The Bartlett Tribune and News (Bartlett, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 23, Ed. 1, Friday, March 2, 1945 Page: 7 of 8
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Friday March!!
I
THE BARTLETT TRIBUNE
4U
fallpaper
try mnkintr a vt
brnstarch
.and water. ApplV
I the spot
and allow to dt
a! brush It
off and tho spot
gone.
on white
You can lodscaf
shirt collars an
hlnc them xxiUh
'. by sorub-
r stiff voge-
fen dipped.
tflhln hfufch ttint
In diluted bleacM
rjnnd then
'tubbed on a cake
atna soap
To rewind thof
tr of a window!
(tin the roll-
&tnsert the
flattened end
of a keyhole.
ver part
Use an old to
andle to
remove dried grji
ttMin
elated
jparts on your
oratch the met;
mv
will not
m
can be
shaped to clean
ives.
A pleasing OampiK'r some-
what different iuMMted sweet
potatoes may beljBifcy adding
the juice of oflSBle n to the
molasses (or imsmmtag). and
Thoroughly ankpsejjpsntiy mas-
sage any rcddceBJjwaai you no-
tice on a sick peMHttinom you
are caring for atlM&ijffKeep pres-
jsure off such spMigjjjjiM'a slight-
ily inflated rubbfigMinor small
soft pillows.
COLBS'MUSCLE
quicKiy relieved Dyanmmn
Grandma's old-tlmomttttei suoi
lacaaoveiopca oymon
intoacountCT-irritant.
salvo that bnngsquii
tog relict. Z5odoul
penet;
BA5E RICH IN MUTTI
During at leatMMt (fcaej three
years followuMfMgnd ef
tho war expoesseeWo that
70 million Hri-tijBl eS need-
ed annually lnfe JkJsV'alone.
Tho peak yeatylMHift
production ofnSitBiiw
jaw a
tfrei
In MjJguntry.'Si3PI?ag
Greater uio of netjiiglcoi farm
Implements In p'oefiWeirf'-years It
expected to make' agiiivlture one
of the largest contvmeH'of rubber.
Despite tha Far..St'lwr tho
Foreign EconsmtfAjbnlnrttra-
tlon expects tjrt;7l6d tons
of natural ruhWe'r.wlll be
shipped to thiTM.TJ. from
Ceylon and India during 1944.
HX3zd1'
Those BeeifpaMarrofs--
Ker
Tfy
Of course thejr
crisp tasty cat
UCCIO. W UPW f
can nnraiy waicto
But be cure you pi
!. .rrn.'ll At
tional tnste and
.&.. W J WU .. W I
so much last yearS
Your favorite di
ranpc of Ferry's
table Seeds. Ha'
den witfUFerry'i
FIRRY-MOB
Detroit 3 J
ut m eooe mm nccuei.
wnu p
8-45
For You Wi
21 houn efei
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vote matter Irani
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back.
acne neaaauiM.
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paina kciude up
filing.
Why not fry D
I Oil WIU
be uiinc a meaici
country over. Voa
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fiiuh out doUoc
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ha f nno.
them ta
from the
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Get poan'l today.
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'Bombs Steel Center
In Imaginary Flight
'Briefed' at Army Air Forces' School for Raid
On Yawata; Follows Course Over
Huge Realistic Map.
By BAUKHAGE
Wcui Anatyit and Commentator.
WNU Service Union Trust Building
. Washington D. 0.
llow would you like to bomb the
Yawata steel works in a flying for-
tress? 1 did it without moving from my
classroom seat in Orlando Fla. in
one of the courses I attended at the
army air force school of applied tac-
tics. It is part of the "post gradu-
ate" instruction of the high officers
of the army and it really Is a realis-
tic "briefing." When I had finished
that demonstration as it is called
1 actually felt as if I had been on
that bombing mission which started
at an unnamed base in China and
flew straight to a target which Is as
clearly pictured in my mind as if I
had made the trip.
I'll try to reenact it for you.
First imagine a great map
stretching across the room in which
you are sitting with two black lines
on It. The lower line runs with a
few slight deviations straight to
the target in Japan. Then there is a
short leg running north and the sec-
ond line a little abovethe other
running back to the base. This is the
course we took.
"Now men" says the officer
standing with a pointer in his hand
"you are going to bomb the steel
works at Yawata. Daylight precision
bombing and naturally you'll meet a
little more opposition. But you know
the importance of steel. I don't need
to talk about that. You have been
selected for your record last time.
Keep up that record.
"As you know this is the first
time for the new stagger formation.
You've practiced it I won't go into
that. We have just 45 minutes to
check the whole plan. We start ai
650 and the first ship goes down
the runway at 700."
(Military clocks theoretically run
24 hours. If the number is above 12
subtract 12. For instance 1630 is
4:30 in the afternoon 1630 minus
12 equals 4:30.)
