Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 140, Ed. 1 Monday, January 25, 1943 Page: 3 of 6
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17 Fire Alarms
New Carrier To Be
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Poised at IM ways at Newport News. Va. the aircraft carrier Yotk-
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$175 VITAMIN PUS
iroat
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,UuC
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in the
““
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with Circle C hostesa
hold circle meetings. In the church
New Low Heel
Chesterfields
OXFORDS
March Into Spring
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OVER YOUR FAVQ
SUIT OR DRESS.
MMO
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To Aid Farmers
With Tax Reports
Miss Nancy Graham,
Jack Gray Marry
tansy
fruit
* .. *
>
Sewing Circle Meets
With Mrs. Mulkey
i
Officers Named by
Ladies' Aid Society
The Ladies' Aid Society of
Top the cold weather
with a new spring <
Chesterfield.
--—
of the
concert
m Bus-
ing the *
at
wore burned
unknown
I a main
Recit-
Llttle
15-18.
town, successor to the carrier of the same name tart in the Battle ot
Midway, await* launching on Jan. 31. and christening bgr Mm- F. D.
Roosevelt who performed the same task for the old Yorktown. Photo
passed by censor*. .
f a aMM
other.
oom-
Mlnor
GOOD NEWS
Far Files • Colon Sofferors
IC
•r*
1
1
i
•1”
I for the
College a
Fe Mon*
1 Green,
fch a:
|l>: ooi-
...........
MILK OF MAGNESIA
TOOTH PA8T»-
RT
Corp Joe Prank Fukien of
Tucson. Aril. radio operator. with a
15-day furlough is here visiting hi*
aunt. Mr*. Ida Sue Perry. 201 Ber-
nard Street, with whom he has
Ills mother during the first World
War He went into service In 1940
v A '
mem-
sell you
the un-
it way it
you are , a
ON
I
All of Family
In War Services
Mias Jewell Hooper of Weather-
ford. who has been inducted into
the WAAC. will arrive home Tues-
day to visit her parents, Dr. and
Mrs J L Hooper, before leavb«
Feb. 1 for the WAAC training cen-
ter at De* Moina*. Iowa. She 1* a
graduate of Teachers College,
taught two year*, was with the FHA
four years, and with the State Pub-
lic Welfare Board, did social work
before resigning to join the WAAC.
This makes the Hooper family 100
per cent tn war service. Hoeea
Hooper, barred from active service
because of lack of heariix, is en-
gaged in defense work; Elbert
Hooper of Austin 1* tn the Army at
■ -
WWW
We Are Working for You
And Honestly, Folks, We Love It!
$1.00 VALUE! AM Me Face Pwta BOTH I
hM‘. J
. *w W./ • >-towv'«»w -
’ —r1 **■ *W.— .. .-.im wHrw ■' , - '
r.g,U,U&.
NNWS
First meeting ef the new year far
the board of directors of the
Chamber of Commerce will be held
tonight at • o'clock in the council
room of the municipal building.
The Order ef Rainbow OMs will
install officers at 7:30 tonight tn the
Masonic Hall, to which the public
was Invited. Mrs. Victor C. Whit-
field of Dallas, chairman of the
state executive committee, and a
staff of installing officers will be
here for the installation
Bam te Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Sweatman. 334 Rufidell Street, in
the Denton Hospital. Sunday night,
a boy
West Prairie Street. Thursday, when
cut flowers decorated the living
room. Alter an hour spent in sew-
ing. Mm. Oiarsnee MaiswiM pre-
sented the hostern gift. During the
social hour a refreshment plate was
served. Hostess Fsb 4 at 7:10 p m.
Will be Mra M. E Grout, 1523 West
Highland Street.
,4;
———-
Lieut. John M Brooks, son of
Mr and Mrs J V Brooks.
West Mulberry Street, has
transferred from Greenville. 8 C
The Shakespeare tee arts de-
partment voted in its meeting Fri-
day afternoon with Mr* P. C.
Storrie to study Russian music and
art next year, and .the chairman,
Mre. F. W. Maxwell, urged more
work in eurgioal dresatog rooms.
Mrs. Storrie discussed ■Candleday
Art." and exhibited her many a»-
agues. Daughter of a Scottish
weaver, she exhibited a handwoven
FMsiey shawl fronr Scotland and
china and silverware from Sootdand
where oho was born. Mrs. A. B.
