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Show Youth Cornerstone of Germans' War Machine Taken in Tow at Six, Children Schooled in Nazi Ideology; Grooved Into Places In Totalitarian Society. By BAUKIIAGE JVeu Analytt and Commentator WNU Service, Union Trust Building, Washington, D. C. (This Is the second of two articles by Mr. Baukhage on where Germany Ger-many continues to get Its fighting manpower.) The husky and determined young Germans pictured on this page are a symbol of the force that made Von Rundstedt's counteroffensive on the western front possible made it possible for the German armies, supposedly smashed to pieces in France, to "come back" .from their stand at Arnhem and on the Cologne plain. These boys represent two things: first, preliminary military training, and second, the control of the Nazi party over the German people. "As the twig Is bent the tree's Inclined." There are probably seven million "twigs" in Germany today. In a previous column I discussed the various Narl semi-military and military organizations outside the German army Itself. Paticularly, the great "SA" or brown shirt organization or-ganization which, after Its purge, became be-came the Implement for Indoctrination Indoctrina-tion and preparation for military training of the German people. I also discussed in some detail the "SS" or Elite Guard, now the most The German counteroffensive on the western front has made it possible pos-sible for another crop of six hundred hun-dred thousand tough Nazi-Indoctrinated girls and boys to bolster the army and the home-front In 1945. (Courtesy Infantry Journal.) powerful factor in the Reich, whose function was first to "overcome the enemies of the Nazi party from within" with-in" and which now has taken over the control of the German armies and the protection of the Nazi state 'from without. Through SA representatives right down to the "ward"; through the powerful Gestapo (secret police of the SS) which gradually superseded all police force, the adult non-Nazis are controlled by force and threat of force. Take Over Adults' Duties But perhaps as important as any Nazi weapon- today is the Hitler youth organization which is the Nazis' grip on the future. Today, thousands of Hitler youth are guarding guard-ing Installations, watching foreign workers, performing work which relieves re-lieves men for the front. Already, many have shot to kill. All can. Tomorrow they will be In the army. The pre-Hitler youth groups In Germany had flourished for a long time. They embraced everything from the strongly rightist, Prussianized Prussian-ized version t the Boy Scouts whose weekly excursions were given over to military games and maneuvers, to the religious groups. In the middle mid-dle were the "Wandervogel" (Wan-derbirds) (Wan-derbirds) who despised regimentation, regimenta-tion, strolled about the countryside on holidays with their guitars on their backs, sleeping in barns or in the open hobnobbing with the peasants, peas-ants, sh.ging and also collecting the old Volk-songs and Just having a plain good time. The writer himself him-self spent many happy hours with the carefree Wandervogel, some of them in the "Eifel," the very territory terri-tory through which Von Rundstedt led his charge. We talked of poetry, love nd philosophy never about war. SJfice it to say, the Nails methodically method-ically absolved all of these groups, tin religious movements which were wtH organized, resisting as long as they could. Today, under Nazi law, the Hitler youth (male and female), controls "all German youth within the Reich." I can give you the testimony of one German mother which was whispered Into my ear in 1939, Just before the war broke out "My daughter has gone," she said to me. "We have nothing in BARBS How ya goln' to keep 'em down on the farm after cancellation of agricultural ag-ricultural deferments? Even a drunkard can't weep In his bier. You don't have to be a carpenter to make a Venetian blind. Just stick your fingers in his eyes. But can you make a birch bark? E. t in. teas: common. Her whole time Is given to the Nazi activities. But I have my boy again. They worked him so hard in the youth camp that he came down with tuberculosis and Hitler doesn't want him. I shall .have him to nurse at home." Poor woman, I am afraid that by this time, if he can walk and carry a gun, he is at least a member mem-ber of the Volkssturm, the "home army." Military Training Begins at 14 The tiny tots Join the youth organization or-ganization at six. But not until they are 13 or 14 does the real "prep" military training begin for the boys and the serious work for the girls in their separate camps. By this