Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 133, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 25, 1942 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOUR
1
Editonal Comment, Features and Fiction
Published
Entered at the Post
matter.
^ "Premier of Norway" Goes for a Walk
Any erroneous
person, firm, or
Brownwood Bulletin will to t^jnT
the attention of “
Brown County, by mall *4-78
per month.
Texas, outside county, New
month; six months, 14.00; one year, $7JO.
45c minimum fge first tneertkm of IS
half cent per word each
for each
of U*e
NATIONAL
RALPH R. MULLIOAN, 441 Laslnftou Asa, Maw Tort, N. T.
c j. ANDERSON, IS B. Waokar Mn, Qricago, DL
NO OVERTIME PAY ON BATAAN
How many hours a weak do the boys on Bataan work?
If the Japs attack on Sunday do you thing tha America#!
troops demand double time tor overtime?
Maybe some of MacArthuf's men don't like one of hil
sergeants. Do you believe they pull the trigger fewer
times per hour because of that peeve?
The answers come quick and easy. Do they come, thje
same way in the battle of Detroit? On that vital productidn
front we have recently witnessed these sickening spectacles;
A greet squabble about double time for Sunday work, h
Several slowdowns in a bomber pgrts plant becauS#
j some of the men got sore at one of their fellow workers, j;
When will we Americans awake to the tragic absurdity
of the 40-hour week in wartime? Will we awake after the
war is lost, when, as in France today, men will labor untold
hours for a pittance that amounts to slavery under a foreign
master?
Many peacetime proponents of the short work week aijft
now its loudist critics. War changes many things, arid thill,
they rightly maintain, is one of them.
When*' Congress voted the wage-hour law, the nation
understood that one of its aims was a limitation on hourji,
to spread employment. The goel now is to get more—ndt
less—work from every American.
It may be contended that tha 40^hour weak is no restric-
tion, that all an employer has to do is to tefl the men to woriii
say, 48 hours—apd pay'them time-and-eAalf for the exttd
eight hours.
This 50 per cent pay increase adds to the manufacturing
cost. It means a bigger war bill which the public—all of us—
has to pay. And this in the hou' of peril when we are all be-
ing told that we must sacrifice.
The government urges the employer to work longer
hours as a patrotic contribution, then insists thaA he pay a $0
per cent penalty on overtime.
How do American workers feel about it? This much js
certain: No truly American worker would quibble abojit
time-and-a-half if he knew his extra hours might help even
ud the battlei on Bataan.
The work week is between 55 and 60 hou't in Grodt
Bri*a:n. It is between 60 and 70 hours in Germany.
TK; Is war. Every American must work as many hou-s as
co^Diatlc e with maximum efficiency. He should bn paid fbr
every hour, at his regular pay rate. The 40-hour we*k c yf-
f me penalties—like excessive profits—are holding back the
wa- effort, For the duration, they must go! ;;
DEATH BY BANISHMENT ~ ] ]~
Because ind:scriminate shootings of civilians caused pro-
found uneasiness among Frenchmen .the German army jpf
occuDaricn has devised a rew techniaue. I* exiles Frenqfi-
~en by hurfl'-eds *o eastern Europe. There? of cou-se, mqfct
cf trem will die, but Heir deaths will be inconspicuous afro
ess like'y to invite recrisa:$
cea*H against a wall.
Tb.'s is a truly satanic technique. Of course no one p
a-y attention to the German allegation that all those w
commit acts against the Germans are "Jews and Comrriu-
rist’S." It that were true, so much the worst for Gentiles ahd
demccrats.- But it is not true. Jews and Communists are not
ft*e o" y oatriots of France.
Summary for Week of War and
Business Presented By U. S. OEM
By Office far
MmrttMRl
Trend*: Increasing watrhfulnses
by the WPB over all less-essential
ums. no matter how snail, of criti-
cal materials. Example of thii to the
order tomied laet week curtailing the
amount* of metal, rubber, plastics,
neoprene and cork which may be
need by manufacturer* of musical
Instrument*.
