Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 48, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 9, 1940 Page: 4 of 8
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v
DENOON. TEXAS, RFCORD CHKONK l K, WEDNESDAY, OC TOBER », IMO
NAI
Germans Renew
Efl
N
they are
in
pre.sent were
l of 21 mid 35. inclusive, are required
•f
PERSONALS
RENTAL
p
( hurch District
COURT HOUSE
Io Convene Here
Latest Fiction
in our up-to-date
RENTAL LIBRARY
Eddie
At 3c PER DAY
JtlJITE
Roach.
Den ton.
per
Johnson.
B
Denton,
Fletcher,
Slidell.
Predicts War
7-
Not to End Soon
e
' 4
At The Right Price
i
J
I
» «
leaders
I
•>
I
Groceries, Fruits,
Will
Vegetables and
i>
in
to be
Meats
ASK YOUR GROCER
<•*
FOR
claimed
they
were
PURITY BREAD
Knight
said
announcement
Ditiidit nm ivui n. cincii i
_ naval dockyards, industrial plants
OR ROLLS
NOTICE!
Tokyo
e «
Japanese newspapers
in
W
FIRE CAPTAIN
IN
to
Purity Bakery
S
*
5
membership
MOSS ROSE!
for your night life. See
our new shipment of ex-
Classified ads get result*
flattering-
citing
and
evening gowns.
s
Many styles and colors.
A
The
I
I
I
E
i
&
Feeds.
THE WILLIAMS STORE
' N
King Radio Shop
PHONE 963
*■ '■■■ i,
VOERTMANS BOOK STORES
L*|
fit
i?
Vanity
Shop
Lovely
Sophistication
GODDESS of TIME"
March of Time
Pictures R, A. F.
Ground School
Class Has First
Session at T. C,
3,390,000 Rales
Texas Forecast
Final Rites Held
for R. J. Cowan
Denton Bundle
Is Sent British
1 .* *
P? r
Fire Drill Clears
Ward School Quickly
Fox-Terrier Reported
Stolen Found Tied
In Laundry Bundle
Training Course to
Draw Scout Leaders
Choral L.ibrary for
T. S. C W. Compiled
in
in
6.2 Cu. Ft. General Electric
Refrigerator $119.50
3 The talk b> Don Bate, foreign
news correspondent and lecturer on
intarnational affaire, which was to
have befn given Thursday night in
the Teacher* College library audi-
torium, will be made at 8 p. m
They’re baked and de-
livered fresh daily.
CALL 106 FOR
SPECIAL ORDERS
QUALITY
BUILDING
MATERIALS
AND MARY SUE
CAKES
German* Bombed
The Air Ministry said tons of ex-
plosives and hundreds of fire bombs
were dropped on the big German
. seaport of Bremen, and that the
other objectives.
Huge fires were
spokesmen
1 out
*
shops
were
W
A
| Kills
Arthur Menken, who has been in ,
Hath Soap, , rakes
Hand Soap, , rakaa
anti
Splnkle
We Can Save You Money
On Your
ECONOMY GROCERY
A MARKET
Phone 133
Tobin Drug Store
Phone 47
MARRIAGE LIGENNEN
Doyle I/eofiard Parker and Paulino
Ruby Armor
J
truck
m
P
( oiii -
coin-
and
Torn
two
£liza^el/i Carden
The average motorist used 724 gal-
lons of motor fuel during 1939. with
an average total annual fuel cost in-
cluding tax. of 1135.75.
11U W. Hickory 141g Oakland
Phone M7
Oodles of
MYSTERIES—
WESTERNS
MACK MASSEY
MOTOR ( O.
Ph. 520 222 S. Elm
Reed
Denton
Foxworth*
Galbraith
Ina—......... . ■ ■ '■■■■■
Smith Frozen
Food*
i
I
I
Li
GODDfll
OF TIMI "A
17 |awal«
*29”
l.'r
poser
position
It < t ion i
LAYING MASH
DAIRY FARMERS
CO OPERATIVE SOCIETY
DENTON, TEXAS
*
-
MILK
Brooks Dairy, Inc.
