Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 171, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 2, 1943 Page: 1 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 23 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
i
1
TZ33Z
AmmcMMI Pints Id
rOL. XUI7
■-
W'*nJ
ONLY OM1
t
U. S. Hits
for
»
Snow, 23-degree
tar
United
Other
Mon-
■■
N
Mam
offensive
■ •J
roughly 350 air mile* from the Jap-
Lae on the northeast coart of Now
rtlB
*
t
*
tree
an
Sh
of
aU-l
im
/ * V
m
1
mt
areas to
and saw the
100% CLUB
J
fried
iJSw*
-■’fiZ
X
atara
»
'jgg-gy
I had
u
Mk
<M
and
%•
N.
• L
,1
Z'
g|i| M Q
IMMW
fl
a
•MMMk
ttff
II
> -
X
&1.
Be Warn Bren
taMt raSSt tatao s
that
they
ty 1
an
TM raw
fiemamraltolndl
and ata
aa adu.__
at enemy tonka
f
_ hi the
Congress, whtob
for
The
1 , . ■''/ .'V- - *r-
American and B>
Slowly in Tunisia,
Jap Base
At Munda
China Situation
Improving, Says
U. S. Commander
s can
tn to
intial
)W8.
feel
liar
Vac-
well
Hindu, Moslem
Division India’s
Greatest Problem
•Thirty-four years ago today Mr,
Amyx and I wore married tn Den-
ton." said Coy Amyx Monday "I
remember it waa a *Flr*t Monday*,
and thia Monday. M years taler,
tails on Hom Monday*."
1--■* ni^ki
last nignl. one
minutes inUde
iwwe force
Ubtll. New
HARD FREEZE
DUE TONIGHT
Fear Damage to
ory Gardens
<w Aaeoctatod Proas)
.. —
the chief
hose anl-
**•»
ivinced that
wisdom not
Inoualy. but
DUMPED
IAZI CAPITAL
ALL-OUT WAR
which would inofc
NurttMta* Mtar
whan urauanA
The Hindu Stott*
nut of India.
•■'A'
allow, itHiegree
ng Weather Recorded
&
3L
POStaM
foot to
ael auh.
1
LONDON, Man
RAF, continuing tl
lied aerial offemdve
h are tryt
on the <
900 TONS
ON BERL
HEAVIEST DOSE
—
father, rihAie a
ta-forlhta
a. ♦
TCLBA.C
SK.1S
-Stars
Religious differences are
raff
* *1
I
‘J
Another norther hit Denton Tues-
day morning. bringing the ther-
■nomotar down to around 30 de-
grees with snow falling through the
early hour* of the morning. A
strong wind, about thirty milea. was
blowing from the north, making
tt a very disagreeable day. The taw
of Monday was down to around 31
with a high in Ute afternoon of a.
A year age Monday the recorded
ttar
SL^SSTh
British Troops Advance
isia, While Russians
Resume Offensive m Frozen North.
M the North, ih M
iMiAlttlaw
rd Bah and flank 1
ssqzcs
WUhehnshaven. Nusnt. CMagne at » a. mJ; Oahreelon M: Houa-
and Western Germs * * — - - - — — - -
hH th that order <R
1 near m taSM from DaM to
could be made to secure - aaana e
settlements
"A podrlMnwnt wttti a
jorftr tolwmMkMi
Na temoodtete relief ns in eight
•nee weather tare met was for cold-
er teM|M wSk a severe fraeae in
the interior of Bast Ttaas and
tatefr froestag an the coast. Ught aoau
sBAFJMMd abet and mow waa forecast
-1 te> for Udo aftenteon to the northern
_ W peeStot of Beet Traer
rtolnly Wr WMt vms. the forecast was
in the Pan-
TOaana to protect
(• Texans donned gvercoats today
and surveyed damaged victory gar-
tone aa an early Matrh cold wave
brought mow to the Panhandle and
freanng temperutarm as far south
mrt oT a
Now Sestet 1
The Grrw»ra won ____
theaMStanmigmt^rtoe Bestera —
r”T' fl
indicated far the Lower Rio Oran- ceme
de Valley with a forocact for a' can
temperature there of to to 38 de- ad mi
grew tonight.
rartSTatj
r*1 w at
night foray over the continent,
ft was the RAPb Sdth raid on
Berlin and the first atom the <tar- 1
tng daylight attacks on Jan. to,
which interrupted ceremontae mark- 1
have, tag the 10th anniversary on the
IVNilC UUt Ut VI1C >i«uwub mi wv Nasi Regime. The German re pita 1 as uuuua. uhiiiiuilmhhi ieu irom majuruy w ■
south and southwest Pacific the- was last raided at night on Jan. i a high of S3 yesterday to M at 8' it Pakistan.
