The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 220, Ed. 2 Saturday, January 30, 1943 Page: 1 of 5
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PAGE FOU R. -__
The Abilene Reporter-srus
A TEXAS 2.4, NEWSPAPER
Published Twice Daily except Unca on sunday
»• by thee REPORTER PUBLISHING co.
North Second and Cypress 1 Ablene. Texas
Tune in on KRBC
, THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
Saturday Evening, January 30, 1943
Saturday
TELEPHONE: DIAL han
Gangster Hitler Is Cornered
By RAYMOND CLAPPER -
WASHINGTON, Jan 30. — It
"Entered as Second Class Matter oct. 4. 1908, at the
aiteres. Abilene. ***** uw " a “ Hera *
oxey
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anyerronenusiefe tion upon t. chandler n and MITNA
ng or, reputation of any person, firm or corporation 1 1 *
which may occur in the columns of THE REPORTER
.NEWS will be gladly corrected upon being brought to 9 FEST
he attention of the management. •
The publishers are not responsible for copy emissions, typographical errors
or any unintentional errors that may eccur other than to correct in next
issue after it ta brought to their attention. All adv ertising orders are accepted
on thla basis only
doesn’t necessarily follow that lie-
cause important military decisions
were made at Casablanca there
will be an invasion of Europe alter
breakfast tomorrow, or day after .
Impatience is likely to follow the
high hopes built up to the enormous
volume of words that is being print-
ed and spoken over the radio about
the Roosevelt-Churchill meeting in
African Military operations take
_ time. Since there
I is no sign of an
Foniieatly uncondi-
tonal surrender
s we must count on
snalkuttcenrumefor
BrsmE teeabtatepre-
operations fe -
tens quire
: Today’s Thought „
And if than come to pass in the day that the Lord shall
give thee rest from thy sorrow, and from thy fear, and from
the hard bondage wherein thou wast made to serve—Isaiah
, 14.33,
26 cam on the 6000 / 0
s 1 Fair "I" rest thee now!—
Trial by Epithet
: There are those who are worried because only the
unquestionably pro-axis officialdom has been cleaned
put in North Africa—direct representatives of Hitler
and the relatively few who by specific action have
proved themselves enemies.
The great mass of French officialdom remains in the
jobs where it was placed by Vichy or left by the Pe-
tain regime as a holdover from pre-defeat days. This,
some believe, constitutes unjustifiable and hazardous
ns.
appeasement.. - , '
From this distance, one would be foolhardy to form
any fixed conclusions about such matters. However,
there are considerations which, tentatively, may be
suggested in offset. . €
' The State Department’s attitude toward Vichy was
bitterly condemned by a vociferous group of critics
who felt that no self-respecting nation could continue
K to deal with the Petain-Darlan-Laval collaborators.
When the test came, that policy paid huge dividends
__tn lives of Americans who otherwise would have died
• trying to land in North Africa. It shortened the initial
operation so much that our expeditionary force was at
the gates of Tunis and Bizerte before it was supposed
to have consolidated the original beachheads.
$ The policy toward Vichy which accomplished this
probably really was one of "appeasement.” Should it,
. therefore, he tried and condemned by epithet’
We occupied North Africa—put ourselves in position
■. to open the Mediterranean and to establish a jumping
off place against the continent—for a song. In doing
so, we made certain commitments to the French who
: either helped us openly or “resisted” with cordial for-
%. mality. Those commitments are known to only a few.
It is a safe guess that they included a promise not to
.Interfere with the civil administration.
Some day soon we shall want to land in France. We
hope to find a welcome there because we shall be
coming as liberators.
. If, now, we assume civil control over North Africa,
breaking express or implied agreements with the
French there, how can we expect their brethren at
home to put faith in our promises?
Appeasement is a big word, a broad conception.
There can be the futile appeasement of dishonor, like
that of Munich, or the sound appeasement of honor-
able if unpleasant expediency.
. Let’s not be too intolerant about that of which we
know little.-___.
Coal Miners’ Hours
Because there are more than 90 million tons of soft
coal above ground, mined and awaiting delivery, won-
derment has been expressed why Solid Fuels Adminis-
trator Ickes insists that the United Mine Workers sup-
■ plant their 35-hour week with a 42-hour one.
, One good reason .would be the pressing shortage of
manpower1 for the Army, Navy and war industries. If
i: things are so bad that we must freeze men onto jobs,
shift them willy-nilly from one industry to another,
provide government nurseries so that mothers can go
into factories, then we can’t afford to have thousands
of husky men working only 35 hours a week..
