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About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 5, 1946)
^-WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS_ Truman Pushes Unification of Armed Forces; U.S. Moves for Active Participation in UNO - Released by Western Newspaper Onion. ______ (EDITOR’S NOTE: When opinions are expressed In these columns, they are those of Western Newspaper Union s news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.) mm - -irmi-nnni" nr~ 'irni—rrinrnmrn imii rm—iinn-iiiiiniimMMn-BirMii mumiii—ii——i m ■ Composed of war widows and children and men needed to care for their families in Japan, first batch of Nipponese repatriates are shown aboard small steamer leaving Shanghai. In all, some 300,000 Japanese, including troops, will be evacuated from the greater Shanghai area. SERVICE MERGER: On Way With President Truman throwing his full weight behind a merger of the fighting services, early congres sional action on unification of the army, navy and air forces was fore seen. Meanwhile, rougher sailing loomed an the chief executive’s proposal for compulsory military training for youths 18 to 20 years of age to build up an experienced reserve adequate to meet future emergencies. In casting his lot for the merger of the armed forces after strenuous naval objections to unification, Mr. Truman called for a single depart ment of national defense under a civilian head, with assistants for the various branches, and a mili tary chief of staff, with command ers from the three services. The military leaders would join with the President in an advisory council. Maximum efficiency would result from unification, the President de clared, because close co-ordination would acquaint each branch of the armed forces with the capabilities and limitations of the others, and economy would be achieved by eliminating a duplication of effort and supply. FARM BUREAU: Discuss Parity Despite imperfections in the pres ent parity formula, American farm .... ers were urged :o retain the system by Secretary of Agriculture Ander son addressing the annual convention of the Farm Bu reau'in Chicago, 111. Referring specif ically to the gov ernment program 1UI 1 1 V. O U p [J U 1 L Secretary at 90 per cent of Anderson parity, Anderson said varying conditions for differ ent crops might fail to promote max imum production. Even with milk at 109 per cent of parity at the 1910-14 base, output is below re quirements, he said, while eggs at 90 per cent might lead to plentiful production. Declaring that the parity formula should be based upon the 10 years preceding the present program rath er than on the 1910-14 level, Edward A. O’Neal, farm bureau president, called for all agricultural groups to unite on an over-all plan rather than Insist on a separate system for eacn commodity. Pointing up the need for addition al rural health and education facili ties, Senator Hill (Dem., Ala.) said that with millions of farm dollars ending up as profits in industrial dis tricts after consumer purchases, only federal taxation and expendi tures for social service could as sure the return of some of the money back to agricultural areas for public purposes. UNO: U. S. In V/ith house passage of enabling legislation, congress joined in mak ing the U. S. a full-fledged mem ber of the United Nations organiza tion, conceived out of the welter of war to preserve future peace by co operative action and prevent the de struction of modern conflict. Acting quickly on the enabling leg islation, President Truman nomi nated the U. S. delegates to UNO, with ex-Secretary of State Edward Stettinius chosen as the representa tive on the all-powerful security council and senior member of the general assembly group including Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Sen. Tom Connally (Dem., Texas) and Sen. Arthur Vandenberg (Rep., Mich.). Under the legislation approved, the President can enter into negotiations with the other four members of the security coun-il of UNO for provi sion of military forces to suppress aggression, with freedom to permit their use after congressional sanc tion of the arrangements. The Pres ident also will be able to join in the imposition of economic boycotts to bring a troublemaker into line. LABOR: Talk Turkey With early maneuverings for posi tion jolted by President Truman's request for fact-finding anti-strike machinery to speed settlement of labor disputes, the CIO United Auto mobile Workers and major produc ers entered into discussions of prin cipal issues, with Ford continuing to steal the show. With the UAW’s Ford division hav ing provided the first real break in the deadlock with agreement to penalize wildcat strikers hindering output, the company took one step closer toward agreement by pro posing a 15-cent an hour