Phone 4K7 400 N. Locust
♦
/.
•
..
“Shop of Style and
Personality
Rega
of his
is out
stra tgh
Denton
regular
the on
game I
regular
To Analyze
Feet for Shoes
Our
Feed
Call American Cleaners for sat
isfactory work. Phone 260 67
eoootit
O» TIMI "C“
17
•29”
CREDIT TERMS
McCRAY’S
JEWELRY STORE
E Townsend, Rube
Fortune. Misses Nellie
Barnhill and Will
Gasoline Fumes,
Tarred Highways
Give Blame for
Cancer Increase ,ng pll\‘*s-
I
AMONG SICK
Mrs John Linn. 1228 Panhandle 1
Street, returned to her home Wed- ■
at 3 p
until 5
Coacl
ere Col
their f
the we<
Denton
quanda
well as
Arkansi
w hom t
Fable i
B T C
1940
Becat
not bei
in tiiel
found
over In
no rep<
the M<
It Is re|
mini tin
Arkurvs.
lor its
lines,
blocker
rather
Stsco c
bls gal
low hl
play
V
Mmi Rom Duning Powder, >1.00
Cologne.#2.00 SctniedBtlm. 32 00
Bath Soap, | rake, in hoa . >2 00
in boa . 11.25
The Denton County Association
for Childhood Education met In
the Lee School Tuesday evening
presided over by the president. Mrs
C C Williams The program for
the year was presented by the pro-
’ gram chairman, Miss Mary Frances
Gardner Miss Annette Leatherwood
reviewed Dorothy Canfield’s "Uns,
derstood Betsy ” Tire next meeting 1
will be in the West Ward School. \
the date to be decided later.
Joe Bell 01
T Blair ol
Green
f McAlester. Ok ,
Denison. Mr
Mis
and
Edward
Kirkpatrick. J
i i
1
M
!x?
Hollow a a
Mrs C W
second 1
Hollow wa
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
M D Bishop and wife to Chas
Jack Morris, part of B B B & C.
R R Co survey Scrip No 111. »700,
Ot
' t-----------— _ -—
k- • Thursday in the main auditorium
of the college, it was announced
today. The lecture Is open to the
general public
Bate, who landed In Ban Fran-
cieco about two weeks ago from
f’. Japan, where he has been a clow
observer of foreign affairs during
aix of the past twelve years, will
talk on the relation of American
foreign policy to the present crisis
Id the Far Ea»t
I The visiting newspaperman will
' diacuge the attitude of the United
| States and Japan toward the Dutch
I East Indies and the Influence of the
Axis powers In the Orient, and will
touch on the subject of national
i defense abroad and within the Uni-
! ted States.
ItBateTaHtiit
!' T. C. A uditorium
Bw
——
t I '*
With Prices Rising
dwe to the war ecare why net
taanre against higher living
eeeto to come by taking ad-
vantage of ear looker eervtco.
Bay wheleeale from aa and
stere aseata, fraita and vege-
tables fee fatare aea
B*ili Oil........... 31.50
Compart Rougr >1.25 Rrfill 60f
lipwick >2.00 R<A1I >1JX>
CrMm Rouge >2.50 Rtall >2.00
r*J, .
to T
NYA Muduntb diict led b\
Westpaal. nistriKtoi m
< ait <om-
restful
d^lEEP
Hr ., r
DALLAS. Oct 9.
be no quick end to the European
war and Britain will survive during Aprons
" Luke Dallas first
rls of Argvle. second
.Me g
Mrs C
si'cond
ris <>t
Hollow wa
Bonnet '
first.
