The Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 19, 1945 Page: 2 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 23 x 17 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
SHINER GAZETTE, SHINER, TEXAS
-WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
Russ Break With Japs Changes
Entire War Picture in Pacific;
Ike Predicts Guerrilla Warfare
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
(EDITOR’S NOTE: When opinions are expressed in these columns, they are those ot
Western Newspaper Union’s news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.)
TREATY:
Russ Break With Japs
When Foreign Commissar Vyache-
slav Molotov curtly handed the Jap
.ambassador a note denouncing Rus-
sia’s neutrality pact with Japan, the
question of the Soviet government’s
future course with Nippon became a
.matter of high importance in United
Nations’ chancelleries.
Speculation about Marshal Stalin’s
intentions was heightened in view of
the close imminence of the world
security conference in San Fran-
MARSHAL STALIN
More trouble for Japan.
Cisco. Two facts, however, were
clear for the record. The treaty or-
dinarily would have run until April,
1946, yet Russia decided to void it
summarily. Marshal Stalin publicly
described Japan as an “aggressor
nation.”
The Russian government, more-
over, accused Tokyo of helping the
Nazis.
“Germany,” the note recalled,
“attacked the U.S.S.R. Japan—Ger-
many’s ally—has helped the latter
in her war against the U.S.S.R.”
Observers were agreed that Rus-
sia’s action meant a closer working
cooperation between Russia and her
allies. How soon that meant an open
declaration of war by the Reds on
Japan, time would tell.
Even as the bad news came
from Russia the Japs got an-
other rude reminder that the
payoff of aggression was ap-
proaching when it was an-
nounced from Washington that
General of the Army Douglas
MacArthur had been chosen to
lead all American army forces
in the Pacific and Fleet Admiral
Chester W. Nimitz had been se-
lected to lead the naval forces
in the final drive on the Japa-
nese homeland.
General of the Army Henry H.
Arnold will command the 20th
(Superforts) Air force and will
be in charge of all other aerial
action in the sector. The chiefs
of staff will continue to direct
the overall strategy and will
give specific responsibility to
MacArthur or Nimitz for partic-
ular operations in the Pacific.
This extension of operational
territory for the two leaders who
have been carrying the war to
Japan’s doorstep indicated that
the “island hopping” phase of
! the campaign was over and a
new strategy involving a direct
assault on the Jap homeland was
imminent.
JAP CABINET:
More Woe Ahead
A steadily heavier burden of
^_4rpuble was to be the fate of the
new Suzuki cabinet in Japan. That
was unmistakably forecast in the
fall of its predecessor—the Koiso
cabinet.
Two major events had contributed
to the Japanese government crisis.
One was the successful progress of
the American military advance on
Okinawa island, only 330 —miles
from the Jap mainland. The other
was Soviet Russia’s action in de-
nouncing the neutrality treaty with
Japan that still had a year to run.
Ushered in as a rallying foi'ce
against the Allied march toward
Tokyo, after the infamous Tojo gov-
ernment had failed, the cabinet of
Premier Gen. Kuniaki Koiso had en-
countered disaster after disaster in
its eight and a half months of exist-
ence.
How long the new cabinet of 77-
year-old. Adm. Baron Kantaro Suzuki
would last was open to speculation.
Japs as well as Americans
one thing for certain. The final
a of Nippon was approaching.
OKINAWA:
Timetable’s Ahead
As military observers had expect-
ed, Japanese resistance on Okina-
wa had stiffened after U. S. army
troops had cut the island in two.
With the strategic airfields of the
capital city of Naha as the prize, the
24th army corps and the 7th divi-
sion fought fiercely against well-or-
ganized Jap units defending the
southern areas of Okinawa. Marine
3rd amphibious forces continued ex-
tension of their northern lines.
Observers were of the belief that
bitter battles would have to be
fought and won before the southern
portions of the island could be won.
In this area it was estimated that
between 60,000 and 80,000 enemy
troops were concentrated. Never-
theless, Maj. Gen. Roy S. Geiger,
marine commander, said the time-
table was well ahead of schedule.
WORLD TRADE:
A War Preventive
A significant prelude to the world
security conference in San Fran-
cisco was Secretary of State Stet-
tinius’ address in Chicago outlining
plans for wider world markets in
which the industrial output of the
United States would match other na-
tions’ needs.
