Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 230, Ed. 1 Monday, May 10, 1943 Page: 4 of 6
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DENTON. TEXAS MAY 10. 1M3
d
MISCE
by
3-
4P
JUSTIN NEWS
San
I
tl
if
I
buy. or
Methodist
r
NINETEEN YEARS AGO
family
e*
r
Enough Is Enough
I
Steam Wathateria
Look LOOK Look
East Side Cleaners
JOE’S STEAK HOUSE
C Stanley and
A
- ■
Denton, Tw
srl
Manner
DROP IN
9
For Your Country's Sake
a
INSURANCE
I
eon
I
WAR SAVING STAMPS!
B tew
M
PitUburgii
a
00
..
At Our Office
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SS3HS?B®*»
ram
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wtomobujb
MX3DBNT
SURETY BONDS
i
<
’^Wr' ********
' a ■ "■
»;>y . gte
Morrison s Peacemaker Flour
Inrationed
j
During Hot Weather
Bring Your Family
I .aundry To Our
k Is Difficult to Buy A New Car
But you can modernize your lights with our sealed,
Ijeani adapters. No. 1 17-inch tires now available.
Western Auto Associate Store
Went Side of Square
Use Our OP A
Official Tire
Inspection Station
Save time and money.
Free parking. Phone 81
I
SAFETY RECORD NO ACCIDENT
Foe the seventh consecutive year and for
CONTEMPORARY
THOUGHT
ADD SPICE
to J" our wardrobe.
Wear Lorraine
SLIPS
$1J» $1.79
DeUdoutHome*
Made Candy
Made Fresh Daily
If you buy a house you II have a
home now as well as after the war
SPANISH sn
Nursery and
Drive
FOR GOOD <
1380-W. Frat
FRYERS 75c e,
and select U
WASHINGTON
IN WARTIME
By JACK STINNETT
Tips on Insect
Control Distributed
distributed by the
Commerce civic bureau to
liotne owners of Deuton Th
distributed through the srho
by mall
and have your tires in-
spected before the big
ruahl
Let us rteaa ywur winter clot
and p**a them la moth and Im
proof baas. American C lea nan
lOST Whlte I
ty tall Arwwt
reward P. O 1
laboma
12x12 ROOM s
Sidewall and
Furniture Com
FIVE SMALL
• way Phone
to tadto to tore i>
cm aaA |g iMBtet
KMtel SUB
BABCOCK’S
223 W. Hickory
WATER JUG4L
Ions and ha
pourout spout.
Store
J'
PER POUND
• WASHINGTON
COLUMN
By PETER EDflON
•M'
a
AS
r
VAlfTED
♦
AJ1 Typewriters Made
Since 1935
Far Government Ust
i
♦
I
'W?
_ ——«W
FOR SALK M
geese Phone
5-TBAR-OLD fl
Prttw too. J.
1. Krum.
p
L
i
L
El'
i
I*OgT I
I ORT Gaaohni
of R L Tl»<w
Return to Bon
“Oa the Hwiwiyr
Always the Beat,
Cooked In the Beat
£
the White House gates more often than he did In
SEC days
3 pair of shoes Is enough for
any man Jarman Shoes will
do It for you It has for
others . Try a pair of Jar-
man's next!
SJtefaO
jiteNfMtaSNlto ■ ^r-i-
;
JU8T RECKIV1
rood minnow
MeKlnoey and
230
■•v •1 ; ■
nlas. calendl
tana and torn
Hower Shop
INSURANCE 1
and Accident
end Delias U
Hospitalisation
largest insurant
In the world. 1
1ST7-W
J?
! to the public Wall Street and the administration
by creating out of the fine nebulous SBC laws a
workable set-up
Worth
J W
I
let which sweepa mankind tieai est
the angels
which the gods and mortals con- I
verse with each other '
THAT MAN KBNNEDY IS HERE AGAIN
WA8HINOTON—Almost any day now you may
hear that Joseph P Kennedy pre-war ambassador
to Great Britain, once more R in the government
picture
The fact that he has been out of R is one of the
stsange political phenomena of this war. It has been
rumored at least a doaen Urms that he would take
over this or that job Members of Cbnsnss have
made speeehm about Joe Kennedy's talents not be-
ing employed in the war effort Nobody much dis-,
agreed that lie would make an admirable right-hand'
to that right hand of the President James P Byrnes.