-A nation that hath no God hati^
nothing to live for,’ Dr. Samuel
L Joekel told his audience in the
T 8 O W auditorium last night
when he spoke on the topic, "For
the Life ot a Nation ”
The 10 commandments have nevqr
been revoked nor abrogated and
~r3 as great and as fresh to- '
day^ as they ever were, the speak-
er said No nation can prosper if
AUSTIN, Oct 9 <4’> Condition
on Oct 1 indicated a Texas cotton
crop of 3.390 000 bales, a decline ol
or 89.000 bales under
1939 forecast
wt“ ki\ gains in years
Industi ml and agrlt nl-
now aggregate $4 630
the largest volume sln< e
Mrs Joe S. Gambill visited rela-
tives in Dallas the past week-end.
Messrs, and Mmes W M Ixrve-
less. I.............. . __________.
C E Miller and L A McDonald
returned Tuesday night from Ok-
lahoma City, where they attended
the annual convention ot the Tex-
as-Oklahoma Kiwanls District.
CLEVELAND. Oct 9 —4>P>—Oa.so-
.............. ... hne fumes and tarred highway
Fred Minor. F L McDonald, surfaces present a new threat to
, the lives of motorists, .the Atner-
i lean Academy of Ophthalmology
| and Otolaryngology was told today.
I Drs Chevalier Jackson and Che-
valier L Jackson of Philadelphia
father and son—asserted tn a re-
port before the academy there is
"some evidence that gasoline fumes
and tarred roads may have a part
tn the Increase in incidence ol can-
cer of tiie larynx "
Tar particles tn dust can act as
an Irritant to produce the throat
cancer and caused death In experi-
ments on animals, the surgeons as-
serted Gasoline fumes act simil-
arly. they said
Oil In tobacco smoke was another
suspected cause of tills type ol can-
cer. described as fatal if not treat-
ed early—otherwise 85 to 95
! cent curable '
Bomb Ruhr
I Berlin dispatches acknowledged
ot.'w'. — ..v. , - i lhnt 30 British bombers crossed into
I nesday with her infant son. born 1 the German Ruhr district, but Nazi
1 five days ago at the Denton Hos- j spokest""" ~
I pital. I chased
_________________________ _______________, A British
i
Business Loans
Shoir Increase
Bishop and
Morris, part of B
R Co survey Scrip No
7. 1940
Book lovers! Come
and browse around
our stocks of the new
best sellers . . . old fa-
vorites.
Milling Concern
Presents Prizes
CLEAN-UP TO
RUN ALL WEEK
The National Jewish Welfare
Board supervises 324 local ass<>< ia-
1 tion.s with membership totaling port
, 380.000
. hands
that may well belong to c bu»y
^voman, yet preierve their air of
leisured elegance... Hand* to which
Elizabeth Arden has taught beadly.->
ri Tor exquisite hands, Miss Arden rec-
Lvcnts I OHlOrrOW Ibmmends her Hand-O-Tonik, a mar-
velous recipe against redness and
toughness, in two sixes, >1.00 and >1 Ji
Japanese 2 6 per cent
[ the Sept 1 1939 forecast the nvrl-
cultudal marketing service rejKirted
today
W
Play suit
Argyle
can Hollowwu of
will Bonnet Mrs
year or two at the der. first; Mrs
Argvle. second
Homer
first ; 1
Dallas,
Homer
first
W
Luncheon set
of Lake I
Burns of
Bovs stiirt
l ol latke 1
-*. » *
'■is.
* /
now miffs
- Bern to Mr. and Mr*. O. L. Fear-
son, 510 Weat Sycamore Street,
|Tueaduy. a girl, Jo Nrll.
First ground school class in the Born to Mr. and Mr*. Jack Ed-
Civil Pilot Training Course at the! wards In Dallas. Tuesday, a boy.
North Texas State Teachers Col- I Edwards Is the son of Mr. and Mr*.
Wednesday morning at | E 8 Edwards, east of Denton.
Burn to Mr. and Mr*. Lee Wan-
terre, 514 Bolivar Street. Wednes-
day morning at the Denton Hos-
pital. a boy
The condition of J. C. Pollack of
PTlMo, Route 1. who underwent a
major operation at the Denton Hos-
pital Wednesday morning, was seri-
ous Wednesday afternoon.
Born to Mr. and Mr*. M. M.
