The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 225, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 23, 1945 Page: 4 of 8
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6
e
SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1945.
Want-Ad Servite—Call 2 S151
Want-Ad Service—Call 2-5151
THE FORT WORTH PRESS
Blood and Guts!
1 Demolishing a Bogey
. SIMMS
DIAL 2-5151
TELErMONE EXCHANGE
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resident,s
Washington Calling Chnocor tORphacsxcke.
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Sen.
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close their Ministry of War In-
With the 36 billion board feet of
I
say
Service Section, The Fort Worth Press
PAGE 3
OPPONENTS of postwar
U sal military training c
univer-
Navy continue to insist military
Letters
the
not
if
32 3338388333333
I
finished.
secrated ground
we get a full carload they will be 1936. The first World War caused
Today's Poem
to catch a train or had
000.
fallen from one. He had
the
After two years of op-
J. H. Kultgen, OPA dis-! league to operate in 1946,'
trict director, has issued
a statement
Pan-Americana
walls, ceiling and shelves
Lena Pope Home,
board as a representative
I
P
ill
"k
N
4:30 a. m. Thursday. Sev-
eral cases of expensive
Japan Sea, and to Japan proper is so
short that Admiral Nimitz and General
man but Selective Service says
“very few” other complaints have
been made.
■OU has a better-than-
average squad promised
President will have to do some
tall persuading. Sen. O'Mahoney
likes to be his own boss, likes his
present job, fails thus far to be-
lieve cabinet rank would compen-
sate him for what he would have
tunities for knockout blows.
Meanwhile, it is good news that Gen-
ment says that full time
employe of OPA may for
one year after leaving
OPA appear before any
Congress who examine the prac-
tices and personnel of owi are
thus accused of slaughtering their
The only European countries
with suicide rates lower than that
been cared for each day
in the past year, is plan-
N one of his earlier revelations
of his own politics, he said he
board against former em-
ployes appearing before
the boards in behalf of
Mr. Simms
countries as
America on
argument of OWI Director Davis
for continuation of OWI service
outside Pacific war zone. Mr. Da-
vis cited British propaganda ex-
penditures to support his case.
mill shavings were produced; commer-
cial uses for this formerly waste pro-
duct are increasing.
• •
beautiful letters.
He had been a member of the
American Labor Party in New
York which has since become the
temporary disguise of the Com-
munist movement and which never
over
and
TIN CANS NEEDED
AS MUCH AS EVER
Editor, The Press:
PECLER
. OWI Infested
With Communist
Propagandists
Denison broke or sprain-
ed his ankle in a false-
alarm dash for the train
here. His overseas service
left him unscratched.
South in the postwar pe-
riod or near future.
and please bear in mind that the
War Production Board has made
it a criminal offense which may
be punished by heavy fine for
failure to save tin cans.
If you have an accumulation of
•A
10
swerved to avoid bitting a
Negro boy who had fallen
from his bicycle in the
path of the bus.
There’s no other girl but Hazel
and no other makes such hay.
SHORTAGES FACING EUROPE
By Science Service
The next collection for tin cans of the United States in that year
will be September 12, at which were the Netherlands, with a rate
‘E
3 3232533
I’m going back to Hazel where
Hasel makes the hay;
I’m tired of just dreaming.
I’m full up on this seeming,
I must see her eyes a gleaming
As I help her make the hay.
those who have deliberately killed
themselves.
If the effect of war is the same
European Comnmunists whose own
excesses all over Europe created
Fascism as the reaction and who
Romania, 10:5; Norway, 6.3; Eire.
3.3; and Italy, 7.9. It is believed
that the low rate in Eire and Italy
may be accounted for by the large
Catholic population; the Catholic
teachinga are very strong with re-
gard to suicide and burial in con-
eral Stilwell is back in the Far East as
a field commandeg. He is a great leader
of men, a fine strategist, and an expert
of long experience in Oriental warfare.
The Japs have reason to fear him.
i
i
to create a Poland in opposition to the
Soviet Union.”
But that the Polish government, offi-
cially recognized by virtually all the Al-
lies except Russia, should continue to
claim its territory against Soviet seizure
is not remarkable. It has better creden-
tials than the Red puppet regime in
Warsaw. We can only hope this unhappy
conflict will end with a new and repre-
sentative provisional government as pro-
vided in the Yalta Big Three agreement.