Conversion, and still more and
faster conversion, was the burden of
an address by WPB Chairman Don-
ald M Nelson to a conversion con-
ference of business paper editors
and publishers. “Industry Itself
must find the w*y to do the Job. It
must not make the mistake of rely-
tn« on government to do It, because
we In Washington can't possibly do
more than part of It. Industry’s re-
sponsibility is great The Job will
take brains and Initiative, but ws
ton do It If we stop thinking about
what we’re going to do to the enemy
in 1943, and start thinking about
what we're going to do to him In
February and March of 1942,” Mr.
Keiaon said,
idwstry Conversion
Programs for Industry-wide con-
version to war production have been
Inaugurated In five different types
of manufacturing enterpfse—auto-
mobile, typewriter, washing ma-
chine. refrigerator, and radio.
Authorised expenditures for war.
Including foreign orders, from the
beginning of the defense effort
ere, and receivers of sugar again had
It called to their attention that be-
fore March 1 they must elect
whether to purchase from a primary
or secondary distributor. After that
date they will net to permitted to
accept deliveries from both second-
ary and primary source*^
The Inventory and Requisitioning
Section of WPB will shortly launch
intensive studies designed to bring
to light all Idle stocks of critically
needed scarce materials, including
seal-proctotod metals and finished
parts, which have become useless
to their owner* because of the terms
of various limitation* and conserva-
tion order*, such as those prohibit-
ing common use*
and aluminum.
tion Order M-94).
Restrictions on deliveries of tung
oil to remain in effect until April
19 (Oeneral Preference Order M-
67).
Limitations on use of cellophane
extended to March 17 (Limitation
Order L-20).
Restrictions Imposed by rubber or-
der on unvulcanised scrap rubber
compounds lifted (Amendment 4,
Supplementary Order M-li-b).
Textiles
Burlap order relaxed to permit
bagging of wool, seed potatoes, and
peanut seed
Oil mills and cotton gins In Texas,
Arizona and New Mexico prohibited
from selling or using 8XP cotton
seed until representative of Depart-
ment of Agriculture has Inspected
seed to ascertain suitability for
planting (Oeneral Preference Order
M-W).
Experts
Applications for export licenses
will be rejected if quoted price* are
of copper | above OPA export price sellings
Where prices are uncontrolled by
through February II. plus requests | Amendment 1 to limitation Order
Preferene* Rating Order P-109 j *ny^)PA schedule, applications may
wa* Issued to replace twelve orders *“
that previously apptlad to the air-
craft Industry. It assigns a rating of
A-l-a to material* entering Into th»
production of direct military alrcaft
requirement*.
Afmsbtles
Manufacturer*, dealers, distribu-
tor*. finance companies ordered to
furnish all information on trucks
and trailers called for by designated
form*. (Supplementary Limitation
Order L-l-d).
Definition of light trucks altered
form those having rated capacity of
less than 14 tons to those having
gross vehicle weight rating of lest
than 1,003 pounds. (Amendment 2.
Prefers jee Rating Order P-57.
In Washington
B> TETIR ED^ON
Ballet in >Xi«hln(*r>n Cwrrespen. *nt
WASHINGTON. Feb 29-A big
“Spring Production Drive" Is to be
itunc'.rd spen by Donald M Nel-
son’s 1942 mo!*: stresmllned War
Production BcwtcJ
Coming, too, i< NrLcn't first
' Production Ccmmur.ique" which
»ill >ho» jin-t how much progress
ha.s been made in arming the coun-
*rv The report will nor tell now
many planes and tanks and guns
nouneed his reorganisation That
isn't touch time to which to con-
vert the country’s economic* from
defeitoe to offense, but It Is passible
even now to point out definite
WPW accomplishments
1 Moat tangible is the fact thst
five m* 'or Industrie* are being con-
j verted from civilian to war produc-
tion—automobiles, radios, refnger-
! ston, typewriter* and washing ma-
chines. The program la the auto
industry calls for complete conver-
sion and civilian production her*
has been stopped. Severe limitations
have beep put on civilian produc-
tion In /all the others, and WPB
Is wcrkLyg with War Department 1
to as'ict^there Industries definite!
