White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, January 8, 1943 Page: 2 of 4
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WHITE DEER REVIEW, White Deer, Carson Connty, Texas
FRIDAY, JANUARY, 8, 1943
White Deer Review
Published Every FRIDAY at
White Deer, Texas
W. W. SIMMONS, Editor
Entered as second-class mail mat-
ter at the Post Office at White
Deer, Texas, under an Act of
March 3, 1879.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Per Year, in Texas--------$1.50
Per Year, outside Texas----$2.00
Classified and Legal Advertising
Rate: 12c per line first insertion;
6c per line each additional inser-
tion.
RATIONING AT A GLANCE
Ration Books
War Ration Book No. 1—Used
for sugar and coffee, will 'be re-
quired to olbjtlain Book No. 2 soon.
Those not having Book No. 1 may
obtain them from the local ration
board until Jan. 15.
(War Ration Book No. 2—To be
issued early in 1943 and will pro-
vide for rationing on a “point”
system instead of on a coupon
basis.
Milage Ration Books—Books A,
B, and C used for passenger car
glasoline. E. and R books, or non-
hig'hway uses; D, for motorcycles;
T for trucks and commercial ve-
hides.
Rationed Food Commodities
(Sugar—Stamp No. 10 in Book
[No. 1 good for 3 pounds until
midnight, Jan. 31, 1943.
Coffee—Stamp No. 27 in Book
night Feb. 7, 1943.
No. 1 (for those 15 or older) good
Meat—Voluntary ‘ ‘ share the
for 1 pound of coffee until mid-
meat” program sets limit at 2 and
a half .pounds per person per
week. Meat will be rationeduodei
the “point” system after Book
No. 2 is distributed.
Mileage Rationing
Gasoline—Value of each coupon
in A, B, and C Books is 4 giallons.
First 8 coupons in A Book are
good until midnight Jan. 21, 1943.
for s— b andf nes; o|ctir
Tire Inspectors—All vehicle op-
erators must have official tire in-
spections by Jan. 31, 1943. There-
after, A an D (motorcycle) book
holders must get inspections each
four months. Holders of B and C
Books must get tires inspected
ever two months or everv 5,000
miles, whichever comes first.
Tires_If official tire inspector
recommends a. tire replacement^ or
recap, apply to the local ration
board for tire or recap ration cer-
tificate. Tires and recaps will typ
rationed to all on the basis of the
inspections and county quotais a-
vailable, with most essential mile-
age to come first.
Other Rationing
Eligible purchasers needing new
automobiles, bicycles, typewriters,
rubber footwear, and other com-
modities on which sales might be
restricted should see their local
ration (board.
COMMERCIAL VEHICLES
MUST GET TIRE INSPECTION
Commercial motor vehicle oper-
ators in Teas, Ne Mexico, Okla-
hoimja and Louisiana were remind-
ed by John C. Massenburg, OUT
regional motor transport division
director, that they must have their
tires inspected by Jan 15. After
that dalte, operation of such a ve-
hicle Avihout an endorsement by
‘an approved tire inspector on the
certificate war necessity will be
unlawful. Passenger car operators
must have tiheir first tire inspec-
tion by Jan. 31.
How to Make Son-of-a gun
Mrs. J. E. Wagoner of the
Groom Country Neighbors Club
recommends using part of the an-
imal organs in making Son-of-a
gun and then canning it for use
later in the year. This conserves
the animal organs that are hard to
use in large quantities following
butchering. Beef organs are used
for this recipe. To make according
to Mrs. Wagoner’s recipe, use 1-2
of the sweet breads, 1-2 of the
brains, 1-2 of the tongue, 1-2 of
the heart, 1-2 of the liver, and the
butchers steak. Cut' these into one
half ineh cubes. Take the marrow
gut, wash well, soak in salt water
for one hour, and cut into three-
fourths inch pieces. Cut 1-2 dozen
onions fine.
Render out 1-2 pound of suet,
and fry onions in it to a light
brown. Add other ingrediens. Sea-
son with 2 tablespoons chili pow-
der, add salt and black pepper to
taste. Add 2 qaurts boiling water,
and more later if necessary. Sim-
pler one hour before putting it.
into containers. 'Seal while hot,
and process quart containers for
1 hour at 17 pounds pressure.
