Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 132, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 26, 1944 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brownwood Bulletin and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Brownwood Public Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
!
.<«MMM •*#**
'TTJr
-v V%.-~ .4
'"&&%* ♦ sfiT ; *r-« *
1 fTT77
ill
'
r
71
WEATHER FORECAST
EAST TEXAS: Mostly cloudy snd con-
tinued warm; scattered showers except
in extreme northwest portion.
WEST TEXAS; Fair, not much
change in temperature.
BROWNWOOD Temperature: Maxi-
mum 77. Minimum 50. Precipitation. .05.
Totgl rainfall for the year, 4.83 inches.
i
Brownwood Bulletin
SIX PAGES TODAY
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1944
VOL. 44. NO. 132
KEEP ON
Wst/J////// %/e
with WIR RONDS
GERMANS MAINTAIN PRESSURE BELOW ROM
American Attacks Shake Jap's Control of South-Central Pacific
i I i T 1 •
Soviets Exploit Rogachev
Breakthrough; Two Armies
Closing in Against Pskov
n"
' f
1
FORCED TO RESIGN AT GUN POINT—Former Presi-
dent Pedro Pablo Ramirez (left) was forced to resign his
office at gun point by ultra-nationalistic clique of Army
officers, and Gen. Edelmiro Farrell (right) was designated
by them to become President.—(NEA Photo).
MOSCOW. Feb 2«—fAPi—Ger-
many's White Russian armies
counter-attacked desperately to-
day in attempts to plug- their
crumbling central front but Soviet
units fighting through heavy snow
continued to exploit their large-
scale break-through near Roga-
chev, fornt line dispatches said.
To the northwest the Red army
was closing in rapidly on Pskov
in a Two-pronged attack from the
northeast and southeast
The drive from the northeast
down the Leningrad railroad and
highway has placed the Russians
in position to shell Pskov's outer
defenses, press dispatches said,
and the highway to the key rail
center was reported now open ex-
cept for the numerous barricades
of minefields the Germans have
; been laying frantically
The Russian southeastern arm
was reported to have reached
within five miles of Porkhov, only
45 miles from Pskov and last im-
portant communications center to
the east.
Beadel Is Named President
Of Chamber of Commerce;
Streckert, Vice President
RUSSIANS GO FORWARD IN
MARCH TOWARD LATVIA
LONDON. Feb 26— <AP>—Rus-
sian armies massed along the 400-
mile-long front between Pskov and
Rogachev are pressing westward
I in White Russia toward Latvia
and the northern part of Poland
despite increased German resist-
ance. a Moscow communique re-
ported today.
German! commanders threw
fresh reinforcements into the Ro-
At the —rrrmI election of the
Bi oeumtiod Chamber of Com-
merce at the Brownwood Hotel.
Friday. James Beadel was elected
president. Named vice-president
was W. O. Streckert.
J. F. Renfro was elected to serve
as director In place of Henry Wil-
son who was unable to serve.
Directors of the chamber to
•erve two-year terms announced
after the votes were tabulated
Mends? are: Beadel. Renfro. Fred
Y. Bell. Joe C. Darrow. J. H. For-
gey. J. Turner Garner, Dr. J. L.
Morris and C. C. Woodson.
Holdover directors are F 8
Abney. L. V. Ford. R. T Hanna
Dave Knobler, Streckert, John T.
Yantis and B. H. Yeager
Officers were Installed at the
luncheon meeting Friday.
Guam Attack
Widens Scope
Of Offensive
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Few of Japan's cluster of island
fortresses remeined untouched to-
day in the barrage of American
attacks shaking the enemy’s con-
trol of the South-Central Pacific
Disclosure that Guam was at-
tacked in the Feb 22 carrier strike
at the Manana Islands widened
the scope of the present offen
sive It added to the havoc left at
Truk and other Caroline islands,
and to destruction piled up in the
Marshalls where the Nipponese
have been forced out of two im-
portant atolls
Success of the Mananas raid,
an operation carrying American
forces to within 1400 miles of
Tokyo, appeared even greater in
the light of the fact that the Jap-
anese detected the approaching j
task force in the afternoon of Feb
21. But Admiral Chester W Nim-
itr. reporting the first details of |
the heavy foray, declared that
"persistent and continuing at-
tacks’’ by the enemy failed to stop
the launching of American planes
I “according to schedule."
