Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 54, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 31, 1942 Page: 2 of 6
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loday Cditonala
R
r
mi
qick. Sure, I said that we kin
PAGE TWO
ner I sat around for a while after
pected that they also want to share cruited on a new front.
Considering these things, is it
mind
By George Tucker
rected pri
at our own negligence in
Up to Friday, 38,000 pounds of ... Matha Scott
Mr.
to find them.
Telegram. .
To he continued
Hollywood
By Robbin Coons
I
Telegram.
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entitled to
Policy
on your
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or errors or
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you of anything Malone,” he said
kindly, “but because the circum-
Todd left the police station and
boarded a street car for the cam-
vance .
> months.
k
that time may already have
rived.
En.
taded veteran of MM wad
the RKO minia-E4 2983
ture department, MS Pg 24
who launched this “navy” and kept
it steaming—through seas no wet-
ter than those usually found in
Switzerland or on the studio's Cul-
ver City lot.
For Tomie’s navy never saw the
is like Sterling on Silver.
GEO. M. GRICE
116% 8. Dixon Phone 73
-
k
hard bv the time I got home.”
Printed
Lake got out a white sheet of
paper and an inked pad. "Todd,
Si months, in
vance _----
1
1
With Out
Fighting
Men
II
i
the scrap had been removed from
the square, and that represented
but a small portion of the great
pile, which almost surrounded the
courthouse at the close of the cam-
paign last week.
But the scrap campaign cannot
be discontinued. Scrap is needed
every day in the steel mills, and
the effort cannot be relaxed until
the war is won.
vance c—:----
8 months, in
advance----
Especially effective was what he said
ef the need of open and honest criticism.
_______________________But we have it yet to do and theirs are
Leaders never like this. But it is “democ- in history that will forever give us the
place of imitators. Perhaps the bad news
will generate the incentive to streamline
and mechanize our initiative. The Japs
“Oh, sure. I got back to the fra-
a watchman making his rounds of ternity house at 6:30 and had din-
plies which have gone to our allies.
Willkie was on the ground and it was hard
sorry fraction of their manpower and no
larger one in materials. We have aggra-
vated the enemy sufficiently to draw a
monster face-saving retort. It seems ob-
vious that the entire Japanese land, air
and sea strength will center on the island
of Guadalcanal which American surprise
tactics Wrested from them. The number
of human lives necessary to save that face
can easily be larger than the number of
trained Americans we can bring into ac-
1 Berliners
maade his
a would be .
izmm.
The Aasoeiated Preaa is e
the use for repubiieation oi
credited to ft or not other
FI RE, TORN AD O
And AH Kinds of
INSURANCE
The name George Grice
the character, r>w
individual or cor-
l upon beta* called
2150
New England is throwing heirloom beds
into the scrap drive, no doubt, a lot of
them George Washington slept in.—Wich-
ita Eagle.
sort of criticism that we should expect
from the leader of opposition in a democ-
racy—which would not be a democracy
were there no criticism. | /
The British failure in the Far East was
handled by Mr. Willkie tactfully but
frankly, though his criticism was di-
'about the upkeep of ner wes-coast
home. She entrusted it to four
Lockheed employes . . . Predomi-
nating colors at this fall’s football
games seem to be tan and red—tan
for the military style topcoats ev-
Paered iSunan sank into a chair
slowly, a dazed look of disbelief
gun. They “shopped” in all
junk yards for the parts. They
an old oil-well casing for the 1
They made some notes. "You
remained in the house the rest of
New York
NJEW YORK.—Translations from
I hieroglyphics on the backs of
old envelopes:
Margie Hart, the strip queen, is
trying to stir up a feud with New
pBLMMhtague,
county, Oklahoma:
ground that they were casting doubts on
ultimate German victory have already
had their doubts removed by what has
happened since.—Arkansas Gazette.
----V—---
Your church is as good as others. Nat-
urally you think it isn’t because you know
the members better.—Fort Worth Star.