Cook of Aubrey, Route 2. Tuesday
night at the Denton Hospital, a
girl.
The Evening Circle of the First
Presbyterian Church will meet tills
evening at 6 o'clock in the educa-
tional "building. the first meeting ol
the group this year Dr Samuel L.
Joekel of Austin, who is speaking
in connection with "religious em-
phasis week" at T S C W will
speak
Prize winners In the needlework
contest held by the Moinson Mil-
ling Co at the Denton County F'»$lr
have been announced and prizes ol
48-pound sacks of Peacemaker flour I
tor first places and 24-pound sacks
of Pea -emaker flour for second
places have been awarded
All garments entered m the <on-
tist were made troni genuine Pep-
perell print bags in which Peace-
There will maker flour was packed
Following Is the list ot winners
Mrs Homer Hollowua of
Mrs J w Mor-
GdTs dress:
Reding ot Aubrey, first:
Burns of Lake Dallas,
1 Mrs J W Mor-
tlrst ,
Lake
R A
J
Fre5h, fngr»nt e«qui»itnej for be*uty *nd
the luth . . . creited by Chudej of the R,tz on
the theme Mom Rose. Like * (rented breach
of the gracious past . . to make living in the
present lovelier! All in the most entrancing of
original pat kaget Now at our ToiletnesCounter.
IS KILLED
BLAST AT BLAZE
LITTLE ROCK Oct 9 >T^-W
E Blevins Little Rock tire depart-
ment captain. was killed today
when an explosion in a burning
building hurled a portion of a brick
wall on top of a hose crew he was tcd
leading Three other firemen suf-
fered apparently minor injuries
but will not have t
• school tills year for such training. ■
since they will not be required to
report for duty before July 1, 1941,
according to information released
bv J Watt Page, state director of
the Selective Service Act
in the home of its I
president Mrs R T< Yelderman ,
The meeting is to be field in the 1
First Methodist Church, with a
luncheon for the women at noon,
and a banquet for the men In the
evening Rev Noel Kelt.i of Ar-
lington Ls the district president, and
among speakers will be Rev Pat-!
rick Henry Sr ot Fort Worth, state [
secretary and Mrs Bessie Hart of
Fort Worth, nilsslonan secretary
Cleburne Group to
Hear Dr. L. H. Moore
Dr L H Mixite, professor ol edu-
cation and philosophy nt T S C
W will speak on The Schools and
Americanism" before the lonnson
County Unit of the State Teachers
Association tn Cleburne Oct 8 For-
mer dean and president of Merldiah
College Moore received hb Ph D V/hite hand*...tmooth handi
degree from t.ie University of Tex- ■
ius For the past nine veins he has
been at T S C W where his work
as a student lecturer and writer
In the field ol child and adolescent
|>svchology and social education has
won attention
Women who have always believ-
ed that correct length and width
were enough to insure properly flt-
i ting shoes, are due to have their
| eyes opened this week, according to
H M Russell A: Sons Co , local Red
J I Cross Shoe dealers
_ , During National Red Cross Shoe
Demonstration Week, Oct 7 to 12.
Russell's Ls inviting the wo-
men of Denton to come In for a
personal demonstration of the im-
portance of the correct last for ob-
taining a more beautiful, more
comfortable fit The last, according
to Homer Baker, manager of the
Red Cross Shoe department, is the
wood over which the shoe is form-
ed. and the nearer this last con-
forms in all Its proportions to a
woman's Individual foot, the more
I perfectly the shoe will fit her
I "Red Cross Shoes." Baker said,
I “tone mtote mrer tiie exclusive fooc-
proportioned IJniff LMKOtoult'
I measuring thousands of women 's
feet In action and repose As a re-
<sult, shoes made over these Limit'
Lasts fit better, give more f
freedom and comfort and enable
woman u> walk
more vicavlous stride
"And because Red Cross Shoes
offer the largest selection of Indi-
vidual lasts in the world to choose
from, every woman with normal
feet, even many women with 'diffi-
cult' feet can be fitted perfectly in
this famous footwear."