Tyson discussed “American Indian
Art, Symbols and Painting." The
hostess served Swiss tarts and tea.
Staff Sgt Lelan D Hsren had a
short visit with his parents, Mr and
Mrs J H Haren. Ponder before
-
I ' ‘
KtS
I .• <1
—
• B' ■» v B BAB I J
.w! t
OTHERS
Th« Boston Store
TOvasmes
Tana, Brown, Moccaain Style, Softies, Brown, WhiU,
All Sixes
Sgt. Benny Pierce of Fort Leonard
Wood. Mo. visited Mr and Mrs. J.
A. Touchstone BiUy Green and
Billy Jack Enolw. who received
were at
__ i Street;
1:06 p. m.,106 North torn Street;
1:4g p m an Oakland Avenue;
3:46 p. m.. 1803 West Sycamore
Street; 3 p. m.. 1003 West Hickory
Street; 3:16 p. n. 1700 block West
Hickory Street; 4 p. nt, 802. West
Sycamore Street; 6:30 P m.. 700
Bradshaw Strset; 5:18 p. m.. East
Prairie and Maddox Streets; 5:15 P
m.. 402 Texas Strsst; 8:10 p m., old
aviation field; 11 p. m. Highway 24.
Sunday, 1:30 p m.. 1801 Bolivar
Street; 3:15 p. m.. 500 block Boli-
var Street; g p. m, 100 block East
McKinney. Street.
The alarm sounded tor a truck
afire at a motor company at 11:30
a. m. Monday, but the blase au out
on arrival of firemen and no dam-
age resulted.
No Colleges to
Be Taken Over
John L. Roden , son of Rev and
j J L. Roden. 523 Avenue A.
wtx> was iierv fro«n Abilene vistlng
hi* parents over the week-end. re-
turned to Abilene Monday to be
inducted into the U 8 Navy He
has been a student In Hardin-Him-
■non* University
• • • •
LteuL and Mrs. J. L Burk* and
daughter. Joan, of Bnid. Ok . are
visiting her moUier. Mrs. J. P.
Rudd. 1731 West Mulberry Street,
and his parent*. Mr. and Mr*. W
D Burks of Pilot Point, for a tew
day*. Lieut. Burk* i* in the per-
sonnel department of a air field
'in Wild
..... '
synthetic rubber
°n
front, th* ndto
ported prepartr
cuttral prtmjt
Plans for 1M3 work. Including
[ the farmers make out in-
BUI Neal, son of Mr and Mrs
N A Neal of Olney and the nephew
of W B May. Route 2. Denton, on
a brief visit recently with his par-
ent* told of his exjierieiMxs in U 8-
Nsval service at Pearl Harbor. Dec
7, anil later at Dutch Harbor Rated
as a first class signalman in ttie
code and signal division, he joined
the Navy three years ago His par
etrta are former Denton County
neaktenu
The Vanity 11
. onop
' FlerwMMltB
f Ta-
Mg
AA
w
dent. Mrs. P. E. Frederick; aecre-
tary-treasurer. Mrs. Oecar Blanke-
meyer Tire group wiU meet each
Monday at 1014 Panhandle Street,
each member bringing a covered
dish for luncheon
THEY BEVUtT TO OLD
OCCUPATION
♦ KANSAS CITY. Jan. 36— ♦
♦ uP>-Tbe best inforasattan-of- ♦
♦ floe employes to Uto .Doten*
♦ Station, mys General Agent A ♦
< W. Dunn, ara former itemgs ♦
♦ who know all train schedulea. ♦
-- ♦Th* tnteb b, thsyTw — ‘
«>• ♦‘to tom note*-------
♦fide*. itbrnM
♦HWHIIrti
■■■■' Dtoted OowMy Msn fo United -Fwcw i ■*
WITH THE KHAKI AND BLUE I
OF LAND, SEA AND AIR
■r iMomr uw mbu*.______■ ; ■ J
prte wto a 8h ift»r
prtoe Company, died
WHY BE FA
NRbKmfVbMmoo'
W. A. will meet st 3 p.
church Jor Biblge study
The First Methodist W 8. C. 8. Monday "for South Texas for the
wiU meet at 3 p. m. In the church remainder of the winter, for Smith
for election of officers and signing to recuperate from a recent illness
Of pledgee, with Circle C hostam Dr. Richard Mandell I* tn Dal-
■rt»e Pint Christian W. C. will las attending ths midwinter Den-
hold circle meetings. In the church, tel Clink.
ww W W I
USO Attendance
Hikes in Texas
Attendance at USO clubs and
service centers in Ttxs* increased
from over 800JXX) to over 1360,000
during the last two months for
which full statistic* ar* available,
according to a report from USO
headquarter* in New York Total
attendance includes volunteers,
friends and families of service men
and repeat visit* of the men them-
selves. During the same period
USO clubs and other centers in
Texas increased from 7# to 107. The
number of sessions of group activi-
ties. such as dance, parties, classes
and hobbies, rose from 4.831 to 5.IM.
