Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. [41], No. [276], Ed. 1 Sunday, July 19, 1942 Page: 3 of 11
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IROWNWOOO (Taut) BULLETIN, SUNDAY, JULY 19, 1*42
PAGE FOUR
Fiction
Comment, Features
ITS ALL A MYTH ABOUT ELEPHANTS AND MICE
THE BROWN WOOD BULLETIN
Pubttatud mrr muni and Sunday morning e» Breemwgod.
* COLUMBUS, O.—<UP>—YiM V»\ 1 1
probably om of thoao ponom who i . , ,
5 SOTT £ STiSan Saba News
“\t!!£? tor pSuJJS* rtUSlSlloSI Ito. a. 0. Oottachelk and saa
-but giva mam bars of the animal! ton and daughter ara hara fro
world a Uttla mora credit than Parry, Iowa, to via* Mrs. Got
mythology allowa. Tbay , ara oat | gehiUt.| p^u, Mr. and Mrs B.1
SSfiSdT think^ ^ Rtoh. and wltb Miss Edytbe Ric
A pbotograpbar want to tha On*) OU>*r *u**te lf“hh»RiC Mri "rqa
UzmbSsmf to find out what ani* the youngest daughter lirklHog
maU will or will not da whan aao» Va* Clara, and children from Ra
fronted with "wannnada^ might. Tttaa.
iS. ^ w“ r~"4*d "= Jft JS-ilX
•St^ssc -Visurii- sr
following: -w j*A town/
Elephants don't mind mica — ^ ^ D. A. Camar
6 ssB.'ssstfs i sp.ssL’sr “ *"
Snakes will croaa a rape area If Mn j. q CampbaU and sift
it aerate bet their stomachs — at Mlas rannle Walker, have return
least a couple of Mg rattlarB tra from Temple,
versed over one woven of horse* (Qp Ernestine Keeney who
hair. I employed at Baatrop was hara o*
Ostriches don’t hide their heads the weekend to visit with her i
in sand or earth when frightened ter, Mrs. Bob Sullivan.
—they use their capable legs to Mies Lucille Hamrick who I
travel from the area, been employed in Austin has
The photographer departed I eepted a position to the Quart
Pram the urn satisfied that, among master's Burgeon’s Deportment
| other things porcupines do w* j Camp Hood, fo; lowing avisitw
SSL S£ K MSBSftS! ‘
| EE & -|B ,
MADISON, WU.. July 1*. (UP)—
The famous Kenny treatment for
infantile paralysis, recently intro-
duced into the United States from
Australia. U now administered in
a special ward In the Orthopedic
Division of the Wisconsin General
Hospital.
The treatment was devised 90
years ago in tha Australian bush
country by Sister Elisabeth Kenny
(chief nurses art called “sister" by
tha British). It U not a curo-all but
it has been successful in a large
number of cases in preventing per-
manent crippling as an after-effect
THE AXIS GAMBLES W#H HU&1AN LIVES
Konrad Bercovici’s warding th*£ the Germans will attempt
sy fail fo win a£ complete military victory
V * fin vtow of apparent Russian re-
id oftHe war dlaewhtre.
vho has seen the Nazi bigwigs at close
- - is the “strong man of
be substituted for Hit-
nans can go before the
t a “blitzpeace” it they fail to win
»over the Allies is a timely one in v
| veraea and the trend of the war
| Mr. Bercovief, who has seen
range, believes that Hermann Gcx
the German machine and that he
ler at the proper time so that the ------7---
Allies and say, “It it Hitler you Rave learned to hate and
I now he’s gone—so let’s make peaAe. What are you fighting
for, anyhow?”
Such a plan would be baaed on no less than an acute know-
ledge of American psychology, which calls for one principal
antagonist tb hate at a time.
But the American people are wdll aware that an heirachy
• of demons andmot Hitler alone can be blamed for the Nazi
zBtar machine, and that in Italy there is-Mussolini and in Ja-
*pan there is a military clique around Hirohito which plunged
that nation into war with the United States.
J) What Bercovici means iethat any negotiated peace, regard-
less of who the Axis stooges might.be at the moment, would
Says 'Nfr Tube, No Crooiw'
place In four to six woaki.