wage in crease. Despite Ford’s alteration of the union’s security plan and the UAW’s rejection of thffe company’s wage offer, the two propositions pro vided a meeting ground for a settle ment somewhere between. Meanwhile, the Sinclair-United Oil Workers (CIO) pact providing for an 18 per cent wage raise and union assurance against wildcat striking loomed as the model contract for all of industry. In arriving at a settle ment, H. F. Sinclair declared that the two parties agreed that volun tary solution of disputes was pref erable to government intervention, such as proposed by Mr. Truman. SHIP SINKING: Convict Skipper Acquitted on a charge of ineffi ciency in the sinking of the cruiser Indianapolis in the Pacific last July with a loss of 880 lives, Capt. Charles B. McVay was found guilty of negli gence in the operation of the ship, with sentence subject to review of the secretary of the navy. Clearance on the charge of ineffi ciency for not issuing timely orders to leave the vessel after It was struck by a torpedo followed Me Vay’s testimony that he had at first believed the ship could be saved but then called for its abandonment when convinced of the real extent of damage. Shortly after, the Indianap olis capsized, taking a heavy toll of life. In being convicted on the negli gence charge, McVay was accused of failing to order a zig-zag course during the trip from Guam to Leyte and thus divert the aiming of a U boat. In defense, McVay contended that poor visibility and lack of moon that night governed his decision not to take on a diversionary course. Stresses Need for Additional Knowfcd?* tf Nutrition * ——— A drastic change in the diet may be harmful even when it adds beneficial food. Dr. C. A. Elvehjem, professor of biochemistry at the University of Wisconsin, asserted in calling for increased research into nutrition to permit wider knowledge of balanced consumption. For example, Dr. Elvehjem says, most workers in this field regard a high level of protein in the diet as desirahle, but it has recently been discovered that a deficiency in vitamin B6, or pyridoxine, develops faster on high protein diets. A high level of fat may tend to reduce tooth decay, he continues, but it may also tend to reduce the necessary synthesis of vitamins in the intestinal tract. TELEVISION: Charge Restriction Accusing Scophony, Ltd., of Great Britain and Television Productions Inc. and General Precision EquiD ment Corporation of America of re tarding development of television in the U. S. through a cartel agree ment dividing markets between Eu rope and the we" _-rn hemisphere, the government filed anti-trust charges in New York City. In stating that the companies had agreed to stay out of competing areas, the government declared that the American firms had obtained ex clusive riglfts to an advanced tele vision set controlled by Scophony, but had done nothing to either de velop and exploit the apparatus here or promote its sale and use. Employing an independent light along the principle of the motion pic ture projector, th. British product is capable of transmitting images 20 by 24 inches on home sets, 3 by 4 feet on school and club sets and 12 by 15 feet on theater screens, the government said. In contrast, Amer ican sets are limited to reproduc tions of 4 by 6 inches and 6 by 8 inches. JAPAN: Tells Secret In guarded memoirs left after his suicide to prevent arrest as a war criminal, former Jap Premier Prince Konoye left some glimpses of the behind-the-scenes maneuver ing that marked his country’s di plomacy before the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. One of the top disclosures was Konoye’s report on the evolution of a peace plan covering the Far East after unofficial negotiations in which former Postmaster General Walker and Bishop Walsh of the Catholic Maryknoll missionaries figured with government knowledge. Sabotaged by Ultra-Nationalist Japanese offi cials, the plan called for Jap with drawal from China, restriction of immigration thereto, and co-opera tion in the restoration of the open door trade policy. In return, the U. S. was to recognize Manchuria. In another revelation, Konoye re ported Russia’s tentative agreement to join the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis in 1940 under inclusion of Iran and India in her sphere of influence. No concrete alliance developed, how ever, because of the failure of the Nazis and Reds to work out details, and the whole plan collapsed with Germany’s drive to the East in 1941. i Frontier Figure Dies Deulli of Moman Pruiett, 73, in Okla homa City, Okla., from pneumonia re called his one-time eminence as a fron tier attorney, with a record oi acquit tals for 303 accused slayers. Having studied the law in an attorney’s office, where he was employed as a shoe shine boy and