The Bartlett Tribune and News (Bartlett, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 6, Ed. 1, Friday, October 22, 1943 Page: 3 of 8
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Friday October 22 1943
THE BAItTLETT TRIBUNE
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THE STOIIY SO FAKl Private Marlon
Hargrove former newspaper feature edi-
tor hat been Inducted Into the army
and Is nearlng his completion of basic
training at Fort ttragg N. C. tlo has
been classified as cook and In addition
Us (allure to master some ot tho tunda
mentals ot army training have resulted
In considerable extra KP duty tor him.
He has also learned the finer points ot
"goldbrlcklng" and "shooting the breeze."
Hargrove has become editor oIa section
of tho camp paper and these duties havo
"kept him away from a lecture series.
As we pick up the story his sergeant Is
assigning blm once mora to KP for this
Infraction. Itargrove Is trying to explain.
He speaks:
CHAPTER. XIV
"Sergeant for days I round up
news from battery reporters. There
Is always too much or too little.
When there is too little I have to
write what is needed. When there
is too much I have to choose which
battery reporter is going to horse-
whip me for leaving his copy out."
"The chaplain is right up the
street" the sergeant said.
"Then I have to edit all tho copy
delete all classified military intelli-
gence and take out all nasty cracks
at first sergeants. Then I have to
write headlines for all the stories
and place them in whatever space
I can find for ihem. Then I must
draw everything up into prptty little
pages. This is tedious and nerve-
racking work."
"The chaplain will give you a
sympathetic ear" the sergeant said.
"I will .give you only KP. Does
'anything you are saying relate to
.what we're talking about why you
Iweren't in the mess hall yesterday
afternoon?"
"I was getting around to that ser-
geant. On the day before the paper
is issued I have to go into Fayette-
ville to keep a careful watch over
the printers to see that they don't
put Third Regiment news on the
Fourth Regiment page. If I am
not there they may even mix head-
lines and put church notices under
'Service Club Activities.' It is neces-
sary that I be there."
The sergeant coughed. "I feel
for you Private Hargrove; I deeply
sympathize. I wouldn't think of put-
ting you on KP "
"You Wouldn't?-" I gasped eager-
ly. "Don't interrupt" the sergeant
barked. "As I was saying I wouldn't
think of putting you on KP if you
hadn't committed a breach of eti-
quette by failing to RSVP the invi-
taion. You didn'ttell us you weren't
coming. Or why."
-Ea-
I was dozing peacefully at my
typewriter the other mprning when
there came a knock on my elbow
and a bright young voice shouted
"Hey!" at me. I looked up into the
impish cheerful and unquenchably
mischievous face of the boss' daugh-
ter Mis3 Sidney Winkel age four.
"Let's be reasonable Pvt. Mulve-
fcill" I said; "As you know I am
working on Capt. Winkle's sympa-
thies to get a furlough."
Miss Winkel was dressed like the
Navy and looked entirely too ener-
getic for such a drizzly morning.
"I'm to be the Valentine" she
said "and Johnny's going to take
my picture and you're to take me
up to the Service Club and carry
Johnny's things for him and wait
for him to get there so you'd bet-
tor put on your jacket and cap and
let's go. .
"I'm going to have my picture
taken with Spud Parker" she add-
ed. Spud Parker is the general's
son and is considered quite an eligi-
ble bachelor by the younger set.
"There's Tom in the cafeteria"
ehe said. "Let's go see Tom."
Thomas James Montgomery Mul-
vehill Pfc was apparently making
his morning rounds in search of
news. He was at the moment en-
gaged in his daily research in the
Service Club's toast and coffee.
"Hello sis" he said. "Hello Mc
Gee. Pull up a chair. McGee get
the lady a drink. Something tall
and cool. Such as a chocolate milk.
What's the deal sis?"
