Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 289, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 19, 1942 Page: 2 of 12
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1
THE HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, FEB. 19, 1943
PAGE TWO
Bond Plan to
)
i
-a
l
4.'
4
1)
OVERTON’ (Spl.)
Funeral
Vessels; 109 Sunk
i
Operators
I
became effective. There never was
showed
public ratification, however.
Martha, 3; Lynn, 1; and Joyce, 8,
Court.
definitely
ing house fire.
persons.
No. 8
mitted giving some aid to German
V
(Continued From Page 1)
?
in North Africa.
4
Texas Joined USA
)
guilty of collaboration with the
Axis.
I out their skins.
I
96 Years Ago Today
replenish their stocks.
cut the supply line.
4
I
I
j tack.
7(
From the memoirs of John Sal- hood is being marked this week by
I
I
Q
4
confronted with
FL
Here’s How You Can
Help Win This War
v
1
defeats
basketball
9
damage.’’
MIDCONTINENT OIL
THIS CURIOUS WORLD
i
BACK UP THE BOYS BEHIND THE BOYS
4
I
J
K
V
$
»
a
Gel Your Shore of
U. S. Defense
Give Tills to Your Henderson Daily News Carrier Boy:
I
m.
2253
I I 205s \
SACK
V
BONDS-STAMPS
10c Defense Saving.
%
Henderson
$
... State
1 ;
1
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS
Get Ynur U. S. Defenne Bonda—Srampa
I
I
Says Pipeline Would
Relieve 14 Tankers
Daily
News
Your Daily News
Boy Is a Volunteer
V. S. Defense Agent
Fan Sorigine," and then can't fin l
the spot on ■ map, let it be "known
of the French fleet and bases in |
France and French North Africa
have sunk or damaged a .total of
182 Japanese ships, including 109
known sunk up to Feb. 14, a Neth-
The penmanship certificate had
been awarded Joyce and was tuck-
Hoir Your Money Is Uted
To Help Win the War
of artillery announced the fact.
only four cruisers."
"We've got to be
Fill out this Order Form for
DEFENSE SAVINGS STAMPS
By William
Ferguson
Women to Be Used
As Car Parkers
for years and had never blenched
in the face of danger and death,
were overcome, and tears coursed
priorit ies
nd driller,
questions
PICTURE ALBUM ONLY
REMINDER FOR FATHER
which we cannot "buy our way out
or produce our way out.” The only
way left ia to "fight our way out
by intelligent offensive action.”
Bizerte, i
France
our
All
and
or AGRICULTURE
Nt8«., ERODUCED
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
LOST: 2-yr old fawn Jersey
heifer. Horns sawed off. No.
53 taged on car. Reward. See
C. O. Smires. Joinerville, Tex.
Box 761.
289-291p.
to identify the bodies,
he broke down.
port. Miss., philosopher, has henn
secured as principal spekaer for
the banquet.
apparently on reconnaissance mis
sions to test the strength of Dutch
defenses, the high command re-
ported.
Dutch ground troops, although
Addresna---e=e-
City .........
♦
three or four months.
A sixth defendant, Pierre Cot.
«
i
Place Your Order for 10c Defense
Stamps With Your Daily News
Carrier Bov NOW!
were almost total strangers.”
James Pinckney Henderson Was
inaugurated as first governor of
Texas.
The anniversary of Texas' state-
#
COFR 1942 BY NEA SEaVICE img
T. M. REG U. 8 RAT. OFF.
collection day,
I would like tn have .........................
Stamps cach week until further notice.
NAME..............................................
MIK LAST VEAR TO
SUPPLY A CHILD FROM B/
TO COLLeSe AG.
WHEN THE
SUF- .
IS ow IN '
THE EVENING
IT IS ALMOST
95 M1/L/oM
M/=S A//GA//
and underground storage terminal
on the outskirts of Savannah and
other appurtenances
He said the line could move 70,-
000 barrels daily.
$
"Priority
Buriness."
Hughes
1
I
♦
042
S
l'-
I
f
"mad
vital defense equipment.
Dealers who handle receipt and 1
7
$ A
mittee on conservation of cultural
.resources is surveying institutions
Weighing and dumping of scrap
will be supervised by representa-
tives of operators and sellers.
United States, and is being tried
in absentia.
wiv mt imaslh.nn whn rs, «
letter* saying ‘arrived safely in ]
that ia is a censorship term which
originally came from the French
phrase "sans origine," meaning
“without origin."
