
(111!' ealiinC't flu . i*
ley that Britain. ss
tieing hombardeil Ii
j v-wt apori-. must tie
| to prevent any met
Advance on Kassel
liy 1 MTKI) PKESS
II,, (i<*rin<iii army on l hi* Itliim* i- bc.itcn—and ran look for*
WiiMl mu) lo iinronditional miitcimIci nr |»ir«rniral collapse.
Thai's IIm* express* f belief <*l Seereiar.x ol War Slimson. How*
rvrr. Slimson millions 11*.«• ll»r \a/.is may l>< able to set up another
l<*ni|M>rar,\ defense line lor an i11n<*i out of i i-sisianrr when Allied
armies reach Ihr end of Ihrir supply linrs.
\i a news ronfrrriire this morning. Mjiiinoii issued a warning
to the proplr of (*ri inan.v. “If Ihr Allied artnir** are forced to fiKht
from village lo villa^r in tin* drstrurtioii of all (.rrinany,” he siiid,
••the tinman people mils! know that ra il pn-M iit leadership and
they who lolrralr il will hear Ihr u - -1 s o i, ^ i I ? i»11 y .**
One rrason why Mlird armies had -■* linlr diflirully in cross*
inu the Kilim—Slimson told newsiiirn- u;.~ flu* fart that Allied
funis in Wish,,, I mopr <.ipfiir«*«) I.I'Jommi (,,*rmaii prisoners be*
I i .June and
Lieut. Meibos Is
Avenger Field
Ping Pong Champ
i See-nd Lieutenant Stanley W Heflin
Mcibo . of Shit Lake City. Ctuh. M
trainee pilot, became the officer - Vr 1
champion ping pong player a1 ■'
As engct k iidd yesterday aftet
nooti m the Field Gymnasium - ' - '
when he defeated Second Lieu’ I"
enant Robert F* Parsons, of New '
Yolk city in two straight gam< -
21-lt and n-IS. -V '1
First Lieutenant Earl P. Beck-
man phy-tca) training officer an
nouneed ihaf matches for tie
ild Pin
ti
i---!.ft unri
gaining i»
icmber s,
le might i
i nation >
'The communique says even
women and children are I icing
Vienna late vi -ti rday. and roll-
ini i n through iiunihling Nazi
l e istatiee
Far to tin' north at the other
. ml m the far I lung .m tm ii front
1 mi'die'.at Danzig on the Baltic
i- ..horn to tall to another Soviet
army
\l Hn* emit, t nl the line
In fule Itei lin — till' \.l/i»
ii i l.itlillg lull k to new ile-
ti ic-c | mill'. R.nlln llei lin
ailudi-. thill the fe eni.'in* have
e> heiiali it Ho n pm ket in the
liig Im-ihI nl tile Oiler river Jl
mill*' cm i ii. ,i-i of Iti'i'lhi.
Thi' R inn are believed to
liavi hilvanei d to the Oiler 2s
. miles fr..ip Ri flin' l it.v limits.
Texas Hews
l' cilet,11 i minimi' at)<>n com-
tni-sion approval has been grant-
id lor th.' laying n( twin under-
ground long ill-lame telephone
cable between Houston and
I’.oauillntit Till' rabies will cost
a gro pi - " t alKiut one-mil- j
lion doll.it uni will provide fin
additional p. it of wire between
the two * itte-
'The announcement i~ made in '
Houston that dealer meetings |
w ill lie In Id throughout the 10- ;
iminty ll"ii ton oi’A district j
during Apt tl a a part of a ram 1
puign lo -A.iinp out gasoline and i
other type- .a black markets.
\ conference i iK'ing held In |
: gathered for the impending hat
j tie of Okinawa are so large that
j the battle may prove a decisive
one.
\notlii'i- Japanese lepmt
says We used t:t(l jet planes
in an attack mi the smitli-
eininost Japanese honie is-
land of Kyiislm. This is the
first repoi'l ol our jet-|niipiT
led planes In aelimi in the i
I'aelfle. In addition, the Ja|>*
report a It-'Jti attack on Sing-
apore and another raid on
I orniosa.
