The Alto Herald (Alto, Tex.), No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 24, 1951 Page: 2 of 12
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:CANN)NG THE WEEKS NE\--S
o/ Sireef ond ^
Mac Urges Action Against China:
Farm Land Prices at Record Peak
MAN WITH A MtSSION—A-
age home-towner. fie emot:cna'.
return of Gen. Doughs MacAr: - .
siderable sober reasoning as
cerning the cause and results :
Stripped of the superftcial.
man with a burning m:?s.^n—
successful conclusion. H'.sobje
administration, except by th
i'
"4.*.*;'
Before the Senate
.!ffjj/r .sfr; ?..'r </'/./
GfM. Afjc-
/or J M<t<' fj!/
<7^,7 <?ir OM
7/jr /M/<wowy tvj! J /tvo-
ou
Ay wjMy
rs.s.'f-
ev^r rr^s;.-.er: Tr-"H- s auth^r-
g&-tt ity to remove him. and he ad-
yi... , * m:itei he had expressed the op.n-
ion that the Chinese would not in-
tervene in the conflict.
But he called again for air at-
tacks on China proper, a naval
blockade and use of Chinese Na-
tionalist troops. At this point he
said he did not believe this would
draw Russia into the fight. He
added that Russia was in no shape
for an all-out war in Asia.
MacArthur's expressed opinion
that there is no end in sight for
the Korean conflict and that some
policy should be worked out to end
the war, appealed to the man on
Main Street. The question now
facing the nation is whether to
follow the general's policy and
risk all-out war in Asia, or con-
tinue with the more cautious one
advocated by the administration.
THE OTHER VIEW—And after MacArthur presented his views of
how to conduct the war in Korea, the one military man who in the eyes
of the homc-towner equals MacArthur in ability and popularity, Secre-
tary of Defense Marshall, told the congressional committees that Mac-
Arthur's peace appeal to the enemy last March destroyed for the time
being any chances of a Korean war settlement.
Marshall made clear that in his opinion MacArthur's war plans
would risk an all-out war with Russia, expose Europe to attack, and per-
haps split the free world into two camps.
Step by step the 70-year-old Marshall disputed many of MacArthur's
statements and warned against the general's proposal to step up the
Korean war by bombing Red China and forcing a Communist surrender.
It was MacArthur's outspoken call for this action—and the use of Chinese
Nationalist troops—that led to his dismissal.
That is the other side of the picture. But the question remains—which
plan for achieving peace will the nation follow. It is a question that must
be settled in the mind of each individual American, not just in congress.
LAND PR)CES HtT NEW HtGH—Main Street economy is built
around the land and what it can produce. And any fluctuation in land
prices and its products is a good indication of the economic future of the
home town.
Good farm property is in demand because people think prices are
going higher. Land is a good hedge against rising prices. With the gov-
ernment indicating there will be a good market for everything produced,
good farming land is a good investment.
The agriculture department measures rural land values by a nation-
al index. This index uses the years 19)2-14 as the base period. With 1912-
14 prices as 100, the index in March stood at the record high of 193. This
was 14 per cent above a year earlier, and 9 per cent higher than the pre-
vious peak registered in November of 1948.
MiDWEST FEEDERS HURT—As expected, the OPS regulations roll-
ing back beef prices raised a howl of protest from cattlemen across the
nation. But of all the industry, the midwest feeder was hardest hit by the
new regulations.
According to authorities in the meat industry, 85 per cent, or seven
million steers slaughtered under federal inspection last year, came to
market over the feed lot route. But the feeder is now expected to cut down
on operations for a time because he cannot buy cattle at a price that will
pay him to fatten them.
Fred Tomlin of Pleasant Plains, 111., said in his case: "There is no
reason for me to go out and pay 34 or 35 cents a pound for cattle with the
prospect of selling them at 31 or 32 when fattened."
N.KOREA
CHOKWON
//
YONCHON
HWACHON
38TH PARALLEL
S
CHUNCWON
UHONGJU
KAPYONG
HONGCWON-.
MILK
10 20
S. KOREA\
INCHON
Communists Regroup to Attack
!H 4 r/j f75,000
CowwwM<!^ <M Korea rfgro;</)et/ /or ?o jowfA. t/N cow-
f/'f /<gMn# u <n /A? arM a&on
map.
THE BATTLE ISN'T OVER—The Communist spring offensive end
ed in the slaughter of approximately 75,000 Chinese and North Koreat
troops without any notable gains. But the battle isn't over. The Reds re
treated into North Korea to regroup for the next phase which could mean
another all-out attack at any point along the line.
It may well be that the second phase will begin at any moment. But
UN commanders believe it. too, will end in slaughter unparalled in his
tory.
It was clear that UN troops remain in Korea because of superior air
power, artillery and mobility. How long this superiority will remain on
the UN side If the Chinese use their air forces in support of their troops,
is questionable.
HOME TOWN BORROWING—The home towner who thought his
town might get that much needed road, school, water system, drainage
or sewage-construction project in the near future may be in for a big
disappointment.
Charles E. Wilson, mobilization director, has asked states, cities, and
counties to get clearances before borrowing in excess of $1,000,000. He
made his requests on the need to halt inflationary spending and to save
defense-needed materials and man power.
The mobilization chief also asked that soldiers' bonus payments, war
memorials, recreational and other postponable projects be put off for
the duration of the defense emergency—at least where funds must be
orrowed to pay for them.
7///: JfWf 177i
Emptoyers Disregard Mi!itary Status
Even if this year's college gradu-
ate rates 1-A in the draft, the big
corporations are hiring them, even
for a few months' work, if he is de-
sirable employee material, and will
have his job waiting for him when
he returns from military service
again. This is the prevailing trend
reported by college placement of-
ficials in the annual employment
survey made by Northwestern Na-
*
)
tional Life insurance company.
Smaller employers hiring only a
few men, for specific vacancies,
try to get draft-exempt personnel,
the survey finds.
The big firms, however, feel the
present cold war situation may last
for many years and for that reason
are hiring graduates regardless of
possible military service within a
short time.
FEATURE
Adutt-Education Program !s Hard Work,
But Energetic Community Can Achieve One
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grades [nttr r;
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knockknce!. !
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economic ;
thannveri; ti-
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the poorest r<
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the body.
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and 'a worshiper
specialities'
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Radulcscuanddno!
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out his "errors'
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F. L. Weimar & Son. The Alto Herald (Alto, Tex.), No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 24, 1951, newspaper, May 24, 1951; Alto, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth215186/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Stella Hill Memorial Library.