The Taft Tribune (Taft, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1945 Page: 2 of 8
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KJ?
»Am TWO
THE TAFT TRIBUNE,
lb
'-WIllCiY MEWS AHMYilS-
Report German Peace Bids as
Allies Press Attacks on Reich;'
Act to Assure Civilian Supply
-------- —Retsaaed by Wart*ra Keivrpeprr Union
JrtHXaB-* KMC’ WK*» »ei»»*** are >»}»»« in Uu>m «*•<*». l*r« nr* tka*« «(
WeiiSere ti«Ms'« H»| Molvtlt ««I« riel awtuertly ,1 tE,,, atvigeyei.i
SlJt.OOHE.
SPtEHAi)
Gm&NY
S9
%
sufft-z !
Indicating the modern network of roods over which the Germans have
been moving military supplies east of the Rhine, this aerial photo shows
**• Adolf Hitler snperhigfcway near V. S, 1st army bridgehead. Map out-
Mbs* extensive road system In territory.
EUROPE:
Rebuff Nazis
FOOD:
Probe Supply
Following hard upon War Mobili-
ze? Byrnes' formation of a special
group to review ali
demands for non-
military exports to
protect essential ci-
vilian supplies in
this country, senate
Amid a Surry of talk that high
German groups had sounded the
U. S. and Britain out on peace pos-
sibilities, Allied armies maintained
their heavy pressure against Nazi
lines in both the east and west.
According to one report, Gen.
Dwight Eisenhower rebuffed Fieid ,
Marshal von Rundstedt's approach | war investigating
for an armistice, under which the 1 committee an-
latter offered to pull German nounced the conduct
armies beyond the Rhine, where j of an inquiry into
they have been forced, and disarm ; the food situation
them. ; currently marked
Published in Sweden's Svenska by the growing
Daghladet, the other report dealt | scarcity of meat. •>»">«• F. »»«•»
with German overtures to a British i Revelation of the senate commit-
esfffeiaJ for an armistice for present- j tee's probe followed demands of mid-
3cg the Reich as a bulwark against [ western senators for rectification of
the "Bolshevik menace." To include i government food policies, which,
the retention of the Nazis in office j they declared, discouraged fatten-
and the evacuation of occupied ter- j big of cattle because of failure to
ritory, the offer also was flatly re- • bring prices and feed costs in line
Jected, it was said. j with production, and failed to place
Even as the reports came through, ' agriculture on a par with war in-
Germany rocked under the tremor j dustry.
of continued heavy aerial assaults, j Just before the congressional
YALTA:
Test Agreement
First put to the test in Poland,
the Big Three’s Yalta agreement to
act jointly in the settlement at trou-
bled political affairs of countries
was tabbed for a second trial in the
ease-of Romania, where the Hades-
c:j government reportedly had been
forced out by Moscow and replaced
by a communist-dominated regime.
At the time the Radescu govern-
ment left office, with Radescu him-
self seeking sanctuary in the British
embassy in Bucharest because of
fear of communist assassination, the
Russians contended that the regime
had failed to take proper action
against pro-fascist elements still
present in the country and threat-
ening the Hed army’s supply lines.
Called at the instance of the U 5.,
the Big Three parley on Romania
could look to its settlement of the
Polish profile n as a precedent,
with democratic elements being
brought into a new regime along
with the communists to furnish a
more representative pattern of gov
ernment.
.FARM LABOR:
At Low
With total farm employment esti-
mated at 8.400,000 persons, farm op-
erators will start the important
spring planting season with the low-
est seasonal level of workers in 21
years, the'U. S. department of agri-
culture reported.
Of the 8.400,000 persons, US DA
reported, 6,804,000 are family mem-
bers, of whom a great number are
women or elder folk. Because of the
presence of the latter, it was said,
total operating efficiency ha.-, been
cut somewhat since the advancing
years have impaired the efforts of
many of the older people.
As the spring planting season ap-
proached. with excessive moisture
retarding work in many sections,
farmers were promised some man-
power relief by the employment of
30,000 German war prisoners during
the year. Despite the worker short-
age, farmers are being asked to
match 1944's record production.