Russia Keeps Watchful Eye
Moscow dispatches indicated
that Russia, although not art war
with Japan, is still keeping a
watchful eye on developments In
the Pacific The Soviet army news-
paper. Red Star, in a review of
the Marshalls campaign, noted it
was ' very significant that Japan
was losing islands <Kwajalein and
Eniwetok' which had been forti-
fied for more than 20 years Tass
news agency quoted the Tokyo
*' .j-. ' «t
«
1 » / '
\
M
H,
■
tot - w
-*
DID YOU BUY A BOND TODAY?—“Casualties were light.” That phrase in the com-
munique describing the capture of Eniwetok Island in the Marshalls, made optimistic
reading on the home front, but it won’t bring back to life or comfort the next of kin of
this Marine being pulled up on a coral beach by his buddies after he was killed by a
Jap bullet as he struggled ashore in knee-deep surf from landing boat.—(NEA Tele-
photo).
MOTHER GLAD TO LET
SON IN AT DAWN AFTER
TWO YEARS IN ALASKA
DECATUR. I1L. Teb. 26—<AP>
—A cry la the dawn aroused
Mrs. Louis Carey In a j hurry.
The cry was:
“Hey Mom.’ Let me in—I for-
got my key ”
It wee her son, Pvt Francis
Carey, arriving on furlough alt-
er two years la Alaska.
gachev area yesterday in a futile Shimbun as saying “anything can
■**---- happen in Tokyo ’ as a result of
the American offensive.
There wes no letup la the South
Pacific campaign to obliterate the
key Japanese base of Rabaul.
New Britain, while Allied attacks
damaged enemy positions on
nearby New Ireland Hansa Bay.
New Ireland snd the Admiralty
Islands
attempt to seal the gap torn in
their lines by Gen Constantine
Rokossovsky t First White Russia-
Army on Thursday.
No less than 14 fierce counter-
attacks north of captured Roga-
1 chev were thrown back by the So-
viets. the j Russian communique
said, and the Germans lost 2.500
men killed.
To date the battle around Ro- 33 Tons Hits Rabaul
gachev has cost the Germans 6.000
Demo Senators
Believe That Party
Liberalism Is Helped
WASHINGTON. Feb 26—'AP’i
—Democratic Senators who Joined
to a crushing rebuke to the White
House by overriding President
Booeevelt’s tax bill veto predicted
today their action would help, not
hinder, the cause of liberalism In
the party.
Nona wsa found who shared the
fears of Senator Pepper (D-Fla.l
that the party's "fundamental spir-
it and character' might be altered
by the sharp difference of opin-
ion which was climaxed by yes-
terday's 72 to 14 Senate vote to
override the veto
“There certainly has been no
break . with liberalism or with
sound.progressive government," de-
clared Senator George 'D-Ga.)
George declared that If Con-
gress had "lain supinely” down snd
accepted without protest the Pres-
ident s biting challenge of the
members' motives to fashioning
the tax bill, then Indeed a tTend
toward “totalitarianism" would
have been evident.
Senator McKellar (D-Tenh.) said
he thought the air would be clear-
ed by the chain of dramatic events
climaxed %y the resignation of
Senator Barkley <D-Ky) as major-
ity leader and his immediate and
unanimous reelection.
Stolen Cer snd Driver
Picked Up Here Fridey
Officers of the sheriffs depart-
ment lata Friday recovered a 1941
Plymouth sedan stolen this week
in LeveUand With the car, offi-
cers also got the driver a man
with a penitentiary record
Officers spotted the car on a
downtown street here and waited
until its driver returned prepara-
tory to driving it off The driver is
being held in county jail waiting
for *he Hockley County sheriff to
carll for him_
FDR ORDERS A
REVIEW OF ALL
DEFERMENTS
WASHINGTON, Feb. *6—ZAP'
President Roosevelt, estimating
the armed services still were short
approximately 200,000 trained
men. today ordered a review of
all occupational deferments "with
a view to speedily making availa-
ble" the personnel required to
carry on the war
The President sent a memoran-
dum to Paul V. McNutt, chairman
of the War Manpower Commis-
sion, and MaJ Gen Lewta B. Her
shey, selective service director,
saying selective service ' has not
men and enormous stores of war
. equipment, the Moscow bulletin
1 added ,
On the northern end of the
front. Russian troops converging
on Pskov, R^tic gateway strong-
hold below Lake Peipus drove the
Germans further west toward Lat-
via.. They killed another 1.100
f.ermans and captured 54 towns
and hamleta, the Moscow bulletin
said and at one point to the
northwett were less than 20 miles
from the greart communications
tenter.
