Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 256, Ed. 1 Friday, June 7, 1940 Page: 4 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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4 bkrlin.
LONDON. Junr 7 —<<P—Beaters
^unr 4 -— 'T —nrums |
iBrttiah) news aftmy reported to <
end a I
lu Central
Ini luting ■
MML' JW 7z-<*>- ITwnlrr
Raynaad UM the Senate army rwu
MtaUn today “there H reaxten to
have eanfidetne in the devetopment
ft flffarallnira now under way "
LONDON. June 7.—,*5 — Ihe
American embassy today urged all
American. without urge al reason*
for remaining la return home
aboard the liner Washington leav-
ing Galway. Ireland. about the
middle of June becaase it said this
uright be thedr last opportunity on-
til after the war
— -----. June 7.—..4->—British ,
"plane* raided Hamburg Germany'! '
third city and chief port, tost night
for the acoond consecutive night but
the bombs fell into an open held be-
came of effective anti-aircrait tire. 1
DNB, the offieiai new s agent y. rv
ported todar
BERLIN. June 7.—The Ger-
man high command aunoumed to
night that Nan warplane* had at-
tacked Cherbourg harbor i-— -
number of airdrutnes
and Eastern France,
heavy damage.
WASHINGTON. June 7—<4N— ‘
Army arsenal* have been otdered
to operate where feasible on a toll ,
to-hanr basis, oflkiais disclosed to 1
day. to speed the production of
luupitlems
WASHINGTON, June 7 —. F—A [
Home tai vatxoxmnilVr, tentative
ly today approved a tax bill de '
signed to rater Jl.MMlte.M14 to help
finance the national defense pro I
gram
LONDON. June 7 — 4>>—British i
lambed railway centers and Ireight
yards in Belgium and Northwest
Germany teat night, the air minis
try announced tonight
*6*
e
*
i
HOLIDAY.**
by
Barrett
•>
9
a
under
A
A
I
I
r
{
I
AMONG SICK
u
nd.
Of Special
862 Enrolled at
ON
by
Katharine
Interest Now
1. S. C. R. Now
Herman Ramchning s
Elvy Newscgn
PERSONALS
of glass Jars
use
DITCH
ottered it
$1.49
e
Bi
Dress
SALE
swered
in
Ver;
r
1
1
of Denton
Hing 15
Henderson
I /
I
-fl
new muffs
■n.~. Am tefl- .eaad vff •— n ■ U« o.
ad- j
I
Annihilation of
France, England
Germany’s War
Aims at Present
\
J E. (TICK i BOWLING
Sinclair Service
Phone 73 1120 W Hickory
ua corn. peas, hominy, chicken <u
fish products, but warned that lhe.-A
should not be used for acid prod-
ucts oi lut meats
This book by the former
president of the Danug
Senate
I
WASHING. LUBRICATION.
VACUUM CLEANING
$1.00
The
Revolution of
Nihilism
hi
This
said all
spokesman
concerning
$22.50 Chiffons and Sheers
$15.00
$17.50 Chiffons and Sheers
$13.95
$12.50 Chiffons and Sheers
$8.95
$19.95 Redingotes
$10.00
$19.95 and $17.50 Prints
| Price
Many other good bargains in
Dresses, Underwear and
Hose
FORETOLD
The German-Rwmian Al-
liance
The Attack on Poland
The Occupation of
Denmark
THE VANITY
SHOP
Shop of Style and Personality
r,.
[More Added to
Red Cross bund
prunes i
corru&tuii
afternoon with her Infant daugh- ' pumpkin and -quash Site ad- 1
ter. born Monday at the Medical vised C enamel-lined cans to pre-:
, and Surgical Clinic I vnet discoloration of product.* such I
agent.
' rural housewives begin
A gigantic target, Parts sprawled out like this under the wings of nearly 200 German bombers that circled the
city, dropping their deadly missiles Aerial view of French capital above, was taken from one of French
planes during a recent demonstration flight
The condition of Rev W F Gal-
braith. who has been a medical pa-
tient at the Denton Hospital since
May 18. Is unchanged
Curtis D Hennon. son of Mr and
Mrs M O Hennon of Lake Dallas.
Is ill of tonsllltls
T 8 May den. 218 East Prairie
fflWS BOOK STORES
H14 W Hickory- 1419 Oakland Ava.
PHONE 5S7
jMr». M. S. Stout
to V»it in L
Enrollment at T 8 C W for the
first semester of summer school
reached 8fQ at 10 30 Friday morn-
ing with late registrations still com-
ing in
Mrs M 8 Strut will leave M<
day for Los Angeles, Calif fr
where she will sail the fellow!
