WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS__ Terrific Air Attacks Spur Allied Drive Against Nazis on Central Italian Front; Moscow Conference Offers Blueprint For Lasting Peace in Postwar World (EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinion* are expressed In the** columns, they are those of Western Newspaper Union's news analysts and not necessarily ol this newspaper.! Released by Western Newspaper Union. ■ ■ .... - I An Allied transport is shown rumbling over pontoon bridge thrown up by American engineers across the Volturno river In Italy. EUROPE: Blast Communications Roaring over France’s once para disaical Riviera, Flying Fortresses took pot-shots at communications lines shuttling troops between south ern France and northern Italy. To the south, Allied medium bombers blasted harbors above Rome, which the Nazis have been using to re lieve strained road and rail facili ties. As their heavy bombers smashed far back of German lines, Allied troops slowly drew up for their next assault on Nazi mountain positions In central Italy. As rain continued to fall in swirling sheets and mud died up the country, U. S., British and Canadian soldiers captured stra tegic heights for observing enemy action and took over important road junctions for shuttling supplies. As the Allies edged forward, the Germans snuggled deeper into their new posts along the 2,500-foot high Massico ridge facing Lieut. Gen. Mark Clark's Fifth army on the west, and the rugged country con fronting Gen. Bernard Montgom ery’s Eighth army to the east. Italian King on Spot Noted for his political tight-rope walking. King Victor Emmanuel of Italy now threads a very shaky line, with the new demo cratic forces in the country demanding his abdication. Led by former foreign minister and refugee Count Carlo Sforza, Italy's dem ocratic elements have expressed ap proval for setting up King Victor’s six year-old grandson, Prince Vittorio Em manuel, as the nom inal monarch, with Prince Vittorio ■ regent like Marshal Badoglio to represent him until he comes of age. Chief objection to King Victor is that he not only allowed Mussolini to come into power, but that he also supported him throughout his ad ministration, renouncing him only when it appeared Italy would lose the war and the smart thing to do would be to jump onto the Allied bandwagon. Removal of King Victor Emman uel would sound the death knell of monarchy in Europe, since he is one of the last rulers with any actual governmental powers. SOUTHWEST PACIFIC: Last Step Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur took the final step toward driving the Japa nese from eastern Australasia with a massive attack designed to clear the enemy from the big air and sea base of Rabaul in New Britain. Feeder point for Japanese forces in the Solomons and New Guinea, and nerve center for enemy resist ance in the whole eastern Austral asian area, Rabaul stood threatened as U. S. forces spilled over Into the remaining Nipponese holdings in the Solomons, which flank the base and offer means for harassing any Allied force attempting to move against the big pivotal position. Occupation of the Treasury Is lands heralded MacArthur's drive in the Solomons to cut off Rabaul. Then, U. S. troops landed on the last two important Jap strongholds of Choiseul and Bougainville, with units of the enemy fleet and air force offering resistance. ELECTION NEWS: GOP Maintains Growth Continued growth of Republican strength was evidenced in a smat tering of important state and mayor alty elections. In New York, GOP candidate Joe R. Hanley won the lieutenant governorship from Democratic can didate Lieut. Gen. William N. Hask ell by more than 340,000 votes of approximately 3,308,000 cast. Han ley’s victory assured the GOP of control of the state if Governor Thomas Dewey should make the race for the presidency, since, as lieutenant-governor, Hanley would step in his shoes. New Jersey’s governor during World War I, Republican Waller E. Edge, returned to the political arena to win the office again during World War II by defeating Democrat Vin cent J. Murphy by approximately 100.000 votes. Edge succeeds re tiring Governor Charles Edison. Republicans held their 62-year control of Philadelphia, with GOP Mayor Bernard Samuel besting Democrat and White House favorite William C. Bullitt by more than 64.000 votes. FOUR POWERS: Postwar Blueprint From out of the conference of for eign ministers in Moscow was fash ioned a four-power pact between the U. S., Great Britain, China and Rus sia pledging a finish fight with the Axis and this blue-print for the post war world: 1. Establishment of an interna tional organization of both large and small sovereign nations to maintain peace and security; 2. Before