janitor, Pruiett, a colorful fig ure with long, black hair falling below his shoulders, was among the first to introduce emotion in court practice in the Southwest. On one occasion when the prosecu tion sneered at his plea of self-defense for a client accused of killing a man who threatened him with a pencil, “Old Moman” suddenly seized a juror by the collar—thrust a pencil at his breast and secured an admission that the pencil resembled a knife under the circumstances. After being convicted as a boy of a robbery — which he said he did not commit, Pruiett resolved to study law. Addressing the judge, he roared: “I’ll turn murderers and thieves loose in your midst.” r Aitivi uiturs: Years Review With a New Year ringing in, American farmers could look back on the old as marking the best in food grain production on record with an all-time wheat crop of 1,123,143, 000 bushels featuring the harvest. At the same time, the department of agriculture reported that feed grains were the third largest on rec ord, though com fell off slightly to 3,018,410,000 bushels from the 1944 figure. As a result, huge quantities of feed will be available for fatten ing livestock and assuring the coun try of banner meat supplies through 1946. Along with wheat, new records were established for oats, tobacco, rice, popcorn, hops, peaches, pears, grapefruit, almonds and fresh truck crops, while near records were set for hay, soybeans, flaxseed, pota toes, sugar cane, oranges, grapes and pecans. Despite the general banner pro duction, the cotton harvest fell to its lowest figure since 1896, while ap ples, barley, rye, dry beans, buck wheat, sorghum silage and forage, ’ sweet potatoes, sugar beets, apri cots and sour cherries were also be low average output. With a decrease of 4,000.000 acres from 1944, production of all crops jn 1945 was only 1.5 per cent off. Out put was 2 per cent below the peak of 1942. LUFTWAFFE RECORDS: j A 250-ton documentary record of ' the German air force which will tell the American people more about the Luftwaffe than the Germans them selves know, has been housed at Wright Field, Ohio. In disclosing possession of the rec ords, the army presumed possession of a detailed report on German re search would save the government a great deal of time and money by eliminating duplication of experi mentation in those fields in which the Germans had surpassed us. Read The Greater Omaha Guide Every Week President Maintains New Deal Policies Year-End Check Shows Some Change of Faces but Not of Any Principles; FDR Intimates Remain in High Posts. By BAUKHAGE News Analyst and Commentator. WNU Service, 1616 Eye Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. Sufficient time has elapsed since President Truman went into the White House to warrant a year-end inventory of his reconstituted fed eral setup, and the result adis up to many changes in personalities, but little switch of fundamental poli cies. In its numerical aspect, the changes wrought by the President suggest more of a shakeup than actually has taken place, for there still are many intimates of FDR in high positions, some of them pro moted by Mr. Truman. James F. Byrnes, secretary of state and top man in the Truman cabinet, was lifted out of the rela tive obscurity of a "career senator” from the southland by Mr. Roose velt. He came within reach of his present eminence under the guid ance of the late President, who ap pointed him to the United States Supreme court, made him war mo bilizer and economic stabilizer, and took him to international confer ences which built him to the point where he was a “natural” for the state portfolio when Edward R. Stet tinius Jr. was moved out by polit ical party considerations. Byrnes was schooled in the Roosevelt ways and he continues along those paths. Henry Morgenthau probably would have remained as secretary of treasury had the President who ap pointed him lived on. But while he was more a personal friend, he was less a political associate of Mr. Roosevelt than was Fred Vinson, the present secretary. And again, it was FDR who brought Vinson to the forefront—made him a federal judge, then took him into the White House to share Byrnes’ multiple functions and burdens. He had little more than passing acquaintance with Truman, and his present post was a promotion for a “Roosevelt man.” KODert n;. Hannegan, postmaster general, was slated for that office before Mr. Roosevelt passed away. It is political custom to award that plum to the winning party’s national committee chairman, whether the Democrats or the Republicans win. Robert Patterson, secretary of war, came in during the Roosevelt administration as assistant to Henry L. Stimson, creating a team of Re publicans in the top spots of the de partment. He was advanced by President Truman when Mr. Stim son