The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 18, 1945 Page: 2 of 8
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Thursday, January 18, 1945
PAGE FWo
THE CANTON HERALD
1
Ernie Pyle9s Slant on the War:
British and American
(WNUServicel
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seas who went into the automat and
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Ernie Pyle
4
of special military types for the pulse, when you see a plane come
upon you, to dive for the ditch.
weight tons were produced for the But the German gunner in this
12 months ending in December.
. Headwaiter
h
the unrelenting pressure of Allied vessels of 3,840 deadweight tons, air-
3 3, 28
M
his platoon on a night attack. They
Ernest Hemingway went to Chi-
He had lived in Oak
Kansas City.
(
program, with these vessels having
Montgomery in the north and Brad- j
units.
«
house and came face to face with the
season
draft to
. . as-
II
i
walked about, dragging tattered
knapsacks, in search of food.
With inflation having run rampant
D
A
(
Rest Not Welcomed by Sergeant
Recoimnented by Many Doctors
"Will the lazi-
y
-
i
VE
ON SCOTT’S/
11 EMULSION
E“ Great Year-Round Tonic
One night Buck and an officer took
refuge from shelling in a two-room ■
same groove in opposite directions,
almost hitting each other. The Ger-
lied liberation has brought no re-
lief, with eggs costing 60 cents each;
beef $3 a pound; black bread $2 a
mile above you, you can’t tell where
it’s headed. It could strike anywhere
Also, the Stuka
has always dived
at an angle. But
these planes eome
literally straight
down. If you look
up and see one a
est man raise his right hand?” . . .
Nineteen men raised their right
young farmers between 18 and 25
years of age was attacked by agri-
cultural leaders, who said that in-
duction of substantial numbers «of
sure that we have
the right number
F. D. R. Asks
Labor Draft
But our pilots have to hand it to
the Germans on the ground. They
have steeled themselves to stand by
their guns and keep shooting. Pilots
The government has stopped horse
facing in America. We wish it were
as easy to stop America’s Trojan
you. It is a hor-
rifying thing. The
German Stuka
could never touch
man border.
Reacting quickly to the Germans’
diversionary thrust in Alsace, the
U. S. Seventh army fought valiantly
to nip the enemy’s attempt to iso-
late its left from its right wing, and
8
r
Notes of a Newspaperman:
Peter Dcnald forwards the story
about three GIs just back from over-
armies slashing in from the north,
the west and the south.
cussions of experts indicate.
Once called to attention by Secre-
tary of War Stimson at the time
Secretary of the Treasury Morgen-
thau proposed the deindustrialization
of the reich, Germany’s industrial
importance to Europe was reempha-
sized by Eugene P. Thomas, presi-
dent of the National Foreign Trade
council, who said that the country’s
said to me very quietly:
"This is the first battle I've ever
missed that this battalion has been
in. Even when I was in the hos
pital they were in bivouac.
ius, "don’t you remember me?”
"Oh, yes,” fibbed Albert (trying
Air Cooperation Strong
Non-Commissioned Officers Never
Become Hardened to Men's Death
within a mile on any side of you.
That’s the reason it spreads its ter-
ror so wide.
with money in their pockets, de-
partment store sales in the U. S.
bounded up 11 per cent in 1944 over
the previous year, the Federal Re-
serve board reported.
Most of the increase took place
in the last six months, it was said,
with sales in the November-Decem-
sheer
I of
productive machine should be used
toward the rehabilitation of her
neighbors as reparations.
Pointing out that as the industrial
again after the bombs had exploded.
But not the Germans—they stick to
their guns.
Maj. Ed Bland, a squadron lead-
er, was telling me about coming
suddenly over a hilltop one day and
finding a German truck right in his
gunsights.
Now it’s the natural human im-
STORE SALES:
At Peak
Reflecting retailers’ ability to shift
lines to meet wartime conditions,
craft carriers and frigates for con-
voy escort.
During the year, the Maritime
I
time economy.
SHIPS:
U. S. Production
With emphasis on the nation's
shipbuilding in the last six months
of the year placed on the faster Vic-
tory cargo model and construction
Increases were largest in the deep
south, stretching from the Atlantic
to Arizona, with the Atlanta district
showing a 21 per cent rise and Dal-
las, 17 per cent.
