The Taft Tribune (Taft, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 27, 1944 Page: 2 of 8
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fcMHE TWO
THE TAFT TRIBUNE.
WEEKLY mm ANALYSIS
Roman Bite Clears Crimea Path as
Ailed Bcmbera Pound Western Europe;
*Stop Aiding Nam* Neutrals Warned;
Jap* Press 3-Pronged Drive in India
WHEAT:
Good Prospects
Because of improved prospect* as
oumoxiaaiwwai
writ. n« *»• *x *»*•** t» in* <s»r *r» umw </
WMtant Ne««p*|M» SMi'i mem uu0tm« mm! xt a********* •# «W» •*»»»•»•»•>
MelmaeSI by Wuhk Kawaseper tram. —■
i
Italy—-Ksw Zn&htad intepo close cot German sniper in Cassino rains.
EUROPE:
Ifwmwn Path
While Russia'* landMumles car-
ried the *»c into the Balkans. Al-
IM bomber* continued pounding
Axis military and industrial mstalla-
Stows throughout Fortress Europe,
PACIFIC:
India Threatened
aanrrntrttflrn on the invasion path
la the west
A* Us* Russians stormed Into
Bwna&ta, other Red forces drove
With their backs against the rug-
ged slopes of tiie Nags hills in cen-
tral India, British and Indian troop*
fought desperately against per-
sistent Japanese attempts to cut off
their supply lines and entrap them
in a huge pocket.
While the British and Indian*
were locked ic their death struggle.
in the Crimea, huge chunk of j U. S. bombers operated over a wide
land thrust into the Black sea and \ range in the Pac.dc, blasting Japa-
ansard/uff the water route to the east-
ern Balkans. A* the Russians ap-
proached the Rumanian rail June-
ticse installations in the Kurile
islands, strung out to the north of
Nippon, sod plastering enemy
of -Jam. the? encountered j bases on New Guinea, as part of toe
•HSaning resistance from native j grand strategy to wipe out their
troop*, fighting by the side of Ger- i stronghold* on this flank of the Pfail-
m»a soldiers, strengthened by j ippines.
I***** defense lines. j In India, toe Japs’ continuing
la continuing their whirlwind as- | three-pronged drive pressed against
mult* to smoother! a a invasion path.
ABM fcc*»5wi struck st airfields,
railroad Junctions arid military de- i also to toe west to the Assam-Bcn-
fesiaes throughout the French and I gal railroad, used to feed Lieut.
| British and Indian supply route*
■■ running both north sad south and
Of all of war’s experiences, few
were a* harrowing as Sgt. James A.
Raley's, who was
trapped in the tail
section of a Fly-
ing Fortress when
If broke off from
the rest of the
plane during a
bombing mission
and fell 19,000
feet down to
earth.
When the tail
section finally
landed miracu-
lously on a tree top. the 27-year-
old sergeant from Henderson, Ky.,
emerged with only a alight Cut on
the chin.
Sgt Raley.
Belgium area. Far to the southeast,
V. 3. bombers based in Italy ham- i
mered Nazi airplane factories in too I
Vienna and Budapest regions. In j
®r*ttnd fighting below Rome, both
sides were retorted making exten-
sive troop movements to prepara-
lion for a resumption of bitter fight-
Gen. Joseph Stilwell’s American
and Chinese troops clearing a com-
munications highway in northern
Burma to China.