the establishment of such an organiza tion, the four powers will act togeth er to preserve order; 3. Regulation of the armaments of nations. For Italy, the powers dedicated themselves to destroying Fascism and promoting democratic govern ment. They refused to recognize Germany’s annexation of Austria in 1938, telling that country its future treatment will be conditioned by its assistance in overthrowing Naziism within its borders. The U. S., Great Britain and Rus sia planned creation of a committee to advise on political questions in countries reconquered by the Allies. MINES: Back in U. S. Hands With the nation’s cof.1 pits back in U. S. hands, Secretary of Interior Harold Ickes conferred with United Mine Workers President John L. Lewis to end the walkout of al most 360,000 bituminous miners. Having given the pits back to pri vate* ownership October 12 after hav ing taken them over last July, Ickes found them in his lap again, follow ing their seizure by President Roose velt after the UMW began its walk out over failure of negotiations for a signed contract. The big bone of contention lay in the War Labor board’s refusal to ratify a new contract drawn be tween the UMW and Illinois Coal Operators, providing for an 8V4 hour day, with compensation for under ground travel time and a daily wage increase of $1.50. Instead the WLB recommended an 84 hour day, with a daily pay boost of $1.12H. To Ickes fell the task of reconcil ing the UMW and WLB differences, even as a danger of a coal shortage arose, with deliveries prohibited to anyone with 10 days’ supply on hand, and sales limited to one tdn to householders. HIGHLIGHTS • • • in the week't news ENEMY ALIENS: Since Pearl Harbor, 7,884 enemy aliens have been interned or paroled after a hearing, Attorney General Biddle re veals. That is more than half of the 14,738 persons seized as poten tially dangerous. Biddle says that 3,771 aliens have been interned, of whom 1,853 are German, 1,798 Jap anese, and 111 Italians. A few Hun garians and Rumanians are held. GROUND GAINER: The Notre Dame football team is establishing a new mark for ground gaining. The average is now about 485 yards a game. The army team is close be hind with 434 yards. • • • SLEEPERS: Soldiers will soon travel across country in new triple deck sleeping cars, the Pullman company announced. SUBSIDIES: Asked by FDR Declaring that government subsi dies are comparatively cheap for (1) stimulating production of certain necessary and select crops; (2) pre venting inflationary tendencies, and (3) encouraging sale of food through ordinary channels instead of black markets, President Roosevelt asked congressional approval for his food subsidy program. By use of subsidies, the President said, food prices can be kept at lower levels than if processors, dis tributors and retailers were each permitted to mark up their margins. Failure to provide stabilization through subsidies, he said, would bring about justifiable demands for increased wages. Use of subsidies to stabilize prices is presently costing the U. S. 800 mil lion dollars a year, the President said. Of the sum, 450 million dol lars is being used to maintain meat and butter prices by subsidizing the producer. Mr. Roosevelt answered the de mand for a food czar by asserting that the different duties of the War Food administration and Office of Price administration made consoli dation of the two bureaus impracti cal. What People Are Doing When Ensign George Swiggart Miles appeared for duty at the navy department In Washington, D. C., he reported to his mother, Lieut. Amy Brown Miles, in charge of officer personnel. • • • A gold prospector from Leadvllle, Colo., bewhlskered F. E. Gimlett, broke Into a meeting of the house ways and means committee study lng new taxation. “I want congress to put the WACs and WAVES back in the kitchen with pots and pans and babies,” he stormed, before he was led from the room. • • • After calling every available non father In LaPlata county, Colo., to service, draft board clerk John Craig put his name at the top of the induc tion list for fathers. Craig’s job went to his wife, and no sooner was she sworn in, than she summoned him to report for induction. They have four children. RUSSIA: Surge Into Crimea Taking no time to catch their breath, Russia's marching Red le gions stormed into the Crimea, the great body of land off the southern Ukraine commanding the Black sea routes. Lost to Russia after the fall of Sevastopol in 1942, the Nazis pri marily have used its former luxuri ous resorts as health havens for wounded soldiers. When it fell to : Germany, 200,000 Russians were killed or captured, and the exact number of Nazis remaining is un known, since that depends on the proportion that could be