■.
. S
whose body was found
near the TAP Railroad
"Tis haying time with Hazel and
Hazel’s making hay:
I know that Hazel's dreaming,
That hazel eyes are gleaming,
That'Hasel's fairly beaming
With thoughts of making hay.
WIFE AND BOY—From Casablanca, Sgt. Joe W.
Hise Jr., wrote The Press for a photo of his
wife and their 11-mon th-old son, Jay Hise. of
3711 MoPherson. Sgt. Hise has been serving with
a communications squadron at Casablanca, and
in French West Africa, for the past 19 months.
Overseas service men may requi
service section by writing the
Editor of The Press. .
ning a post-war expan-
sion program to be car-
ried out on a 26-acre site
MAKING HAY
The hazelnuts are browning in
fence rows by the way
The goldenrod is blooming.
The bumblebees are booming,
'Tis surely not presuming
To think of making hay.
TIEARD from increasing number
Il of parents whose GI sons re-
main in Europe because of lack of
84
1
■ K I
,8
:35388
S^STXSiF"^ CAESGEaHon pueensepiera
The Fort Worth Press
A scarrrs-HOWARD NEWSPAPER
DON E. WEAVER
Editor and Publisher
Entered as second-class mail matter at the
Postotfice at Fort Worth, Texas, Oct. 3. 1921,
ud ler act of March 3. 1879.
(Starts on Page 1)
ground forces. Hodges once held
title of Chief of Infantry.
A A •
RST strategy of major labor
I leaders opposing federal indus-
trial relations bill: Try to per-
suade Chairman Murray (Demo-
crat, Montana) of Senate Educa-
and will go to the peni-
tentiary to start serving a
four-year maiming sen-
tence.
He made up his mind
when a surprise witness.
Miss Lou Dumas, 2616 S.
Jennings, testified that he
ELTON M. HYDER.
Chairman Tin Can Committee.
Wse A 3•
8358888 ■ 8 $ N8 ■ 5®
mE-A
(j2ee
hei ""08m.,2a
-y PHadsgssnmed
ITHHINGS are still popp-
l ing in the sports
world of Fort Worth and
within three weeks four
major announcements
1 have just about fixed it
identification. Detectives
Please save all of your cans
The GI musical circus
show, “Pin-Ups" and Pea-
nuts," brought here from
Camp Fannin, near Tyler,
leat photos for the
Command Photo
NTAVY’S tight blockade of Japan
I will tighten even more when
our planes from Okinawa strips
cut communications between Jap
home islands and Korea. Military
men caution, however, that block-
ade won't make Japs fold. But
blockade will make ground work
- easier.
Owned and published
daily (except Sunday)
by The Fort Worth
Press Company, Fifth
and Jones Sts., Fort
Worth. Texas.
. DR. ESCALANTE. POSSIBLE
PRESIDENTE DE VENEZUELA
CARACAS, Venezuela—La per-
spectiva de qua el doctor Didgenes
Escalante, actual Embajador de
Venezuela en Washington, sea
electo Presidente de la Republica
shipped.
Remember that if you fail to
save your cans you are doing the
same thing as striking on the
job. These cans are as much need-
ed as the other war materials, so
please do not go on strike and
waste cans.
soaked with kerosene that
had burned out with little
damage.
• • • ♦
Fifty residents of Mon-
ticello Addition filed suit
sell M. Wilder of Mayo Clinic,
speaking at the University of
i North Carolina research confer-
i ence, declared that poor food sup-
ply such as now exists in seme
parts of Europe causes infectious
diseases to be much more danger-
ou and deadly.
“Malaria became so virulent in
Greece when the people were sub-
jected to starvation that mortality
was terrifying,” he recalled. “Ma-
laria spread farther north into
Eastern Europe than it ever had
before in recent yeras, as if the
soil were fertilized by the misery
of the populations of Bulgaria,
Rumania and the Russian lands
beyond.”
Polish Trial In Moscow
Now that the one-sided Soviet “trial”
I of 16 kidnaped Polish underground
leaders is over, the public knows little
more than when it started.