time they have already been indoctrinated indoc-trinated with blind devotion for the "fuehrer," the belief in German superiority su-periority and abject loyalty to the Nazi state. . Aside from training In sports which are believed to condition a boy for military hardships and actual actu-al drill with weapons, the "leadership "leader-ship principle" is stressed and promising youths are sent to special schools (Ordensburg). When the Hitler youth completes his training he is fully prepared for whatever Nazi group into which he fits best. He may, in due course, become a member of the esoteric SS the force which under Himmler rules every phase of life in the Reich today. He will probably find some role in the great SA organization. In any case, he will become a member mem-ber of some special group, perhaps more than one, which will, prepare him to serve or provide a place for his service in his destined role as a cog in the machinery of total war. Normally, when his Hitler Youth period Is ended, the next step, unless un-less the boy is physically disqualified, disquali-fied, or is chosen for special duties, is the Labor Service, which is like the American CCC insofar as it is concerned primarily with such work as construction and forestry. But the military training continues. As in the Hitler youth organization, the young Nazi is drilled, disciplined, housed, fed and clothed like a soldier. sol-dier. When this duty is completed, he probably finds himself immediately In the army. But In peacetime, or if he is specially qualified, there are a score or more organizations which will take care of him right up to old age, such for Instance as the Veterans Vet-erans organization in which military Ideas are kept alive. One Important group is the Labor Front which was created as a check on unionism. There is the hugaj Todt organization, a kind of land Seabee outfit w.hich was created from groups of highway builders in order to complete the Westwall. Now it Is a vital part of the army. There is the huge People's Welfare Wel-fare agency which collects charities; three large civilian auxiliary air groups; the Nazi , Transportation Corps, and many more, not to mention men-tion the host of services under National Na-tional Socialist Womanhood. It must be remembered that all of these organizations stoutly maintain two functions: first, indoctrination In the Nazi philosophy, or If the person per-son is too old or too stubborn to bow to these perverted ideas, so to enchain en-chain him In discipline as to achieve the same result. The second function func-tion of the Nazi organizations is to prepare German man and woman power, for the nearest thing to a total to-tal war effort achieved In history. The effectiveness of this system of militarizing a nation undoubtedly was underestimated by the Allies. The facts concerning it were available. avail-able. For example, an excellent compendium of the Nazi groups was published by the Infantry Journal in Washington called "Hitler's Second Sec-ond Army," for distribution to and study by the American armed forces. But It was simply impossible impos-sible for the normal individual to grasp the degree to which the Nazis had perfected their plans and had, by Indoctrination from childhood, actually turned human beings into efficient machines. Herr Goebbels, father of lies, was not lying when he said recently that Germany had become "a warrior nation in the full sense of the word." by Baukhage A chicken, unlike a rabbit, has to dye if it wants to lay an easter egg. As between the hare and the tortoiseI'll tor-toiseI'll take the turtle in my soup. You may be a war profiteer and own your roll, but you can't smoke many cigarettes these dajs unlets you can roll your own. WEEKLY NEWS 2,000,000 Russ Strike Nazis; Yanks Drive Inland on Luzon; Set Up New Deferment Policy Released by Western (EDITOR'S NOTE! Wtasa aplnlona ar expressed la Ihess sslomas, tbty are Ibese e( Western Newspaper Union's news analysta and net necenanly el tbis newspaper.) V. -IDANZIG Sa fL. J1 O BERLIN ' - N 4 GERMANY! - STIJIJNJ i ' TPATiBiic.crA '"-WARSAW as DRESDEN K, 'S DUE tiAKOW '""A VV-$oP VlfNKTA PACIFIC: Move Inland As carrier planes from Adm. Hal-sey's Hal-sey's Third fleet ranged the South China sea to smash Japanese shipping that could bring reinforcements re-inforcements and supplies to the Philippines, Phil-ippines, U.S. ground forces under command com-mand of Lieut. Gen. Walter Krueger continued con-tinued to move inland in-land on Luzon in their drive for Manila. Only to the eastward east-ward did the Yanks encounter stiff Jap Gen. Krueger resistance, with Jap armored columns, col-umns, using baby tanks, lashing