evacuated while rearguards fought bitter delay ing actions at Melitopol. Farther to the north, German rearguards battled fiercely in the Krivoi Rog area to hold off the Rus sians while the Nazis withdrew from the great bend of the Dnieper river. CIO: 5l/\ Million Members Growth of the CIO to over sy* mil lion members increased the ranks Philip Murray of organized labor to over 12 million, what with AFL strength estimated in excess of seven million. Announcement of CIO membership was made by its president. Philip Murray, at the open ing of the CIOs sixth constitutional convention in Phila delphia, Pa. To the 5V< million mem bers, the CIO will add two million more in the coming year, Murray said. As the CIO delegates convened, they heard a message from Presi dent Roosevelt, in which he said that although the movement of workers to new manufactft-ing centers was desirable during the early phases of the production program, stabiliza tion of employees at their present occupations was now essential. TOKENS: For Rationing The tokens that will be substi tutes for ration coupons for small purchases were described by the Office of Price Administration as be ing made of fiber, and between a nickel and a quarter in size. They are colored red or blue, with orange edges, it was said. Red tokens will be used for meat purchases, and blue for processed foods. The new system will go into effect in Febru ary. Politic Seen as Key in Farm Subsidy Problem Acceptable Compromise Lacking; Presiden tial Veto Forecast for Any Bill Banning Use of ‘Economic Stimulant/ By BAUKHAGE News Analyst and Commentator. WNU Service, Union Trust Building, Washington, D. C. The administration is in the midst of one of its fiercest contests to ‘‘hold the line” against stabilization. It is the old question of subsidies for farm products and it looks like a fight to the death. The house agriculture committee, with Representative Steagall and others swinging over to the Republican side, is backing the bill which would renew the appro priations for the Commodity Credit corporation and cut out the subsidies to processors, distributors and some direct cash aid to farmers. The present legislation expires in Janu ary. A presidential veto is taken for granted for any bill banning the use of subsidies. Administration sup porters believe that such a veto can be sustained, but they see a tough, bitter fight ahead. The key to the whole difficulty is violent partisanship. Successful pol itics is like successful living—in the family, in the community, in the world—it depends on the ability to compromise. In this fight, there seems to be no one able to work out an acceptable compromise. Already the feeling is bitter. Coat of Living Complicating the problem is, as usual, labor’s insistence that the cost of living has gone up higher than statistics show, that the Little Steel formula is no longer a fair yardstick for wage increases since decisions of the War Labor board, plus in sistence of the director of stabiliza tion, hold down wages while the ad ministration has not carried out its promises to roll back the living costs. The farm organizations and the processors and the distributors op pose the roll-back. They don’t put it that way. They say they oppose subsidies for rolling back consumer prices. They argue that subsidies to increase production and support i prices in a free market are all right -rand are horses of another color. The President sees no difference. Subsidies which permit the govern ment to buy up commodities or make loans at a minimum price when the market price dips below that figure are all right, say the farm bloc, but, they claim, the “new" subsidies go further than that in that they mean payments direct to the processor and distributor and also buying and selling by the govern ment. This, they claim, is in itself inflationary because it means pay ments out of the treasury. They say they don’t believe that the money will get back to the farmer, that it means “grocery bills paid by the government,” with very little real saving to the consumer, and finally, which is the real rub, it means too much government control. Subsidies and Votes Oi: course, there is the point that the politician doesn’t like to mention —nobody who depends on votes wants to be in a position later on of having to remove those benefits. An other point, not stressed, is that sub sidies to processors mean that the government has a right to look into the books of private industry. But to the President, it is subsi dies or inflation. At a recent press and radio conference, the President said that he got the head of the Farm Bureau federation. Edward O’Neil, to admit that letting prices go up in a free market, which the govern ment says would have to be the