Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, September 27, 1940 Page: 3 of 13
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DENTON, TCTA8, KBCOBB CHBON1CU. FKIDAY, CTFmtBtt », tH»
New Alliance
New Alliance
-
n 1
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through Oklahoma's
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scien-
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the
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President Makes
^Sec leljj
^'tleivs- NIW BRIEFS
t z-- i I American Legion members are ti
I ( 1 1' F* 1 1 I 1 . )ui <i t i lin I nil 11 1 I I novi 'T'l me
I
American Legion members are to
the
ihe patriotic parade
OFFICE
i
S U P I’ LIES
Miss Ella fxiuise Knight hits gone
Ihe Best Selections
at the Lowest
Prices!
Italians Attack
British Bases
Pi ices
(Quoted
Gladly
—and
Pi ompt
Sen ice
I SMITH’S Frozen Foods
On Special Items!
it
ACROSS FROM P. ().
WEEK-END SPECIALS
r 1
. 1936 Oldsmobile
2-<l<x>r
touring
sedan.
TOMATO JUICE
17c
New
paint.
.Must
sell
AT
this ti'hok
also arc
P. & G. SOAP. 5
15c
Rl GULAK
Three Albanians
s(ZE BAKS
TOMATOES
5c
' those usually
i iliiues
planes
1
POST TOASTIES. 2
19c
N e w
PINEAPPLE JUICE
3 FOR 23c
*7 •
i
(ROSBY
FALL SHOES
15c
25c
Oi l? DOWNTOWN STORE IS
FOR MEN
i
$4 and $5
19c
10c
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
29c
15c
21c
15c
Academy at
A
11c
13c
F
$3.95
BOLOGNA
10c
r
i
19c
KRAFT’S ELKHORN CHEESE
to
BACON SQUARES
15c
Super Thin, Double-Edge
DRINK
i
RAZOR
S5.95
BLADES
Box of 25
i
25c
i
f
JCPENNEYCQ
MMMM
VOERTMAN’S BOOK STORES
J
I
5
1
il
I
I
t'l
One of Greatest
in World History
Rotarians Hear
Ballas Attorney
We're Financing
Many Hornes
“BETTER THI NGS TO EAT"
Air-Conditioned for Your Comfort”
El Circulo
Names Officers
DOUBLE
COLA d
( olunibus,
16 Oz. Can
No. 2 Standard,
( an
I urge
( No Limit) Can
Iatan Association
Telephone 26
Set1 the
bout''
Suit s.
PHONE
391
named
Chib,
Hickory Smoked,
Smith’s Nubbin, LB.
Oranges
34 I Size, dozen
FREE
DELIVERY
Ian
en>.
the
lor
EVERY
DROP
OF
Jones Bootery
North Side
casions and circumstances calling
momentous decisions" on her
President
told reporters
the
had
as
to Berlin.
new
little
BRITISH WAR
RELIEF SOCIETY
BLAST PROBED
motorist
and lilt'll
Crackers
2 Lb. Box
Onions
Yellow Spanish, lb.
I
I
Brick Chili
Smith’s Del uxe, Home Made. lb.
Calf Liver
Branded Beef, lb.
Wieners
Skinless. 2 lbs.
Tobin Drug Store
Phone 47
Ss
jen
xik
md
Brooks Dairy, Inc.
Phone 467 4U0 N. Locust
1314 \V. Hickory 1419 Oakland
Phone 5C7
’ I
An
60
Coffee
Maxwell House or Folger's, lb.
Cauliflower
Large Head, each
Kraut
Nu Crest. 2 No. 2 cans
Try Our SMITH’S DELUXE Bacons and Hams, Sugar Cured and
Hickory Smoked in Our Plant!
We Have Installed a Refrigerated Vegetable Spray and You Will Find Our
Vegetables Garden Fresh!
Cabbage
Nice Firm Heads, lb. .
I Vet
the
re re
be-
any
dif-
Eight Hundred Men
and Girl
rj
Hats Cleaned and Blocked. Amer-
ican Cleaners. 39
Per
LB.
■ i
?. 1
f J
In Large Bottles or 2
Full Glasses
5 CENTS
M
tins
underwent
20
12 Oz.
< an—
i
IP
i
I.
»
r;i
The Vanity Shop
“Shop of Style and Personality”
Mr
rc\
at
i ■
Per
LB.