war produc,.ui task.? In reiriacr-
atorv r.nd :a >o*. dates have been
m frr com; rr’e conversion in April.1
1 2 Nclzor. hay rompletru his
organ.zktien d ’be o!d of*M and
ha* Miown that the new WPB to not
just a shift of names with the same
old faces running the show under
f.c* billing Tiu.e is a different
attitude and a new approach to the
war production juo. Tins is perhaps
intangible, but u can be pointed
out tha: under the old OPM or-
ganisation the br.ua hat* were al-
ways trv'tng to alrht Inability to get
anything done betau** then organ-
awarded the contract to the Henry
J Kaiser Interest*. The contract
wa* cleared through the Defense
Plant corporation Its 44 hours, a
record that beat past performancto
not by days, but by weeks Con-
tracts for a new steel mill to use
this pig Iron are hot on the heel*
of the blast furnace job That i*
typical, it marks a definite break
with the cld Idea tnat present »teel
production capacity is adequate.
4 Nelson gels dally' progress re-
port* submitted to him every mom-
mg. If he sees schedules ere not
being maintained, a call goes to
the division head to make a per-
sonal investigation and report Top
men are kept jumping around the
country taking corks out of bottle-
r.rr<*.
9 WPB'* P anning d •• I'icn has
| Ju-t beer oryanued ahh young
tf' Robert Nathan as chairman. The
ulv.. u,n i—, not hail time to show
iu stuff, but It U apparently to be
more than a mere brain trust, gaz-
ing into the future It 1* the in-
tention to give this three-man com-
mittee specific prcalrms of war pro-
duction to think through and solve.
6 Nelson’s recent action In giv-
ing aircraft production A-l a prior*
itle* rating along with tank.* ord-
nance and shipping, slide hcMg-
far war purposes now before Con-
gress.'total an estimated 149 billion.
404 million dollars, according to the
Division of Statistics of the WPB.
The money will go for muni ions,
implements of war. and equipment
used In the field by the Army end
the Navy, sueh as ordnance, planes,
val and merchant vessels, and
Corps requirement*; con-
struction of Industrial faculties.
housing, post*, depots
and station*; ths pay and subsist-
ence of the armed force*, civilian
dofenae. and administrative | ex-
L-J. Amendment 2
Order L-4).
Use of Madagascar flake graphite
confined to manufacture of cruci-
bles for the war program (Conser-
vation Order M-41)
Unused track-toying tractors and
auxiliary equipment froaen in the
possession of manufacturer*. dis-
tributors and dealers (Limitation
Order L-53).
FrUrHiea
The WPB took over control of the
entire 1442 raw cane sugar supply.
By the terms of Oeneral Preference
Order M-M. only refiners and man-
ufacturers may buy. import, or ac-
cept delivery of raw sugar during
the year, and may not do this In
excess of quanUtie* allotted by the
board. Allotments of raw sugar to
each refinery, for the period from
January 1 to Aeptamtor 40. 1442.
were announced
“Reminders'* of certain details of
the *u*ar controls were issued dur-
ing the week Wholesalers were told
that they must distribute their sup-
plies equitably among their custom- for civilian m* (
Aluminum producers ordered to
file shipping schedules for each
month by 14th of preceding month,
and to tell stocks of aluminum in
excess of immediate needs mi cer-
tification by buyer that It win be
used to fill rated orders for essen-
tial items (Supplementary Order
M-l-f).
•hot end bullet core steel to go
under allocation control March 1
(Supplementary Order M-21-f)
All automobile graveyards being
listed by Bureau of Industrial Con-
servation. with view to make scrap
available to steel mills and foun-
dries.
Shearings (sheep skins) not meet-
ing military epeaiflcatlon released
be rejected if quoted pneee seem
unreasonable In relation to current
markrt quotation* Appeals In the
first instance should to directed to
OPA. in the eeoond to Office of Ex-
port Control.
Various electrical utensils and ap-
paratus. rubber tires and tubes, may
no longer be exported to British
Empire destinations under British
Purchasing Commission unlimited
license. Netherlands unlimited li-
cense to Curacao. Surinam and N.
E. I. amended to include rayon yarn
and fiber, certain other synthetic
textiles, wool yarn*, bullet-proof
and optical glass products, field
glasses.
Rationing
Following up announcement of its
rationing plan for retreaded tires.
