|-WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS Russ Break With Japs Changes Entire War Picture in PartifTt;' Ike Predicts Guerrilla Warfaje m . .1 Released by Western Newspaper Union _ (EDITOR’S NOTE: When eplnlens are expressed In these eolnmns. they are these at Western Newspaper Union s ntw» »o»U«U*nd net nacssaeillp-ot thls ni n spnpsr.y TREATY: Ru&sJBrcak Jf ilh lapi_ When Foreign Commissar Vyache •lAY jMolotov curtly landed the Jap ai^bil^dc*- a note danoiddiig Rus sia's neutrality pact with Japan, the question of the Soviet government’s future course with Nippon became a matter of high importance In United Nations' cbpnceljeriea.. - . r rtf Speculation about Marshal Stalin's Intentions was heightened in .view of the close imminence of the wor^ security conference fn‘ $an Fran - — J cisco. Two facts, heaver, were clear for the rapid iTlm treaty or dinarily woulmhmftertin iiintil April, 1946, yet Russia decided to void it summarily. MarsHWStalln publicly l*>aDn99jL“n l/iWeiflqr nation., apn M Jj.v UiiririOO J "CrenSiin^,” * tff*WfcC reciW "ettafekeiHfce tfi.S.«l9ap»fiJft¥P' mate’s alWmttrt heJpWi'iSe lattfcf in .her. war against fee r .SAR.”ncu Observers were vgredfi that Kus-r slaia jactlon meant w ok-sari working co?SW^?^b^twoppkRusrt*. andtfcer •UlOL Sow soon that meant an poem declaration of war ,by .thf Redson Jajiatt. time would tell". •'* kuui.. .yA "uj_ noc. ,.mro *ven as t|»e bad news, came ffom Russia the Japs rot an-' •fhW rode remthde?1 Urat^the^'f payoff of aggression was ap». I preaching when, it was- »n-ji i nounced from Washington that Qenpral, of (he Army Douglas r OTScArthur had been chosen tp lead aA American itrniy forces ; In the Faeidc and FleH- Admiral Chester W. Nlmlti had b*ba se lected to l*ad the naval ferns la the final drive on the Japa nese homeland. General o* the Army Henry H. Arnold will command the 20th (gnbertortsV Air force And will be In charge «f aU other aerial ^ no Hon In, Abo nertor. The ctdbfai of staff will continue to directj, the,, overall «tratcgy and lylll give specific responsibility to. MacArthnir or Nhnite for partic idhV Operations tn th* Pacific1. ’ This extension of operational 1: territory for th# two loaders who £v®, been carrying the w/w to r pan’s doorstep indicated )h*i. the ^Island hopping'1 phase of tfie Campaign wa* over1 and i'" new strategy involving a dfreet 1 awnmlt im tha lap homeland was it Imminent. .£*3 vrc JAP CABINET: More H oe Ahead A , steadily heavier burden of trouble was to be the fate of the new Suzuki cabinet in Japan. That was unmistakably forecast in the fall of Ms predecessor—the Koiso cabinet Two major events had contributed to the Japanese government crisis. One was the successful progress of the American military advance on Okinawa island, only 330 miles from the Jap mainland. The other was Soviet Russia’s action In de nouncing the neutrality treaty with Japan that still had a year to run. Ushered In as a rallying force against the Allied march toward Tokyo, after the infamous Tojo gov ernment had failed, the cabinet of Premier Gen. Kuniaki Koiso had en countered disaster after disaster in Its eight and a half months of exist ence. How long the new cabinet of 77 year-old Adm. Baron Kantaro Suzuki would last was open to speculation. But Japs as well as Americans knew one thing for certain. The final doom of Nippon was approaching. j OKINAWA: , Timetable'a-Ahead A* military, observers had expe<;t td% -Utuvwe resistance-opt Okirf* wuJ had-' suffered after* U.'Si *enffy troops had cut the island in two. With the strategic airfields of the capital city of Naha as the p'rize, the 24Uj army corps and the *?th divi