The Taft Tribune (Taft, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 7, 1946 Page: 2 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Taft Public Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
m
'' nm
Schools Play Critical Postwar Role
German Education Must Be
Recast in Democratic Mold
I
I
m
I
j
I
E"
E
f ;
|
V
h
:*
m'l
j JUsI«om4 br Wertsza l*«w*p»t«r Union.
TRUMAN'S FUMBLING RESULTS
tffcOM ORKTINO CIO ORDERS
i WASHINGTON.-A politico! Lnno-
mct and deficiency are being as-
sumed tor President Truman in
popular report These are natural
public reactions to the series of fail-
area of policy which the President
baa suffered, and i;o doubt thesa will
prevail In the Imagination of the
wan in the street.
• But the truth of the matter is far
different from that — and mora
gubtle
Mr Trannul has simply failed
•very time he undertook to
chant plan a CIO paticf, and be
tone wen «a the single notable
•oc salon In which he opposed
CIO.
This la the Inner history of his
•^ministration. He went against
CIO's demand for appeasement of
Russia, and won national bipartisan
unity for hi* foreign policy. When
bn lapsed on this and let his Com-
merce Secretary Wallace make a
wpench to CIO in New York advo- \
eating a middle foreign ground j
•gainst hia own Byrnes policy, ho |
bad to Are his own secretary in or- '
<kr to retreat to firm ground.
At the cutset of his administration 1
bn enjoyed full congressional sup- j
port until he undertook to cham-
pion the key CIO bills cm unemploy- j
snent Insurance and spending. With '
that step he alienated congress, anfl
By BAUKHAGE
Vein Annin: and Commentator.
i WNC Service. IMS Eye Street, N W„
Washington, 1). C.
j WASHINGTON-Whether we are
going to have two worlds or one,
: one of the battle
i grounds on
j the Issue
j decided
j many. Lines
that battle sre
! forming now be-
i tween one of the
"Did you have any breakfast to-
day’’’
Contrast the life of these children
with the American children who
spend eight years together in the
grade schools, many of them four
more in h'gh school, where all com-
pete on equal terms, where ability
ran be assayed, where ambition can
be estimated.
Bankhage
most powerful
forces for democ-
racy. the Ainer-
lean public
school, and one
of the most anti-
democratic forces
of old Germany,
the Prussian edu-
cational system.
When congress meets It must con-
sider the report of the mission of
educators who were sent to the
American zone by the state and war
departments to study education to
Germany. They came back with a
careful and detailed study, includ-
ing a description of conditions and
a set at. recommendations which, if
they can be carried out, will have
a vital effect to building democracy-
in Germany.
Perhaps an educational system
based on the American model may
j not be sufficient to democratize
lost hi* fight, getting only some • Germany but I think it is
School Plant Hit
Hard by War
This is only one facet of the prob-
lem with which the educators who
must guide German education will
have to deal. There are a great
many physical difficulties, too. In
the first place, there is a dearth of
buildings, of teachers, of equipment.
Many of the school buildings
are rubble. Many have been
requisitioned for various nses
by the military government. In
the winter there Is the question
of heat—this winter probably
will be one of the worst—and
this fa one of the most difficult
problems to overcome because
of the shortage of coal In the
American zone.
meaningless little hills passed. On
the strike legislation matter he lost,
•nd wound up with no power what-
ever in this crisis, to full accord
with precisely the same scheme of
•flairs. When he clung to their OPA
hontrols too long, he had to sur-
render again.
UNREALISTIC PROGRAM
The CIO policies have thus proved
to be wrong, because they were not
founded upon what is. but upon
what the leftwing union leaders
thought ought to be. They were
popularly unrealistic. They were
licit conceived to give the people
what they want, or in recognition
of their current troubles, but what
the union men thought the people
should have.
Tbia is clearly discernible.
The unesnpleyrnent insurance
snetif mi promoted by the CIO
at s time when the uliu was
critically short of enough work-
ore to do Its business, and when
prospecto were it would be short
Indefinitely. The spending bill
sms advocated when the budget
and national Income were al-
ready at highest levels and go-
ing higher, and thus when
spending should have been cur-
tailed.
The Russian appeasement policy
could not stand in the face of Rus-
sia’s bulldozing efforts to build a
postwar empire.
aggeration to state that without such
a system, democracy never will be
achieved in the Reich.
1 had the privilege of attending a
conference presided over by William
Benton, assistant secretary of state
in charge of public affairs, at which
Chairman Zook and members of the
educational mission were present.