Commonwealths of Nations
"'.Out of the general wonderment as to what will be
post-war framework of international government, one
probability is emerging, in addition to the certainty
that some type of Anglo-Saxon coalition will become
the permanent protector of democracy.
A: It seems almost inevitable that the old system of
, (colonial empires dominated by European mother coun-
* ■ tries will give way to Commonwealths of Nations mod-
eled more of less on the British.
Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands already has
promised a post-war reorganization of her kingdom in-
to such a commonwealth in which the homeland, In-
donesia (Netherlands East Indies),- Curacao and Su-
rinam will participate as, members.
There is no doubt that the British “Empire" will be
loosened yet more, with India eventually joining Can-
•da, Australia, New Zealand and Great Britain as a
six
It was nearly six
months ago that
we landed on
Guadalcanal, and we have not
o n
yet
cleaned out the Japs. We lan ded
in Africa nearly three months go.
Most of that time, we have be
building airfields and bringing
equipment for the coming batti
Tunisia.
We can't judge the future pro-
gress of the war necessarily by the
more spectacular rush episodes, such
as the British chase of Rommel
across Africa. Rommel was trying to
get away. There can be no com-
parison between that kind of move-
ment and the amount of time
1 the
re-
quired to prepare for an attack,
pecially for an invasion of strongly
held territory. The North Afr
landing was some four month
preparation, and planning had
gun even earlier.
es-
can
in
be-
Before we can begin hitting
southern Europe, the Axis mus
driven out of Tunisia. That - battle.
be
so dispatches report, may begin any
time now Bad weather has held us
up. That fight may last for some
time. While our people have no
doubts whatever about it, they fig-
ure on going through a real fight
to throw the Germans out of Africa.
A factor that impatient people do
not appreciate is the slow fight
against the submarine and uw
drain it makes on our shipping Ws
have broken all shipbuilding records
in the last year yet we have been
able just about to replace the ship-
ping that has been lost. The de-
mands that military operations are
making on our shipping space .are
indicated by the steady tightening
of restrictions on consumption of
gasoline and fuel oil in the United
States. Our production is gaining
and in most items has fulfilled ex-
pectations and more. But it must
be carried across the ocean.
now.
Just a year ago our troops first
landed in Ireland some of those
veterans are preparing now for their
first hard fighting campaign in
Tunisia.
We forget, too, that the cam-
paigns now going on must be sup-
plied continuously and that any ad-
ditional campaigns will commiv ad-
ditional shipping for an indefinite
period. We are constantly earmark-
ing more and more shipping to sus-
tain operations already going on.
You don’t land troops and then
consider that hauling job done. You
continue to haul supplies month af-
ter month.
For many such reasons the time-
table of war is slow. Hitler s race
through the low countries and
France was an unusual thing, per-
haps unexpected by his own staff.
The Japanese had their three
months of lightning war in the
Pacific, taking advantage of our
surprise, lack of preparation, and
the general confusion. Then they
slowed down, and they find it dif-
ficult to undertake new campaigns
If we keep to mind some of the
time-consuming difficulties we are
leas likely to indulge to unwarrant-
ed expectations of early victory. Hit-
ler, faced with the unconditional-
surrender terms of the Casablanca
conference, is like a gangster sur-
rounded to a building by the FBI.
He won’t be able to escape. But he
is in there with a gun, desperate,
knowing he won’t come out alive,
and determined to make it as costly
as possible by shooting it out. It
may take a while to get him and it
may cost some lives to do it, but the
gangster hasn't a chance. That’s
about the position Hitler is to to-
day. -
Earthquake Shocks
Last Over Month
LONDON, Jan. 30. —()— Reuters
reporting from Istanbul, Turkey.
Friday night that one of the long-
est series of earthquake shocks ever
recorded in Europe had been in
progress to central; Bosnia since
Dec. 59. 1
During the first week, shocks
came every quartet hour and even
now five to six shocks are recorded
daily, the agency said. •
Material damage was heavy but
only 19 lives have been lost, the re-
port said.
The first known globe model of
the world was made in the second
century, B.C.
The earth’s surface totals 196,-
940,000 square miles, almost four-
fifths of it covered by water.
Better Living Is on
By PETER EDSO N
Reporter-News Washington
Correspondent .
A surprising array of new. post-
war industries may be a-borni 1’ in
—of all places—the war plants that
are nov devoted to turning out
of poison gas, incendiary bombs
and the non-toxic smokes which
will play an increasingly impo riant
part in this global ruckus.
ton*
Take the gas masks thems elves.