GREECE:
Hunger Stalks
With Athens’ streets cleared of
murderous civil warfare, its hungry
people lined up at military soup
kitchens for emergency rations or
4
i
afer
wm
front, however, continued to center
in the Hungarian theater, where ,
Captured enemy film shows Adolf Hitler, surrounded by his party
officials, trodding ruins of German village devastated by war.
paper will go up in flames, taking
every trace of gas with it.
FoVD
C USE 666
Cold Preparations as directed
ED
ilk
1
Tie a little piece of sponge to
a medicine dropper for a handy
envelope moistener.
It happened at an army training
camp, reports Irving Hoffman. The
sergeant had twenty recruits lined
up for fatigue duty . . . They were
not as energetic as the sergeant
thought they should be ... So he
tried to cure them . . . "I've got a
nice easy job for the laziest man
UR
jo.
Platoon Leaders.
Buck Eversole is a platoon sea
geant in an infantry company. That
means he has charge of about 40
frontline fighting men.
He has been at the front for more
than a year. War is old to him and
he has become almost the master of
it. He is a senior partner now in
the institution of death.
His platoon has turned over many
324 *8888
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8-TySCOTT‘S
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say the Italians would shoot until
Bias cut garments should nev-
er be ironed carelessly lest sag-
ging result. Experts advise iron-
, ing with the grain of the fabric
rather than from neck to hem.
concluded the wooden vessel pro-
gram, including deck and hold
scows, large barges and tugs. Near-
ing completion is the concrete ship
Edward Stettinius, who is certain-
ly the most modest and democratic
of our Secretaries of State, used to
visit the Broadway night clubs occa-
sionally a few years ago. One night
he went into the old Paradise with
on the ground, and I think he would I present," he barked,
have cried if he knew how, and he
streaming back and forth in the
WHEN CONSTIPATION makes yon feet
punk as the dickens, brings on stomach
upset, sour taste, gassy discomfort, take-
Dr. Caldwell’s famous medicine to quickly
pull the trigger on lazy "innards”, and
help you feel bright and chipper again.
DR. CALDWELL’S is the wonderful senna
laxative contained in good old Syrup Pep-
sin to make it so easy to take.
MANY DOCTORS use pepsin preparation*
in prescriptions to make the medicine more-
palatable and agreeable to take. So be sure
your laxative is contained in Syrup Pepsin.
INSISTON DR. CALDWELL'S—the favorite
of millions for 50 years, and feel that whole-
some relief from constipation. Even finicky-
children love it
CAUTION: Use only as directed.
ML com’S
SENNA LAXATIVE
.OMI. SYRUP PEPSIN
to place the man), as he showed him
to a nqne-too-good table.
The part I like is that Stettinius
(who was then only chairman of U.
S. Steel) knew headwaiter Albert,
troops firing from jumbled debris.
Murky IPeather
Few observers back home realize
how short the days and how long
the nights are in west central
Europe at this season of the year.
Aachen, largest German city yet
taken by American forces, and typi-
cal battle line marker, lies near the
51st degree of north latitude. Al-
though in that zone in late Decem-
ber and early January about eight
hours elapse between sunrise and
sunset, effective daylight usually is
cut sharply at both ends of the day
by heavy fog.
- eo!
ES
•••BECAUSE IT'S RICH
IN VITAL ELEMENTS*
Good-tasting Scott's Emulsion helps
build strong bones, sound teeth, and
stamina; helps build resistance to colds.
It’s rich in natural A & D Vitamins* that
may be lacking in the diet And—it’s ,
times easier to digest than (lain cod liver
oil I So give it daily. Buy at all druggists!
"Some of them have just got
fuzz on their faces, and don’t
know what it’s all about, and
they’re scared to death. No mat-
ter what, some of them are
army and navy, 16,343,436 dead-
----WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS------
Yanks Clash with Japanese in
Major Battle of Philippines;
times as battle whittles down the
old ones and the replacement sys-
tem brings up the new ones. Only
a handful now are veterans.
"It gets so it kinda gets you, seein’
these new kids come up,” Buck told
me one night in his slow, barely
audible Western voice, so full of
honesty and sincerity.