Of the 16 accused of subversive activ-
ities behind Red Army lines, 12 were
given prison sentences of from four
months to 10 years, three were acquitted
and the trial of another postponed. Cer-
tainly the sentences are light if the men
are guilty of the worst crimes charged.
That .they were guilty of being Polish
patriots was proudly confessed. But that
they were guilty of terrorist activities
—of the kind all too common on the
part of both Russians and Poles in the
disputed territory—is not clear. The
chief defendant, Gen. -Okuliciki, com-
mander of the Polish Home Army, in
denying that he was guilty of any crime,
testified:
“I consider myself guilty of not giving
orders to hand over radios, guns and
ammunition to the Red Army . .. (and)
of forming the new political-military or-
ganization, of maintaining communica-
to hospitals, many more
to jaiP and added knives,
pistols and ice picks to
the police headquarters
callection. Others celebra-
ted with less violence,
with an estimated 10,000
at the Forest Park Zoo
animal show.
time we hope to have a big collec- of 8.1; England and Wales, 12.3;
tion. 1 - ---— - -
GERMANY'S SUICIDE
RATE DOUBLES U. S.
By MARJORIE VAN DE WATER
Science Service Psychology Writer
WASHINGTON. — If the Nazi
leaders killed themselves as some
reports indicate, they followed a
tendency that is much stronger
successful prosecution of the war.—
Gen. H. H. Arnold, commander, Army
Air Forces.
))
of restric-
About 8300 objectors are now
enrolled but none has been dis-
charged. Releases beginning in
August will be based on point
system similar to Army's.
• • •
are formation. That would weaken
First came
isauing from half dozen agencies;
over everchanging outlook for
materials and plant capacity; over
prices of materials; over redistri-
bution of labor; over continued
production of war materials.
had threatened to kill
her. The 26-year-old bru-
net sold her car to pay
his bond two weeks ago.
den W. Gilbreath, 30, be- 4
fore he was slain two erating on an accelerated
•round to friends houses
with a box of cigars. The
husband and father is
with the Army on Oki-
nawa.
Police gave tickets to
two dog owners when it
was discovered that their
pets had broken the dog
ordinance by breaking
into the poultry yard of
Clara Jones. Negro, 3801
Galvez, and killing 20
fryers, six hens and one
duck.
T TRUMAN wants
O’Mahoney to succeed
Secretary of Interior Ickes, the
F PRESIDEN’
RITISH indicate they may '
TIHE successful close of the Okinawa
I campaign and appointment of Gen-
eral Stilwell to command the U. S. 10th
Army should speed Pacific victory.
Conquest of Okinawa took much long-
er and cost more than anticipated. But
the achievement is vastly important. It
is inside the Jap belt. It provides air
and naval bases, and staging areas, for
Member o t Seripps-
Howard Newspaper
alliance. The united
Press, Newspaper En-
terprise assn.. Science
Service, and audit Bu-
reau of Circulations.
Gary Cooper, film star,
was here this week for a
ranch barbecue and per-
sonal appearance at the
Worth Theater in connec-
tion with his new picture.
“Along Came Jones.”
While here, he was made
an honorary Texas
Ranger.
in khaki. he wore no
is refused to
tracks. About 27, dressed Series E bonds. That' The petition states that
boosted Tarrant County's the defendants are build-
* • •
TA ATE for war's end? Some Con-
I gressional guessers say next
midsummer.
Selective Service Headquarters
plans to begin discharge of con-
identified as Communists those
who denounced the war against
Hitler as an imperialist campaign
of aggression until Hitler attacked
Stalin, but perceived it to be a
people's war next day.
Had the OWI been governed by
that declaration in its selection at
editors and other job-holders ever
since, he might have earned the
respect of Congress and the pub-
lie, although it does not neces-
sarily follow that, even so. Con-
gress should continue to meet his
own estimates “ of his need in
money.
But that standard or specifica-
tion was flouted from the very
start. The OWI has been infested
with domestic and foreiga Com-
munists who have called Commun-
ism truth. and its propaganda has
been consistently that of a polit-
ical wing of the American people,
or more properly the Red political
tip of the left wing, not the aver-
age or balanced belief of all the
people which is the system under
which all of us manage to get
along together.