As a sort of lieutenant general on the home front.
Kennedy would be carrying on a public service that
has been his forte almost from the day Roosevelt
became president
In 1832. Joe Kennedy became the first chairman
' exploits of one of the minor thugs
Q—Which of the allied powers
la World War I suffered the most
ca&ualttea. and which the kaaak?
A ffwla’a casualties were over i
8.000M0 men, while Japan's were i
but 1110
■N OHIeY
G OLD u
Q— What la the "eldest hand." so
often mentioned in card rule books?
A—-The hand to the left of the
dealer. <
Fisher a diploma of Theology
Alton Johnson, seaman second
class of the Naval Air Station al
Dallas visited his mother Mrs Alton
Johnson
H H Teague returned liotne af-
ir.sxi’E'
aMfT-toSWRKB
WHINOVOB X WANT
...Ii Ytir
Ova Hmm! 1. . „
jjgt
BORROW OUR SHU GOB
3 Giant VtAumr*: Hund ret
Of Hume Devurating Ides
♦ MHiuma hm»
Morris & McClendoi
219 W. Hiekory St. . j
uy. w.ssmwi,,
A Greece '
• ♦
Q-What the the Maritime Pro-
vtnoMf
A—Prince Bdward Wanda. Nova
SSfc.-tfo.'S. —*
S. Crout of Baileyboro. R
. A S Crout
Calif. and K'
Port WorUi; t
a sister. J D u
BRUSHES — 1
Clear or cok
to MOO City I
EIBCTROLUX
factory repo
Denton Wsd
Haun Eagle C<
WOOL
Warehouse a
survd Libera
your wool Will
rd. Sacks and
houar Denton.
-J-
.' V.
■Mt-
C
-I
ass———
tits body from D« Angrier
Rev and' Mrs Fred Fisher and
were awarded degrees at the South
western Baptist Seminary at Fort
Worth Friday Fisher received a
bay emmaoiM
tattoa or standing
UM Will b» gUdlr
r larw an added ugt Iff
n more potential WOrt-
io be employed Mffm in 1MB.
Project on top of thta the advances in linhnMagy
which will permit the production of more goods per
man-hour of labor, and. ohjo thte ourvoy. "RMMing
that people vUl want to work about the same hour*
as in IMO. the potential capacity of the available
manpower tn IMO io ataaoot M par cent greeter than
tha total output in 1000 "
It U made clear by the DeparUactK of Commerce
that this is not a forecast of what, the votaaoa of post-
war buaffteaa can be—of what can' be produced There
is an accumulated buyer demand being built
war shortages. ‘There are accumulated war i
For a time they may keep production of peacetime
conouRNrr goods at an dosihraini rate But It wiU
be difficult to maintain.
of (he Security Exchange Commission In seme cir-
cles. there was i “ ‘ x
lowly beginnings on Boston's East fftde. Kennedy was
known as a Wail Streeter and "Just another specu-
lator " There egyn is a story that the President him-
self was not too sold on him for that job. But he
gave it to him anyway and Kennedy sold huneelf
Sailors at .tra, soltliers on land, and pilots in the air
An? doing their |»art on the War Front.
We houwwivea at home, huslMinds at work, and chil
dren in school
Oldsmobile Servi
Genuine Parts
RAY DICKSON MOTOR COMPANY
Phone 157 115 S. Elm
there will he a million camatetm ta ths
id forms after the war •■! have
tew million, there WU be jobs
million dheharted aoldhn and
ten erewth af the caMtry wW.
“2 tertliM labor
af hi
a
Profess
wJ •i' ’’em*
a^ * x^4* —, — - F -r*«***i,T*
Mcqurtan 1
DR. moi
McCrary B»
OPTO
Qrw?JrLiry*
CHIR
Nervous an
"'Mt
Colon
_____me w.
OST
' DR C.
31T J
Office fhMp I
NATT
O. O. OOLUM
Naturopathy,
dlgretlvw rheur
BMg, M, Ke
■f
war workers who
fore the war will go Bate 1
babim and sitting in 12
all these increaaea hi tek I
IMS there will ba tan mi
era
MOTH SPRAY
Guaranteed
Also moth ball
Drug Store
VENETIAN BL
paint, tape.