On the ground it sounds as though
they are coming directly down upon
the house
Including authorization of 73
billion dollars for war purposes,
the President asked for an 87 bil-
lion dollar budget for the 12
months ending June 30, 1946, 13
billion dollars below his request
for the present fiscal year. Ex-
pecting that smaller war expendi-
ture will result in decreased tax
payments by individuals and cor-
porations and bring revenues
down to less than 41 % billion dol-
lars, the president said the na-
tional debt will reach 292 billion
dollars by 1946.
found that the only available table
was one that was occupied by a
spinsterish female. Wanting a little
them for i
frightfulness
sound.
POSTWAR AUTOS:
Buyers' Plans
) Long statisticians for the auto-
mobile industry, R. L. Polk and
company, polling 50,000 representa-
if a gas smell remains after
all the dampers of the furnace are
open, place several sheets of
newspaper atop of the coal. The
nades over
MEAT
With the government stepping up
Its purchases of all kinds of meat,
both rationed and unrationed civil-
ian supplies in the early part of this
year will average slightly less than
2% pounds per week compared with
more than 3 pounds at the same
time in 1944, the American Meat
institute predicted. In addition to
the government’s increased pur-
chases of meat, the institute said,
the situation will be aggravated by
a decreasing over-all production.
bound to get killed.”
We talked about some of the other
old-time non-corns who could take
battle themselves, but had gradual-
ly grown morose under the responsi- I
bility of leading green boys to their |
slaughter. Buck spoke of one ser-
geant especially, a brave and
hardened man, who went to his cap- ■
tain and asked him to be reduced j
to a private in the lines.
"I know it ain’t my fault that
goodbye all around and slowly
started away.
I walked with him toward the
truck in the dusk. He kept his eyes
Shu
WE5T COAST-
/3th™
%2A____________X GUlf COAST
at each
Italian stone house. As they sat
there, a shell came through the wall
c/ the far room, crossed the room
and buried itself in the middle wall
with its nose pointing upward. It
didn t go off, but Albert didn’t know him!
Another time Buck was leading | _____
To repair a leaky vase, pour
melted paraffin into it and let it
harden over the spot where the
leak occurs.
of workers in the right places at the
right times. . . .” the President spe-
cifically recommended action to
route 4,000,000 4-Fs into war work
and induct nurses into the services.
Although generally opposed to a
national service act, but at the
same time anxious to solve the man-
power problem by less drastic
means, congress considered legisla-
tion to compel 4-Fs to go into
essential work or face induction into
labor battalions without service-
men’s benefits. With 20,000 nurses
needed now and recruitment drives
having failed to enlist sufficient
numbers, the lawmakers also re-
luctantly backed the drafting of
nurses.
While congressional machinery
ground into action, selective service
sought to keep registrants in essen-
tial work by asking local boards to
induct anyone leaving a deferred
position without their consent, and
Warsaw, but claiming to have set
back Moscow’s winter offensive
plans by going onto the attack them-
selves in Latvia and East Prussia.
Principal action on the eastern
"44,
a56
dal-waFTa
Budapest, and the Reds tended to
offset this heavy pressure by push-
ing forward just above the border
in Czechoslovakia.
In bitter fighting in encircled
strong German armored forces . "0 —-—• --—6 — dPo
struck at Russian lines northwest of ; during the German occupation. Al-
lowering physical standards to pro-
vide for the drafting of such indi-
viduals.
Meanwhile, selective service’s or-
der for the review of the defer-
ments of approximately 365,000
Buck himself has been fortunate.
Once he was shot through the arm.
His own skill and wisdom have a male companion . .
saved him many times, but luck Albert Berryman scanned them with
has saved him countless other | an appraising and unrecognizing eye
times.
'Hello, Albert,” said Stettin-
mate of Ted Tod’s, now working for
Warners’ ... At the time, Tod was
working for the Chicago Herald-Ex-
aminer as a reporter, and Heming-
way hoped Tod would try to get him
a job on the paper . . . Tod went in
to speak to Frank Carson, the city
editor. He told him all about Hem-
they get killed,” Buck finally said.
"And I do the best I can for them,
but I've got so I feel like it’s me
killin' ’em instead of a German. I’ve
got so I feel like a marderer. I hate
to look at them when the new one/
come in.”
All this talk of what to do
with Germany—and, of course,
it is more than talk, it is a
grave, great problem—reminds
me of this tale ... An apostle
of conciliation once asked the
late Georges Clemenceau if his
hatred of the Germans was
based on knowledge. "Have you
ever been to Germany?” he in-
qnired.