Washington Di9eSv
World Monetary Plans
Seen as Boon to Trade
Funds Would Help Restore Production and
Stimulate Exchange of Goods in
Postwar Era. Treasury Says.
By BAUKIIAGE
/Veit* Aimly.il and Commentator.
on how the money
mty wd*
credit
« .MI Service, Union Trust Building
Washington, D. C.
I have just come from a luncheon
of creamed chicken and rice, green
salad and trimmings. The food was
not. however, the interesting part of
the affair. The "food for thought"
that went with it, was. And so was
the setting. We were served from 8
large oval table in the conference
room of the United States treas-
ury, The hosts were Secretary of
the Treasury Henry Morgenthau and
a squad of his fiscal experts.
The subject of the conversation
was the same one which was dis-
cussed at many of the more than
200 conferences which took place J bear two.thll.da * „ n«.
around that same table and which wouW dfl under the inter-
led un to the Bretton Woods mono- 'tank. ft ifl pointed out by
eas&r .-iK—*—w
rklPhi/fipr
j promotion in baseball
Baseball is dt-c-'aretl to need •
"promotion roan" hr Larry Mae-
Fhail and others We second the
motion. Many ';hM wouM
raise baseball to the housei-mul os
teem enjoyed, say. by movies ra
dio, etc., are neglecicri
For Instance, is baseball f:'r i;f'
hind the time in putting emphasis on
keeping it clean? Isn't baseball los-
ing its appeal by insisting that the
athletes conduct themselves with
good taste? Isn’t scandal essential
today to popular appeal.’
A movie star gets into a series «f
disgraceful episodes and Is featured i
anew in heroic war rotes! Another j
screen hero sounds off publicly in a
night club on his private lave life j
and hi* Ian mail doubles! A young
lady become* an oieriilght rage "»«ss|H
through a particular catlike person- j
ftiity! i Me.** developed
--•*— * iiU 4 j a i o u ri U-r-imltJtt.wpfn
Isn’t it possible that t! e n ob would : anlvcthatbnnpqridMi
tear down the baseball park gates to j 28^.
led up to the Bretton Woods mono
tary conference last July Today
that same subject is before Con-
gress in the form of pending legisla-
tion which would authorize Ameri-
can participation in an international
bank of reconstruction and develop-
ment and an international monetary
fund.
Upon the passage of this legisla-
tion and the creation of the bank
and fund, the master-minds on
money matters tell me, depends
the success of any world security
be handled.
Relief far U. S.
Bankers’ Risks
One of the chief arguments as to
the direct value of the program for
the United Slates is this: it is esti-
mated that in the postwar pe-
riod. the United States bankers will
have to do the bulk of the world
lending. Estimated on the amount
we did after the last war, perhaps
as much as 90 per cent. Rather
than have the lenders risk the loss
as they did last time, it would be bet-
ter to have the government and the
governments of the rest <of !the «- 7{ "a southpaw who had
lions bear two-thirds of the risk. irj!iictmen„ for]
cradle snatching? Wouldn't the at- •
tendance be trebled by the appear |
Rdl
*u. piesnuiH
j. Curtate liftn
f'ftihlflp L.. to "
BfilLSni
Ildt iutuu isuiuv. ta - -- ---
treasury officials that not only will
most of the money be borrowed
from private bankers in this coun-
try for the next five or ten years
(since we have most of the money to
loan) but most of it wll likewise be
spent here since we have most of the
thing* foreign countries need.
There are two chief reasons why-
such an international financial pro
gram will be to the disadvantage of
the private banker although by no
means all bankers oppose it. One
.vi .tv«vjF «v*.ur j ~wiyic utc wiigirssiunai
mimed at. Nazi industrial installs- ; storm broke, Byrnes proclaimed the
’ions, communication lines feeding organization of a special group to
■___________________, ____determine that Europe's demands
™ —' “ - ~ - — * I | for relief and rehabilitation would
not interfere with U. S civilian
Towa Buster’ Latest Bomb
Te Brittain’s famed "blockbust-
er’’ and "earthquake” bombs has
been added another, the 11-ton
“town buster,” developed to
penetrate to the mdarground fac-
tories the German* established to
avoid bombardment.