I came away deeply impressed, not
only with the factual data present-
ed—(I was familiar with some of
the data)—but also with the impor-
tance of the program as a means
of determining whether democracy
or totalitarianism will dominate
western Europe and perhaps the
world.
System Mixture of
Master, Servant
We know how Germany’s history,
her political arid social institutions,
have all tended to create a peculiar
type of thinking which has resulted
to a caste system with a strange
mixture of super-ordination and
sub-ordination on the p-art of the in-
dividual German. The superfl-
j tiff and erroneous explanation is
j that, the German is half dominating
i and half servile. There isn’t space
] here to go into German psychology
; hut there was one point in the edu-
j cational mission’s report which was
j emphasized by their chairman and
j echoed by Assistant Secretary of
i State Benton, which partially ex-
As to teachers, more than one
half of the Germans were dismissed
because of their participation in the
Nazi setup.
There are few books. There is a
paper shortage- because there is no
machinery to make paper. There
is no machinery because there is no
steel. There is no steel because
there is no coal. And so the vicious
circle continues, affecting the whole
question of supply and equipment.
There are, on the other hand,
some things on the credit side. For
instance, the fact that the Germans
have an inborn respect for learning
and after a generation behind the
"iron curtain” they are literally
starving for Information concern-
ing the rest of the world. I can
testify to this from my own con-
versations with a number of the
young people, as well as the older
ones, who had had at least a glim-
mering of the world before Gocb-
bels.
It is generally admitted that the
first two objectives of the occupa-
tion forces have been realized more
fully in the American zone than any-
where else. I refer to denazifica-
tion and demilitarization. These are
important but negative. On the posi-
tive side, democratization lags. Wa
*U*Jtom*
*1oum
Repstvitek
fa WASHINGTON
By Woller Shead
WHU CemMpamlaat
CLASSII
P E P ART uj
_ MISCEI
vsthm®
Havt
cirUJ
J fAl'V
T*rmin.il i-cavt Fay
your n»i>y with %i
KV/SSS*
,rt; rt'’Urn#d
copy
mi
WNl) Wishingtnr Nur**n
!SK f.p» St . N. W.
21 ( HubSriAon At.
HAMr
Fertilizer Industry Say*
II Can Meet All Demands
< 3 Keen* Ittdf.
\ 1 TITH thousands of acres of farm
W land n-iiad-o.it of rrop-produc-
‘ A ft BOM !»I01
A mndd'
MM Hr,
ms.
FUTURE JIVE ADDICTS . . . Combining the average child * lik-
ing for banging on pot* and pans with an awakening of his natural
sense of rhythm probably will not make the neighborhood quieter
hut it will tiring out the Jump and jive of the younger set. Youthful
■’hep-cais’’ are shown here at a jam session at New York Children’s
Aid society.
itig minerals due to In ivy and con-
stant working during the over-pro-
ductive war years, this question I
of fertilizer—or perhaps the ques-
tion of government or private in-
dustry proa action e-f fort ircr — Is
looming ever mote important as the
basis of spirited controversy in the
tOth congres'
Your Home Town Reporter has !
been learning something about the
question under tie t-itei ige of -
less an auth-.rity than Maurice II
Iiockwecd, president nf the Nation- *
al Fertilizer association, an organ-
ization which rlaitr.s s - -doing like
480 memberships U m the some fioo
fertilizer t lanls n the '-•nirit.-y.
Lockwood has been a fertilizer r-x-
ewe1.1. r siti.Kr
Buy and Hold]
B- S S&vispj
How To
BronciH
ecuiive Fr rrnny >'•
headed the fertilizer dr.
Eastern State Farmers’ F<
one of ab< T> re opcm’ ’ c
! held menihcr*h,p in toe i‘ -
Lockwood’s organisation.
having
■: f the
ichanr*.
■s whir h
aviation. .
slung
NEWS REVIEW
Full Agenda Faces U.N.;
Wave of Strikes Looms
U.N.:
Meeting Underway
j sians have Jealously guarded to pro-
: tret their interests ai'amst the An-
with the National I’lsnt Food eoun-
tll, the other national fertilizer or-
ganization. is locked In battle with
the Farm Bureau ami other organ-
ization* over further entrance of
government in the production of
fertilizer, ami partlrulatls against
the ilill-Hankhead bill and tin Flan-
agan bill, wlit< h I* definitely and
unalterably sponsored by the farm
Bureau.
rreomiilsion rsfiewst
cause tt goes right to cJTs
trouble to help ixtgte i
germ laden tihfami ma,
to soothe and he»J nx t_
flamed h-nuchi*! BatisJi
broEcs. Tell you dnwttk *
c bottle of CrratmliM M
tier ruining you mat Jfc*|_
quickly allay* to# eowh
to have yuurmomrM.s *
C REOMUL
far Caught, QvisfCoifM
[ glo-Amcrican majority.