"No, Monsieur,” replied the
Tiger, "I have not been to Ger-
many. But twice in my lifetime
the Germans have been to
France."
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An American citizen of Ger-
man ancestry was walking down
Powell Street, in San Francisco,
when he was stopped by a sol-
dier who asked: "Can you tell
me the way to Chinatown?” . . .
He replied: “Yes, of course, it
is two blocks over and two
blocks to the left, but you don’t
want to go there because you
are a Jap” . . . The soldier re-
plied: “And you are a German”
. . . The citizen said: “How did
you know?” . . . The soldier
replied: “I know because I’ve
killed a lot of them the last two
months in Italy and I’m on my
way home to Seattle” . . . The
citizen of German ancestry
looked at the uniform of the sol-
dier and saw on it a Presidential
citation, the Purple Heart and a
few other campaign ribbons.
Telling this story about him-
self, he said: "Boy, was I em-
barrassed! The soldier was of
Japanese ancestry and a mem-
ber of the famous 100th Infantry
Battalion!”
trigger first. His slug hit the Ger-
man just above the heart. The Ger-
man had a wonderful pair of binocu-
lars slung over his shoulders, and
the bullet smashed them to bits.
Buck had wanted some German
binoculars for a long time.
The ties that grow up between
men who live savagely and die re-
lentlessly together are ties of great
strength. There is a sense of fideli-
ty to each other among little corps
of men who have endured so long
and whose hope in the end can be
but so small.
One afternoon while I was with
the company Sgt. Buck Eversole’s
turn came to go back to rest camp
for five days. The company was due
to attack that night.
Buck went to his company com-
mander and said, "Lieutenant, I
don't think I better go. I’ll stay il
you need me.”
The lieutenant said, "Of course I
need you, Buck, I always need you.
But it’s your turn and I want you
to go. In fact, you’re ordered to go.”
The truck taking the few boys
away to rest camp left just at dusk.
It was drizzling and the valleys
were swathed in a dismal mist Ar-
tillery of both sides flashed and
rumbled around the horizon. The
encroaching darkness was heavy
and foreboding.
Happy Relief When
You're Sluggish,Upset
4)
other without success. Finally Buck ingway-what aggodwriterhe.was
stepped around one corner of the ' '.' . ' . „
' Chicago, but he knows it, knows
By Ernie Pyle
(Editor’s Note): This dispatch was written and first published when Pyla
Was with the GIs at the Italian front. He is now on his way to cover the boys
in the Pacific war zones.
IN ITALY.—If you ever heard a dive bombing by our A-36
Invader planes you’d never forget it.
Even in normal flight this plane makes a sort of scream-
ing noise, and when that is multiplied many-fold by the ve-
locity of the dive you can hearUie wail for miles.
it
I1
' 1' -
First army rushed to the defense of
the Strasbourg region.
Eastern Front
Long dormant, the Polish front
bestirred, with the Nazis reporting
Russian movements on the road to
German Silesia, 120 miles below
*
EUROPE:
Nazis Pull Back
Making use of swirling blizzards
and ghostly battle-fields piled high I
with snowdrifts, German Field Mar- i
shall Von Rundstedt slowly pulled 1
his recent onrushing Nazi legions J
from the big Belgium bulge under
Buck came to the little group of
old-timers in the company with
whom I was standing, to say good-
bye. You’d have thought he was
leaving forever. He shook hands all
around, and his smile seemed sick
and vulnerable. He was a man stall-
ing off his departure.
He said, "Well, good luck to
you all.” And then he said, "1’11
be back in just five days.” He said
paws . . . "Why don’t you raise
your hand?" inquired the sergeant
of the 20th lad.
"Too much trouble,” he drawled
Once but 4 miles from the
Meuse and 29 miles from the his- commission reported, the shipyards
toric gateway to France, the Ger-
man forces, originally said to num-
ber 200,000 men, gradually gave
ground as the Allied armies, under
pound; oranges 40 cents each;
beans 80 cents a pound, and cheese
- - ---- $10 a pound.
Budapest, the Russians continued | Serving only the richest, restau-
their block-by-block conquest of the rants were charging sky-high prices,
once beautiful but now smouldering with one U. S. correspondent din-
Hungarian capital, with tanks and ing in a cafe paying $8.70 for three
self - propelled guns rumbling fried eggs, French fried potatoes,
through the battered streets and two pieces of white bread without
butter, and one cup of coffee.