Highland Phot
SPORTING OC
and bats 1
tennis balls. |
Store
appUanees 1
need alectrtaal
Service On.. BN
BARGAINS IN
.yg..“%s;
prompt efftoi
IOS mSSk”
Bw<>
’40 Chev
•37 Fort
’37 Fort
81 Cher.
A frat took at odfne of the probtraw involved in
maintaining hill employment after the war has just
been made by the National Economics Unit of the
Department af Oummerce in a study called "Market*
After the Wv.~ As the Utle indicates, this appnash
to the probiem is from a new arwle the viewpoint
of selling the goods and not the usual idea of bmphlg
jxoducUon going—any kind of production—just ae
U provides emptoymem
Today, half the nation's goods and services are
bought by the federal government But when *U this
WILL PAY CAS
sgrspn reoor
Shop
WOODSON
50 Wedding /
Phons 233 It
Rtetear te «M Mm
ibai amet of the wmmo and other
fc.
Mill! 1 II W H yhrtfk
JUST
2 AMONG VS
touts U
► t 1 X F
"pointed Ote
teteff. • «
Taa is on the shortage Mak, « ttte ahmaaar vt
may have ice tea with Imbm affted anti the taa
omitted . ; ? .
• ' ..
The war has mate RMat ARMriMNa raatee that
obstacles are merely aaMMNhtag to amka thate get
busy.' ‘
DENTON »'KD».jtAL HAVINGS
A LOAN ASSN
JOt Jaeksea Bldg. Phone M .
*' *■'
Tte WILLI T.„
__ _______ Ltette
weather ran true la term W the lam
SSiTJSLW’7-
....
Preclpatitlnn at the Mate Bx-
ax baptag is aawed’off sharply after the war. this
Er fiy ** prteueuve capacity and ew»-
■Pw PMNMy be kept on putter worts
■2' W* j"* — ’"‘“fc "■*“ Pr»N«« «*W beteg aa-
Rj- OMbied by various federal state and muniNprt pten-
Mteff.—teteNgae WMt begin to absorb ag Mie peo-
■feflFJM* N.MM And that's only the beginning
'From Denton Record -Chronicle May 7. 1KM>
A shower of rain that was welcomed by the farm-
ers and gardeners fell Tuesday night, measuring 32
of an inch in Denton
The low temperature of today here was 60 foDow-
uiging a high of tl yesterday
Margaret Lee Wiley of Denton wa* one of the nine
students of Texas University to receive a 3500 fellow-
ship award
Trinity University of Waxahachie clinched the
T I A A baseball championship by beating the Han
Marcos Bobcats The Teachers College Mglea and
the Bobcau are hauling for second place
Ernest Francis Simpson. Jr, celebrating his first
anniversary Tuesday was honored with a party by
hh mother Mrs Ernest Francis Simpson
Word from Dallas Tuesday was that Mrs U L
Miller, who underwent a serious operation there, was
doing nicely
Mrs. F T Underwood, taken ter a Dallas sanitari-
um > month ago. n doing nicely, according to re-
port from there Tuesday
Clem Bushing while working at the TVachers Col-
lege Wednaeday morning fell from a 30-foot pUt-
ftgwi and sustained painful injuries about the head
and back
WilHe Page Allen and Miss Gladys Parker of JAirt
Werth were aiarried in Denton Tuesday
Charles P'POol U ill at his ixime an West Hickory
Street
iMtrtee Joy and Rod La Roeque are the featured
actors bi "Trlbmph - at the Dreamland
Smokey and Joe Pender, dogs owned by Dr J. M
Pitner of Denton won the t hampianehip tn the rab-
bit ram held north of the city Sunday On request
at the large crowd that witnessed the races the two
dogs ran against each other and Smokey put out
Joe Pender with a J to 2 count
Marriage license was waufd to
Mis* Maude Alien
|
Since we got Into the war n has leaked out that
Kennedy has turned down several jobs. It is mid
here that be didn't want any part of the dustings off
that many < the administration appointees In war
jobs were getting In that, perhaps, he was wise Yet
there couM be no tougher merit than Civilian
tapply director under EconcaNc Slabillaer Byrnes
Aald* from the public. Kennedy would be conetantly
warring wttb WPB < Donald Nelson is reportedly op-
posed to hewing anybody ea Civilian Supply offlcw
ouwtde of WPB» the Army. Navy and several others
Any nM» that the bespeetaeM MY Kennedy
takes will be • tough one but not too lough for the
Irish-Catholic lad who did an Horatio Alger
RELIABLE WC
children by tl
HAVE TRUCK
Iron, stock i
1500 W R M
( permit al Camp Cleaners. Ph. lilt.