At least 10 million of them will
have to be made for the armed
services to say nothing of‘the
lions made for civilians. The
portant part of the gas mask s the
filter that absorbs the poison
The important element of the
—the stuff that goes to th >
that hangs below the mask—is
tivated carbon. 1
In the last war, that filtering
element had to be high-grade char-
coal and it was a' considerable
problem to produce this gas absorb-
Ing material—in sufficient quanti-
ties Today this activated carb in can
be made from almost anything, in-
eluding coal or sawdust, and there
is no shortage.
When the war is over the plants
making this activated carbol may
be kept right on going, say the
chemists, in a new peacetime indus-
try, The thought is not to provide
every cook with a gas mask to pro-
tect her from the fumes of her own
sauerkraut, kidney stew oi fried
onions, but it’s along that lite
Since this activated charcoal will
absorb gas, chemists say it Is en-
tirely possible to make a handy lit-
tle kitchen dingus that will absorb
kitchen odors, make, a musty cellar
smell as sweet and clean as a
mountain too, or even be
will
mil-
im-
gas.
filter
can
ac-
char-
indus-
fried
able to
night-
kill those fatal post-party,
cigar smoke, cigaret butts arid spill-
ed Bourbon.
Yea and moreover, the chemists
say this activated carbon stuff will
even take the stink out of 1
nasium locker room, thar
a gym-
which
there is nothing huskier this-side
of a skunk.
BOON FOR GROWERS
New smoke-producing units de-
signed to throw smoke screens over
to ca-y
war plants or whole cities
mouflage them and spoil the aim
of enemy bomber pilots may find
a practical application in peace-
time as frost protectors for orange
groves, early vegetable patches and
the like.
The old method of beating a sud-
den freeze was to light smudge
fires and rouse every man, woman
and child in the countryside to keep
the smudge pots going all night
long. Orange growers even used to
burn old rubber tires because they
produced a heavy black smoke that
protected the trees like a blanket.
These new smoke-producing units,
however, will make the job of pro-
tecting an orchard, an orange grove
or a truck farmI as simple as a cig-
are' lighter. A small battery of ma-
chines will smoke up a square mile
or more, and, being practically au-
tomatic. only a few men would be
required to keep the fires going all
night.
A large part of the poison gas
manufactured is chlorine or chlo-
rine compounds. Productive capac-
ity for chlorine manufacture has
been stepped up tremendously, and
new processes have been developed
for its more economical manufac-
ture. Here’s another industry that
won’t be just a war baby. Manufac-
turing chemists are looking ahead
to a big boom in the chlorine
bleaching business, and in further
purification of water supplies,
whether you drink it or swim in It.
Brand-new cleaning agents that will
revolutionize the dry cleaning bus-
iness are to be found in the chlo-
rinated hydro carbons which also
have a role seme place in the com-
plicated chemistry of synthetic rub-
ber, and of course that may be the
biggest of the war-born industries.
LIGHTER, STRONGER METALS
Thermite, or iron oxide, used in
some of the incendiary bombs, has
already found wide use to manu-
facturing as a welding agent, so
there’s nothing new to that. But to
magnesium, the element used to
other incendiary bombs, there is a
whole new light metal world wait-
ing to be born. U. S. production of
magnesium has soared by the thous-
ans percent since the start of the
war, and the price has been drop-
the Way
ping accordingly.
Magnesium being lighter than
aluminum, its uses in manufacture
are almost without limit. Alloyed
with other metals., it has the
strength of steel, with much less
volume. Your new post-war auto-
mobile may have a lot of magne-
sium in it and will consequently be
lighter and much cheaper to oper-
ate.
In these respects, it’s a real
chemical war, even if chemical
weapons are never used.
Public Records
NEW AUTO REGISTRATIONS
1942 Studebaker 4-door Commander,
Gooff* W. Page.
1942 Studebaker 4-door Commander,
George W. Page.
1942 Studebaker 4-door Commander,
George W. Page. ,
Owen P. Thomas, Judge Presiding
Eva Mae Cox vs. Thomae H. Cox, suit
for divorce.
ORDERS IN 42D DISTRICT COURT
C. E Roberts vs. Emma Roberts, di-
vorce granted.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Charles Perry Taylor, Austin and Mary
Ann Fristae, Mayfield, Ky. +
Eldon Ferrell Champion, Lawn and
Bobbie Jean Henson, Abilene.