K£J
JU
■ I
-i
M •fl
’’'v'-i
the most |
I!
27
it
1 • A
that In view of the
VIRGINIA BAKED HAM K 39c
FRESH FISH. HOT BARBECUE. FRYERS AND GUINEAS EVERY DAY!
'U«R<
NAA I*”*. iM.
r, J
I
pl
Ml
I h
,'M|W !
B allace Praises
Naval Base Deal
■> .•*11
London Brings
(hit New Secret
Devices to Fight
Night Raiders
Were financing many new homes
and additions to homes, as well as
refinancing others, and would like
to figure with you on any financing
problem you have. You deal with
I home people and use home money
through our Association.
Denton Federal Savings &
Cello Wrapped
LB.
t He
hair
Rev John Schwer was program'
I <huinnan.
a. |
immediate nidi
wea|X)HN i
I
IM
* ,.ugM
|g
new "Switeh-a-
lumper Fashion
en to revive Italian claims against i
(ireece. which were brought to the
fore a month ago by the reported
slaving of Hoggla
I
K
[ ;A'i
have
<»ur dangers—the dangers of any
combination of dictators "
Wallace said he was confident '
"no American blood will be shed
11 we pursue our present course."
He stressed the f *’
wheat loans and derided the Re-
publican farm platform
NEW COMFORT IN EUSTM 1T0CK1NM!
New ifjurr & black Elaatic Stockings
give ample support vet look like regular
silk hose Cool, comfortable, light weight
anj washable Made of “Laatex” with
two-way stretch.
Another New Weapon
mentioned "another
which makes
«11
d
■ L-
mean Japan will enter the Euro-
pean war.
I
I
' -iy* ..
£
The income of the state of Tex-
as was $202,300,658.25 for ti e 1939
fist.il \eat. disbursements $194,332.-
431 42
Remember Way Baek About a l^^ar Ago?
Repeating moat of the address
delivered tn T. 8. C. W assembly
Tltursday morning, Wm H DuU,
legal advisor of Bell Telephone Co.
hi Dallas, yesterday noon summar-
•uted • the qualities of a true Arner-
li an citizen before Ute Rotary Club
We are at the crossroads of
civilization,” Duls said, "and. we
have to make a fight in dead earn-
' t for American principles"
Next week's meeting will be on
grounds of the Denton County
xiy
WASHINGTON. Sept 27.— (ZP> 1
On land, al sea. and in the an the 1
new German-Italian-Japanese al- . L
fiance presents one ol t..» ----
forceful combinations in history |
Authoritative semi-official figures *
i ade
Miss Charlene Starr, daughter of
and Mrs 1. C Starr of Attb-
underwent an apixmdectomy
the Denton Hospital Friday
PERSONALS
g9 19
* t -
•I >♦
i 1
____
‘IM
advanced to !
1 ’*>
new
WASHINGTON.
President
army officers todai
promotion to major
brigadict general to meet
qulremeiits of the c\j
forces
It Invoh
motion ot top-i.inking
peace-time history, officials
Twenty-eight were nominated
advancement to major general
Baptist } ear
Io ( lose Sunday
A at-MsA.,,? «
Most Important
Since Soviet Paet t
( r
,S|Min Not Mentioned
Contrarj t ■
was not mentioned in the pact
, . would be |
enrolled as an ally to permit Ger- I
IDtlll f r < uytvc f (I >>to rah I h rill mH LJ • i • >
fact the air tor.e
viate iiom
u | ing almost ext ItiMvek
PROBE MEETING
OF “OBJECTORS”
Election Guess I comment upo
. ...
I initsi<*,iuk
high up tn the heavens
A flat roar which seems to
■ a ceiling several miles up
bump
alliance by
there Ls
Hie threat ol
man invasion was off for
year nt least Military informants
said the RAF had battered Nazi t
troop-carrving barge concentrations
sufTic iently to allay invasion fears , —
which reached a crescendo tn re-
cent weeks
1 Berlin reported that Hitler's night,
raiders dumped 880.000 pounds of
high explosives on South England ,
■in 'one of the severest raids yet1
earned out on Britain " Most of the
bombs apparently were directed at
River shipping targets.
London's millions heard few.
which the United
States had taken into account in
determining its own policies.