• ;
Pre-election predicts on a national scale
are like that. You are right or wrong,
according to your guess.—Ardmore Ard-
moreite. ! Ii
. ---------V----------:
. There had been < signs of a dinner, then I had to go back to
struggle, the story said. A chair Johnny Miller’s quarters—he’s our
trainer., you know—for a heat
The more than one t
who, 12 days before
speech promising that S
taken, were reported arrested on the
Erewer, John Wesley Dever. Mad
May Dever, Jim Henry Dev
William U. T. Dever and Embi
Evert Clement
Marriage Urense
Wesley Waddle, 25. Ardma
Oklahoma, and Viedell Stephens
20. Springer, Oklahoma.
16TH DISTRICT COURT
Nev Caves Filed
Ex parte. Frances Forsyth,
al. partition.
O. N. McEntire vs. Edna Me
advanee --
One year, la
ndvance --
date th
fordama
them tor
• •
PRE-ELECTION PREDICTIONS
PREDICTION of Democratic or Repub-
- lican gains in pre-election weeks may
be true or they may be false. At any
rate, they remind us down here in the oil
country of what a practical driller told a •
lot of “rock hounds” one day while dis-
cussing spots to bore for oil.
The oil driller pointed to a rack loaded
with drill stems and said: “Look, you
birds, there is a string of the only geolo-
gists in the world, all you fellows can do
is guess. If you guess right, G. K., but
tell the world how many times you guess
wrong and add up the score.”
tion against them. ; _____a__
begin active trailling in anticipation of it.
The British were fortunate, psychological-
ly. They worked backward from the su-
perlative. We still retain much of the
impersonal approach to the starkness
upon which the British, the Russians and
the Chinese have eked out survival. It is
only fair to say on the form of 1917-18—
to mention only the latest of a number—
that we shall meet the crisis.
that she entirely overlooked.
"Yeah, Tve heard,”' Eldie replied,
and she noted hoarseness in his
voice. "Everone has, and those
, blankety-blank police have Todd
down at the station. Why, those.-
what do they think he is—a mur-
derer!” Eddie fairly shouted.
Susan felt ehilled. "Todd,” she
echoed. "What do they want with
him ?"
That, of course, was where Enoche, Samuel Marcus Duff
Tomie came in. Tomie and the sort Cora Mae Meads, Ruth Beigg, A
of ingenuity that will keep tne , ur Jackson Jones. Edna Fees
'---- - - • ley Jones, Jeannette Mires, L
Ella Justice.
such responsibilities as fall upon
civilians to provide for the fight-
ing men’s needs.
Therefore, we are confident that
since the call for day room fur-
nishings has gone out to our neigh-
bors, they will respond as magnifi-
cently with funds, as they have
with workers and houses and
apartments, and other needs that
have been filled.
I 1 1
AS TRUCK AFTER TRUCK
carry off to the junk yards, loads
of scrap from the courthouse
square, one realizes more fully,
what a tremendous amount of the
badly needed metal has been gath-
ered together by volunteer work-
ers in recent weeks.
Charlie G. Robertson, Rob
e Clifton, Andrew Thom
HOLLYWOOD'S oP UG-OUrS"as
There have been times when
appeared more impossible than
has in recent weeks. But to. the
who know the extent of t
jurisdictional differences. it nev
has appeared likely. The war effi
hasn’t changed the situation at‘a
In many instances, it has widen
the gap. A quick glance at t
s . 3838
J-
1 A
1 4
Legal Record
COUNTY COURr
Probate Docket
Applications to establish bit
records for Lillian Illene Pei
Smith, Billie Merle Campbell, fl
tella Julia Hurd, Charles Edwa
Mr. Willkie’s report may well prove to
be one of the momentous episodes in this
world struggle.—Denison Herald,
MAN POWER ON THE FARM
OOD has been abundant in America, so
“ so much so that we tend to take it for
granted. But food doesn’t produce itself.
