The Bartlett Tribune and News (Bartlett, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 10, Ed. 1, Friday, November 19, 1943 Page: 2 of 8
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THE BA1VTLETT TRIBUNE
Friday November 19 1943u j
1)0
Republicans Gain in State City Elections
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
APPLES FOR SALE
Who's News
This Week
By
Dclos Wheeler Lovelace
APPLES sweet Juicy. Delicious 1.50 box
Klnrt David for icily SJ.BO Kennnrd'a
Choice snuce. butter jelly $2.50. Shrinks
Apple Orchards Largest In Tex. Clyde Tex.
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Republican and Democratic political strength is apparently more on a par than it has been for many
years according to results of the recent off-year state and city elections. GOP candidates won not only the
posts they were expected to get but also some they were not expected to get. Three of the victors arc pictured
above. Left: Walter E. Edge Republican elected governor of the State of New Jersey. Center: Joe R. Ilanlcy
Republican elected lieutenant-governor of New York state. Right: Simeon S. Willis Republican elected gov-
ernor of Kentucky in a tight vote battle. Kentucky had not elected a Republican governor since 1927.
The recent election was said to have been the closest in that state since 1915. In Philadelphia Pa. Mayor Ber-
nard Samuel won over his Democratic opponent William C. Bullitt former ambassador to .Russia and France.
Four Typical U. S. Fighters of the South Pacific
Left: TJ. S. A. of the U. S. N. that's U. S. Aarnham '24 a yeoman of the United States navy pictured in-
specting a box of junk jewelry on an island in the South Pacific. The jewelry was collected in Los An-
geles for trading with island natives. Center: Sitting on top of their sleeping quarters are two marine anti-
aircraft gunners who have shot down many enemy planes during the 140 raids they have helped to disperse
in two months. They are: Pfc. Frank D. Dollard 19 (left) and Corp. Robert Wolf 23. Right: George Asi-
makis 29 a machine-gunner with the coast guard who took on a Jap in the jungle and scored with a left hook
to the jaw. But he was forced to resort to firearms when the Jap drew a knife.
Carrier Transports Supplies Tank
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Wear and tear on on tanks is cut down considerably by tnis tank
recovery vehicle which carries the tanks up to battlefronts. Thus they
enter an engagement with cool engines and full fuel tanks. The carrier
is 58 feet long and weighs over 40 tons. It is -armed for protection against
enemy ground and air attacks. It carries enough ammunition and ra-
tions to enable the crew to operate independently for four days. The
army has labeled this new craft the M-25.
The King Is Peeved; the Queen Dignified
Norman Nelson (left) 15 months old appears to be on the verge of a
hearty howl as he poses for the cameraman after being named "Master
Cidcaeo" at an annual baby contest sponsored by the Women of the
Moose. Ills attitude draws a look of disdain from the queen of the show
Jacqueline Clark 29 months old (right) who dignifiedly accepts the title
of "Miss Chicago."
SW - -AVt-g-f-
Mountbatten in India
British Admiral Lord Louis! Mount-
batten (right) supreme Allied com-
mander in Southeast Asia is greet-
ed by General Sir Auchinleck com
mander in chief in India as Mount
batten arrived in New Delhi. This
will be Mountbatten's headquarters.
Opens CIO Convention
Philip Murray president of the
Congress of Industrial Organizations
opening the CIO's sixth annual con-
vention in Philadelphia Pa. CIO
members now number 5285000.
Consolidated Features. WNU Release.
"MEW YORK. If John R. Deane
' could have kept on winning pro-
motions as fast os he did in the first
months of his career in the United
.. . r n States army
Maj. Gen. Dcanc he wouid
Slated to Go Far long ago
At a Rapid Pace have had no
more ranks
to conquer. He enlisted in the clos-
ing hours of World War J on Octo
ber 5 two days after the Germans
asked President Wilson for an ar
mistice. He was made a second
lieutenant on October 26 on the
very day Ludcndorff resigned his
German command. Not that Lieu-
tenant Dcanc had the field marshal
worried. The two events just hap-
pened to dovetail. By the next Feb-
ruary it was First Lieutenant Deane.
lie lagged for a while after
that. He waited 16 years for his
majority. But he is. a major
general now and his present job
in Moscow at the head of the
American military commission
which is supposed to blow all
bottlenecks out of our lend-lease
program there is likely to move
him still farther upward and at
a fast pace too.