Warn Neutrals
INDUSTRY:
Posticar Reserves
Looking forward toward the prob-
lems if postwar readjustment,
IS. S. industry has set aside hun-
dreds of millions of dollars out of
Having suspended oil shipments profits for switching back to civilian
to Spain and announced restriction production, rebuilding plants or pro-
** steamship service to Ireland, vidmg lay-off payment* to workers
IGrcat Britain and toe V. S. next de- during toe period of change,
mmfed termination of Sweden’s _ ... . ,
bail-bearing trade with Germany to * ”*•**“?• Vrted
a determined campaign to halt the j \ . i4**V
„ , . . j iisneci .1 nest egg or 3104,153.557:
eoUrtrte* ewnmerce wth General Motors tn.OSl.805: Gen-
*** t'aro‘>*’ i eral Electric, *73.582.337; E. I. Du
At the same time, it was an- j Pont. $31,613,130; Sears, Roebuck,
Bounced that toe Allies would look , $28,500,000; United Aircraft, *28.004,-
Sato Turkey’* increased chrome j «$; International Harvester, $20.-
«*i*»!«nts to Germany during the | 000.000; Goodyear Tire and Rubber
hat three months, with a view to- j company, *15,462,612; Borden tarn.
w*Kl limiting the traffic through a j pafty, *11.805.185: National Dairy
eortoOtnest of our own trade with j Products, $10,000,000. and General
the Turks, whose l end-lease aid j Foods. *4.462,712.
isiready has been cut down.. | Smce such reserves car-cot be
In hearing toe Allies' demands, j taken out of income before taxes
8» Swede* said they were to no
POLITICS:
i FDR, De trey Lead
With the Democratic and repub-
lican convections still two months
off, the candidacies of President
Roosevelt ar.d Gov, Thomas E.
Dewey, N. Y., have picked up steam
as a result of toe popular favor
shown them in toe selection of
nominating delegates.
As of April 12, 46 delegates were
openly pledged for the President and
137 others claimed for him, for a
total of 203 out of 236 already picked,
At toe same date, 25 delegates stood
pledged to Dewey and 123 others
were claimed for him, for a total
of H8 out of 356 selected.
While toe President polled a large
■ vote in toe Nebraska preferential
primary, big highlight was the
heavy write-in vote Dewey obtained
U. S. NAVY:
Plan Bigger Growth
To provide for toe heavy fighting
ahead, congress was asked to pass
a naval appropriations bih of
ywtiten to comply without breaking
tfaelr formal agreement with Ger-
gamy, which, they said, toe Al-
Mm approved last September. Al-
though there was abjection to th®
Mi-bearing shipments, Sweden's
iem or* deliveries to the Nazis were
t>:m emphasized.
like deductions for depreciation,
debt retirement and depletion, they
must be put aside out of industry's
profits.
Economic Protection
WOOL:
Big Stocks
’■ With an all-high stock of foreign
wn& V, S. wool, the Commodity
Qroriit corporatton wa» directed to
jS& into the market to support the
SWm domestic clip estimated »t
4fil,*lM,000 pounds
Whereat* U. S. stocks stand at ree-
«* fcwvls today, there were pros-
gwctu of serious shortage* when the
Jig* launched the* South Pacific
drive, threatening the Australian
uni Hew Zealand producing areas.
Approximately 400,(k»,!®3 pounds of
feiireigja wool is now owned by this
gwwtry, with th* Defense Supplies
MKjparatian, holding 850,090,000
founds and dealers and manufac-
fesrers the rest. At toe same time.
SBft.W.SKI pounds, is being held In
theta ©B’SEstry far British account
Seejmse Ifee 0. S. clip sails about
*C Me hi i* pottasf, attowe lareig» *«-!,
To prevent a repetition of toe
widespread bankruptcies and fore-
closure* which fol-
lowed World War !,
th* Commodity
Credit corporation
is empowered to
make loan* at 90
per cent of parity
on basic crops for
two years after the
end of hostilities,
War Mobilization
Director James F.
Byrnes declared,
While outlin-
ing tee protection
Byrnes also proposed to help labor
laid off from slackening war .indus-
tries, through a system of federal
unemployment benefits to be paid in
addition to regular state payments.
To relieve toe problem of future un-
employment, Byrnes suggested that
workers be shifted from lagging war
plants to busier ones now while job*
w«re available.
