Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 308, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 8, 1942 Page: 3 of 6
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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War Production
F. W. Maxwell
Um
Lieut. Colonel
an-
Forget I
'It’s Cool at
ints
Dally News and
SANGER NEWS
!•
Chandler. Loa An-
Universal Ration
ice
System Indicated
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PERSONALS
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COSTS LESS TO USE
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Sherwin Williams Paints
RV
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Gloomy View
Given of U. S.
Baptists to Open
Revival Sunday
Set $5,000 Bonds
For Two Youths
\ Civilian Defense
Talks at Parley
C, R. Chandlers
Observe 50th
Wedding Date
M
AUGUST BLANKET
SALE
Missing Fishing
Party Is Rescued
Publication of
Midway Battle
News Probed
>r Is call-
mo a spe-
<rows no-
iS
IS
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Keith Shearer and Dorothy Phin-
ney.
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GAL.
PASTE
FORM
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FALLS
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CharHe’flFood
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Investigate our
Away Plan. Buy
_ 'ji-'‘-i—I# - ar
Fur Coat now whil
• Just mix 1 gallon with
water and make I’/i
gallon, paint. Your
cost, rea dy-to-apply,
per gal., $p98
• Coven with Oh Coat!
• Dries in One Hour!
• It'. Washable!
• 1 tel F intake* Average Room!
Public Hearing on
Budget Monday
A public hearing on the proposed
county budget will be the principal
work of the County Commissioners
Court meeting Monday at 9 o'clock
in the court house.
BROWNSVILLE. Aug 8.—(API-
Nine deeply tanned member, of a
fishing party feared lost in a storm
were safe here today after the
blow had forced them to take ref-
uge in a wooded area on the Mex-
ican mainland in the eighth pass
area south of Brownsville.
Mexican pilot Thoma. De Leon,
who was forced down on an Island
at Eighth Pass Thursday as he tried
to fly part of the group out, re-
turned with the three women and
six men as far as Matamoros. None
was injured. :
In the group were B. G. Eubank,
Brownsville fishing guide, Meredith
R Carts of Fort Worth; L. K. Bush
of Houston, Mr. and Mrs. J. Brown,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Knight, and
Dr. and Mrs. R. T. Weber of Aus-
tin.
now int «NMryau i
tty dry elsMtag. Camp
r the 1«-
read in
Scientist,
i "Where
is, there
ns 3:17).
ich com-
i the fol-
"Thou
they are
west the
s 104:30).
■ludes the
tie Chris-
lence and
rriptures."
"Spiritual V
ion to be
i ail oth-
■elates to
Officers of two counties were en
route to a home near Parvin Thurs-
day before the woman, who had
reported her home burglarized,
found her false teeth and called
the report a false alarm
Not being able to find thp teeth
when she arose Thursday morning,
she reported her liome burglarized
to the Collin County sheriff who
sent a constable from Celina to
Investigate, Discovering that the
woman’s home was on the Denton
County side of the line, the con-
stable called the Denton County
sheriff's department to send offi-
cers to meet him at Parvin. In the
meantime, the teeth were found,
not in the glass where they were
usually kept overnight, but in a
bucket where the woman had put
them the night before but had for-
gotten the new location
Class to Have
Ice Cream Social
Tlie Fidelis Class of the First
Presbyterian Church will sponsor
a home-made ice cream social on
the church lawn Monday evening
as a benefit for the church build-
ing fund. The public was invited.
~A revival will begin in the West
Side Baptist Church tomorrow,
with the pastor, Rev D T Bryant,
doing the preaching, and music in
charge of Rev. B<11 Carpenter, for-
mer pastor of the Highland Bap-
tist Church. The public was invited
in Drug Store
‘ Phone < I
wri
/Ser.
■JfF -
*>m» "
ft*
The Assembly of God Church will
close ita flrat week of a revival in
the tent service this evening with
Rev F. D. Davis of Fort Worth
again preaching.’ Services will be
held Sunday at 11 a m . 2 30 p. m.
and 8:30 p. m.. and will continue
through the week. The congrega-
tion will determine Sunday Bight
whether the day services will be
held next week
The evangelist preached Friday
evening on "Divine Healing", and
Rev. P. C. Nelson of Fort Worth
offered prayer for a number of sick
members of the congregation Out-
of-town visitors and singers were
present. ’’
Ixiulse Gilbert
and Mrs
Welk of
Nancy
i j
Mrs R G. Hurd
N W Read and
Ann and Elaine
Mayor Lee Preston, director of de-
fense activities of Denton, will open
the Denton conference of home-
making teachers 17 with a talk
on "The Responsibility of the Lo-
cal Defense Council in the War Ef-
fort.”