Even women who are not plan-
ning on buying shoes now are In-
vited to have their feet analyzed
by H M Russell A- Sons Co. this
/ week, and to receive tills personal
— demonstration, it was announced
advanced
Tliutfen Boi Scout leaders ol ' 'U1 m.'trumeiitx und^vuimu.
Djmton have indicated they will at-
tend the training m-.-Ioii Thursday
night al the Davis Farm aboilt
three miles noitliea.st of Denton.
Lyndon T Grant. Bov Scout execu-
tive. has announced
Some leaders will go to the farm
while others will not go
in The session will
HANDS
Make Every Pullet PAY A
PROFIT By Feeding
Home Mixed
Your Pullets Through The j
Hot Weather And Get High
Prices In Early Production. I
SHREVEPORT La Oct 9
—Mrs. Cecil Watson called
police to report the theft ot
her four-week.s old fox terrier
She thought a delivery boy had
stolen him. she said
The laundryman stopped by.
and promised to be on the
lookout
When he got to the plant lie
found the dog—tied Inside Wat-
son's laundry bundle
LONDON, Oct 9 —(/Ft—Nazi night
filers oiiened up their after-dark
assaults on embattled London on
schedule tonight, flying in scattered
relays against the capital's defenses
One of the night raiders was re- r
ported brought down on the out-1
skirts of the city with a full load
of bomb*.
The plane apparently was caught
in tiie anti-aircraft barrage, which
flecked the sky with flashes like
exploding star* First the outer ring
of guns begun a chorus like a dis-
tant thunderstorm The volume
swelled as the raiders drew closer, i
Tiie sky was cloudless and the |
moon was so bright it outshone tiie
searchlights
The night raiders followed in tiie
wake of afternoon forays by Ger-
man planes that flew in loose for-
mation to out-smart the city's grow-
ing anti-aircraft defense
"No tuition can prosper if
it does not give tc God that whlclix
Is his pre-eminence, worship, sa-
credness ot his home, and obser-
vation of the Sabbath "
Dr Joekel spoke of the Sabbath u.-
the "savings bunk of human ex
istence." and said that although it
was due to God. it was made for
man Don t be like tiie man who
paraphrased the third command-
ment to read Work for six days and <
catch up on the seventh '
The sin ol covetousness fa the
mast dangerous of all sins according
to Joekel who went on to show ttiat
it would lead to the breaking ot
other commandments
Dr Joekel will speak again to-
night. and his subject will be
■ Christenizlng Public Opinion " The
address will be at 8:15 in the T 8
C W auditorium ’
the winter. Phillip W Russell, a
I governor of the New York Stock
Exchange predicted at the conven-
I tion of the National Association of
Securities Commissioners here to-
day
Russell said he believed It
be assumed that the conflict
extend over a
very least
"I assume that." he stated
cause Germany has met a dlei
type of enemy than It has encount-
ered before British morale has not
been shaken "
He predicted that America's pe-
riod of great expenditures on de-
fense must go through at least 1944
in order to make our position on
tills continent impregnable and to
continue supplying Britain as part
of our defense program
(Continued from Page One)
Australian cruiser Sydney in a run-
ning battle off the Cocas Islands. '
in the Indian Ocean.
Today’s invasion weather:
"Wild, gale-whipped seas run-
ning in Strait of Dover; thick
sea mists, visibility poor."
Willie German raiders pounded j
London. Britain's RAF bombers
were far from Idle
Education Group k
Told of Program
Plans for u one-day convention
ot District 13 ot tiie Christian
the Ciiurcti were made Tuesday after- 1
niMin at an executive committee
Junies ineeflng ol the First Christian Wo-
mens Council
Mrs
j
M r.-
Dallas, second. ,
Banks of Pon- j
Morris of i
Mrs |
Dallas I
! Dike I
Mrs 1
Dallas.
Nothing to Liv«
for Without Go4
lege met
11 o'clock after a final list of 20
students was approved and passed
by medical authorities
One change in personnel wa>
made from the list announced ear-
lier by Fred Connell, Instructor in
navigation and meteorology V O.