J
I
I •
I
price change reported in any di-
vision
-year-old father had today of his j
wife, and his five children. Mrs.
L. V. Sharp, Jack. 10. Kenneth, 4;
7as cm - « 1-2
«uro«4,
i
No. 3
(Continued From Page 1)
therefore the Supreme Court. ' Decorator Color Blind
founded under its terms, is ille- l
lence in penmanship . . . ______
Those were the only reminders a
No. 2
(Continued From Page 1)
k3
P .
i
I
No. 5
(Continued From Page 1)
10c IN DI I FNSE SAVINGS STAMPS
• will pay for 5 cartridges
25 IN DEFENSE SAVINGS STAMPS
will provide a soldier’s mesa kit
I! 50 IN DE I I NSE SA INGS STAMPS
pays for a first -aid kit
•: 00 IN DI I F NSE SAV INGS STAMPS
i* W bat one blankefcosts
$6.00 INDEFI NSE SAV INGS STAMPS
will buy one antitank sheli
$10.00 SAVINGS STAMPS
will’bny 2 steel belmets
No. 1
(Continued From Page 1)
200
army could supply only two men
for each mile.
No. 7
(Continued From Page 1)
No. 4
(Continued From Page 1)
No. 6
(Continued From Page 1)
Zt
C
"VESUA",
A HOLSTEIN COW OWNED
BY THE NEBRASKA SCHOOL
ANSWER: A survey showed photography first, stamp collecting
second, and music third.
No. 9
(Continued From Page 1)
priority specialist in the office
of petroleum coordinator, speak
special displays at Texas Memor-
ial Museum here, arranged by J.-_
tarland Adaf, curtor if / triot-
ic exhibits.
gal, he said.
The men are being tried not for
acts of commission but of omis-
sion, for alleged negligence in
our Henderson Daily News carrier
boy has volunteered to act as an Offi-
cial Defense Stamp Agent to make it
easy for you to lend—not give—your
money to your country. Let’s do it in
the American Way, the voluntary way, by invest-
ing in Defense Bonds and Stamp regularly, every
week. Tell your carrier boy how many stamps
you want him to deliver to you each week. You’ll
be surprised and pleased at how quickly you'll
ha vesaved enough to buy a bond. You invest only
$18.75, while, upon maturity, your Government
will pay you back that original $18.75 plus $6.25,
A total of $25.0(1! Don't delay, fill out the coupon
below right now and hand it to your carrier boy!
nose co Id easily repair this gap
but they’also knew that the main
invasion effort of the Japs would
be made at other points along -.e
Batavia to be employed in sound
ing nir raid alarms.
d
At the door hand to hand fighting reported
in some areas and planes ranging
TODAY, the first duty of every American
is to put his dollars into uniform — to get
his share of U. S. Defense Bonds and
Stamps so our boys can have immediately
the planes and ships and guns they need
to crush the dastardly attacks of our
enemies.
Every cent you can spare is urgently
needed.
least 10-to-1 numeric-’ superior-
ity.
For three days, new guns and
squadrons of Jepanese dive-bomb-
ers have blasted MacArthur'* line.
for scrap hauling
lend them for use
who do not have
the U. S forts astraddle the en-
trance to the hay but "without
accomplishing a. great amount of
day for Mrs. Winnie Dell Sharp. Jameg Hiohes Will
27. and her children. Jack, 10; -anes -iuone Will
Joyce Laferne, 7; Martha Mae, 5; Address API Meet
Kenneth Wayne, 3, and Robert
Na Such Spot on Map
PORT ARTHUR, Tex. (UP) -
For the Information of sailors'
son Jones uttered those words to a
crowd gathered at Austin: "The
OKLAHOMA CITY. (UP)- The Be Explained
much-maligned woman drives took
over the job of handling automo- J At Overton
biles in a parking lot here today. । - “
and the new
truck or two
are urged to I
of operator*
these facilities.
. DALLAS. Tex, (UP) — H. P.
[ Jordan is ah interior decorator, an
' occupation that calls for a fine
sense of colors.
tidying in their attempt to AUSTIN. (UP) Ninety-six old pioneers who had done duty on
years ago today. Texas joined the I the skirmish line of civilization
mon Ford, editor of the Texas
Democrat, came the following de-
dtasin of Texas'
republic to state-
shipment of the scrap receive a
commission for their work. They
aye not the purchasers of the i
yKetal, but act only as agents for
stee] mills which are seeking to
DEFNE
.aguj.
e*K--
yard break. They knev the Japa- , been
bining Defense Stamps nf 10
Bring them on your regular
Tankers Seven sunk, two dam-
aged.