Hull made tills comment
bflef formal statement
Previously
Roosevelt had
could not say anything about the
pac t signed today in Berlin because ;
tie had received nothing official on
it
Amid this diplomatic flurry Ger- |
warplanes In great waves •
I
Anderson, at Mis 1, W
a residence. 80ti Bell Avenue
RAF ofiieers lot the chib yc'ni
Moore was electcxl vice
Mrs
er and Mis
NEW ORLEANS. Sept 27
Reports of an explosion and traces
ot oil prompted tut investigation
today ol a blaze
damaged the headquarters ol the
British war relii l society at 2302 St.
Charles Avenue late last night.
A spectator said an explosion
: shattered several panes ot glass tn
pat t o! the house and
Evans asserted
unmistakable odor
the line for the part they j 4,
♦ tonight 122 German planes ♦
♦ were shot down in today's al- ♦
♦ most continuous air battles ♦
+ over England ♦
By EDWIN STOUT
LONDON, Sept 27 Jv New se-
cret devices witit which to combat 1
night raiders were reported today 1
in use in the London area winch '
last night had one of the lightest (
night raids in Hie three weeks since
Hie air blitz began
Tlie devices
He
5. it was 315 to 216, on August 2J weapon winch makes very little .
noise except an odd rustle like the (_Op Oftld He LoUlCI
Not Do It, But He
Showed He Could
ROME. Sept 27 olA- The Alba-
nian new.spa|X‘r Tomon reported
today the "barbarous" killing of
i three Albanians tn Greece, includ-
ing the niece of t so-called Al- |
banian "patriot" Dant Hoggla al-
legedly slain earlier in Greece
The new alleged crimes ' threat-
Sept 27
Roosevelt nomtntaed 113
lot tcnipol :o V
general ami
in. ■ t the re- ,
xpanding hind ,
the largest mass pro-
officers in 1
said
tor j
and
85 for promotion to brigadier gen-
eral.
Topping the long list sent to Hie '
Senate was the name ot Brigadier;
General Jay 1. Be nedict, command- ;
ant of the Military
West Point, wlio was
— —' and
of
Hal nominee, during a three-speech ] Hn - Tokyo alliance by peaceful
trip through Oklahoma's eighth ; means, but "there Is no telling
congressional district, told a gat.r- 1 whether there might not arise oc-
eung here:
We should give thanks that we | for
president who understands ' pnrt, Foreign Minister Yostike Mat-
dangers—the dangers of
F Solomon has returned
sja-nt sev-
her mother, Mrs
bv Mis Hill | Lizzie Hicks Sunday Mrs Hic ks
ticdfi'lt. Ihe celebrated iter 80tii birthday mini- ’
1 hem V e 1 Hill make
he I eiissui ect t lie olf’u < 1
an
which heavily
1 Thames
j since1 Lon
explosions
I Nazis Hit Hard
With daylight, the Nazis strilck
in greater force, smashing three
times at the
120 planes 111
B.. I other German
officials said several thou- I bombers and
ol such relief
clothing
the
force, smashing t
British 1 apital
the first wave
formation of
fighters attacked
town in the Dover zone but
I defenders reportedly scattered
the m
Berlin residents benefitted by the
first night of unbroken sleep Hits To fill the' honorarv
week British bombers tailed to up- mother formeriv
Mrs
was elected
Vickery rev
British bombers tailed to ap-
pear over the German capital, and
air raid sirens were silent.
The British reported that 1
man-held invasion bases" on
channel coast. Kc’il. and Internal
German waterways felt the fury of
their bombing attacks Britls.i
planes blasted at Zeebrugge. Calais,
Boulogne. Dunkerque- and Cap Cri.s
Nez. France, leaving a path of de-
.struetlon mid fire tn a 100-mile
i w all)
The British announced 34 Ger-
man planes were shot down yester-
duv, and admitted the lo: : ol eight
British lighters Th. hciiuniis said
19 British and only time Nazi
plain's were' downed
lokvo pi 1 s- comment on tl.c Unl-
1 cd State's embargo on scrap metal
to all except We tetn Hemi.sphete
c limit tie's and (in at Britain mdt-
e ated that .Japan e iiiisidered the
measure disci immatoi v action aim-
ed (lireetlv at ni-r
The newspaper Asahi said a clash
seems inevitable" between Japan
and the United States.