Byrnes advocated legislation for
guick settlement of cancelled war
$32,647,009,000 for the fiscal year be-
ginning July 1,
By July of 1645. the navy will have
, 10,244 self-propelled shir*. 74,925
j other craft, including landing ves-
sels, and 37,73,5 airplanes.
Also by July of 1945, naval per-
sonnel is expected to reach 3,857,000
officers and men, including women.
Biggest planned expansion is for the
marine corps to a total of 476,000.
James Byrne*
for farmers.
Use CCC has encountered difficulty j contracts to aid Industry in the re-
ifcpMtoe of th* tfoirMtte stock, al- ; eonversiori to civilian production,
(hangb the army asm apecilfats its I amt he also called for congressional
la purclwse* and about 18 par
mnt at a*yy orders are expected to
mil te it
action to facilitate the orderly dis-
posal of surplus war goods without
disruption of regular markets.
| HIGHLIGHTS
tie the week's new*
msS: Another record in *U pri>~
ettoo was turned in hy America'*
fd-working bens during March,
- third consecutive month of #11-
i« bighs. There were 6,763,068,000
» laid last month. * per cent
ty* March last year and <9 per
i over the ten-year average,
$42. Number at laying hens m-
«M«d 5 per cent from March.
* to
MIDGET FURNACE; A tony fur-
nac*. weighing only 21 pounds, may
b* sufficient to heat a 20-room
house, if a new type of heating unit
now u3ed only in military aircraft
esa be applied to homes The little
furnaces would be only about the
size of a waste basket mid would
cost about ISO. .Demonstration mod-
el* have given encouraging results
it was said.
LABOR:
Hit Power Politics
Asserting that territorial and
. frontier problems of Europe should
be settled by popular vote of the
affected people, the American Fed-
eration of Labor * Vice President,
Matthew Wall, assailed Soviet Rus-
sia's alleged alteration of th* cor»-
: tinent in defiance of principle* of the
United Nations.
j Taking hi* place beside WoU,
: David Dubinsky, prenident of the
j AJFL's Dite.rriationai Garment Work-
ers Union, deplored toe development
of policies designed to divide the
; world up Into sphere* of influences,
; in which th* big nations would
; dominate militarily and politically.
! Decrying the proposal to cotnpen-
i sate Poland for the less of terri-
| wry to Ruiaia by giving net pail ol ,
eastern Germany, Dubinsky de-
j dared; "... This mean* that Po- ;
i Sand, or what remain* of her, will
| remain • center of bitter and con-
i slant struggle — a football for th*
| powers,"
! BLACK MARKET GAS
' So extensive has tee black market
: In gasoline become that it is im- :
perilling the whole civilian motor
| fuel program, Petroleum Ad/rsir.is-
i trator Ickes warned. He said that
j more than 2,500.000 gallon* a day
! ta sold through illicit, channels, with,
j counterfeit coupons one of the roost
| widely used means of evasion,
j The most hopeful possibility for
j an increase In tec allowance to civil- j
tan drivers Is through the crushing ,
Washington D]9£S
* result of a recent rainfall, th*
V. S Department of Agriculture
predicted a winter wheet crop of
*1,750,00© bushels for '944. 72,153.-
XlO more than 1043 production.
Based c»n official returns, the
I domestic supplies of wheat for
1944-'45 were estimated at 1.530,900,-
000 bushels, compared with last
year’s 1,440.006,000 bushels.
Although moisture deficiency in
western Kansas and the adjoining
wheat sections to Texas, Oklahoma,
New Mexico and Colorado was off-
set by rainfall, Nebraska was re-
ported in need of precipitation,
Egg Glut Calls Attention
To School-Lunch Question
House of Representatives Decides Against
Spending Taxpayers’ Money on Food for
School Children After July 1.
iPhfflipr J
CLASSIFl
departme
U. S. ACES:
’Rick' Topped
To army air force Captains Rich-
ard I. Bong of Poplar, Wis . and Don
S Gentile of Pifjua, Ohio, went th*
honor of breaking Capt. Eddie Rick-
enb acker’s famed record of shooting
down 26 enemy aircraft, established
In World War 1.