"I'm- to be the Valentine" she
said "and Johnny's going to take
my picture and old Hargrove has to
take care of Johnny s stuff until
Johnny comes and I don't like him
anyway because he makes faces and
sticks out his tongue and says sticks
and snails and puppy-dog tails
that's what little girls ore made of
knnd he's not my boy friend any-
way." "No punctuation" I said. I wag
gled my ears and stuck out my
tongue at her.
"The next time I come" she said
"I'm going to bring some soap and
every time he sticks out his tongue
I'm going to put soap on it because
Wm0Z
j-!Ze5f
See Her
Frivctte oarg
by Marion Hargrove
it isn't nice to stick out your
tongue." She emphasized her state-
ment by paralyzing my wrist with
her fist and sticking her tongue out
at mc.
"Let's have no unnecessary vibra-
tions McGee" said the Lieuthom-
as looking up reproachfully over his
glasses. "Coffee is five cents the'
cup." He beamed at her. bhe
beamed back at him
"I have seven boy friends" she
said raising one forefinger delicate-
ly and rubbing the other against it
in a highly jeering gesture. "I have
seven boy friends and you're not one
of them and you're not anybody's
boy friend." She hit me this time on
the elbow and I made a horrible face
at her.
"Myaaoh" I said. "Who wants
to bo your boy friend anyway?"
"I wish you wouldn't blow smoke"
she said. "It makes me cough and
it's not nice to smoke anyway. Old
cigarettesl"
I wearily crushed my last ciga-
rette in the ash tray. "Women
the eternal reformer" I sighed. "It
wasn't like this in the Old Army."
Miss Sidney Winkel took off hoi-
sailor cap and arranged her big red
hair ribbon. "You're a nasty old
thing and you're not nice like Johnny
and Tom and Lieutenant Meek and
Captain Wilson and all my other
boy friends" she said. After a
pause she added airily "And Ma-
jor Long and Captain Quillen too."
"Myaah" I sighed wrinkling my
nose more violently.
"Oh there's Johnny" she sudden-
ly cried "and he's going to take my
picture and" She tripped off with
a bewitching smile for Bushemi and
a running line q babble.
"No punctuation" I said to Mul-
vehill. "It's a woman's world McGee"
he said reaching for another slice
of toast.
-Pa
"Get him away from me Bu-
shemi!" roared Private Thomas
James Montgomery Mulvehill.
"He's got that gleam in his eye.
Get him away!"
"You're just being difficult Lieu-
thomas" I told him. "Just sit down
and relax." The Lieuthomas laid his
enormous frame on the bunk and
started slapping his knees in utter
despair. "
"What kind of deal are you try-
ing to swindle this time?" he asked.
"Let's be reasonable Private Mul-
vehill" I said patting him reassur-
ingly on the shoulder. "As you
know I am now working on Captain
Winkers sympathies to get a fur-
lough sometime in February . . .
the first half of February."
"I know what's coming" he
screamed. "And I won't do it! I
can't do it!"
"Now as you know furloughs are
laden with little expenses neces-
sary little expenses. To help me
along with the load Sergeant Sher
and Private Bushemi have already
made philanthropic little loans. I
have your name on my honor roll
here Lieuthomas. What's the do-
nation?" The Mulvehill cringed and edged
away. "What do you need from
me?"
"Well" I estimated "I should say
that ten dollars."
"Great gods and refugee chil-
dren" he gasped. "Ten dollars he
says yet! Why don't you ask me for
my life's blood? Six dollars he owes
me already and now he's asking
oh -I can't stand it! I can't stand
it! Take him away!"
"My life's blood" he moaned.
"Where's the six I lent you two
months ago?"
"That was only five weeks ago"
I reminded him gently "and I've
already paid two of that back.
Three weeks ago I paid it back."
"Yeah" he protested "but you
borrowed it back the next day." He
rose and paced the floor. "What
are they doing to me? My life's
blood they would draw from
my veins? Thirty-six measly little
dollars a month I make and he
wants ten dollars! Maybe I'm Win-
throp Rockefeller I should lend out
ten dollars a clip! Thirty-six dol-
lars and he wants half!"