French Cold
In France, Paris shivered from
lack of coal caused by the disrup-
tion of transportation. Patrolmen
guarding the city’s picturesque pub-
lic parks were doubled to prevent
residents from chopping down trees
____ a,---- ber Christmas shopping
reinforcements from the French mounting 17 per cent.
German, who'd had the same idea.. | names, etc." ' Carson looked up
' and ho-humm d: Does he know any
Buck was ready and pulled the Chicago coppers?” . . . “No,” said
Germans, who frequently counter-
attacked to relieve pressure on their and people’s propensity to spend
lines, were looked upon to withdraw
to a new defense arc around St. 1
Vith, but four miles from the Ger-
Nowhere in our fighting forces
is cooperation closer or friend-
ship greater than between
Americans and British in the
air. I have yet to hear an
American pilot make a dis-
paraging remark about a Brit-
ish flier. Our pilots say the Brit-
ish are cooler under fire than
we are.
They like to listen in on their ra-
dios as the RAF pilots talk to each
other. For example, one day they
heard one pilot call to another:
"I say, old chap, there is a Jerry
on your tail.”
To which the imperiled pilot re-
plied:
"Quite so, quite so, thanks very
much old man.”
And another time, one of our In-
vaders got shot up over the target.
His engine was smoking and his pres-
sure was down and he was losing
altitude. He made for the coast all
alone, easy meat for any German
fighter that might come along He
was just barely staying in the air,
and he was a 9d and lonely boy
indeed.
Then suddenly he heard over his
earphones a distinctly British voice
saying:
"Cheer up, chicken, we have
you.”
He looked around and two Spit-
fires, one on either side, were
mothering him back to his home
field.
were walking in Indian file. Sud- .. . .
denly a mine went off and killed cago years ago after working in
the entire squad following Buck. I Kansas, city. He had lived inOak
He himself had miraculously walked Park, m and was an old school-
through the mine field without hit-
ting a one.
One day Buck went stalking a
German officer in close combat, and
wound up with the German on one
side of a farmhouse and Buck on
the other. They kept throwing gre-
Iasi coast!
M 30^1
OLD ESTABLISHED business
firm offers an exceptional op-
portunity to young lady who can
use typewriter, for general office
work. A lifetime position with a
future fer one who qualifies.
Pleasant working conditions. Start-
ing salary $25.00 per week. Ad-
dress, with full particulars, P. O.
Box 1329, Dallas, Texas.
truck swung a gun around and
This isn't as good as the "West-
inghouse—I’m westing” gag—but
it’s going the rounds among the
icky set—and makes me ick:
"We’re broom-mates. We sweep
together. Dust us two.”
-g
privacy, they decided to sit down,
hoping by means of conversation to
make her finish up and leave in a
hurry . . . The first GI said: "Boy,
life overseas sure was tough. I
didn’t have a bath in eight months.”
"Think that’s bad?” said the sec-
Special types delivered included started shooting at Bland. German
this group would seriously impair transports and cargo ships essential and American tracer bullets were
food production, particularly of for Pacific operations, small cargo
pork, beef and dairy products. _
for fuel.
Because subway stations and
post offices recently were the only
heated places, women and children
and the aged crowded in, huddling
in corners all day. Mothers brought
along their darning while others
played cards or read.
hub of Asia Japan supplied much
1 of the region’s goods, Chinese repre-
sentatives at a conference on Far
Eastern affairs at Hot Springs, Va., I
stated that continued existence of the the bombs were almost upon them,
' enemy’s productive capacity might then dive for their foxholes, and
be necessary to help restore peace- then come out and start shooting
man never stopped firing until
Bland's six machine guns suddenly
chewed the truck into complete dis-
integration.
Our dive bombers don’t have
much trouble with German fighters.
The reasons are several. For one
thing, the Luftwaffe is weak over
here now. For another, the dive
bombers’ job is to work on the in-
fantry front lines, so they seldom
get back where the German fight-
ers are. And for another, the In-
vader is such a good fighter itself
that ‘he Jerries aren’t too anxious
to tangle with it.
Flying Allotment.
For several months the posting
period back to America was set
! at a certain number of missions.
