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GOLDEN VALLEY NEWS
GEORGE BERNARD S~LAW
AT 88 PUBLICIZES
It4ENEFIT NEWEST BOOKS
George Bernard Shaw celebrat-
ed his 88th birthday with advice
on How to Care for Babies. In the
London Times he compared the
late Kaiserin Augusta's model Ber-
lin nursery wi~h shanty homes in
Ireland's C~m~mara: "Under the
ideal Berlin conditions the infants
died like flies while in Connemara
there was no (infant) mortality
rate because childrert never died
there~The difference was due to
the fact that in Berlin the nurses
tided up the child~.en's beds and
fed and took their temperatures
and weighed and measured them
very efficiently--whereas in Con-
nemara the mother hugged them,
mammoeked them, kissed them,
smacked them, talked baby talk to
them or scolded them: in short
maternally managed them to their
hearts' eont;enL"
Concluded G.B.S.: "The Berlin
child did not grow up at all or
grew up a nervous wreck or a dis-
ciplinarian terrorist. The Conne-
mara child grew up humane and
healthy but at best a noble savage.
The problem is how to produce a-
dults who are both humane and
cultivated. Clearly they must have
nor only the Berlin discipline but
the Connemara massage."
Announced last week was the
title of Shaw's next book: Every-
body's Political What's What?
Any Port. In Belmont, Calif., a
dog named Pando, trapped in a
burning house, scurried to the
bathroom, plunged into the toilet
Ibowl, was found safe and sound
after the house had burned down.
DOG TALES
(Submitted by Mr. Rlchm~l Morris,
Frankl|nvine ~N Y.t
Fritz was a pampered Belgian
Shepherd, and like most pampered
~ets, he had a favorite spot for
eeping warm on cold days~on tep
of a foot-square floor register in the downstairs hall.
He had spent many a contented hour in that cozy corner
when the snow was falling so hard outside. But Fritz was
a watchdog. He had been taught to post himself each night
on the landing of the stairs between the first and second
~oors.
One particularly frigid night, Fritz was snoozing on the
landing of the stairs, but he evidently didn't appreciate the
chilly air that swept across him. His dog mind must' have
started working overtime, for somehow an idea struck him
that was quite an achievement from a dog's viewpoint,
His Master tells that he was awakened suddenly in the
middle:of the night by a loud crash and clatter, and bound-
ing out of bed, he raced toward the stairs to learn the cause
Of such a racket.
What he found amused him highly, and br0ughL about a
great respect for his dog. For, on the landing of the stairs
was one sh~tggy Belgian Shepherd, faithful to his duty, but
also mindful: of his comfort, r-sleeping peacefulry on top of
a ten-ponna floor register.
Somehow 'he had pulled it out of the floor downstairs and.
d/'agged it up the stair~ to the landing.
Give your dog ma extra "~M f~ hie eon~mt loyslt.v. &nd .]Ldk
feed him well with the nutr|tlous dos ~ood," unratione~. St
rotor irroeer's,
Ks|lie will pay $5.00 for every original ~rtte dog story
accepted for vublleatlon, Send them to (}rand ~ntral PoU
.Oftice. ~ox 4~), New York Cit~. Unaceel~ed manuscripts XJ~I~J[F.-,
wUl not be returned. All msnuseripts tubmitted become
Kellle's Property. Do not m~bmlt stories which have tmen l~mark
publiihed pr~vious~.
-29S HIT AT
/
¢#~tGTU •
N
OFFICIAL WAR DEPARTMENT statements now make plain the fact that
in the Manchurian raids of B-29 rdperfortresses, the U. S. fliers have
located the centers of new war industries set up outside Japan by the
Nipponese. These are at points outside Mukden and Tientsin, such as
Anshan and Tangku. The map shows the probable course taken in
reaching these centers from which the Jap armies in China have been
getting supplies. The Mukden area is the second largest pig-iron pro-
ducing center of the Japanese empire. (Int~l)
D WEY IN PITTSBURGH ON TOUR
REPUBL!CAN PRESID~I~IAL NOMINEE Gee. Thomas E. Dewey (m-row) J~
greeted on his arrival at Pittsburgh, Pa., first stop on his 2,350-mile con-
ference tour. The governor, who is on his way to attend the Republican
C overnors' conference in St. Louis, Mo~ was greeted by a committee
h~eded by Gee. Edward Martin of Pa. (Int~matio~l So~lphoto)
Nurses From a U. S. Army Hospital Ship Hold Lifeboat Drill in Australia
These U. S. Army nurses from a hospital ship are more at home in a ward than in a lifeboat, hut they are
learning fast. They must know how to care for the wounded in an open boat as well as in a hospital ward. The Army
has issued an urgent appeal to qualified registered nurses to apply for commissions in the U. S. Army Nurse Corps.