al ternative of the subsidy if the farmer was to get the incentive for in creased production, would mean a little inflation. The President then told the story about the man who took just a “little” cocaine. He soon became an addict. It was then that a woman report er, known for her spicy questions, asked if the President didn’t think that if his measure was carried we might become subsidy addicts. The President didn’t seem to think so. He pointed out that agriculture has been getting subsidies since 1933, Whether or not there is danger in any of this mild economic stimulant which the administration feels is a wartime necessity, everybody ad mits that runaway inflation must be avoided if possible. The whole com plicated machinery of stabilization was created to prevent it. The proponents of the subsidy plan say that the fight against them is purely political. They say the Re publicans naturally take the side op posite to the administration because they can win some farm votes as champions of higher prices to farm ers if they take this stand. On the other hand, they believe that the anti-subsidy bill will be vetoed eventually and the Democrats say the veto will be sustained. If so. the Republicans will not be criticized for supporting a measure which is defeated. And the Democratic sup port in the house agriculture com mittee, subsidy supporters say, was "bought” by allowing the present subsidies for the products grown in districts of the congressmen who supported the bill, to stand. The administration followers say that it seems strange for the Re publicans to raise a cry against sub sidies when tariffs are subsidies. They mention the sugar “subsidy.” As for complaint that the subsidy on agricultural products would not reach the farmer, they call attention to the milk subsidies at present in operation where the man who milks the cow gets the subsidy direct Meanwhile, we know that the cost of living has already gone up. We know that we need full production of foodstuffs. We know that many farmers can’t get the feed required to raise the stock or to fatten it to its most efficient weight for slaugh ter. Payment of any money out by the treasury does mean more money in circulation but the subsidy pro ponents point to the kind of inflation we get when prices aren’t controlled. The administration says it is better to control a few processors and dis tributors, even if Uncle Sam has to snoop into their books to see he isn’t cheated, than to let that vicious spiral of prices and living costs start to mount. In the next weeks you will hear a lot more of these arguments. • • • Food Contribution The other day when I stepped into the broadcasting studio just as the Farm and Home Hour had ended, I found some cookies, some Brown Betty and a meat loaf sandwich wait ing. These samples had been saved from a more elaborate layout of good things made with soy beans which had been the subject of the F & H broadcast. I ate them with pleasure. Al though the meat loaf was 25 per cent soy grits, it tasted exactly like meat to me. The cookies and the Brown Betty were excellent. Soy flour and soy grits—the bread had some soy flour in it—are both on the market ready to contribute vitamins, mineral, protein, vim and vigor to our food, reducing the con sumption of scarcer and more ex pensive products. A saving of from 20 to 25 per cent in meat and still having almost identical food values is nothing to be sneezed at. Soy, it is pointed out, is not a substitute but a supplement to other foods and you would be surprised how many tasty dishes can be pro duced with it. The Bureau of Hu man Nutrition and Home Economics has a handy little pamphlet contain ing recipes, and you can get one by writing to the bureau, care of the department of agriculture, Washing ton, D. C. There are recipes for mint loaf, chile con came, suggestions for use of soy with vegetables when they are served as a main dish; soy in sauces and mixed with cereals to give a richer protein diet—many sugges tions for making what you have go further and accomplish more. A Letter Frankly, when I get a letter that makes me real mad, I sometimes mention it on the air. I shouldn’t ever do it, I suppose, because I usu ally get a flood of sympathy which perhaps I don’t deserve but one of the best replies I ever had was from a man in Spearflsh, S. D., who wrote to me as follows: “F.ach morning at II a. m. MITT, I tune you in. Now, I may be mistaken, yet it seems to me that at times you think some of the letters you receive are ‘hitting below the belt' which has always been considered cowardly and unjustified. Hut in a great many cases, if ue don’t hit below the belt, we just make a total miss as it seems that some of the stuff that is put out for us to fol low