Deane is a Galifornian. Better
he belongs to the toploftical inner
circle of Californians who were born
in San Francisco that romantic cen-
ter of fogs tip-tilted streets and
overcoated evenings. He belongs to
the army's inner circle too is a
graduate of the Army War college
where only the smart officers go
and of the Command and General
Staff school. Forty-seven now in
his 26 years of military life he has
served In nine states the Panama
Canal Zone and China. Just before
the Moscow trip he was secretary
of the Combined Chiefs of Staff in
Washington. That too is a job
which goes only to the smart offi-
cers. A NOTHER friendly gesture from
President Carlos Arroyo del Rio
of Ecuador pleases but does not sur-
prise the United States. -Now those
r- -. citizens of
Ecuador s Chief in his sman
Another Friendly country who
Gesture to U. S. get
into the
fight may enlist in our armed forces
with his approval.
Under Dr. Arroyo's presiden-
cy Ecuador has sold us valua-
ble rubber has leased us invalu-
able naval and air bases on the
mainland and on the Galapagos
islands. Dr. Arroyo has made
us a state visit too. In 1942 a
tall heavy man with a big nose
a receding pompadour mus-
tache dignity he visited Wash-
ington West Point and New
York. His only son is being edu-
cated here.
The srn.aU republic sitting so cock-
ily astride the equator has had 22
presidents since 1897. Dr. Arroyo
elected in 1940 seems destined to
fill out his four-year term. Born in
1893 in Guayaquil educated there
his personality smacks of this pro-
gressive seaport rather than that of
ancient dreamy Quito high above
in the mountains.
He received his law degree at
20 practiced corporation law
with solid success taught in his
alma mater the University of
Guayaquil served many terms
as deputyvto the national legis-
lature was elected to the senate
and finally presided over the en-
tire congress. He refused to he
candidate for president twice
but luckily fur us was- willing
in 1940.
SPORTS writers who knew him
when he was running the ath-
letic show at West Ppint said then
that Maj. Philip Bracken Fleming
ar rl u was a tact'
Maj. Fleming Has M adminis.
3 Words to Ease trator never
A Tough Problem a loss '
the word
needed to ease a bad situation. Now
that he is a major general and Fed-
eral Works administrator he still
has the needed word. Three in fact!
They are: "A billion dollars."
That much money the general
reckons will nicely cushion the
impact of postwar unemploy-
ment feared by so many. Re-
publican voices offstage seem to
groan that so much money ought
to cushion anything but the tact-
ful general pays them no never-
mind. Fleming finished up with West
Point 10 years ago. "An army engi-
neer with a highly regarded knowl-
edge of construction he was draft-
ed by Roosevelt a fledgling presi-
dent then to head up the Public
Works administration.
He has done a passel of jobs since
that time and has been called an
ace New Deal trouble shooter. He
has been FWA administrator for two
years and before that wiped up a lot
of spilled milk for the Wage-Hour
administration.
Major Fleming is just a little short
of 60 years aid now. His hair is
graying his mustache is gray but
hi3 eyebrows ore startlingly black
with a heavy quiet face and a full
mouth.
He was born In the Middle West;
Iowa in fact and was graduated
from West Point in 1911.
The New York
And Washington Wire:
Admiral George Robert who was
Vichy's Governor at Martinique Is
the honored guest of the U. S. Navy
in a suite at the luxurious Normandy
Hotel San Juan Puerto Rico. He
will get a free ride to France on a
Spanish ship . . . The Berlin radio
now follows traitor Robert Best's
newscasts with this: "Mr. Best
speaks for himself and does not rep-
resent the opinions of this station"
. . . During Sec'y Knox's tour of
Europe (on his return via the South
Atlantic by plane) he learned the
pilots had never been initiated over
the Equator. Playing Father Nep-
tune Mr. Knox then initiated them
by mixing a drink for both. It was
cold chicken soup mixed with orange
juice.
The Magic Lanterns: There was
just one unfurling so this space can
be devoted to flickers good enough
to rate some fresh orchids . . . The
film that hit you hardest was "Hero-
ic Stalingrad the City that Stopped
Hitler" . . . The finest all-around
job out of Hollywood "The Watch
on the Rhine" an improvement on
its footlight version . . . The most
talent-laden "For Whom the Bell
Tolls" which had magical acting
from the top G. Cooper and I. Berg-
manto the tiniest bits including
horses and guns. None of the cine-
ma's golden gals and youths were
in it which gives you an idea . . .