Marshall of Temple replaced Chis.
Kelly
Denton students taking I 11 e
course are Maurice Dyche. Duane
Faw. Bill Bob Kee. William R Mc-
Clendon. Charles McFatridge. C A
Skiles Jr and Charles E Tobin.
Freeman O’Rear. former Denton
resident, also is enrolled for the
course.
Ten students will be permitted to
attend ground school in addition to
tiie 20 who will fly as well as re-
ceive ground' instruction Nine stu-
dents have been tentativley ap-
proved by the college for tills work
provided they pass final medical
examinations. Francis Reed and
Cohen Calhoun ot Denton art
among the nine
Students being trained here will
have 72 hours of ground work
These will include 24 in navigation
and 24 in meteorology, both subjects
being taught by Connell of the col-
lege physics faculty, and 24 in air-
craft operation, which will be
taught by John Huett, student from
Comanche, who has been approved
as Instructor by C A A authori-
ties.
Students also will have from 35
to 46 hours of flight training, one-
half of wtilch will include dual and
one-half solo work This training,
expected to begin this week, is di-
rected by C S Floyd. C P T flight
operator, and assistants
Johnson and Rolph Carlisle
and oilier military objectives" were i
attacked in Germany and German- |
. occupied territory.
| Japanese newspapers in Tokyo
■ Indicated Japan's answer to Brit-
ain's decision to reopen the Burma
Road would be heavy
bombings of that roAd
With air bases acquired recently
1 in French Indo-China. Japanese ■
( airmen now are in a better por j
sition to strike at the Burma route.
Women s Auxiliary
Begins Bible Study
Beginning for their Bible study !
this winter the Epistles of John,
Mrs A C Evans was tiie teacher
In the meeting of the First Pres- .
byterian Women's Auxiliary Tues- ]
day afternoon in the education
building of the church Sixteen
were pre.sent Next Tuesday an
auxiliary session will be held.
Tile North Ward School has lieen
able io clear the building m one
minute in two fire drills held tins
week, according to Principal W E
Cooper A new "firebug is creat-
ing interest among the students It
is a piece ot wood wrapped m red
paper that Is concealed In the build-
,ing. and the .student fin ling it is
i privileged to turn In a tire-alarm.
I ( . Ml SI( I \\s ill M \KI
STATE RM ORD
At the invitation ot John
Gtmstrcam. dirts tor of 'In 1 <
S< llool of tile All the Teacher., Col-
lege string ensemble tron: the col-
lege symphony, under the direction
ot Floyd (iiaham will go to Fort
Worth tonight to make a recording
ot Texas Our Texas " This record-
ing ot the state song will be used
as the theme tor all Texas S< hool
of the Air pr<8’.rams
again at Nazi-
held continental bases, the flash of
bomb explosions being seen from
the English cliffs
‘Map also battered Wilhelmshaven I
n> naval base, the great Krupp arm- i
OI ' aXnent plant at Essen, tiie Fokker I
aircraft factory at Amsterdam in
‘ Nazl-qccupied Holland and many
f(X other objectives.
1 i Huge fires were reported raging
wltii a vounaerU!at Bre,nen' “1,d the Alr Ministry
“ yomwer^ Ka)fj on wilhehnshavm was
"equally punishing. ' with more
than 15 tons ol bombs dropped
there
Dawn In London revealed glass-
! Strewn streets, shattered buildings,
i and heaps of rubble that had been
homes and shops Lengthening
I casualty lists were reported from
102 sections of England. 8 of them
in London.
The RAF lashed
Britain's Roval Air Force her
All | principal iiope of victory in hold-
i Ing back the Nazi invaders and
I keeping war industries going. Is tiie
I .subject for tiie March of Time
I which will be .shown at the Texas
[ Theater Thursday Friday and Sat-
1urday
'to drop'mff'of / P ’’“'•nson, manager of the
......j theater |x>lnted out tli<‘ timeliness
" of the March of Time which will
J picture the efforts of the pilots of
, tiie RAF to drive off the Nazi
bombing fleets an episode Amer-
I leans are reading dally m news re-
Several hundred 'Teachers College I
.students will fall in the conscriji- ' ,, , , ,
non age limits. 11 Is estimated , England lor the past lour mon ns.