Por bast raaulta. tha pattont must
begin treatment within a short
time after diagnosis, preferably
within a few hours. N
The major difference between
the Kenny treatment and tha meth-
ods commonly used in American
inevitably result in eveptiu£ ruin for the United Nations anc
he’s right there.
that make? u
There can be no armistice in this war and no peace treaty,
until Germany, Japan and Italy have been disarmed com-
* They have demonstrate^ utter |ack of the responsibility
any nation must assume toward its Neighbors before it should
have the right to bear arm$. The aimed might of the Axitois
whnt has cost the world vears of tewible suttering and blood-
For BUck Marketeers
MANCHESTER. England—(UP)
—DmHi for block mcrktloort.
This was tha penalty demanded
factory workers and H**1**** wom-
an attended tha Ant meeting of
tha Lancashire Woman's Parlia-
eovered in from four to six weeks
with no traces of crippling
Sister Kenny introduced the
treatment in the United States in
1940 and has bean amlcted by tha
National Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis and tha Minnesota Foun-
dation in establishing a training
center for American nurses at the
Universttp of Minnesota -
With funds donated by the Man-
chester family of Madison, tha Wis-
consin General Hospital sent Its
mous WPS cotton duck limitation
order, to which a young lawyer
inserted a paragraph about the
iives life of Donald Duck. It got
by some 15 or mora officials be-
fore It was caught
Right after this event, which got
a big laugh In Washington, some-
bod) in the Army- wrote a memo
to wpb saying there should be
a limitation order on
era. , fW wpb man who gat the
memo thought this was a good
joke, but they weren't going to
make a sap of him on a gag like
that Donal Duck thing. He put
the memo in the waste basket.
A couple of weeks later, the
Army tailed up. screami*^. Where
was the goose feather limitation
order? The market was bought
out and Army procurement of-
ficers were having a terrible time
finding enough goose feathers to
stuff the pillows for soldiers to
lay their weary beads on at night .
Shamefacedly, the WPB wheels
began to grind out the order, re-
dvillan purchases of
So They Say
worse travail before
This is no panty-waist war and
It won t bb won by panty-waist j
measures.—Robert Nathan, WPB
Planning Committee chairman.
We must remember that we have
not done wonders ourselves, yet —
Wendell L. WiUkie.
p ' i • ■ l|
If China doesn t get immediate
help. Japan and Germany will en-
circle the world—Sou may Tchenk.
Chinese woman lawyer.
The government has a right to
call citizens to aid in the defense
of their country, city and families. ,
so what is wrong in calling men to j
serve their city?—Mayor F. H
LaGuardia of New York.
• SERIAL STORY
MURDER It
-BY A. W O'BRIEN
RY COMMAND
In Washington
By PKTKB KD0ON
Bulletin Washington
fen to those who always
tide” using strong megp
*<• Well, in this count?}
ons have been exe-
being. We look upon
be eliminated—by cure,
r. In the Axis countries
re murdered many times
_____ _____ od. The fellow country-
1 men of these helpless victims woul4 not be gentle with their
BSmttsiian- i •_ \ i ' .
The Axis has gambled everything on wiping out the world
modem free peoples. When the ASis loses—as it surely will
These first 10 days of July marks
a series of important anniversar-
ies in the history of U. S. par-
ticipation in the European war.
On July 4. 1941. the first cargo
of American tanks, planes and
military supplies unloaded at an
Egyptian port. This was approx-
imately three months after Presi-
dent Roosevelt s declaration that
the Red Sea was not a combat
zone and that American ships
could therefore enter it without
violating neutrality.
On July 7. 1941. an American
convoy unloaded the first U. 1>
troops in Iceland.
On July 10. 1941. It was first
announced that some 400 Amer-
ican technical experts were being
CHAPTER X
pLYDB DAWSON’was repairing
^ tha ravages at his stormy ses-
sion with the spy ring In the
Turkish bath of bis Chicago hot*!
when, st about • o’clock that
night, a telephone call wm
plugged into the steam room. It
was tha chief agent of the F. B. L
“Something of special Inters*
for yon, Dawson," he said. “Your
wood-looking girl friend boarded a
Canadian Colonial Airways plane
at LaGuardia Field In New York
20 minutes ago. Our Manhattan
office wants to knew if they’ll
have the plane radioed bade . . .