At tlie same time attendance at
group events went up from over
500.000 to nearly 800.000 persons
More than 3350.000 service men
visit USO center* each month,
while the total monthly attendance,
including civilians and return vis-
it* of men in uniform is 12,000,000.
Fouumgni
Door Mirror
11 x 4SIb6Ime
31 —A
L'XtKwhmffi
Notes of Service
Here and There
Morris R. Boyer, son of Mr. and >
Mrs C D Boyer 1406 West Hickory [
SUivt. has been transferred tn U. 8
Coast Guard service from Corpus
Christi to Manhattan Beach. N Y..
where he will enter seamans
school, with Jack Dempsey as his
physical trainer
Two Matthew* brother* are vto-
itlng their mother. Mr*. W. M
Matthew*. 611 Denton Street. They
ar* Pvt. L- H Matthew* ot Camp
Bowie and Staff Sgt. Sila* Mat-
thew* with the U 8- Army Air
Force* at Tuskegee, Ala. '
Correcting a recent error in this
column: Camp Pickett, where both
T J. and Robert Fletcher are sta-
tioned in the U. 8. Army I* in Vir-
ginia. not Maryland. The broth-
ers are sons of Mr and Mr* R. L.
Fletcher. 818 Myrtle Street.
• ♦ • ♦
Elvln L. Shiflett, son of R. U
Shiflett of Ponder, I* now stationed
with the U. a Army Air Forces at
Kearns, Utah. He entered the ser-
vice in September. 1841.
, Paul Thomas left Wednesday for
Williamsburg. Va, where he WiU
receive basic training with the U.
S. Navy "seabees."
WASHINGTON. Jan. 25 -dP>—
War Manpower Commissioner Paul
McNutt said today that the gov-
ernment did not expect to “take
over” any colleges in It* program
for using them to provide special
training for men in the armed
services and other* scheduled to
do technical work In war Industry
The contract* being negotiated
under principals and regulations
which “will be announced siiort-
ly" would be distributed a* widely
a* possible among the colleges and
no one would be given enough stu-
---r----------------, dents to require that it be “taken
Randolph Field; Dr. John M Hoop- ' over" tn its entlrey. he explained
er. lieutenant in the Medical Corp*.!
In charge of the dispensary -*
Camp Wolter*, and Richard
Hooper, grandson, and son of Mr
and Mr* Hoeea Hooper, now em-
ployed in the quartermaster's depot
in Port Worth, to be inducted into
the Army Feb. 5 ; h J
I come tax reports, were made at a
j luncheon meeting of the Denton
. County Farm Bureau directors Sat-
, urday As most of the farmers will
' need to make out income tax re-
nte Friendly Sewing Circle met port* this year, many of them for
w!lh. I101 . nrst time, director* made plans
assistance
During the past year, the bureau
ha* secured 188 new member* in
the ommKy and sent repfeaentaUvea
to the state convention
Directors wiU hold community
meeting* in each of their communi-
ties shortly, it was decided. Those
present included John D Faught.
: president: Homer Taykor. vice-pre-
( | aldent; Qu* H Rgan. secretary -
: treasurer; A. H Lyon* and R L.
George, precinct 1; B T McGee,
precinct 2; Frank Butler and Milton
, „ st High, precinct 3; W F Guyer. pre-
Paul's Lutheran Church ha* elected 1 cinct 4; O. R Warren. Loyd Sulli-
new officers a* follows: President, van. J. T. McDonald Ode Cauble.
Mr* A. H Brinkman; vice-presi- visitor*.