retired, although there were strong representations made to the White House on behalf of other can didates, practically all of them Democrats. Original Roosevelt cabinet mem bers retained by Mr. Truman are James V. Forrestal in navy. Henry A. Wallace in commerce, and Har old L. Ickes in interior. Anderson Took Off ‘Heat’ on Food Clinton P. Anderson, the secre tary of agriculture, won White House entree during Roosevelt days by taking 4he heat off the adminis tration with a food investigation. La bor Secretary Lewis B. Schwellen bach has been described as “more New Deal than Roosevelt." Continuing, it was President Roosevelt who brought Tom C. Clark, the present attorney general, into government service, placing him in line for the advancement which Mr. Truman gave him. Paul V. McNutt, who left recently to be come high commissioner in the Phil ippine islands, was originally a Roosevelt appointee. Even in the intimate surroundings of the White House will be found several “hold-overs." notably schol arly William D. Hassett, a presiden tial secretary whose typewriter has turned out many of the lyrical speeches delivered by the late Pres ident, and whose skill can be detect ed by Washington newsmen in Mr. Truman’s more formal addresses. J. A Krug remained at the head of the War Production board until it went out of existence, although the new President was often critical of WPB when he was presiding over the senate committee which bore his name. Almost every move made by Mr Truman in organizing his official family had underlying it a record of Roosevelt association. There has been only one notable discernible i - departure from the administrative status quo so far as fundamentals go, and that was the appointment of John W. Snyder as chief of the of fice of war mobilization and recon version. Snyder was a friend and military buddy of the President for a quarter of a century. But Wash ington hears that the OWMR direc tor is being sidetracked, that the President is taking counsel with Secretary Vinson on subjects that rightly fall into Snyder’s bailiwick and that a resignation has been of fered. There is nothing in the Truman appointments to indicate whether the President is turning to the right or the l§ft of center—using FDR as "center.” Mr. Truman is franker than most public figures and com mentators — he says he frankly doesn’t know what "center” is. imagines he’s about the same as his late chief • • • Opinion is growing in the capital that the government is "reconvert ing” too rapidly and that the force of speed without direction will have harmful results. Except for a few generalized thrusts, the White House has shown no disposition to come to grips with the wage-price dilemma, hasn’t at tempted to develop a comprehensive program to eliminate the element of chance, and, in the opinion of crit ical congressmen, is simply trusting that things somehow will work out all right in the end if left to their own devices. There is a striking example of the haphazard system which has been followed, and that is the retention of OPA while permitting the Na tional War Labor board to go vir tually out of existence. WLB exer cised a fair degree of control over wage and salary levels, and with wages the largest single item of production costs, there is today no agency effectively operating in that field. Both management and labor agree the President’s radioed speech on the subject clarified al most nothing. The result has been to cut the ground from beneath OPA in its efforts to maintain price ceilings. Another example is the War Pro duction board, which was permitted to go out of existence on Novem ber 3. Odds and ends fell to the newly created Civilian Production administration, but there is today no raw materials allocation plan and efforts are being made to create out of export licensing a means by which domestic industry might have its needs fulfilled. The theory is that refusal of export licenses for needed civilian materials will back those commodities onto the market here. But its effort upon restora tion of foreign tirade is making con gress unhappy. There still are fgencies in Wash ington “winding up” the business of World War I, and it seems entirely possible that history will repeat aft er World War II is officially over. That day will be fixed by President Truman unless he tarries too long and congress steps in to do the job. Dissolution of the Office of War In formation may supply an insight Into what happens when bureaus which came into existence since Pearl Harbor cease to exist. Ex cept for changes in the top positions and discarding of the domestic branch, which always was a minor part of the operation, OWI seems to be a very live corpse. Blanketed into the state depart ment may be upwards of 5,000 OWI payrollers. They will continue, and