Carried by Britain’s foor-en-
gtoed Lancasters, the "town
buster” measures SS44 feet in
length and almost four feet in di-
ameter. Upon releasing the heavy
toad, the huge planes have
bounced up as high as MIS feet
from relief of the weight.
Packing a tremendous wallop
in Itself, the "town buster”
sappiemeate the six-ton “earth-
quake" bomb, which sank the
German battleship, Tirpitz, ami
penetrated (5-foot-thick concrete
roofs of U-boat pens.
their armies and troop concentra-
tions massed to meet Allied attacks
to both east and west.
uiKt-iicic ~ i - -1 u. o. civilian
needs, and even to review past
j commitments in the same light,
j Following Byrnes’ action, capital
circles buzzed with talk that the
, War Food administration, for one,
■ had approached him for help in al-
locating the shrinking food supply
■ dunng 1945, with prospects of from
20 to 23 per cent less meat, 10 to 15
j per ceat less vegetable oils and
| fats, and 10 per cent less sugar,
i Meanwhile, it was revealpd. !e>;d-
lease purchases in recent weeks
have been severely reduced be-
cause of the growing meat shortage.
Although the government has been
receiving larger allocations than for-
merly, it was pointed out, still the
drop in slaughtering has reduced the
volume available over last year, and
practically only military demands
are being satisfied.
I As a result, lurid-lease meat ton-
Butcher 01’ Dobbin
nage has been slashed almost 80
* per cent in the last two months, with
In the east, Russia grouped the | ^ ‘“f* “ne wfek. dow"
bulk of her manpower for the grand I „ . . ' eI?! rum last -v<Mr'
assault on Berlin, heavitv defended ! ^ 86 ct‘n" and
by an extended network of to 87 *’er
boxes, tank traps and infantry ob- | 4 '
Stacies, which could be flooded. j PACIFIC’
As the Russians built up their '
forces beyond the Oder for the >
smash on the German capital other
Red forces were on the move in
| Air Lashings
| With long range U S bombers
t based within flying distance of
j Japan as a result of the recent con-
| quest of outlying islands in bloody
I but valuable fighting, the enemy’s
great industrial cities have more
both Upper Silesia and Hungary, m
an effort to pry open the roads to
the rich industrial districts of
Czecholovakia and Austria, feeding
the Nazi wehrmacht. J and more been feeling the lash of
In the west, German war produc- j heavy bombardment,
tion was serioi.Uy threatened a* | Curried on even as General Mac-
*j ,Y and British armies cli-sed on 1 Arthur’s forces in the Philippines
both the Ruhr and Saar vaUevs. Not I tightened their grip on the sprawl-
only was the Ruhr menaced by the j Jag archipelago guarding the inner
U. S. 9th and British 2nd armies
tram the west, but Lt. Gen. Court-
ney Hodges’ fi S. 1st moved up from
Its Remagen bridgehead to threaten
V from the south.
The V. S 3rd ami Tfh armies also
were sp-plyirg a vise on the Saar
valley, with the 3rd pressing in from
the north and eaat and the 2th
squeezing ahead from the couth.
China sea lane, and as begrimed
marines finished off a stubborn foe
on Iwo Jima. the B-29 raids on such
Jap centers as Tokyo, Nagoya and
Osaka are designed to cut down fac-
tory production and impair the flow
of supply to the enemy's armies.
Meanwhile, Genera! MacArthur’s
force* moved toward the climactic
battle with the hufk of the enemy
faking fuM advantage of their ex- j cornered on northeastern Luzon,
tensive road system and short ; and additional American landing*
soiPPiy tines, the Germans fought [ to the south secured the sea pas-
VteteBJlrty to hold both aH-iitmportant sage through the Philippines tc
«»«»»• i Manila.
SERVE G.L
AH over Europe the transportation
corps .military railway services are
Stealing SJ.iXW ton* » month tsS
meat*, trash vegetables and dairy
jsrodycts—SKijraJly Suriaging • ’fillets
to his {whole" to G.L Joe. Keefer
cars make it pcesMe to deliver
Kiwd iomi in good conditim,
ffeatta before the InvatHm, at
wwsttos fcgiote in dlffentot p#s*t® <rf
.Kfig.tass4, mm at the railway .shop
ItottsSions tobwed to connnict th*
swk'x atm fty-rai prefabricated sea-
\Hon» smbs? ovwr fwwn stir RtuVtai.