To plow the ground, prepare the seedbed,
cultivate, harvest, feed livestock - and
milch cows, requires good equipment and
skilled man power, particularly man
power. ■ •
Reports from the country indicate that
the men are being draihedi from our
farms. Defense plants paying high wages
have taken many. From the Wiconsin
College of Agriculture comes a report that
eleven farm operators in that state have
been drafted during recent months leav-
ing the land without tenants. Dairy cows
are being sold for slaughter at a time
when the needs of our armed forces, al-
lies and civilians call for more production
rather than less.
. A point will soon be reached, if it has
not already been passed, when further
withdrawals of farm labor must cease.
Food in wartime is as necessary to sol-
as guns and tanks. The landr cannot
be turned over to incompetents with the
expectation that it will continue to yield
bumper crops. The armed forces; of
course, must have first call on the able-
bodied young men from the farms as well
as from the towns and cities, simply be-
cause they make better fighters. To win
The Word of God
e You will never hit the mark higher than you
aim Aim at perfection and you will come closer
tb the mark than tho you just aimed to be an
average Christian: Be ye therefore perfect, even
as your father which is in heaven is perfect—
Matt. 5:48. r V
GGainesvilledailuRegister 1
Houndaa aucust, as90.ezozozznunzzanaszs.rvusnaa,Etsn,arternoqn.Ezcept sumaay
soldiers at the camp, and scores of . potent independent unions that to be able to call forth any fu
their citizens are civilian workers have nothing to do with either the legislatiou necessary to er
at the camp, it is only to be ex- CIO or AFL, which might be re- economic controls on all d
V—
CAPT. ISADORE SPARK
is chief of the Medical Serv-
ice and Neuropsychiatric Sec-
tion at the 1885th Service
Unit’s Infirmary at Camp
Howze.
Cooke county men who have
been accepted for army service and ,,
have been sent to the Camp Wol- a I was land-locked by war,
ters reception center this week for and the only storms it encountered
processing, include: Private Pat were those marked by Priorities
Cathey. son of Mrs. C F. Gobble, . and Scarcities.
are all-out in the Solomons and extermi-
nation is the purpose.—Fort Worth Star-
Entered at the Gainevine,Texas, Poetoffice
as Second-class Matter.
steak house. capitalized on the sit
uation bv advertising it would ba
closed on Tuesdays . . . Fish an
poultry dishes naturally are get
ting the play in restaurants ani
the fish houses instead of having
eryone seems to be wearing ... A one big day a week (Friday) a
New York newspaper's etiquette having two ...
editor thinks it’s bad manners for . . ... 2
soldiers and their girls to hold Fifth Avenue is possibly th
hands while walking. Now ain’t gloomiest street in town afte
that awful? dark because it contains few 9
1 ' n , the types of businesses which re
There have been 20 marriages main open after six o’clock. Pee
between members of the cast since pie merging from the subway
ice skating shows were launched grope blindly until their eves be
at the Center Theatre in Rocke- come accustomed to the dark . .,
feller Center two years ago . . . Broadway seems to go through al
The most authentic character bit ternate Deriods of light and gloom,
on Broadway is being turned in by the nickel-catching establishment
half-pint Billy Miller, dance direc- gradually stepping up their light
tar in the comedy on burlesque, ing until they have to be stepped
"Strip for Action." For 27 years on
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1942. f
TownTopics Washington By Jack Stinnett I
"2uoamoxsekknow enat „washngton-back.m.ggaa esyaxoraszthazLesirxaraxie
about kingpin in the CIO, put his deal? '
chips on Wendell L. Willkie, I The talk of a “labor peace" be
. . tween the A. F. of L. and the CIO
i has been kicked a round’ever sinc
Lewis led the original, rebel
. 4 on bar face as she read the front was hand Phil Humphries a face
the war, we need a winning army and page story. The body had been fun of knuckles.”
found lying on the floor of the The detectives nodded. "Sure,
laboratory. Preliminary reports Todd, I know what you mean—but
revealed Phil had been dead any- about last night,” he said ■gain,
where from three to five hours firmly.