Other and heavier air att.'a k-1
I against the Japanese loom in tin f
j near future In Washington Gen
I oral Arnold hint- that our IM-’n
i raids may be increased until a-
tnany as one-thousatid of the big
- Ii 11 is will In- attacking -iinul
t taneotisly by mld-mtmmer
On the Philippine t-land of
.('elm. report- from the capital
also named rvbu-- de-erilie dam
age to that city as paralleling
■ that in Manila Feint is the -ee
j ond largest uty in the Philip-
■ pine and our force already
have pushed north of the town
and inav have raptured a large
j airdrome
Allied furies of the .Viatic
mainland are • leaning out hip
remnants holding mu in the liilF
sections below Mandalay In Pair
ma In north central China, the
Fhlne'e hav.....unti l attacked
! Ait-tIn today by -tale highway L() ;l|| |p(, -(p drive on thi' inv
engineer I) (' Greet and a 'lel«' I allied airbase at Laoho-
gallon l'i in Fort Worth and j.iiW
Tarrant county lo discuss plans .y_
lor a lsei war highway for that Hji ,;ik(> jn , rhev
j eetion of the tale. j ^|,rfiv$; into th eair backwards
The Trxa- Ill'll.....f represen- ! f,,| a nil'll di-lanee before going
i;11 ivi■. ha killed a re-olutioti | u|)l.i„|
j hill tor the legislature to adjourn
May fit l 'The vote was 11J ayes
1 to five lines and Represent a
I live Frank Svadlenak of Thrall
! made the tabling motion.
Gov. Coke If Stevenson says
i in Austin that mile s the legis-
I [attire levies nine new taxes, lie
I predict that the state w ill again
j go on a tlefii it that Is. if ap-
propriations continue at the pre-
set ii rate
WASHINGTON (I P) — Far-
mers and ram hers don’t get
beef by shuffling a bunch of
figures and charts. That
stuir-,.,1 out ei iphatU ally as a
-l«sial s,.nate commitiw* resum-
ed its inquiry into the food
shortage particularly in
meat
Most of Hn* lengthy hearing
wa> gi' i-ll over to the hal'd luck
stories of packers and slaughter-
ers Their tory wa- that they've
been losing money in hog- since
the end of that tremendous hog
run ol a year ago. 'They were
given subsidies for procc--hig
hog- They -ay they’ll begin los-
ing even tip-re after the fir;’ "f
\pril when OI’.V* revised p., k-
eis sub idy program i i liolul-
i'i| to go inf" effect. After that
tlie subsidy for killing meat ani-
mal will be dropped »o ,’!(l ii |g -
Bombard Nazis 4
.Days On Franco
Italian Frontier
ROME H P' Alla I
piai tci - in Koine say - Allii'd
warshij s Iwmbarded German
position- for four day- in north-
ern Italy al< ng the long dormant
Franco Italian frontier
The naval attacks w-re can < I
ml by I'ritlsli and French dc •
tn lyers
'I lie hcav at iHitnlKirdment
»a " iiteied on Porto Maurlzio,
diotlt 111 iniies east of Mi’lltone
which is Just inside France -it
tin Italian holder
Thcri' Iiave lu-en virtually it"
report - "f ground activity In that
-i-etii|* -inee Amefiiatl til" I
drov northward from the south-
i n France hniisioii ls*aeln-
Bud wciither .'gain I* restre t
ing ground opi rations along the
Fifth and Eightli army front
("•lore the l*o Valley
a hundred for packers buying
animals below the ceilings How-
ever, OP A says It’s willing to
was - j>ost potn* the sub-idy change for
nays,
Testimony that all was well
financially with the packing m-
ilustry during the big hog run
iau-eil Senator Ship-te.iil t"
-iIniI'm uneasily in Iii' chair.
Then he rumbled this:
you made a profit la-t year !«•
cause fanners took a licking on
Ilf
His sharp ohsf‘rvati«»n caused ,
terk - in tlu* hear inu
room to chuckle* Faint smiles
touched the lips of some <»f the
pack< r
On this (H*ca>ion a ivprescnta*
'or Ci
(i« i i
live
of the
"big f'
r>ur’
was pro*
• in
along
with .-
I Hike
-imon f"t*
t hi*
smaller
Indepi
melon
t slaiiph*
ten-
r- He ■
■■as Th
OltKis
Edward
Will
*< >n "f the fin
ii ho;
■irir.v? hi-
name. His 1
tale of
W( »(•
inatohod
thin
of the
other-
VVi
Ison said
t ha:
packer
s can’t
buy
stock at
the
ei Ring-
—and
mosi
every*
thina now *
(ell* at
tilt* <
•oiling <*r
(• to It
-then
fini.-hod
proi
lljf t> ;it
control le
vt‘ls and
Sunrise Easter
Services To Be
Held At Field
11.
- ",:ic "Ut with ti profit
Pai ker W'il«on al.-" loitehed on
the feeder problem lie agreed!
that cattle "f unfinished quality
are coming to market
--------y ........—.
Tries To Bring
About Wage Pact
WASHINGTON
HIM -
Secretary of l.almr 1
ranee Per
kins ha made a i>er-
i n.d effort
to bring coal operaim
•g and the
Fnited Mine \Vork**r>
together.