These figures did not include the
sinkings of numerous minor ves-
sels
BATAVIA. (UP) Allied forces probably sank six and damaged 11.
as she resists German demands
on more important matters use
prepared in
erlands Indies summary
today.
Of the 73 ships not <
and Italian forces in Libya but their functions and betrayal of
have justified it on the ground | their duties. They have excel-
that they faced the alternative I lent lawyers and the haggling and
of German occupation of the ini- arguing is expected to last for
During the Spanish-American
War, he said, there was a “terri-
fic howl for ship* for every har-
bor and port to meet the threat of
Red wines are made of grapes
adjudged fermented with their skins: white
h th? wines of grapes fermented with
asked to assemble the scrap metal
in piles, ready for transportation
to central points next week. They i
will join with every other oil field
in the country in the campaign
to reclaim metals which can he
used again in oil field and other
degrees as proof that
and the University's ।
system do not mix."
Chi- .
12 consecutive conference
Wha* was important, of course,
wns the lack of aircraft, in the
oil field superintendents, lease
nien, and foremen explaining -e
industry’s scrap metal drive, which
opens on Monday morning and
will last through Feb. 28.
Men in the field have been
contends that so long air minister under Blum, is in the
situation in
bore shore but aused only a 30- [ toward which the Japanese had
DALLAS. (UP. A fire-black- tomorrow
ened picture album and A first
1 grade pupil’s certificate for excel-
f 9
blew up the causeway to the Jo- miles north-northeast if Rangoon,
* Spanish fleet that
conclude with playing of "Re-
treat" while the colors are retired.
The audience is scheduled to
participate in the singing of one
or two songs, according to Band-
master Hill.
a widespread demand for troops to
ptarol the Texas border during
Meexican revolutions. He said that
at that time the entire regular 1
in exposed areas which would be I
1 willing to store evacuated hold-
ings. |
Straits where better cover was Burma drive or held in reserve for Feb. 19. 1846, when President An- down sunburnt cheeks where they
available. In this, the British of- it.
I want to -do my • bit by
denomination every week.
driver respectability.
James W. Nix, operator of three
parking lots in Oklahoma City,
said he has begun to replace boy
parking lot operators with girls.
The customer hereout will find a
woman wheeling his car into line
I at early hours and out again in the
i afternoon,
Nix has no doubt that the wom-
in attack far along the jagged
front.
will discuss
AMERICAs mosr POPULAR
_ HOBB IS
_ S7AMe coL.fere —.
P~oOGAAPNY t J
T ~s/c •
According to figures tcleaned bv
the Clifornia State Employment
‘Service, the airplane industry is
currently employing 138,000 work-
ers, and the 150,000 mark will be (
I passed shortly, a.
who can spare a
this war to take soradic attacks
along our coasts," Stimson said.
"The only way to combat that is
to mass our forces to carry the
fight to the enemy. If we scatter
our forces for the defensive, It is
the surest way to defeat.”
Stimson said that the nation was
HOTSPOT IRAN’S ROYAL FAMILY—Nazidom’s annual encan do the job. He‛s married,
spring surprise may spell trouble for new Shah of Iran, for- the lots "off and on” for seven
mor crown prince Mohammed Riza Pahlevi, shown here with ! years.
Lynn, 1, victims of yesterday *
1 blaze.
she should not be
first act in this great drama is
now performed. The Republic of ,
Texas is no more.”
portant French naval base of
heavily outnumbered, are still
fighting in south Sumatra, the
Dutch communique said. They are
affecting the producer a
He al o will answer
Art Preservation Studied
SEATTLE (UP) Valuable
. records and art works jn the state
of Washington will be protected ’
from wartime hazards. A com-
Sharp was at work in a filling I beyond that. northeast.
station when the fire broke out At all points the battle was
He was taken to the funeral parlor growing rapidly in intensity with
West Toastmaster
For C. of C. Banquet
Norman West, local attorney, i
was selected today ns toastmaster •
or the Rusk County Chamber of
. Commerce banquet on Feb. 26.
[ West's appointment was announc-
ed by H. E. Poynter, C. of C.
1 president. — +
I Ticket sales continued briskly
todax, with indications that all
available tickets may be sold by
Monday or Tuesday.
Some details of the entertain-
mont program must be concluded
this week. Clayton Rand. Gulf-
TULSA (UP) Midcontinent re-
finers have been asked a second
time this month to lease additional
tank cars for shipment of burn-
ing* oils to the East Coast, it was
learned today.