Tire opening session, at 9 a m
In the T. C. library auditorium, will
feature civilian defense problems.
Miss Dorothy de la Pole, from
the state office of civilian defense,
will follow Preston with a discus-
sion on "The Contribution of
OCD to the War Effort."
z*
\
\.
I WHEN WILL WE LEARN?. . I
By CHARLES A. WELLS
Officers Called
To Probe,Theft of
False Teeth—but
Merely Misplaced
Former Resident
Of County Dies
Jack C. Brannon, formerly
Ixtwisvllle, and well known over
Denton County, died suddenly Sat-
urday about B:K a. m. in Fort
Worth. He was a brother-in-law of
George Elbert of Denton. Funeral
services will b« held Sunday at 4
P m. in the Guardian Funeral
Home. Fort Worth, and burial will
follow in Old Hal! cemetery, near
Lewisville.
There's always a Bargain in the
•lasslfied column.
VEGETOLE
Armour’s
4 LB. CABTON 73e
Enter Vegttole’s 15,000
Coateet!
Miss June Rose Gammon, who
has visited Miss Emma Jane Pro-
phet In Houston the past two
weeks, was to return to Denton Sat-
urday.
Mrs' E. E. Hanks went to Dallas
Saturday morning to be at the bed-
side of a sister-in-law, Mrs. Earl
Hanks of Kilgore, seriously 111 in
the Medical Arts Hospital.
Betty Lucille and James Thur-
man. children of Mr. and Mrs. CJay
Faulkner of Coolidge, Colo. have
returned home after visiting their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. L
‘ Faulkner
Mrs. R J. Turrentlne Saturday
went to Austin to attend a meeting
of the state democratic executive
committee and will return Sunday.
Mrs Lester Rogers of Tyler, who
has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs
J. L. Rogers, has returned home.
For Better CMounog and Press.
Ing, caB American Cteansrs A Dy-
ers. TH. 2M.
J Revival Closes
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
M. J. Sims and wife to W. J.
Austin, 8% acres In A Hill survey.
81.800. Aug. 1, 1942
H. E Thompson and wife to H
C. Dunn, tracts of 25 acres and
17V» acres in Isaac Walters survey,
81.700, July 13. 1942.
•'pitched •
on when
ils choice
of strife
lx»t hkd
Stic, and
only of
egardless «
nself and
vhen So-
involved
city
londitlons
interces-
fully, for
of spirit-
onceptlon
place of
•servation
ire right-
the pun-
- who are •
>u under-
a to God
jquires a
lay when
y toward
udgments
righteous
Z as cer-
d certain
e idea of
ayer that
rsslon in
t and the
i gnt well
i eonnec-
lis lesson.
I -« W r«»wwe»
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.ii, y'.'.r ii^'iiiinii—i.MW'i1 j ij~«*■*»■
DENTON, WOfAfl, RFCORD-CHRONICIX BATOKDAT, AO<
- at ‘ -
' ' '
Formidable guns pointing skyward, all-welded M-4 tanks, built by Fisher Body, line up for inspection after
- stiff tost run.----—-------------------— i , , . < t
Special to Record-Chronicle
SANGER, Aug. 8—Mrs George
Haggard, who had lived here for
teveral years, died Monday at the
home of her son. Leon Haggard,
in Wichita. Kan.
Fred Jones has gone to San Di-
ego to work in a defense plant Mrs.
Jones is visiting her mother. Mrs
O L Hester, near Krum and will
join him later
Welzy King is convalescing from
pneumonia.
Mrs. Zeula Wallen of Hobbs, N
M . is visiting Mrs. Charlie Chris-
tian.
Mrs Alice Brown of Gainesville
PtaatotanlTta
Credit Term.
M’CRAY’S
JKWBLBT STOB1
War 1 ime Hours
OPEN 7:45 A. M.