Limitation i OPA began the wort by disclosing
the state quotas of fires and tube*
thst will be parcelled oat during the
current month. Total of 40,744 new
tires and 47,11* new tubes wa be
rationed to eligible rswngir ears
this month, while trucks, busses and
other vehicles will get 144431 new
tire* and 247J42 new tubes, along
with 84.906 retreaded Urea. The re-
tread rationing plan ttaelf went into
effect at midnight on Pbbruary it,
although Issuance of eerfifleates for
retreaded truck fires was delayed
until February 21.
On the sugar front, OFA asked
all hoarders to share their supplies
with their neighbors or to sell their
excess back to their grocers.
Fries*
The week passed without any for-
mal action by OPA under the new
Emergency Price Control Lew How-
ever. Mr Henderson let It be 1
that celling SOOT
women's rayon
sharph-worded telegram, asked for
immediate cancellation of recent In-
crease* in prices of radio receiving
set* and radio phonographs.
Three Industry conferences were
held during the week to discuss
maximum prices for naptholen*;
creoaoto. ereslylc adds and rylends,
and creosote and pitch.
uontroi Law How-
raon let It be known
. iff-
irOrr' O*’"0' Frgnchm^ t”8n I havp 1^ manufactured but by a
" inapx i.^moert cased ~
T
vho
YALE SHOWS THE WAY i;
"raaltron Fas it that eHy-day students at Ya'e Unlvfct-
: *y c'coced wood, deared brush and wo'ced in the fields
drou-c New Haven rree+ expenses and make the place
e -e'y b’“ aHroctive as say, that school at Cambridge
Maf?s. *;
Vve *-c sc~s of E*l will soon be doing it again. Presi-
aen* Seymour of that venerable institution reveals Ya'e yrill
-equtre a < students to take physical training to equ’p them
r sewice in the armed forces. Of course there will be
baseball swimming, tennis and other familiar sports, but
after weeing up a good sweat at such "sissy" pastirfiBs
■‘nese fallows will ba put to chopping wood, digging ditch#*,
sawing wood and other "quiclc*Hanry-tha»arnica" activities.
Sure, we're soft, mentally and physically, so it’s good to
see Yale lead out in a campaign to make flabby muscles.'as
unpatriotic as warbling the "Horst Wessel" song at a de-
fense bond rally. r.
*rir» of mavx r.unibcrt Dated on
the war production for December.
1941. which will be put at 100, the
percentage of Increase In war pro-
duction will be indicated The idea,
of course, to to tell the general pub-
lic Just what is being done with-
out revealing detailed military pro-
duction *ecret*. >]
Thto «print production drive, cou-
izaflon faulty or because thev ! n*tw1 M * purely orgardkatlonal
didr t have the authority to do) in®tlcr to mnme a psychological
the job or became too many dl-! barrier fo: aircraft procurement
vision* ma;r'ri or didn't know their
responsibility Nelson ha* changed
all that He has given, the outfit a
different tone, pepped' it up, bn
proved morale The word he pass
e* on to his principal
now u that if the orgaatoatloa _
sour from here on. no one to to to
blamed but the WPB bosses them-
selves
pled |wlth the first production re- ] Procedure has been
1 pot’- *‘nce Pearl Harbor, will give and this has been passed on t4 oth-
the real lndicstton of how effective ,er agendea cf the government eo-
Nelson’* cne-man rontjrol and re- ! operating with the WPB Jmt re-
iponsibtllty for admlni--nation of cently. Nelson decided to put In a
war production ha* been going It
to Just a month since Nelson an-
new 1,200-tcn blast furnace fer pig
iron production on the west coast,
Hold Everything—
SAY IT ISN'T SO
Just as trough wb didn't hav# enough worries, aloing
comes a bad blow at the solar plexus of our morale. We ob-
ject. We protest. We cry out tor relief. In fact, we are y#!l-
irg our heads off about thii;
Frankie Baker, of the famed "Franki# and Johnny" taatn,
tastifying in a St., Louii court that the shot har unfaitHfol
lover with a "small.caliber pistol.’' not th« .44 of long, r
Next thay will b« telling us that Stave Brodie didn’t julep
eff Brooklyn Bridge, that Mrs. O'Leary's cow didn't start fha
CHcego fra, and that Adolf Schicldgruber wasn't Vienda'i
worst paperhanger,
• THOUGHT FOR YODAY
There the wicked cca«c from ♦rnnhiing; ud there the wtery bft *<
Li
never
beet ner Milews reer.—Cewper.