Addressing the council on foreign
relations, gray - thatched Stettinius
declared the United States would
exert its full power to call a world
conference of leading trading coun-
tries to stimulate international eco-
nomic Well-being. The secretary of
state said:
“Our objective in all our rela-
tions with other nations is to prevent
aggression abroad from again dis-
SECRETARY STETTINIUS
A Formula for peace.
turbing the peace of the United
States and to develop those condi-
tions of international life that will
make it possible to maintain high
levels of productive employment
and farm income and steadily rising
standards of living for all the
American people.”
GUERRILLA WAR:
Forecast in Europe
The statement to President Roose-
velt from General Eisenhower fore-
casting extensive guerrilla warfare
in Europe was being borne out as
Allied armies ground their way
through Germany and her van-
quished satellites.
Unable to form a strong unified
line to combat the Allied smashes
toward Berlin, the Nazis command
depended on a series of “last man”
stands to delay extinction. Undeni-
ably General Eisenhower’s Allied
armies on the west were cutting
Germany to pieces. Yet spots of
resistance remained and each posed
a cleanup problem to the Allies.
The trap in the Ruhr was an exam-
ple of this trend.
Over battlefields once reddened by
the blood of soldiers who fell in the
Napoleonic wars, American and
British divisions smashed in their
drive east to meet the Russians and
to bisect Germany. Far forward
in the vanguard of the race to Ber:
lin were armored units of General
Patton’s 3rd army. Pressing toward
thg strategic North sea ports of
Bremen and Hamburg were the
British forces of Montgomery.
Meanwhile, Lt. Gen. James H.
Doolittle was sowing destruction via
warplanes on the airfields, rail yards
and supply dumps in the Munich
area of southern Germany where it
was reported Hitler was planning
his last stand.
In the east, Russian forces had
continued their pressure on Berlin
and to the south they cleared Hun-
gary of enemy forces, capturing
Bratislava in Slovakia and pouring
across the Danube to Vienna.
IGHLIGHTS • • . in the week’s news
T TREASURES: Hidden in a
tunnel used by German civil-
near the front, priceless art
reasures from France were found
by units of the U. S. 1st army.
Among the art found were works of
Rembrandt, Reubens, Van Gogh and
Van Dyke. In addition there were
500 original scores by Ludwig van
Beethoven, the composer, taken
from his birthplace in Bonn.
SURPLUS GOODS: A pre-sale dis-
play of 1,500,000 items of army sur-
plus property drew 500 dealers to
Philadelphia. Although the general
public was not eligible to bid, war
veterans wishing to obtain stocks
to go into business were allowed to
submit orders. Sales were under the
direction of E. H. Mallory, regional
sales officer for the treasury depart-
ment’s surplus disposal branch.
RECONVERSION:
Postwar Freedom
$ .
J. A. Krug, War Production board
chairman, tempered a warning
that “while Japan fights we will not
enjoy anything like a free econo-
my” with the promise that the gov-
ernment would not attempt to shape
the country’s postwar business
structure.
The WPB chairman made these
disclosures in a statement outlining
the government’s reconversion pro-
gram.
“Our plans do not contemplate
any long-range programming of this
country’s industrial structure,” he
declared. “The wartime controls
were developed with the advice and
counsel of management and labor
in the various industries affected,
and this same advice and counsel is
being sought in considering the
timing of their relaxation and with-
drawal.”
ARGENTINA:
‘Probation’ Ends
Argentina’s probation period as
the bad boy of the western hemi-
sphere drew toward a close as the
state department announced it was
removing its special economic re-
strictions against the South Ameri-
can nation.
The new United States policy will
put Argentina on an equal footing
with the rest of Latin America
when it asks to buy commodities in
this country.
The state department’s move was
regarded as a reward for good con-
duct. Argentina had followed its re-
cent declaration of war against the
Axis by signing the Act of Chapul-
tepec pledging nonaggression in this
hemisphere and had likewise begun
an energetic purge of Nazi spies.
DEBT LIMIT:
Upped 40 Billion
As Americans began assaying
their family bankrolls in prepara-
tion for the forthcoming Seventh
War Loan drive, the White House
announced that President Roosevelt
had approved legislation increasing
the public debt limit from $260,000,-
000,000 to $300,000,000,000.