Sunday will mark the closing ol
the assoeiatlonal venr lot the First
Baptist Chinch, and the day will
be closed with the ordinance o!
baptism Also, Sunday will be pro-
motion day in the Sunday School,
whi n < hildren tire promoted from
the different classes bv age after
A|>t il 1
The paste: Dr Frank Weedon,
will preach m the morning on And
When Thew Had Pltiyet and in
the evening on What It Costs Not
to Be a Christian ' Two anthems
. The Lord Is Mv
Light" eoR'y S))eaksi. in the
morning and "Even Me" 1 Wat ten >
111 the evening The ordticince ot
baptism will be adt^niistered at the
close of the evening service
Hext me e ting will be tn I wo weeks. | versary on the same day with her
j with Mrs Andy Cain. Bell Avenue 1 granddaughter. Nancy Ann New-
Thirty-one rela-
the observance at
Reported Killed
LARGE BILLETS LSED IN
T ILK ON DOVi It
LONDON Sept 27 I'1 Rest
dents of Dover re|X>rted that just
1 before the German shelling todav.
a German fighting plane maclnne-
I gunni'd the' town with at tnor-piere-
mg bullets three times the size" of
fired from German
LONDON. Sept 27 — <JD- The
signing of tlie German-ltallan-Jap-
unese military alliance today was
regarded in diplomatic circles here
as the most momentous diplomatic
development tlie world has seen
since Germany and Russia an-
‘ noupced their nouuggreaslou pact
a f<w days before the war began
diplomats declared it was intend-
ed primarily to divert United
States' attention front Europe and
to limit American help to Britain
"It is dilcult to resist the conclu-
sion tllat Japan lias been hurried
into an arrangement which can
bring her no assistance but only
ENID, Qk , Sept 27 (A’j—Hen- the embarrassment of undertakings
Wallace declared last night she ll have to carry alone," inform-
; developments ed sources said
abroad "it certainly is providential |
that we acquired the new naval 1 May Fight
bases In the Atlantic.” I TOKYO. Sept. 27. —<4’)— Japan
The former aecjretary of agricul- will try to live up to her new re-
* Rue and Demopratic vice presiden- 1 sponsibilitles under the Rome-Ber?
s'e^Tee^
•71ie.se queer
Londoners have
creasing interest
are in tae t caused by new ty|M-s ol
weapons, or bv well tiled weafions
January. 1 adapted to new uses." said one ob-
his forecast had been 325 electoral I server,
votes for the Democratic ticket and
206 tor tlie Republican, on June
‘ 1 ministry reported
shot down
Nasis Step—
(Continued tram Page One)
ing too lightly fit pushing Lhelr’
countries into a dangerous adven-
ture” and that any attempt to en-
croach on tiie "living space" of any 1
of the signatory powers would meet
"an Imposing forces of allies "
Germany's foreign minister Joa- ,
chim von Ribbentrop stressed, how- ■
ever, that the pact was intended to 1
"seek peace and not war."
Tlie Nazi diplomat described It
as "an alliance of tlie three most I
powerful powers in the world, and. |
lie declared
Any nation which intends to
mix in tile' Joint Halts of tlie con- j
tractors will have to meet the com j
pact power of the three united nu |
tlons of 250 000 000 people "
2 A flat roar
strike a ceiling several miles
and bump its wav clamorously
along the top of the skv ,
3 A muffled rattling like a ' ”7’’ , ,
Fin1 Chief John W
there was an
ot oil nt the s
No estimate' ol damage was giv-
en but e..T.. .....
sanel dollars owrth
supplies as shoes and 1
! were stored m the building
' No one was in the house at the
'time of the fire
AMONG SICK
Cail Gentry, son of Mr and Mrs.
J D Gentry. 406 West Mulberry
Street, is ill
used together. I
might make
hazardous
18 Nazi planes I
weir shot down in tlie morning's |
furious sky battles over the south-
eexvst alone
Itself
in
WASHINGTON, Sept 27—(/P>—
President Roosevelt told a press
conference today he had forecast
the outcome ot the November elec-
j Hon
In response to a question,
, president said the prediction was
j in a sealed envelope tn his desk.
