Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 8, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 23, 1941 Page: 1 of 8
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D
DENTON, TEXAS,
VOL. XU /
NO. 8
—
c
Cry as Nazis Pash Ah
le
T
1 Bob Montgomery
In New Uniform
J
.4
1
FLASHESOFUFE
kJ
followed the
the east
front
and
In the past, such ivUcence by the ! AtlanUc^n
id
4f»
j
sanctions un-
fa
ly mxhi AH. or practically ail of the
which j
Whatta Letter Soldier!
"A
;<K
'V;
that
The striking CIO shipbuilders de-
Opening
■4
way
Hm
■'W
■
the
w
• ago.
—-
x I
in
Ruslan,
means
I
<
• ■ >
»
I
/J'l’f i
I. ,1
1 ’
s
I
^eathei
I
aw
Mi;
■■
EAST
S“«S
jdBral
>
I
president, urges all members U> be
present, as .some matters pertaining
to fish laars will be up for discus-
sion
Kremlin,
citadel.
Admit Danger
to City Serious
Power to Pay
Expenses After
Session Denied
Senate by Munn
Ju
Donald
Oouglas
Receives Degrees at T. S. C. W. As
Term Closes; 168 Degrees Conferred
- Regulations on
Installments in
Effect Sept 1
Graduation at
T.CToujht g
tor S3.5OO
viB erect
rune reri-
'iM'r
b
i
dense far J.
BUeet for 03
A B Fry
sheet iron r
on McKinn
street* far I
banks win a
two rocom I
al OM Bofan
new criminal act.
tags* correspond-
r at the aet con-
V
'■ 1
Finn Ship Burns in Hudson River
Mr fa- . J
jmK ......„jj
i -1
I I.
EOi
74,101 Bales of
Cotton Ginned
’f
rf Wrr
—
■
Sfadters on maamnere taro
days—the arrival of mail R
recetvo a tetter Mho Hto cos_____
UMfa Bratamrism nfaifafalil _
»*■ WM fa Whr^BwwjmfjpoMeroro with
_______ and ’
fag," by the eum-
___ Ctetr. The eotk«e
ty fdt ratin'fand win pier the pro-
- tsriuuL-- 4—-. —.—r—--—5-43
in Denton thl* week Morrman was 1 Nazi high cotnmattd hv frequently
reared aa a boy tn Demon on West concurred with stiffening Soviet re-
Q«m»a ---* - — -I 1__- — - - - » a— kii.fari<.A
Members of the largest summer
graduation cias* in the history of
the college received diplomas at the
Togas State College for Women
commencement exercises Saturday
morning. Of the Ifa receiving de-
greet. Tt nan masters'. 25 bachelor
and of science in library science. 32
IBM*
. _____________r seefc-
after peace to knoefa wood.
Largest Summer Graduating Class
■ uie uiqy remaining muaffaaW OWO* “ — -- — — ---
' ed periodical, has received a fanfan
I withdrawal of funds for ubrrjlng on
■N
J* '
1
i ■' "'■’S3
r In Paris
DENTON
<>
E/*61
Br
fa,;,-.. Aj I
h/ /
’J’ / .
1 xl
F
I. ' A
Death
Thn J
de.'troyed on
The next meeting of the Denton ground and 16 tn air fights
County Angtenr Chib wtlt be heidf ►»»•»* MtabWmiy — Frderat ShtpbutMtng and Drydock’
August 27 at the State Fish 'Our troops continued t~ -
stubbornly with the enemy on the
Lake Dallas Several officials of the whole front," a Herl army bulletin
hatchery will be present to explain said tersely
and show the workings of the in- 1 In a sunui “ '
aUtuUon. which, by the , .
known as about the greateat cat fish
Hold Leningrad, Russia|
' -1
i Ma? for ibe Red army fa Sfagrl*
U said to be powerful, totaling some
i.million well-equipped and hfahly-
trained men
3. The fact that Japan is bleed-
ing heraelf white econoaoically in
pursuing the endless Ch tn ear war.
Incidentally, a little item from
Chungking In today's news quotes
Generalissimo Chiang Kal-8hek as
I that the conflict with
t
-
The 1M1 model year set a new
record for the number of automo-
biles manufactured, surpassing 1929
which was the beet previous year. ■
Even a 50 per cent cut wUl leave
this country with about the same |
automobile production as in some
of the early years when car sales
dropped off. People used tiietr otd
cars then, and they can do it again. |
if ne^esaary.