"You see Lieuthomas a sad and
work-worn creature an Alice sit-by-
the-fire whose only hope for the fu-
ture is in the faint glimmering hope
of a furlough. Day after day week
in and week out I have worked my
frail fingers to the shoulder blade to
make things pleasant for you and
Bushemi and Bishop. I have patched
your quarrels with the mess ser-
geant. I have saved you from the
terrible wrath of provoked Rebels.
I have sat here at night sewing but-
tons on my blouse so that you
wouldn't have to wear it hanging
open on your merry jaunts to town.
Money could not pay for the things
I have done for you and Bushemi.
And now this. Ten dollars between
me and spiritual starvation and no
ten dollars. How sharper than a
serpent's tooth."
"Don't talk like that Hargrove"
he said his voice cracking. "Put
me down for ten."
-pa-There
was a little note stuck in
my typewriter when I came back
from prowling for news. It looked
like Private ("One-Shot") Bushemi's
typing. "The stockholders of the
Union of Hargrove's Creditors" it
read "will hold a business meeting
this svenine about seven o'plnek in
the latrine ot Barracks No. 2 Head-
I
w.n.u.
SB n.v 1 c t
quarters Battery. Please be present
or we will beat your head in."
It was tho day before my furlough
so I got the general drift. Tho vul-
tures who were contributors to the
furlough would probably stand
around frowning and figure out
some sort of budget for my vaca-
tion. I could picture tho blue-nosed
demons slashing away at my enjoy-
ment. The meeting had an unexpectedly
small attendance: Maury Sher
mess sergeant of Battery D of the
Third and chairman of the ways and
means committee of the Union; Pri-
vate Bushemi principal stockholder
and president; and Private First
Class Thomas James Montgomery
Mulvehill chaplain.
Private Mulvehill beamed. "Ser-
geant Hart sends his regrets. He
has a heavy heavy in Lillington. He
is with us in spirit though."
"Come in drip" said Bushemi.
Sergeant Sher got down to busi-
ness. "I've got to hand it to you
son" he said. "Gone through this
much of the month and still haven't
tried to get any of your furlough
money back from the chaplain!
We're all proud of you."
"Shucks" I blushed. " 'Twern't
nothin'. I was able to bum a ciga-
rette here and there."
"McGee" said Mulvehill clearing
his throat "you leave tomorrow for
New York where there are many
snares to trap the unwary. Don't
buy any gold watches in the park
or any stolen furs anywhere. You
know I presume about buying the
Brooklyn Bridge."
"Now we don't have any restric-
tions about the way you use your
money" said Bushemi. "Only last
time you spent too much money on
"Little man" she said "will you
please ask the waiter for more wa
ter?"
taxicabs. You'll have to use the
buses and subway more this trip.
All the shows you want to see all
the books you can buy but taxicabs
only for very special dates."
"Rnmnrinriv Virus Virion ovnftcfprnt
ing this taxicab " I began.
"Taxicabs" Sher broke in "only
for very special dates. You may go
to the opera once if you sit down-
stairs and twice if you sit in the
Famile Circle. You are not tc buy
more than six theater tickets. In
uniform you can see all the movies
you want for two bits each."
"And be conservative in tipping
the waiters" said Mulvehill tapping
his glasses on the window sill. "Very
conservative. Short-change them if
necessary."
"Tell him about the budget" said
Bushemi with unnecessary impa-
tience. "As the matter stands on the fur-
lough deal" said Sher "you owe
Bushemi 22 dollars me 10 Mulve-
hill 10 Hart 10. That's 52 dollars.
Counting the ten you'll wire Bushemi
for before the week's over it's 62.
With what money we have taken
from yuu and given to the chaplain
during the past few weeks you
shoUld make out all right."