1 Then, with a smile, he added
1 that he always understated things
Mr. Roosevelt has made similar
forecasts prior to the 1932 and
' 1936 elixtions, but had guarded
them very closely
Alter the 1936 election. Mr Roos-
evelt disclosed that tn
granddaughter,
mam of Ennis
lives attended
Mrs Hicks' home
D S Malone of Ponder was in
Denton Friday
suoka told the nation tonight
In a broadcast he reiterated, how-
confident j ever, the statement of Foreign Of-
fice Spokesman Yaklchlro Sutna
: that the plot does not necessarily
government's "
d.‘<l th.» '
east < exist alone
London itself underwent the
mildest nigut in 20 consecutive '
dusk-to-dawn attaxks. and a slow- ;
ly lifting British censorship per- ;
nutted correspondetiti to comment
vaguely on new seert^ anti-aircraft
devices which may have, hampered
tlie German raiders
One new weapon was described
tvs setting u|i a single terrific explo-
sion disintegrating into staccato
cracks high In the heavens Anoth-
er produced "a fiat roar winch
seems to strike a ceiling several
miles up and then bump its way
clamorously along the top of the
skv" still another produced a
muffled rattling like the carpet-
slipper machine gun."
For the first time, the British
high command was pictured as con-
sidering that Hu' threat ol Get
invasion was ' ofi lor Hu.,
nt least
the
w ho
major general and assigned
ix>mmand one of the three 1
army corps planned by the war de- ,
part ment
Brigadier General Edwin
Wntson. the president's aide,
nominated to move up one,grade to
major general
PEORIA Se'pt 27 iJ9 A
polai’m.iii hailed a motorist
who had snarled traffic by try-
ing to make a "U '.tuin on a
busy striTt
"Say. you c an t do that he-
barked, walking over to the car
Ihe motu' 1st glalu I'd li lt.
1 tglit and t hi't 1 at Ha- jxilte i'
man
Oh
man troops to march through Spam |
and attack Britain's great rock ci-
j tadel at Gibraltar from the rear.
. A 1 » s 1 .4 ♦ 9 * 4 < - ,4 1 , , 1 < «. 9 4 M,.»* »•«» /~T
j man warplanes in great waves
, ' pressed Hie assault on the London
. . area and over the Dover "Heil's |
Corner" region The London qtt ,
Nazi planes I
Mr Roosevelt tevtsed his predic-
tion to FDR 360. AML 191 " On
the Sunday before the election he
made it FDR 360. AML 171 Tlie
actual electoral vote was 523 for
Roosevelt, 8 tor Alt M Landon of
Kansas.
I. ------ -J 122 GERMAN PLANES ARE SHOT
| be at the Legion Hall next Tues- DOWN IN DAY
1 day nt 3 p m. to complete plans + LONDON.’ Sept 21 -0P>- ♦
land f.trm the line- for the part they | + The Hlr mlnlstry announced ♦
Mrs RuIm. Martin wa- n■<.»<-d . ,h,‘ >’"t!' • ♦ tonlBHt 122 German
wits ttuia tviaiim w,i.> n.un u (lp, nmg tin- Denton County Fair. |
WHO president when El Cnitilo Club, n 11S muioumi'd by Zeil Ti'ir.v, Le-
meeting Thur.siliiy with Mrs Lilt her , glon member working with the pa-
nt Mi s 1, W Opltz s
1 lech'd '
Mr;, Roy
was eli'ctexl vue president
Julian Land sei roary-report - ,
Jess (1iifTit.l1. treasurer
ixtst of club I
held bv Hie late '
Art VickeTv Mrs (■ Se hletnat I
... and in tribute to Mrs |
Ger- Vickery rores were presented her to Megargel where she will teach
1 Hip daughter. Mis GritTith | home ci einoi’iii s In the school
Eleven members and one gue st | Mrs J
were' pti'si'iit, an! Mrs Edward I from Dallas where she'
Vickery was rece ived as a new menr- I cral elav.s with
her I’ti/es were won
Sc.ileinat and Mrs
PITTSBURGH. Sept 27 opt—A
Us til meeting ot ' conscieutious ob- '
lectors" to discuss conscription
brought about three investigations [ ..
today including one by Federal Bu-
H au Ot investigatie.n agents. ; . onterence
ihe inquiries were announced
.liter Pitt.sburgh school authorities
ir pended ,1. C Spahr Hull. 36.