------ ' dared to the whole world that the
Miss Viola Sharber lias been oom- way i
Inated to a place ip the Galf -ston . Kiev
public schools antfshe Jias accepted j
the position of kindergarten teach- I
er Mias Hharber is a graduate of
T. 8. C. W with a B.A degree and |
has done part of the required work ;
on her Master's She is a niece of
Mr and Mrs W L. Yarbrough of
penton and has made her home
with them since a child.
Germans Adopt
Stern Measures
To End Discord.
"Wlten Mrs. Fblnnan left on a
trip, she placed Stubby in my care.*'
said Ool Tom Cole. '1>ut this morn-
ing la the first time I've seen him.
■M that was in Denton *
Yesterday s high temperature reg j
Lstration In North Texas was only M
with a low of 72. but in U»e south-
ern and south western parts 'of the ( outskirts of fx-ningrad and heavily
Htate the thermometer was still go- ' bombing vital rail lines east of the
Ing high. 'city f -• -«
I have learned, in whataeever
•tale I am, therewith to be content
PhllUpians 4-11.
Is life ao dear, or peace so sweet,
as to be purchased at the price of
chains and slavery?—Patrick Hen-
ry
,___TilgiB, the axfa eMef Ub-;
yaa wfafay Wl. aad eaaaed largo
fires aad ofaafaam Thursday night,
the BAT Middle East caaaaiwnfaBa
raid today. • ----:—r—
WASHINGTON.
The census bursa
that cotton fa It
ginned fa fafa.
running balaa. M
half bates fafa t
compared with It
and MT.lfa two y
Gtanhfaafasfal
tiro flgurn fag a year 1
Wit niHgii
Ml aroct a U fa M
ifa shop for h Massif
and North te
, while J. N. March-
i a screen porch and
his frame raeidanee
atte far tin.
ROUND
i ABOUT
TOWN
The MM tuu Finnish freighter Aurora eras destroyed fa flro fa her andhorage tn the Hudson River where
she had lain for two weeks awaiting ordem from her warring hngnetemd Police and fireboats fight the
flames asfa rescued all but one of the 21-man crow. The FBI is investigating the flro.
i By Associated Press)
BREVARD. N. C—The Mil-
lers are an all-out defense fam-
ily. J. A., the father, is helping
with defense housing on the
North Carolina coast. Mrs. Mil-
ler plans to join him soon aa
his secretary. Fred, the eldeet
son. is stationed at Maxwell
Field. Ala.; John is a lieuten-
ant at me submarine base at
New London. Conn.; Henry is
an aviation cadet at Lou Foote
Held tn Stamford.
Teachers College wUl c
groee on <M dtiterte J
aTthamaih andtfartiWB fa Uw coi-
lega. Dr. teM G. Uter. presi-
dent of llw Beard fa Besewte far
the teM teMbM dfakte Wl
make the prtuefael ate
This yeart gradwatli
eludes 124 master’s can
Ml bachelor's.
The comsneneement p
feature the shfatag «
Aik "How BtaWted Are
Lisefs *
mer A
25==
wS 1
badbelor of arts and » bachelor
of science Eleven of these are Den-
ton students. This brings the total
number of graduates this year to
414. with 50 degrees conferred in
February and 3M In June.
i
*Taseea from Mexice"
Placing emphasis on the import- i
ance of agriculture in maintaining !
peace and happiness in the world. '
President L H. Hubbard told the
“netinnal happiness
are baaed on the
city A total of 35 Soviet planes
was reported de.'troyed on the
aiiolber record and Itegiui to de-
clare tliat the aim of the German
anny is ix>t the selsure of towna
but the extermination of manpow-
er and destruction of the equipment
of the Red army
However, two months of war
gave evidence that the Red army hastening men to
not only is not annihilated but Its
strength and the power of Its re-
sistance Is growing with each day.
Day.
I OAKLAND. Cahf .
—A honeymooning <
:ord-ch
..re. . J . . •.....
j.......... 1 . ii.i'-.-.h-jaa
iTURDAT AFTERNOON, AUGUST 23, INI
Private LtmlUi wax accused of be-
ing absent without leave
"What have you got to say?" ask-
ed Hie Colonel
•■Well, air." replied BmlUi. "it was
like thia: I got to the station and
was about to open the carriage door
when a band outside struck up the
National Anthem. I stood at atten-
tion until It was finished, and when
I turned around the blinking train
had gone."