running into a : Last nightb raid
lined airmen. smashing foltaw-up
hPtobtot wHra emeiii ' nto>i£S| SMMlt tte I “ **’
the Oriental iJUes clear of oppo- , German submarine base at St. Na- to a m. tncluded
-« ----------- Bitkin tovwd oweowowAbam mem ' mmbwm ram w^. I 1 m.MAI 8--A ■■ 1 _ . am. — - ~ Wto. teto sSa. m
to batter at Japanese ships, sir-
"---- - * ‘ * i over 1
.>• '■■W'F Vyi'wSa
Hailed as Prepan
For Invasion of E
I tomBwmrasmwwmsmteihmtor
rv r rir*r'tort men falfoth seven |
ttorat_rai rteeth up again.—Pro- 1
are i
part
dajr
DALLAS. March L-iA’i-The
weather bureau here iocued the
following East Texas weather
warning!
Colder tonight with odd wave
over the east and south por-
tions. severe freeee in the in-
terior and freesing on the coast
Lowest temperature g to 14 to
the northwest, 14 to to in the
northeast, 18 to to in the south-
west, 30 to to on the upper and
middle coast and 35 to to in the
Lower Rio Grande VhOey.
Strong winds. Protect livestock
and other produce.
TBs UMBMiMMgEwW
i town ymteitog
ABted ateoran atea tnHttd k |
JmEbt -Itotolr^Bage am
-iihwH - -JW
ainb biggest bombere-Laneaotem
Haitians and Mirtoigl 181* pmt
in the raid. f ■
start Barty Fteto
The first wavs of bombsmrtmM
fires which later arrivals ocuM mt
for to mtnufios before retching Ao
targets. On the wny heme gtnto
could see the torn ftoaa Brantoi
and Hannover.
Rrtumlng pttoto ropcrtod that
Berlin s tanitmerto stood out olmrty
.--- mbi Mto wmrtB
the cfoyh detonm
take to the gM
--Is
—The Atom warn throe
sS
' -M Mml INMN » » “
3rrws.v
oped only if the 1
geneom. The h
Hindus ere two
Thm have natal
That have dtttra
H
yen ran^ijt
een bo torak
Be are hoted
NEW DELHI.
Heavy
Tbntli
rd the strai
between Mai
Burma dams. „
out Japanese rail communtoatione
___ _ —J bor-
der. It was announced today.
The viaduct, one of the engineer-
ing marvels of the Fbr East, is
3 JOO foot tong and its many steel
tenure ere buttrowed <m a natural
bridge Mg feet above a river gorge
Ml mltoe from Mintatay and M
mtao bon Leahte, bridgehead of
Road
----nattaoal Mto
ernment <m the ground UwC stMO
the Hindug boro A majority
ttggg to cm. the Mtedvea seta
' W a oonataM mtoorify UBbmtTL
to eh Bi "•
The vohtotoe which are caiiytog
this heavy
Si'
MteRto Grocery.
ungodeU Borvtoo Bteitan ___
Itartarb Ornery.
WlttamBOtoro.
Mtal Drw
Cram Committee had raised I1J14.
8M ehUto the amount asked, and
at that tone aoaee of the oommtt-
tee-OMmbme had not reported, so
again Mtot Point toora over the top*
Other eommunittos over the coun-
ty wtU undoubtedly *go over the
top’ before the campaign ends.
Donten accepted 87.000 as its por-
tion of the amount to be raised tn
the County, and surely Denton will
fulfill its part.
ora goto «
ma I row
Brt the
there we*
first tone since
no daylight asr-
__ _ m continent yw-
,raday. but eboetvera here eaid
thto woe only a tmpnravy break
;ta tte round-the-clock offensive
The score of this oBonstve was
jiMli i ihl test night by Trims
Mtatotar Ohurehm when he sent a
oamtutatovy nmesge to oh* Mar-
■h|r Str Arthur Harris in which
jSTdisctoeed that the RAF had
toopped more boeabs on Europe in
BratoMJ then tot any previous
mnntb of the war.