MI don’t wanna see a atuffed elenhant-J wanna aee
of • tbaee^atuffedc shirts oivdaddjtoUUks about L"
men, m reality the first ntcp
of a much broader revision of the
whole system of top rating* on ms-
Uriel* priorities Production *ched
ulee, la other word*, are bring com*
Ptotely recelcutoted to bring deliv-
eries schedules on raw material* in
to line with military requirement*
on finished ptoBuct* for war
7 William* 1/ Batt* Materials
division will Men have new figure*
on the over-40 requirement* and
production of gJtagtean and
neslum These will be the finMC'a
completely new erttoe at eettr '
on the ultimate iBtoMBrt tor rawi
piu«. 120.000 Irak, uuoo
•ck guns and M on. to tEfaeat two
years. Tf
When the* new * requirements
figure* are set, h will mart the first
time that anyone will have had any
definite idea at what 14-14 foCg
U take to ou-----
via thto war
Navy.
tag from darlo _
Now. !
where the
fotng to
That to
eomplishawnt to data
T LOVE YOU*
CHAPTER XIII
'THEY spoke of many things—of
A his work, what they read, what
they thought about. The rain came
heavily and went away, leaving a
perriitent. protestant dripping
from the eve* It wa* much later
when P * it Is mid. "M*yto I better
go now- "
"Wait a little." She kissed hit
check
“I love you. Caseto.’*
**No you don't, Parris. But than
all right."
“Ll*ten now. Casei*.
“All right, what?"
"Someday I want you to marry
me.”
"Oh, Parri*, there isn’t any an-
swer for that—now
“But why?”
“Because you don't really want
to.”
“I mean It! How do you know
’what I think? I've got to study
and be a doctor and it will be a
'jmt time-"
prBhe ndothered the rest
Parris laughed a little. Whet a
wonderful friend Drake McHugh
west He understood you ee well
He thought of Caeeie. An image
of her floated into hto waning
oonadouaneee and her presence in
hto mind flooded his nerves with
a taint excitement
Parris didn't answer. Hto tape
were quivering.
"Did you ever hear Of Dr. Ladd
in St Louis?"
“Yes, sir."
"Do you think you could in any
way persuade Madam* von Eln to
go to St. Louis to consult him?”
DAVID PROVED flLINOBROT
WAg DANGEROUS WEAPON
DETROIT—(UP)—Lloyd Lowe,
M. organiser for an AFL restaurant
workan* local, wee arraigned to>
foro Recorders’ Judge Christopher
B. Bteia on a charge at carrying a
darwerou* weapon
your honor," pleaded Lowe,
for breaking a window
durtog * recent Jurisdictional fight
“» slingshot isn't a dangerous weap-
on."
“Uni itr the Judge parried. “I
refer you to Samuel: 1-17—you
know. David and Ooitath."
The oourt oonvloted Lowe
Contrary to
Roman
togent, Nbro,
®ould not hav*
^fanlonee with h4r hand.
Pferi* <
of the
opened the door and shiv
ered when the drenched night air
struck hto flushed face.
“Listen, Cassis, I've got to see
you."
“Maybe. Maybe I can think of
a way. But you'd totter go now
Harris, sure enough. It f*4!s late."
“Listen!” The deep bell of the
town dock struck slowly—dour
k “Wham you do?"
* “I’m going over to Drak* Mc-
Hugh's. Then I’ll aay I was with
him all night"
“Maybe I love you—I don't
THt thinning clouds were turn*
x log pink overhead when he
knocked at the side door of the
Livingstone house.
“Say! Who's out there?" Parris
thought Drake sounded Just a lit-
tle frightened.
“It's me, Drake. Parris.”
«SS5 AJU? 45
era you doing around bare this
Bate of night?"