Vyacheslav M. Molotov shook the ; Other ’horny i.-sues included
hand of Mr Truman warmly iri the
lobby of the United Nations meet-
ing place in New York after his od
dress to the delegates and a Rus-
sian interpreter told the President:
"Mr, Molotov wants to congratu-
late you heartily on that speech. He
thought it was a great speech,"
Later that night when Mr. Tru- . mer enemy hum.-.
man greeted the delegates at the i • Iran's protest against Russian
Starlight Roof of the Waldorf As- j pressure for political anil petroleum
toria hotel, Molotov and the Prcsi- ; concci.-i ns.
dent again shook hands warmly, « Russian demands for the (try,
• Creation of a trusteeship council
to govern dependent areas of the
world, particularly the strategic
Italian colonies along the Mediter-
ranean.
• Russia's prop’ '-al that allied cv-ia-
tries report on the.r rt:,■: 'cr...,aco 1
troops in other states, except f :•
lili,
end the interpreter repeated: "Mr.
ouster of the Franco regu .e to
Molotov wants to thank you aga.n * Spain,
for your splcrcid speech.”
The speech which Molotov so j LABOR 1
highly praised was a masterful dip- | ■». ,. ,
lornatic piece, Indeed. It recog-| eu lh'nnwif',
nhed the talk of another war aris- I New contract demands by
Lriki
dunry is
lion of a
to goveri
search fo
in tne f'-r
t veir.rr < ill
ir.it private
the <• imi or;
t, r.<-r fr i
He says
pi.--.'-' i.tti
turc i: -c li
e.-s can us-.-
faeturii'g fr
ever I* v ■
food Cl.: W ’
Ir.g U-l’ct !•
!■ -re. Ai >1 .f
Should gOV(,:
turo’
f, rt
Whenlfoarl
are Crying M
fart
%
w«r*
punk «n tbe dsfkff&igktecMiffe
uf^M f<jur U«*i«, guif r
,f.f —Z---
I !'
t*>.« Or. CsW**B-» liMt
l. c-j.. kly poll tk* btB«Mii
midi", *--.1 yzsMr
chipper a ecu*.
on cm tt««u*» is fit i
r a iaza'.ire <oot«lB»< is *wSS
Pejisin i-. auk* it » ruf j
mobv doc rotts ms mm i
tuns yrrictiptlosnOWlH'li
i. - e c ore sal a
uk«. So be aur# fou k"
Uisnt in Srra# Pop»*.
msisr OH Sit. CM-tem
>Vi
the
tog from the differences of the lag | auto, f- r::a oq : t.rnei-.t re.
know very little about what is hap- j powers over the postwar compo- | ur, -3 left Ana 1 ..-.-j ..
Why a Got ernmrnt Plant ?
tont• cf ra.i.iMU [«*<«•>.»
' Ins#
lha! *h r*li*l t
t,1 .-r flnickj ckiMntlMS J
e*t/noMs r»« osif ssindd.
Ukewise, of what good were OPA ' p,aIn4 this phenomenon. It reveals
imFunto nn ztyAnf nr-ie..ac A# 1«yrr» t* ! .
controls on merit prices at a time
svhen there was not any meat?
The CIO chieftains and economists
bitve just planned unwisely. This
was unavoidably true because their
primary interest was not to the peo-
ple but to their own unions—which
want, greater government spending
jind unemployrr.en! insurance at all
time*, a strict OPA to hold price*
down while their wages go up. Thus
their schemes could not wtn.
♦CLEAR WITH SIDNEY’
Tbe charge has been made that
Mr. Truman got his job because h*
was “cleared with Sidney" meaning
the late Mr. Hillman of CIO-PAC at
the Chicago convention, although
ffidr has been officially denied. At
any rate, the late Mr, Roosevelt
played the same game, and it, is nat-
ural bis handpicked successor would
try it. even after the game had run
out into an inflationary era, calling
tor different tactics,
TSta is the nnh »f the mutter.