4
- ■ a
. “ news roached
kfafa M A new trtfa wreck
wMMfaA Mlns at Ofa an-
ttea Yaktanne tunneLta
~ In yistwrtoy. Thirty
injured
I in Parts ware report-
urned from the wurk-
SKfa to the swank
■yaw section of H»
in the fortified metropolis Itself.
a vaxt |M'O|>lrx army manned
street barricade... ready fol a death-
land tn the event of ■ sudden
break through tl>e outer perimeter
of defenses.
German military dispatches said
( waves of Kt oka dive-bombers were
blasting Soviet airdromes on the
Traffic Cop says.
Drive aa carefully aa you would
have the other fellow drive
EAST COAST OF ADRIATIC HE-
INO PREPARED
BMILIN. Aug. 33 - bP^ DNB re-
ported today from Zagreb that It-
aly had Informed the Croatian gov-
snunent the entire east coast fa
the Adriatic from Hume to Mon-
tenegro wm being pul tn a state
fa 'Military readineag."
•d One
d in Home
a — uh
___________ ____ . married
only yesterday in' Reno, were shot
to death early today aa they step-
ped across the threshold fa their
new home in East Oakland. Deputy
Coroner Elmer Sorenaan reported
The victims were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert A. Newcooxb. * -- - -
Deputy Coroner Sorenson said
they were shot to death fa Serg-
eant* James C. McDonald. R. O. T.
^jC. instructor in an Oakland high
school, a friend fa the bride be-
I fore her marriage
on August 27 at the State Fish
Hatchery, just below the dam on
- • Tiic 1,1 lotion cotilradic-
tory statements as to the probable
cut in automobile reduction for the
model year of 1M2 was dispelled the
other day when OPM announced
that passenger car production would
be curtailed 24 1-2 per cent during
August, September and October,
with an expected 50 per cent cur-
tailment for the full year ending
July 31. 1942. But while passenger
care will be reduced, truck produc-
tion will be increased to meet na-
tional defense demands
Scherle must be sleeping with oil
test on the Joe Walde farm, near
Bolivar, as he's as hard to find as a
squirrel In a forest So there's no
other news than that the test has
passed the 1400-fool depth This
may be that oll-year that Hcheyle
has been telling about for Denton
County during the ixsl fifieen
years.
■r^- ip • - -£*■*-4r4'
Indications Grow
Japan Slow to
Push Into War
Gevtnam Indefinite
A bulletin from the German
J fuehrer s liewdquarters gave no de-
tails of the M day-old struggle, de-
An oMtlmer <-omes back home for clarUig briefly
a visit with his sister. Mrs J F Operations on
Raley Mr and Mrs Leslie More- ; roll Untie according to plan."
man of Caspar. Wyoming, arrived I
VICHY, Unoccupied France,
I Au<. 23. —- (AP) — German
| military authorities put the
I lives of thousands of French-
I men in pawn today for any
| new violence following the aa-
sassinatlon of a German col-
onel in the Faris subway, and
1 the Petain government of un-
occupied France followed an
eartier German lead by de-
creeing death for communist*
and anarchists.
But own whfla the roundups fa
minan w
FoUre relda
ed to haiw hl
Ing elaag dla
CbampB ___
Eighth Anus fateMBfait
'---' prograto wm not
MILWAUKEE—American Le-
gion officials, who are having
trouble finding quarters for
delegate* to the national con-
vention here, ran into another
problem Cart Bandell, drum
major of the Denver. Colo,
band, wrote he would need ac-
commodations. Bandell la 7 feet.
4 tnchK. tall and weighs 240.
Io Moscow. Ix-ningiad and
were open Bui our troops
have blocked this way. . .
"Its plans having suffered a fi-
TotaWJMO
Yfar building permlU totalling
37440 and Unhiding Iw ww rat-
dencea were muted fa Denton dur-
ing the pnat wook. James L. BaM-
win will erect a ono More. Bvw
1 room frame ratdence on (fongren
Avenue far faod Buyer
white A. O. Bohonnfa
a nne ctofa, flve roton f
on
recommendation fa candidates for .
maaters* degreea. Willis H Clark.!
head fa candidates for masters' de- I
greea. WUlts H Clark, head fa
^ ...... graduate school; conferring honors
or permit installments to run more gf graduation. President Hubbard. |
than 10 months.