CRIME
Release of tlse FBI’s annual
crime report* bulletin for 1M4
refletta a general upward trend
to crime during the year. Direc-
tor J. Edgar Hoover said. He
added that arrests of boys arid
girts 17 year* of age totaled
more than for any other group.
Arrests of bays under 18 were
M.S per cent greater to 1944 than
to MMl. the last peacetime year,
land arrests ti girl* under a
allowed a 134 per cent gain over
the MOW period.
Already evident before hinwiry 3,
when nice trucks were closed, there has
been u decided rise in the tale of dres-ed
horse carcasses us the meat situation
grates increasingly critical, packers re-
vealed.
Although sold for human eansurnp-
non in Milwaukee, it is.: Iloston, Muss.;
Cleveland, Ohio: Detroit, Mich., and
mme Vie Jersey cities, it is not per-
missible in Chicago. Ill, where, oddly
enough, sates to retailers have doubled
since the iteej famine.
In explaining the phenomenon of how
sales to retailers could double if the
latter could not resell the product to
consumers, one packers1 representative
declared that butchers didn't know
unethhf she buyers acre going to eat
the horse meat themselves or feed it to
their pets.
SHOES:
To Cut Output
With most of the cattle hide sched-
uled to meet greatly increased army
demands, allocation of leather for
production of civilian shoes during
April, May and June may be
trimmed down to about 10 to 15 per
.•e.-it of present allotments, further
iffecting the future supply at men’s
and children’s footwear.
In an effort to meet the overall
civilian requirement of 350.000.000
shoes for the year, it was said, gov-
ernment. officials are hoping to in-
crease the production of fabric foot-
wear. despite the tight situaiion in
worsted materials needed. Against
'he 100,000,000 fabric shoes manu-
factured last year, 30.000.00U more
may be produced in 1945.
Beyond the postponement of the
validation of the next shoe stamp
totil sometime next summer instead
if May 1 as originally scheduled,
to change in footwear rationing is
contemplated as a result of the new
cattle hide nllocatkm, OPA said.
HOLLYWOOD STRIKE:
{- om pi ex Scenari o
Closure of American movie houses
was threatened as the Internationa!
Alliance of Theatrical Stage Km
ployees. A FI.,, considered exertion
-f pressure on picture producers
n its fight to obtain recognition as
bargaining agent for some 70 studio
set decorators in Hollywood.
In vying for control of the 70
workers, the IATSE bucked mother
AFL affiliate, the painters' union,
which had been accepted as the ertv
ployees’ bargaining agent by the
War Labor board.
Standing in the middle of the en-
tanglement were the picture pro-
ducers themselves, what with the
IATSE not only threatening to pull
its workers out of the Hollywood
studios but also to stop the showing
of movies throughout the country,
and the rival painters’ union already
on strike because of the picture pro-
ducers hesitancy in recognizing
their group.
WORLD AGRICULTURE
Already accepted by 18 countries,
adoption of the constitution of the
Food and Agriculture organization
of the United Nation* neared.
The purposes of FAO are to im-
prove agricultural production andl
distribution, raise the level* of nu-
trition and standard* of living, and
wetter uie conditions of rural popu-
latlon*. An important part of the
work of FAO will be to aid nations
to adapting their agriculture to
chaofjia* world eosmlMian*.
\p «•, t—. «,-r
Francisco will control the world fiscal policy
Aim to Stop
Economic Warfare
The reason for that statement,
boiled down to its essence is this:
you can’t stop international warfare
unless you stop economic war-
fare.
Economic warfare in this sense
means international trade practices
not in the common good—spe-
cifically some of the practices in-
dulged in by nations competing for
foreign trade before and after the
grand smash of ’29.
How is this warfare to be re
strained?
Quid pro quo, of course. In the
vicious fight for trade after the
war a large number of nations will
have three strikes on them to start.