MBui
r Na in
DON, MAUCH 1.1H1
more bombers or both
Mere Air Power
It may mean Uie addition
correct when he mM *nerte* to Ire
O*deHb thirty-day’ Indian ■ dry
signs. BIB had predicted rain or
www* by Monday night, and he
only missed it a few hours, ao well
have to turn over the weather-mak-
ing to him for the time being.
uncle 8amb Treasury really to
feeling the effects of restrictions on
motor vehicie use. Excise taxes on
automobiles and motorcycles drop-
ped from 814JMM00 tn December.
1841. to 878000 the same month
one year tarter Income from taxes
on motor trucks during that month
fell to 8310.000 as compared with
88.783.000 tn the same month of
1P41 December. 1841 yielded 813.-
131.000 tram taxes on tlree and
tubes but the same month tn 1843
produced only 81.403.000 from this
mures. Gasoline and lubricating oil
taxes also showed declines from a
year earttar.
Bankers here agree that the wea-
ther was not suitable for a Holiday,
which today to being observed as
Ttons Independence Day. R. M.
Barns, one of Dentonb ardent an-
gtoto, waa ali-eet for a day on the
creek, having gathered hto worms
or minnowo Monday evening, but
, it seems that be changed hto mind
when be tanked out and raw the
brand of weather offered
Tonight. 8:48 o'clock at Marquis
Hafi. Tbxas-exra wW gather in an-
iet. Each student or ex-
Denton County to urged
with other
Untverehy
ton8 r.• ) < ' ....
-
By CAEL C. ORANMM8 J
Aaeertated IWgtfMr ■«)* ’gmSgS
Berlin du< out from under the ruing left tar
tona of bombg in the RAFs greatest raid on the Gm
ital today an American and Britfeh troopa, akraly o
their advance in Central Tunisia, reclaimed the era
of the territory won by Marahhl Erwin RgBdibM I
cent offensive.
British DiiiMiwitero
Mr, Harold Balfov. halted the
SZT-SmmSXm
to invade Bqrope.” y
~nune are but the opera* bam. In
whtah wfll rtm to the maooendo M
a march on Buropa.” be doolagra
The BeriM MriMB MM aran ven
OD* UK IvUl MnuiVWKBy w raw
German Air force UMM Beteho-
—• . ■errttel Gaertes raw . boasted
„ ■ I would make Goeeaany human e
air oftaratve in which the BAF has
hymered^awey^for^shrjooeeertra
Attacks Continue
As Enemy Marshals
Big Naval Armada.
‘ WASHINGTON, March 2.
— (AP)—The Navy reported
today that American dive1
bombers had attacked and
started fires in the Japanese
air base area at Munda on
gteMy." before *noon of the tint i New Georgia Island in the
fry. hSiraay. the, Pitot Point Rcd Solomons Monday.
Ute raid was the 8OU1 011 Mun-
da, tn the Central Sotomons. since
November 33 when the air force
baaed on Guadalcanal Island be-
gan a campaign to destroy the en-
emy base.
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN
AUSTRALIA. March 3—0P1-A 14
ship Japanese convoy, one of the
largest ever assembled by the en-
emy to this sector of the South-
west Pacific, moved westward from
New Britain toward the New Gui-
nea coast today as bad weather de- [
layed Allied airmen waiting to
strike at the armada. %
A communique t-------
Douglas MacArthur** heedquarters
said the convoy was last sighted off
Jap Fleet to Be
ST^-ZS* Destroyed-Knox
loktelk viaduct * • ,
WASHINGTON. March X -Ort-
Navy Secretary Knon
senator* today that "ng'_ _
destroy the Japanese Beet before
the war to over "
And when tt to annihilated, he
added, “well probably impoar upon
her that obeli never have anower
ftoei."———- ».A'
The cabinet oQictal made the
statement In ur^ng 'the s
foreign relations tioranltlse V
KdhleateMit anetaS?^!E*
DocrBasB Shown
hl OR Production
)RD-
h fflS?
i of tasse teethe
divtatea which
wrattons has beep
Mcrosri that fl»-
* j r
I
f r
a. . ra . I
F« ■- 1
; > a
1 1
reporting the ship* were ‘moving
under cover of an advancing wea-
ther front "
If U>e weather clears sufficiently
Fraa> — —— — — * — nia — 8n mmwO
Allied airmen were poised fur a .
am on?njg
Mvect when he mM *nerta te Ira had chosen his weather shrewdly. mav ^tra* or an estimated 4M tens UR thte cap-
ital. A year ago Mb tons dragged
s
Last Sunday nighr the RAF dump-
th* Kr*P°r?*^—bom^ toads from *Mmm in Central manT-boat bMe7*wtthte"s8 era-
resulting battle might rival or but- Southern and WesternJapan stnsck^’bv ^arrmT^iundred**toS?