The order, the Board said, is mere-
ly a start on credit regulaUona.
changes will be made as necessity
requires
The restrictions Include
Ond third minimum down pay-
ment and maximum of It niunths
to pay the batenre on new and uwd
automobiles, airplanes, power driven
boats, outboard motors, and motor-
cycles.
Twenty per cent minimum down
payment and 1< months to pay bal-
ance on mechanical refrfaerators
fa tass than U cubic fret capacity.
1 era. suction heaters, cooking stoves
land ranges, hsettog stoves, and
space heaters, electric dishwashers,
room-unit air conditionera. sewing
machines, radios, phonographs and
musical instruments composed prin-
cipally fa metal
Fifteen per cent minimum down
payment and It tnonlhe to pay—
household furnaces and heating
units for furnaces (including in-
stallations for oil. gas or coal
stokere). household water heaters,
water pumpa. plumbtag. and san-
itary natures, tano air cagdRton-
tag systems, uM «Mte ifatfail |
IMR< A?' . ’
R- 11
L
■g&j i.
RRSF-
I u j
on mechanical refrfaerators
cause AFL and CIO leaden were household wMhing^nathiiim.'ii-rr
unwilling to get together with the I era. suction heaters, cooking stoves
manufacturers Donald Douglas, I and ranges, hssdtag stoves and
preeident fa Oouglaa Air Craft'——— -»-■«-« —
Corp., said each union group "seems
to be afraid to make a stabilisation
agreement for fear of what the
other will do."
been shattered by the nene stand
ol the Red armirev
A month ago.” U»e summary said
"the German high command de- d,^, n.r man^ement hak 'conUn-
----... ued f<>| |8 dayj ,.No„
j this As a result of the failure of
workers and owne to agree, there
are no hot rivets going into two
cruisers, six destroyers and many
ax-o. tlie Gennan command PUl on merchant vessels, and 18.000 work-
en, are idling
Traffic hUII Tied I p
Mavoi Edward J. Jeffries of De-
troit pondered what to do about the
motionless busses and trolley care.
ago were
big auto
AUKTIN Aug 23 (AV Attorney
General Gerald C. Mann said in
an opinion today the Texas Sen-
ate was without authority to vote
each member »50 a month for
stenographic and other expenam
from the end of the laat general
session of Ute legislature to the
next special or regular seaaion.
The opinion was sought by
Comptroller George H Sheppard.
"The diaUiwtion between legisla-
tive expensM and persona) expenae
la to be observed." Mann wrote.
"The power to allow the former
inherea tn the legislative function
and may be exercised The power to
allow the latter does not inhere
and may not te axarcisad fa tte
legislature except te the extant fa
(xjugUtuttouaJ perrnktonti *
ta tot VJiv-gtt -w. inc cwimiir: ntoiRUUite uh- r . _u_s4^ ,ww» a
stalemate at the posed by America in Uie matter of (J® Ult inscription. Wemu&t
strikebound Kearny. N. J . shipyard* essential supplies, without "
the little island empire cannot con- i
duct normal affairs, much less con- i
tinue Ui make war. ~ - —
5. The lieavy curtailment fa Ja- I Sf”8!...
pan's huge export trade to America,
including her all-important silk
commerce, thus increasing her al-
«m braking point fa Uxtor tang aafl tart
l and fitenda. RkMom <to ttay
•nt CtMrtm Mater fa tte 4Mh
tram tea gkl fatoML RW rally
jtta nthrd Amy B
Lieut. Robert Montgomery,
screen star and onetime ambu-
lance driver In France, strides
down London street to his post
as assistant naval attache al
American embassy A U. 8.
naval reserve officer, he flew
a bomber
WIRE BMW
LONDON. A* M^-fAFI—Tta
indaatrial eKy fa Maa a kite WM
the main targe* fa Britiah baart
era wMeh attacked ubulivea te
Western Ctraaawy during tte right,
" autteritottve saureea said today.
which up until four days
----- •-> uw
plant*.