If Davia had wanted to, he could
have had an objective, truthful
and informative service which
would have represented us to dis-
turbed peoples abroad in a man-
ner to arouse their envy and de-
sire. Instead, we are at beat a
flabby substitute for a Bolshevik
nation whose real initiation into
the pleasures and spiritual re-
strictions of statism is still around
some corner.
If, as the OWI is now howling;
an American soldier will die for
every thousand. pamphlets whicb.
because of congressional economy.
It will be unable to drop on the
Japanese, or some homesick serv-
ice man will be kept abroad an-
other week or month. then the ■
matter should be taken up with
Elmer Davia
, items.
Meantime, the second
half of the Panther Qty
league opens at La Grave
Field Sunday. Popular
Clothiers, formerly Worth
Clothiers, won the first
half race when a number .
of complications arose
which seemed too com-
plicated to unravel. Any-
how. the Clothiers were
in front.
3283550238 333 8388935225500
> amMenl. su
Ahn. V ■
dMh "T
L $.
he ‘will withdraw appeals
in four cases against him
many Senators and Congressmen
get passage in airplanes to fly all
over the place?” Answer so far:
Silence.
, )
Jgan
building restrictions of
the addition, and are de-
on the other, can ever really understand
each other well. Poland will be the test.
The little nations know this, and are
worried. They are painfully aware that
their future, individually and collectively,
is largely in the hands of Russia, Britain
and the United States. Not one of them
is satisfied with the veto powers of the
Big Five. They admit they yielded to
“this vicious principle,” as Australia’s
Foregin Minister Herbert Vere Evatt call-
ed it, but only because it was the price
they had to pay for unity. No veto, or
charter, and no charter no world organi-
zation.
A VERY important new book, we
H think, is "The Bogey of Economic
Maturity,” written by an economist
named George Terborgh and published
in Chicago by the Machinery and Allied
Products Institute.
It isn’t light summer reading. In fact,
it's hard going. But those who take the
pains to read it carefully will find it
thought-compelling and hope-inspiring.
TT is against this background that
1 United Nations envoys here view what
is going on in Europe. Relations among
the Big Five, but more especially the
Big Three, assume supreme importance.
Every straw in the wind la anxiously
watched for direction. Hence the enor-
mous interest in the case of the 16 Poles.
As for the trial itself, it was not a
trial as Western democracies understand
the term. To them, it was a dramatic,
well staged spectacle, for political pur-
poses. This purpose achieved, it came to
an abrupt end. Apparently, witnesses for
the defenses were not introduced. Bad
weather, it was announced, had grounded
the plane in which they were traveling.
To many here, the testimony carried
anything but conviction. The published
3 "confessions.” for the most part. seemed
more the admissions of Poles who were
loyal to Poland just as R-ssians love,
and are loyal to Russia. A • rently the
Russian judges were struck by this, too,
for the maximum sentence was 10 years.
• • •
A T British Foreign Minister Eden’s last
H press conference here, he spoke ear-
neatly on the subject of Poland and the
arrested leaden, then being held incom-
municado. He stressed the work of the
scientious objectors in August des-
pite demands that they be held ^of many months after the war is
TETROIT auto makers
• wringing their hands.
Government controls issued
Eight persons were in- F2 /
jured, one seriously, in a ESg
total to approximately ing houses of similar de-
said he was either trying 87.000,000. Goal is 88.900,- sign that do not meet
tion with London and of carrying out ’
propagandaag ant thm Soteulnior On From Okinawa
for July summer training
and there's the state ten-
I nis tourney which opens
_________ _ at Colonial next week
clients who have business and a few other odd
weeks, ago by his 25-year- war time schedule, TCU
old wife, was made at will return to the old two-
semester plan in Septem- ____________ „ ______
ber, 1946, according to' tions to local rationing
the latest general cats-
peVpiehPe tattee EPIDEMICS BRED BY ROOD
than to enforce it by criminal ac- .
tion.
Army in Pacific by 65-year-old
General MacArthur causes some
concern in Congressional quarters
about fighting future of young,
successful commanders who oper-,
ated in Europe.
Surprise greeted announcement
General ' Patton and his Third
Army would be kept in Europe as
an occupatisn groi.p, as will Gen-
eral Fafch’s Seventh.