expand, a worldwide plan of infor mation dedicated to the purpose of teaching other nations more about this country, its people, their aspira tions, their accomplishments. About 2,000 more have gone into the bu reau of the budget to continue their present assignment, which is publi cation of the United States govern ment manual. Closing of the do mestic branch actually affected few er than 200 jobs in Washington. Larger, actually, than OWI’s for eign branch will be the information al office of the state department, for it will include also the public rela tions section of the office of co ordinator of Inter-American affairs, which beams its material to points south of the Rio Grande and which heretofore functioned independently of OWI. BARBS. . . by Baukhage j The British tried paying a head bounty for every rat killed in rat ridden Hong Kong. They gave it up . . . the enterprising Chinese started rat breeding farms to make more money. • * • The Japanese women’s federation suggests that every Japanese wom an give up her kimono to raise funds fnr fond imnnrts StriD for warmth It is the boast of the Koreans that it was through them that Chinese culture reached the Japanese and led them out of the Dark ages. The Japanese idea of repayment was to return the Dark ages to Korea. • * * Faver Castle in Nuernberg was •‘modernized” by a rich wife. Now, during the Nuernberg trials, 200 guests share the three bathrooms. KtStARtH CREATES MANY JOBS Scientific research, upon which America’s industrial strength is based in great part, his since. 1880 created 15 major industries and given jobs to 15,000,000 workers. Private industry is expected to double its prewar outlay for re search, looking forward toward greater productivity, more jobs, and better goods at less cost, which reached a total expenditure af $234,000,000 in 1940. Prices And Wages Prices of industrial raw materi als have risen 28 per cent since January, 1942- Average hourly earnings have risen 33 per cent. During that period, approved wholesale prices of manufactured products have risen but eight per cent. TO PLUG IN A CORD: ONE THOUSAND BUCKS It was a Government investiga- ■ tor who turned this one up: In the ' use of a welding machine, a licen-1 sed maintenance electrician had to i be hired to plug the cord into an outlet. Because union rules provi. gin WASHINGTON ||By Walter Shead 3 WNW Correspondent Future of Farm Loan Agencies in Doubt p'ARM leaders here, governmental and private, are split wide open over the question of whether or not farm credit agencies should be combined under one head within the department of agriculture, or sepa rated from the department and oper ated as an independent agency. On the one hand, there is the Farm Bureau federation, the Na tional Council of Farm Co-opera tives and the National Grange who re backing the bill introduced by Con. John W. Flannagan Jr., (D., Va.) which would separate the farm credit agencies from the depart ment of agriculture and place them under the jurisdiction of a bi-parti san board to be named by the Pres ident. of which the secretary of agri culture would be an ex-officio mem ber. On the other hand, the progressive National Farmers union, the secre tary of agriculture and a group of farm-minded congressmen are seed ing to retain the farm credit agen cies within the department of agri culture under direct control of the secretary, but with the appointment of an advisory board and an assist ant secretary of agriculture, who would be the executive administra tor of the agencies. And aside from these two schools of thought, there is another group headed by Rep. Harold Cooley, (D.. N. C.) and Reid F. Murray. (R., VVis.) who are seeking to set up an entirely new corporation to be known as the Farmers' Home corporation, which would operate upon a plan similar to the Federal Housing ad ministration insofar as farm loans are concerned and which would as sume many of the functions of the existing farm loan agencies, within the D. of A. struggle for Control Thus, there is a three-way fight for control of the multi-billion-dol lar farm lending agencies, which since their inception in May, 1933, have made various types of farm loans through June 30, 1945, totaling $16,868,539,301 under the head of the Farm Credit administration, and an additional billion dollars under the Farm Security administration. The various lending agencies, which have been established under the Farm Credit administration gov ernorship, include the Federal Land banks, the Production Credit cor poration, the Federal Intermediate Credit banks, the Federal Farm Mortgage corporation, the 13 Banks for Co-operatives, Emergency Crop and Feed loans and the Regional Agricultural Credit corporation, all j of which, as of June 30, 1945 had loans outstanding amounting to $2, 