Conferences appeared frulUra*.
while tlreie were rumors that the
municipality wa* about to take over
the transportation system which I*
the cente ro fa Jurisdictional dis-
pute between AFT. and CIO unions
i Hie AFL demands that the street
railway detriment fa the city grant
■ it exvhtMvr hsrttairrtng right* and
refuse io deal witi» the CIO, which
challenges AFI/b claim of majority
representation
West coast faatie makers told a
senate Investigating committee al
i Los Angeles that wage stabilisation
negotiation* were deadlocked ba-
1 gig-
NEW YORK. Aug- »L—<API—A
Biktoh kradiri rari .tedny te**
STsrSTrii sritaTs
Otej^ Tte brwtetot WM bMrt Ste^Sl
hurling the
Nazis back six miles in a fierce
the activities’of Die chib willi be counter-attack. This may have been
properly cared for and Ihi In hope Odesa. Black Sea port, which has
that by the time I get back theyll b’*'n "'»der siege for inany days,
have that canopy over the tree of
knowledge and cushions on the Iron
benchea.**
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Acker of '. - -
Holtville. California, are guests of Kia « second greatest city, ac- ■
" ’ -----" ■■ that “a
hanging
and that I
. . j” the
tiie Republicans of California. "That sprawling industrial center on
wasn't very popular at that time. tke Gu>f Finland I
a* the state was Republican, but lne 'jUH OI , *
siixe it has come Into the Demo- "Dig ypurselves in! The decisive
craUc fold." he said Acker is now moment has arrived " Voroahllov
with the Federal Government em- proclaimed, even a* Red armies de- I
*—-■*— *•-- -■*- —*-/~ri by
Leningrad's
. were re-
heavy pressure on
By DEWITT MACKENSBI I1
The Far Eastern tension aagEB
to te a bit easier—not btrail— Jto>
pan loves America and Britain tiiw
more but because she likes nmMi
lew the dangerous position ata B
in. both economically and militarily.
Any easement is, of co
easement, though it a
mistake to conclude M
j | has had any change fa I
1 I territorial expansion or.
by anything else than es
is to say. it's a good Ua
ers . „ ~
An indication fa Japggrt canni-
ness is before me in thu ■*--- “
cable stating that Japan 1
— ' the ofay remaining Amaataun «n»-
I ed periodical, has received a foreign
i ministry permit to mate a normal
withdrawal fa funds for ubrrjlng on
' the pubUcation. Bo ter an appears,
thia is the only American firm in
Il , Japan thus far exempted, foam Ihfl
A ' order freezing the funds of United
■ States citlaens.
■ W* N<nr P0*1®1 fa all this to that
•' Japan Newsweek has been suppress
* ' rt several times—and as rerararaa
< Ji , last week—for printing anti-Axis
: editorials. The plain inference must
I te that tte Jaoaneae want this anU-
Axto paper to keep publishing, and
thus to make their Axis affination
lees pronounced. You might call it
a small gesture of appro Brmort to-
ward Washington
Fret Brake
Quite apart from this magaxtne
Incident. however, there have bom
i many signs that Nippon was driv-
ing with her foot on the brake. The
reuMxis aren't hard to And. Md
may be set down like this: -A :
1. Fear fa involvement in WUT
with the United States and Bri|fan»
i especially the U. 8. A.
2 Growing anxiety over the MR*
ability that if war should fagbe.
B" TfT'/^7
1 * v /
i ■ ■ i i
J” 1
r \
WASHINGTON, Aug. 23^—(API—
Leon HsndeeMSk, pstee adudrio-
tratar, imposed a actedue ef esR-
ing priees today on Mnaylvarin
grade erode oBs at levels atari M
te M eente a bend below pewvafl-
IV—W tote S3 wu/ Ul Lrt'IIVUIL Oil writ wswos owiiviMiig uvve^ .v- #
Sycamore Street, and he moved to stotance An*lLp I nmofc
Hereford with his parents some I While stemming twin German i7Ll lILv 1 III VilLc)
forty-odd years ago "You know It s drives from the south and south- ___
amsws WineS: Harass National
ones.” he said, so it seems that | Finnish column* striking down the ,
you Texan* must get around quite 1 Karelian Isthmus from the north knossrliirM?
