Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 287, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 30, 1942 Page: 4 of 8
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BROWNWOOD (T«u>) BULLETIN, THURSDAY, JULY 30. 1942
RAGE FOUR
Features and
BROADWAY HIT.
ARMY SHOW IS
THE BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
£****»«i every mnlc( and Sunday morning at Brown wood. Tim
___•j*wod ot the tat Offlc* at Brown wood. Texas. aa ncood daw mail
Under The
DOME
NEW * YORK, July SO—U»cU
Sam i own show, "This Is: tho
Army," U Now York’s biggest hit
, To get a Uckot to it la aa tqugh
aa fatting Dooald Nalaon uf all
tba Little Nalaona to spend a
waak-end with you. v
Braky thne tba doors to tba
abow art opanad tba cuitomeri
•Ufa a miniature Oklahoma'^and
Would you Ilka to know what
Undo Sam glraa tba boya to taka
cart of tba difference between
living la an Army camp, where
me ala and room are free, and New
York City?
Okay, this la what Undo Sam
civet them: EXACTLY $2*9 A
DAY!
Every try to fat room and board
for *16.45 a weak la Now York?
- It can be done, aura, but not
vary comfortably.
Of eourao. tba boya gat their
bade pay. but they are using ovary
cant of K and more trying to Ilya
decently In New York while they
put on a abow thg| brtaga la
I44,ooo a week
I talked to a lot of them. They
are bunking together in boUl
rooms They are eating at hide*
away Joints. They haven’t a penny
la taka their girls out for an ev-
ening. Ita scratch and rustle and
hope tba pennies will loot until
next pay day. They are washing
their own socks and pants and an*
NATIONAL
JUSTICE DRAWN-OUT BECOMES A TRAVESTY "
Summoning a special aeasion of the United SUtes Supreme
pourt to beer a plea by seven Nazi spies that they meant no
«»nn by landing from submarines with enough explosives to
blow the nation7* into a cocked hat, is an insult to
shone by a corporal from. Mis-
souri. Howard Lindsay Lakes a
back soat to a private first fleas
from California. Bobby Clark and
(J>P*y Rosa Lea. Olsen «ad John-
son. Willie Howard and Paul
Draper, and many others whose
names have bean In lights since
Kdison was a pup, have to ba con-
tent with place money since Unde
Sam. Irving Berlin and tba sol-
diers hit town.
Owe Great Show -
It’s a craat show.
It pulls in around 144.000 a weak
for the Army Relief Fund It
pulls in that much baewbe of
talent. The first night’s tickets
wore, bought out of pa.notiam.
perhaps but since then It has
stood strictly on its own aa one
of the finest musical comedies’of
all time.
All of which is an Introduction
to a complaint Prom now oq this
column Is i fussing one. aa ornery
one. one la which Uncle Sgm la
pictured as a miserly old gkntle-
So They Say
HT FOR TODAY
H shall ha given yew;
boys in “This la the Anay” gat
£2.35 a day.
They are doubling; la brass, as 1
said before. They are soMiers-
Uade Sam‘la tripling la brass
when ha agrees to treating them
soldiers so niggardly.
(Distributed by McNaught
Syndicate. laaJ
1 maintain that, thanks to the
tremendous power of modern av-
iation. it Is easier to Invade the
continent of Europe today than
at any time since the invention
of gunpowder
up from the camps whore £ they
wake training and told to go to
New York and start working In
the show.
They went 1 „
They all have to live la New
York City. They don’t go to near-
by camps when their work la
package is 13 books of matches is
5 cents. ' * , ,
RAIL MOVEMENT. OF OIL
DOWN—Rail movement of oil to
the East Coast during the week
ended July lg was at the rata of
740,070 barrels dally. Petroleum
Coordinator for Wgr Harold lekas
announces. This reprecents a de-
crease of 39.480 barrels a day over
the record 788.590 barrels moved
eastward each day during the pre-
ceding week.
Because of the disrecognitioa of
those who are in authority of my
work and mission. 1 have moved
my residence from New York City
to Philadelphia.
—Father Divine. Negro evangelist.
We have the wealth, the mater-
ial, the fuel, the industrial facil-
ities and the mechanical and fight-
ing skill to create aa air-borne at-
tack force above and beyond any-
thing that Is possible by the Axis
nations.
—Lieut. Gen. Henry H Arnold,
commanding general. Army Air
Forces, a
ENT ABOUT TO
la about to begin a
bceoment of GMPR
its education aettv-
•hed a majority of
Administrator Hen-
seas. “The honest
tad they are legioh
lag public must be
at deliberate chisel-
f profiteering, be
• SERIAL STORY
I In Washington
BANNERS FLYING
BY MARY RAYMOND
URGED TO USE NEW FACILI-
TIES—Donald Nelson. WPB chair-
man. and Leasing J. Roaanwald.
chief of the Conservation Division,
have sent s telegram to state sal-
vage committees to be forwarded
to more than 12.000 local salvage
committees throughout the coun-
try asking them to make immedi-
ate use of new collection facilities
w filch have been offered In the
national salvage campaign by
members of the automobile, rub-
ber. oil. and farm implement In-
dustries.
) TO COMMITTEE—R
irly. af the Tn-State
ompany. Shreveport. Lt..
named to the committee
i in Washington to assist
dealing with manpower
in the inter-city bus
Rion Industry, the Office
aformatkm has been ad-
The British are human beings,
and I am never in despair of the
possibility of human beings mak-
ing an upward growth.
- Mohandas K Gandhi. Indian
but the secretary of agriculture.