at the left flank of General Krueger' s forces in an effort to check a drive that could bottle up sizable enemy units to the northeast In the early absence of appreciable appreci-able enemy strength southward toward Manila, Yank columns took full advantage of the minor resistance resist-ance to securely fasten their hold on a network of highways leading from their supply dumps at Lingay-en Lingay-en Gulf for the great battle shaping. In penetrating the Japs' inner lifeline life-line in the South China sea, Admiral Halsey's carrier planes not only attacked at-tacked enemy shipping bearing supplies sup-plies to the Philippines, 1,100 miles away, but also bombed their sources of supply along the Chinese mainland main-land to the west. DRAFT PLAN: For 26 to 29 With the pool of 18 to 25 year olds dwindling, and with the services insistent in-sistent on the use of younger merv War Mobilization Director James F. Byrnes traced out the course to be followed in the induction of industrial indus-trial workers in the 26 to 29 class without impairing the production effort. ef-fort. Under Byrnes' formula, 26 to 29-year-olds not in essential activities would be the first to go. They would be followed by those engaged in relatively unimportant positions in essential or critical industries, who can be easily replaced. Finally, those in more important Jobs in essential and critical industries would be inducted. Meanwhile, some 365,000 deferred farm workers between 18 and 25 years of age began receiving their pre-induction physicals, preparatory to local boards' review of the cases of those found fit for the services. CIGARETTES: Trade Rationing In the first broad attempt at private pri-vate rationing during the war by a trade, the National Association of Tobacco Distributors drew up a plan under which the 1,250,000 retail outlets out-lets they serve would issue cards controlling their customers' cigarette ciga-rette purchases to assure an equitable equita-ble supply for all Framed after shortages had pinched many communities, the distributors' dis-tributors' plan did not meet without criticism, with an official of the National Na-tional Association of Retail Druggists Drug-gists declaring that no such private rationing was necessary if members were given their wartime allotments instead of smaller and smaller amounts. Eight-seven per cent of the retail outlets would be affected by the plan, with exceptions including the chain stores, which buy direct from manufacturers and take 8 per cent of supplies, and hotels, railroads and other places serving travelers and normally selling 5 per cent of stocks. The road to Manila, which American Ameri-can forces broke open with landings on the gulf of Lingayen, lies through the great central plains of Luzon. A broad open corridor 40 miles wide and hemmed in by mountains, this region is one of the most populous and normally productive areas of the Philippines, with many small farms spreading a mosaic over the face of the land . . lowers. J ON ROAD TO MANILA ANALYSIS Newspaper Union. BfhNKlSBIIlfl In what th German Ger-man $ay may bt the decisive phase of the European ivor, the tuition launched J general full-scale ojjensive along the long eastern east-ern front, as indicated indi-cated by arrows, ofc tacking northward from East Prussia to Southern Poland. At the same time, the Reds pushed forward into Czechoslovakia. Czech-oslovakia. Main Russian effort was concentrated below Warsaw on route to Krakow, with the Germans forced to give up forward positions po-sitions under the sustained pressure of the Red attacks, prepared by the heaviest of artillery bombardment. , s r IUBUN XsHw-v EUROPE: All-Out Drive On the move behind massed artillery, ar-tillery, with tank columns spearheading spear-heading their drive, 2,000,000 Russians Rus-sians smashed at German defenses from the wooded lake country of East Prussia to the vast snowcov-ered snowcov-ered plains of Poland in an all-out effort to reach the Reich. Greatest concentration of Russian Rus-sian strength was along a . 