.when the body was discovered by
- g-hp.1
- ) -- - i ■ ■ ■■ ■ ■ ■ ■
Member of the Associated Press. Dnited Press,
Texas Press Association, and International Circa-
iation Managers’ Association. _______________
mSPPtks, m™. omtom S
I was pretty mad the night I said
that. Ine most I ever wished to do
HOLLYWOOD — “The Navy braved the briny with no s
II Comes Through,” is all adven- sailors,
ture on the briny, and it’s full of •
salt water, flying spray, and far Tomie is proudest of his
horizons. It has gm
racy’s greatest driving power—the whip-
lash of public • opinion developed from
honest and free discussion.”
rapid growth of union members
==3# ms-
ther eduipment.and Onisrn, drawing the United Mine Workers have to settle those same probi
them were assgned to neighboring from the Co, Lewis has certainly multiplied by hundreds.
_ __ . . . demanded a new shuffle. Probably a much more imp
Camp Howze is certainly not an The question now is can Lewis tant factor in the now three-c
exclusive Gainesville institution. I gather enough supporters around nered labor union struggle is 1
is one of a number of army can- him from the independent unions trend which manpower legislat
tonments placed strategically and possibly from dissatisfied win take.
about the country, and it will be unions in the CIO and AFL. to re- If it comes down to a work-
peopled with men from every state build the power he once had. fight ultimatum, with wages q
in the union. He is, of course, employing the trolled, the union game may hl
Since the neighboring towns old battle strategy of divide and- to be called off for the durati
have furnished hundreds of work- conquer. According to labor ob- for lack of cards—at least so I
era, skilled and unskilled, to con- servers here. Lewis’ plan had this as the three leaders are concern
struct the camp, and since they are advantage: his opponents were As a matter of fact, with Jaa
being called upon to furnish hous- already divided. F. Byrnes now firmly in the si
ing for many of the families of the In addition, there are some die as stabilization’czar, and lib
The Register Printinir Company, Editorial and Busi-
--tlwukktfEGrn-
in Gaihesville or in Cooke, Grayson,
Wise couhties, Texne, and Love
have to ask you what you did* last Escaped Convict
night. From the time vou left nT I I. . • m
practice until you went to bed.” Nahhed 1111 Koxcar
There was a slight sardonic -•UUEM 111 •V 4-
smile on Todd’s face now. He ANGLETON, Oct. 31 (AP). —
looked at Lake and then at an- Captured at Alvin in a box car
other detective who was seated yesterday was William Kirkpatrick
beside him. The few seconds of of Fort Worth, one of the four con-
silence before he spoke seemed victs who escaped from the Re-
like a long time. triev prison farm near here.
When he spoke his voice was Still at large was Mabry Hol-
low but distinct. "I had little use land of Houston. serving four to
for Philip Humphries but I didn’t ten years for robbery by assault
want him to get his skull bashed in Harris county. The other two
in. Also, I wasn’t the one who did fugitives had been previously cap-
it Let’s get that across right tured.
while in town t
appear in the
play “The Willow
and I,” won't
have to worrs
had been knocked over and a large
glass container smashed. Humph- treatment on a bruised leg. That
rles head had been crushed by was from eight to nine. Then I
2 heavy, binnted instrument, walked across the campus to Main
Robbery was discoumted because street, where I met a friend of
nothing of value had been touched, mine. That was about 9:30. I
Susan read the story through walked her home and then went
Phirs background, his brilliant home myself.”
promise in chemistry, Nis repute- “What time did you get there?”
tion for frivolity. “Oh, about 9:45
Ther were no thoughts of classes You went straight home?”
that day for her. She stared at Todd’s eyes flashed. "I just said
Alice Duncan and Alice stared I left my friend and went home!”
back, both hardly knowing what “Who was the friend?” Lake
to say. Then Susan got up and insisted.