sion fought fiercely against well-or ganised Jap • units defending the southern areas of,Okinawa. Marine 3rd amphibious forces continued ex tension of their northern lines, Observers were of the belief that bitter battles wmild have to be fought and won before the southern portions of the island could be wop. In this area it was estimated that between 80,000 and 80,000 pnemy troops were concentrated. Never theless, MaJ. Oen. Roy S. Oeiger, marine commander, said the time table was well ahead of schedule. WORLD TRADE: A War Preventive A significant prelude to the world security conference in San Fran cisco was Secretary of State Stet tintus' address In Chicago pytlining plank fdr wider world markets In whWh the industrial output of the United States would match other na tions’ npeds. Addressing the council on foreign 1 relations, gray . thatched StetthmnF declared the United States would: ^tPO'WF/.to f work} VMf* «Wr< tries, to stimulate International eco nomlrtyellftJbini. Tflc^ecretalV df state ,n* ioUiftRotm *t.i *0«ei objective im all our rels Uoi* with oftofcr nations is tp jtferfcrd, aggrcuflw SECRETARY STETnNItJS I ; , A Formula far peace. •■ i /. turbing the * pea£e at ttttf United States and to develop those cotidi* tlons of international life that will make, it possibly fo maintain hig(v levels of ppqductivp, efnpjojrmen^ and farm income and steadily rising standards 'of lfvtng tot all ftie American pfeoffl*;’*-n{' u cdl.RRlUA WAR: Forprakt ifi Eurnpp f Ttie staterrlint to #*residerri HooAe yelt 'froth General: Eisanhowefr fbre-r; casting extensive guerrilla (warfare in Europe was .beuig borjn$ out as Allied armies ground th^ir wpy through Germahy and her van quished satellites. ji)i . Unable to fbritt a stAingf unified line! td etirnbat thei Allied smashest toward Berlin, the Nazis comrr)Ap<|l depended, on a. series of “last maq" stands to tjejay extinction. Undeni ably General Etsenhower’V Aftfdd Armies dh tiie west were ! cutting Germany to pieces. Yet spots of l resistance remained and each posed a cleanup problem to the Allies. The trap in the Ruhr was an exam ple of this trend. Over battlefields once reddened by the blood of soldiers who fell In the Napoleonic wars, American and British divisions smashed In their drive east to meet the Russians and to bisect Germany. Far forward In the vanguard of the race to Ber lin were armored units of General Patton’s 3rd army. Pressing toward • the strategic North sea ports of Bremen and Hamburg were the British forces of Montgomery. Meanwhile. Lt. Gen. James H. Doolittle was sowing destruction via warplanes on the airfields, rail yards and supply dumps in the Munich area of southern Germany where lt was reported Hitler was planning his last stand. In the east. Russian forces had continued their pressure on Berlin and to the south they cleared Hun gary of enemy forces, capturing Bratislava In Slovakia and pouring 1 across the Danube to Vienna. HIGHLIGHTS . . . in the week’s news ART TREASURES: Hidden in a dank tunnel used by German civil ians near the front, priceless art treasures from France were found by units of the U. S. 1st army. Among the art found were works of Rembrandt, Reubens, Van Gogh and Van Dyke. In addition there were 500 original scores by Ludwig van Beethoven, the composer, taken from his birthplace in Bonn. SURPLUS GOODS: A pre-sale dls-! play of 1,500.000 items of army but- j plus property drew 500 dealers to ' Philadelphia. Although the general public was not eligible to bid. war veterans wishing to obtain stocks to go into business were allowed to submit orders. Sales were under the direction of E. H. Mallory, regional sales officer for