A second force was 22 relies
I horth of Pskov at Lutovo. another
23 miles northeast at Kebska. and
to if** east still another column
had reached the outskirts of Pork-
hov. last important town before
Pskov, 45 miles sway
Oregon's McNary
Dies in Florida, Had •
Brain Operation
Allied Columns
Gain Ground In
Western Burma
NEW DELHI. Feb 26— <AP>—
Allied columns advancing from
the north against the main area
of Japanese resistance to western
Burma north of Akyab gained
some ground in severe fighting
yesterday. a communique: • an-
nounced today
Admiral Lord Louis Mountba't-
possibly because of the loss of 703 j tens command said that strategic
planes there since the present Al- : Ngakyedauk Pas* was being kept
lied drive began last Dec 17. open to traffic.
The Japanese lost a total of 135 j (A Tokyo broadcast said today
planes in combat and on the that the cordon wa* being tight-
ground in the sweep of Rear Ad- ened around the Allied Fifth and
miral Marc A Mitscher’s carrier Seventh Divisions and that com-
Another 33 tons of bombs drop-
ped on Rabaul Wednesday raised
to 1,829 the total tonnage for 23
days thia month And for the
fourth straight day. the Japanese
sent up no aerial interception.
British Bombers Blast Augsburg
In Great Strength Friday Night
force against the southern Man
ana Islands of Tinian. Saipan and
Guam, the little American posses-
sion which the enemy seized to
December. 1941? when everything
wa* going its way In the Feb. 16-
17 assault on mighty Truk. 640
miles southeast of Guam.« the
navv has announced that carrier
planes and warships destroyed 201
enemy aircraft and sank 19 ships
for certain.
LAUDERDALE. Fla Feb
. j.MI—TAP)—While funeral plans
delivered the quantity of men who were being mads the body of Sen-
were expected ” > I atgr Charles L. McNary of Oregon
"The shortage which began to rented today In this small seaside
develop last September reached town where he came to aearch of
State Medical Survey
Authorized by Texas
University Regents
■\elop lai
total of
seclusion to
came
recuperate
from a
brato operation.
The Republican leader who was
a total of 200.000 on December
31.” he added “This meana that
today we are still short approxi-
mately 200.000 trained men al- hi* party's vie* presidential can-
?hough the actual personnel short- didgte in 1940 apparently had been
age in the army has been reduced gaining strength recently, but death
to 150.000
Urging that agriculture and In-
dustry release younger men phys-
ically qualified for military serv-
ice. the President said the army
will not reach its planned Janu-
ary strength until some time in
April, or even later If selective
service “continue* to fall behind
on its quotas ”
AUSTIN, Feb. 26 —<KP)—A
survey looking toward establish-
ment of a program of medical ed-
ucation to fill the state's future
needs was voted without discus-
sion yesterday by the board of
regents of the University of Texas
When the survey was firat pro-
came unexpectedly at 3 p m yes- posed at the October session of
terday at hit apartment. 'he regents by President Homer P
Mrs McNary. their daughter. Rainey, the motion was tabled af-
Charlotte. 8, and Mr* McNary s tor another motion to elladnate
»i*tfr. Mis* Mary Louise Morton, reference to the location of the
of Washington, p*re *t his side. i medical branch at Galveston had
Senator McNary. reelected only failed to carry on a four to four
Thursday as chairman of the Sen- vote
aluminum produced
Lumirmm u being *"*■“**
Yunn^i province tor
in China s numnp Ju*Jo*y
broadcast was record'd
government monitor*.
The
by U. S
Lieut. Gen. Kenney
Awards Air Medal
To Five Texans
GENERAL HEADQUAR -
Southwest Pacific Area. Feb. 26—
<AP>—Lieut Gen George C Ken-
ney. commander of the Allied Air
Forces in the Southwest Pacific,
has awarded the Air Medal to five
Texas members; of the Fifth Air
Force Troop Carrier Command.
They are
Sgt J A Bozeman. Jr, Cole-
man
Sgt Richard L Goodkto. 1002
Crawford Street. Houston.