, photographed the March ot lime
The special film appears on
same bill with "Cltv for Conquest"
starring Ann Sheridan and
Cagney.
Ei < in ulo < 'lull will nie< t at
? 30 |i in al till' 1,0’10' ct Mis
Andrew cam mi7 Bell
'Tin literature department ol
the Shakespeare Club will med
at 3 30 p in with Mis Ben
Bovd. 920 Congress, and Miss
Minnie Paschall
Chapter U of P E O will meet
with Miss Mamie Walker. 1117
Austin, and Miss Constance
Hem li at 7 p in and following
a business session a program
of vacation highlight,-, will be
given
'I'lie Thursdav Luncheon Chill
will meet at the Southern Ho-
tel at 1 p m giie-ts of Mrs
Fred .Minor
'The T'.iursdav Bridge Club
will hold I he first meeting of
the club season with Miss Lou
OWslev. West Oak Strix’t, new
chairman ot tile group, at 2 30
p m
NEW YORK Oct 9 OS After
years of small demand for business
credits, bunkers reported today a
decided upswing in commercial
loans, particularly borrowings
finance new war industry and
panding payrolls
Some Wall Street bankers said
thev lixiked for broader demand
for comm rilal cicdlt.s as the Uni-
States defense program moved
ahead and manufacturers felt the
need for extra working iiipital to
carrv stixks of raw materials and!
buy equipment
Hie latest weekly condition re- |
of member Federal Rcrserve
Banks in 101 lending cities. It was
note I showed a lump of $ >5 (XXI 0(k)
in business and farm loans, one ot i
tiie largest we< kl\ gains in years I
Commercial
tural loans
(XX> (MIO
late in 1937
Funeral services for Robert Jef-
ferson Cowan, who died Monday,
were held lltesday afternupn in the
Shepard Funeral Home, conducted
"... L P Parker, pastor of the
| First Presbyterian Church. U S A ,
Mrs Margie Stafford sang "Beau-
tiful Isle of Somewhere." and a
1 quartet compared ol Mrs Stat
lord. Mrs L P Parker. V W Shep-
:ard and Bill Triggs sang "Shall We
Gather at tile River and
Adding another attraction
s c w
Frederic k .....,-------
| the dcpaitment of music
i piling a c horal library
I Loc uteri in the music and speex h
I hall the collection contain' publl-
| cation from all music publl: her-..
I Ix'ginmn)' and advanced methods
mu
education book.- The uialetiicl
c ross inch xed according to
title and character ot
Also included in Hi
literature for solo instru-
mental and mx al work
Available to everv student the
library will be o|>en all dav during
be I class hours with a student librarian
the first of a three-session training I present
course Dates for the other two
sessions will be set later bv agree-
ment among tiie Scout leaders
The partv Thursday night will
be under the direction of patrol
leaders Bert MoOre and Raymond
King The group will stay all night
and return to Denton early Friday
morning In King's group will be
Bruce Davis. J D Parnell. Wood-
row Malone R J Burns and O C
Moore's group will include
Wayne Taylor. Dr W H Hawley.
Dalton Parsley W A Cooper and
Dr R J Foster
We have a new ship-
ment of 1941 Ply mouths
that have just arrived.
Come in and see them
and get the good trade
we are offering.
as a
Registration of
After-night Foray T. (■. Students Set i
Appointment of Dr Jack John-
son. head of tiie deportment of | ttre working to collect warm cloth- i
economics at tiie Teachers College. 1 lng to over>ceax for relief of the b R .
las chief registrar at tile college for i war-distressed British I .