“I*ve been at Dr
"Thto lata?" Dra
becauae that instrument had not
“Ho*s in ft Louis. I went by for
my books. Caari* and X started
talking—" ha broke off "She’a
beautiful, Drake."
*T>on,t X know Itt"
JStS^Jsis?*;
teoff tbit wot coat AM It Dr.
Tbwer flags out you>* fallen flar
bw, even pneumonia won't save
The color faded slowly from
CPRINQ in King* Row ws* never P*rr‘»\.T»ee. his eyes darkened,
^ —--------- brief prelude to “nd word* r'mr*- «
more then a
summer. The leaves unfolded end
there was a week or two of balmy
warmth, then a sudden onslaught
of blistering heat The Idlers who
hung about stoves in the back
quartan of stores came out and
took their accustomed places on
the courthouse lawn.
On the west porch of the court-
house was another group. This was
the upper order. They were wit-
ness, Jury, and Judge of any hap-
penings in the town or county.
“Say, I hear old man Tod Irving
down at Little Port passed on."
A new speaker interrupted. “I
guess you all ain't heard the news
about Mis' Sims."
"She was operated on by Dr.
Gordon last week."
“Is thst so? What for?"
“I don’t know exactly. Some-
thing about her ear, I heard."
“Ob."
"Well, I hear the operation went
through all right, but they say
half her face to paralysed."
"Does seem to me, though, thto
Gordon does a powerful lot of
operatin'."
• • •
T)1L TOWER handed a mail
^ German pamphlet to Parris.
This may Interest you. It is new
—and important”
Dr. Tower watched Parris
keenly.
“I saw your grandmother yes-
terday”
Parris looked up, somewhat
startled.
"Yea, sir?"
“I hope you wont misunder-
stand my question, but have you
any Idea what's wrong?"
Parrie laid the book down. "No,
I haven't really. I believe well,
sir, I Just hadn't thought It could
be anything serioua.”
"tha docent look welL"
The peculiar enmhaeto thto time
frightened Parris. "Do you
really
to something—’
Dr. Tower Interrupted brueque-
y. "I don’t think anything about
It. I’m not your grandmother's
pturslcian.”
Parris flushed darkly.
"Hav# you any
•Hen# at all. Only
it ones—that my
laean't like much.'
TTm. You’ll be quite
*nd hfi words cam* huskily. *<
don t know how I could do it
She’d want to know what mad#
me think of it."
“Yes, yes. Doubtless. Is Skef-
fington her lawyer?"
"Yes. sir.”
"Could you talk to him?"
"Maybe. Or could you?"
“No.” The reply was curt.
Parris shrank sensitively from
the cutting tone. “I guess I’m be-
ing kind of awkward this after-
noon, sir, but, gee, Dr. Tower,
I—I’ve been scared all this win-
ter. I didn't know why. It wa*
Just—just instinctive "
“H*m, yes. I see. 1 think you're
going to be a good doctor, Pams. ’
“lent Ito. Gordon a good doc-
tor?"
Dr. Tower looked steadily *t
Parn# fer a moment "Not a very
tactful question, young man, nor
a very ethical on* for a young
doctor-to-b* to art." He muled,
and Parri* smiled, too, rather
wanly.
“You trust my Judgment do
you?”
"Oh, absolutely. I know you
know.”
Dr. Tower colored a little,
very little. Parris stared.
“I’m curious to know why you
think so.”
"Well, sir, there are some things
you Just know."
"Instinct?"
“Yes, sir. I gu«
moved forward in his chair. He
forgot the distant formality ths
usually characterized his
with Dr. Tower. “You
that little book of FriedtoadV
that you had me read last
He said a lot about
observations and how wa
tknas add up a long sum e<
kind of observations sad eon
conclusion* thst ara
without knowing bow we m
“Yes.”
“Well," Parris tonOod franki'
“it’s like that."
Dr. Tower looked grave. "Wei
keep your mind open. You’re gc
ing to see and leant a lot of na
thing* in your life. We're on th
brink—tha very brink of taxpci
tant dissever lea. Sometimes it
tuitions ota a good corrective u
■stigma tlnns of bum^
44
A.l
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 133, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 25, 1942, newspaper, February 25, 1942; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1101755/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.