If this is not to be canned, sim-
mer it for 3 hours before serving.
Serve ith crackers.
Cl
l:
it!
■ ■ !
/j
&
They looked at each other and a smile spread over Jim’s face.
“Woody—okay! ”
FLYING TIGERS
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Jim Gordon...........JOHN WAYNE
Woody Jason........ .JOHN CARROLL
Brooke Elliott..............ANNA LEE
Hap.....................PAUL KELLY
Alabama ............GORDON JONES
Verna Bales.............MAE CLARKE
Col. Lindsay.......ADDtISON RICHARDS
Blackie Bales____EDMUND MacDONALD
Dale...................BILL SHIRLEY
Reardon..................TOM NEAL
McCurdy. .MALCOLM*“BUD” McTAGGART
Barton................DAVID BRUCE
Mike..................CHESTER GAN
McIntosh...............JAMES DODD
Tex.................GREGG BARTON
Selby................. .JOHN JAMES
As Fictionized by Will Ours/er from the
Republic Picture in Photoplay Movie-Mirror
SYNOPSIS
Woody Jason (John Carroll), a wise-
cracking, know-it-all pilot who is heart-
ily disliked by all the men and who has
been blamed for the death of two of the
pilots because of his own selfishness,
has been making a play for Brooke
Elliott (Anna Lee), a Red Cross nurse.
Woody has been dishonorably dis-
charged from the Tigers because of
these occurrences. Jim Gordon (John
Wayne), squadron leader of the Flying
Tigers, has volunteered to take a trans-
port plane through the Jap lines to
bomb a trainload of supplies. Jim pre-
pares to leave on the suicidal mission
angry with Brooke, who he loves, be-
cause he believes she is partially re-
sponsible for Woody’s dismissal.
CHAPTER SIX
Chinese mechanic Mike let out a
terrified yelp when he saw Jim put-
ting the nitro into the transport plane.
Jim soothed him. “It’ll be all right,
Mike. Keep your shir tee on.”
Colonel Lindsey stood on the field
as Jim climbed into the plane. He wit-
nessed an astounding thing. As soon
as Jim was inside, the door slammed
shut, the motors of the plane started
to roar and the ship began to move
forward.
“Cut those engines,” Jim yelled.
“Who the devil—”
He ran forward to the pilot’s com-
partment. The plane was gathering
speed. As he opened the door he
drew back with a shock. Woody was
sitting placidly at the controls.
“Sit down, pappy. Which way do
we go?”
“How the blazes did you get here?”
“Gave the sentry double talk. He
thought I was the general.”
“Get this plane back on the field
.and get out.”
“No soap, Jim. Besides, what do
you know about flying a transport?
That’s my business. You point the
way—I’ll drive.”
“You’ve even lost the brains you
were born with. You know what’s
riding back there?” **
“Ought to. Nearly broke my neck
railing over it.”
Jim growled. “Okay, wise guy. We’ll
hit for the hills.”
They rode in silence. Dodging be-
hind the unpeopled hills to the north,
flying so low at times they skimmed
the tree tops. After a while Woody
asked, “Talked with Brooke lately?”
“It’s all right, Woody. Whatever
she does—I want her to be happy.
She’s had it tough.”
“She’s, going to be happy. Because
you’re in love with her—and she loves
you.”
“Loves me?” In spite of himself,
there was excitement in Jim’s voice.
“How do you know? I thought—”
“I know. You heard what Hap
said. He heard me boasting about—
my conquest. That’s a joke. You know
what I am—talk big, never mean
any of it. She thinks I’m amusing. But
truth is—she wants somebody real.
And—Lord knows why—she thinks
you’re it.”
“She—told you that?”
“Sure she told me. Listen pal, I
know dames, see— and you don’t. A
dame—she has to have her heart ex-
plained to her, half the time. It was
going out with me, seeing what I was
like, that showed her what a real guy
you are.”
EYES examined and vision tested by
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GLASSES prepared under our personal
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HYDEN’S
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NOTICE!!