Then it was suddenly upped by
more than a score. There were
pilots here who were within one
mission of going home when the or-
der came. So they had to stay and
fly a few more months. Some st
them never lived to finish the new
allotment.
ond. "I couldn't even wash my
hands in four weeks.”
“We were so busy,” the third add-
ed, “I couldn’t change my under-
wear in five months.”
At that point, the old gal looked
up and said: "Would one of you
stinkers mind passing the salt?”
----------- Io buy a new vehicle within two
they are those of years after the war if there was no
thia newspaper.) , ,
price increase.
Ia-meeq3 Interviewing 10,000 auto dealers at
We ,3 the same time, Polk learned that
M 4 most of them intended to greatly
expand their service departments
off after the war to take care of de-
2 5 mand for repairs before a complete
82682283607 peacetime adjustmnent permits new
5265882 car purchases.
58880905228782 in conducting its poll, Polk also
49348882524888 learned that 49 per cent of the car
3822857422 owners intended to buy the same
270832028498 make, while 40 per cent ware un-
decided and 11 por cent planned to
buy other machines.
I AGGRESSORS:
. S I Future Treatment
2228222252 Postwar troatment of Germany
5252062862403 and Japan will be complicated by
H the important part these nations
576224*5 S have played in the peacetime econ-
222041222884 omy of their res l" ctive reitions, dis-
A c, I - ' - * i tive car owners in an effort to get
Act to Solve Manpower Problem
found 63 per cent of them intended
PACIFIC:
Decisive Battle
Three years before, Gen. Douglas
MacArthur had left Luzon in a small
torpedo boat in the dead of night,
with the Japanese breaking the last
shred of U. S. resistance in the
Philippines.
But he returned in a brilliant
comeback, puffing hard on his corn
cob pipe at the rail of an American
warship, one of 800 vessels in a 70-
mile-long convoy which poured thou-
sands of troops and tons of supplies
on the sandy beaches of Lingayen
gulf in northeastern Luzon, 120
miles from Manila.
Coming shortly after the U. S.
conquest of Leyte island to the
southeast, General MacArthur’s
latest invasion was a bold stroke,
setting the stage for the decisive
battle of the Philippines, Japan’s
last great defensive bastion before
the Asiatic mainland, a battle in
which the enemy was expected to
commit 200.000 troops.
Fleet Aids
Preceding the Yanks’ landings,
U. S. warships subjected the cres-
cent-shaped Lingayen beach to a
murderous three-day barrage, and
mine sweepers ploughed in to brush
away surface obstructions.
Lack of heavy enemy resistance
to the landings, and the absence of
any formidable beach defenses, in-
dicated that the Japanese command
resolved to reserve its forces for
concentrated onslaughts inland in-
stead of spreading them along the
shores.
Heavily reduced by previous sus-
tained U. S. army and navy< air
force raids, a pared Japanese aerial
fleet offered desperate resistance
to the spearhead of the huge Ameri-
can convoy steaming toward Ling-
ayen, with preliminary reports in-
dicating 79 enemy planes shot down
by fighters and anti-aircraft fire.
MANPOWER:
Act on Shortage
Its efforts to solve the nation's
critical manpower problem brought
to a head by the President’s appeal
for a national labor draft in his 12th
annual message to --exawegaum
congress, the gov- 4-
ernment moved io "
swiftly to channel f-amn,.
workers into essen- Lyne
tial war plants and -
provide additional
men for the serv-
ices.
Although asking
for a national labor
ley in the south, cut into their lines, proven their worth as tankers, float-
severing important supply roads ing warehouses and refrigerator
1 Released by Western Newspaper Union. ——
< EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions are expressed in these columns,
Western Newspaper Union's news analysts and not necessarily of
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and threatening to entrap the ene- l
my's armored divisions in the west- |
em portion of the bulge.
As the Allies delivered their trip-
hammer blows against them, the ;
Tod . . . “Well, I don’t care how
good a writer he is,” replied Carson.
"Our reporters have to know the
Chicago coppers” ... So Heming-
way didn’t get the job. Instead he
went to Canada—worked on a To-
ronto paper and from there started
his climb.
If it hadn’t been for his not know-
ing any Chicago policemen, Heming-
way might still be working on the
Chicago paper.
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The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 18, 1945, newspaper, January 18, 1945; Canton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1516276/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Van Zandt County Library.