Some capital quarters hope out-
standing officers from these and
other armies that fdught in Eu-
rope will get top-flight Pacific
assignments There are reports
that Patton’s crack staff may be
broken up, men used in higher
capacities than occupation duties.
General MacArthur will pick the
"big brass” to serve under him in
Jap campaign. That was assured
when the late President Roosevelt
Warning that epidemics have al-
ways been bred by wars. Dr. Rus-
*ed
3 ”
with the boards.
Former employes, set-
ting themselves up as
experts on OPA matters,
have, it is alleged, advis-
ed commercial companies
how to interpret OPA
regulations. The state-
about their future in a competi-
tive world* where mediocrity en-
joys no subsidy and the wages at
incompetence are failure, is a
suspicion which, though firmly re-
jected, nevertheless recurs.
That the Communists in ths
OWL including the European
but a most welcome one.
That, however, is no longer the point
—not if they are wise. What is needed
is a new start in the direction of better
Soviet - Polish relations. And the Rus-
sians, who are incomparably the stronger,
c can well afford to take the lead.
As for the other two members of the
Big Three on whose collaboration ao much
depends, the eyes of the little peoples
are on them. too. Poland ia their ally,'
the first to fight Hitler. and has never
wavered. If they abandoned her now,
the rest of the small nations will regard
it as a bad sign.
been dragged by
different as Britain and
the one hand, and Russia
nqcesidad de former una coaliciOn
con el Partido Demgcratico.
just purchased.
• • • up so Fort Worth will be
A historical footnote the sports capital of the
was provided when a Southwest if not the
young mother just out of
the hospital after having
her first baby, drove
approved General MacArthur's
conemana °axaounderorprendnt ■ Vsal military tra wng count .on c.—
Trunin tacked that Assignment. Srngras Mwnwhll. *X Aha SdOnCe
- Congressional recess probably i came tumbling off the boats st
' will start between July 10-15. last American porta bowling that they
! about two months. had been roughed up when the
truth was that they had been ask-
they are Communists, want the
American people to pay for their
propaganda and lend it the strong-
ly persuasive label of the Star
Spangled Banner, no confidential
comrade would deny.
In this situation, we are asked
to pay a considerable share of the
cost of converting to the Russian
form of government bewildered
and bedevilled millions of Euro-
peans who have just been deliver-
ed from one form of despotism
and might like the American way
for a change. As to whether we
have any legitimate mission to
save them, as the missionary
saves the heathen, there is not
complete agreement among our-
selves.
»I • • •
rNHERE is a fascinating ex-
l ample of the wiles of the Com-
munist propagandists of the OWI
in its own arguments in its own
behalf. These abusive texts put
forth the proposition that the typ-
ists and radio hecklers, the class-
MEMBERSHIP drives by veter-
IV1 ans organizations will start
soon. Among top items on Ameri-
can Legion National Committee
program in Indianapolis June 28 is
discussion of how to attract World
War II veterans to Legion. Rela- i
tively few veterans of current war
show desire to join old or new vet
nouncement of the Train-
ing Command football
team; then the 810,000
invitational open golf
tourney at Colonial. Now
Glen Garden has come up
with the announcement
of a 810,000 golf open in
February and the Ive
Hockey Assn., says the
new United States league
seems a cinch to bperate
and that Fort Worth will
be one of the eight clubs.
Glen Garden already I
haa financed the open,/
which will offer more
money than any tourney
on the Gold Tour between
Los Angeles and Miami.
Dates have been promised
between Corpus and New
Orleans. The Colonial
Open, in which only 20
invited pros and 10 picked
amateurs will be eligible,
is due the latter part of
May.
Other cities already in -
the hockey league are
Dallas, Omaha, Tulsa,
Kansas City, Minneapolis
and St. Paul. Neither
Louisville nor Milwaukee
have buildings but are
Mid to be scrambling for
same.
Meantime, it looks like
a cinch for the Texas
The coroner was inves-
tigating the case of an
unidentified Mexican
By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS
Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor
CAN FRANCISCO.—An amnesty for the
• 12 Polish underground leaders tried
and sentenced this week in Moscow, would
have an effect on this conference, and
possibly on its future, out of all propor-
underground and emphasized that the
missing men included nearly all the lead-
ing figures of the movement. They were.