One Oklahoma refiner that al-
ready has leased 150 of its tank
cars said it had been asked for an-
either 100 The tight tank car sit-
nation has developed hecause of
loss of a number of tankers in the
Atlantic. It wan pointed out that
one tank car would average 100,-
000 to 125 000 barrels of oil, where-
as a single tank ear's capacity is
around 200 barrels
The refinery market had a rela-
tively quiet tone today with no
g
weeks because they haven’t heen
"milked” since the invasion start-
ed. However, rubber stocks were
burned and tin supplies, machin-
ery. and oil tanks were damaged.
After the fall of Penang, the
Imperials really scorched the
earth
A Penang volunteer told me
Hint he personally fired his tom-
my gun into a great pile of can-
ned gasoline, starting a fire that
swept through Penang town.
Around Kuala Lumpur I saw
great rubber industries turned in-
to the funeral pyres of the hopes
of planes. Lie Knllans airdrome Japanese_planes flew over a
wns the on!" field where planes number of regions of the Indies,
stayed in action in the f hours ;
“The glorious banner of
fathers ascended in its stead,
were ready to welcome it.
off the Japanese-held shore, was
snid to have been "particularly
heavy."
There were indications that the i
Japanese were throwing all their
artillery Into the "windup” for
their big punh on Bataan Penin-
sula.
MacArthur'* own 155mm. ar- 1
1 tillery took up the challenge all
along the 13-mile front, informed
military quarters '-aid, presum-
ably with a heavy toll of dead and
wounded among the tightly pack-
ed enemy troops which have at
Queen of Iran, sister of Egypt's King Farouk, and their — —-----
child. Shah succeeded to Loitering throne abdicated by his Sister of Overton
father as British and Soviet forces moved in. . M D; , t D 11
Scrap collections, or needs for
assistance in hauling., should be , perishea m an early morning room-
reported to the county chairman.
Letters had gone out today to
I, CURTIS, i
EKOUGH y
The recapitulation showed:
Battleships two probably sunk,
two damaged.
Cruisers Seven sunk, four prob-
ably sunk, two damaged.
Aircraft carriers One sunk,
two probably sunk, two damaged.
Submarines Six sunk, 12 prob-
Overton will conduct the funern' ,
ceremonies. Miss Ponder's death
followed an illness of two venrs‛
duration. She had visited here
several times.
The fire, which occurred yester-
day, brought to nine the number
of Dallas county's 1912 fire deaths
It was the worst fire here since
the Salvation Army transients’
lodging house burned last year
with the loss of 13 lives.
Funeral services were held to-
communiques for three days, al-
though telling of fresh Japanese i
troops landed in Subic Bay above
the fighting front, made no men- i
tion of infantry attacks.
Nor have the Japanees bad any
hetter success in treir efforts to i
crumble MacArthur's flanks. In- ,
stead of allowing them to be bent
back. MacArthur let the Japanese
units break through, then closed
the gaps and encircled the enemy
+*—" ...........
will be limited to 1
food stocks to the natives. The
story was the same down through
, the Negri Sembilan, and Selangor
and Johore states to everything
usable, the torch was applied.
Batavia is a heavenly refuge
. after the Jast two months in Sing-
। apore. Foo I is not rationed, there
is plenty of gasoline, the beds are
comfortable ami there aren't, at
least yet, daily bombinrs. People
move freely about the streets, but
there is an undercur ent of sp-
prehension like that which was
i felt in Singapore in late Decem-
i her.
spent their lives building them. I
---, watched grent piles f shees rub-
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK the estate manager andrinate all
night it Kilgore on
Orders and the Oil
When the British forces with-
dre to Singapore Island, they
eabinet, probably will be dropped,
the correspondent said.
Air Minister Sir Arehibsid Sin-
clair may be given another post,
he added.
The predictions came after
Churchill had agreed to a two-
day war debate in Parliament but
without lessening criticism of the
cabinet’s conduct of the war.
cdcationdi 1 , The fire Against Fort Frank on 1
,i Carahao Island, only a half-mile (
STAMP EM I
*
listed as sunk. 28 were listed as
probably sunk and the other 45 as
du maged.