They looked at each other and a
smile spread over Jim’s face. “Woody
—okay!”
“Right. And while we’re about it—
let’s give this Tokyo chu-chu a going-
over.”
They came out of the hills. Jim was
peering through the window. The
bridge was supposed to be beneath
them—but it wasn’t in sight. “We’ve
overshot it,” he said. “It must be be-
hind us—”
“But we didn’t miss the chu-chu!”
Woody pointed to along line of trains
—so small they looked like toys—
creeping along the track below them.
At the same instant, the anti-aircraft
guns spotted the plane and started to
blast at them. A shell struck one of
the wings, flinging Jim across the
plane. Woody fought at the controls.
Another shell broke near by. The port
motor burst into flames.
Jim said tersely. “It’s a dead pigeon,
Woody. Set' the controls and bail out.’'
“Don’t want to give up after we’ve
come this far. If I could reach that
train.—”
Woody was trying to get the star-
board motor started. Jim cried out
angrily, “Hit the silk, I tell you.”
A burst of flame in the cockpit drove
Woody back toward Jim. As Woody
staggered back he tightened his lip—
Jim mustn’t know. Mustn’t know that
part of the shell had struck him, that—
He grit his teeth. “You — you pc
first 1”
“Do as I say,” Jim ordered. “Jump."
Jim was standing by the door—ready
to go. Woody deliberately flung his
body against Jim, catching him oft
guard. He saw Jim pitch through the
door, twisting crazily. He watched
then, watched as the parachute flut-
tered open. Tim would be all right. Jim
would be safe—
There were only seconds. He could
feel, the hot blood from the wound. His
eyes glazed — his hand wiped across
them. Only seconds ...
He put the ship into a glide. He
could see the train clearly now. Head-
ing straight for it, flames pouring out
of the ship’s engines, wings shattering
as the anti-aircraft continued to blast
away.
' Now it was closer. “Hold your nose
baby,” he muttered. Six tons of T.N.T.
Six tons of hell—
Jim saw. Saw the ship in that grace-
ful, terrifying glide. Saw what Woody
was doing—heading the ship straight
into the train. Jim twisted and turned
as the parachute drifted earthward.
“Woody—Woody!”
In the distance, a detonation, rising
with deafening roar over the country-
side, echoing and reverberating. And
then silence.
At squadron headquarters, Jim Gor-
don found a letter from Woody. A
mist came over Jim’s eyes as he read
it. Woody had known—with that sixth
sense of flyers—that it would be his
last trip upstairs. He’d explained about
how he and Brooke weren’t serious,
how it hadn’t meant anything really.
Explained why he hadn’t been at the
field when Hap went up.
Brooke was standing across the
room as he read it and he looked up
and tried to smile. “Woody—telling
me he—you weren’t—”
But Brooke had come toward hitn
and she put her arms around him now
and her lips against his.
“Woody—Woody was right, Jim.”
They brought in a new recruit, a
few days later. A young man he was,
with sandy hair and a boyish grin. He
hadn’t flown much. He seemed a little
scared.
Jim shook hands with him and they
talked about flying and then Jim
reached in his desk drawer and bronchi
out a faded scarf with Chinese
—letters identifying the wearer a-„ •»
member of the Flying Tigers.
“You’ll wear this one,” Jin*, said
quietly. “I hope — you’ll always bt
worthy of the man who wore it befrr«
you.”
The young man seemed impressed
“He was—he was a good flyer?”
Jim said, “Sure. Tops. Only better
than that. Sort of—sort of a hero.
That’s all. There’s work to be doiv..*
The young man started for the field
Jim turned to his desk. Minutes later,
he could hear the droning roar of the
engines as the fighters lifted into the
The End
I Will Be at the
Farmers National Bank
In White Deer on
Fri. and Sat., Jan. 22-23
To Collect Taxas
Clarence C. Williams
SHERIFF, TAX ASSESSOR-COLLECTOR, CARSON COUNTY
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Simmons, W. W. White Deer Review (White Deer, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, January 8, 1943, newspaper, January 8, 1943; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1160816/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carson County Library.