200-mile front below Warsaw, where about 650,000 Reds hacked forward, with one of the wings swinging to the rear of the former Polish capital, capi-tal, and the other riding down hard on Silesia, important German industrial in-dustrial province. Outnumbered, with no natural barriers to hole up behind on the flat plains, the Germans were compelled to fall back as the Reds overran their forward positions. In East Prussia, Where the Nazis could utilize the forested terrain, the Reds were held to smaller gains. Meanwhile, the Reds encountered encoun-tered stiffening resistance in their push into southern Czechoslovakia Czecho-slovakia and Hungary as the Nazis sought to buttress their industrial districts to the west Write-Off Bulge One month after Field Marshal Von Rundstedt had launched his lightning thrust into Belgium , and Luxembourg into the First army's rest sector, his forces streamed back into the Siegfreid line again under cover of fog and rain. As the U. S. armies wrote off Von Rundstedt's sudden offensive 'thrust, however, the cagey German general was reported to be shifting With the war department removing re-moving the limitations on the total of overseas vets who can return home on 30-day furloughs, Gen. George C. Marshall said the number should rise sharply in the next few months. major forces to the Alsatian front to the southeast where small but sharp Nazi diversionary attacks ear lier had bitten deep into American and French positions along the frontier. Von Rundstedt's abandonment of the bulge and withdrawal Into the prepared defense fortifications fortifica-tions of the Siegfried line followed fol-lowed quickly upon the Allies' recovery from the first shock of his big offensive and their attack at-tack upon his lines from the -north, west and south with massed forces that threatened to chew his army to pieces. Taking Tak-ing advantage of murky weather, weath-er, and with rearguards stubbornly stub-bornly covering his retreat, he managed to extricate most of his armored columns from - the bulge, to 'fight another day. Losses High With most of their 90,000 casual ties on the western front between December 15 and January 7 suffered in Belgium and Luxembourg, the Germans paid a high price for their temporary relief of their vital in dustrial Ruhr and Saar basins. Of the 90.000 casualties, approxl mately 40,000 were captured. Secretary Sec-retary of War Stimson announced. bringing German prisoners up to 844,891 since D-day, with the U. S. First army bagging 230,911 alone. U. S. losses on the western front between December 15 and January 7 reached 52.594. with nearly 40,000 of these suffered in Belgium and Luxembourg. Of the 40,000. Stim son said, about 18.000 are miss ing, with the majority presumed to be prisoners. GUARD MARKETS Protecting both the consumer and honest manufacturer, the U. S. Food and Drug administration moved against a minority of manufac turers who sought to capitalize on the heavy demand of consumers by disguising their food products during 1944 Cases included substitution of mip- eral oil for food oil: use of sac charin in beverages and ground cocoa shells in chocolate products and the palming oiT of prepared cereals tot nus -muls vff POLAND FARM INCOME: Up 6 With returns from crops showing the most substantial Increase, farm Income approximated $20,390,000,000 In 1C44, 6 per cent over figures for the previous year, the U. S. department depart-ment of agriculture declared. Th rise in income from crops totaled 11 oer cent the USDA said, with receipts for tobacco showing the biggest increase of 36 per cent a result of lareer acreage and higher yields, and returns on food grains mounting 29 per cent chief ly as a result of the record wneat harvest. With Droduction of decidu ous fruit above the unfavorable 1943 season, Income from fruits and nuts was up about 25 per cent. With most of the rise due to marketings of meat animals, re- ceiDts from livestock and related products were up 2 per cent over last year, USDA estimated. Because of a sharp drop in egg prices and slight decreases in both prices and quantities of chickens and broilers, income from eggs and poultry dropped. Wages Highest The hiffhest wages and lowest lev el of emDlovment of hired hands for a January 1 in two decades were re corded on the first of the year, the USDA said, partly reflecting the intense in-tense competition of agriculture and Industry for labor. Ud sharolv from a year ago, rates cer month with board averaged $74.60 on January 1, while rates without board stood at $88.90. Daily rates with board averaged $3.54 and those without board $4.15, the USDA reported. As of January 1. the total of both hired and family workers on farms stood at 8,005,000, 2 per cent below 1944. 