$100 Fine, Costs
On Liquor Charge
Doo C Hall was fined 1100 and
cost*, totalling 812135. Saturday on
a charge of transporting intoxicat-
ing liquor in a dry area when he
' entered a plea of guilty before
; County Judge Gerald SUx-kard. He
was arrested by State Patrolmen
i J O Maddox and Wallace Beasley
PERSONALS
Events Tomorrow
The First Presbyterian W A.
will meet at 3 p m. tn the educa-
tion building for Bible study
Church of Christ Bible
will meet in Uie church at 3 p ni
Hi* First Baptist W M U dr- ■
de* will meet at 3 p. m. in the
church for a stewardship program I
in charge of Mrs W T. Rouse
The CumbertaiKl Presbyterian W •
11 r ire Alarms
Over Week-end
Frartoen aM«M for fire* satar-
48F, 13 at Mmb gram fire*, and
end. Only two of the Saturday
alarm* resulted in damage
Eleven head dT ‘ '
to death in a blare of
origin that also deatrar
barn and two 8bed», all filled with
feed, at the Charles Fierce stock
farm en the Fort Worth Highway
*A 13:18. p> m.
Another resulted in anal! damage
to a storeroom and a stack of sec-
ond-hand lumber, belonging to Ctay
Newton at 1018 Wort Prairie Street
at 4:36 p. m. No estimate of dam-
age for either blase wa* available.
Other alarms Satan’
13:30 p. m, 414 South
I ■ I
I !
I 9
'WiM
—
..... .
nniita iiii'iiiirriririMiMn
ar-
s w
1
Pvt Agel A. Browning, son of ■
Mr and Mr* T. A. Browning. Route |
2. Denton, has been promoted to the
Krade of corporal at U»e Armored U|Unln< ln the U & Air Corp.
Puree Replacement Training Cen-
ter. Fort Knox, Ky Corp Brown- ,
ing. who was graduated from the
Trachen, College In 1930 entered (
Army service in August, and is in I
charge of recreation hall at the
renter, administering aids to re- i
taxation for hundreds of trainees.
Service notes from Sanger Jesre
Earl Seal, wtw hafr been a aall
carrier here, luu gone to Camp
Parry. Va . where lie will be a yeo-
man with the rating of second
class petty officer Ui the U & Navy
Seek Land Army
For Farm Work
WASHINGTON, jia. 25. —(T>—
War Manpower Commissioner Paul
V. McNutt and Pood Adminirtrator
Wickard announced today they
would seek to mobiUre a “land ar-
my" of about 3300.000 to volunteer
for seasonal farm work this year.
Together they told a press con-
ference that persons doing work
not connected dkwih with the war
effort would be enrolled in both
rural and urban communities and
asked to shift temporarily to plant-
ing and harvesting work whenever
needed to save crop*.
Such persons—<they gave clerks
in stores as an example of the type
of worker they had tn mind—would
not be asked to work without pay.
but would be asked to accept reg-
ular tana, waste, jmb If bgBgr C_ .
pay of their normal job*, at a con-
tributton to the war effort.
AMONG SICK
Mi,. W. A. MMMW* Ml 1MB- . .....
fess; sysr.tas
Mte 1U.1I Cm. who wm to
the Denton Hospital Sunday night ,
for observation, returned hntnu
Monday.
Mr* P. B Green. 416 Wood
Street, is Hl in the Denton *a>
pital. t "
Mrs. Bertha Smyera. Who la a
rMtitoaat’ " tea ♦Bare
meaiCBi paueni in ww uencon
Hospital, te resting well. ,
Arsen*]. Md He was chosen from
the ranks tor Lite training by hi* I
superior officers because of excell-
ence in military record, education
and cliaractcr
vohmtoera would do seaimal
' Nutt at th* eaqta MBaT***
. • dt-bour wift'-wttfc to* i
piato thto hM m relatton 8(
question of paying ttall *nd 8
rata*, a* provided by the wagl
hour act, for work over 48 hw
wook. The 8e*mte appngkl
committee ordered an Imtofii
Uons.
Ctottintai UM roiwmi IM <
lease program wax tar front
sided, rinse reciprocal ata te
^ *"*'.^*
EH;
JtMg^ howmr-maay wage ma
<*W SSSrar ywiHwi da
Am « tow
v4*£rsw*A Dgw^a^puaw-
Twx> Lyles brothers. £ D and
Woodrow. wi»o left recently for U
S Army service are now stationed
at Sheppard Field. Wichita Falls |
J B Bovell has been sent to Camp
McCoy. Wls. and Woodrow Ma-
lone is at Camp Joseph T Robin-
son. Ark
Ti
, min
wWI
in
cut the coastal road up which ha
murt withdraw to pool foreaa with
Col Gan. Jargon ven Arnim.