Fiscal experts believe this $300,-
000,000,000 limit will be reached by
about June 30, 1946.
The present debt in terms of “ma-
turity value”—the basis on which
the statutory limit is set—is about
$243,000,000,000. This means the old
limit of $260,000,000,000 would have
been reached some time during the
Seventh War Loan drive, if that
drive produces anything like the
$21,000,000,000 sales of the Sixth War
loan.
PACIFIC BASES:
U. S. Must Hold
Control of Pacific bases “paid for
with American blood” and the main-
tenance of a large postwar navy
were urged by Fleet Admiral
Ernest J. King, commander of the
U. S. fleet.
Failure to keep these bases now
will mean that this country will
have to fight for them another day,
he declared in an address before the
Academy of Political Science in New
York City.
“Rich as we are, we do not have
the human or physical resources to
ADMIRAL ERNEST KING
“Keep our bases.”
dissipate our patrimony generation
after generation,” he declared in
emphasizing that we cannot afford
to continue a cycle of “fighting and
building and winning and giving
away.”
Postwar jobs:
Baruch Sees Plenty
Postwar America as a land where
jobs will be plentiful was envisioned
by 75-year-old Bernard Baruch, ad-
viser to President Roosevelt, in an
interview published in the army
newspaper Stars and Stripes.
On a mission to London, where
he conferred with Prime Minister
Churchill of Great Britain, Baruch
asserted that servicemen would
have nothing to worry about when
they got home, and that “there will
be more work in the United States
than there will be hands with which
to do it.”
RAILROADS:
Problems of the American rail-
roads will not be solved by the
termination of hostilities in Europe,
Col. J. Monroe Johnson, director of
ODT, declared.
The end of the German war will
simply mean a reversal in the flow
of traffic from east to west, he told
a meeting of executives of the Asso-
ciation of American Railroads in
Chicago. Carriers will be confront-
ed with large amounts of troops
and supplies that have to be moved
across the country.
rHl.Phillipr
Mr
WNUSeAri*
HALSEY’S BASEBALL CAP
the
Admiral Bill Halsey’s wife says
old baseball cap he wears
“looks just awful.” On the other
hand, we think it swell headgear. It
gives Bill the look of a tough pitcher
pouring in his fast one and dar-
ing the ump to say “Ball!”
_*_
The “look of eagles” is great, but
the look of a baseball hurler who
can also hit and field is nothing
to sneer at.
_*_
The admiral’s visor cap is prob-
ably a factor in the present be-
fuddlement and concern of the Japs;
it has them guessing.
_*_
It is not regulation, and anything
like that bothers them. On one of
the great admirals of the American
fleet they see not an orthodox naval
ADM. BILL HALSEY
bonnet, but just a working chapeau,
a tough piece of millinery . . . just
the sort of old lid a man slaps on
when he goes downstairs to lick a
cop, settle an argument with a bill
collector or take the bus to the
chowder club picnic.
_*_
The cap has a “sez you!” quality,
_*_
Some Japs have played just
enough baseball to realize that it
could be a baseball bonnet. For
them to wear one would mean they
would lose face. In Halsey’s case,
it adds to his face.
To such Japs it complicates, still
more, the question confronting the
Nipponese empire: Should we bunt,
try for a hit or hope for a foul fly?
_*_
Keep that baseball cap on, Bill!
_*_
And if you’re wearing spiked
shoes, using a new type ball and car-
rying two bats, it’s okay with us.
* * *
BACK HOME STUFF
Fred Grave, the w. k. cigar maker,
is the new headman of Morey's famous
Temple Bar. . . . Cigars sure do bring
recognition buck home. . . . Mayor
Murphy is a stogie maker by trade and
has had six terms. . . . Frank Smith is
■hung a swell job with a column started
by this correspondent many years ago.
The Clarion”. . . Hughie Reynolds'
old cafe is now a chop suey spot, of all
things! ... Ye ed’s heart went pitter-
patter the other day when he passed
Lenox hall, the dance hall of his *ticcth.
aid saiv it all made over for business.
. . With Dick Miller and Eddie Stan-
ford playing the music and all the pret-
ty gals in town dancing, them was the
laze! . . . “Ask-Your-Neighbor” Bugler's
■lathing store, a lundmarkDor years, is
now a drug store. . . . Bill (faddon, who.
ike all other kids, once had an ambition
’o run away with the circus, had the un-
isuu! thrill of having a circus run to
dm. . . . Bill was counsel for Ringling
Brothers in all that fire trouble.