9 per cent below the 1935-39 8'--rage, and the lowest on that date f 0 years. Part of the decrease attributed to unfavorable .her, which reduced efforts to necessary chores and livestock care in most parts of the country except the west and southwest. FOREIGN POLICY: Senate Debate Charged with the consideration of America's foreign affairs, the U, S. senate, with prewar debates still mutely echoing within the staid walls of the stately old chamber, cham-ber, again be-stirred itself as Montana's Burton K. Wheeler rose to his feet to describe projected postwar peace or- Burton wheeler ganization as the arbitrary ar-bitrary rule of great powers, and Florida's Claude Pepper warned against scotching an effective international inter-national security body. Said Wheeler: " . . . Observe how the Dumbarton Oaks proposals emasculate the good neighbor policy, poli-cy, override, the principle of the sovereign equality of all nations, approve as a cardinal principle the use of brute force and the threat of coercion with re quiring resort to peaceful methods in dealing with the threat of aggression, aggres-sion, and deliberately deliberate-ly divorce the structure struc-ture of the pro- ff posed security or ganization from the Claude Pepper nature of the peace which it is expected to enforce. ..." Retorted Pepper: " . After the senate failed to ratify the treaty of Versailles (in 1920), Including provision pro-vision for the league of nations . . . we abandoned our Allies. We abandoned aban-doned our objectives. We failed to take advantage of the opportunities afforded by that day, and we waited for the next war to come. . . ." HITLER TRIAL: Plans Snagged With Great Britain's rejection of the Allied war crimes commission's proposal for a creation of an international inter-national court to try Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini and other Axis leaders, fear was expressed that they might escape punishment after all. According to the London Sunday Sun-day Express, the British foreign office of-fice favored exile for the Axis heads much in the manner of Napolean's banishment to Elba. Meanwhile, Russia intimated that it was proceeding with its own plans for trying Hitler, et al, what with Ilya Ehrenburg, prominent Soviet So-viet journalist, declaring: "... We ourselves will Judge our torturers and this we will entrust to nobody. no-body. . . " Quoting an unnamed British Jurist Jur-ist the London Sunday Express declared de-clared that one of the reasons Great Britain might object to an open trial ofhe Axis chieftains was because some of its own officials might be embarrassed by being called to the witness stand to give evidence for the defense. LABOR TURNOVER For every 1,000 workers on factory fac-tory pay rolls in November 60 either changed jobs or left manufacturing manu-facturing work. Quits represented three-fourths of all separations discharges dis-charges and lay-offs each accounted for 10 per cent and the remaining 5 per cent resigned for military and miscellaneous reasons. The quit rate for manufacturing as a whole. 45 per 1.000. was slightly below that of the previous month out on the same level with that of one year ao. f i! I ii h (JJ BIIMIll i 1,1 ""' Snotvflahes:' King George f Greece Is Irked with his public relations experts. They kept him staying In his London hotel room during the Athens mess -instead of okaying His Highness usual routine of making the London lata places surrounded by a bevy of beauts. . . . Cuba'. Batista will settle in Brazil. The Federal Trade commission is checking up on endorsers of prod-ucts prod-ucts in ads. Wants to find out if the celebs who endorse them actually use them. ... The reason for the New York butcher strike is this: The Gov't clamped down hard on black marketing. The butchers learned the fine was too high to make any profit even at b.m. fees. They decided it was cheaper to get out of business than make wholesalers whole-salers rich and themselves poor. Add rackets: Phones in Florida are bringing as high as $500 each from people who lost theirs to the armed forces a year ago. . . . The mobs are set to run the bookmak-ing bookmak-ing in Mexico and Havana. They had been figuring on the tracks suffering suf-fering disaster for more than a year. . . . Sidney Kingsley dashed off a five page scenario in 30 minutes, min-utes, for which Zanuck paid him $50,000. More than a 1,000 smackers per minute. Though war plant absenteeism was a contributing factor, the Washington Wash-ington grapevine is saying that the main reason for closing the tracks was this: congress was preparing to stick a 10 per cent tax on the mutuels, and the track owners (instead (in-stead of cooperating gladly in view of the fortunes they've garnered lately) made ready to fight it ... It was their attitude, more than anything any-thing else, which irritated the powers pow-ers that be. The first Broadway hit show to beat the jinx of the amusement page alphabetical listing is "A Bell for Adano." . . . Many shows that put an "A" in front of the title to inherit the top of the list flopped. "Angel Street" was the exception for a long time. ... The commies in Indianapolis, Erie and Buffalo last week started their campaign to discredit G-man