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INDIAN VALLEY RECORD Thursday, March 29, 191
II ii
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...... WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS .....
gov. Dewey Breaks With Top GOP
Leaders on Arms Aid to Europe;
Farm Aid Needed to Kill Rackets
,11
(EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions are expressed In these columns, they are those of
Western Newspaper Union's news azalysts and not necessarily or this newspaper.)
NOBLES'
CHEST COLDS
to relieve coughs--aching muscles
There's a special Child's Mild Mtt
terole made for kiddies' tender akin.
Mtmterol not only gives speedy relief congress. They have also urged
but it brekim up congestion in upJ ' i placing our faith in defense on over-
bronchial tubes, nose and throat. JtJ ' j whelming sea and air power.
rub it on chest, throat and back. Thus develops the serious ruff
U -- ---"
lll[k[t]qq within the Republican party that
• could have far-reaching results
v- within the coming year. Politically
DEWEY:
Breaks With Top Men
The hints at a serious riff In policy
within the Republican party during
the past few months took on definite
form when Gov. Thomas E. Dewey
took sharp issue with such top
G.O.P. leaders as Taft of Ohio,
Wherry of Nebraska, and former
president Herbert Hoover over the
defense of Europe.
In one of the bluntest statements
ever made by Dewey, the New
York governor said it would be "ut-
most of folly" to depend upon sea
and air power to protect the U.S.
against Communist aggression. He
added, "Anyone who thinks you can
defend the United States or any sub-
stantial part of the world with any
two out of three branches, of the
armed forces, is ignoring every lee-
son of history."
He then urged faster moblllZaton
and sending more American troops
to Europe immediately. He said he
felt the deployment of troops was
no business of Congress.
This viewpoint i the exact op-
posite of Taft, Wherry and Hoover
who have repeatedly demanded no
more American troops be sent b)
Europe without prior approval of
% !it could mean that Dewey is dead
as a pbssible G.O.P, standard bear-
let in 1952.
On the other hand, if Dewey's
thinking is the expression of the ma-
tngnn " "ter Teeth jority of the Republican party, It
could mean Taft, Wherry and
Hoover will be stamped isolationists
and doomed to ultimate oblivion.
In this connection, it was interest-
ing to note that Dewey said, "Any
isolationist speech is an aid to
Stalin."
FARMERS:
Must Help Curb Rackets
With the government's order
limiting the number of slaughter-
houses that will be permitted to op-
erate and the amount of livestock
they can butcher, it became appar-
ent it is going to take patriotism
down on the farm to keep meat off
' the black market.
: While big and middle-size slaugh-
terers who provide most of the
sleeks and chops for the dinner
table will be licensed, several hun-
tired thousand farmers who usually
butcher a few hogs. sheep, for
their own consumption or for local
sale are exempt.
While these farmers right now
don't account for much of the meat
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trollers. During Worm War II many
farmers sat up their own barn-
yard slaughterhouses with no more
equipment than a tree, a rope. an
ax, and a butcher knife.
It wasn't very sanitary, but plen-
ty of racketeers were willing to
Whether you aim for
the blue-ribbon of the
expert or the dinner.
time smiles of yeu
family, your beet
guarantee o! jmeeeu
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buy the meat at fancy prices and
truck it into the cities for sale at
even fancier black market prices.
Price control officials are afraid
that some farmers exempted from
the slaughtering regulation might
be lured into illicit butchering by
the prospect of easy money. The
Job of keeping check on the farmers
would require an army of enforCe-
ment agents, and is impossible un-
der present conditions. For that
reason it will take a lot of patriot-
ism down on the farm if present
slaughter regulations are to be en-
forced.
HOLLYWOOD:
Unpleasant Publicity
Hollywood, that lan*" of make-oe-
fieve so often in the headlines, ap-
peared in line for considerable more
publicity, rut of an unpleasant na-
ture.
The new avalanche began to roll
when the house un-American activi-
ties committee announced plans to
Investigate certain Hollywood ac'ors
that would "inevitably" lead to a
revival of the communlsm-in-HoUy.
wood ease.
In 1947 the committee investigated
Communist influences in the movie
capital in long and sensational hear-
Ings with the result that 10riters
and directors were convicted of
contempt of congress fo-" refusing to
say whether they had ever been
Communists, All went to jail.
The new hearings may do consid-
erable godd, but as in all such in.
vestigations, some innocent people
can expect to be hurt.
Hitch-Hiker
William J. Newton, Jr., who
first made headlines last August
when he landed a seaplane at
sea beside the "iron curtain"
liner Batory and got into trouble
with the FBI, is shown (left) as
he was interviewed by corre-
spondent Frank Conniff, after he
turned up in Korea. Newton said
he had hitch-hiked 12,000 miles
to "kill some Communists" to
clear his name of the taint of
communism. The 8th army gave
him a physical, turned him down
as unfit.