She says sre had nt:
Kio a sooi’i*
fie propo al for a xx;
ige ajjroo*
men’ which would bi i
eak neither
thi Indust tv nor the
price sltua-
lion. Tlie -eiretary -a
y* her iiro-
posal - in hi r word
— “would
if it iif the
EMU i heri'bed demands " It’s
tindet -b" d that at tin
* >ame time
In is trxing to ci t the (iperatoi -
2 Huns Surrender
To Pretty Nurse
WITH THE noth
TON IN’ GERMANY
The Yanks in G. rmai
thi
nine
rhe <»thcr *1
ice I (JcM’mar
their cmintfr«»ffcr
Sweetwater Qirl Christens Ship
At San Francisco Launching
Don't Get Jitters
Says German Radio
I oNIion i ITi - 'The <icr-
m,m i,idi" ha- a ked the tier
mail people not to believe setl-a-
tiotial rumors that Allied tanks
have by pa cl Nuernberg, 1US
mill souiltwi t "f Berlin, and
an'driving on Leipzig, only 71
mill from the capital.
I'll ISO N FILS ESI t TE
APK'TiN H IM State police
report the escape of three Amer-
ican military prisoners at Camp
IIoinl
The escapees were wearing
hlue denim and one was wearing
kliaka, and nil had khaki over-
sea- cap;.
Freddie Linn, a farmer Sweet-
water -ehool 11ok her, and two
sisiei . I'v all la. ami lloberta
I’etei . believe they v eXpet'lell-
!'i*d the thrill that mines only
once in their life lime when
the they took part in thi' InUla It-
ing "I a Kaiser ship "S. S Si
Law rein a- ri’eeiitly In Sail Fran-
cisco.
Miss l.lnn i hi 1*1 cut'll Hie
sldfi mimed for a New York
* nllege: f t aid.I was maid of
honor anil Knhcria was flow-
er girl.
Preparation for the launching
gave the trio about as much ex-
citement a the actual cere-
mony All three who are employ-
ed at the Kaiser shipyards In
Oakland went on a shopping
spree prior to the main event,
When picture* were napped of
the launching Freddie was wear-)
ing a black wool gabardine > n-
soluble with white gloves, a
black -traw sailor and patent
accessories. She "tossed" a mink
coat over her shoulder. Her cor-
sage was two large orchid*.
As she stopped to the plat
form to swing the bottle of
champagne, she "seemed to have
dented till' bow” her sister
wrote 'The "splash" covered
them well. Sim wa- presented
with a silver service tray val-
ued al SRHl "Il was a relief t"
see the hip slip Into the wat
or," she wrote.
Preceding the night launching
Hie girl- w ere seated on a plat-1 green ai'i'e -ories
form and thousands watched the corsage
christening. An announcer told "It was the biggest event of
of Miss Linn's connection with j our lives." the three wrote of the
the Sweetwater schools and of [launching
her t»i bioilici-. David and
John being in serviie and the
three 'islet ill war dofell.-e
work She was handed a large
arm bouquet "f red i"-'pLuiis
which she ma muted to hold as
she christened the ship
The girl- were taken t" tl"'
.idle of the launching in a
Kaiser llmoiiscne They are dau-
ghters "f Mr and Mr
Linn of Nolan and nieces i
Mrs Sy Hi uni a!.-" of Nolan
The maid of honor wa- dress
ed In a light grey woo! ensem-
ble with a pink felt sailor and
pink arc - -erics and orchid cor-
sage, I let -i let'. Roberta Wore a
black I leaded silk crepe with
and orebiil
tc
the woods and surrendered.
They surrendered not to |>a
tr.'ls, not to tank crew*, tv"
even to doughboys. They
surrendered to a very much
• iii'pri-cd army nut ~e
She i- I lent Paula Krull
of Fitchburg. Mass, who
was riding by In a Jeep
when the Gorman.* ran out
She told them to climb on
fin* hood of the Jeep, and
Ushered them Into the prl-
oncr*' i age of the American
‘ibtli division.
Major Frank Gonzales <>f
New York commented
"Maybe the Jerries llkixl
her looks She * not bad at
all.”
pong
d hadmint
between 1
i tie . Mitude from
or Tlv cabinet i
that such an attitu
by end Britain a-
P« ">l»le.
rtie high i.iiikiieg Riilish
re went on lo explain Hi.il
if l.ei "uni iiuhi'ti y 's i lo-nii-
i.d production is permitted
in flic lutioe, il might lie en-
tiei-ly pnssilde that a new
w i apiili eollld I"' ilex eloped
lo wipe out England oxer-
night.