Ferrv High School English teach-
11 who presided at tlie meeting,
until they "obtain more information
m the case.”
Hull said tlie group was com-
posed solely of conscientious objec-
tor-. and l ommiuted ' there is a
difference between con-scientious ob-
jectors and dial’ dodgers."
Hull, lather of two children, stud 1
la' would serve tn a non-combatant
capacity but ' under no circum-
stances will I bear arms."
froufrou of a taffeta gowu."
Evidence the British high com-
mand considers Hie threatened
German invasion of Englund "off"
indefinitely was seen by authorlta- .
tive military quarters today in 1
longer and more frequent perhaps
even nightly Bittish raids on Bei
tin
The RAF. wlmh raided Beilin
four successive nights tlu.- week but
not last night, has not aniiounced
the new policy 1 tfieiallv but it has
been put down as a ceituintv bv
some sources
These quarters point out Jhe RAI'
: is not neglecting the ' niviision
| ports" across the ihaimel. but Hie
counter I fact th,‘ ' ’
Viale from a polu v ol 1 ota iiitr.it-
I ing almost exclusivvh on Hu Ger
man-held channel toast 1 taken 11
a sign of "growing contidt nie '
Military informants said the RAF
must feel it lias battered the Ger-
man barge concentrations sulfi-
I ciently to allay the worry the con-
centrations caused a tew weeks
ago
Two other ftp tor- ;dso arc seen
permitting the switch of targets
the rapid approach of
bad winter we athe r and the ri'port-
ed arrival on the' fighting line ol
squadrons of new and jxtwertul
■ British bombers
\V. F. (Pal) H Will TON
MOTOR (14.
Ph. 2 IS 120 S. I.ix iist
: i 1 “ 1
indicate that together the tliree
axu guv tin uuent-s command train-
ed armies ot some 20 000.1XX) men
air forces of- possibly 35.000 planes I
and fleets aggregating more than ,
2,000.000 tins
Tire figures.
Lund forces, including reserves— [
Germany 6,000.000. Italy 7.5OU.OOO. j
Japan 6,500.000
Air—Germany 25000 planes. It-
aly 6 000. Japan 4.000
Sea—Germany 400.000 tons afloat
including five or six conventional i
and "pocket" battleships. Italy r
550,000 tons, including six battle- j
ships; Japan. 1.100.000 tons. 10 to
12 battleships
a
How d fou like to swap places
with Fiances Cott girls? She's
the only girl in C C N Y's
School of Technology and there
ate 800 men The 16-vear-old
Brooklyn miss, pictured tn class
above was acimitted to the
chemical engineering course
through a lexrjrhole tn. college's
regulations Her first love, she
says. l.s not men but mathe-
matics
Long Existant
WASHINGTON. Sept 27. —(Al-
1 Secretary Hull said today that Ja-
pan's alliance with the German-
I Italian axis merely made clear "a
1 relationship which has long existed | Tlie devices were said to have
un effect” and which the United been developed by British
tlsts, and observers declared there
was a chance tjiat
two ol tlie devices
to a press night bombing
raiding by day
•>e I There were no
he | cation whether the new
were responsible tor Hie solteiimg
of Hie Gertnan blows on the capi-
tal, and there were no intimation.',
ol their nature
In a gradual lifting of the cur-
tain of censorship, however, British
------ - J— > were permitted to
upon tiles new air-raid
noises heard by Londoners in the
last few nights
1—A heavy single explosion dis-
integrating into staccato cracks
rattling like-
"carpet slipper machine gun."
noise's to which
listened with in-
and speculation
ROME Sept 27 •1’) The Ital-
ian high command tdoay report-
ed widespread bombing attacks on
British bases in Africa and tlie
Mediterranean and acknowledged
Hie British Air Force had retali-
iite'd with a series ol
bieiw.'
Among the Italian obiective.s.
1 onnnuniqiie said, was the British
oil terminus at Haila. Palestine.
British raids were reported on
Hargeisa and Berbera Somaliland;
Metemma. Libya. Jljlga. Ethiopia,
and Agordat, Eritrea Results were
said to be negligible
i ARMY OFFICERS I
GET PROMOTION
11
1 was not mentioned in th
had been anticipated she
to expectatloius, Spain 1
....-----. ... ... ... t u
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, September 27, 1940, newspaper, September 27, 1940; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1307168/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.