Thursday for Hawaii, to spend
aumrner with her 'on. Myron SU
who teaches in a boys' school
Honolulu
Mrs E M Short. 1308 Myrtle
Street, returned to her home Fri-
day with her Infant daughter, born
Sunday at the Denton Hospital
Mrs Rose Bumstetn. 116 Fergu-
son Street. Is a medical patient at
the Denton Hospital
Mrs Lee Shaw of Krum returned
home Friday with her Infant son
born June 3 at the Denton Hos-
Early Preparation
for Canning Urged
>J
• #
last having dunked Latin, she we
home to tutor with her father to
a bualnesa course, got a job on t
Boaton Traveler as •tenographer a
that was where it all really begi
MIm Brush took to Action like
duck but she wrote a lot of go
newspaper copy first Now ah.' son
times sella the same story in 11 d
terevit ways, and doeant need
bother abdut newspaper jobs
Born to Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Han
cock, 305 Avenue G. Thursday
morning a boy Jerry Nigel Han-
cock
night from Bucharest that Sir Staf
ford < rippa the new British am
basaador en rwule io Rwaata. e»-
caped ininrv tonight wh-n a boh ol
lightning struck the airplane hi
which he was flying near Salon
1 tea.
Mr
ton i i
funeral
Mr
the ' Urup
.nrvl Mr Mrs Lonao Medan ul
Beulah visited Kirk Downing
Mrs Helen Meaders of Denton*
vsilted Mrs John Dupree
Sallle Schoppaul received a
BERLIN June 7 —i>P- -Ger-
many's war aims wire an-
nounced by authorized sources
today as twofold—“the tnnlhll-
alion ol France and Hie anni-
hilation of England, all else is
beside the point"
"Germany.'' according to an
authorized spokesman, "always
wantec peace and ~
again and again "
England and France, how-
ever declared war on us Our
atm taere'ore is annnulatlon
until capitulation unitl a com-
pteto knockwut *
■'Everything beyond ’tiiat—as
Von Reichenau (General Wal-
ther von Reichenau, command-
ing a group of German armies
on the western front > is fond
of saying -can only be revealed
at the autopsy
"It is useless
and Mrs George Taylor and
i soils. Prank Leatherwood and Mrs
Vadu Pitts returned name from a
trip to Carlsbad Cavern
and Mrs Osborns Moore and
l Walters ok . attended the
the latter's aunt. Mrs
I
Advising housewives that
vance preparation will greatly im-
prove the quality of canned goods
Miss Nena Roberson, county I
demonstration agent, urged
' ' ------- "----1 work
farm and home food budgets
Miss Roberson pointed out
adequate preparation
to discuss the
future wtule vou are fighting in
the present."
authorized
questions
war or peace alms will be an-
categorlcally in the
same manner
Bobble McCullough, von of Mr
and Mrs W R McCullough 1400
Maple Street Is ill.
Mrs A D Wiley 1208 North Lo-
cust Street, underwent a nasal op- (
elation Thursday
Mrs Ida Bel! Noren. 405 Mulber-
ry Street daughter of Mrs Hardy
Garrison underwent a tonsillectomy
Friday
Mrs Otis Smith of Argy le. Route '
1 returned to her home TTiursday ’ beets
L.ff.r’.z.j. ivith h.r I1.. f. f Ho
^fc.sS
SAN ANGELO. June 7—■»*—
Medalist Revnolds Smith wf Dallas
worked into the second round of
the Texas Golf Association tourna-
ment lodar with a 3 and t triumph
over Morris Norton. Wtrhita JaUs
redhead and Wewt Texu eham-
pton
Individual dona tic ns each day
: add tq the total collections made
j by the Denton Chapter of the
' American Red Cross which has II.-
i 300 as Its minimum part In the na-
1 Lionel pi ngram
I ContnbuuvTLs were made today by
the following persons J W Ma-
• lone I! Arthur M Sampley 13. Cur-
, tls K Scott 12 Junior League of the
First Methodist Church 31. Ray
J Lyon II. Miss Elizabetn Lyon 11
Merl E Bonney *1, Bill Mixon 50
| cents
I
Mrs Roy Borden and children
Dick and Miss Audrey of Junc-
tion are visiting her parents. Mr
and Mrs R T Slaughter Dick,
who was graduated from the Junc-
tion High School recently wrill at-
tend Tewchen College the first
summer term, and plans to attend
Rice Institute In Houston in the
fall
Mies Mary Katherine Van V<
his and Newton C Van Voorl
Elm Street,
from
"pres.-urv ;
their comm uni- |
cases she said It I
necessary to return the I
<* *1 . | V »• • • •« a as^^zg^ww x«a a • W w wa to
message that tier sister, Mrs Llszle
la lliHl'.. K LS z 4 I lax. 4 rat her Fwctowsaa 1st
STUDENT PILOTS TO 1
ASSIST FRANCE
PARIS June 7 —uPl—A group of i
Dutch student pilots 'lew to France |
In training planes eacapuqj despite !
the sharp watch of the Geiman I
conquerors of their country, the (
Netherlands legatiou announced u>-
, day The pilots will be incorporated
< in the French air force
o!