Mervyn B. Frank, Spirit Lake, Ia.. and
Mrs. Viola Frank, Spirit Lake, Ia.
WARRANTY DEEDS
Mrs. Laila V Hopkins, a widow, et
al to Ollie Tribble a feme sole. Dec. 30,
1942, 2-3 Interest In lots 5 and 6, block
B of subdivision of lots 2, block 188,
city of Abiline, consideration $800.
Maxie Banner a feme sole, to Claude
Warren. Jan 28, 1943, lots 11 and 11,
block 15. Noble’s subdivision of block
15, College Addition, town of Merkel,
consideration $600.
. B. T Thompson et ux to J. W Kemp,
Dee. 29, 1942, lots 8 to 15, block 13.
town of Halltown, consideration $225
cash. *
C. B. Manley to John H Crow, Feb.
23, 1942, lots 3, block 1, MeMurry park
addition, city of Abilene, consideration
$400.
W. R Cox et ux to E. G Williams.
Jan. 23, 1943, West 140 feet of East
300 feet of South 150 feet of block 11,
College addition, town of Merkel, con-
sideration $600
Frank J. Richards et ux to J. C. Har
ber, Jan. 5, 1943, 1 acres off north end
of a 11-acre tract out of lot 8. Ander-
son and Berry subdivision of Alexander
Thompson survey No. 37, said 11 acres
described in Vol. 314. page 476, begin-
ning at northeast corner of said 11-acre
tract; thence west 157 viras to its north-
west corner, thence southwest with WBL
of said tract 311 feet, 10 inches, thence
east to EBL of Mid tract thence north
229 feet, 10 inches to beginning, con-
sideration $100 cash.
Remember Pearl Harbor!—Buy War Savings Stamps and Bonds
IT’S A COLD, COLD, HEMISPHERE
TODAY on the
HOME FRONT
By JAMES MARLOW,
and GEORGE ZIELKE
PITTSBURGH. Jan. 30--
Pittsburgh is stripped to the waist,
all bone and muscle, hard-working,
self-sure, a productive giant of a
town where fog and smoke from a
thousand millstacks keep the sun
out of sight some days till noon.
The steel mills broke 3,100 pro-
duction records, in 1942, aim to
break more to 1043, but you stand
in the streets that seem empty by
day and wonder: Where are the
people?
They’re all around you, out of
sight, deep in the mills and fac-
tories. working with stunning, speed.
They are pouring molten metal to
the light of blazing furnaces, and
out to the open in weather below
freezing they are whipping ships
together with their torrid welding
torches.
There are men with dark goggles
and transparent plastic masks or
masks of meshed steel to save their
faces and eyes from splashing
white-hot iron or flying fragments
of metal and stone. There are men
with towels around their heads to
catch their dripping sweat.
The flying fingers of women wind
electric coils or pack food for ship-
ment overseas.—--v
• * *
These things are not figures of
speech. They are true, hour after
hour, 24 hours a day, amid the
warning bells -of gigantic moving
cranes, factory trucks, the busy
racket of conveyor belts.
Pittsburgh is working as never
before, and those who live here,
conscious of the vital energy they
are pumping into the nation, radi-
ate self-confidence. Ask them why
and they sayt
“We’re producing and we know
it."
Absenteeism? Some plants say it's
a serious problem with them, oth-
ers say no. Manpower? Except for
skilled workers, Pittsburgh has had
no real pinch yet. Transportation?
Tight, especially to the rush periods
when some business district hours
are staggered, but this problem is
expected to become more acute.
Housing is short, rents are high,
hotels are jammed.
Night clubs did a boom business
till the recent ban on pleasure
driving. Then only those to the city,
accessible by streetcar, retained a
keen trade.
In 1942 the coat of living rose
here about eight percent, employ-
ment 10 percent. Retail sales were
up about 10 percent, too. Pitts-
burghers’ liquer store bill, totaling
almost one-quarter of the depart-
ment stores’ sales, shot up to about
337.000,000, or 20 percent above 1941.
Pittsburgh expects to fare bet-
ter than most industrial cities to
the period- right after war—when
planta will have to halt work while
they reconvert to peacetime pro-
duction—because largely it is using
for war the same tools it used for
civilian goods and can swing back
with little trouble.
Did you ever see a woman peel
potatoes to such a hurry she looked
like she was trying to get the last
one done before the house burned
down?
Did you ever see s woman spread
new and wet spaghetti on a rod to
dry with such a smooth and flowing
motion she seemed to be waving it
on, not one strand overlapping
another?