' Then came some directions about
"assembly" (where this group joins
the formation) which I won't go into
here since space isn't adequate but
anyhow the assembly point is
Chengtu.
Level Off
For Bomb Run
i-'K-'.v
"We must be at Chengtu at 800.
Climb at 100 miles an hour to this
point here (the pointer taps the
map) ... to 1500 feet and level off.
200 miles per hour . . . this junc-
tion (another tap) 940; then swing
on course . . . 01 degrees . . .
(the pointer swishes out along the
black line) to the coast.
"Here-is your second climb . . .
1212 . . 190 miles per hour . . .
300 feet a minute ... to bombing
altitude at check point of Island at
1245 (the pointer touches a little
island off the Jap coast) ... it will
look like an inverted pyramid . . .
then level off to the IP." (That is
the point of entry which must be
definitely established for the flight
from there on is directly to the tar-
get and careful synchronization
with the other planes must- be
made.)
"Show a ' yellow-yellow flare so
we'll know you've reached the IP
. . if dark toggle four-and-a-half
over the bomb run then to the
rally point 14 miles north of target..
"If you are crippled going over
the target try to cut short your
turn. . ."
I'll" explain that: you see normal-
ly the planes would go north from
the" target and "then turn at a right
angle to the assembly point. Then
another right angle back toward
home so if a plane had been hit.
arid couldn't last long it must try to
catch up with the others and make
known its conditions If the plane
lags' behind It may be located by
the group leader who wW make con-
tinuous s-turns looping back trying
to locate- any stragglers Mean-
while (as I forgot to explain) there
Is a friendly submarine loafing
somewhere within radio call for two
purposes. First to try to locate
anyplane that has been forced down
Into the water; second to pick up
information concerning any enemy
phips which tho planes may have
spotted so the sub can go over and
take a poke at them.
I cannot in this space give you a
fraction of the detail of this brjef-
BARBS ...
The "work or else" bill bogged
down Jn the senate. Perhaps be
cause the senate is already over-
worked. On January 8 General Yarnashitu
said; "Japanese forces are ready
to destroy the enemy with one stroke
should he choose to land on Luzon."
Some prophets are without honor
Bfil
ing which pointed out on the map
every hazard every advantage ev-
ery varying condition. Special areas
were blown up in largo size: as a
lake serving as a landmark whoro
the. planes start their ocean jump
a peculiarly shaped river where
they reach land again. Sketches are
furnished by meteorologists show-
ing just the types of clouds they
will encounter some "full of rocks"
(covering mountain peaks) which
are to be avoided.
The known location and number
of enemy lighter planes is marked
as arc the antiaircraft guns and the
temperature and tho wind velocity
at various levels.
Target's There
Then Gone
As to the target Itself largo
scale aerial pictures were shown
which looked very much as tho
actual terrain would look to the pilot
and bombardier.. Also a map of
tho whole city. Then a map of tho
target area then photos of tho tar-
get area taken from an angle as
It will look when the plane ap-
proaches it from a distance and
another as it will look when It is
directly below the important mo-
ment. That last statement "directly be-
low" is misleading as I found out.
What you see when you look through
the glass walls of the bomber's
"nose" and what you see when you
look through the bombsight are two
quite different pictures. What you
see when you look through the
bombsight is the area (far ahead of
where your plane is) upon which
the bomb will hit if released at that
precise instant. Naturally at the
j speed at which a plane travels the
inerua oi xne Domus carries uieiii
far ahead as they fall.
This is disconcerting to the lay-
man. I looked through the glass of
the nose and picked me out a little
Florida lake upon which I decided
to drop my imaginary bomb. Then
I looked into the sight and there was
no "lake there I Too late I If I had
released my bombs then they
would have hit far beyond the dis-
tant shore although the plane
hadn't even reached the near shore
yet.
k But to return to my synthetic
flight. Lflffd it impossible to recount
it with half the realism with which
it was presented to me as my eyes
followed that moving pointer from
base to assembly point to "bomb
line" (where the planes cross into
enemy occupied terrain) on to the
target itself with the looping tracks
that bounded it and then back north
and west again over water and
land lake and mountain on the long
trek home.
After thp briefing was finished
four men in uniform took seats on
the platform. They were men with
stars on their service ribbons and
some purple hearts too. Men of
many missions just such as the one
described or they would not have
been chosen as instructors in this
post graduate university of the air.
And they acted out with startling
conviction the briefing of a returned
crew. One his nerves on razor edge
from what he had gone through an-
other a little dazed as if he had had
a few drinks too many another sol-
emn wide-eyed another jumpy lo-
quacious controversial all true-to-life
types we are told.
Carefully and tactfully the officer
checked their conflicting statements
until finally all were molded into
a reasonable and rational report.