The laughingest film of recent
months was "The More the Mer-
rier" . . . The most disappointing
vere Crosby's "Dixie" and Hope's
"Let's Face It" high-priced jobs
that looked marked down . . . The
film that promised most and deliv-
ered less was "The Adventures of
Tartu" which mixed England's best
with Hollywood's corniest . . . The
week's import was "Top Man" a
show case for young Donald O'Con-
nor and a roomful of bands in
short juve and jive. Jump the yarn
which is no jump since it lies flat
and you can revel in song and dance
flippancies.
The Dials: Edward Marrow and
Larry Le Sueur who rarely sugar-
coat their broadcasts sent word that
the Reich is approaching its 1918
whimpering. And Howard K. Smith
relays from Switzerland that the
Nazi jails are loaded with sassy
Nazis who are beginning to 'tell
Himmler's goons to go heil them-
selves . . . Tojo the dog-faced boy
bit his tongue as follows: "The en-
emy who was defeated at the begin-
ning is in fear of the richness of
our conquered territory trying to
overwhelm our nation" . . . Trans-
lation: "Here they come boys and
shooting" . . . You know who's good?
Dunninger the telepathic marvel
who takes words right out of your
cranium before you can mouth
them. He's probably dictating this
plug right now by telepathy . . .
America's song tastes range from
the ditties in "Oklahoma" to the
corny "Pistol Packin' Mama" which
is the new name for "It Ain't Gonna
Rain No Mo'."
New York Melodrama: Years ago
a Broadway showman befriended a
young man . . . When The Young
Man suddenly acquired a job on the
radio to which he invited guest
stars the man who once befriended
him asked him to put his wife on the
program . . . "Don't be silly" was
the retort "your wife is a has-been.
I need 'names' for my show!" . . .
That was seven years ago and the
fellow has carried a grudge all that
time . . . Now it looks as though
he will even things . . . The Young
Man was recently inducted into the
army . . . And the fellow who be-
friended him and was turned down
for a favor is now a big shot of-
ficer ... He has requested Our
Hero's services . . . Owwwwl
Quotation Marksmanship: Nina
Wilcox Putnam: Men are as trans-
parent as cellophane and as hard to
remove once you get rapped up in
them . . . Thome Smith: A voice
almost as low as his intentions . . .
Dr. G. Vincent: So few of us really
think; what we do is rearrange our
prejudices . . . Margaret Case Har-
riman: Money is what you'd get
along beautifully without if only oth-
er people weren't so crazy about it
. . . Swift: Censure is the tax a
man pays to the public for being
eminent . . . Sir Robert Walpole:
Gratitude a lively sense of future
favors . . . Evelyn M. Campbell:
Her face had been nicely chipped
from granite.
One Palm Beach realtor reports
most of the leases there have been
gobbled up . . . Fred Allen's latest
news: That he resum.es in Decem-
ber for the same sponsor.
The Radio: The safest kind of
heckling Raymond G. Swing point-
ed out is that which termites the
war strategy. This strategy he said
has to be secret to be any good. So
when a demagogue or a newspaper
or a second front soap-boxer starts
running the war to please himself he
is safe from authoritative squelches
the high command preferring to let
him rave rather than tip its mitt
to the enemy. Those hecklers need
about as much courage a it takes
to shoot a duck in a rain barrel it
is observed.
CHICKS FOR SALE
naby Chicks cheaper belter low ns S4.0S.
20 breeds. Lei Anconns. Giants Orpine-
tons Wyandottes Reds nocks Mlnorcns
Brahmns. Shanks Poultry Farm Clyde Tex.
HELP WANTED
Wanted negro woman cook ond house-
work. Man yard work. Live on place. Rooms
and bath so arranged can use either couple
or separate. No laundry or small children
Perm. Good salary Write P. o. Box 100.1.
PIlONn CAPTOL 1)758 HOUSTON TEX.
Wanted Klshl Men Free Travel. Oil Held
.Insulation work. No previous cxper. but de-
sire to work rcq. Also one man work in
crew who can drive truck. Essential war
work. Tr&velini living cxp. paid. No
hoozc-hends Salary. Anplv 2211 Preston
St. Write P. O. Ilox 1003 Houston Texas.