St I let
and Mrs
'L-lte.l D P Newsom
S< noate. had died at her home in
Oklahoma
| - ALASKA
WUtoagteby.
Barvetf Willoughby ta ■ brweay 1
young woman who writew Action and
I fact about the place of her birth. I
| Which happens to have been Alaska i
She Juat has produced a book of tact
—the atory of a vacation ahe and
a friend or hers named Zoe spent in
the once-Rusalan town of Kodiak It
W a lighthearted book full of rather
Important information. Mid aketchea
of Aleaka people which seem allght-
ly influenced by dramatic exaggera-
tion. and are none the leaa amusing
for it
The vacation started under a
cloud Two young women leaving the
steamer at Kodiak with no reason
beyond an Inexplicable urge to apend
a few weeka loaflng aeemed a little
loo etnnge to the Inhabitants Most
ol these thought ths newcomers were
spies because a female Informer bad
turned up the local booBeggers and
moonshiners, and these last were «i-
pectines raid, or at the beat more i
spies The other group believed the
visitors were two ladles no better 1
than they should be. attracted to I
Kodiak because there was an oil boom I
in the neighborhood
And then the Marshal returned to !
town and somebody thought to wlre-
leee Mlsa Willoughby's home town,
and the thing was straightened out
and suspicion no longer followed the
visitors about like a hungry mala-
mute
The girls were stufled with tall
tales about the otter Ashing days,
danced with the local boys, were
escorted home by 14 of these bathed !
tn a banya learned about the Rus-
sians who once lived there saw the
treasure sent the local church by
Catherine the Great, heard the story
of the last volcanic eruption tn the
neighborhood watched herds of
seals visited the Marshal's fox farm
did more things than you could
shake a stick at
Just the same the two best stories
tn the book were not directly out of
Sitka One is written by Mrs Victor
Johnaqp of Matanuaka the other Is
the atory of Klondike Kate, moat
famous of Alaskan dancing girls
Mrs Johnson gives what Is probably
the most balanced and most Intelli-
gent account to date nt the great
colonizing experiment at M.-itanuaka
Klondike Kate talks about the life
of a dancing girl in Klondike boom
days Neither story has anything in
common with the other except the
pluck of the chief characters, yet
each has an affecting quality which
moat of Miss Willoughby's prose
lacks Mrs Johnson is so balanced, so
grateful and so earnest - Klondike
Kate is so frank so honest and so
lot all things!) worth while
BARTONVILLE •
BAR IVN VILLE. June 6 Mrs
Let- Street who died at her home In
(h« Bethel community, was burled
in Shiloh .'itnetery Sunday after-
IHXll
Mi
liv'llie
thut
on
I
tiiat I
will reduce
the actual time of cunning opera-
tions and will help insure aguntst I
spoilage She advised that tin
housewives check the family plea-
sure cookers first to be sure Hlmt
they are in good condltloH u.o
ready for use Home Demcnstia-
Uon Club women throughout
county are conducting
cooker clinics" 11.
ties In some cases she said
may be necessary to return
cooker to the factory for major ad-
justments
Successful use of glass Jars m ,
canning Miss Roberson continued, |
Is dependetit on the quality ol the j
rubber rings or composition tops)
and on the rims being free Irom ,
nicks and chips New supplies i t
lids and rubber rings, she explained. 1
I are means of insuring against cuii-
| nmg failures
It cans are to be used it is bet-
ter to buy new ones each year lath- >
er than reflange the old ones Miss
Roberson said In explalniiac that ,
rar.ltary or enamel-lined cans pre-
serve the color of such highly col-
ored foods a- berries prunes and
and prevent corrosion in
and -quasi;
1 fall tar t*w hook So Mlaa Brush
iought up a different idea — she
would introduce th* «tor lea with
comment on them, heraelf the world
or what have you What ahe produc-
ed wax In effect an autobiography
with inlays ot Action there are
_2" number of Brush Action
atorlew in the book, but chiefly It is
echt Brush
Therein we see a little girl will
more energy than discrimination a
the beginning, daughter of a head
master In a boys' school. Who begai
wrlUng stories behind s sign ' Oenyu
is Working", which she stuck oi
the door of her room A little 1
she cut a swathe through her tail
school being, as she carefully
pteitu the only girl for miles aro
8tUl later the awathe got a bit
barraaelng to the cause ot educe
so she was removed to a curious (
school In New Jersey There ahe
a diary excerpts from which ■
Its author to nave been one of
campus cutups And utterly wlti
fatigue—the physical labor Invc
------ —--- in Alling 15 blank books with L.