"How many enemy fighters . . .
here?"
"Oh 80 easy'' sold the jumpy
one
"How .many do you say?" (to the
fellow in the half-daze).
"Well a lot of em I didn't
count."
"Enough anyhow. And you didn't
warn us about the others here"
says the slap-happy one as he jumps
up and jabs the map.
Finally it settles down to about 60.
This estimate will be checked as
other crews are checked and
an accurate estimate is obtained.
The same careful and studied analy-
sis of data on troop concentrations
observed movements along high-
ways convoys new landing strips
as well as the damage done to the
target.
by Bauhhage
Some French banks hold tho
phoney German "reichmarks" as
part of their assets. Well it might
help the paper shortage anyhow.
They are talking of using silver
to make bqll bearings for- automo-
biles. They ought to go pretty well
with some of the guilded youth if
'there are any1 lpf t over when the1 war
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
SUNDAY I
chool Lesson
BY IIAnOLD h. LUNDQUIST D. D.
Ot Iff Moody nible InsUtute oi Chicafo.
rteleaaed by Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for March 4
Lesion subjects and Scripture texts se-
ctert and ennvrlffhterf hv International
Council ot Religious EducaUoni used by
permission.
JESUS TEACIIES FORGIVENESS
LESSON TEXT Matthew 18:21-33.
GOLDEN TEXT U ye forgive men their
trespasses your heavenly Father will also
forgive you. Out U ye forgive not men tholr
trespasses neither will your Father forgive
your trespasses. Matthew 6:14 13.
Forgiveness Is tho very essence of
Christianity. In Christianity only do
wo find an adequate and proper deal-
ing with sin leading to forgiveness.-
In Christ alono do we find that for-
giveness cleansing and regenera-
tion. Since God has so willingly nnd
wonderfully provided for our for-
giveness it would seem that wo
would need no urging to mnko us
forgiving in spirit toward one an-
other. Yet it is indeed "a melancholy
fact that there are few Christian
duties so little practiced as that of
forgiveness. It is sad to see how
much bitterness unmerclfulness
spite harshness and unkindness
there is among men" (J. C. Rylo).
I. Tho Extent of Forgiveness (vv.
21 22). -3
"How long do I hfllfe to stand It?"
is the question of the human heart
especially if untouched by tho spirit
of Christ. The Injustices of life the
offenses of our fellow men against
us all seem to pile up until the bur-
den is about to crush us. What is
the answer to man's question?
The Jews had an answer. He said
three times is enough. Forgive once
yes. Again yes. But the third time
no. Peter was bighearted enough
to more than double that allowance
of mercy. He was willing to forgive
not just two or three times but sev-
en times.
The spirit of Christ swept all of
that aside. He said that one should
forgive 70 times seven. In other
words Christian forgiveness is to bo
untiring unlimited to know no
weariness and have no boundaries.
If one really forgives it is because
he has a forgiving spirit and that
spirit is not exhausted by use but
rather grows by exercise.
A word of caution is in order at
this point. Let no one suppose that
our Lord's instruction means that
offenses against tho law of the land
or against the good order of society
are to be overlooked and condoned.-
It relates rather to the cultiva-
tion of a personal spirit of forgive-
ness the laying aside of revenge
of malice of retaliation which do
not become the Christian.
II. The Motive of Forgiveness (w.
23-34).
Two motives are given. Tho first
is that since we ourselves are daily
and hourly in need of forgiveness at
the merciful hand of God we should
in turn be merciful toward thosewho
sin against us. Compared with our
offenses against the law of God we
know that the misdeeds of our
neighbors against us are usually
'mere trifles. Remember what God
has done for you when you are
tempted to be hard and ungracious
with your brother.
The second motive is the remem-
brance that a day of judgment is to.
come. There is always a time of
reckoning ahead even as was tho
case with these servants. Remem-
ber not only what God has done for
you and is doing foryou but what
you must yet expect Him to do In
that day of judgment. It will make
you merciful and gracious in your
judgment of others.
Forgiveness has a fine quality
which commends itself to others.
Note the sorrow of the fellow serv-
ants (v. 31). There is then a so-
cial value in true forgiveness.
III. The Importance of Forgive-
ness (v. 35)
A man dealing" with his fellow
man is apt to think that it is merely
a matter between man and man. We
are not dealing with a straight line
"between ourselves and our brother
(that was Peter's error) but with
a .triangle at whoso apex is God
Himself.
If I expect God to forgive me I
must let my forgiveness flow out
to my brnifej. If I deal with him
as thougnSRrhod nothing to do
with the truster then I must not
try to count God's forgiveness Into
the picture when I stand indebted
before Him. .
God does nqjjjjlay favorites. He
Is no respectfjflpf persons Ho is
as IntefestedTif the other man as
He is in me. The Christian should
have the same spirit.