a bit " I The Finnish high command said 11 II" iJiJvi711 ULIh
----- I Finnish troops had reached points j. * A
Mrs. J R Harris, daughter fa j within 50 miles of Leningrad after |
Mrs. W B Francis, of McAllen. Is smashing five Soviet divisions and
proud of what the Valley towns are cracking defenses set up by the
doing with their Bougainvillea Trail. Russians on the former Finnish
which extends from Mission to1 Mannerhelm Line
BrownsvtUe The planting has been i South and west fa the <
under way for the |»ast five years nearest Gennan force* were report-
and many of the plants have been i ed in the vkuUly of Kingisepp. 75
planted and are in bloom." she said. ! miles away, and tn the Novgorod
“and it's going to be a trail of beau- j sector. 100 miles distant
ly sooti AH. or practically all. of the
automobiles In the Valley have spe-
cial automobile plales, which are
paced above the stale license plate
advertising the trail
(By Associated Press>
Quick settlement fa an Alabama *
steel mill strike encouraged defense
city, the authorities today but remaining to pt^fcting
‘ harass government agencies keen Japan will end next year in China s
«w defense speeiiupa were U>» favor _r—..
threats of walkout* at Great Lakes 4. The economic
shipyards. tl»e i
r . -.V
OAKLAND. Oalif. — Nelson. ,
Adam. 14. fell 35 feel out fa a
Uwe and nm'l hurt a JML Bit
- wtari-*»rtM*i»fl»-raRMMBgytoN*
a Iftnb fell out of tte MUM tra.
It broke hte leg. '
PORTLAND, Ore. — Stanley
Petersons cat Just doesn't like
bells. Everytime the telephone
rings the cat walks across the
room and bate it to tte floor.
' t ' ? V ' w • a '
'■"•.'‘■•■-if *- . -wi , -------- Jf"., .» /■“Xaitt-'1—
.;-------
te
I
CAIRO, Egypt, Aug. W—(AP)—
the however, —bum
_ tha mat
In dtocloetag
fa A OriMgR'
Thtnrtay. IAmR
ployed in the Defense Labor De- ' feuding the
perUnent "Some day I’m hoping, troops r__?.
ported under
three sides
Previous reports had indicated
the Russians were holding fast.
Meanwhile. Soviet dispatches said
i imv, —w,— -
British bombers groppei more than t
23 tens fa bombs ea F
Mele in
tte flrat news that got out.
Tn rM.iln.tea fhU fofrl
_____Otatril Brast^‘
Schaumburg, OribMB ccounandant
of the elty. mmumM ttat aflto*
Dre today hB Yrairteiwi under
arrat would be oiaased aa hostages
and “to earn i *
a number fa
holding huge defense contracts and
the public transit tie up In Ltetrolt
CIO steel workers had picketed i
the plant fa the Republic Steel Cor- |
porat.lon at Gadsden. Ala.. Friday ‘
A union man said a demand had
been made for wages approaching 1 .
those of the Birmingham district, a ready serious economic situation,
union shop and the check-off ays- '
tern of due collection.
Kearny and Detroit reinaincl sore
spot* ’
L. H Komdorfl. president fa the
j,MltaMpBrvdy _________ — •
to fight Company United States Stref sutK
sidlarv. which bold* 34g3.000.000
worth ot contract* for tight Ing and
I craft, returned from
way. is t»'d conflict. U><; Russians declared | stble conference with his associates
._t“_:i Itliat twice already Adfal Hitler's I The striking CIO shipbuilders de-
hatchery In Texas J L Yarbrough, plans for a blitzkrieg campaign had | mand a maintenance-of-union con- i
.. _ i .. , u.. .....j (met, under which the firm would |
be required to discharge union mem-
bers who failed to |>ay tlteii union
Rr 4S/„, ’ndicate
Germ<-% % **e.
IBy A-ssoC u -
Soviet Marsha. 7 einenti
i Voroshilov,«>in a drai..atic lip-
peal to the populace of Rus- i
' ain*H «»»<'<>rul <rr<>uto.at citv mc- *
hl* brother. E. M end fam- i knowledge*! today
Uy Acker left TbXM some twenty-! i„..r:i.i„ (l«nirpr is
five years ago. moving to Callfoi - iHanger is
nia. and as he wa* a Texas Demo- !over Leningrad
crat. he didn't faU to “put it on" 1 “the enemy is nearing
tl^e.' the Gulf of Finland.
' Dig ypurselves tn! The decisive '
moment has arrived." i'.c.
proclaimed, even as Red armies de-
* ** ? city, reinforced
_________ >W|MUV -CCp rushed from L
I'D be able to come back home and garrison of 1.000 00 men.
settle down with my old friends,'
he said.