It i- well-known that Hitler
: and the high command have |
'vixen such plan-), the highest
priority.
At tlie -aa.o time, eyklencc
c - it huies ti> mount in England
a- well as in central liberated
j ihjit ••Mon*i%** \vi*ll*or*
Mt*il
Say Gen. Wolff
Succeeds Marshal
Kcsselnng As CO
IjONDON
.'HZ' :
I’n
Hin
Iwo Hero Is Dead
TO It list Tl XslON-
poke, two Ameri-
< ided into one
ng force — were
into Germany.
First and Third
o', tieing at a mile-
■; tin He-sian cap-
Pia miles from
’ armored out-
armie- were
mile- south and
Ka el, and rolling
t no German op-
First Army
.giixvay city of
t night,' and
tward six and
i take another
0 the first 20t
-■ t of Berlin.
' ration'* rip-roar-
a liih " inorcd division
i mining neck and neck
i an toe Kassel. The
i.oo i ido.z general's men
o- - d i iglit mile* In this
ii'itnii: lighting to reach
Hi- I iii noi-l.cip/ig super-
in hw.i.x. oid they have roll-
>.l , - o Hiat load to within
'.’In noli * of Berlin.
•t demoralized
falling into the
* j tli*’ Amoricans.
itrymen In the
.nisi 10 miles to
■ :■< et. of the Rhine
Marshal
Rhine bridgehead
I- ti..n .’Ti miles long.
are thrusting
• new C...'n-
blackout pre-
, i the main arm-
Hritish Second
•ward through
knocked in the
. :i the northern
‘a.hi dispatches say
e is going ahead with
at: ; Tliere ap-
■ doubt ri'i>orts
are in the city
— mile* east of
d pi miles from
■ih fn,m an Ameri-
■-j*indent, Her-
: tl). Blue Network,
German radio a*
irniored sjiear-
:, bed the town of
e-t of Hann-
1 miles from
• • .a report Is un-
ci i on the
\t I i*t t.t.iMHi prisoner*
Hided up liy The
I atm alone yesterday,
i a- i Patton's Third ar-
- at not ex< n stop-
' ' ii ml up prlsonrrs.
t ■ 'itoiit ai my '* sudden
a northward. after
nth low .11 d V III i o-
. - • tx ha* fhroxx«i
oi* i omldetrly off
Housewife Sees OPA Ji 5 Commodities
Nation Sees 12 Pet. Cut In Meat Supplies
ho
f,
Hi'ginning next Sunday, tlie
point Value* ol pork, laid,
margarine, i anned pea* and
liinned asparugiis all lake a
ill tup iipwiied — which will
la-t through the month oi
tpitl Pea* and .I'paea ni*
points are to mg lioosled tu -
eailse of a man power short-
age in the can mile*
iloxxi >• r tlie ()F*A ha* a eon
enli d to have
. - plan to build
Ihicbuhc of a
litjis are intend-
t tlie imst war
(or Byrnes says
i- taken after
conferred with
Navy Forrestal,
King and the
11 that Forrestal
he navy Is obvl-
by the slash,
told new; men
to have parts of
ogram revived,
etarv a erts:
"Utlnue to build
eflpcting the ex-
it \\\ tin TitE \ 11 it
GALVESTON fl l’i A te
Britt ! port from Halve -ton today »liox\ -
if; that the I’nlvefslty of Toxa*
| Medical School has eared for
s-1 Ml" eharlty patients from Bit
Texa- counties during 104-1 —
through the John Scaly hospi-
tal.
of that number, 3M were
from Galveston and the remain-
der cutnc from all sections of the
state The number* do not in-
clude the 100,000 patients treat-
ed free of charge In the hospi-
tal s out-patient clinic.
I't. Xl
Ii
Re
Noting the recent 12 per cent
cut In civilian meat supplies tor
the second quarter of 10L". pri<"
administrator Bowles Dint nil
meat points may tie raised in
May and June.
Bowles says: " later in the
quarter, there is normally a
sharp seasonal decline in the jn >
durtion of meat. And that d-
crease will be felt first In Max
In off trial Washington, a di
pute between war mohlllzation
director James Byrnes ami Uis
■■It is OonfPTT-
■ 1 ■ iders tmluy on
otitaitiing tiassago
ig manpower Mil,
rati< leader At-
nr) Senator Elliert
tah to the White
after he returned
•i from a four-day
• • i me at Hyde Park.
1 i ■ * : i nt most of hi*
fr Hyde Park clearing tin,
t-d taper xx*ruk and
t** Franklin D>
bev il"' LWLVLb Page l ^
igt
_ _ A
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 76, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1945, newspaper, March 29, 1945; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth710403/m1/1/?rotate=180: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.