1st Lt. Joe H Gray. 1957 West
Colorado Blvd . Dallas
1st Lt Harold L Jekel
view
1st Lit James W. Locklear. Lam
pasas
ate Republican committee, came
here in December when he left the
i hospital after the operation
A short time ago McNary told
friends he expected to resume his
place as minortty leader of the ville Builington
Senate, but his attendance at the remarked
R^piiblieln national convention de-
pended upon the rapidity of his
recovery
The end was unexpected and
the shock prostrated Mr*. McNary
She was ordered to bed by the
family physician.
McNary, tall and lanky, wa* pop-
ular with his colleagues and was
noted for enjoyment qf his Sena-
torial. duties He was reluctant to
A proposal that the regenta In-
vite Gov Coke R Stevenson and
Senators Tom Connally and W
Lee O'Daniel to speak at the uni-
versity was withdrawn after Or-
of Wichita Falls
plete annihilation or capitulation
of the enemy appears certain in
the immediate future).
The Allied communique said
Japanese attacks north of the Bu*
thedsung-Maungdsw road hsd been
thrown back, an^ that in the Kal-
apanzin valley, east of the Ngaky-
edauk Pass, tanks had attacked
enemy forces trying to withdraw which
to the south, inflicting heavy cas-
ualties
U. S bombers attacked targets
in Moulmein and .Martaban, start-
ing large fires, and fighters hit at
bridges, supply areas and radio
communications in north Burma
RAF and Indian airforce planes
attacked objectives in the Mgyii.
Kaladan. Arakan. Akyab. Chin
Hills and upper Chlndwin areas.
Landon Says Tax Bill
Friction Evidence Of
Increasing Friction
LONDON. reb 26—AP—A
massive fleet of British bomber*
' carried out a crushing attack on
the burning city of Augsburg last
night and piled up a total of more
than 17.000 ton* of bombs drop-
ped on Germany in an unparal-
leled six-day offensive against the
Reich’s aircraft Industry.
The German radio said large-
scale attacks on the chemical cen-
ter of Frankfurt were made at the
same time, and the Swiss radio
said night flights crossed Switz-
erland from Italy—raising the dis-
tinct possibility that Italian-based
Wellingtons of the RAF again car-
ried out a two-way British assault
as they did the night before.
The Air Ministry communique
announcing the operation against
Augsburg said It »u carried out
to “very great strength" and that
the city, a center of aerial engine
production, was attacked twice
during the night by large forces
of Lancasters and Halifax#*
“The weather was favorable and
reports indicated the bombing was
concentrated and effective.” the
communique added.
Twenty-four planet were lost to
these assaults and to simultaneous
Mosquito operations over south-
west Germany and the low coun-
try and to extensive minelaying
sweeps
Flying Fortress#* from Britain
made the 1.600-mile round trip to
Augsburg yesterday, setting fires
lighted the way for the
RAF
The night blow followed an un-
precedented two-way stab yester-
day at a single target—Regens-
burg's Messerschmitt factory’
American heavy bombers flew
from both Britain and Italy
Together, the attacking forces
destroyed 142 enemy aircraft
against a loss of 69 heavy bomb-
er*. The 15th lost 39 bombers and
the Eighth 30
Photographs made at Augsburg.
Furth, a Stuttgart ballbearing
plant, and R*g*nsburg “showed
food results," th* eommunlque
said.
Local Draft Board
Asks Addresses Of
Four Registrants
TOPEKA. Kaa . Feb 26— <AP> !
—All M Landon interpreted the (
tax veto battle as evidence of to-j
creasing friction between Congres-
snd the President and suggested
today “Mr Roosevelt should be Officials of the Brown County
unhitched and a willing snd able Selective Service Board have re-
team mate be substituted.” quested that persons knowing th#
"A new President—Democrat or present addresses of four ragla-
Republican—would not have a sua-
“Now you’re fixing to get the
univeratty into politics."-
The proposal was made by D F
Strickland of Mission. who with-
drew it.
The regenta refuted to allow
Dean T H Shelby of th* univer-
sity extension service permission
to attend * meeting to St Loci*
where plans will be made for a
proposed national federal jpro-
arcept the vice prudential norai- gram of adult education through
nation, preferring to remain at his
•eat in the Senate.