It will be over American soil tor
about an hour more it’s the reg-
ular evening plane for Montreal.
"No, let her «o ... I've a sud-
den hunch and want ha* to have
a little mere rope. My compli-
ments to your Manhattan office—
striding----- -.
down weathers under three inches
long. * ■ | T’
There’s a tremendous surplus of
hearty 25 million cases of evap-
orated milk on hand, and there s
kind of a problem about what to
do with It How this stock cams
to accumulate is Interesting. Orig-
inally the British asked for aid
of dairy products fo rtheir chrU-
lana. Evaporated milk takes only
cases. Then shipping space got
tight. To save still more space,
the British shifted their order to
powdered, dry milk, which takes
up only one-eighth the space of
If we will put as much thought
and money into the building of
markets as we put into the build-
ing of factories we will have no
need to fear another depression —
Walter D. Fuller, publisher.
for tha transatlantic fti
"We’re over Dorsal
pitot yelled^ ‘TIon-ytM
low there is the further explana-
tion. “Secretary Knox called upon
Navy Department civilian em-
ployees to take the lead In cutting
out jobs and procedure not nec-
essary to the war effort."
“ That’s dandy, but when a busi-
ness man goes to the Navy De-
partment to see someone, he goes
through this procedure:
1. He goes to an outer recep-
tionist who takes his name and
address and who he want! to see
and entars it on a ticket in dupli-
cate to which he signs his name.
2. The outer receptionist calls
the inner receptionist to see if It’s
all rii
• BARBS
In a number of cities girls are how working as barbers.
Wall bet they’re top notches. jj
f.. ■ I * 1 .
T ' It’g funny how a happy-go-lucky* man wdl go out on the
golf course and drive himself mad. H
The average gentleman’! clothing bill is said to be $450
per year. What does that make moot of us?
2. Tha man then goes to a lob-
by telephone to call up thg. toner
receptionist to tha man ha wants
to eae . l _
4. This toner receptionist says
she ll clear him right away.
6. The man goci back to tha
outer recpptionl’st desk,
g. The man waits.
• THOUGHT FOR TOD^Y
Far what la a man <dftntkgei
lass himself, er be eeat away?—4-u
_ As thoe soweet, ae shall th|u
7. Tha inner receptionist then
calls up tha outer receptionist
Funny Business—
J -This will tickle yoa—ahe asked
for the beet reute to Newfound-
land via Halifax .. ."
•It flta,” Dawson murmured
From the Turkish bath bn
phoned directly to the Fenjr Cem-
mand hondquarton to Montreal
and had uwm locate the Air Mar-
shal Half an hour later Deweoa
girl was obviously sue
te hid it wttn her mus.
iy well tot’s ger Mto eo
was on hie way to an airport just
outside the Chicago limits. There
was an Army Air Force officer
waiting for him at the gate.
‘ I’m Instructed to taka you di-
rectly to the field, Mr. Dewaon,"
he said crisply. "There's s twin-
engined bomber blfrlg held for
you on Ferty Command inatruc-
tegether
I like to see
A T Detroit the plane had to land
A for customs and Immigration
clearance and Dawson took ad-
vantage of the few minutes to
phone tha Montreal bureau of tha
probab!
‘Pardon me—I am* »nj *las»«rnf*4 changinjf
that those who ficht may eat
[Ml
HI vv
CLASi
IlFCKD B ATBB ^___. ^
Us minimum for first Insai
MsAva-srSaK,
, " —- :
hatt'Cent par nurd seoh^foOoe
NATIONAL
RALPH R. MULLIGAN. Ml
C J. ANDERSON. 31 E Wi
,t-
Mur Drive, Chicago, m.
Mr ^
■ f
v ? i
i ft i
■£ jt
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. [41], No. [276], Ed. 1 Sunday, July 19, 1942, newspaper, July 19, 1942; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1097050/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.