Here we need a word ef explana-
tion. Let no one suppose that our
redemption in Christ is contingent
upon what wo do toward our breth-
ren. "For by grace are ye saved
through faith; and that not of your-
selves; it is the gift of God; not of
works lest any man should boast"
Eph 2:8 9).
Nor does tho truth of our lesson
mean that we are somehow going
tovbargaln with God trading a bit
of our forgiveness toward others for
His forgiveness ot us. God Is not
interested In such transactions.
But it I does mean that If you can-
not op will not forgive you may
well consider whether you are 'a
Christian at all for Jt Is Christlike
to fjirgivev
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS
Shirtwaisters Are Top Favorites
Buttons and a Bow tor Accent
i28o rTTMni
-Smart Shlrtwaistcr
CHIRTWAIST frocks have won a
- favored spot in every wardrobe.
They're versatile smart and a
boon to the busy homemaker. This
button-front model has a set-in belt
and graceful figure-molding skirt.
Pattern No. 1280 'Is designed for sizes
34 30 38 40 42 44 40 and 40. Size 30
three-quarter or short sleeves requires
Sit yards of 33 or 39-lnch material; 2''a
yards of 54-lnch material.
O-C.O-C.CWO.C.0-fk.r-f-fWCwrk.fwfv.r.uv.
? --.. -. ?
I ASK MS ?
? ANOTHSR f
I A General Quiz "
't The Questions
1 !.
-5i
1. What is the "arena of the
bears and bulls"?
2. When Is cockscrow?
3. What does the Statue of Lib-
erty hold In her left hand?
4. What droppeth as the gentle
rain from heaven?
5. What is the protagonist of a
story?
6. At the foot of what statue did
Julius Caesar die?
l!Jv The Answers
IUU-. mttff
1. The stock exchange floor.
2. Early morning.
3. A tablet inscribed with the
date of the Declaration of Inde-
pendence. 4. The quality of mercy.
5. The one who takes the leading
part.
6. The statue of Pompey.
6EE-SHE
LOOKS W
TOD Ay
YOU BET you show it when those
cruel pains shoot through arms
neck back or legs Do something.
Rub on souetone Liniment. Get
the blessed relief of Soretone's
cold heat action. Quickly Soretono
acts to;
1. DHato turacc capillary blood
veueli
2. Chech muscular cramps.
3. Enhance local circulation.
4. Help reduce local welling.
Developed by the famous McKes-
son Laboratories Soretono is a
unique formula. Soretono contains
methyl salicylate a most effective
pain-relieving agent. For fastest ac-
tion let dry rub in again. There's
only one Soretono insiet on it for
Soretono results. 50'. Big long-
lasting Dome i.
! McKesson mukes'U"
J9
Frock for Tot
COR a young miss a dainty long-
waisted frock she's sure to love.-
The Peter Pan collar and cuffs are
edged in gay ric rac and the bod-
Ice boasts a parade of buttons. One
of the prettiest frocks for a tot
you'll see.
Pattern No. 1279 Is designed for sizes 3
3 4 5 and G years. Slzo 3 requires 15i
yards of 33 or 39-lnch material; 't yard
for contrasting collar; l't yards rlo rao
to trim.
Due to an unusually large demand and
current war conditions slightly moro Urns
Is required In filling orders for a few of
the most popular pattern numbers.
Send your order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
330 South WcUs St. ChleafO
Enclose 25 cents in coins for each
pattern desired.
Pattern No Size
Name
Address
feV!
uMRlOttiB.
-TT.r MtU"'!'" .
.nUlHU
f OB "" 25?
really toothing because
they're really
medicated
' U GBfl
t.ZENSES
I
Millions uso F it P Lozenges to
give their throat a 15 minute sooth-
ing comforting treatment that
reaches all the way dowru For
coughs throat irritations or hoor&e-
nesfresulting from colds or smoking-
eootha with F&F. Box only lDf.
SORETONE
soothes fast with
COLD HEAT
ACTION
In cant of
MUSCULAR LUMBAGO
OR BACKACHE
due te fttliue tr uvntire
MUSCULAR PAINS
due tt telda
SORE MUSCLES
dm te evirwirk
I MINOR SPRAINS
m ST a s
m
Thouh ppUt4 eol& mb-
fMrtat iofredlftots lp eti.
ton act liltt hut to incrtaM
tb lujwrflcUl upplr of
Moo4 t Ut -and lo&u
e) BkWlIt MOM 0 Vflttitft
NJ
of their own country. .
JPi
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Jones, Johnnie & Jones, Mrs. Johnnie. The Bartlett Tribune and News (Bartlett, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 23, Ed. 1, Friday, March 2, 1945, newspaper, March 2, 1945; Bartlett, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth81678/m1/7/: 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.