Such a thrust was presaged in
Axis radio report* that a huge
American force was maaring at
Ttbt-wa on the Algertan-TUntetan
border its mite* west of Bax. TW*
Wte teat confirmed from ADM
A French coaununiqus. however.
aaM an Matain AHMMt' MBHHr ,
mauled the Gemant severely ta
an attack in the Oumeltla sector
south or Pont du Fhha. whan tin
Geman* rotted back ntO8» tgita
ped Writeh troopa teat week.
Doss Monro, a Canadian presa i
correspondent, reported from this
hent Ahat the Inerteini sawed “a
American tanka, gum. infantry and I
pianea" . i
A entataunigm from Allied hen8>
aakl that the j
yjD8 iMRttaBk I
ttou DriMEBcn
— ---—Oueeeltia Val-
ley where von Arata* has bean try-
g| to tatagwd Ml coastal Mk
.....
--- 1
------------------ I
75< VASELINE HAIR W J
toVITAUS HAIR TOME .....
58< PABLUM
M SAL HEPAUCA
re- w am* ' nm w* n ■** *a suwwam
to*,
50< JOHNSON BABY TALC
25< ZEBBST COLD CAPSULES
to REXALL
Mr. and Mr*. R. B Blackburn of
Blierman. Mrs W B Davis of Ihm
... . .^uj.imii v,. Bean and Staff Sgt. Elliott Ftteby
I. 8. wiU meet in the church at of Camp Woltet* were guest* of
"2.P m A Mr. and Mra. O. A Frteby. 418 Ful-
The Flrat Presbyterian. U S. A, ton Street. Sunday.
Homer C. Smith
and daughter. Mias Dorothy, left
Russian Music to
Be Gub Study -
fl 1 Af Qfi
tan i
^2 :
the Coast Guard since enlisting
last January’, and had been located
at Ellis Island until sent to Bain-
bridge He te a graduate and for-
mer teacher of Teacher* College,
received a master's degree from
. . . — Columbia University and was work-
lean ing lor Miami - ln< on hls doctor's degree in New
• here lie will be ^‘ned in the of- University when he entered
fk er candidate school ot the U 8 ,
Army Air Force He had been in u‘e *
personnel work with the air force
at Stuttgart. Ark He entered the I ““
service in August. 1941 I
• • • •
Harvey M Francis has been !
graduated as a setxytid lieutenant at
the Chemical Warfare Service of-
ficer candidate school at Edgewood
i
MfmXtMONB^^ANVABT^mt^
Soviet*—•
(Oonttauatf Dam Pto* Qua)
with th* Rumtan wtatar. and Mua-
•olini. who iort hi* African ampire.
K»d the bleak prospect of further
unmeasured revacaa* today a* th*
Bod anny rolled relantlamly waot-
ward on • 580 mil* front and marg-
tag Allied annlm sque*ae<l Axis
troop* into a vtoa ta Tunkto
Tb* RtMtana roported dosing ta
•taadUy upon th* k*y German
bases of Rortov and Kharkov, an-
nounced the whole eastern and
central runes am cleared of In v ad-
ore and captured thro* mor* town*
in Thrust* thr—tening to Bank the
Maikop oil fieMa and cut Ito <Mr-
mans' road of retreat.
In North Africa th* BrttWi swept
on beyond captured Tripoli, their
vanguards perhaps already aero**
the Tunisian border, a* American
force* hurled the weight of their
tanks, gun* and plena* into ttw
fight from the wart to bolster th*
hard-pressed French middle-front.
Hard reality apparently was com-
ing home to roost tn Berlin too
plain to be ronroatert
The German oommunlqu* **id
today “the bridgehead of Vcron-
e*h.“ on the Upper Don. had been
evacuated by the Axis "in order
to shorten the front.”
Prepare for Qefeat _
Berlin dtepatchea u> Stockholm
indicated that the Nari pre** wa*
preparing the German people for
new* of a great defeat on th* Rus-
sian front. Editorials sought to stif-
fen morale with reminder* that
“weakness on the home front forced
Germany to capitulate" in 1818,
and with the grim comment that
“a lost war te a lost future."
The Russians smashed through
German resistance in the North
Caucasus to the rolling plain* of
Rostov Province, capturing the
railroad city of Peschanokopskoye.