* * *
Wail From Miami
Hi—Don’t anybody ever tell mt
igain that Miami is not a “year
iround” pleasure spot! If I get a
rain out of here before August it
vill be a break! I ran across a fel-
ow offering coach tickets 52 weeks
xhead. He was nuts but he had
something there. If I knew a witch
vho could fly a two-passenger
>room I would marry her.
—Hilary.
* * *
The Great Tripe Issue
Dear Hi—I asked a hotel man
ibout the preparation of tripe and
le said that it had to be cooked
ind skimmed and cooked again, al-
ways keep the foam skimmed off.
. . “It’s awful stuff” was his com-
nent.
Somewhere, sometime, I read tha1
r foraging party sent out from Val
,ey Forge returned discouraged witl
lothing but several tripe and some
whole peppers, but the camp cool
rad some onions and potatoes anc
Tom these made the spicy stew-
hat became the first “pepper pot.’
—Mary Kate O’Bryon.
Ain’t It So!
There really is
No faster pace
Than the downward drop
Of a master race.
CAN YOU REMEMBER—
Away back when people put their
faith in super fortifications?
* * *
The motto of too many people
these days is “It’s smart to be
shifty.”
Washington Di9esty
American Engineer Plans
Great Dams for Asia
Dr. Savage of U. S. Dept, of Interior Proposes
Extensive Flood Control and Irrigation
Systems for China, India, Palestine.
By BAUKHAGE
News Analyst and Commentator.
tVNU Service, Union Trust Building,
Washington, D. C.
Recently I sat with a group of my
colleagues at a table and listened to
a shy, elderly man, who might have
been a professor of Greek, talk about
dams. Just a moment before I had
been in the newsroom reading of the
terrible destruction which had lev-
elled the cities of Europe. I couldn’t
help thinking of the paradox of civ-
ilization as this quiet man, who is
the designing engineer for the great-
est dams in the world, Grande Cou-
lee, Boulder, Shasta, the Norris dam
in the Tennessee valley and scores
of others all over the world, outlined
construction projects for Asia. His
program is the exact antithesis of
what is going on in Europe.
John Lucian Savage is chief de-
signing engineer of the bureau of
reclamation of the department of the
interior. He has just returned from
14 months in the Far East where he
has conferred with Generalissimo
Chiang Kai-shek of China and with
officials in India and Palestine on
construction projects which dwarf
the world’s greatest efforts in this
direction.
Dr. Savage discussed these under-
takings as if they were some beauti-
ful little works of art which had, per-
haps, a utilitarian value, but which
after all were creations of the imagi-
nation, important in themselves. In
the course of a half hour or so he
outlined projects which .would af-
fect the life of literally millions of
people for untold generations and
might well change the course, not
only of their history, but the world’s.
He went to the Far East repre-
senting the U. S. government, loaned
by the department of the interior to
the state department as a specialist
under its cultural program. Much
has been said (With eyebrows slight-
ly raised) about Uncle Sam’s effort
to spread American culture and help
import some of that product from
other nations. Most people do not
realize that cultural matters include
10,500,000 - kilowatt - waterpower
plants.
“We went down the (Yangtze) "riv-
er from Chungking,” said Dr. Sav-
age as if he were describing a moon-
light ride on the Potomac, “by
steamboat and launch to within 15
kilometers (about nine miles) of
Ichang.” (Later it was explained
that he had to stop because it hap-
pened that a war was going on in
that vicinity.) “I had with me all
the topographical data I could find
and I had spotted three possible dam
sites from these maps. I stayed
with General-(name omitted for
security reasons). I asked him if
he had any topographic maps that
might be helpful to me. He replied
that he had captured an aerial map
from the Japanese.”
Studies Map, Selects
Five Sites for Dams
The map proved' to be excellent
and one could almost see the engi-
neer’s mouth water as he examined
it, picking out sights simply crying
to be dammed. Then, still as if it
were all a great lark, he said that
he went on down the river to within
three miles of the battle lines (per-
haps the genial general-host had
called off the war for the afternoon).
Anyhow, Dr. Savage said, smiling,
that he had selected five possible
dam sites.
