Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 179, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 12, 1942 Page: 5 of 12
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V
PAGE FI VP.
BROWNWWOOD (Texas) BULLETIN; SUNDAY, APRIL 12, 1942
uatad tram Texas A. * M College
la ms.
Blacki# Charred of Belton la a
mi journalism graduate of How-
ard Payne college, where he edg-
ed the Yellow Jacket and won the
title of Senior Favorite He ha*
been a staff writer on the Temple
Telegram alnce leaving Howard
Payne
Havina. son of Dr and Mr* T.
R Havina. 1708 Eleventh street,
attended Brownwood High school
and is a 1938 graduate of Howard
Payne college, where he edited the
occupied countries, too. and severe
penalties they wera decreeing for
saboteurs and guerrillas Indicated
the underground armies were be-
ginning to revolt.
Future Homemakers'
Gub toPresent
Musical Tuesday
(CONTINUED PROM PAGE ONE)
Texas. Is as proud of them as
though each was his own son.
"They did a darned good job,*'
he told me
1 Every one has seen action and
plenty of it in the Allied Air of-
fensive off northern Australia,
which already has blunted the
spearhead threatening Australia
_____ The Thursday attack on Rabaul
American cigarets sold for 110 directed by Lieut. Col Mil-
a carton "when you could get them," R Haxkin of Harper, Kans.,
he uid. a 83-vear-old bombardier He was
The lot of thoae on Bataan was aided by seasoned Australian pilots
bad enough but I understand it intimately acquainted with 4he
was even worse for those captured nests of islands
McNamee said. "We The Australians steered the
men's Missionary Union
Sixteen will hold a two-
•t the First Baptist
•atlay and Wednesday
WASHINGTON, April 11 (UP»—I
lv^Jr* for "extz^ordtnsrv achieve- 1 Re**rVf OUUxn Training school at
mimrin0* "2? ,E"" ^
era from Honolulu to the Philip- B€na- ina
pine* last fall. Three others from this ares will
All were members of the Army Air *he 8° to Notre Dame, where they
Forces, except Capt Donald D. **U attend a 30-dav indoctrination
Fllcklnger, of Long Beach. Calif I «hool They are Dick Hanna Roy
who is a medical officer. In addl- Morrison snd Blackle Sherrod
tlon to Captain Kelly, whoae home After the 30-day period at South
o£*th? blSi’ iE °ThJv B*nd* lh* four wU1 g0 elther t0
on the list have bwi killed. Th*y Northwestern university or will
board the U 8 S Prairie Stale
' Rfooklyn, N._T., » member ln Hudson River New York
LtMM* L "cannon 8 SCHERT 8l,te for lhree months of miship-
JAMEH L CANNON, »CH*RT, man trainmg. follow 1ng which thev
TEXAS, and William C. Jones „lU ^ cot^liaiiont6 as ensigns in
4 .. the Naval Reserve
medals praised tha * skillful airman- i
fl .nH tH 1 Hanna U a son of Mr snd Mrs
.h?^i-htdwhS ‘ R T Hanns. 2011 Vincent street,
in making the flight which t™-! Brownwood He
1 me program theme is "Oh send
out Thy light and Thy truth "
imis is the thirty-third annual
meeting. Officers from Brownwood
kr* Charles BlveDs. president.
»ho is completing twenty-five
>aar» of service; Mrs Herman Bet-
'*«*. corresponding secretary and
treasurer. Mrs T J. McCaughan
t^ooetiing secretary; Mrs Karl H
•Joore, young peoples' secretary
The vice-president for Bros n
2*inty u Mrs. L. L. Evanc
Wbwueuod members of standing
ooxkNilttees are Mrs W G Den-
S>A Mission study; Mrs Z T
IMP, Education, and Mrs Adelia
Me*Up, Historian
meeting of the executive
I will be held at 3 T. m
April 14 The conference
■VkTueeday following the board
Yellow Jacket for a year and a
half. At the time of his enlistment
In the Naval Reserve he was a sen-
| lor ln Mining engineering at Texas
i College of Mines
Hsvlns will be in training for an
engineering officer, while the other
three will be In training for deck
officers
t ICO
gates
mov-
pight
pior,-
>srd-
■ IV v vn«# by the Japs," McNamee said. “We) The Australians
(CONTINUED PROM PAGE ONE) heard unofficially that they gave Americans directly to their targets.