Operating in the South Pacific in
a Lightning fighter with the portrait
of his fiance. Marjorie Vattendahl
of Superior, Wis. painted on tee
nose. Captain Bor.g was credited
with destroying his 27to enemy craft
Ir. the air on April 12.
Previously, Captain Gentile had
been credited with bagging 33
enemy planes in Europe, but seven
dt them were shot up on the ground
During World War I, Captain Rick-
enbacker's total of 26 included five
observation balloons, so that Cap-
tain Bong paced use field in the
number actually knocked out in sky
fights.
Bv BAUKMAGE
News Analyst anti Commentator.
THE REDSKIN AND THE RACES
, One of the high *P°t* ^ in *“•
I Florid* racing season !* the day,
recently observed, when the -em-
; tools Indians west admitted to the
! track free and spent the afternoon
I in the Infield, It is « colorful
! spectacle. The Red Man to his na-
jtive costumes squats or meanders
' around tee infield while the White
|Man does his stuff at tee betting
windows.
almanacs
.ysW-^'inWga
a-irdm when the muon t» to
A
lllflf hAimian
Business Opportan^
town; i^tco^s. T
Inventory. Good JocS!? I
per month. Buildinj? ha* J
mg »y*t«vn. Owner retiring ^ *
CHICKS
or five million school chll- And you don’t need th«
•, hot lunches after July i teree guesses to decide which
the four
riren won’t get hot lunches after
1 of this year,
,u. i.rAtr j Not all the parents of all of the
j four or five millions of school chii- ;
dren are taxpayers. In fact, the i
Indian.
Vfe Jnst dl»cns*ed Ibis idea with
mi old Indian, Chief Heap-Mnch-Pus-
) uicii o.c * - -- ----- --- ■ sat Hina
| truth is tea! many of teem are too j *iea. •*Thl» Is quite an Idea
■ poor to buy a decent, or to some ^e Indian inside a race track once
cases any, lunch for their children. ,
American i The richer cc.es who c.n.ffonM j
said.
year,’’ we
.... _____ "White Man much good «« *ndb
be satisfied with the chief replied. "Yeah fair."
a cold ore and tec chances are they "How?” we asked.
to
WOT? Service, Union Trail Building
Washington, D. C.
You have often heard the lament
when guests came
was bare: "11 we only had some
ham and had some eggs, we could
have ham and eggs."
If we had the man power and the | P®°r
machinery, equipment arid distribu- ;
tion, we could step up American I
food production until, by 1954. we j Iwch wsil bav# to
could feed 380 million Pe^Pte. That *wly M healthy a one ; -white M»n let Injun com*
:s what tee Department of Agt provided by a school I track but no let him near betting
fpL? --T: . .r ra,$ed where parent-teacher and other .„d the . hlrf.
r d-‘v IV-'.lie*_________ groups have seen to it that a bal- -We never thought of it quite teat
Today, Washington :s »crr>.n« : « * provided. !way." we .aid "We thought tee
over two problems brought into . ! :. . . , ,r,o - -Minus
Ioc’js by that little if " j Educators Worried | |ndia” was ^-P •,, * tv, 0 dol-
This time we have over-predue- ; worries the Office of Educa- Just becaus i - 1 -
tern of one food product: eggs. I Uan which is still working on con- ; >*«• ^ vvhi.c Man small
Government agents are hurrying : gresf to get an appropriation j ‘"l. " ww -t it l-ke tea* ” *’ud
around trying to find a means of through to continue the school lurch ; enough to 1.0 e
absorbing them. America has more , i(jea,
eggs than were ever laid on these : School lunches started as “made
fair shores in our history, enough to ;
idkalchTckT”^
sk At th«aw br««4t|M ,
:cM« haivA deflnit*
•fm u. «. ctrtiLrSin
ilrAd Whir* U-’"-- 1
Into thi
B O P. *- .........