R E Jackson and son. Bob. left | eaaentlals must have been torrlAc
"THIS IN
Brush
Once we met Katharine Brush and !
said. How do you do’" (Or maybe
It was "How do you do It?" for we .
were then and still are envious ol |
the neat way she can turn out stories I
tor the slicks at penthouse prices I |
In sny cwae. we were not absolutely i
sure we were meeting Miss Brush ' ujfa]
because Faith Baldwin was In the ! p
offing and there always has been a
cock-eyed connection between the '
two in thui mind 8o we did not 4earn
to know Katharine Brush
But now. without ever having met
her again we do know Katharine
Brush She has written a book call-
ed "This Is On Me which is as
exact an exposition ot herself, com- . ____
pleu* with background as any writer ■ street Is 111
could do .
It began, the author savs tn the '
Persian Room at the Hotel PLaxa in
New York around 3 one morning at .
which time her publishers John and I
Stan were having Scotches with soda
and were In a pleasant mood She
wanted to publlah a book of short i
atones and because short stories sell
badly as a rule. John and Stan did
arte.......-------
915 Nonh Elm Street returned
Thursday from Oklahoma and 1
Kansas where they visited reteuw.
Miss Tltla Belle Blanks daugb- 1
ter of Mr and Mrs J H Blanks, quite a
left Friday for New York CHR
where she will study on her doc-
torate in New York University dur-
ing the summer terms En route she
will make stops in Ada and oklfl-
Ivoma City. Ok. Wichita Kan,
Ames. Iowa, and Niagara Falla N.
Y She has been a member of the |
home economics faculty of John
Tarleton College. Stephenville, for
12 years
Mrs Travis V Steagall 72j North
Elm Street, had as a guest Friday
her sister Mrs Robert Jones ol
Dalia-
Mrs J M Moreland
spent Friday in Dallas
Thursday for Henderson where
their daughter and sister allss Jean
Ellen, is visiting Mrs A E Dean,
and will return here with them this
week-end
Mrs H M Reeves at Uvalde Is
. here at the bedside of her moth-
I er-in-law, Mrs F M Reeves of
j Austin, who is a medical patient
' at the Denton Hospital
| MAN FATALLY BURNED WHILE
WORKING ON CAB
SAN ANGELO June 7 —(Afl—
Richard T Arrowood. 23. died In a
hospital here this morning from
I burns received while working on
his car in a downtown street late
I Thursday The carburetor exploded,
j drenched Arrowood'k cheat and
J 1 face and the gasoline Ignited
How German Bombers Stabbed at France?s Heart—Paris
Three Men on a Horse
'AR BRIEFS _
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.jcX'vy. IW7 ■ ' - -V.'
_T
DRY SALT JOWLS
19c
5c
Lb.......
SALAD DRESSING ~
Advertise—Lest they
STUDENTS, WE ARE GLAD TO HAVE YOU BACK!
fl
CUT RATE AUTO BUFFtY
FhMie Ml
T
A
A
i
a
fl
WHITE SWAN
PORK* BEANS
16 oz. can 5c
20c
5c
Lb. -*2OC
15c
15c
Wc
V
it
TOMATOES, 3
MATCHES, 2 --d
PORK OR VEAL STEAK
a--------
I II
■
SLICED BACON
VIENNA SAUSAGE '.^ '"
BOLOGNA
VEGETOLE
SHORTENING
4 lb. ertn. 37c
}
OXYDOL
15c
19c
Large Size
Box .........
WIENERS -r
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AMD MARKET
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yours for
♦
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WEEK-ENDS
of
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this
You
can
summer
rifice of comfort
or
is
The
fol-
come
on
Williams'
down
to
being . .
3.98
PLAY
NEW
SHOES
$!.<>«
The Williams Store
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play
without sac-
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sports shop, we’ll do
the rest. Slack suits
smart appearance!
prescription
easy, simple to
low! Just
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Phone 1165
I HI HMOND. DECKER
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Ball Furniture Co.
15----Phones----9
Loyd Ixxnn
Metal
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LAWN CHAIRS
LITERARY
GUIDEPOST
Hy JOHN RKLBY
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 256, Ed. 1 Friday, June 7, 1940, newspaper, June 7, 1940; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1312706/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.