pass the epic three-day battering Or first emphasis may be placed h»r>
Allied airmen handed a smaller on J -c . . I
force en route from New Britain ‘
to New Guinea on Jan 8-10
Hmashing Defeat
A Mnashiitg defeat was inflicted
on Hint convcfy. bearing reinforce-
ments for Japanese positions at
lac. with the result tiiat only a
remnant of the original force of
four warships and five transports
survived The Japsmeoe tost at least
78 and possibly 100 planes trying
to protect the ships
Allied reconnaissance planes first
sighted the new Ji
Monday afternoon t _
Britain, and were able to follow Its
course along the New Britain coast
While Allied airmen waited for a
raWM>M
to riokR 3Su
Kal-Bhek.
Wbrklng through the Ftan Se-
curity Arimlnistratton in Denton
OounB. the Government wUl en-
deavor to bring together farm la-
borers and tamers who need year-
round labor.
*Ttan workers who are looking
tor-reund farm wortt are urg-
1 register with the local FBA
said Robert F. Wallis. Ooun-
ipervisor. “as well as emptay-
rho are wanttag farm bands,
ayore and laborers wUl bo ex-
1 to enter into aa agreement
which will fond both parttoe *
the length of the contract
Mum Security Administration to
co-operating with the pgBB ta thte
■form Labor program. The Oounty
FBA to JacnteA* tan-basement of
the port office. Any further infor-
matton doclred about this , program
can be had by contacting me in
my offtee."
Han.
nual ba
student B
former sttatoute of
of Ttataa.
The OQtenel had instructed his
rift g* J*». BURMA VIADUCT
BO mid tout Came the day and the
OBMBtl art into a beautiful done-
tatagrtra turtwy. frowned, cut
again, then sent for 8am.
-DtanT 1 ten yvti I wanted a <to-
u»eetic MrdT" he thundered
"Tbh. auh. bat's a domeetto. corn-
fed fowl" .
-MbH what about thte shot I'm
flndMff*”
8am Shuffled from am
the otttor. “Det shot CM
were meant tar ate.*
Ao Ttaranr was putt big on a coat
braaoaT* S mS? *te
, *4£at*s taa metrat" ataad hto
. 'rJ-ri'X
.?■ »■' ‘
at are three or-
nram terra bn- —----„——---ehu
r to the Amari hoadgaartgto ooaatoaaigBe Bum
Hlndmart«rera- J Worth AMea aMd taa Garaaa aU
Maharahha. which comiwtem the * DtuMfictaC from heertymMam >a
__more oataodoB Bbutak The fiB-1 Matte AMandaM taB4NhpBrasb«'
rature drop at Amarillo was , India Congress otetera to be nattoto
rrees from * high of M yes- al and to ixmiude members « all
’. 8now also wee reported at religions, though its opponsnts ae-
Oocupted Ra^MsT» digreea. OtanasviUe.
La enemy with a temperature of 33 degrees.
----‘ ported tight sleet.
Mrtrt rains In the Palestine and
i^Mn areas were expected to help
(■at extensive fires in the East
toile timber belt.
Waco
Ry DeWErrr MaeUNElE
The Indian poltttoai estate brte-
ttos with more dangerous pctafia
than a porcupine does with
but the grams
Wndu-Moetem
1 through the g
marked by a
quently has produced 1
A fight enow, falling at intervals
Dor mmmA hdMiFB coHBlMi Mrith * Religious allTereiwtB i
M-draaatairaraturoto mark a baste of thte foud. Out'
return of winter as Matai arrived nwwtftes has grown oto _
in Denton. The norther blew up ‘“■J™* constantly tag
and the tam- tneted and made eoasproaetom bora
j/Traj. '1 ■ ■teilsraa— emP «
Ttee ndnimum temperature
day aeerntag was 37 degrees.
Fltet Fetat Dem It Again! Pilot
Boint wee arind by the Red Croe*
Chairman. Ben C. Ivey, of Denton,
to accept an aerignment to raise
SUM for ita portion of the 813.000
to be ratood * Denton County J.
Wineton Feel, chairman of the Pi-
lot Brat ccmmtetoe. eaid. “Yes. we
will take our part willingly and
By GLENN BABB
The most encouraging comment
on the China situation tn weeks
come* from General Chennautt. _
Ths commander of the American t force.