V. S C«rtifWrd 200
Ctoi-'
,'RhcKie Island and
approved BufY and B\
‘ I'Whit
'J?W**
ronas, Au*tra
Hed*. !»>'*
100% puilorim
inr.AI. HArCUKHY a
Camcraa
FARMS
T. - .* J n I'MII I IPS. ORlSf!
BOX i.vwxnui f:. trim. *
FOR SALE
I i»K ^LL
A.-.h Muk%gg
sk.aU i,: i'i*iCT, • jrtdf' -*
— ~.J*. rash
tl< n;.l CGi...Vi«.j«r
box r;
cr. flsuwtc ti
rt‘g::--er. Hmg* ireSSl
•• >*t j* «m pxr> r*,kin *
A«\C9YIMJC,
IW
ifec«e
ijsdict
leiM 5
I**:1
T bit 1
LskW1
I«7 f-
: «M«
5 sfiy t
sptot
I ‘IimI
■ raj
| iiwit
r C iST. 5
the Red Man.
HELP WANTED
work” back in the days of depres- j "What does *n Indian thiok of his
have rolled some or, the White tion ancj me WPA. The original idea annual view of the wmw man *
House lawn on Easter Monday if 7. ,s to provide employment lot the races?”
the President had permitted such -A,-jmen But as the idea developed, | “Heap interesting. Very good for
a wastage, which he wouldn't. j j. wag discovered teat here was an papoose. Papoose watch White -Man
The government is buying eggs ! opportunity to do two things; to im running around in circles trying lo
right and left <600 thousand cases of ' prove th* health of school children | run a clamshell into string o( beaos.
shell eggs. 13 million pounds of paw- and to absorb farm surpluses. Make fine lesson. Red - Ian *'c !“’
dered eggs since January 1 to sup- ! So the WPA furnished the woman Juvenile problem. '
port tee farmer’s price, and giving j power and some equipment and tee , “How does ft affect the auu.t
some aw ay — and here is where Department of Agriculture fur- | Man .'"
problem number two, which I said j rushed the food. For awhile, the de- j "Adult Injun watch race crowd
Washington was worrying about, I partment took tee actual responsi-1 ten minutes and know why Write
comes at. We are giving away eggs ! bility of buying the food arid de- Man so screwy. One thing p:-u,c
to state and federal Institutions and I Uvertog it. Later, when the WPA |Red Man much."
aiso for school lunches. After July 1. j went out of business, and in many , “What’s that','"
school lunches, supported by tee ! cases local sponsors took care of tee 1 “White Man has plenty wampum,
federal government, will be no more ‘ service, the Department of Agricul- j plenty clothes, plenty food. Why he
If the seriate follows the action of j tare merely contributed a certain j always to such hurry to get mure
! amount of money (nine cents per ! wampum?"
efcilil, matched by nine cents from i “He does it for sport," we ex-
the local community). This came 1 plained.
out of funds provided for the pur, | “Injun no understand that kind
chase of surplus commodities and : of sport. Injun think sport means
the school bought the food itself. to hunt, fish and shoot ’’
The proponents of the school lunch i “That's what the White Man d-.es
point out teat on tee principle that » race track. He hunts fur good
as a twig is bent the tree is in- temgs, fishes for tips and shoots t,.e
dined, furnishing a balanced lunch ; bankroll."
to school children will build good; —• —
eggs, we could consume far more * eating habits which will affect the , "No fun hunt horse. More fun
if we had the man power to run I whole community. It also point* out hunt deer’’
the drying equipment to produce the I ttat now that sc many schools, espe-j “Yes, but all race-track addicts
powdered eggs for tee military ! c;aliy 10 rural area*, have been con- think a horse Is going to turn out
forces and lend-lease although those j solidated with one school and bus 1 to be » deer. Vie notice thxt the
Institutions now consume 400 million I service drawing children from
pounds of egg-powder a year, and many distant places, children can't
eggs run about three dozen to one | g0 home to get a good hot lunch,
pound of powder. i ^fariy can't afford to bring food with
j teem.