"Must I be treated as a child?"
I asked.
"When you get back broke Mc-
Gee" said Mulvehill "you are not
to eat breakfast at the Service Club
You are not to take out any post
exchange books. You will get your
cigarettes from Sergeant Sher who
will ration them out to you as per
budget."
-Pa-Sergeant
Sher Private Bushemi
and the other members of the Union
of Hargrove's Creditors would have
been quite pleased at the sight. In-
stead of spending their money lavish-
ly on taxicab sightseeing trips and
expensive shows I was dining quiet-
ly in a conservative grillroom with
the Redhead. We weren't even dis-
cussing ways to spend their hard-
earned money.
"Little man" she said "will you
please ask the waiter for more
water?"
"I beg your pardon" he said
rather unctuously. "There is a fif-
teen million gallon shortage in wa-
ter at this very instant. On the other
hand madame all supply ships to
Great Britain use Scotch whisky as
ballast for the return trip. Perhaps
madame would like a glass of Scotch
whisky?"
The Redhead lifted an eyebrow.
"I wpnder" she said "what they
use in the finger bowls here rub-
bing alcohol? I do not want Scotch
whisky. I want water."
"It is as madame wishes" the
Waiter said bowing from the knees.
He walked away and returned again
to -lean against a post. The Red-
head drummed her fingers on the
tablecloth.
"Don't be afraid of him" said the
Redhead. "Call his bluff."
(TO BE CONTINUED)
S3 1 wSM
Your Broadway and Mine:
Sallies in Our Alley: Secretary of
the Treasury Morgenthau went into
the Hotel Delmonico pharmacy
mode a small purchase and handed
the clerk a $100 bill. The clerk
failing to recognize him scrutinized
the money carefully. "I hope it's
good" he said . . . "It ought to be"
was the dry reply "I made it my
self." . . . Ann Corio mentioned al
most daily by a racing paper (The
Morning Telegraph) phoned tho pic-
ture firm she works for and com-
plained . . . Surprised at any ac-
tress squawking about too much pub-
licity they asked Ann what was
wrong . . . "What's wrong?" she
yipped. "My name's in it so much
that people are starting to bet on
me!"
Sounds in the Night: At Havana-
Madri'd: "He's in 4F. Walked through
a screen door and strained him-
self!" ... At the Stork: "I'll cut
you down to Mexican size!" . . .
"What size is that?" . . . "It ain't
tall!" ... In Reuben's: "He doesn't
enter a conversation. He invades
it!" ... At Leon and Eddie's:
"She gets on his nerves. Her fa-
vorite perch" . . . At the Latin
Quarter: "They've been going un-
steady for years" ... In .Ver-
sailles: "My dear I no longer care
that you no longer care" . . . "It's
worse than that darling. I no long-
er care that you no longer care that
I no longer care!"
The Magic Lanterns: Mark Hel-
linger herded the whole Warner
Bros payroll into Edouard Cantor's
support in "Thank Your Lucky
Stars" and what did that get him?
A wow that's all! Cantor and Dinah
Shore give zip and melody to the
main yarn and the olio trimmings
come from such mighties as Davis
Bogart Garfield Flynn De Havil-
land Sheridan not to mention et and
cetera . . . Sonja Henie is still the
most skillful and winsome cutie on
skates but the story has her cutting
the same old Figure 8 in "Winter-
time." It's all about a broken down
Winter resort with Sonja getting
Jack Oakie and Cesar Romero out
of the barrel or something. Pretty
to look at but the tale is as cold as
Sonja's ice . . . Charles Laughton
who can make hamminess artistic
is handcuffed in "The Man From
Down Under." He plays a bluster
ing old Aussie warrior mixed up
with a couple of Belgian orphans.
A Jap attack is rung in to straighten
out matters but Laughton had been
too mauled by the writers to re-
cover . . . "The Kansan" gives
you Richard Dix Jane Wyatt Vic
tor Jory et al out thar in the sage
brush country a-fightin' and a-lovin'
and a-cliche-in'.