NO ALLIED CONFIRMATION
OF Dfc GAULLE WOUNDING
LONDON. Fete. 26—/AP>—Tbs
Berlin radio, quoting reports from
Geneva, said today that Gen
I Chariot De Gaulle had been
Long- wounded to an attempted assassi-
nation.
was no confirmation from
source
sere wi
Allied
state
Ices
university extension aerv-
Bullington expressed diaapprov
i of Texas go
after
state
al of the idea
federal funds to “subsldlz
education" but added that
money was appropriated
this state should then
share
The regents did not taka up
matters relating to th* formation
of a patent policy for the univer-
sity. or a proposal that a univani-
ty press be established.
plcious snd unfriendly Congress to
work with as Mr Roosevelt must
have from now on," the 1936 Re-
publican presidential nomine* de-
clared to a statement.
Landon predicted that "when
the American people grasft v the
true significance of the chaotic
condition created by th* President
to his intolerance toward the Con-
frees thou I am certain that thia
most unusual and unprecedented
and dangerous situation will be
corrected next November."
FIRST AMERICAN RED CROSS
GIRL KILLED IN ITALY
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS.
Naples, Feb. 26—<AP>—The death
of the first American Red Cross
girl killed to action to thia theatre
of. war was announced today. She
was Miss Esther Richards, a Ban
Francisco hospital social worker,
who was a victim of a German
bombing atf the Auto beachhead
Feb. ?.
trants of the board oommualeate
with draft officials at once
These men and their last known
addresses were: Eulia Jefferson
Sparkman. 1602 Hawkins Street.
Herbert Wilburn Marler, 118 East
Seventh Street, Austin; Abner
Reynolds. Route 2. Blanket; and
C. C DeHay, Jr., 308 Lamar.
Swuatwalar.
iL
,-_I
Two Draw Fines
In County Court
A Brownwood man. charged
with transportation of liquor, was
| fined 8122.20 to county court Fri-
day after pleading guilty to the
charge. The man’s wife paid his
ftaa. The man was arrested last
December and had been free on
bond tine* that time, County
Judge A. X. Nabors ssdd.
Another defendant ii
court Friday paid 822 20
checking" charges. Ha
required to pay off
cheeks, a totalaf Bit.
. • r '.j
Conferees Have
Scant Hope Of
Vote Compromise
WASHINGTON. Feb. 26—'AP'
—Senate and House conferees to-
day dung to a scant hope of find-
ing a compromise solution to the
ppliticslly-explosive issue of arm-
ed services voting.
Actually, they appeared as far
from agreement now •* when they
started their conferences more
than two weeks ago. The admin-
istration's insistence on a uniform
federal ballot for military absen-
tees still stood like a barrier
across the road to demands for
state ballots.
The House conferees offered a
suggestion for limited use of a
federal ballot yesterday but It fell.
flat with Senate administration- vidoua fighter
ists. They agreed to look it over
during the week-end but they
sounded unhappy about It
Th* new House plan would re-
tain federal ballots for us* only
to states which have no adequate
military absentee voting system,
agree to accept the federal ballota
and certify that they comply with
stats election laws
The conferees will meet again
Monday.
SLENDER THREAD
Of COOPERATION
TAUT BY DEATH j
WASHINGTON. Feb. 26—/AP)
—Th# alender thread of ooope i
tion between th* legislative «nd ex-
ecutive branches of the govern-
ment—already worn fine by the re-
volt of Majority Leader Barkley
'Ky> against President Roosevelt's
tax bill veto—was drawn taut to
Nazi Attack
Near Cassino
Thrown Back
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS,
Naples, Feb. 26»r-(AF)—The Ger-
mans. maintaining steady pressure
on tbe Allied beachheads below
Rome. harassed American and
British forces with shells) and
bombs but were knocked back ia 7
their single small attack yesterday,
headquarters announced today
The ineffective Nazi stab was
made on the. Allied right flank to
the Potine marsh area at a point
I south of Cisterns and west of Lit-
loria Taking advantage of the rav-
ine terrain near Carroceto on tha
other end of the beachhead, th*
I Nazis tried to slip through th*
Allied lines, but all their attempts
were unsuccessful.
High winds sweeping the moun-
tains on the Cassino front togeth-
! er with snow flumes helped to
' keep that sector more or less sta-
tionary except for patrolling, but
j the Germans again attacked a
j French-held hill northwest of Ca*-
1 Mno and again were thrown back.
I On this front as well as on tha
I beachhead heavy guns of both
sides kept up their endless shell-
ings
Headquarters announced that 92
German planes were destroyed and
j 14 more probably wers knocked
down on the Italian lag of yestar-
! day’s simultaneous American
heavy bomber assault against Re-
gensburg, Germany, toy bomber*
flying from Italy and Britain.