Of course, the community ought to
look after this question itself and
m most communities great interest
has been shown and local authori-
ties have cooperated. But to the
PARTS Min
MECHANICS
BODY REPAIR Mil
EXCELLENT PAY
Good Working Conditio**
Permanent Employment
EARL McMIUlAH COMMIT
Houston, t Fnt'ijI, h-a) VofMf
l«uiii«na at Prtririi* <A5h f if j
MarhintslK and hrlyrr*. *]*.. idt*
“'I’crti .7(1 )i» ip*-f s net ,-iow rRicidyels*'
. a-s*. ", !* ■ :•.{*, w.-,. can <>a (town
the house and refuse-, the appropr1-
4tion for that purpr.se. And re !
gardless of eggs, there is develop- ;
tog the other situa’ion over which ;
certain people in Washington are ;
worried. I'll go into that later, but 1
first, let us look at the egg glut.
We are told teat we could feed a i
lot more people if we had tee man j
power, equipment and machinery to
produce the food. In toe case of j
fa . -1 . . , ...t, ,.ly n jtOTMBts.
i«». m<ii m sot roMkstn
»4:0 iftii'.M* A* (turn*. ![, f&fc]
w \ sn:i» - F-XPEHIKKC ED UNMIK
tii f it A I OR : • ’.< t- \! maU#t jwI
g>.«cx :t ver.tn'iM*- 945 P*nuiw
f ill tin;*’ Will i>;-.y triirmportiitiiiA,
THOMAS <». Si MMVsM
DAtiy Krrurif
I
'H mu vm»mas for hwAcmtit &
■ tgeri t<T.ip}« ; jkVJt'Hl hOWA fur
MRS- U A -<L»IWI.ai;i
itt'f fur rtfkt MfSJi 1
KKS, »*«4*y Tfn».|
11^
akk
1*itm;i. 1 s 1 w ivrni v*»cm -u.
Lfi-<eti dr isltire OwkJ! Mi»tf, % te»m
pr /fils’ N , , „>r: r.w-lfd. Writ* K (yfo-
r»i * i t- v r A»m nauK u ■
MISCELLANEOUS
About Hen Power
In this case, the man power
doesn't match tec hen power. A con- j
traption called a cyclone drier dries
eggs. AU you have to do is to crack i
the egg and drop it into a container !
and let the artificial breezes blow, '
but it's hard to get crackers. Or.c
Indians at a race (rack sit down
most of the lime, yawn openly and
often go to sleep. They never stand
on a chair and yell.”
"Indian got more sense ”
"They never curse a horse."
“No, Horse good friend of man."
“They never curse the boy or
i horseback.”
fir <, AMI 111 I K. ( mrj
S* T.lf .• ran StODV
niui.iv HOPPE
<i«s SMSstri
per a®.
WH
sown, haaf
PEANUT PILER
14al#* PeftBftt** ‘“it! lor tfifoj'matama
r*?.:r.ut T":rk V;--L'-.tv AnuicUMiMtt
from dirt *J«i '
At«i|
_ .....^PP|„ _____a iio.-w »m
ing j;**.14nut* Itii |
,yf • Do4- fr'tiri dirt «!«• ~-
or p;;r* j>e.*r.’,its »SWt Mg i
- x men A time In 1
"Boy on horseback okay think In
poorer communities which have the !dian.“
greatest need, it is impossible, and i "And we have never yet heard a
.... i 5S!: “ T£*d2F ~f * " ^
| tetomg to the schools — as school • “Red Man not sure enough to yell
' teachers' salaries all over the coun- 1 such things."
try testify, j _
Unless the appropriation hill now
POULTRY
IIP ! P 1 HI E IHI. WORLD f*#**!«
I Buy Cor-, ,-r.i.it Vitality ehteks t»*W.«V_
! , : f r meat; Whit*
^ ^ . i - . The Vind iht! MS it!