The Magazines: William Shirer dis-
cussed "American Traitors of the
Radio" in Harper's meaning the cor-
respondents who hired out as liars
to Goebbels. They were weakies
said Shirer fearful that they couldn't
make a living if they came home.
Mebbe but what about those back
here whom the Reich reached? They
were living high hobnobbing with
our biggies and feeling inferior to
nobody . . . Will Rogers Jr. is all
for a fast break with Franco he
states in Coronet. When the Axis is
cracked he warns the Nazi big-
shots will scoot into a friendly Spain
and be free to cook up some new
barbarities against civilization. Un-
less! . . . Carl Hermenn Frank
the Czech who betrayed his people
for Hitler's marks has more to shiv-
er over than even Quisling. Frank
according to Collier's profile or-
dered the slaughter of 250 Czech
youths. He had them shot down
while attending the funeral of a pa-
triot also murdered by Frank's mas
ters . . . Morton Eustis describes
in Theatre Arts Monthly how a North
Africa air raid broke up Josephine
Baker's act. When the all-clear came
Josephine picked up and carried on.
Showing no war will rob a perform-
er of that bow.
The Front Pages: Sen. Lodge
back from the battle areas blasted
the "rosy propaganda" back here.
He plans to report to congress that
"our fighting men are mad because
of the false optimism of the news at
home" . . . Erudite Times opinion
boys are flunking a simple arithme-
tic course. Last week they said:
"The first front is Poland the sec-
ond France and the third the Middle
East." The day we invaded the Eu-
ropean mainland the same editors
said: "The second front is now
ablaze in Italy" ... A newspaper
like the New York Herald Tribune
deserves every American's-applause.
Thoroughly Republican but it never
forgets it belongs to America which
made both parties possible.
Observations: The hungriest street
in the wor'd the one on W. 33rd St.
between Fifth and Broadway. Has
19 restaurants . . . The subway ads
that read: "Sumner Welles is the
coolest man in Washington" . . .
The old horse market on E. 24th be-
tween Lexington and Second. Be-
ause of gas rationing and rubber
itto the trading in nags is enjoy-
lg its biggest boom in 50 years . . .
he Brig-Gen'l with four rows of
impaign ribbons and the sailor ex-
aiming: "Look at all that fruit
lad!"
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
SUNDAY I
chool ILessoffD
By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST D. D.
Ot The Moody Bible Institute ot Chicago.
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for October 24
Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se-
lected ond copyrighted by International
Council of Religious Education; used by
permission.
HONORING OUtt PARENTS
LESSON TEXT Exodus 20:12; Luke 2:48.
SI; Mark 7:0-13; John 19:23-27.
GOLDEN TEXT Children obey your
parents In the Lord: for this Is right.
Ephcslans 0:1.
Right relations between children
nd parents have much to do with
the peace and prosperity of a com-
munity and a nation. Experience
has demonstrated that to be true
but even more basic is the fact that
it is in accord with the promise of
God.
One of the bad breakdowns in
modern life is that of proper honor
and obedience to parents by chil-
dren. In all too many homes God's
order has been reversed and instead
of honoring and obeying their par-
ents children (both young and old)
have taken the place of "boss" and
mother and father must obey if they
want peace and rest.
The need for our lesson of today
is both great and acute. The future
happiness of hundreds of thousands
of children and the present welfare
of thousands of neglected and boss-
ridden parents will depend on the
intelligence and faithfulness with
which this lesson is taught in our
churches and the honesty of heart
with which we all receive its truth.
I. The Command and Promise
(Exod. 20:12).