246,628,252. The National Council of Farm Co operatives and the Farm Bureau 1 federation believe the Farm Credit agencies should be set up on an in dependent basis much the same as the Federal Reserve system, and should co-ordinate the different fields of farm credit loans to elimi nate gaps and duplications, operat ing within the framework of the na tional governmental policy, under the jurisdiction of a bi-partisan board of six to seven members. Combine FSA With FCA Sec. of Agriculture Clinton P. An derson believes the Farm Security administration should be combined with the FCA, but by retaining all agencies within the department of agriculture. He believes that farm loans are inter-related with all the other functions of the department, j and that persons who have a voice I in making credit available to farm ers should have a voice in the for mulation of other farm programs to make a maximum contribution to the welfare of the farmer. “Because of the prevailing view that agencies of the federal govern ment should be grouped under cabi net officers responsible directly to the president,” Mr. Anderson said, “I believe that for the long run, the question is not whether the farm credit and the farm security pro grams should be set up within an independent agency of the federal government. To me, the question rather seems to be whether it is more appropriate for these agencies to be in the, department of agricul ture, or in some other executive de partment of government. Since these are farmers’ programs, it seems obvious to me that they belong in that department which is engaged primarily with the problems of the fanners.” This writer believes that since Mr. Flannagan is chairman of the house agricultural committee and his measure has been reported out for passage, it is likely it will stand a good chance to pass the house in spite of the opposition of the agri cultural secretary. Whether it will get by the senate, however, is an other question. The Farmers union believes the Flannagan bill will definitely kill the FSA and they are sTanding alongside the secretary in the fight to keep the credit agencies within the department of agriculture. ded that a maintenance electrician must stay on the job until its com pletion, it cost $1,000 just to plug that cord in. The skill required, according to the report was the same as that required to plug in a toaster on a breakfast table. Billions in Construction America’s construction industry whil'e anticipating higher wages and material costs during the next year, expects new contracts at the iate of $12 billion annually. This will give direct employ ment to 2,400,000 on-site workers. if. coy ‘suss*. *?HE 27 YR-OLD COMMANDING 'OFFICER OF THE 332*FIGHTER GROUP IN ITALY,WAS THE FIRST NEGRO SQUADRON COMMANDER HIS GROUP WAS RECENTLY AWARDED THE DISTINGUISH! N UNIT CITATION FOR OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE OF DUTY. 1 A GRADUATE OF WEST VIA.STATE COLLEGE ‘38,HE RECEIVED HIS AVIATION CADET APPOINTMENT VjUlY 1^1941/'^— ' mui.rMun jett-uisoN JONES, m Dean of women at hampton i UNIVERSITY, BEGAN HER CAREER m,2 AS AN APPRENTICE CASE WORKER W| WITH THE UNITED CHARITIES OF CHICAGO ^ AND LATER BECAME DISTRICT SUPERVISOR. ^ She holds a masters degree in social Service administration fromuofchicasq^ raumti. IMS *. QMKir L Um I QUOTES-7 «* '•’HE>EEk| “America has been very child ish—it’s just beginning to grow up.”—Sinclair Lewis, novelist. “I look upon the U. S. as the magnificent adolescent.”—Very Rev. Hewlett Johnson, “Red Dean” of Canterbury (Eng.). “I've kissed my wife three times a day ever since we were married.” — Former Vice Pres. John N. Garner, Texas, explain ing 50 years of wedded happiness. “To provide jobs, we must look first and foremost to private en terprise—to industry, agriculture and labor. Government must in spire enterprise with confidence.” —President Truman. - > V “Price ceilings intensify short ages by discouraging or prevent ing production.”—Henry Hazlitt, economist. lty V “He is the man of my choice— and this is my last.” — Peggy Hopkins Joyce, marrying for fifth time. plus five million off-site workers, in production, transport, and ser vices. •For Greater Coverage ADVERTISE IN The Omaha GUIDE! i We wish to Announce THE OPENING OF THE G & J Smoke Shop ! ;! 2118 NORTH 24th Street ' Everything in the Line of I CIGARS, CIGARETTES, & i SOFT DRINKS ! ll- Jackson & Godbey, Props. Heres a SENS/BIE my to relieve distress of H^FEMAIE WEAKNESS (Also o Grand Stomachic Tonic) Have you at such times noticed yourself feeling nervous, irritable, so tired, a bit blue-due to female functional periodic disturbances? Then don't delay! Try this great medicine-Lydia E. Finkham’s Vege table Compound — to relieve such symptoms. 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