New Salem FU
Buys Building /
The New Salem Farmers Union
recently purchased the Gutschmidt
Store, which handles clothing and
dry goods.and also the food store in
New Salem. It is understood the
building will be used to house a
cold storage locker, for which prior-
ities have been received ~om the
government.
Madame Chiang Kai-shek, who
spent three months In a U. S. hos-
pital on her last visit (1942-43) to
the Western Hemisphere, arrived
by plane in Brazil last week. She
was suffering from nervous ex-
haustion and insomnia, planned a
three-month rest cure. In China,
she had been under the care of
I U. S. Assistant Naval Attache Com-
mander, Frank Harz'ir~gton, and said
he had warned her that "I'd never
be cured if I stayed in Chungking."
Sales of canned fruit and veg-
etables you put up yourself, if less
than 500 quarts yearly, are exempt
from price ceilings, says OPA.
The Lone Ranger
By Fran Striker
INTO THE WOODS~
.,.THEY'LL BE MAggACREP/
J
NcNOW WHAT DO YOU THINK)
THAT MAGKED AAAN 19 y"
TO DOt 61E~
lilY/!//
' ~-~-r~ ~..~ ~r-I
~'~E T~ AR
NEAR ENOt.I@H ~I~ FIRST OF
E, ow: 2 il
/
THE MASKED MAN SPOKE THE 3..
TRUTH! INDIANS ARE IN THE ~DODS]
AFTER A I-/ALF-NOUR BATTLE.
PLEASE ACCEPT ~Y Al=,Ot..~
OOIEG! BUT FOP, YOU ~THE
INDIANS WOULD HAVE
Follows His Dad
INNOCENT-LOOK- /THE INDIANS
TEI~RAIN} ]'~ ARE SOUTH
( ~,,.. OF THAT --
?~4~ !~'~ i~::I~!? ,~
IF WE'D FOLLOWED TilE
MASKED MAN'S ADVICE,
THEY'RE F/R/N~" AT c~:)ME-
"~ alq~ s ¢, a~ ~ #I~ THINOJ
SERVING aboard the U.S.S. Vanval-
kenburgh is Lieut. F. B. Vanvalken.
burgh, Norfolk, Va., shown above
son of Capt. Franklin Vanvalken.
burgh, who went down with the
U.S.S. Arizona at Pearl Harbor, and
for whom the new destroyer iS
named. (International
Vet Leaders Conf
: ::::.==========================
WAsmNazo~, O. C.- mii
Gem Frank T. Hines (right), he~
of the U. S. Veterans Administr~
tion, and Millard W. Rice, natiom
service director of the Disable
American Veterans, discuss curret
legislation affecting disabled ve~
erans. The D.A.V., chartered 1~
Congress as the official voice of s
men and women disabled in de~fer~
of the nation, works closely wit
the Veterans Administration in t!
rehabilitatfon and compensation
disabled veterans. Both Gem'Hinl
and Rice are ~cheduled to speak
the 1944 national convention of t~
D.A.V. to be held in Denver, Sel~
12-15.
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WAS WUR COUr 'mO
WHO GAVED YOU/J YOUtVE
HI= GENT U9 WITH J ~EEN
THE WARNINC'./ j~ W@UNDED~
" )N
£
You can put new life in an a]~twit t
wardrobe or change the appeara~J~eless,
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piecers by the-clever use o~. Sli
bright weskit, bag and hat. M~a~eed a
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