shows that there is NOTHING above the belt to hit at.” _ I B R I E F S . . . by Baukhage Nazi occupation authorities in Hol land have even cut the Dutch horse meat ration one-third. The weekly meat ration coupons, which used to be good for 150 grams of horsemeat, now are good for only 100 grams, or about two ounces, according to a re port published in a German language daily in Holland. The cut means a great deal to the Dutch, whose liv ing standards have lowered. Collecting spider web for precision sighting instruments is one of the duties performed by women in the British Auxiliary Territorial service. • • • Because com fields are excellent hide-outs for partisans, the Croat minister for the interior has ordered all farmers to cut their field; by the end of this month. If they are not cut by then, they will be burned. By VIRGINIA VALE Released by Western Newspaper Union. TIME was when an actor was likely to lose his pub lic if he stayed off the screen for even a short time. Some can’t risk it now. Alan Ladd doesn’t belong in that class— a large part of the public is remaining faithful to him while he’s ofT serving his country, and refusing to put anyone else in their idol’s place. He worked hard for his suc cess—had years of encouragement but few good roles, and put in time working in radio before he got a good role in “Joan of Paris.” Then ALAN LADD he tested for “This Gun for Hire," and when Paramount executives saw his test they didn't bother about test ing anyone else. His success in that role was like Marlene Dietrich’s in “Morocco”—instantaneous. -X Gary Moore, who co-stars with Jimmy Durante over both CBS and NBC, will make his picture debut under David Selznick’s sponsorship, and will be developed as “a sort of combination of Fred Allen and Bob Hope"—which should be something! It’ll be Allen on writing ability and Hope from the slant of his delivery. -* Howard Petrie, announcer of the Moore-Durante air show, had both Paramount and RKO after him with a long-term acting contract. He stands six feet four and weighs 240 pounds—right up with Paramount’s Bill Edwards, of “Our Hearts Were Young and Gay.” -* Hildegarde, the new radio star who has the “Beat the Band” show on Wednesday evenings, introduced a song called "She’s Got Bars on Her Shoulders and Stars in Her Eyes”; the WACs couldn’t resist the title so adopted the ditty for their official recruiting song. -# Pompeii’s emergence into front page importance because of the fighting around Naples inspired RKO to reissue its spectacular “The Last Days of Pompeii,” originally re leased in 1935; its cast includes Alan Hale, Basil Rathbone, and Louis Calhern. -* Dick Haymes’ first tests at 20th Century-Fox turned out so well that his part in “Four Jills and a Jeep,” with Carole Landis, was made big ger and bigger. Meanwhile, his ra dio sponsor pays for the lad’s popu larity. Half the program comes from New York, with a full orches tra, chorus, and Jim Ameehe fea tured—another orchestra and chorus goes on in Hollywood, accompany ing Haymes’ songs. -* Flossie Flynn, head of Loew’s Telephone Information Service in New York, says that recently her office has been swamped by in quiries about Metro’s two-reel short, “Heavenly Music,” a tale of a Jive musician who can’t get into heaven until he convinces a jury of famous composers that swing is real mu sic-says she gets more calls ask ing where it’s playing than she does on feature productions. -* It’s taken 14 years for Hollywood to get around to remaking “The Bridge of San Luis Rey,” done in 1929 as a silent. Benedict Bogeaus, a business man who bought Holly wood’s General Service Studios a year and a half ago, bought the screen rights and put Rowland V. Lee in as director—and now the pic ture's timed right to coincide with the work of the Committee on Inter American Affairs. -¥ The Ellery Queen cast likes to be heard above the incidental music of the organ, except when guest detec tives turn up early, during the dress rehearsal—then, when the crime’s solution is given, the organ fairly roars, drowning out all voices. -* ODDS AND ENDS—Tenor Bill Days, discovered by Groucho Marx in his ra dio program's chorus, and then given the solo singing part, has been signed to a 26-week contract . , . Looks as if uBlondie” — Penny Singleton—would soon be kicking her pretty legs again in musicomvdy films—she uas orig inally brought to Hollywood because of her success in musicals on the Broadway stage . . . Maureen O’Hara, last seen in RKO’s “The Fallen Spar row,” and Paul Henried will co-star in that studio's ”The Spanish Main” . . . Boy Acuff, a star on radio's “Grand Ole Opry," may be a candidate for gover mor in Tennessee’s elections next year. 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