Mr and Mrs. Abe Scott and Mr >
and Mrs Chester Scott leave Bun-
day for Clovte, New Mexico for a combined Red anny foroas and vol- i
two week's visit with relative*. Abe unteers fa a peoples army” had
said, before leaving. “I have turned “vrd an unspecified city from Ger- i
my interest in the shadyside club 1 m“n s***’ columns, hurling the
over to Tom Fanner, so I feel that Nazis back six mile* In a flert*
• merchant
sununarv of Ihe twu-montli- Washington to New York for a poa-
. till* FillSXiBl^ 11Ared I ailxlx, «a,itta Ri« *te*te*^
twice already Adolf Hitler's I
graduatag
and its resource*." Speaking
,on “A Lesson from Mexico," he
[mid ttat one fa tte impreeeiona a
SraSy wm
agricultural land* play In the econ-
omy fa a nation. Relating this to
the agricultural problems fa this >
country, he commented Uiat "our
trouble is that we do not realize
how big a problem it to."
"This i* not merely a focal prob-
lem or a state problem or a problem
confronting the South,” he said.
"It is not even a national problem i
atone Its scope to international. On t
one of the mural paintings fa the I
great Mexican artist Diego Rivera '
‘ ‘ I live in
harmony with one snoUier and tn .
' harmony with the land ' I
"Almost at the moment we were I
reading this inscription. President
and Prime Minister ,
Churchill were engaged in their
historic meeting in the North At- ,
lantic. Among eight points formu-
lated aa a basis fa a just and last-
ing peace for this troubled world
was a declaration that the nations
fa the world must live in harmony
with each other.”
In conclusion he advised gradu- ,
! atee to resogntoe the necessity fa.
' working out a system fa farm own- ‘
ersiiip in Texas and the , nation
that would enable every man who
desires to farm to own the land
which be works, so that he can add
to his other incentives the pride fa
WASHINGTON. Aug. 33 (AP• ' ownerfallp
Strict government regulations for ,
installment buying, distributed to- < Pregram Given
day to take effect Sept 1. affect Opening with "Grand March"
not only a wide range fa luxuries front -TUnnhauser" (Wagneri as.
but many items long cxxwMmd in the orwen proceMkmal. played by
Ute necessity class - j Miss Gwen James, the exercises
The new rules promulgated by continued with invocation by Rev.
the Federal Reserve Board applv Albert Jones, pastor fa the First
to pleasure cars and 33 other Items CSirisUan Church; organ solo,
such as musical Instruments, home "Largo." from "New World Bym- J
repair loans and other credit la- Ptany" (Dvorak). Miss James; ad-
ciliUes The general Idea to to con- <*ras. President Hubbard; recom-
serve materials for defense and pre- mendatlon of candidates for bach- i
vent inflation. ttorx’ degrees. Dean E. V. White; I
Beginning the first fa tte month.
merchants, generally speaking, msy
not tend money without a down
payment. Ttey cannot give term
credit without a down payment
Hymn, "America.’ audience; and ,
benedictton. Rev. Jone*.
Receiving a master's degree In
Spanish was Ruth Bradshaw, the'
daiRhter fa Mrs. Supe E Bradshaw,
im West Mulberry Street A1
buchetor fa art* degree went to Mrs. {
Anna Anderson. 1138 Bell Avenue. I
while baetetar fa wienee In flteary i
'■cience degrees were swarded to
Mr*. Kitty Haye*. 1833 Mulberry
street, and Irene Steinberger,
daughter fa Mr. and Mr* K. A.
Btatatagr. 1438 Bolivar Street
received by Late Jo Bentley, daugh-
ter fa Mr. and Mra. W. M. Bentley.
Route 3; Bettye Laney, daughter fa
Mr. and Mra. W. R. Laney Jr . 1330
North Locust Street; Norvella
Lynch, daughter fa Mra. Bertha
Lynch. TH Schmita Street; Berta
McKensie. daughter fa Mr. and Mra.
B. W. McKensie. 1011 Austin Ave-
nue; Leto Underwood, daughter fa
Mr. and Mra. John W. Underwood, .
Route 1. Opal Wood, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. N A. Wood. 3X1 Ave-
nue D; and Mrs. Bern M. SUU. .
OUT 1-1 Arata Avenue.
Other master* degrees went to
Maxine 4hd*reen. Bun Antonio;
(Sm OBADUATIDN. Hue '• LOUMODO, JttB
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 8, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 23, 1941, newspaper, August 23, 1941; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1307448/m1/1/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.