Speech of Senator Harry S. Truman before the American Trucking Association, St. Louis, Missouri
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OCR Page 1 of 6ADDRESS BY SENATOR HARRY s. TRUMAN OF MISSOURI
BEFORE THE AMERICAN TRUCKING ASSOCIATION,
JEFFERSON HOTEL, ST. LOUIS, MO., OCTOBER 20, 1942.
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I am glad to talk to the minute mon of transportation.
You are in the great army that delivers the goods to the army. No
matter how remote are the sites for new army camps, you get the con-
struction materials where they are needed. New war factories can
be
located. anywhere. Your trucks fetch the raw naterials and carry the
finished product.
In our time of greatest need, we recognize the many inval-
uable qualities of motor transport. We see in the truck the pinch-
hitter of our transportation team. Spare parts, small quantities of
essential articles may be needed in a hurry to keep a war plant going.
A truck is ready at the appointed minute to pick up and deliver. If
there is a shortage of tank cars to bring northern milk to southern
camps, tank trucks fill the gap, and roll a thousand miles, two thou-
sand miles, from dairy centers to Florida. Hand in hand with refrig-
erator cars go our refrigerator trucks-meat, fruit, vegetables for
soldier, for sailor, for war worker, for our whole people.
The truck reduces transpor tation wastes, cuts delays, makes
our ital carriage of munitions and war equipment efficient If the
route by rail or river is circuitous or roundabout, and the motor
highway permits short and speedy delivery, up roll your cars to save
time for our boys at the front. If a switch yard is a bottleneck,
you provide a joint rail-truck service in place of a joint all-rail
haul.
You man the breach. If railroad trucks have been improvi-
dently torn up (and we now know there has been too much recklessness
in destroying railroad lines), you send your machines to do the whole
job until the reconstructed rail lines are ready to carry their part
of the load.
We have taken our truck system for granted, sometimes with
praise, some times without appreciation. But now we thank our stars
that our great motor highways were built, and that men of vision set
upon those highways a vast organization. As we see the platoons, the
Battalions, and regiments of trucks, the huge army of five million
vehicles ready day and night to roll on our roads and streets for our
national needs-we take our hats off to the organizing geniuses in the
trucking companies and to the steady hands and the tireless eyes at
the wheel that are part and parcel of our nation's mobilization.
The trucking companies, the truck operators-wy are all
doing your part. The government must do its part too, It cannot ask
you to make magic. You cannot operate without replacements. You can-
not operate without new parts. You cannot send your machines without
drivers. You cannot be expected to operate without rubber.
That is where the Government can step in to help. It is
trying to help. It cannot help on a peacetime basis. In 1941 you
bought 700,000 new trucks. Of these, 450,000 were bought to replace
wornout trucks. But now, in the civilian pool for allocation to all
truckers there are only 70,000 new trucks.
The War Production Board is trying to help. And if any man
on its staff goes to sleep, Congressional committees put the spotlight
on him, and arouse a public outcry to fill his ears. Nobody wants to
criticize just to find fault. But materials are short and time is
short. Every Government agency must keep on doing better and better.
With ceaseless effort and wise planning we can have more new trucks
and more spare parts you need to keep 'em rolling.
TRUMA
So it is about rubber. You need it, the Army needs it.
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