The dam in the Yangtze gorge,
he told us, will probably be about
750 feet high and there will be 20
tunnels of about 50 feet diameter to
divert the river flow. Boulder dam
on the Colorado, he told us for com-
parison, was 730 feet high and had
only four such tunnels.
There will be 24 generating plants,
each generating 110,000 kilowatts of
electricity. They will equal five
times the ultimate capacity of the
Grande Coulee dam and ten times
its present development of 10,560,000
kilowatts. The average total output
of electrical energy for one year on
the Yangtze will be 71,300,000,000
kilowatt-hours.
Within the present range of distri-
bution live more Chinese than the en-
tire population of the United States
—140 millions.
Dr. Savage went into similar de-
tail regarding more dams on tribu-
taries to the Yangtze. The fatal re-
sult, beside regulating the river-flow
so that navigation can be improved
and ocean-going ships brought right
up to Chungking, would mean water
storage that will irrigate a hundred
million acres and make it possible
to double the present production of
rice.
I will not deluge you with further
figures for I cannot produce them
with such a flavor of enthusiasm
and admixture of personal delight
as Dr. Savage does, but I may add
that he spent four months in India
discovering and planning similar
projects in the Punjab, along the
Ganges, and in Afghanistan, on this
and other trips. Dr. Savage, I might
observe, is typical of a kind of gov-
ernment servant of which the world
knows very little. He is one of the
highly trained experts who prefer
public service to financial rewards.
These men turn down highly re-
munerative offers from business or-
ganizations.
Australia Asks for
Dr. Savage*s Help
Back in 1940 a cable came from
London asking the United States
government for Savage’s assistance
in conjunction with the Burrinjuck
dam in Australia. Before the depart-
ment of interior replied, Dr. Sav-
age was reminded of what he al-
ready knew; namely, that United
Statfes officials may not receive
emoluments of any kind from for-
eign governments. Our founding fa-
thers were quite sensitive on that
point.
“. . . no person,” says the Con-
stitution, “holding any office of prof-
it or trust under (the United States)
shall, without the consent of Con-
gress, accept any present, emolu-
ment, office, or title of any kind
whatever, from any king, prince or
foreign state.”
And so Savage, rather than delay
the project while congress decided
whether such emolument be permit-
ted, wired the then commissioner of
the bureau of reclamation: “Any as-
sistance given to New South Wales
will be gratis and I shall not accept
any fee or other form of compensa-
tion or any reimbursement.”
As a government servant, Dr.
Savage, although he cannot accept
titles and awards from princes,
kings or foreign commoners, has
garnered plenty of honors from
American institutions. They include
his doctorate in science from the
University of Wisconsin and the
American Society of Civil Engineers’
medal. Also he has that most cov-
eted award, the Gold medal for out-
standing engineering service, a joint
award of the leading organizations of
his profession.
If culture can be served by dam-
ming rivers, and capital can be
found to pay the bill, they’ll be
dammed—by Savage.
• * *
The war will wipe out a lot of ig-
norant sneers which so-called “prac-
tical” men often direct at “long-
haired professors.” Perhaps the sci-
ence of psychology gets the most
wallops from the uninitiated. Says
General Arnold in his second report
on the army air force: “The RAF
paid the AAF a compliment in 1944
by adopting our system of air crew
selection and classification. Our psy-
chological testing procedures were
also adopted by the Free French.”
There are 20 psychological tests
administered which have proved val-
id in predicting a cadet’s chance to
win his wings and his chance for
combat success.
“The aviation psychology program
has paid off in time, lives and
money saved,” says General Arnold,
“at a total cost of less than $5 per
candidate.”
* * *
The Soviet Information bulletin
published in Russia calls attention
to the fact that the Russian guards
created by Peter I, in 1700, were the
first to enter Berlin in the Seven
Years war.
It further states that the tradi-
tions of the Soviet guards, created
when the German armies were near-
est Moscow, in the autumn of 1941,
were inspired by the ancient Russian
guards and “are preserved to this
day.”
This is one of the many indica-
tions of how the Soviet government
is continually looking back on Rus-
sian history and increasing national
consciousness among the people, by-
passing the ideology of communism
and the landmarks set up by the
revolution.