the treasury depart ment’s surplus disposal branch. RECONVERSION: Postwar Freedom J. A. Krug, War Production board L a ^arninL IhtTwe will aJp a free e^po Ise that fl^Pfov ttempt fPshape war Business^ ._ The. WEB ahaieiwaw made these' disclosures In a statement outlining the government’s recohvefsiod! pro gram. any long-range programming cf»#iis country's industrial structure,1** Tie declared. "The wartime controls were developed with the advice and counsel of management and labor In the various industries affected, and this same advice and counsel is being sought in_ considering the timing of their relaxation and with drawal.", . ,t ., .• ; ,i ARGENTINA: ‘Probation’ Ends Argentina's probation period as the bad boy of the western hemi sphere drew toward a close as the state department announced it was removing its special economic re strictions against Ole South Ameri can nation. The new United States policy will put Argentina on an equal footing with the rest of Latin America when it asks to buy commodities in this country. The state department's move was regarded a^ a reward for good con duct. Argentina had followed Its re cent declaration of war against the Axis by Signing the Act of Cha^iul-i tepee pledging nonaggsesaion in this • hemisphere and had-likewise begun an .energetic;pur*r of Maxi’ipies, ,M DEBT LIMIT ‘ Upped U) Billion 'As Ameri,(^o^ began , *4««yii)f !their family bankrolls in prepara TOO,000 -t»i$a«l)000(Oatt^®OJ>T is a>‘. > • Fiscal experts Jaeliaue this $300, iCpOlOQOcAOO Utiit tvillbeortaclldfi b* ^boMr,»%unenlO, 1M0. nt tEblr*f > i 91 “msi ©ufotiHtfKy&C*'1 i$2k#,W)0,o6o,OOftf me3ns limit of $260,000,000,000 would haW^ been reached soma time during the Seventh War: Loan driver if that rfifiv,* firodMtM-i anything- like tbei ? $21fppo.000,000 s^le$ ^jthe,Si$Vi War .W ‘ „." PACIFIC BASES; mo . V. S. Must Hold f 0 JUiB1 ‘ ’ with American blood and Che main ItrttfHfce!of a' large*' poster We**1 Wed 3by 'FleM'' A«Wftfal Ernest i#p King, commander of the V< &!' fleoti, ? c: -asTsi r>T o) FaJlu^f, ten .kgep these, now, will mean that this country YfUl have to fight for them another day, he declared In an address before the. Academy of Political Scitnc* 1A NeW York:fcit*- j: ■ :-n» .“3c , "Rich as we are, we do not have the hymarv er physical resoqrces to ADMIRAL ERNfeST KING ' “Keep our basos.” dissipate our patrimony generation after generation,” he declared in emphasizing that we cannot afford to continue a cycle of “fighting and building and winning and giving away.”, t POSTWAR JOBS: Baruch Sees Plenty Postwar America as a land where jobs will be plentiful was envisioned by 75-year-old Bernard Baruch, ad viser to President Roosevelt, in an Interview published in the army newspaper Stars and Stripes. On a mission to London, where he conferred with Prime Minister Churchill of Great Britain, Baruch asserted that servicemen would have nothing to worry about when they got home, and that "there will be more work in the United States than there will be hands with which to do it.” RAILROADS: Problems of the American rail roads will not be solved by the termination of hostilities in Europe, Col. J. Monroe Johnson, director of ODT, declared. The end of the German war will simply mean a reversal in the flow of traffic from east to west, he told ; a meeting of executives of the Asso ciation of American Railroads in Chicago. Carriers will be confront ed with large amounts of troops and supplies that have to be moved across the country. Entire Nation Mourns Death -HIANKUN DELAN© *©QSEVELT wav, (7£”,j; JANUARY 30, 1882-APRlfc^J^ fi f ^ I ?Whe^%erurft?