HOGS FOR SALE
Due to lack of feed nnd help I nm com-
pelled to dlsoose of one-halt of my herd of
registered Hampshire hogs. You can take
your pick. This Includes twenty sowj
weighing up to BOO lbs. each herd boars
and thirty beautiful glits ready to breed
and weighing about 300 lbs. each. The
above arc from the finest blood lines in the
nation. This is an opportunity to get a
foundation stock nt very reasonable prices.
It costs no more to feed a good one than a
common one. Come nnd see them if vou
can. If you cannot call or write C. C. Tay-
lor Taylor Farm Arlington Tex. Phone
Arlington 832W2. Phone Dallas L. 1. 442.
HOTEL FOR SALE
rOIt BALE AT A REAL BARGAIN!
"the Plaza Hotel" on Main Plaza in heart
of New nrnunfcls. "THE BEAUTY SPOT
OF TEXAS." No trade In. personal in-
spection invited illness sole reason for
selling buyer take immediate possession.
For price terms contact AL1IKHT NO
WOTNY SR. NEW BKAUNFELS TEX.
MISCELLANEOUS
"TUnkEYAID" for blackhead nnd droopy
turkeys SI. Satisfaction guar or money re-
funded. Wrights Turkeynld Arlington Tex.
Nurses Training School
MAKE UP TO S25-S35 WEEK
as a trained practical Nurse I Learn quickly
at home. Booklet free. CHICAGO SCHOOL
OF NURSING Dept. CW-3 Chicago.
PECAN TREES
Plant Papershell Pecan Trees this fall.
Heal income in four or five years. Trees S2
to $3.50 en. ' off tor orders made now.
SHANKS NURSERIES CLYDE TEXAS.
SCHOOLS
GIRLS CONSIDER BEAUTY CULTURE
Highest earning in history now and a sure
demand after war. Easy terms on training.
Particulars tree.
MODERN BEAUTY COLLEGE
001 San Jacinto Houston. 2 Texas.
Swayed to Sleep
Members of a tribe of tree
dwellers in the Philippines sleep
on a swaying rope of vines.
GRANDMA'S IDEA FOR COLDS ACHES .
uuu uiu;ii usuu luuuicuuxi mutwu &uefe
cow many mothers use Pcnetro
modern medication in a base contain-
ing mutton suet. Rub on doublet
action relieves colds' muscular aches
coughing. (1) vaporizes to comfjprt
stuffy noso (2) outside stimulates at
spot where applied. Get Penetro.
"Torelieve distress of MONTHLY'S
male Weakness
Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Com-
pound is made especially lor women
lo help relievo periodic pain with Its
weak tired nervous blue feelings
due to functional monthly dis-
turbances. Taken regularly Plnkham's Com-
pound helps build up resistance
against such symptoms. Here Is a
product that helps nature and
that's the kind to buy I Famous for
almost a century. Thousands upon
thousands of women have reported
benefits. Follow label directions.
Worth trylngl
LYDIA E. PINKIIAM'S gSKKS
Invest in Liberty ft
ft ft Buy War Bonds
Relief At Last
For Your Cough
Creomulslon relieves promptly be-
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm and old nature
to soothe and heal raw tender In-
flamed bronchial mucous mem-
branes. Tell your druggist to Bell you
a bottle of Creomulslon with the un-
derstanding you must like tho way It
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs Chest Colds Bronchitis
WNU-P
4643
Help Tlicm Cleanse the Wood
of Harmful Body Waste
Your kidneys are constintly filterlnt
vmtt matter from tbe blood stream. Dut
kidneys sometimes lag; in their work -do
not act as Nature intended -(all to re-
move Impurities that U retained may
Iioison tho system sod upaet tho whole
ody machinery.
Symptoms may be passing backache
persistent headache Attacks of dizziness
getting up eights swelling puflinea
under the oyea a fooling of nervous
suxlety and loss of pep and strength.
Other signs of kidney or bladder dis-
order ate sometimes burning scanty or
too frequent urination.
There should be no doubt that prompt
treatment is wiser than neglect. Use
Voan'i Pills. Doan'i have been winning
new friends for more than forty years.
They have a nation-wide reputation.
Are recommended by grateful people tlta
country over Aik your ntiUorl
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Ford, Robert C. The Bartlett Tribune and News (Bartlett, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 10, Ed. 1, Friday, November 19, 1943, newspaper, November 19, 1943; Bartlett, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth76806/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bartlett Activities Center and the Historical Society of Bartlett.