Air Force* in China, who has been •
fighting the Japan*** longer than
any other American general, says
things out there appear more hope-
ful. The judgment of thte veteran
airman, whose record proves his
profound knowledge of the enemy
and of the means to accomplish
his destruction, commands the ut-
most respect.
Chennault dates the turn for the
better from the Casablanca confer-
' 1,, - »« ence That dramatic war council
Allied ainnen waiting to
‘from' General pro,nl“ of frea‘*r ______
I President Roosevelt said after' ring said that uMto g8CM MM»
_ , - __ -__ hu return from Or*hianra that i bars of searchlights atoNted rite
0,1 .n*** n°* “there are many rands which lead sky the anti-aircraft fire wag W ‘ “
Mn, .bn.., ITS mile. rtand^
mme of them.” Chennault^ ainnen , Brig. Gen. L. H- Bedrick. J
are operating along the road on ' Advocate General of United 8
which forces of the United States Forces in this war theater. L
are ctaeest to the enemy capital, viewed returning creua gfiran
It is likely that they will be the , bomber "* ‘
2.„ j deliver thorn punishing proceed-----
little raid even more ImDreeeed. I cert
*
B=3S=3»S*
Dt-BMM-'ffN
r ..v, -. - .
A. March L— ♦
♦ U0-The toil Of convoyed UMk ♦
♦ ted Nattooe sMpa taut in sub- ♦
♦ marine warfare in the Atlanta ♦
♦ to only ono in 300. Admiral sir p
♦ Btow Noble, head of the ad- ♦
♦ Utasdty delegation at the Brit- ♦
♦ teh embassy in Washington, ♦
♦ aatd tact night. ♦
tooobbBBooogooooooooooot
TTmoo 8ram and their Muptayse
have oart their Bod Cram war fund
Mata Ml rar curt:
Donten Mkta School tartim.
Berth Turns State Thacherv Ool-
“ *J and Charttabte Mmd.
State College for Women
tacuite tatortta Maud.
Bahbrop Grocery.
. Ttakehra OoOBps Grocery.
UfoeT tatejtartar 8hop.
DMhutrtaT tSSTtak
O. H. Brammer Bra Oa
MM Bra
Ifoungti ^1100)^
RdBRe Botrotaan Ob.
taawr
ObtafcaaMHtan
of achievement.
This deep division botuesn
main parties t—2 2 — -
where the Hindus and the Most
charged each other wth seertni
rate India. The Brtttoh batata
ed out ths gttustton aa evta
that sstf-goraaasont. on a ta!
baste was difficult. Ths Indi
charged that the gosenanent !
exploiting those differences in or-
der to continue impertaltotte rate.
Htadm in Majerity
Ths population of India to sett-
mated at about TMtaMEO. These
are some 37M0QJM Hindus and
eojooaje Moahuns. That tt to anff
the Hindi* outnumber the Maatara
by three to one.
The Hindus arc nat
want a imttMMl ~—
will take in the V—
Moslems object to a
Europe, bombed Berlin and trap
in Western Germany last night
raids from which 18 pitataroA
to return, the air inliM^
nounced today.
The attack on Berlin was ftt
ertbed as "a heavy, concenttat
assault" carried out In clear wa
tber. and the tuaMM :1MjMM
to haw boon good.
“Berlin got tt heavier last gM
than it has ever had ta'*>F*
Harold Balfour, undetaterota
state for ah*, declafew**^ ’
It was at drat esMtated
about 1JM tons of bontfta ft
the German capttal In haff an
It was authorttattvely riBOrtad
that the weight of bonfbo b
Berlin last night was prt
twice as greet ab
as ths tap load dm
in any one night by
____March
and medium I
U. R Air Iforae
Goktaik viaduct
f and Lashto ta
it sufftetonlly to
New Britain and about 175 miles
west of the big enemy base at Ra-
baul
While It* destination wa* still tin- f
certain, the convoy» position was
SXZ »»ftft ri»~rirai STS. I NN
, first to deliver thorn punishing printrt and I betaW Hitter
Ue on the northeast coast of Now — whlch Doolittle raid oven more Impressed I oMta
°^1H^ ..nvn Mn, . **• " ^wtaaste gathered the 8Btnttn>Mp a g>
Allied airuton were poised tor a, of whtcli Gen- iraM"--i—- 'w—am ... -w- zr-
ijx-«F”*Z‘r“s:I. ~ ~
--r:--.. ~ :----t-’* Thte may mean more fighter* or an estimated 450 tens hit thte era
K — w—a taNNate ■■■ NN kNlte itral A taUMto mMTO MBA ttMom
the RAF virtually wiped'out
per cent of Lttaeok ta Germany,
f* reconnaissance heavy bombers capable of carrying ^'ntT'Nanatee^Qur-
accompaniod by fighter planea The chlra to the Industrial center* of
I nr flr.. NnhN. WTWr*1 hUndl*1 *«“•
Or first emphasis may be placed , i^ra,
i fighter and fighter-bomber types
which will deny air superiority over i I
China battlefields to the Japanese’ rJ" ‘
and so greatly bolster China's de- | intruder
fenac tn the next few critical France
ST
1«jE
Sixth Stesamaive Pteray ter£y ___ ___ _ ____
BriUah ptanrn also carried out clarendon, u degrees; and at Wteh-
________,___aiTtadd mtorc ta enemy
moot I is against Japan's efforts to water*, the comminique reported,
knock her out of the war. In the Tt waa the RAFS sixth successive
near future Uie latter type of aid -*-*“* *------ *- —-----
probably will be the more valuable.