went to the telephone. She had an "A girl Susan Drake. She’s a
odd desire to talk to Todd but ‘ Delta Sig.”
neighboring towns are pitch-
ing in and doing their part toward
furnishing equipment for the day remember using
rooms d the 84th Infantry divi- a quote from some
sion at Camp Howze. ope who knows
Marietta has contributed $200 the old union
and Muenster, Sanger, and Valley rebel better than
View, with contributions of $100 any one else,
each already made, are working The quote was:
toward their second contributions. “Don’t forget
Other neighboring cities and that first and
towns—Denton, Whitesboro, St Jo always, he’s a
and Nocona, are expected to do good gambler."
their part and undoubtedly will In 1940. Lewis!
Send ia contributions soon. lost and for quite
GainesviHe has • taken the big a. while after!
prints?’’
“I suvpose this is formality,
too.” Todd snapped.
Lake pressed his inked fingers
onto the paper. He recoiled slight-
ly when he saw the dark blue im-
prints With the myriad swirls.
"Whats the matter?” Lake in-
quired.
“Nothing.” Todd said. still look-
ing at the prints. "I—iust thought
Eddie raged. “Formality! the of something, that’s all.”
detectives said. They just wanted “Something we ought to know?”
to euestion him. Remember that Lake asked mildly.
night at Tony’s when Humphries “Nothing you should know,"
• first sprung the news about Todd’s Todd said evenly, “but Til tell you.
father? Remember how Todd made This made me think of mv father.”
some sort remark about they kill "Oh-" Lake said. He closed
snakes where he camerom? Well, his notebook. “Todd. we’re honing
that remark got around in case you’ll cooperate with us. We’re
you don’t know it, and it finally asking that of everyone who knew
reached the shell-pink ears of the Humphries.”
failing to use our influence to obtain a
settlement that would mobilize the opinion
of these peoples on the side of the United
Nations. He called for action in Burma,
where we have failed so far to make these
people feel that this is their war. He was
blunt and honest in saying that whatever
smacks of the old imperialism must be
abandoned. We agree that the Atlantic
Charter must be expanded into a world _
charter to set forth our war aims, as
President Wilson’s Fourteen Points be-
came the goal of liberty loving nations in
World War I.
Mr. Willkie’s sincerity gave weight to
what he said. He knows and we all know
* that some of the truths are not pleasant,
but that they cannot be brushed aside.
We have been hearing about the sup-
news dispatches
• creditea inthi
if we get some finger
F-2nza
go,
.tea4
J
15
e
_ 1288
$ii
san said weakly, for want of some- pus. There was a brooding bitter-
thing else to say.! "What do we— ness in his heart as he sat moodily,
what are you going to do?” reflecting on the turn of events.
"Nothing. Waitl he ‘gets back Formality! Yes, of course. But he
to the house. They’ll probably re- was no dummy. He knew that
lease him right away. It’s just that formality could be just a step re-
I don’t like the idea. It stinks. It’s moved from suspicion. And after
rotten!” all—-
Just A Formality' He was too engrossed in his own
Detective Sergeant Paul Lake thoughts to notice the two high
knocked his nipe against the desk school boys seated across from him.
and looked Todd full in the face. eyeing him with that unashamed
“Just relax, Todd. We’re just worship which kids have for poten-
here for a talk. Routine, that’s all. tial All-America quarterbacks.
. A man was murdered —we think— Todd, raising his gaze, saw
last night, and the chief wants us them finally. His hardened face re-
to explore every angle. Unfortun- laxed slowly.
ately you happened to have had. He winked broadlv at them. At
well—a little difficulty with the apy other time their wide grins
victim and you made a certain re- might have been a tonic for any
mark." frame of mind, no matter how de-
He looked at Todd’s tightly pressing.
drawn mouth; "We’re not accusing But not now.
York university
claiming she wa:
given the brush
off when she at-
tempted to deliv
er a lecture at
the school. Sub-
ject: Agriculture
route 3, Gainesville; Private J. B.