____________________________ he Mid. of the type of men who should
MacArthur now have several new oppor- be consulted about the new Polish gov-
ernment as agreed on at Yalta.” p
Release of the Poles now would be
I hailed here as another straw in the wind,
NTEXT to Secretary of Com- - . . . .. ...
I merce Wallace, whose cabinet cans and do not want to wait for
job is well secured, the depart- the collection, dump them on the
ment he adeepstsgketztogbeire- i wnrehnusdumdhetsesnouhswaate in Germany as it generally in in
tal. Senators who aren't concerned ! Material Co. junk yard on East other countries. however, it is
about what Mr. Truman does with ■ Vickery about a block and a half* probable that the suicide rate is
1 east of South Main. As soon as lower there now than it was in
head-on collision of two
crowded city buses short-
ly after 8a.m. Thursday
at Ninth and Houston.
Bobbie Jean Edwards, Ne-
gro, IMS E. 12th. suf-
fered a cheat injury, cut
lower lip and loss of her
front teeth. The accident
occurred when one bus
By WESTBROOK PEGLER
(Copyright. 1945, King Features Syn.)
ryE OFFICE OF WAR INFOR-
I MATION. our first national
venture into propaganda. as such
and undisguised, ia now making
propaganda for itself with intent
to obtain from Congress more
money than ra--a
Congress is 5582 2
willing to ap- 47
propriate for A
its services. Ia * H
That the self- V I
less toilers in #8VN
censorship and 12 4 , mdfr
the enlightment Wh Er
Mr. Terborgh has dug up facts and fig-
ures which, in our opinion, demolish the
theory that the American economy has
outlived its dynamic, expansive youth.
Before the war that theory was hailed
as a profound new truth by people who
wanted to justify the New Deal policy
of continuous Government borrowing
and spending. It still has great vogue
among those who contend that deficit
spending must keep right on after the
war if this country is to have enough
production and enough jobs.
Mf. Terborgh, having searched, has
found no credible evidence to back up
the "stagnationist” belief that the econ-
omy is senile because of chronic over-
saving, reflecting inadequate opportu-
nity for private investment, and brought
on by the decline of population growth,
the passing of land frontier, the lack
of great new industries, and the alleged
growing importance of corporations’ de-
preciation reserves.
Our real problem, he contends, is not
the combatting of chronic stagnation
but the damping down of cyclical swings
so that booms and busts will not be dis-
astrous. That, he believes, calls for wise
Government fiscal and other policies,
but not for continuous’ Government
deficits.
This book probably won’t be one of
the six best sellers, but. we wish it
might. For we believe in the soundness
of its theme—that the American people
can go forward to greater, sounder
prosperity than they have ever known,
working, producing and supporting
themselves and their Government in-
stead of being supported by their Gov-
ernment.
We do not propose to ask for more i timber cut in the United States in 1943.
aircraft than an necessary for the about 15,000,000 tons of sawdust and
. ...... this week in 96th Dis-
2or a.gala.bond show.at trict Court to enforce
the Worth Hotel this building restrictions on
week, drew crowds to the houses erected by the _ ____________
tune of 8384,000 worth of, “7 Of Taylor A Todd, j where 200 children have of a client
Confidence of Small Nations
In Big Three Rests Largely
On Russian-Polish Trial Cases
own innocent sons and the sens of a
their neighbors for reasons of
petty politics.
This, I believe, is the only
group of sedentary government
employes on the home side who
have nominated themselves fer
medals as the authors of victories
in the field. Even the Red Cross
is more modest of achievements *
which, to the majority, will seem
more important by any compari-
son.
The score against the Office at
War Information is that from its
very beginning, it has favored the
theory that Communism is prefer-
able to Fascism and Hitlerism and
is a better antidote than Ameri-
canism. It has used in its work
tion to the act itself.
Never more than
now, as the delegates
prepare to leave for
home, has it been so
evident that the shape
of the whole post-war
world depends on the
Big Three; and what
happens to Poland and
to the Polish people
now and the next six
months will, go far to-
wards revealing their
intentions.