Doe* it not point to an obvious
.seluiiea? Fortunately the CIO
jwlfeies, at ieasit the old Oflf-
man policies, arc now just about
washed away. The tenet-, ahead
center around the necessity of
Atklsi a profit system work.
- Itomesticany we must get produc-
tion and a stable economy. We must
get a settled period of prices and
-wages—not continued strivings to
perhaps the greatest single factor
that can block democratic evolution
in Germany, This factor, the mis-
sion says, "has cultivated attitudes
of superiority in one small group
anti cf inferiority to the majority of
the members of German society,
making possible toe submission and
Jack of self determination upon
which authoritarian leadership has
thrived.”
The bars go down on the path of
democracy for the German child in
the fourth grade ot elementary
school. It is hero that the fortunate
1!) per cent who arc to be the ’‘su-
periors" leave the unfortunate 80
per cent, for at this point—when the
children are about 10—those who
expect to attend toe universities and
prepare for a professional career
j are set aside in secondary schools.
It is largely the financial or social
I position of the parents which forms
i the basis of selection for these sec-
. ondary schools. The overwhelming
! majority of pupils,
| portion of whom des
• education because of their ebilt'y,
j finish elementary school and then go
I on to vocational education. This
> makes a fundamentally “and 1 m-
| ocratic division of Us® educational
1 stream.”
petting in the Russian zone but a na-
tion that has progressed as far to
moulding the minds of its own peo-
ple, undoubtedly is not neglecting
its efforts in Germany. Wo know differences between the East and
that despite the terrible conditions ; Wes', but committed the U. S. to no
in Russia arrangements already j definite adjustments. While firm,
have been made for students from , R was conciliatory.
sition of the world, but appealed to : a new v.a- ■ of -l
tbe sensibility of the major slates- ; oiling just as j,r -
men to avert such a di-.liter It j to bt gc-mng into
called for compromises to adjust mere, ml output.
|Qk
IT
■ixs -.v
uction
full f. iv
consti.”
IS in
sppe
ng
ers
much
R.nke
the Russian occupied countries to
take courses in tiie Russian univer-
sities.
The recommendations out-
lined to the mission's report in-
clude similar project* for the
future, as well a* various other
steps extending beyond the
schools themselves and operat-
ing through the parents and
teachers organisations and other
groups. There Is no intention In
superimpose upon the Germans
any system against their will.
So far there has been excellent
co-operation and educational chr-
cles in Germany are enthusias-
tic about the steps already taken.
They hope that trained educa-
tors will come to Germany; they
would be only too glad to send
their people to this country for
instruction They may not know
what democracy is but there is
plenty of evidence that they want
to find out.
Thorny Issues
nr.ore go* .is -M k • rr p: res.
Auto—Wuk prod irior?:
tered in the CfO-Ui ifed Auv
ers offensive aga*r.n :| > Cf
me
Inc
da
DR.
SEvmiAUTm
coot****# ™ lynpf]
i corporation for wage lrerc.sses c t
j responding to the t.se in the i f
Mr. Truman could well prepare • livmp rmce the q-,- j
the path for firmness and concilia, i :,n ib'j cent .-.-.q r. • ; ■ j- ’
tion what with the U. N. about to 1 uery
mull ever an agenda parked with jn -r,M-.. v its offensive • -v t
explosive possibilities Foremen M ' Chrysler t!,.: hi. ■ f . ■ ,.•
these was the proposals advanced i a wi.;:c ptotero f.„ the ta r- i- -
by Australia and Cuba lo eliminate ’ try, the CAW d.vt! -sc-d i! -A„„i(i vK
the veto right of the big powers on j for a minimum ir.rri-iso.of !6 c.-n’i
an hour to take care of the 32k* per
cf
'it .
if; r
bil:
1_____
the security council, a right the Rus-
Fresitmably the report as for-
warded to the secretary of state will
receive bis approval, and congress
. 1’irge pro- j will har e the opportunity to pass
ve university , yj,,,n the whole program but, as the
report concludes: “The development
of this program is not the responsi-
bility of the government alone.
Equally, if not more, important is
she intelligent barking of toe
American people in the rtorienta-
cert rise in the cost of I;vk g sin:.,;
i-j.it Jsmuary. A boos! of I’d Ci:r.;.,
®n hour v. dl be demarv’ed If the
co:d cf living should tear 20 per
eer:t or cents if v.e yl, • r1,.j
£5 f>er cent.