Martin, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. M.
Martin, route 3, Muenster; and Pri-
vate C. A. Wadkins, son of Vick ,
Wadkins, 724 Buck street, Gaines- cameras grinding through this era
vnie. of shortages.
. The armed freighter which is
Lt John H. Chalmers, son of Mr. scene of most of the action was
and Mrs. W. E. Chalmers, is pic- built on a huge sound stage —
tured along with other members of built solidly and nailed to the
flyingfortress crews in this issue floor. Ordinarily sound stage ves-
of Lfe,.Qctober.19. He is in the sels are buiit on hydraulic jacks,
group at the bottom of page 32of to rock the but these devices
the magazine, the young man with are expensive, they require a heap
a.pipe inhismouthHe isa na of metal and, as Tomie set out t
gator. John S address is Lt. J. H- nroye +Agv ,-,*4
Chalmers, 0659006. 340 Bombard- P _ ’ they 1 necessary.
ment Sqd., APO 364, care Post- _ The .oat on Which Pat O’Brien,
master. New York, N. Y. Jane Wyatt and George Murphy
see so much excitement plows
Robert Speake enlisted this week through a dry ocean, but it rocks
in naval construction, and is at Ms and rolls convincingly on the „ .
home here, waiting a call. He is a screen. Tomie Thompson rigged up tre, divorce. E .
son of Mrs. Greta Speake, 1022 a Rube Goldbergish contraption - c -----,,,--------
' East Broadway. some glass, some chicken wire, I ofton A l afmontat ♦ i
Raymond Han, Jr. who enlisted some.paint, some greenleaves \-mA-en.8g (
l twogekzeomniheu.8Nvys mndte“cdntro.the rocking byre- Not to Be Reduce y $
SUEE20n66 8 MEEO, “aElI. 18
a son of Mrs. J. D. Gilbert, east of I First he took a sheet of glass, ABILENE, Oct. 31 (AP).__< j
Gainesville. painted cloud shapes on it, and set ton allotments in West Texas ’
„-E. . „ up • motor which would carry it not be reduced in 1943, the W
Tom Cunningham, who recently across a track in front of an arc- Texas Chamber of Commerce st
volunteered in the^Scabecs, has light at a “cloud’’ speed three feet yesterday it was assured by Sts
been sent to Camp Edicott, David- in 10 minutes. The light threw the Senator George Moffett, in Was
construction "clouds" on a white backdrop be- ington pressing the organization
processing center. He writes rela- hind the ship. campaign for increased wart hi
fives here that he is SCWng along Another sheet of glass was cotton Ind cotton TSucts.
' A painted black, and scratched with
Pvt Raymond Nichols, stationed broad, rippling Vs, wave-shaped.
at Sioux Fans field, South Dakota, A rough cylinder of chicken wire,
writes friends here that he has containing the leaves, was placed
made an 85 per cent average so far between this glass and the are-
in his radio work. He looiu forward light .While the one glass “pro-
to getting letters from his Mends jected2 “waves”—which in turn
in Gainesville. Pvt Nichols is a Were ‘brought to rippling move-
1 1941 graduate of the loea] high ment by the shadows of leaves
! school. His address is Pvt R. C. churning in the chicken wire. The
i Nichols, 809P35, Barracks 217, whole contraption was rocked,
AAFTIC, Sioux Falls, South Da- back and forth and sideways, by
kota. the motor—and the rood freighter
DAILY REGISTER
BY MAIL, in Cooke. Grayson, Denton, Montague,
Wise counties, Texas, and Love county, Oklahoma:
One month, in ad- - Six months, in ad-
____________ vance__-------
in advance -----------------------
One year. In advance ------------------------
WIHLKIE’S FRANK, HONEST REPORT u. .