By-PaaMs OFA
Not only does the secretary of
agriculture have the powae to fix
farm prices, but ha has the power
to pay subsidies—a power thua far
denied the OP A. At the same time
the secretary of agriculture an-
nounces adjustments In the prices
of meat animals, be announces that
a deal Is being worked out to pay
these little ala lighter bouses a kind
of subsidy for “custom slaughter-
ACTION TAKEN TO REDUCE
EXCESSIVE PROFITS — In a
move to reduce excessive profits
by making it easier to renegotiate
war contracts, the War Department
has established price adjustment
sections In the procurement dis-
trict offices of the supply services
of the Army’s Services of Supply,
and the Material Command of the
air forces.
TON TAKEN TO HIKE
UCTION—In order to in-
production of dehydrated
the WPB requirements coro-
recommendation of
memDereo aooui uari, ra up ad Christie s
g ou a doorstep, k was J taxi turned in tbo gateway.
. She waited until Christie had paid
uoe, when aha reached the driver and than asked: "Why
me, sounded almost an* Dld you t-**1’
ind immensely relieved lhook ^ w—i she
la the world are you, told Jan the story. While aha was
, Witter upon
the Foods Requirements commit-
gee has determined that a high pri-
vity rating (AA-*) may be assign-
ed to the delivery of a considerable
quantity of material and equipment
Jobe need during the last half of
the year to expand dehydration
production facilities
1 VIOLATIONS IIPOB TED—
goveral complaints of violations of
ODT local delivery orders tare
been received by S. J. Cole. Dallas
enabling them to keep going.
Lease-Lend Administration pays
the subsidy, so the taxpayers are
nicked.
At the same time the secretary
announces cuts la prices for meat
animals he announces decreases In
the prices to ba paid for evapo-
rated and roller dried milk,
and increases In the prices to ba
paid for spray skim milk, cheese
and butter. Did the Office of Price
Administration approve them ad-
justments in prices? U did not
OPA was consulted. But the De-
partment of Agriculture Issued the
orders without OPA approval. ,
. This would seem to make it fair*
ly unanimous that the Office of
Pries Administration is in a bad
way. Congress cuts OPA's budget
for price enforcement, the War
Labor Steel wage increase decis-
ion, the Department of Agriculture
tells OPA where to bead in on farm
prices. Unless someone adminis-
ters some drastic medicine soon,
look out lor gradual, creeping in-
flation
CLAMP PUT ON NEW MO-
TORS—WPB has announced that
henceforth new motors will be re-
leased only for the moat Important
war plants and civilian require-
ments. Other applicants for new
motors will have to adapt used
equipment—of which there is am-
ple supply—to their needs.
Tea. He was in the Wi
knights’ oar, and Mr.* Wainwr
was driving. They had an acrid
and Mr. Wain'Aright fait reap©
manager of ODT. Liability
ising a delivery truck to make
than one pick-up or delivery
parson a day in violation of
orders rests equally on the
mer and carrier. Mr. Cola
Funny Business-
Bangs News
PROHIBITION PUT IN GMPR
■Express prohibition against ua-
g several layers of price lists, one
Ud an top of another, to poet
l Mrs. Jim Vincent of San An-
gelo visited/her mother. Mrs.
Unford and sister. Mrs. Chester
Wilson. Tuesday Her daughter,
Jimmie Carol, accompanied her
Mrs. Hubert BeH and baby, Ira
Sue. spent the week-end in Avoka
witn her parents. Rev. and Mrs.
Grimes -
Mrs. Bailey of Stamford arrived
Saturday for a visit with her
daughter. Mrs. Manley Sikes.
Mrs. Jim Wilson visited rela-
tives in Dallas last weak. >
Mias Dorses Wilson of Brown-
wood visited Bar parents. Mr. and
Mrs. C. C. WUaon. Friday night
Mrs. a ion Barnett af Abilene
BICYCLE QUOTA SET — An
ugust quota of t J4g bicycles for
did. I’m proud as tho devil. You
won’t do ti again, though. The
kind of luck you have—it might
play out, CMfib* -
"It’s tba vary last time, Bart"
Whan the phon* clicked In place
Christie Joined the group of people
on the sun porch. .
It was around t whan a nurse
motiotad to Christie. Christie got
up and joined her to tba corridor.
"Your friend la going to ba all
right," the nurse said "It was
a good thing those doctors In
West* rod got him hare so quickly,
and lt was lucky you happened to
know how to handle a plana. Well,
I guess you know how fortunate
you are." She was beaming.
"I suppose you knew 1 never
saw him in my Ufa until they
brought him to tba airport."
m six status total 3 024.’ Broken
rwn, the quota and reserve, re*
loctiveiy.^for jBach»ststc looha^ltta
g, 1.152 and 414; Loatotona. *42
id *06; Missouri. lJtO and 70S;
Idahoma 1.016 and 372; and Tex-
k SJBSI and 1.000.
BOOK MATCHSI UNDEB
Hg4PCMfabMi prices at
hklHta^k^nuitehes. frae ^froa ad-
ebooks. may ba sold at manu/aa-
triag and retail levels are estah*
under price central la April, ad-
vanced 71 par seat la price la
the preceding twe years. , . «
U. 8. wine industry Is being sat
up to produce IS million panada
af cream af tartar from residue
in wine teaks. . , . City families,
says tba Department af Agrieul-
Bm^jhould put up 41 Jan af
aon-farm fimiliri
I ■■Ilk I HU V
Mrs. Colton’s voice was frigid.
"I don't aaa that a party has any
cer.naetion with pevtottnfc. Pao-
lo this town are going to remem-
ber this one as long as they live."
. Ob Ba Canttnuad)
Gotta permit.
■ •.. BB
O^gMh jkf*
♦ kgs j 4
i
□L-j wfia
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 287, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 30, 1942, newspaper, July 30, 1942; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1097079/m1/4/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.