The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 20.02.1943, Page 6

The White Falcon - 20.02.1943, Page 6
Barney Google and Snuffy Smith by Billy DeBeck •SSSSST m&W' NW=> S.’EVVrVYc.CR OUi MOttRTAW. ww var'ia x vevoA Me a-nv\\r'orn>’ vnvwvst tm racr \s t(\r<mro, We 'sve' morr. \tMRW>t$R\_ ^ecv. it rr<< >// W ^ o'" -— —i c\x - (. <- -y / iJ// < Topr iOj’. King features Syndicate, Inr., World rights rcservcri. " * ** ? \VvBRfcAOA <N SECOOT« TARSh TAAR. \TOA-RRRM\S V=> AS 'A'CTCUVN' AS V TV? WOO* NVOWrW l ! wVfWv cPPMnpwnrw j/e* ~^kKoJ m u ? /W : - T t, i „ Our neighbors, the Navy, pres- ented an excellent entertainment program in our theater last week. And someone has sent us some of those “rubber bands” you call chest expanders so the outfit is fast becoming muscle conscious. Another girl friend has writ- ten her last letter: “I’ve met so- and-so and I love him very much. I’m keeping my old job!” 10-E-C. Field Artillery Father-to-be Corp. Bing And- erson was presented with an in- fant-size sleeping hag for his hoped-for son. The men are still talking about the fine lime they had recently when a Bed Cross sponsored program was staged here. It was quite a treat. Pvt. Burton A. Anderson. T/5G. Joe (Call-Me-Sergeant) Taylor is always asking the K.P.’s, “How did . I ever make Sgt.‘?” After tasting Joe’s cab- bage with cheese, others now are asking the same question. T/5G. Bucknor, known as “Ted- dy” to his boys, is down in the dumps lately. It seems his love, Bose, by name, wrote only 14 letters during the last two weeks. Pvt. “Call-Me-Lover” Jennings lots such a collection of girl’s pictures over his bunk, it looks like the graduating class at Vas- sal-. Pfc. Paul .1. Florentine. The first hit of business new S/Sgt. Lowery vows he’ll attend to, sans further adieu—is to post a reward for the uncouth rascal who was so mean as to pilfer his “Git-tar”; i.c. a broomhandle and can equipped with three genuine twine strings. He wants to whip out a few tunes that’ll shame Monsieur Autry and Ac- ufr. (Note to the culprit: We ivho have never learned the fin- er arts of vocalizing beseech thee to keep abovementioned in- strument in hiding. If Pvt. Horwitz doesn’t become an auctioneer after all the shout- ing he does at our bingo games, we’ll pass the job on to ever- obliging Wolfgang. Pfc. Jack D. Hunt. —They Say.... (Continued from Page 4) had to fight a-war on two fronts; when we view with satisfaction the accomplishments of the Brit- ish IJighth Army in North Africa we must remember that this army has been able to drive for- ward without looking over its shoulder toward India. Thus it is apparentJhat rarely in military history has a detach- ment so thoroughly justified it- self as the detachment of Allied air power which has been as- signed to the southwest Pacific. WALTER LIPPMAN.—It is so highly probable as to be virtu- ally certain that at some point within the past few weeks—per- haps when the dash to relieve the Stalingrad army failed—the German governing class made up its mind that the war couldn’t be won. A conviction of that sort can’t be kept the secret of a few men; it must soon be known to military and political agents of countries which can’t afford to be wrong about who is going to win the war. Finland, Spain, Italy and Turk- ey are all vitally interested. Finland, in effect, publicly has thrown herself upon the mercy of the Allies. The tension in Spain is relaxed. Italy had a change of government. Turkey dramatically reaffirmed her al- liances with Britain and Russia. RAYMOND CLAPPER.— The new American Commander of the European Theater, Lieut. Gen. Frank Andrews, says that his first job will be to increase the bombing of Germany and thus to complete the softening- up process. The idea that Germany could be defeated from the air has nev- er been seriously held except by a limited number, but it is ac- cepted that a daily raid on the scale of the Cologne raid would so completely disorganize and depress Germany that a few of them would bring her half way toward defeat. Russia is now doing the job on the ground. There may be much groundwork for us to do before it is all over, but every bomb dropped now will do work that otherwise soldiers will have to do later. Every bomb dropped in Ger- many has a double force. It does its actual physical destruction and it udds its blow to the Ger- man spirits that are already so low over the defeat in Russia. Obviously we have sent a considerable airforce to North Africa, and the fact that General Spaatz is remaining in Africa indicates that extensive opera- tions are in mind there. That has necessarily checked the amount of air power that we can put against Germany itself for the time being. But considering our production along with the pilot training program we should have literally thousands of planes available for use against Germany within a very short time. Unquestionably Ger- many is shaken inside. There is odd behaviour going on there— funeral dirges, strange silence from Hitler, a frantic note in the voices of once cocky propagand- ists, a hurried dashing about of the General Staff in the Balkans since Churchill’s visit to Turkey. All those things add up to a home front echo of the bad news from the whole Russian front.

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The White Falcon

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