WENDELL WILLKIE’s independence of navy.
thought, ingrained liberalism, and keen There is no cause for immediate alarm,
observation have combined to produce a because the family-sized farm is the bul-
survey of immense value to cause of free- wark of ur agrieuture. But we should
aom, revealed in his radio address to tie be alert to the dangers of a possible food . „
nation this week after a tour of the bat- shortage in the years ahead. If drafting
tie fronts. It was a great report to the skilled man power for the farm becomes
nation; the kind of report we needed. Will- necessary to maintain the food supply,
kie spoke out, frankly. There was no in- that step must be taken. The same goes
stance in his address where he held back , for defense plant workers. There should ”
punches which might have cost a vote. be no favoritism. Meantime, let’s not com-
Especially important was the feeling mit the blunder of ‘allowihg needed men to
he got of the situation in Russia and Asia, get away from the farms, only to be com-
With other matters of importance com- pelled later to return them Bo wel have
manding first attention, the administra- something to eat.—Chicago Daily News,
non at Washington apparently has been , _______y
only sketchily informed of the state of INEVITABLE BAD NEWS
mindof the peoples of. the remoter areas ANLY the confirmed optaniet will live
taXX th^U omanainrethus ' -nwithimthenbeief th gh Ammerican
DePBle is ot vital consequence to the war fardnen slownemta emergtag from . pae, me akea
Mr w;u1;,,, .44- r c 4, it makes it a popular brag that our small for Eddie Luttrell, instead, on an
.:Mr..Wilkiels setting .forth of the condi- numbers and lack of weapons wilt be no impluse. If Todd didn’t already the evening?”
trans that have been allowedto develop in serious handicap to our overthrow of the know she didn’t want to the one to - “O qourseIt was raining pretty
'these areas necessarily mvolved criticism „pg L“.1 I., ahw* 0 tell him.
of the president and his advisers It tag forces which were organized and trained “Eddie," she began,? when he
„nPemidensand ? auvser -t ' before we awoke to the existence of a got on the line, “this is Susan,
not petty, partisan cnfcwni. It was the menacewhich we were loath to admit, Have you-"
even then He interrupted with a curse
Tragedy stalks through and over the
Solomons, Australia and New Guinea even
as it did from the Philippines to Singa-
pore. The Japs are operating on plans a
dozen years in the making. We are a
covered the exterior with roun
wood. They found an old gear!
—once used in a bakery "br
Iine"—and an old ammonia va
for other parts.
The ship, and the gun, w
converted during the’ filming
serve as a German ship and C
man gun, and there were ot
tricks.
But none of them, says Toi
was done with mirrors.
Ohe :
256.
other coun
roaring sea bat-am
ties and all you'd 4E
expect from the Hpp
title. Which is F
Why, if you like | _ a
it, you should (50 #
give a nod to "
Tomie Thompson. f , -d
It was Tomie J ■.
lean, bespectac-
UY MAT in
States:
«» "5822*—
-r azzumue
------------daily REGism tothevublisherattntion.l~l
BY MAIL. OUTSIDE OF Cooke, Graysoh, Denton. — t H |
Montague, Wise counties, Texas. Md Love count,
Oklahomei, in aa- M Six months. Had-
"vance —— -----70c vance----—----23-52
One year, in advanee---------------------
XBy MAIL, in Zones 6, » and8:
One month, in ad-
A,Tire;g3-Sgg
paper and also to local newA apearing herein.
Billy has been a dance direct I
connected with burlesque, now I
speaking lines for the first time..
Aviators who have seen servic
abroad tip their caps to the Poli
as being the toughest of the to
Polish fliers have lost all conta
with home and family and fly s
recklessly that German pilots fea
collisions more than guns ,. . Han
ry James, filling an engagemen
made when his band was less fa-
mous and less costly to operate,
took a $30,000 loss' rather than
break his contract—and his word
. . . New York’s voluntary meat-
less Tuesdays seem to be taking
hold pretty well, with few reports
of chiseling. Gallagher’s, famous
, I
1: 1
ki
-■
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 54, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 31, 1942, newspaper, October 31, 1942; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1481352/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.