95 miles southeast of the port of
Rostov and barely over 100 miles
due east of the Sea of Aaov.
Russian battle front dispatches in-
dicated that the Germans were
hastening their withdrawal a* the
prospect of entrapment in . the
Western Caucasus loomed ever
more clearly.
Red army force* driving up the
Baku-Rostov trunk line from the
southeast reported sweeping on 30
miles or more beyond recaptured
Armavir, cutting off the rail spur
to the Maikop oil fields
The mid-day communique from
Moscow announced the capture of
a “strongly - fortified populated
place” on. the southern front, and
said that In another sector two
more “large populated places” were
won back.
It reported the destruction of
another enemy force trapped in
the Kharkov drive southwest of
Voronezh and said 1.100 prisoners
were taken, bringing the total re-
ported captured there In two days
to 3.700.
The Russian* Sunday night re-
ported the capture of Starobetek.'
126 mites southeast of Kharkov in I
a Ukraine drive supporting earlier '
penetrations to within 78 mile* |
east of U»e great Donets Valley In-
dustrial center
1 1- ' ' Frees Rsmmil
tping up the pressure on Mar-
Rommel. Allied airmen from
the east smashed anew at enemy
shipping attempting to *acap* from
the little port of Zuara, 86 mile*
west of Tripoli
Fighter-bombers carried on be-
yond the Libyan-Tunisian frontier.
Yesterday they bombed the Axle
airdrome at Ben Oardane. 36 mil**
Inride Tunisia, and the night be-
fore they swept 36 mllea beyond
Ben Oardane in an attack on an
airfield at Medlnine. Stelly al*o
was kept under air attack.
A Cairo communique did not dis-
rkw Hie extent of U»e British
Eighth Army's progress beyond Tri-
poli. saying merely that “our troops
continued their advance to the
west"
Virtually all that Roapmel wa*
able to salvage from the once-1
mighty desert corps with which te
threatened Alexandria last sum-
mer was reported in Tunisia, with-
drawing at a speed which suggert-
ed that the Germans might not
even risk a stand at the oM French
Marelh line, the defense system
some 65 miles west of the TUni-
xlan-lJbyan border
Bepart New Threat
Military observer* in London said
Rommel'* hesitancy to halt and
give battle in the old French forti-
fications probably wa* du* to the
danger of an Allied break-through
TUniria whtah would
MLv. Nancy Graham, daughter of
Mr and Mrs W E. Graham. W*
West Hickory Htrret w>d Jack
Gray, non of Mr. and Mrs J W
Gray, 515 Pearl Street sere mar-
ried Saturday evening at 8:3fi
I o'clock in the home of the bride -
. groom s parent*. Rev J J Cope-
' land, pastor of the First Presbyter -
i ian Church. U. 8 A. officiating
Mrs Copeland played the wed-
ding muric. liM-lnding "I Love You
' Truly” during the ceremony which
was performed before an improvised
altar of palms, llltea and chrysan-
' Uieniums at the fireplace Carlton
I I. Out and Mte Bonnie Bell Hop-
! kins attended the couple, the bride
wearing an antique tan crepe dress
i with trapunto trim and a gardenia
corsage
At U>c Informal reception, the
bride cut the wedding cake and
I punch were served by Mmes. Wayne
| Stalling* and Helen Kelsay to about
You may now have a copv of Uns 25 guests, mostly college friends of
122-page FREE BOOK by asking | the couple Both the bride and
for it with a postcard or letter No bridegroom are seniors in the
obligation so write today Tw Me- | Teachers College and will tpake
Cleary Clinic. E3615 Elms Blvd . EX- I their home with the bridegroom'*
celator Springs. Mo i parenta .
I at Atlantic City, have been’ trans-
> ferred to Washington. D C, for
training in the signal corps
1 Ivan Johnson, son of Mrs. Ivan
JoiuMon, 1419 Austin Avenue, has
| completed six weeks' training in
i Bainbridge. Md . and lias been ad-
vanced from yoeman first class in
the U 8 Coast Guard, to chief
specialist in the Third Naval Dis-
,beS!1 trict, New York. He had been in
to MacDill Field. Tampa. Fla . wltii
the U 8 Army Air Force
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 140, Ed. 1 Monday, January 25, 1943, newspaper, January 25, 1943; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315624/m1/3/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.