In conference circles
there is a good deal of
talk about this. People
are asking whether
the an-
ing for it for years.
Elmer Davis, the chief of the
bureau, is more distinguished by
a poll of white hair of shade. cut
and texture which casting direc-
tors favor for the role of the dis-
trict attorney than for any
achievements in journalism or
of the all-in-
formed in other
lands might be
primarily con-
c e r n e d with
their own gov-
ernment jobs
and w o r r ie d
tion and Labor Committee not to
hold hearings on it. That would '
keep proposal in cold storage.
* * • .to give up.
APPOINTMENT of 62-year-old1
H General Stilwell to head 10th
PEP. MARCANTONIO, (Ameri-
AV can-Labor, New York) says he
is preparing to expose an OPA
situation which will be "more
shocking than anything to date.”
en 1946, parece haber cobrado vi-
Goodbye, my dears. I’m leaving, gor con el anuncio de que el par-
No use to keep her grieving, tido de oposicin, "Accin Demo-
I must keep that girl believing, I critics,” no podr presentar un
I must help her make the hay. candidate propio, sino que tendr
FRED HUSTED.
Jacksboro, Texas.
fms. 5
6EMegg**
800 am
gL^^w*** -2aeMBE
Saturday. June 33 1945
SUBSCEIPTION BATHS
By earrier per week. 15c. or 65C per month.
Sng. opy at newsstands and from newzboys,
fa- By mail in Texas $6.00 per year, $10.20 per
year elsewhere.
“Give Light and the People ,
Wiu bind Their Own Way"
WE ARE still collecting tin i in Europe than it is in the United
cans. I just received an ur-; States. ...
-i =ama2 az==z
they will be needed for a period I double the rate for the Mme year countries
in this country, 14.3. 1 . ,
EMrdony‘larththemaingust.mte tried the next big push. The distance from
' our new bases to the China Coast, the
. • • •
The Will Rogers War
Training Committee was
officially dissolved at a
dinner meeting in honor
of the group in Virginia
Lodge. Local educators
and war plant officials
praised the work of the
committee. The: school
closed this month.
until war is over. Veterans of
Foreign Wars has protested re-
lease of C. O.’s to President Tru-
a drop in the German suicide rate.
From a rate of 231 per 100.000
in 1913, it dropped to only 15.3 in
1918.
The U. S. suicide rste has
dropped in the present war to 10.2
in 1943. the latest available Cen-
sus Bureau figure.
carrying out terror, espionage, and acts
of diversion . . . This is a political trial.
... You accuse the Home Army. . . .
The Polish people.”
The Soviet prosecutor said: “Of
course the four principals did not kill
anyone. But they had instructions from
the emigre government to carry out ter-
ror and diversion in the Red Army's
3 98280
A 9282502
only to have him marry a p,2333
blond upon his release. 1 A /3,9
NKILITARY high command ts groups. Battlerveterans may be
M expected to oppose Stewart- more inclined to join than ahort-
Maybank Bill which would give t term soidiers., .
transportation; "How can so
__ . An attempt to burn the tracting from value and
train, they Mid. “Y" package store, oner- appearance of other prop-
* * * ated west of Fort Worth rty in Monticello.
News that some Fort on Highway 81 by Gor-
Worth members of the - — — - - -
86th Division was in Fort
Worth aboard a troop
train, first combat unit
to return from Europe,
brought families and
fziends trying to find kin whisky had been removed ,
on the train, < from the place. Police 1 8-
Pfc. Guy Combs of were holding an arson A _
suspect ! Celebration of Emanci-
Orficers found the store wtitn NPaoesbyent "or
uralle Aailine anH ehelem S’
———————————————————— angling movie distortioners and
the rest of the cabinet have gone training will be essential to Amer- pamphleteers of thia mysterlous
to bat for the New Yorker. j ican defense. ______ bureau have been saving the Uvea
of American fighting men by their
courageous labors here in New
York and Washington, and that to
the extent that its payrolls are
reduced, Americans will die need-
lessly on foreign fields.
Those members of the Americas
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Weaver, Don E. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 225, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 23, 1945, newspaper, June 23, 1945; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538042/m1/4/?q=lumber+does+its+stuff: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.