CLOSE 7:30 P. M.
•Sundays Only: Open
K:30 A. M. and close for
lunch 1 .00 P. M. to 2 P.
M.
Thanks for your coope-
ration.
HEADLEE’S
PJione 88
307 N. Locust St.
-.c'A
■ "f*1- • t’T'; *••;)<
** ■' 1 ., . ,tVt':•!
L ■«.» i'-* -f'V. . . i .l-T» ') ■!' r i
Sherwin-Williams .
WALL FINISH
Kem-Ton« bring! you painting con-
venience and economy. This alto-
gether new kind of paint eliminatea
the tuual fuse, muss and bother of (
painting. You thin Kero-Tone with
water then paint it right on—that’a '
alii A aingle coat covers almost any ’
room surface, including wallpaper! <
IN THE NEWEST, SMARTEST PASTEL COLORS!
morris & McClendon
219 W. Hickory - ' ./ Phone 95R
), y<, ---"It-’'*8'JI. ’ * '* ' '* ' f'* s' . it
Weedon Here to
Preach Sunday
Dr Frank Weedon returned Sat-
urday from Bowie, where he has
been conducting a successful re-
vival this week. He will preach In
the First Baptist Church tomorrow
morning, returning to Bowie to
preach through the close of the
meeting in Bowie Sunday. Aug.
WASHINGTON, Aug 8. —(F>-
Publlcatlon by three metropolitan
newspapers of what Attorney Gen-
eral Francis Biddle termed "con- [
I fidential information"
CLEANSING
~ CREAM
r Thera are two types of
Barbara Gould dearaho
Cream—each doee o woo*
derful |ob of skin-clearaing
and leaves the natural
moisture In your ddh.
MCIAI OIAISM <HAB
* CREAM MNVM 8
«sr dsetoe «*sry tym otto
Tobin Drug Store
Noras
Bam te Mr. and Mrs. Tenser
Knight, 417 Panhandle Street, in
the Denton Hospital. Thursday, a
girl. Knight la with the U.S. Navy,
stationed et Norfolk. Va.
Dr. M. L. Holland is slightly im-
proved at the Denton Hospital
where his condition the past few
days has been quite serious
Miss Ida Ijindreth, daughter of
Mr -and Mrs J. W. Landreth of the
Fort Worth Highway, underwent
tnajbr surgery in a Dallas Hospital
Saturday morning.
Most of us think we can leave Christianity out of our lives and that
after all it really won t matter. But the cgie thing the world is teaching
us today is that it does matter For centuries man has tried to build his
own world instead of God’s kingdom, and again and again we have
Aim maiii efiurts coiisuuuid by Lhe outbreaka of thoee elements of
life that have not submitted to divine will There is every evidence that
man must soon either submit to the way of God a« expressed through
Christianity or destroy all that civilization has suffered to bring forth
in a thousand years of painful progress. Christianity gave man a picture
of what sublime beauty and perfection the power of God could create
with human life Witiiout that pattern we are completely lost.
.4^-
AUSTIN. Aug. 8 —(AV-Chalraem
E. B. Germany asserted today that
there were no discrepancies between
the unofficial tabulation of the
July 35 Democratic primary vote
and the official canvas of balloting
being made by the Democratic ex-
ecutive committee.
£■
The War Department has
nounced the promotion of Major F
W Maxwell, 936 North Locust
Street. Denton, to the rank of lieu-
tenant colonel, effective Saturday.
Col Maxwell is stationed at Camp
Beauregard. La., and u> assistant
chief of staff. G-3, Provisional
Headquarters, Third Army Special
Troops, having been assigned to this
duty last June after more than a
years duty as assistant G-3. Third
Army at San Antonio Col. Maxwell
had served as commanding officer
with the CCC for the past nine
years in Wyoming and Texas, hav-
ing had charge of the CCC camp
here at the time of his return to
the service Prior to that time he
was commadant of cadets in tire
Fo>" Worth schools, connected in
that capacity with the schools for
19 years.