R.0
tea
c->:
tec
to i
of
OVI
•II
ail.
to
*r
Mi
as
aa
ceiling of 50 cents an hour for his
crackers, has to compete with
airplane plant in the neighborhood
which has a 50 cents an hour ceil-
ing. for work no less attractive to
young ladies than breaking eggs.
Right now, the country boasts the
biggest hen population it ever had
and egg production is SO per cent
higher than ii was Just before tee
war. Ever since March, something
has gotten into the hens that has
made them step up their produc-
tion — feed was supposed to he
hard, to get so it couldn’t have been
something they at*. Maybe it’s
just patriotism. Anyhow, the War
Food administration is buying all
tee eggs it cars, arid now it is giving
eggs to schools for school lunches
and to state and federal institutions,
mi* entirely because it has a gen-
erous heart but because it wants to
support tee price to tee farmer who
las usual) hasn’t been getting the
benefit of the retail prices which, to
many places, hav* stayed up even
in the face of the greater supply,
Washington, however, was able to
buy eggs for tee Easter rabbit this
year, 18 cents a dozen cheaper than
they were in March.
This egg glut ha* brought into
sharp focus the school-lunch ques-
tion which is of considerable con-
cern to tee Office of Education as
well as the War Food adminis-
tration.
The present laying spree of the
hens will cut las* forevcj. and there
wifi be no eggs to throw around
later on. And anyhow, the house of
representatives ha* decided that
even if there were a surplus of eggs
and other food products, it does not
approve of spending tee taxpayers'
money on school lunches even if
for Elytra. inr ***** -m- i
r,,.iK >. f ;•'e t• g« 7*x&» B*by B*Wgii L
.;ls r.-,dv Th«’VJl we.-gfe :ik.t MW* ;
Wri‘
L:
P. O H«x
\ iiVXIMlNtll BATCMM .
»»..« «« - “*wa,
committee ------
..>.,w sou^w* look
. . . ’* acc,fpt*d and Passed ' fresh, and gay and happy while tee
hers step up production, tee school I pe^ed “atd’alfto How'com "
POULTRY REMEDY J
" M t I* I Ni:3TEC«*
Kfff p your hern*
c a ted
-——-------—-l
MKDI,-NKSTKOC* ,
e-"i?t 3a.- ,f g. NeW tMlimMhV*®; i
t.CMtVk-* di.virircU BWtt
twos fontto***'
... ....'1 v-0iy.!SVt:
at federal expense even if
other farm products are so plenti-
ful the government has to buy them
up to protect prices.
Newt From London
The London Daily Mail sets up a
little special edition for the United
States—a digest. It is photographed
London on microfilm, flown over
lUzed.”
"Oh yeah!"
"Oh plenty yeah,"
Indian.
poultry d.:!4«,uw* ft«f
vvitni; F(jh samm.K*SfefaWMK ;
ii,* tee, l c :-- or direct*** •* l
u n * i.miiiii'V S»1 *'**» -fifr?
ian Aalonlw, T<4*«, It-tiW *f .Ilf!!!*'
concluded the
RANCHES FOR SALS.
Renaming the Stars
A. P. Herbert has tee Idea of tee
Century. In fact of *11 the cen-
turies. Realizing that tea Greatest
HAVE SEVE.ltAL GOOD Ml
a die wurth th* money. R <>o<h of ’
beautiful river front *ul!«bl» *®LjSStr- ■
Coat* or rattle, t HARUW t* *&**■■
North I vkilf,
REAL ESTATE
to ti-.s country, enlarged to a four tc j Show on Earth has no popular fal- • moo si modem.*. ** *<-'**• *&SlA
six tiaee brochure. ah,-»r .......... . rhn-ujii lue r’ .nilv toa-rt^Hai
six page brochure, about the size
of ordinary typewritten sheets.