Did you ever see a woman sitting
hour after hour patting down hash
into shining cans that raced past
on a conveyor belt like unsteady
marchers to a parade, bobbing,
nodding, weaving?
They're all at the H. J. Heinz
company plant—thousands of them,
packing and preparing food for the
army at a rate to make the average
housewife dizzy.
The potato-peeling women sit
around long tables, steel-mesh
guards on the fingers that hold the
vegetables, while hour after hour
they whip out the potato eyes and
the deep-bedded skin which ma-
chines cannot handle
They average about three palls an
hour if they're experienced. The
record-holder among them peeled
57 buckets to a day.
That's K. P. with a vengeance.
One degree of longitude on the
earth's surface “at the equator
measures 69.16 miles.____5
"MOUNTAIN STATE"
full partner.. % -
Probably the commonwealth term will not be adopt-
ed, but the United States, the Philippines and perhaps
Puerto Rico will become, in fact, a commonwealth of
nations. 0 .
This leaves what used to be the French Empire. In
view of what happened when Hitler conquered France,
it does not seem far-fetched to imagine that the one-
time colonies will prove reluctant about returning to
their Old status.
In pure theory, the simplest thing would be for the °
major nations to turn their colonies completely loose
and let them have both the privileges and the respon-
sibilities of freedom. A
However,, the people of the Philippines, the Dutch
East Indies, French Indo-China, now know at first
hand how small is their chance at survival without
’ ’ might behind them. The starving people of Puerto Rico
. can guess how much worse off they would be
ica’s economic support were withdrawn
British long have known and 2- --
-ered that it is possible to exte nd complete local
omy to the provinces, permit th em to share in the
Genre
Aine
Th
disco
the Dutch have
A U tor •" 1 w ****-P------7----1 J
deter mination of commonwealth problems,
leaving them to the mercy of the economic and mill-
without
wolves -
1 certainly the homeland, exp cted to spring to
the < efense of its commonwealth bi
“is entitled to have a voice in •
Commonwealth type of organize
instrated ito strength and its fle
WAX
need
The
dem
ethren in time of
nergency matters,
ion seems to have
xibility. -
HORIZONTAL
1,5 Depicted
state.
12 Harem
13 Profit
14 Clamp.
16 Affectionate.
11 Genus of
tropical
shrubs (pl.)
20 Simulated.
21 Athapascan
Indian.
22 Symbol for
selenium
23 Music note.
24 Father
Answer to Previous Puzzle
GEORCEL PAT
VERLDE
5,7150014
ADIAsO
F OIRICE
*
IN
24 Dance step
23 Babylonian
god of the sky
23 Symbol for _
iridium. O
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LIEIGEIDA 28 Skill.
KEEP ER 29 Fish eggs.
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32 Scoffer.
33 That one
36 Pleasure cart )
37 Flock.
39 Arcaded
bridge.
40 Mean.
Two P
Repor
51 Small particle.
(comb. form). 54 Commandos
S5 Eel catchers.
31 Royal Society 57 Years (abbr.)
(abbr.).
24 Universal
Mln want.
language.
35 Similar.
61 Small beating
vessels.
<2 Forsaken.
38 Hackneyed 63 Wands.
41 Him.
42 Has been
consumed
47 Within.
VERTICAL
I Cry.
2 Man’s name
49 Its capital is 3 More
- sorrowful.
43 Resource.
44 Size of shot B
45 Daybreak
_ . (comb. form)
6 Four (Roman) 46 Compass point
7 Shred. 48 Shout.
3 Beverage 49 Compact
S Islands (Fr. ) 50 Smooth. A
or *
11 Intentions, account.
12 Station 53 Manuscripts
(abbr.)--(abbr.). ---—
15 Greek letter. 56 Ever (poet).
17 Steel. 59 Out of. •
19 Sour. 80 Yard (abbr.).
4 Bind.
5 It proceeds
(music).
Accord
2
16
20
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24
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30
CAPITOL DOG FIGHT IN RECESS
BUT SOLONS' FUR STILL FLIES
By KENNETH L. DIXON
WASHINGTON, Jan. 30. —)-
Congressional fur still flew Friday,
although the Capitol hill dog fight
was officially recessed until Mon-
day. 0
The bone of contention »
whether every dog should have his
day to the House of Representa-
tives—or whether congressmen are
treated like dogs.
You see, Curley got lost.