&d r#^r closer the doom of Nazi Germbh^antl'lmjM^ftfl^adSft?,9 l^ranklin Delano Roosevelt died in Warm S^ifin^f;JG%ofgfS/r wltereii>€£jhadnlpee«)-nest»g-*for 10 days. . ©wtteitftfiwltedjfROW Oiifler©bra¥lfembh-hTag£'at ViW p.^T noijuAiprLl l2i*nMj. *6«K:aHev ffaid;t)e#ftJ Pf&SWeftt0 dpr-li^fears, qft©tfnQwthS^r/dqe!dtfys:r-TWWWite:Hbu3e waft’s finnoHnqedi^prth^rf^fbigf l&ejfurtetthl, wSthKf!?fl?ffWen1f at the* ^fam^dest%te§ftjr4l^.i^rk| K," yi»»wsio9 ^ niMtod - n oi A^WLy1 nnHy hjju^laps^d^lncche hathtaken* hisr hipt§ri^g^,th^f pfyce fpr,.a fourth* term. Qaty a few; weeks : befqre jcie |iaa3te|.urrip4 fhe Yalta conference.'wherB-in oojpf)pimy-WitA S^uqsh^X^tafin.$f Russia and Prime Minister Chufchiltpf fjjifes^ ^r^'ai^ he. fi.Bjd labored to. build an«ndurt ingLngace., ^t„r ^ * 7' ** 3i ,t sA .t-1 ,-£ta9trr v:i3if as .Fate .denied Franklin Rposevelt thei chance to,enjoy the, fruits pfy|ctpry py^rW&Mis, Yet history seemed-destined , to enshrine,himas gne of the immortaloArnqripaiji.pre^idwts. And, every citfz6h Wh© irMrriftd ths,dd timely passpig-pf thpy Copornander-ih-Ghief felt that hewa§.^ casualty pf the war, just hs purely as every <£4t., M^finq and ^qilop who hftd,. failed fn battle?2 en)J f1’ ' r r »vrf r.\>r *.t 1 * "imcr 1 , '• Never before had ant Anjerifjgo President died in wartime., ^bca ham iiincpju, tqll Udder ^ssassin Booth’s bullet jiist five days after the surrender df General Lee’s army at Appomattox vin 1S65. Woodrow Wilfeprt livadi tc# see*jvlctery Gerrhhny lft‘Wcftrld Waft I, bofthe fought a losing battle, for the League* ©t Wnlronj»aad *dieg aarty in 19*4, ‘a :4or# waa iio be achieved t 9VWi GtyVf. ina^^en^d l^kel^ tprlive. in Jjjs tory.es 9] great,man,, ate?te4*siB?fiar fe mourned the ‘ tfeatVi <5t' £ ranklin' Roo^velt, tWe*ir ! prtfyer#( Weht for his successor, Htirry S. Truman/' For on the shouldersiof’ this slight,, gray, 60-year-old Missouri^ had been laid a responsibility such, gs po American President had ever1 borne. ; i • What the consequences of the President’s death would be to the United States and the world, time alone would tel). But as American? recovered from their first shock at the news, they quickly determined two things. The war must be prosecuted to as I speedy and victorious a finish as possible. Lasting peace must be estab lished. And so, regardless of party or of past political differences, the peo ple have rallied behind Mr. Truman. The new President faces the im mediate task of directing American participation in the United Nations’ blueprints for a permanent world organization. He likewise faces the responsibility of establishing work ing relations with other members of the Big Three, so that the per sonal cooperation which existed be tween Franklin D. Roosevelt. Josef Stalin and Winston Churchill in leading the Allies toward victory PRECEDENTS OUT: Throughout his career as Presi dent. Franklin D. Roosevelt was known as the “precedent breaker.” j That title was first conferred in 1932 when he flew out to Chicago from Albany, N. Y., to address the Demo cratic convention that had nomin ated him. It continued after his election as a result of his informal methods of transacting business. But it reached a climax in his de cision to seek a*.,third term in 1940 and a fourth term in V944. 1 _., WUt&Y'iS. 2MIUAMN 59: D : Ifcd WtS^EftJy ,,,. ,-fpa^ Bd'^hinfitinerfllrf‘helping th’e''peadt?r ¥lcJfirhes ^fi^ftng-rshge .