1 do not know how large a dr.
dilation it has obtained so far or
whether it is achieving its purpose
of mutual understanding but it often
contains some rather interesting
items. For instance:
John Henry Jones, a 40-year-old
steel smelter, came to America with
other British trade unionists to visit
our war factories. The Daily Mail
quotes his reply to one of his wife's
question* when he got back: "How
about wages? Is the American
worker really better off than the
British worker’” And this Is what
! Mr. Jones replied;
i Taking a chap with the same
size house, same number of chil-
dren, doing th* same Job as his
counterpart over here — No Dm
house here would cost $18 a monte
clear, in rent. A similar house in
the States would run away with $3C
a month."
on the performers, he proposes that —
something be done about it
improve,) und ununpiov*^ U£»jj=J*
■ mi *«» it, m“2J5E 1
Wb»t shew Is he talking about?
The heaven* at night: The
boundless array of star*
steUatlon*.
REGISTERED BULLS.
great
and con.
Edit R ALB n ■ „ to'i M
Mr. Herbert would label tee stars
so teat Joseph P. Doakes could feel
a warm interest to them. And we
second th* motion. Only an astron-
cmer could oppose it. And he could
do io only because h* want* to keep
tee heaven* all to h!.w*elf. *!5£i ha*
tee necessary reference fcsoks.
USED ARMY SHO&L
F*t Sti«, No Ration Coupon.
• Lvtred Checks ct money
*1* price* to merchant* *®J
or more.
Hit CANDLER BLDO-. *tUT*-SJ
Th* m»n «r waman Buyer jived
wfe# didst t wSah ta astatv the star*
and s»der»t*tid Use heaven*. Rut
what happen*? One or ,*■„ 9j,.u.
***** ***** *** tease tongue twlatlu
B»iue„*. and »t*» *(- om<
Masicai j.
A musical beach ia to M »»* |
on the little island of Ei*&
Hebrides It gives tert
sonorous note, the source «
has never been explained* m
B R 1 E F S . . . by Baukhage
Gasoitoe needs in this war are
K) times greater than in tee last
one, according to the V. 15. Petro-
leum Administration for War.
. of the satlonfticle Illegal traffic
! jjasoftne. Idr. Ickes declared.
Since D.ir.kirk, more than 14.000,-
000 food packages have been sent
by or through the British Red Cross
to British prisoners of war in
Europe, the British Information
services report
Fifty per cert of the outdoor ad
vertistog space in the city of Madrid j
must, he reserved for tee use of
Spain's totalitarian party to present
messages of the Phalangists,
i , ®“* 9f Scotefc M * case «f
■ &ter %vt beiof fivcA t« wl«tli>n who
! v*Vtare » Up on Bouca&aviilo w#
i thought Scotch *«d beer worth
■ tfaae that everywhere an earth.
1^-, art gowta* 4>fe.-;1aS vj
'sm
rg&:
Don't put ad tfouloc ‘ .
l.l*v» pain of mim'Ulw .
and other rheumatic jwtlaa .
Use only an tflrertojl-
purchase price hack If a**
& and 11.00. Today, Mf
One million fewer work accidents
In the next 12 months is the goal
sei by Secretary of Labor France*
Perkin* for attainment by American
labor and management.
!
"Spare Parts of Poultry Provide
Food Novelties"—Headline.
— ft
You're telling us!
M ttfiST
John Gunther
.»*. s syfir; i
“ ,"“a' u. v,„, ■
day now.
■ _ V
66j_
«l TABUTSt 5M ¥0
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Richards, Henry C. The Taft Tribune (Taft, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 27, 1944, newspaper, April 27, 1944; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth711064/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Taft Public Library.