PRICES:
Reach Record Level
The American public found itself
in a strange position, poe which it
did not entirely understand and
which presented frightening possi-
bilities for the future.
The situation began to develop f
some weeks ago with the enactment i
of price-wage controls, which most i
people believed would halt the cost I
of living spiral, Shortly after the I
"freeze" went into force, numerous
loopholes in the plan were made
known by which many foods could
jump from 5 to 200 per cent.
Later the gullible public was told
by the bureau of labor statistics that
wholesale prices reached a new rec-
ord high despite the "price freeze".
The main increases were in prices
of food and farm products.
This, of course, caused immediate
rumblings in labor's ranks. In turn,
Secretary of Agriculture Brannan
defended farmers against t h e
charges that farm prices were "un-
reasonably high".
Economic stabilization adminis-
trator Eric Johnston, who has the
most thankless job in the United
States today, issued a statement
saying that prices may advance a
few more months and finally level
off in midsummer.
The average American had no de-
sire to see any one group of the na-
tion's economy--farmers, laborers,
manufacturers--unjustly bear the
greatest burden of price and wage
controls. But the average American
was worried about how far he could
stretch his pay check without dras-
tically lowering his standard of liv-
ing. He wanted to know if he could
stand it until the midsummer level.
ing-off took place?
KOREA:
Red Counterattack
With stunning force and typical
blood-curdling methods, complete
with suicidal charges, bugle-blow-
ing, bell ringing, whistle-tooting,
and drum-beating, Chinese Com-
munists launched a counterdrive
against U.N. forces in central Ko-
rea.
The counterattack stalled the
U.N advance that began late in
January and which had approached
Seoul.
Eighth army officers reported ele-
ments of nine Chinese divisions and
six Korean divisions were used in
the counterattack.
At full strength this would mean
as many as 150,000 to 200,000 men
However, heavy casualties had been
inflicted on the Communists since
the U.N. offensive began. Officials
claimed Red casualties, by ground
action alone, totaled 80,121.
Some military observers believed
Communist armies in Korea had
been hurt so seriously in recent
weeks they could not continue an
offensive fore long period of time.
Others, however, were cautious with
their predictions, remembering the
overwhelming manpower available
to the Communist cause.
Morale was reported high among
U.N. troops during recent weeks
as they pushed slowly toward the
38th parallel
EDUCATION
College Enrollment Drop Is Expected
Mobilization is having a drastle 20,000 to 25,000, who will be dis.
effect on colleges throughout the missed from their jobs or will not
motion. A recent survey of Ameri- be replaced when they leave for
can universities and colleges re- military duty or war lobs, the sur-
coaled that most institutions pro- vey revealed.
diet they will lose 25 to 50 per cent The drop in student enrollment is
of their students before the end of causing college officials serious con.
thls year. cern. They report a decline of 5
Such a drop in enrollment will re- to 10 per cent in enrollment for the
suit in a sh of spring semester which began in
January.
OLD CHRISTMAS CARDS AT WORK . . . Jackie Sexton, 2, shows
keen interest as Miss Jetta S. Hendin, administrative director of the
pediatric cerebral palsy clinic at Vanderbilt Clinic, New York City,
helps him cut out gay figures from some of the 25 million Christmas
ards contributed to United Cerebral Palsy to help in theraliy train-
ing of cerebral palsied children in clinics, schools and homes all over
America. In background, two patients cut out their own figures.
TYPICAL RED SOLDIERS... This is a typical group of Chinese Com-
munist soldiers recently captured by United Nations forces on a Korean
fighting front. Chinese Red troops do not surrender themselves too
readily to U.N. forces, preferring to fight to death generally, as they
have been warned by their leaders that capture by American forces
and their allies means execution anyway.
FIRST BIRTHDAY STROLL . • . Renato Roberto-Glusto Giusoppe
Rossellini, celebrating his first birthday, couldn't take hls eyes oft
the photographer during his birthday party. Screen director Roberto
Rossellini's son by a former marriage, Renzo, helgs little Robertlno
walk across the room, while a doting mother, Swedish actress, lngrld
Bergman, lately of Hollywood, Calif., looks on.
MOLUCCAN OFFERS JUNGLE TROOPS . . . Karel J. V. Nikijuluw,
representative of the republic of the South Moluccas, south Pacific '
island group, points to his country during a New York press confer-
ence. The Moluccas, part of the Indonesian federation of republics, I
has offered to the U.N. two thousant trained Amboinese jungle troops
tO fight in Korea. He told his become the first
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