I-arm Equipment—to
ci-;r 4 contra:!, negotiation.* with In-
Haivcs’n, the CL .i-Farm
Equipment Workers asked to .’ , n
!' e' : s a'ac-A-i-d to E.-uire p
tru- pro-, i eri-y f cot: oar v atid
R-e c-.-w try |i .,vt -:,.r ,, ..1...... . ..
fit-u-: the a!!---, • p.-ji
wi.-nid treble its but
in ii-ifi.
Besides bitli.'ig fi
Mr
Uuntr.-i *Mvi.»n John I lanxe tn 'O,
V.1 1, vflu iv, chairman id tin house
agricultural carnmittce. In i!:k c, * -
ir.g hi* bill said. ''While I do not
believe the government abuuld go
into tbe fertihirer tnisim'*-:, 1 would
like to sc- the government step in
and set up fertlli/i r exiierimenial
pilot plant* at st,u h point:., a* will
serve the dilterei.t sections of our
country, nir, ilu (daidv lor the
length of time nr-- - sure to develop
the riyht knots of ferirli/ei- needvd
I or our diff'.rrnt soil- and demon-
strate to ttie farmers the imper-
alhe in:a--.-,i(v for swi impriivc-
ment and 1 ir*- »nd ipc.-i turn the
plants iivr to ptic.itc industry ”
Tl.;s :- <| < • • , c I..*-, ci.
i ...
win mi
Moci<»rn A^ay Brinft«
Wlui'n diwoBRlortl
<1tbd fed ko nlMVNil
BM tiierf fiow nw *
cjtik k• setiag Wftirf *
m> ptetMUQl' to
vkUetho’% t
preuar pr ■
egrcc
Xf'AM
■ rt
pay incresi'.
s, the FEW j’so
‘.’cc-k u
r-tecd annual -a'.ag:
s rniri!
morr. i f tu ho-JI-v ,
prro-.ation for
each 0! 52 weeks
Coal-Cha
rv.ing the govr-rr.r
r'!i * lk
va pons rdt.'OMOi
tipfjer bnmchiw
r«.*b«ve Br»fB throat
PBSE rm gw™
approved mo tom <wrJ
tutsfic rricnikiJiott:lv. 'Taji
tup the- tocai c*mg*ffvnaa
cutUif mpjWM
on itJi'rk 1 nn Ux boow#* M
«iec“p, M<xtorn
ctuutginft to dmn wwA
PINETR0rJ
f
inn to
h
Until they are 10 years old little j lion of the German people. We have j
Fritz az-.d Jcha.tn have studied and ! comnuttad ourselves to a program )
played together in something ap- | in which education plays a critical (
proximatnr.g the comradeship of two j role. Tbcr# must therefore be no ’
s- s ssrs:’ ^ 1i Srr
a tailoring shop. Rut when they i peace of the world.”
leave the fourth grade, their way* _______________________________
part and each year from then on, !
toe wall between them grows high- j RECALLS 1920 SPIRAL
Imagine. Recent experiences have
worked toward unity on this prob-
lem also. Ths- AFL led the demand,
tor Instance, for abandonment of
OPA, and shows a greater realiza-
tion now that, business cannot pay
high wages without commensurate
profits.
Vtdets CIO »top« and seizes
hold of this trend in tbe coming elec-
tion# of eengreaeroen, is wiil be the
prospective pattern tor the future.
B Sdr, Truman has learned that
CIO could not poMibly plan a sue-
emful economy in * crisis because
saf the prejudi.c«d attitudes it b*s.
tnm which It. cannot escape—-or it
VICTlAf OF LAW . . , A legal
quirk may dcpiivc sEx-yc-ar-uld
Billy Keefe, Jersey City, X. J.,
paralyzed since birth by < i-ia-
bral palsy, ot in's beloved pony,
Beauty. The board of health con-
tend* hi* mother, also paralyzed
since Ills birth, illegally convert-
ed a garage into a stable.
g toe contract with
Worker* unrier vvi
operating toe nsti:
U.MVV Chief::,
lied for
tti. 1
p.c
"f.and-
John
,. . . ft new pact ejB.
i bodyurg revised an.-i »,..r*
' - f :■ ,-s
' ’’ i 1 ’ ’ defer toe v
| mh Lewis' blunt
j that fan to tj.,
1 cuKiiMns ’.v’-uld v'jid ihe
PASH *tt WAtW**,-;
Some Change* hi reded
It . ., : ., .