General Chennault believe* that
the quality of the Japanese air
force is deteriorating Thte agrees
with oUier opinions which _ . .
come out of the fighting in the Nasi Itaghnt. The German capital
-------* ere 4te- StaN. ' vmma UU * A- -8 1
atera There is much evidence that 17.
the Japanese are running into a, I '
shortage of well trained ainnen. smaaht
Now Uiat tlte veterans who swept night's
crack at the convoy they continued .
hrattor mt JtanmtaMMB ■****» *■»- « m*mlm
dromes and sujipiy fines
<rt^f >rT*. . . fit ttw Solomons and around New
Ouloea. repiaasmsnts of like qual-
. J J? , Ity are not available.
• i J?ar^?r 011 LmI wbhIe cmTi attempted raid
Of «1 A—n* »><*>. of ths raerimm
LnTtew^hito^^T temiNr. ' P*rry 8rrvk* *• “» «wtaptt of the
rakiart tn. *odd* U* Ff** Japanese pfiots face
Xi I when **“ «» mttrion. againrt the
ZrXd traS I American. Of some 40 enemy
strafed trail* near fialamaua { oniy known to have
n* a ’ escaped Odd* tike that can break
BOMBERS BLAST U* morale of the most fanatical,
fatalistic soldiery
: a. m. tart Worth reported a drop
temperatures of 7 degrees
today, reported mow. The
Wiure lirup a* mmwiw was iiwiw wagrsse wmawa *w wv ■
rem from a high of 84 yes- al and to include membera
rw also was reoorted at reltoiona- thouah its oooonei
. sert that it is chiefly Hindu.
The Moslems are represented by
the powerful all India Moslem Lea-
gue. This to uniter the preskteocy ««a» «■ i i j ■
of Mahomed AM Jtnnah. a brilliant tunted bask. MM i
lawyer who to one of Button out- haadquartare atoo ___
standing personalities. I AMtaagpture of tagRgta
In Jtanah-S forceful toaderahtp southwest oT ffeemrtnt ta
orted a minimum tern- . the League has dev e tap id an en- . Ttartta
33 degrees st 7A8 a. m ’ plosive idea to safeguard the Moe- Aris Afranfl Baum
> had fatten to 38 degrees at 8:M tarn minority agataM that Hindu I \
At Dallas, thermometers fell from msjortty or thfoe to one. They ca8 . craft were start
i a. aa. rwv wasiii itrputwu a urup <Land Of th. FUTO) a pregT"^
ddsd a from U at midnight to 33 at 10 a. which rejects entirely the M
Sunday m. . program for a national govenm
Other minimum temperatures up and atom at the Britton of h
“ “ • - • '• LaHwit tato two wholly autonomous str
in the first few months' are , satoe. on whtah Brtttoh and Cana- IT; Qaawett IT; Alptoe 30; Laredo One Of .ttMOtalrtl MMbto'
r' gone, vk-ttm* of the heavy toll taken dian ainnen unloaded more than! 04; Brownsville 00; Corpus Christi. tbs other Hindu, taktotan tt
■ by Uie Americans and Australian* i 1.000 tana of expItavM. ' 08; San tatenio 4b; Austin «3 <08 name of the prepeood Mseeta 8
. ----- ;---
been 1 too I*; Batasttne M; Mg Spring
■ peoceding , M; Wtak-M; Brady Mu --------—
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 171, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 2, 1943, newspaper, March 2, 1943; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315655/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.