Tlie compilation did not include
Japanese ships atacked in Suma-
tra walers where perhaps 11 ves-
sels were bombed and several of
them sunk.
last days of fthe battle I visited® ; ~ . ,
the seleter ........me he higgest wakEt"ngthe.‛dispatchicknntinuedmripion
comprised Royal Air Forre station in Ma- . "ecn in 5ava ror Some time. j transfer from
1' 1 " re. only three A Dutch Indies communique hood:
plan ere o a a na flying Admitted that damage was inflict- "When the last sentence fell
borts and a , mid i nml y ng ed in the latest Japanese airfield from the lips of the earnest speak-
.boat All n" or commission. attack but said full details of the er. (President Jones), the beloved
The Tonga airdrome on the wes operation have not yet been flag of Toxas was furled. The boom
side of the island war also devoid received ... i
WASHINGTON (UP) A con-
sulting engineer of th* Trans-
American Pipeline Corp., which
proposes to build a 1,050-mile
crude petroleum pipeline from
Wichita County, Tex., to Savan-
nah, Ga., told a defense transpor-
tation examining board today that
its construction would relieve 12
to 14 tankers now plying danger-
ous Atlantic coastal waters.
The engineer, Vincent G. Shin-
kle of New York, testifying in be-
hajf of TAPCO, estimated the
pipeline would require 85,000 tons
of steel, could be completed In 90
to 100 days after materials were
deleivered, and would cost approx-
| Name Leaders
In Scrap Drive
. . District chairmen for the oil
field scrap metal drive were ap-
pointed today by John R Alford,
Rusk-Cherokee county < hairman
The drive will b staged Feb
23-28.
Jim Clark, Tidal Oil Co . was
appointed chairman for the Kil-
fire district; Everett Mooie, Gulf
Oil and Refining Co., Overton dis-
triet; John Lumpkin, F. W Mer
~ rick, London district, Ben Givens,
\ Sun Oil Co., Wright City district,
\ A- D. Riley. Texas Pipe Line Co.,
Vurnertown district; R W. Faw:
cett, Ohio Oil Co , Carlisle district.
T A Boren, Henderson .district.
Collection yards designated for
Rusk county are the Texas Iron
• and Supply Co . at Overton, and
Harry Weisse for Henderson.
The Overton area will handle
■crap collected north of the Hen-
derson-Tyler highway, and Hen-
derson will be the central point
for scrap metal gathered south of
the highway. However, operators
can choose which yard they want
to use.
lacked maneuverability and gun-
power. One big trouble. I under-
stand, was inadequate servicing
of the machines due to lack of
trained American mechanics.
When the British Hurricane
fighte’s arrived, the Brewsters
took a back seat. But by the time
the Japanese were dive bnmbing
Singapore Is' nd there were few
Hurricanes left on the island.
The Japanese landed on Dec 8
' in north Malaya, 300 miles above
Singapore and quickly took the
Solicitations have been in prog-
ress in Henderson for a week, with
moderate success. Wcrk will be
expanded to the London-Overton-
Leverett’s Chapel area within a
short while.
Civic and service clubs in Over-
ton are holding a joint meeting at
the First Methodist church there.
Area chairmen are to be chosen at
this meeting.
In Henderson, the campaign is
proceeding slowly. Many firms
hav the necessary forms to be fil-
ed out by employes, but have not
completed their canvass of allot-
ments for purchase of the defense
securities.
Committeemen expect to renew ,
... ■ iiii. । iii their drive today in quest of addi-
services are scheduled to be held . ,___./
in Dallas Friday afternoon for iona A oca ns.,until
Miss Allyne Ponder, who died No figures will be released unw
late Tuesday in a Marshal bos- a comrrehensive figure. nbe
nital. She was a siter of Mrs.reachied. taking in mosttHender-
Ernest A. So um of Overton son business and industries
and was a resident of Dallas. |
Rev. Horman T. Moipan of
The reaction was hesitant glances I Meeting in Overton tomorrow,
of anxiety, but barbed remarks ! potential worker* in the Rusk
were nil । county defense securities sale cam-
war had brought the feminine pairniwitmaarppidntaiisotthepay-
Kota Rharu airdrome. Eleven
days later, the British evacuated
Penang Island in that time, the
planters, fleeing their plantations,
loft behind rubber trees that will
be producing at capacity within
three or four months The trees
will require curig for s few
Chinese reports said that the United States of America.
Japanese had 5J divisions, num- The Republic of Texas, born
bering about 100,000 men, in the only 10 years before, ceased on
American ships and planes were |
responsib’e for 84 of the known
sinkings, 15 of the probables and [
28 of (he damaged ships. The ■
Netherlands Indies forces sank 24.
but, according tn MacArthur's
latest advices the defenders stand
their ground with dogged determi- !
nntion.