Curley is Representative Brad-
ley’s (R-Mich) springer spaniel. Be-
fore Bradley found him, he decided
what this country needs is some
good dog protection laws, so he pro-
posed a couple in the House. They
would impose penalties on dog
poisoners, hit-and-run drivers who
leave injured pooches on the pave-
ment and dognapers who profit on
finding lost Fidos before they’re
lost, so to speak. '
Curley, he explained, once saved
his life. 5
Up popped Representative John-
son (D-Okla) who allowed as how
he loved dogs as well as the next
one, but that what with a war go-
ing on, this was no time for Con-
gress to turn dog catcher. He in-
ferred that maybe the gentleman
from Michigan wanted to appoint
a "special committee on canine ac-
tivities.”
Bradley bristled and growled
something about replying on Mon-
day. but into the snarl sprang Rep-
resentative Hoffman, another
Michigan Republican who certato-
ly wasn’t going to sit idly by and
listen to any New Dealers "tell us
what to say and when to say it."
(See what you started, Curley?)
"You (Democrats) look after your
own speeches and we will do the
same," he barked. And furthermore,
"May I say that anyone who has
been yelped against and howled
against as has been so many mem-
bers of this House" is justified in
such actions as proposing dog pro-
tection laws.
He snapped that “there are four-
legged dogs and there are two-leg-
ged curs.” and then observed bit-
RADIO PROGRAMS
AFTERNOON
D
a
ingly that certain people “have
been abusing and misusing, and
kicking us around as though we
were dogs..." ,
Representative Clevenger (RP
Mich) saw an opening and jumped
in to ask if Bradley's bills would
“extend his mercies to the Frank-
furter 'hot dog' also?" (art! arf!)
When Hoffman replied that he
gathered from Supreme court rem,
ports that "the Frankfurters are
very well able to take care of them-
selves," Representative Rankin (D-
Miss) interrupted to say they both
were barking up the wrong tree-
talking about two different laws al-
together. D
The lost dog proposals were lost
in the shuffle, so the House ad-
journed.
Rev. Butler Will Give,
Talks at Rising Star
The Rev. R. L. Butler, pastor of
Fairmont Methodist church. wiYp
leave Sunday afternoon for Rising
Star, where he will deliver a series
of four lectures on the Holy Land
and the Far East, Jan. 31 to Feb. 3.
The Rev. Mr. Butler's lectures will
deal with' conditions in Italy, An-
cient Rome, Egypt, and the Ho.il
Land, and with the fall of Pompeii.
He will speak at the Rising Star
Methodist church, whose pastor la
his brother.
Crowd Fuller
D
CHICAGO, Jan. 30-((Pl—An ex-
hibit to a small grocery store Is at-
tracting more attention than many
of the displays to adjoining Michi-
gan avenue shops. T
Long rows of shelves are jammed
with every variety of canned goods.
The model grocery store was built
by the regional headquarters of the
OPA and the exhibit is intended to
demonstrate how the new point
rationing program will work. J
Saturday, January 30
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WASHING
The president
and Brazil, 1
personal co
that the Atl
‘safe for all"
and Dakar n
threats of b
against the 1
• On the wa
ping of war
Minister Chi
Morocco, Pre
ferred wtih P
a United Sts
Onursday. T1
they had agr
ment last n:
In Rio de J
that a comp’
effort was re
American all
dulation whe
an even too
conflict by se
tual battlelin
On two po
“It is the
(he United 8
lantic ocean
to their join
at the White
grateful for
help that ou
to the great
throughout t
The latter
as being ad
Argentina, th
American ns
• to declare w
sure diploma
The two cl
pressed "com
must be peri
assured that
rica and Da
any circumst
dome a bloc
threat again
They said
tog going ov
as a whole
joint Brazil
sort. They o
tinning subn
Caribbean to
Vargas anno
efforts on
to meet this
a Flying hoi
but safer so
- Roosevelt st
African coas
Atlantic to t
ance of Bn
him and th
And inspect
forces of t!
In a sepe
the press.
White House
ed that he
dlanca conf
“war effort U
pause to B:
with Varga
details of ■
"President
colleague,'"
said, "of the
of the confe
of the reso
come must 1
tank civilize
The stateme
Give had di
Anglo-Amer
Africa, for t
the possible
freedom of
at the narr
lantic.
• The two
meeting has
ity to "sun
all the Ame
opinion eac
publics was
Do an equ
just wha
mutual ass
conversation
protect the
not divulge
during out
THE THR
O
TH
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 220, Ed. 2 Saturday, January 30, 1943, newspaper, January 30, 1943; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1635626/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.