Earl Coleman said. A charge of be- j until real material aid Is forth-
coming "
Mr and Mrs. C R. Chandler, 714
Bolivar Street, observed their 50th
wedding anniversary Friday, quiet-
ly. because their nine children live
at distances and were unable to
be present They received messages
of congratulation and gifts through-
out the day, and were looking for-
ward to more favorable times when
their children and families may
gather here. Chandler is a retired
Baptist minister, now caretaker of
the T 8 C W. botanical gardens.
Mr. and Mrs. Chandler were mar-
ried Aug 7, 1892, near McGregor,
and have lived in Texas most of
their lives. They moved to Denton
17 years ago and built the home
where they have lived continuously
since. They have had five daughters
to be graduated from the Denton
High School and one to receive a
degree from T. 8. C. W. Of the
family of 32 children and grand-
children there has been but one
death, a son killed in an accident B
after he had returned safely from Washington Times Herald
the first World War ... ■
The children
family
the subject for grant! jury investi-
gation.
The investigation, recommended
by the Navy Department and re-
quested by Biddle after a prelimin-
ary Inquiry, will concern possible
violation of any criminal statutes,
particularly the act of March 28.
1940. prohibiting unlawful commu-
nication of documents or informa-
tion relating to national defense,
the attorney general announced
last night.
Tlie official announcement of the
Inquiry did not name the news-
papers but Robert W Horton, head
of the News Bureau of the Of-
fice of War information.' Identified
them as the Chicago Tribune, the i ing.
New York Daily News and the
WASHINGTON. Aug 8—(AP)—
Uncle Sam was paving the way
today for possible Inauguration of
a universal rationing system under
which the government equid deter-
mine the war-time allotments of
all citizens for scarce commodities
and articles.
The Office of Price Administra-
tion disclosed it was preparing a
general ration, book, applicable to
any article, which would enable
the start of rationing "almost over-
night.”
Paul M OLeary. deputy OPA
administrator tn charge of ration-
ing, explained the plan was design-
ed to put rationing into operation
immediately after the need arose.
He said machinery was being set
up for rationing many commod-
ities "in which there is no present
need for rationing."
■:FyW fa
Wr'-'/
■■ "WM?®
is visiting Mrs. Wm. Gillum.
Mrs. J C Ramsey returned to
Denton after vftited her sons here.
Mrs Mollie Cearley and Miss
Ruby Jo, returned from Fresno,
Calif Mr. and Mrs Andi Cearley
returned home with her for a visit.
Mrs George Yeargin and daugh-
ter of Norman, Ok., are visiting
Mrs W L. Mundy.
Mr and Mrs D A Willis enter-
tained a group of people with a
birthday party on Clear Creek hon-
oring Miss Mary Louise Simpson.
Miss Pauline Christian of Waco
is visiting Mr and Mrs. Walter
Christian
Mrs. E J. Hester of Krum visit-
ed Miss Ethel Payne.
Miss Dorothy Faye
Gainesville visited Miss
Smith
Mrs
can |lt
wool
The Vi
j
• "DttoaM” doo-WM aasdla*
point fabric.
• GaMwWMbdbJItoto
<«g« tf CtlMnt* Yana
• gaitoi^toriiadM 8*
•JXitrto*****
Bonds for Troy Wilson and Mel-
vin Hathaway, each charged with ;
rape, were set at 85.000 each by ;
Judge Gerald Stockard Friday. As
both produced satisfactory evidence lies have got to realize the grim fact
that they were under 17 years of j that we are still fighting a losing
age, the cases wore transferred to i war and that theer is no possibility
juvenile court. County Attorney [ of an offensive from U—---
Eari Coleman said. A charge of be- ,
Ing a delinquent child was entered
against each on the docket there.
in June and expressed doubt that
“all of us realize how hard we are
going to have to work to win.”
"To win a total war we must
fight it totally." OWI said, "and we
are not fighting it that hard."
A similar tone was expressed i
[ in Australia where War Corre- 1
I spondent Norman Stockton of the
Melbourne Herald asserted "our Al-
of Grand Prairte to cosAmMOR
revival 88ffVta8B «8 1
Church BundAy nig
Rev. 3. K. Ctork, local paator, IB I
•toting «htai and Mr. and MM. ■
bert. Barthold have chasga of 1
dreas and especially urged- that,
the parents- come and bring th
children He will speak KN
moratag .on Tfratow Our Fu8«
Boom.** All wars urged to atto
these sendees^
Mr. and Mrs. B- L. FhOtga a
children at Green VsBey, Mrs. M
Lambsrt and children of F
Worth, and Mr and MM Kafl
Phillips and daughter of Friendto
were guests at Mr. and Mrs.