^pbt'of go’lding;tfte'lriOitR>,h to postwar: eeonamia pnokperity once NaziCSer 1many and Japan are finally defeated. Known as a plain, modest man who b»s not drgmath*ed himself personally. President t Truman nevertheless has dem onstrated on many occasions that hfe cair fod a leader of force and determination. His work as chairman Of the Truman com mittee in. the U, ». senate in vestigating the conduct of the war is(cited as an example of this. And his conduct of the Vied Presidency has shown that he can work successfully with political leaders of both parties in getting! needed measures passed and in reconciling op posing points of view. The 33rd President was bom in Lamar, Mo., May 8, 1884, although the home of the family for four generations had been on a farm near Independence, Mo. Served in World War I. When World War 1 broke out, Truman became captain of Bat tery D In the field artillery of the 35th Division and saw ac tion at St. Mihiel and in the Meuse-Argonne offensive. Back in Independence, Truman and a war buddy opened a haber dashery business. He married his boyhood sweetheart, Bess Wallace, and they have one daughter, Mary Margaret. Truman later turned to politics for a career, which started with his election as County Judge of Jack son county, Mo, In 1926 he became the presiding judge of Jackson county, with the endorsement of Tom Pendergast, political boss of Kansas City. He studied law at night and supervised the construc tion of a great highway system. President’s Life Was Characterized pjffy ^ijftirous Action •J Unlikedhe “log-cabin” presidents, |Franklin®elano Roosevelt was not B&om iij#4ipverty. When Franklin arrived at Hyde Park, N. Y., on -January 2£L ltifti-.-hc came_ialQ a., family that had possessed wealth' for many generations. The Roose velts had been thrifty land-owners 1 tn the Hudson' vattertrtTire thr first" of the family came over from Hol land. On his mother’s side also there was a substantial fortune. Among his ancestors were many men who had served the state in various capacities. Young Franklin attended the very fashionable Groton school, where he prepared for Harvard university. After completing the liberal arts course he entered Columbia U. law school, from which he was gradu ated in 1907. Two years earlier, however, he married his distant cousin, Anna Eleanor Roosevelt. Eleanor was a niece of Theodore Roosevelt, at that time in the White House. After two years of legal prac tice, Franklin entered politics, running on the Democratic ticket for the New York state senate. He unexpectedly defeat ed a strong Republican candi date. From the beginning of his career he identified himself with reform movements, opposing the powerful Tammany organi zation in the statehouse. He was re-elected in 1912, by which time he had become a leader of the antf-Tammany faction. Woodffcw Wilson appointed Roose/ ve?t assistant Twctetary1 of 1 tWF navy. When World War I brokamuGi Roosevelt proved himself an effi cient administrator;—handling bi!-~ lions: of dellara’ w'orth--.e£ contracts forjihops ancFaupplie*. H^ftefrved fobs ’- thif, jjosV Ihc^cjut .the, -l^e Vl1 ' Cor XfflSiPreWH9¥>9B n ' fetW t!« fiSWPP^iC-o^SnaAr mate ipr James Cox. 'While cam pa^ni^'WW^viW^^esftBeitfy HdbseWlt^at!^ mwb a&t&ami' arfte&> u*fluErt>l«9ihfi'tAter.t.|*ulittdBl t flifa«T Cosoi being oddfeuted, oJT.OUfcv Returned to legal practice. ,xa«v ! \ The following year the great ! i tragedy of his life struck him— , fhfarfflie' f&raiydfs. dll«#> bf#,H , I strong young: man ticca me i as fi bedridden/inv«Wo>fV months he .lay yrithoiR ag)lpition, »lm,ost erful will took command, now amf ty ‘^ersl^enty We n partially1 regained-’HW-ltei of T-1 him tbusctodJ It was during Ub : convalescent*/at Warm'Spnings, rtft Qa., that ke d^tggmiijed to 4$^ hfvfW“.f?oHad,Stk|“ >. scourge thal had almost ruined him. ' The "Marehrtff Dimes4’' campaign was the result; 1 At the Democratic'^bti\fB8tlofls Cf 1924 and 1928,'life aligned’ hifnsett' with' the groufi kiipphrtlng Alfred E.; Smith, New Yorkfso gov'ernoru When gmitb -was, nominated in 1928, Raqsevelt ran ipr, governor of his state and w^s elected. At the end of Bis two-year term fie was again elected; this time by the gfehteyt majority'ever given to a New YoVk governor, ci* 'ir.ir o io.J ? so As governor he continued theottfc-i form and improvement policies of his predecessor Smith. His achieve ments attracted nationwide atten tion. As the depression that fcdfgan latle in: 1929 deepened, rhis efforts r to , foatrolF.