RELIEVES DIAPER RASH
MOROLINEl
■▼■white petroleum jelly
^TRIPLE
SIZE
MR
BARBS
by Baukhage
Apparently General Arnold of the
air force and not Secretary of the
Treasury Morgenthau is dictating
what is to be done with German in-
dustry.
* * *
Since it has been established that
the cherry trees in Washington are
Korean and not Japanese, they blos-
som earlier, trying to synchronize
with Korean independence week.
AT FIRST
SIGN
OF A
USE
Cold Preparations as directed
The population of Berlin is becom-
ing “radical, almost red,” say re-
ports of Swedish refugees. What
would you call that? An attempt at
protective coloring?
* * *
Obituaries of prominent Nazis are
appearing in great numbers in Ger-
man papers. The “deceased” are
saidv to have, gone “underground,”
but not cemetery-style.
SNAPPY FACTS
ABOUT
RUBBER
Recent government tests
demonstrated that synthetic
truck tires show slower wear
and less tread-cracking when
operating at night than dur-
ing daytime service. Atmos-
pheric temperatures were
given as the reason for this
difference in service.
Like other rubber commodities,
footwear should be treated proper-
ly to extend serviceability. Avoid
tearing by putting on and removing
rubber footwear carefully; wash
outer surfaces after each wearing;
dry out linings in room temperature;
store in cool, dry, dark place and
make sure to keep footwear free
from folds or wrinkles.
Jkomct peace
BIGoodrichl
FI RST IN RUB BE R
Sensible Way To Treat Minor
SKIN ABRASIONS
Immediately make the wound antiseptic
as a precaution against infection. (1)
Cleanse with warm water and good soap.
(2) Apply an antiseptic preparation.* A
fine antiseptic for this purpose is Carboll,
the salve that soothes and helps promote
healing. Car boil, 50c at drug stores or
write Spur]«k-Neal Co., Nashville, Tehn.
IS GETTING UP NIGHTS
GETTING YOU DOWN?
Thousands say famous doctor’s
discovery gives blessed relief from
irritation of the bladder caused by
excess acidity in the urine
Why suffer needlessly from backaches,
run-down feeling from excess acidity in
the urine> Just try DR. KILMER’S
SWAMP ROOT, the renowned herbal
medicine. SWAMP ROOT acts fast on the
kidneys to promote the flow of urine and
relieve troublesome excess acidity. Origi-
nally created by a practising physician,
Dr. Kilmer’s is a carefully blended combi-
nation of 16 herbs, roots, vegetables, bal-
sams. Absolutely nothing harsh or habit-
forming in this pure, scientific prepara-
tion. Just good ingredients that quickly
act on the kidneys to increase the flow of
urine and ease the uncomfortable symp-
toms of bladder irritation.
Send for free, prepaid sample TODAY]
Like thousands of others you’ll be glad
that you did. Send name and address ta
Department B, Kilmer & Co., Inc., Bon
1255, Stamford, Conn. Offer limited: Send
at once. AH druggists sell Swamp Root.
i
Famous to relieve MONTHLY
FEMALE
MISERY
(Also fine Stomachic Tonic!)
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound is famous to relieve not only
monthly pain but also accompanying
nervous, tired, highstrung feelings—
when due to functional periodic dis-
turbances. Taken regularly—it helps
build up resistance against such dis-
tress. Pinkham’s Compound helps na-
turel Follow label directions. Try it!
<£fdui£.(PimkluvnC6 compound
Low-Spirited Mood*
And Fatigue Are Often Symptoms
Of Constipation I
For constipation take Nature's
Remedy (NR Tablets). Contains no
chemicals, no minerals, no phenol de-
rivatives. NR Tablets are different
‘—act different. Purely vegetable—
a combination of 10 vegetable in-
gredients formulated over 50 years
ago. Uncoated or candy coated, their
action is dependable, thorough, yet
gentle. Get a 25j£ Convincer Box.
Caution: Take only as directed.
NR TO-NIGHT, TOMORROW ALRIGHT
ALL-VEGETABLE LAXATIVE
■ f?cc u s rat oro'ce y
IA»TABLETS"N?
ONE WORD SUGGESTION
FOR ACID INDICESTION-
Nmu.Ui
TUMS
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Fietsam, Tillie. The Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 19, 1945, newspaper, April 19, 1945; Shiner, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1147949/m1/2/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Shiner Public Library.