*■*»* I Mrs Richard J Turrentine is
compulsory I general director of the Bundles for
Britain movement in Denton 2!
of a special registration place for ; kh),i Tuesday that response to Die i
. ‘ ’ I Idea had been good and that
| other bundle
I shipment aoon
Bundles For Britain. Inc was
be held > formed In New York last January
.. 7 a m. | ttS ft women's emergency organiza-i .
in the library audi- li(>n to ultj Great Britain and fight
Hitler The local group is headed I
by Mrs Katherine Preston as
chairman Mrs R. J Turrentine.
general director: Mrs Spencer Sto-
ker. associate director, Miss Betty I
Mitchell, secretary; Ed Miller, trea-
surer; and Mrs R J Edwards, pub-
I liclty
Al TOMOBII.I- REGISTRATIONS
Noises J D
Buluk coupe
NO1569 J
Plymouth s«’dan
222535 J H
Chevrolet
an- t
would be readv tor i Uulhel. tlu. Kiver and Abide
| With Me. Burial was in the I O
O F cemetery, and pallbearers
i were 1. F Rowlett J C Rowlett. W
•. Wight F. F Sanders O S Chas-
tain and Guv spencer
' Out ot town relatives mid friends i
Mmes. Sarah Smith I
i Joe Wiggins. V
Burch. H 1
and Oracle Barnlull and
Courtney and daughter, all of Wyn-
JikwoikI Ok . Mr and Mrs Rpy
Cowan and Mr and Mrs Roy Cow-
an Jr ot Ardmore. Ok . Mr and
Mrs C Ryder Mr and Mrs C O
I Briggs. Mr and Mrs J B Cline,
i Mrs o I Splnkle and son Ted
| Courtney. Mr and Mrs G Beasley.
Mr and Mrs B F Higgs, all of Fort
Worth Mi and Mrs
Plano. Mr and Mrs W
Grandview, Mrs Bennie
and children of
Mrs Storie of 1
Mrs Lee McAdams
Shaw Almon "Pulliam
daughters, Mr and Mrs
Connely. H I. Kirkpatrick. J C.
Hubbard Mr and Mrs Robert Hes-
ter, all ol Dallas
*
1 "*
( Although weatiier has twen ideal
for the clean-up city officials were
unable Wednesday to estimate the
( progress of the periodical trash-
1 hauling campaign that started ear-
ly Tii"sda\ morning
Dr F E Piner, city liiidth of-
j flcar said Hie campaign would cOn-
’ tmue through this week and asked
' continued c<x>|x ration ol Denton
I citizens He particularly ho|X‘d to
have Elm and Lixilst Streets clean-
ed well belore the crowds ot Vis-
itor. enroute to the lexas-Okla-
W Mor- ' doma tootball game Saturdaw^tart
Horner ! P8'Ns>lig through Denton
, 1 * 4
” w r*
rlc« c|
makes your life a bed of
I military training, and establishment ;
non-Denton students at tiie col-
I lege was announced by Mrs Oberla
i Edwards. Denton county clerk
Registration of students eligible
for selective service will
Wednesday. Oct 16. from 7
until 9 p m 1
torium Johnson will be assisted by
a committee of at least three oth-
er faculty members
All men attending the Teachers
College who are between the ages '
I of 21 and 35. inclusive, are required ;
I to register wltii tiie special reglstra-
(tion committee headed by Johnson ’
j unless their homes are in Denton
j or unless they are at their homes
Oct 16, the day set aside by presi-
' dentlal proclamation for national
registration tor selective .service
I Denton students and students
who are at home on the day set
' should register at their regular poll-
, it was announced
men who have passed their 21st
' birthday, or who have not vet reach-
ed their 36th. are required by law to
register
Students already enrolled In col-
lege may be called up for trailing, i
First of ite kind to go from Den-
ton. a Bundle for Britain was sent
to England Tuesday by women who
Uli* V» —1-- - 1 _____ ___*-
economics at tiie Teachers College. 1 lng to ^end"over>ieas for relief of the
' registration of students within tire
conscription age for <
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 48, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 9, 1940, newspaper, October 9, 1940; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1307178/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.