Hoover with a national na-tional smear attack. . . . They say N. Y. Times' critic, Brooks Atkinson Atkin-son (now in the hospital after a long session covering China's part in the war), doesn't want to resume drama-inspecting. He prefers doing something Important, such as his recent re-cent assignment His excellent reports re-ports are credited with actually influencing in-fluencing U. S. policy in the Orient. Faces About Town: Libby Hol-man, Hol-man, the blues thrush-tobacco heiress, heir-ess, who is quietly backing Broadway shows. . . Band chief John Kirby, $5,000 wealthier after winning a libel li-bel action from a Pittsburgh writer, who cast aspersions on his draft status. . . . Canary Bernice Parks, currently at the St Regis, who will decorate Life's pages as best-dressed best-dressed gaL She has 16 fur coats. Her match book covers feature photos of her feller. . . Horace MacMahon, one of the stage's capa-bles, capa-bles, serving the nation by delivering deliver-ing war bond speeches while waiting wait-ing for producers to come to their senses. . . . Milton Berle, who at this tardy time is feuding with Joe E. Lewis over the song, "Sam, You Made the Pants Too Long!" Apparently after reading the "Fight or Work" edict Story of the Week (By Dr. Elisha A. King): Do you remember the Indian Juggler described by William Hazlitt in one of his famous essays? The Juggler was perfect in throwing and catching brass balls-keeping four in the air at once. That was his whole, stock in trade, but it was the best he had. Seeing a number of people go to the Shrine of the Virgin Mother bowing, praying etc he became interested and wanted to worship. Finally, he went In squatted In front of the Image and performed. It was the best he had to offer and doubtless acceptable I mention this because of a report from Guadalcanal describing a Christmas evening service. Father Gehring celebrated midnight Mass but no one could play Christmas music A soldier had gotten a small organ from somewhere, but no one could play it However, one man !" d h kaew only one tune. Yidd.sher Mama." so he played ZZM Utin' " Jewia boy Played the one piece he knew and several hundred Protestants. Ca5S lies and Jews knelt and listened. i The Radloracles: Talk ahn,,t a flation. When CBS last week dropped Raymond Scott's 20-piece orchesS (which cost the nptJn,i, ull-uesira $250 000 in tT network m-e than 0 two yea the spot was erited by Milt Berth's Copaca band, which has only three Zsl Ted Adams. .cting pro ducer of "We. the People." ,b0kine Hodins. tE youthful spy-catcher for the pro- Eram- Because Adam, Z mered near wher. -lor 25 yearf For Bahr'e . baby has gro" chair stage, don't overlook , vantages of having two ' washable slip covers for k Ml I ornamental: but ,h.' T1101 cleaning up job if there i, at ieeamg time. Yon covers up in a Jiffy using J? ' to keeD them In 6 iaP i f ai.C. Highway Improvemeilt During the '20s highway Z ST ! Bel' mad to Li can sren want 'irange : taelr kbout awr koung . rvu.u lurward on I scale. Uniform marking 0,!j ways was inaugurated H B j -""ciuence of vehicle owners. Ownership nf vehicles expanded greatly the lower-income families w United States. 11 U. S. 'Spudka' Not to be outdone hv .. . sians who make vodka out of J luca, uiaiuueia irouea Out thei J not a to whiskpv In Mo... , . "'i -vw lOfltr,, ly, made from 80 per cent spirj! tilled from cull potatoes and cent straight whiskey four yea, Tomorrow's Luggage A new resin impregnated t-surface t-surface forms a tough- waw foss i oa.i.11 u wwuuu is already in J for light - weight shock - UJ j uua, trunks It offers obvious postwar 1 possibilities. v . Prpfpv Cn... Homemakers seem to have J pi clci cmcs iui certain soaps W like one special brand; others s) raises questions as to di&V in soaps and in the results obu- Abl dncto pven new Walk a spi the p ent r Bffil (or tl Joh Remember that Constipate , make easy problems look ta Constipation can Undermine op and conndence. Take Nate Eemedy (NR Tablets). Contain J chemicals, no minerals, nophendi livati ves. NR Tablets are differa:-ttct differa:-ttct different Purely vegetdk- combination of 10 vegetable fogs-enta fogs-enta formulated over 50 vearaV on S foriglr I play j stage 1 Brow Uncoated or candy coated, tie action is dependable, tborouri, ni gentle, as millions of NR'aU proved. Get a 2of Convince- Be laution: Take only as directed NR TONIGHT, TOMORROW MIS direc 'Just be si wift Evi Come his s AU-VEGETABIE MXMffl (QUI WORD SUGGEST!: 1 tosse; FOR ACID INDIGESTION 1 fte j Burnt I whicl of pri Eei :i ment j diem 1 pan II nil tll'ltil Hi lla IINMaalal r NR - TA B iTeTS - N? 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