the prisoners in Manila only a enabling them to carry out an
Navy announced at Washington A handful of uncooked rice a day. amasingly swift operation, catching
4,000-ton Japanese freighter was j They were try ing to make a good the enemy unawares and getting
torpedoed and probably sunk showing by treating prisoners well away before the Japanese hsd re-
Stnce th« start of the war Ameri- [ ln Manila but the stories of the covered from their surprise
can submarines preying on enemy treatment accorded prisoners else- The eagerness of the Americans
tut v,
kfic-
tour-
i the
Biles Facts
UX BOOK—tolls facts
Recta! Abscess. FUtula
fetal and colon diaor-
related aliments and
iye treatments Thorn -
Philippines the Japanese sent an
Invasion force ashore on the island
of Cebu under the protection of ,
dive-bombers snd the fire of war-
ships and established at least six
bridgeheads, it was acknowledged. 1
In Australia young American,
fliers continued to keep the Jap- i
anese Invasion time-table off sche-
1 dule with terrific bombing attacks j
on Rabaul and Koepang on the Jap-
aneae Invasion Islands" off north-
ern Australia
The men—and the' women nurses
—who fought and worked day and
night against impossible odda on;
,ped across the I
received his A
! B degree in architecture from Rice
Institute, Houston, in 1940 snd s
B S degree in rachltecture in
1941 Hanna is a 193) graduate o!
Brownwood High school He hA
been employed as an architect at
Camp Bowie recently
Roy Morrison of May attended
Howard Payne College and grac-
inrr.v
and
ti the
BM direction of Mrs Karl H f. J. . I4* • j* 4 *
Moore Mrs R D Kinney ot L J s 4 L\|. Y/.T.^W
Broaueuod will give the welcome B » /* »1| • I r • « L
••d Mrs. H. J Starnes of De i I* 4 < >1 > « L • « «j *T
Leon will give the response Miss j J* * 1 r 1 » ♦ f M
Wilma Weeks of China, will give #• »|,4.4J *,'l* * * *l\i
»he address. "Send Out Thy Light"1 I - •*-**f1*
through missions
Wednesday morning at > » * 1 1 l
m . Thomas H. Taylor of Howard \ \
Payne College will give the ad- ^ \ 1
drees. Mrs. Herman Bettis will j A A \ I
speak on .••* the "Light Shineth | t* \ \
Through Our Olfu." Miss Wilms *=& \ \
Weeks will speak on “Let Your \ II \ \ \
Light So Shine " Mrs B A I \ \ \
Copass, president of the Texas W I I 1 \ \
M U . will also address the froup.! UUJJ 1
Wedneeday afternoon at 2 o'clock j Q l Art I \ I
Mrs. R L. Brown. College Sta- OIDU / |
tion. will speak on "I Have Set
Thee to Be a-Light" In the Home-1 An &n Um« fashion favorite, the
land. There will be a pageant, jhirtwaist dress, appears today ln a
Tha Light Shining Through the. 3Unpi^ pattern which every home
Past Twenty-five Years" depict- | dressmaker can follow with ease.
mg the work of the past years Distinctive details are the smooth _________________
There will also be a program | shoulder vokea, the cuff* which can j the '^y ot Bengal their air force
tunes,
Corp,
a»toi /,
l«9tfc
Leroy
*igtv-
Lacic-
selght
Ban-
Bt.
|uuar
Bataan and then
four-mile channel to the compare- j
41 r- ■■ ■ ■ . ■ f n ■ *a MveWv 1
German General
Caught in Net
Of Brazil Spies
Two men pleaded guilty in County
Court Saturday and were assessed
lines of 1100 snd casts each
One man pleaded guilty to
charges of possession of liquor for
purposes of sale
The other man pleaded guilty to
charges of carrying a pistol
| iCONTINUED PROM PAGE ONE)
program still subject to revision.
