-15- much more crucial since the building and consumption goods industries have lost 100,000 workers through recruitment in the Army or through transfer to other industrial branches. How serious the situation has become through dif- ferentiation on account of the purposes of employment of labor is clear from a report which has been received from the industrial group of textile manufacturers. At the beginning of 1941 supplying the textile industry with workers had reached the point where only the most essential, orders could be filled, postponing those which came from the Army. Examples of this are the deliveries of canvasses and tents for the resettle- merit of Immigre-Germans. The urgent manufacture of 200,000 mattresses for the air raid shelters in Berlin; the priority in the manufacture of sacks for the transport and storage of grain flour, dry beans, sugar and salt as precautionary measures against a dangerous crisis which was feared in the distribution of foodstuffs. The especial urgency of this and other tasks and the impossibility of carrying them, through with the available workers has al- ready brought it to pass that for certain branches of the textile industry, through the intervention of officials who have an immediate interest in the fulfillment of the contracts, |