Phillips and daughters. :
Mr. and Mrs. Howard MeCtoo —
Fort Worth visited hto parents. Mr.
and Mrs Horace McGee.
Dr. A H. Knox visited hto daugh-
ter, Mrs Roy Patterson, of lockMy.
MBs Rally Ruth Patterson retungA
home with him for a vtott.
Mr. and Mrs. MB Lewto and
in Austin.
Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Longptn* and
daughters returned from a vaca-
tion In Oklahoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Weber of Al-
varado are visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Walter McCUster.
Rev. and Mrs. Alvin O. Rue aflB
B. F. Wltowi - —:——
For Mrs, Darnall
Funeral services for Mrs. W., Q.
Darnell, who died Th
held Friday afternoon
irwi napiiBv vnuren, x
Rev. Earl Slaughter A quartet
posed of Misses Ethetetoo Pro--
Nelma. R. B. Neale Jr.
Durrough sang "flense
Make It Plain " and
WSHINGTON, Aug. 8.~-(A’)~- A
gloomy puicture of America's war I
effort to date was laid before the
nation today in a warning by the Of-
fice of War Information that ma- |
tertals are failing to reach the ■
fighting fronts In the time and the I
volume needed to win.
Reviewing the military and pro-
duction situation. OWI asserted last
night that output of fighting planes,
tanks, most types of artillery and
naval vessels feel behind schedule |
CARE FOR PETS IN AIR RAIDS
IS ADVOCATED <
What plans have yqu made for 1
the care of your pet or pets, in case 1
of atr raids or other emergencies? 1
If you love animals, as you proba-
bly do or you would not have -any, '
they should be tagged and every-
thing possible done to protect them, >
not only for their own sake but
for the safety and comfort of the '
community at large.
Did you know that you could take
a first aid for animals course and '
that tn New York City alone a I
- thousand animal aids are need-
ed? J
* So says Sydney H Coleman, ex- '
•cutlve vice president of the Amert- '
can Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty of Animals.
Mr. Coleman explains that aides l
are needed in each air raid sone,
and they will have the same rights
in bombed areas as only other civil- i
fan worker. It is urged that you look
into this without delay, in order
to find out who is the proper per- 1
son In your community and what
the proper procedure
Tag Your Pat
Leaflets on "The Care qf Small
Animals Under War Conditions" are
now being distributed by the Ameri-
can Red Star Animal Relief. These
stress that all pets must be tagged
at all times, and kept under strict
- control during air raid warn Inga -i
Cats are more difficult to han-
dle than dogs and the only way
... I ----.
Ing
a basket or | _
which the cat can see. They are far
leas frightened, when they can at I
least see where they are being
taken. Tag your cat and her kittens
and don't forget also to tag your :
canary or any pets you or your ,
children have made themselves re-
sponsible for. Quito naturally anl- .
mals are excited by confusion and
..^...-1 information" concerning uproar; they are deserving of our
the Battle of Midway, became today1 sympathy and protection.
" ‘ ■ During the early stages of bomb- :
Ings In England, many pets were
killed, injured and lost, and this
unfortunate state of affairs must
exist In all countries attacked. We
have yet time to safeguard our .
faithful little pets.
II Uw comniuulty In you
live has not taken up this import-
ant matter, so that It does, that ,
air raid shelters for animals are
provided and some system worked
otu by which they can be protected
as far as is humanly possible.
Think twice before you go away
from home leaving your pets closed
up in the house. Many a dog has
been trapped in a burning bulld-
Chlldren who have animals
should be taught to realise the re-
sponsibility of their ownership at
an early age They should be train-
ed to feed their pete and,never1 al-
lowed to forget the importance of
.. Xeedlng them at regular Intervals,
or, when absent, of arranging with
some reliable person to carry on in
their abSa.^
In many large.apartment houses,
provisions have been made for the
care of pets during an air raid.