They are wrecked, some physically
and a great many more financial-
arid not the leading private inter
national bankers who had the con-
trol before. The second is lhai in
the long run, as sponsors of the plan
admit, it will lower interest rates
Those two reasons are r.ot stressed
by the vocal opponents of the
measure before members <-f .
gres*. Many .-'imr object on?, sop <•
highly technical, arc set forth The
main suggestion tn ’he report of a
committee of the American Bankers
association is that because of un
settled political conditions through-
: out the world, any action ought to
be tiostponed until tec.-c conditH n:
I stabilize. They say that the ntllojis
: should agree to ccrtaift changes u
i the program before is presemi ■
to the cotigre»-
iforne of the chat :.vs suggested art
prompted by honest Conviction.
tome are due. according to treasury
leilUilUlT W” ih-um:" "rr-..... I
ance of a shortstop who had divorced j
two wsves and was romping around j
the gay spots with a new sweety’
__•
Maybe the failing ofT in baseball
attendance last year was due to the*
fact no club carried enough gag men
to flood the press with wisecracks
which the bait players thought up in
the swankiest bars in town?
_____ * _ ____
We pause for a reply,
afraid »t will get it.
Another j->b :■
j might taikie would be :■
j i,n.i,b-ic:c f,n fonH r. ‘
Eating ha* betorr
rportsr.g project
anyhow. Why n-
dog1'
__* __
Thousst dt u rid flock tc tile ball
park upon reading a newly cont|™Mte
advi-i tisement
I RAVKFIT. r I ns
4 Ml
MM INNINGS III-
HAM HALL
AT POLO GROLMtS riiri \ \
2 V M.
And car. you imagine how tills
would ran* attendance’ \ MNQ
WJCH. A BAG OF PFAN’l’T". AN1)
ly. politically, economically. Those ; officials, to a misinterpretation of th*
which will emerge less affected by
he war scourge, like the United
States, will be equally affected if
they hove nobody with money or
credit enough to buy their goods
Therefore in exchange tor an
agreement to abide by certain fair
practices as ue might call them,
and contributions in cash or its
equivalent, under 4he Bretton Woods
agreement a nation would receive
membership in an international
bank which would guarantee pri-
vate loans—make some direct—for
the purpose of reconstruction and
development so they can build fac-
tories and do other things necessary
to create goods to sell and earn
money to buy. These loans would
be loans in which the risk is too
great for a private institution to
take, and which if they were nude
and bonds offered to the public the
public wouldn't touch. Fiut guaran-
teed by the international bank over
a long turn, private bankers would
lend the money and the public, with
the word of 44 nations behind the
bonds, would hardly be skittish,
The monetary fund would be
created for the purpose of stabiliz-
ing e .-change, and facilitating fhe
growi:i of interiiatiomS trade The
members would agree to tie their
exchange to lhe gold standard and
not change it unless the nuernors 1 exists
and direfljtas of the fund ap-
prove This would stop, among other
things, what amounts to mi- us-
ing hidden tariffs on foreign go< els
b.V changing the rates of exchange
of a country's currency in terms of
other nation's currency, in their
mud efforts to export goods at any
price and get credits abroad, the
Germans bad all sorts of different
kinds of marks that had one value
here and another there.
As to the administration of the
bank and fund, a very careful ! failedl
program There is a group in the
United States v. high say* that the
; United St.-ter will come out of the
little end of the horn under the ar
i rangen er.t and that the British told
us a bill of goods There is a grotif
in England which says that Brit
i ain will come out of the little end
of the horn and that the United
States sold their representative* a
bill of goods
That is one thing which, quite
aside from the arguments pro and
con on the various disputed parts of
the prog I am. demonstrate s that is
must be- pretty good.
* * *
Some weeks ago in this column 1 !
tried to explain "why Germany
came back" after its defeats ii
France.
May I be permitted to exploit
why the Nazis couldn't come back
for the second timet
Once agaw v. e have to Cong filer
not toe military organization uf Ger
many gone but the civilian or
Realization as well Nazi discipline,
because it was built on an entirely
anti-human foundation, Anally ml
lapsed. It was a discipline of fit (|e.
cc/t, (J.) force Both were bound tc
fail in the end because it faded
to take into consideration one thing
winch the Nazis refuse to admit
the humeri soul,
Nu/iisrn With threats, brute force
mid an orgaiiizatiiij which could
! out the threats and exercise
’■he force was effective up to a cer.
tain point Then .if failed.