MacArthur‛s line stretches from
th vicinity of Ragac on the China
. Sea across the jungle-like trails
1 and mountains to Pilar on Ma- J
nila Bay.
. I Military officials said it was
I significant that War Department '
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP, _
Livestock
Cattle 1300 calves 350, steady
•teers and yearlings 7.00-12 00 fat
cows 7 10-8 75: cutters 5 00-7 00.
calves 7.00-12 50
Hogs 1400; 10 to 25 lower: top
butchers 13 00; god butchers 12 75-
12 85; mixed grades 12 00-12 65;
12.00-12.65; packing sows 11.00-
1125
Sheep 500; steady; fat lambs
none; yearlings 9 50. aged wethers
T.50; feeder lambs 9 25
imately 823 422.439 The cost I
would include pumping staions.
American Petroleum Institute 5 Allies Blast 182 J ap
hear James E. Hughes, chief
Probe Asked
After Deaths
Of 6 in Fire
ficers oved correct.
The causeway was nr ver an Im- i
portant factor in tlie Japanese at- 1
5.% 17
e -
e "e,.
M / 1
making every effort to prevent , _ r .
Ilie Japanese from crashing Chicago U. Urged
through to the Sunda Straits beA . D: r
tween Sumatra and -lava. 1 O Kuit 51g I en
The communique revealed that
in addition to five Japanese born CHICAGO. (1 P) Pulse, ntu-
hers shot down out of a group dent magazine at the I niversity •
of 24 when attacked the big of Chicago, asked the University
Soerabaja naval base yesterday, today to withdraw from Big Ten
four more Japanese planes were athletic competition before it is
hit in an attempted attack on a "thrown out” of the conference.
Dutch airfield in East Java. In in an article, entitled "We're
this attack slight damage was thru." Editors pointed to
caused and one native was 1 cago’s
wounded.
Dutch authorities distributed plan to award two-year bachelor's
1,800 war Hrums to natives in
Overton Band
To Give Concert1
OVERTON (Spl.) — Members
of the local unit of the Texas
Defense Guard will be honor
guests at the seventh annual
winter concert of the Overton
high school band in the high
school auditorium Friday night.
The concert is being sponsored
for the benefit of the Navy Relief
Society and the U. S. O.
Bandmaster Charles Lee Hill
will dedicate his own composition,
"Company B, Battalion Twenty-
Three,” to the guardsmen. The
band will present a variety pro-
gram consisting of marches, an
overture, tangoes, and other types
of music, and the junior high
school band will be presented in
a brief program of marches and
waltzes.
Mi’s Ann Heiligman, a five-X
year-old pianist, will be presented®
with Mrs. Jennings Patterson in"
“Fun at the Piano."
Miss Ida Rae Smith and Lloyd
Gilmore will he presented in a
cornet duet, “The Pal," and Miss
Mary Bess Rogers will be featured
in "Sinbad the Sailor."
The concert will be opened
with a salute to the flag and will
asked hv the group.
The meeting begins with a
hanquet honoring Hughes at the
Kilrrore hotel Arrommodntions
ed away in the album. Firemen
snatched the album from a smould- l
ering closet after the $3,500 blaze i
had been brought under control,
V 65;5r“
4
. and ambitions of men who had
DALLAS. (UP) A rooming
house fire which burned to death
a young mother and her five chil-
dren brought demands by the Dal-
las Fire. Prevention Council today
for an investigation of the city's
housing inspection system.
Alphonso Johnson, secretary of
the council, said he would recom-
mend to ctiy officials that the
staff of building inspectors 8nd
fire marshal's offices be enlarged.
ably sunk, one damaged.
Transports 52 sunk. 12 prob-
ably sunk. 23 damaged.
Cargo vessels and auxiliaries
23 sunk, four probably sunk, three
damaged.
East Texas members of
make a mental vow to stand by it
to the death: vet there were feel-
ings none cou’d suppress. A flood
of thought like a torrent rushed
upon the memory The scenes of
years past by In review . . . Many
f t \
Kallang hnd a detachm.ent of ;
Brewster Buffalo fi ;hteM. They
caused great enth a . . among
RAF pilots when they arrived in
March, l!'4l But when real ac-
tion cnme Dec. 8 the enthusiasm
wiltec P. i ' s.'ii the Brewsters I
Yesterday Jordan tried to en-
list in the naval reserve.
Physician - examiners turned
him down. d
The examiners said he was "
color blind!
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 289, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 19, 1942, newspaper, February 19, 1942; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497129/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.