They are not to be taken to the
shelter for humans unless carried
in some sort of container and in
some cases not then. Into the dog-
house for them, presumably, and It
is up to the more articulate to see
that there Is water for them to
drink and food for their temporary
stay which, after all, may extend
over a considerable period. Ih case
of a broken leg, or a wound, it
saves time and trouble, not to men-
tion suffering. If one knows how
to apply an emergency splint or
was out a wound.
Cotton stuffed In the animals
ears will help deadening the din
of explosives. The dog Is quite ex-
pert at expelling the cotton, so one
doesn’t need, the lecturer pointed
out, to remove it, but don’t put cot-
ton next to a wound; first put a
piece of bandage over it before
applying. Otherwise the cotton will
work Into the wound.
In other words know how. Vol-
unteers for this humanitarian ser-
vice will be given the necessary in-
structions by A. 8. F. O. A. veterin-
arians on how to handle pete dur-
ing air raid. So that is something
else we can do. Preparedness is a
out-moded word but there Is noth-
ing out-moded about the necessity
for being prepared, In other words'
knowing what to do and how to do
it when the occasion arises.
H Haney and Laura Jane
are spending the week in Decatur
Mrs. A E McNeill of Houston is
visiting Mr and
Mr. and Mrs
Misses Barbara
visited in BoVd
Mrs C C EWffl of Cleburne vis-
ited Mr. and Mrs. R G Hurd.
J B Pierce. Mrs. J A Touch-
stone. Misses Gene and Mary Nelle
Touchstone visited in Valley View
and Gainesville.
W B. Chambers is spending the
month with an uncle In North Caro-
lina.
Mr and Mrs. Fred Hackney of
Corpus Christi are visiting Mrs G
L. McClendon en route to McAles-
ter where he has been transferred
on defense work.
Alvin and Miss
of Dallas visited Mr
Frank Gilbert.
Mrs E B Watters and son of
Dallas visited here.
Mr and Mrs. Victor Simpson and
daughters visited in Alvord
Billy Bob and Misses Mary Claud
and Alta Jane Chandler of Dallas
are visiting Mr and Mrs. E C
Cone
Mrs. J. T Fulghum and children
of Dallas visited Mrs. R D Windle
Mr and Mrs. A E. Amyx of Dal-
las are visiting Mr and Mrs Jerry
Giles
Mrs. R. C. Marshall of Morton
is visiting Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Wylie
Mmes. Hannon Gwin of Arling-
ton and Joe Bryant of Fort Worth
were guests of Mrs Major Moore.
Miss Edith Gambill returned from
San Angelo
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Walde and
Miss Mary Lou Walde of Hale Cen-
ter are visiting here.
50c Down
reserves any blanket or comfort in this
sale. Buy on our Easy Lay-Away Plan!
100% ALL WOOL
72x84 Rust, Blue, Rose, A A
Gren, and wide satin border
ESMOND 331% WOOL
««)% Rayon and Cotton mk An
72x84, all colon wIiVV
100% WOOL BLANKETS Q
72x90, Wide Satin Bonier qq A a
Rust, Peach, Green, Blue, Wine WVflVU
The Boston Store
JOE’S STEAK
HOUSE
“On the Highway"
. .—.. 4mdtho ----l_
FOOD IS FINE
drive <jown and enjoy a
delightful warm weather
-----dish
r I, ,, 4^ um,,, -.L S,^,, ,i lisigjflairi
" a^i' 'I'tai' ii'i ■Ti’ttggB
COSTS UTTLE TO BUY
■
^iT=D I faX ^Mrs0' H^rber?^
Raton. N. M ; Mrs. A. H Wlttllf,
Waco, Mrs. N. B. Snodgrass. Den-
ver. Colo.; H. F. Chandler, Loa An-
geles, Calif ; Mrs G. Stroppos. Col-
orado; Mrs Ernest Verquer, Trini-
dad. Colo.; Mmes. Harold Jones
and Octi Parker Oklahoma City,
and Mrs R C. Patrick. Ban Anto-
nio.
fl^pwiS^^
■no.
and Mary
and R. E.
Day Hell =
"Rock of Agm."
Burial wm in Belew
and pallbearers were 1
Alvo Fenner, Jamee Ri
Owens.
_______________■ com-
Mlmee Ethetetoo Provence
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 308, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 8, 1942, newspaper, August 8, 1942; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1312759/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.