; Its strength was in bending the
iwi-i as 1 tried to point out in try
earlier analysis. Youth worshipped
the false god of Naziism as long „
ils clay feet could be concealed
| V uth knew other god But the
i r"on'*nt the day feet crumbled in
the defeat of its armies U.e force
A DOUBLE
CENTS."
HEAHER
FUR 75
Promotion
That's the
idea* On
with it, hoys!
And 1 i,
boot name
orchcsiras arid d«3.r;cin^;
under to**
stands when a
game goes
t* ♦ ■»
LIVESTOCK I
if Cuts mi
... If yotTrt a
a n ii kt-pftv Dr, ftsrtflft
Oil on hand in ftol
for emergency tm
veterinarian atoeti
tell you wtuii im«
vlerful help If is fes
natural heali£$ i
minor cult, femm
collar tore#,
flnh »wuti(}*. U»#'
mttd.Ots taltbyji
The GROVE U: <
/; ,! *t *bvi>,,» *
THE KIDS’ DEFENSE
'After meditating un recent lapse* ■
bn the part of the young folks • i
Low moral standard, we're above, |
Oor honesty’* 4rar lilac,
it comes from observation of
The things our elders do!
The fine example that they vet
tWe see it everywhere. —
R’. grabbing every chasiee In get
It easy here and there!
f)ur ethics they an kept aluif
By merely looking at
Our elders seeking something soil.
And waxing rather Lit
We see the grownups merely wink
At virtue drhicn low,
And when we feel out- morals sink
This helps us, don’t you |»«w!
The lawyers who boast ethics tall
Tet lor a fancy tee
Hsii work for any crook at all.
And strii e to set him free.
Those politicians shrewd and deft-
I lie gimme-gimme crew—
fiiose fixers to the right and left—
They help the kids, they do!!
Cold Pnpaiatism
full of grease-bail j
Those movie*
guys—
The slickers glorified. . , .
The happy ending as it trie*
To justify a smdi . ,
Die spotlight for the cheap "foui
balls,"
The ponkeros and heel, . . .
Oh, how they help toe kiddies all
To .keep an eTen keel!!'
and fund, a very careful I railed) youth deserted
sr s —r“
rtsponsitailily each country would gaulelter the fear
have. The figure would be based on j tration camp fear of Th C0"mi’
the trade of a nation over a certain ; squad, began ol,d« , ,rin*
pu-si period with some oilier modi. The
flea lion* For instance, the Untied drafted by Himmler) iL'T
afTa ,0when or
For
Slates would assume roughly one-
third of the financial responsi-
bility and have one-third of the votes
dered,h.d Regulation, were evaded
Taxes went unpaid*
BA BBS • * a by Baukhage
One reason why Stalin can’t leave , In spite of the ,
Russia to meet even the wort£ doctors, denti..,, u,e hreitlT/T*
Y 1 nation, according to QWt. ^
bigwigs was revealed at toe Yall*
conference—he makes at! tii*- mili-
tary decisions himself.
The Japanese government has
token over all toe airplane factories,
giving the Jap industrialists who
want peace another reminder that
Itaff isn’t much profit in war.
serious decline." Probably" jo,,
case of supply and demand.
General De
France need,
Gaulla say* th,j
babies’* to the n‘4 TZrt't
may not get K mfuton J1* *, *»
be "fine’’-Mk their mottS d‘
A big New York department!
!1T* ‘*"ow *P«toliz.ng to diamond
s«ues. We remember away back
when no shoppers ever dreamed of
getting up early to get bargain, m
pwcloiis ii tones.
Arid, believe it or not, money |,
to free today that we a group
dLT !W V*'* ilw>c#* «w« another
markerf'0^ *** * 20',:!,irB® *so«*
Sww " ,0 **•«•■«» too
Awai-fc-hi
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Richards, Henry C. The Taft Tribune (Taft, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1945, newspaper, March 29, 1945; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth712069/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Taft Public Library.