, embraces in addiiton to new price
1 and wage controls proposals for
increased taxes considerably in ex-
cess of the $7.800 000 000 goal sCt hy
J President Roosevelt in January, si^l
; tightened credit controls designed
to put business more nearly on a
cash basts
Wants Price Ceiling
i George reiterated his belief that
time has come for a general price
; celling In place of the present sys-
i tern of seeking to prevent Increases /BELTON. April 11—iUPi—Prea-
I in the price structure through *e- rher J F McAlister can't set foot
1 lective control on the grounds of the Bartlett
"I think a general price ceiling la school he but recently adminlster-
! essential." he said "I think it must ed
I affect wages, not by s hard and District Judge Wesley Dice to-
fast rule, but along the lines of the da> overruled a motion by Mc-
l Canadian *>stem ahtch will keep Allster that the restraining order
open the possibility of readjustment forbidding him to go on the prem-
lf there Is a big increase in living lses of the school be set aside
costs. Dice issued a temporary tnjunc-
"I am also firmly of the con vie- **on °f bis oin which forbid Me-
, tion that we must induce savings Abater-to Interfere with affairs of
through the purchase of govern- 'be school The former supertntend-
ment bonds and it is very proper . *nt gave notice that he wiU appeal
that we face the problem of com- ; to 'be Third Court of Civil Ap-
pulaorv savings" pesls st Austin
Ooorge said he preferred to try ! McAlister, who was superintendent
out the voluntary savings plan first the school until dismissed by the
in the 1942 tax bill but conceded trustees recently, doublet as a mln-
the compulsory system might be- Wer on the s^ As superintend-
come necessary He outlined hi* *nt the school he required at-
'.oluntarv proposal as follows tendance of students snd teachers
A corporation would be permitted by religious senices. the
to allot up to 20 per cent of Its in- . .
come to the purchase of govern- i^hen the students and teachers
mem bonds and take a tax rredi* ““ ln“*
for that amount The bor.ds would '™t*T** * d«h»rge »UP*
: Im rano i A in t n cl • l Iwsan t • a f tap I be f nnl/Huf II
-fUP)
Ighter
Jnerl-
9 off
dship
« her
k»ed.
col-
Cked-
ene«
RIO DE JANERIO AprU 11—J
<UP* —Genera] Otto Busch of the
German army who was Involved in |
the abortive pro-Nao plot to over-
throw the government In Bolivia:
last July, was arrested today on a:
charge of espionage and held in-
communicado
Authorities said that Busch came
to Brazil after the Bolivian plot
had been uncovered through a let-'
ter from German Minister Ernst1
Wendler to Major Ellas Belmonte j
Bolivian military attache in Berlin.!
which fell into allied hands
Belmonte was ousted from the
Bolivian army and Wendler was ex -,
pelled from Bolivia.
Brazilian police continued to
round up other alleged German es-
pionage agents with the arrest of
15 Germans In the city of Burl who
were said to have been watching a
strategic road leading to southern
Brazil
Among those arrested were Theo-
dore Bohl described as Nazi espi-
onage chief of the region, and Karl
Boh me. operator of a clandestine
radio transmitter
The men were reoprted using a
portrait of Prime Minister Wins-
ton Churchill as a shooting target.)
Nther
they
cmng
that
three
while
nun-
S«« oui
Mssh —
show snd
"Ws cut
dsr. WiH<
rheae smart leisure thorn take the V
for you. Soke of thick, resilient, \
rubber Or of Cock ... add vigor fl
make wa&ing pillow-soft. Work in
in them . . they U be your comforts!
iooj for your ’'dara-rf-i-Cart"
G«h Flood of Advics on
How to Spond L«st Days
MEMPHIS. Tenn UP'—When
a.ce« might he five per cent George { w L WlneeU was Informed by phy-
'liggrsted with a total yield of M - 1 sicians that he had only a few
000 000 000 a yea: He said there months to live, he began to plan
would not be the same tax reliev- how to spend his last day's of life
mg inducement in this case for in- I The story reached the newspapers
dividual taxpayers in the lower and now Wtnaetl has another wor-
orackets ry
which they did.
207 Csnttr
This he said would Induce cor-
porations to invest in.bond, to es-
cape the high lax rates of war tune
In the case of individuals, the
percentage allotted to bond purch-
Dwmonstratmg Anthony's Erory Day
Low Prko Policy on Quality Merchandise
UVf OOOktNO
TWi A NO PUW
SAvtiNsroeef#
LiFTOVfK root
SAVE IN St
AHDDtSUV*
GET THESE IH0DERW/5LASS UTENSILS
See Thb$e and Hundreds Myeia
Oar Wind* ws aad Stara Teanrre wi
6ni for now ond oW
Anthony's art domon-
These jrwm or*
dote ond godding—hnor
nost 4 98 con buy ino dn
Values under ony condd
( V hundreds meet mk
Drew for street, busineW <
summer wear They're the\ar
stating our obility to deliver'
sketched from stock. There
mu Ma n
PAM. It s aA
all 9 sizes. W
toms. Easy-po<
You ega see
cook! 1 qt. size
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 179, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 12, 1942, newspaper, April 12, 1942; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1101620/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.