fore the ,rri,,. ... ,,
be-
VVNU-P
contract
! *r’
! Dr. Zook’s voice was filled with
j real emotion when be described one
‘ of the many experience* be had
■ when She mission visited (.he Oer-
; man elementary school#. It was his;
: practice to 11 -k the fnarth grade
; children; "What are you going
fin
Farm Mortgage Debt Soar
jX
For the first Urnci
CHICAGO.
in 23 years, farmers are plunging i after
Mg
• f pi
] be?" And without the- slightest bes-
| station they would answer: '’Butch,
i er, baker, clock-maker, cobbler” or
■ whatever it may have been, never
-ao ha* tettMrf tt—and the coming I ******** that it could be •*W»h-ng
continue to regtetor the do- * ^
#0*ao at tat ufbursry power over
^rwidesd*. the future of fibs eoun-
-- : •- — .’ — -- >-• ^ 1 j fljw, a steady decline before
to j into debt, Dr. Norman J. Wall, head j during the war, he adds
end
fry *.*? hs wwsSttd out on more
ilrwifflrV iiis.es with a cfcaace tor sue-
been chosen tot them. Till* revrla-
j tion. Dr. Zook said, was as beart-
| breaking to hints ** when again zrni
j again, tour out of five of the chil-
dren answered “no” to the question:
,f the division of agricultural j The toti.l farm mortgage debt in-
finance In the. bureau of agricultural , creased 80 million dcllars m the -j*
economics mtr.t-4 delegaies to the ; months ending Uft J..,:-.- j ,e.
National Agricultural Credit coin- ; ports, adding that land vaiu'a #-e
mine* Btectifg here. : .Vffowing closely the spiral ofVos'd
Inflated land prices combined War l. He eomtuirr (S the
ye**? t-Mljn.f
cf«fet
V-rt
kne governmej;! <:
ibe r *»?,£ cf reph\
with plenty of cash are responsible position to (hat of •»». when’i-ri^* :
for the increased debt *«*.•».* farm- < of land snot up in tlieir final syqrt i '-'nAir,'
era. Dr. Walt maintain*. The | before they started skidding.
ernamt -at money farmer* owe their j Rural bank loan* alro arc
creditor* It on the way up age lit j up. according t* Dr. WaV’lL.q-roa; j «tw!l «ow
conwiist Air
ntottit, which
timing ii.e
f>E>- •f.t-nir.g, htt adds
* •*» c ;r>dttj.>r, v, [nP
that tamier* g.re usir
will
■ by
wa*
war
confidence os
irf Rtwi dtev
of pacltagin
m »0t-r I al l
tost when a
fertilizer • r ;
he gets that
not &?) po'.ir.ri
P»--':nd# >: f !■;
becocdly. he mu
ent method* r.,f ;
eliminate l-.g f:
hi'.!, tile f ..-..j r
tonnage T1
hetler anti p
t« that tile f
what he is be
rr.tve under w
this nv.rB -JC
k,;r* .
lie ii
‘ICXt.
to: rr.t r 1! -
[•'lrlf.t f
in other
r buys, 1
.-.-.i.v uf f.:
p: : (.
Tit t
awl!
Indus-
-,-d
• d in
vordi.
: .n of
iUv.vr,
i ar-j
400
differ-
<»# to
'U tor
heavy
nr.-:
a.r:;;i
txdcily
vi-.le for
S their
fact
atcressuigiy abundant'
rrr.er
iy twiw to
urste in a
hich will he introduced tn the
rrrgi m. That the Industry
eventually car. do this u shown in
tae fact that they have improved die
P-ant content over the years ,
ftfiai stiU could lower price*.
fed
«*;;
I to,
«ti
®<g
A;
•tin
five
> kvei
Nktrij
r«dt
! And
ksvj
| «r t
to,
fed 1
!• Mu
Bdpn-jSI
jtiar,
Wm j
»-v‘ »■? ** rtSS'Vk1
■y>H
I %4ip
l ^
.....
« «g5sJp
-aaeM«*r
; %*«
m i
!■*» 1
i
6**
h***
5S^
1
■
I
i.'3£
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.
Matching Search Results
View five places within this issue that match your search.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.
Richards, Henry C. The Taft Tribune (Taft, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 7, 1946, newspaper, November 7, 1946; Taft, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth749690/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Taft Public Library.