Thirty-nine bombers and five
fighters were report-d missing
from the heavy bomber thrust*,
! also aimed at the Italian porta of
Flume and Pole, the Yugoalav port
of Zara, and an airf;e.r near Graz
in southern Austria.
The total of German fighters
destroyed on tha Reger.sburg mis-
sion snd elsewhere yesterday was
fixed at 96. setting a new record
for the Msditerraneaa alrforeo
Th* previous high was 87 German
planes knocked out to Tunisia last
ApriL
Indian troop* of the Eighth Ar-
my threw back three separata
night attacks near Orsogna Allied
artillery fire also broke up aa en-
emy raid at another point to tha
Orsogna area and a patrol inflict-
ed casualties on the Qermant to
a clash north of Ariel!!, between
Orsogna and th* Adriatic coast
Guns and supplies still war*
flowing tote the beachhead area
despite bad weather, continued
Nazi shelling of th* port of Anzlo
and s new attempt of tha Germans
to interrupt th* process by mak-
ing torpedo boat stabs at shipping
off ths harbor.
The Allied eommunlque laid aa
E-boat attack on th* anchorage
three nights ago was broken up by
patrol sraft V
Liberators bombing pert and
rail facilities at Flume flew
through thick heavw flak. Lika
the Regensburg raiders, they mat
opposition, with
soms of tha enemy planes carry*
tog rockets. Th* crews reported
direct hits on the harbor and near-
by installations.
lOPoint Ration .
Stamps, Tokens
In Use Sunday
WASHINGTON, Feb. 28 —/AP'
Ten-point ration stamps and red
and blue tokens as change will
ease Into use throughout th*
country starting tomorrow.
Th# new ration currency for
buying meats, dairy products and
processed foods becomes valid
then, but the Office of Price Ad-
ministration (OPA) expects light
exchange the first day sinee most
stores will be closed. But the new
system will get a full-blown test
dW by th. d»th Minority Lud- ”*ompaon 01 *‘'"’
"monIi? « ho1romBril2i*.Ml .. ^ Th* b, US«d UOdOT
Merfary, woo comprised and mi * t new plan arc ill in
■ETS* “v toMtatatiwm wii. SU“7o.p2U!S & 111
originated by the administration
Into a form acceptable to tha Re-
publican minority and anti-Roose-
velt Democrats, died yesterdav in
ration
processed
foods and red for meats and fats.
Eecb »tamp has a ten-point value
regardless of th* figure on the
face
an apartment at Ft Lauderdale j The first rod stamps valid for
Thajmrson*1 friendship^between SSy ^us^thrcJ^M^jo’jR
ery two weeks, three new stamps
will become valid
Blue processed food stamps win
be validated to seta of flvo at tha
start of each month, with tha first
••riea—A-8. B-8. C-8, D-8 and
E-8—good through May 20
As change for thair te
the President and the sandy haired
westerner who headed the Senate a
Republicans from 1933 down to
date, formed a tangible but little
known link between the White
House and Congress It is a link
that can not be reforged to a day
MeNary was consulted by tbe
Whit# house on many proposed
bill* that never saw th* light of
day to Congress aa well aa many
that did.
Aa Intimate of FDR. Early
Th# 69-year-old Oregonian not
only knew President Roosevelt
well enough to tell him to his face
more than once at bipartisan con-
ferences that be thought the Presi-
dent waa wrong, but be knew in-
timately and liked Stephen Early.
Presidential secretary.
Unruffled. McNary went his way,
ruling the minority with an Iron
hand that some resented, but suck
waa hia strength that mm dared
■ -_■ ~ teniiwlEg
stamps, housewives will get tokens
—blue to processed food purchas-
es and red for moats and dairy
produets—and those will be good
indefinitely. In no case, however,
may stamps be cashed outright for
a full ten points to token*. Thu*
nine tokens will be th# moat ro-
drived as change for any atanp.
TOKYO BAYS COCKS B
VICHY ENVOY TO JAPAN
Tha^Te Y°WC’ ^
Coame,
to th*
ad'
YORK., Fajk ML—<AJ»V-
V-
Ml
1
II j
;;
4 i
H
T
y >
\
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View three places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 132, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 26, 1944, newspaper, February 26, 1944; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1062894/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.