We are told by Paul that this is.
the "first commandment with prom-
ise" (Eph. 0:1-3). The Lord was
not making a bargain with man or
seeking to draw out obedience by a
prize but there is obviously a great
reward in the observing of this com-
mandment. Then too as the children of God
(if we are such) through Jesus
Christ the first and most important
consideration to come before us is
What is the mind and will of the
Maker of us all regarding this mat-
ter of the relation between parents
and children? His words are plain
we are to "honor" our fathers and
our mothers.
The word "honor" carries with it
a great many things but perhaps
the three outstanding elements are
respect obedience and affection.
Our Lord Jesus Christ who is the
Saviour and then the Example of
believers presents a beautiful pat
tern of true obedience to this com-
mandment. II. Willing Obedience (Luke 2:48-
51; John 19:25-27).
The fact that Jesus was God mani-
fest in the flesh only enhanced His
conduct. He who is divine presents
an example of obedience and con-
sideration both as boy and man
which we do well to emulate.
1. As a Boy (Luke 2:48-51). The
boy Jesus increasing "in wisdom
and stature and in favor with God
and man" (v. 52) had come to His
twelfth year and with His parents
had gone up to Jerusalem to cele-
brate the Passover.
There moved in His heart the con-
viction that He must now be about
His Father's business an altogeth-
er proper and commendable pur-
pose but one which resulted for
the moment in separation from His
parents. This was far more serious
than a physical separation for we
read that they did not understand
Him (v. 50).
Tragic indeed are the conse-
quences of our failure to understand
our children. Notice however that
Jesus did not withdraw Himself from
their watchful care nor refuse to
obey them even though they failed to
understand Him. Equally tragic are
the results of hasty and bitter sep-
arations brought about by the dis-
obedience of children.
2. As a Man XJohn 19:25-27). The
value of our lesson will be greatly
reduced if we see only the responsi-
bility of children while they are
young. We are the children of our
parents as long as we and they
live.
One marvels at the carelessness
and hardness of heart that will per-
mit men and women who have time
and money for everything else to
neglect their aged parents and even
shunt them off into a public institu-
tion for care.
III. Hypocritical Disobedience
(Mark 7:6-13).
Such an important commandment
naturally held a high place in the
thinking of the community. To vio-
late it involved a measure of shame
which men sought to avoid. So the
Jews of Christ's day devised a
schene. which made it possible for
a mahTo appear to be very religious
even as he deprived his parents of
the honor and help to which they
were entitled by the law of God.
The man who was so avaricious
that he did not wish to support his
aged and needy parents could en-
tirely evade that God-given respon-
sibility by declaring that his proper-
ty was "Corban" that is dedicated
by a vow to God. Thereafter no
matter how great was the need of
his parents they could receive noth-
ing. Thus do men make "the word of
God of none effect" (v. 13) through
their traditions. The method differs
but the spirit persists even in our
da"
wwuvuww .
innrrvnoNooF
EXTERNAL CAUSE "
cne pimples bumps (blackheads) tint
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WHEN CONSTlPATIONmakesyonfeelpon
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DR. CALDWELL'S is the wonderful senna
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MANY DOCTORS use pepsin preparations
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There are more than 50 peaks
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.O KJav FmtarM rneaftft.
ugeu iriMiiwf
ihis cold-relief used when
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and makes breathing easier
Whenever the Dionne Quintupleta catci
cold their chests throats and backs aro
Immediately rubbed withMusterote.
Musterole gives such wonderful results
because it's MORE than just an ordi-
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IN 3 STRENGTHS: Children's MHd.0
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TIRED? NERVOUS? NO APPETITE?
You probably need
Often dietary deficiency results In the
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your daily diet Taire as reccommended
or as may be directed by your physician.
Prices quoted nre for 100 tablets Poat-
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Send remittance with order o
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It's so easy to wear your plates regu-
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Ford, Robert C. The Bartlett Tribune and News (Bartlett, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 6, Ed. 1, Friday, October 22, 1943, newspaper, October 22, 1943; Bartlett, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth76802/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bartlett Activities Center and the Historical Society of Bartlett.