^egjaftciunfipg fcpsmess , faijpres,. up^nplc^menjjj , ^anq^jdis-... tress in Bis state revealed his abili ties as 4 vigdroflSKfci1d,erfin gravb' ■ijimk'it.'t'tc t> T vro;m“ eoso.aven 1 '^4^»t M;4V Ja c‘; WhCtr' the" ^nhfiBna4} £8nVdhtioVr met 4ft1 CKlcag^ftt'lgS^-Ro&stWW'’ was quickly chosen. He was swept into office i»3f i-«i'j)li«qJity. of seven mij^op-f.yptes, carrying,. 42, states, Both, fiqyse? ,wept fDe^graUc , Befoy© he could, take ,office d wgy^ of banlf failures threat- r - cued the whole economic struc ture. The tarfi'oUs "bank mora torWfh’’ Ardor,1 oWe of Roose velt’s first o flirt a I arts; 'closed all banks until they could he re- - organized on a pounder basis, thus preventing disastrous runs. In the spring of 1932 came the repeal of tHe l8th, or prohibi tion amendment.' Then came the National industrial Recov ery Act, or “NBA,” under which extensive emergency pow ers were granted to the Presi dent. A series of public works were authorized to combat un employment, together with huge appropriations for direct relief. The numerous executive and leg- ] islative acts of this first term were j approved in general as necessary | in the face of widespread suffef ing. A phrase from one of the Pi-esident's speeches, ‘‘a new deal,” developed into a title for the whole Roosevelt program. In 1936 the convention in Phil adelphia nominated Roosevelt by acclamation on the first bal lot. He carried 46 states In the elections. This second term ma ority was so overwhelming that many New Dealers began to call it a “mandate from the people.” During this second term a great number of mea sures were passed to increase the economic security of the In dividual, particularly the work ers, farmers and small busi nessmen. “ CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT BABY CHICKS BUY ROSCOE HILL CHICKS for treater profits. Their fine quality breeding will help produce eggs and meat our country need* and offer you an outstanding profit-making Investment this year. Improved breeding stock, hundreds males from 200 to 311 egg ability. 10 reading breeds—sexed chicks. Write for prices. Free Catalog, i • ROSCOE HILL HATCHER* •15 B St. - Lincoln, Nebraska. CEDAR PQSTg for SALE TOA'tfd 'dEUAR POST maker wJhtl sal* hIuGBCBHBOLM. Bonners Ferry. Uaka. Farm Machinery Wanted WANTED TO BUY New or used Massey-HaTrib dr * International self-propelled combine. Charles R. Fentress, Hemlngford, Nebr. 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It retained, n>aW;_ poisoa the system and upset the wnolw^j body mfcthinery. , . • IJ . fH Symptoms may be Dagging baekacne#|| persistent headache, attacks of dizzinesajv* getting up nights, swelling, pumne«»‘f! under the eyes—a feeling of nervou* ,■ anxiety and loss of pep and strength*!, Other signs of kidney or bladdordlwjM order are sometimes burning, scanty too frequent urination. There should be no doubt that prom(|j r, treatment, is wiser than neglect. UHii: Doah'i Pith. Doan'a have been winnm(gji new friends for more than forty yeart^jf They have a nation-wide reputmtio»di; Are recommended by grateful people tM||| country over. Art i/our neighbor! jjj