Pamphlets giving a tloarn tips on
how to control hwects have been
Cham bar of
2 000
were I
l and
r Purity Bakery
———
*■ ■ '■ ' MW?
.
In time Kennedy moved over Io the Maritime
OrxnmisMoti and according to Mime set up the
model or all-out wartime producUon
In thine days iw> was backing Roosevelt vociferous-
ly and financially He had a hand in the second
Humrvrti campaign and an important one If It
hadnl been important he never would have been
appnfntod ambaasador to the Court of 8t James i
That was his reward but m hh new poet something I
happened |
Kennedy never has been accused of being an iso- <
lattonirt but be didn't see eye to-sye with the Presi-
dent on foreign policy and being the outspoken
fellow that lie t&. he said so
He argued against lend-leaae HR contention was
that we should prepars for war first and form our
alignment* later He wasn't Men for the third term
although he did nothing to block it. even held up ’
one of hb major critical speeches until after the I
IMg Chicago cxmvenUim.
Ekanewhers, th* r*M tonehlp between Preskieni .
Room-veil and Kennedy became noticeably cool Ken-
nedy cam* home from Migiank and just didn t go
back No longer was b* the fraqusut White House
luncheon guest, nor even a Washington visitor Pe-
riodically h* waa Hated by the ncramnalers a*
scheduled for this or that job. but R never material-
ised Recently, however, he has been seen goir< tn
cgnte.
’ • • • •
The weather la taking • promi-
nent part
J
Crout of Denison.
San Franc Imo. r
Flora l^Rue of
brothers and ..
Enoch Jones and Mrs J. A. (
all of Denton. 27 grandchildren» *
22 great-grandchildren.
Seek to do our jiart on the Home Front.
Using more unrationed food <>n the Home Front
Saves more rationed food for the Wnr Front.
Q—For what particular reason
to Princess Elisabeth, heir to the
British throne, making an intensive
study of French?
A—French Is sUR the predomin-
ant language of diplomacy and toy- |
al court*.
Jack HodgM
■m* Pfifftoffier
FMwttO
and
l
TAXING OUT-OF-NTATK BUSINESS
States whtrh have sales tax laws naturally try to
coDeet ewry possible dollar under them For that
reason tha “use tax was invented Par the same rra-
acna the Arkansas Revenue D^artment attempted
to ceBect reran sales taxes from certain Memphis
eoneem* dotag business in this state
But the Arkansas Supreme Court declared the
tax could net be collected because the transactiokto
wars within, interstate commerce Two of the con-
cerns maintained business relations in the state and
made mall deliveries to purehagtra fo Arkansas
In a third case the aourt said the sampaRy deUv-
erod aosn* of tt* goate to ArtaagM poschMsxa Ml
Ms own truck* and lor that reason the tatmtate
loawiiiiL'i efemrnt might be tat and the state might
be able to aoUeet tha tan. *nu* earn wa* lanaadad
wtfb tnatruMon* to dwtaop tert* eottatataff d»-
Uvary of good* in Arkaqgda
tn hoidlnd the UMMactton* of the Memo
own* tn interstate cMtadtoa, the coartl
M it* ruing in a Ml Nta feat Mto MB 1
did not impose a "iar tan. Ttai iwaaBMd dN
contended that the IPtl gross recetpi sata
levies move than a sales tan but the court d
“Whatevte name amp be fltan to flte tl
te either of lbs acNtOte WjTte dt ZmS
asntMMy the nsn' th* aptoton to*
J,* - J.,- •
a poG-nt MIly
it serves tn i
OSRSMBWa
•BARBS
O 8. custom* offta ruled that a Rte at jteto-
tafli to plual. flam* wav* seen wtea toff staffator.
• • •
A isMtarat* la where m i*n dlobsa edh-
talnffw a little food when yah NM want to flash
tetflk.
LOST - Two No
McDonald. R
Hickory
1A7HT Blue *i
belt Relurt
HUM ---------
i trict
ruptured Kan Grace Johnson of College j
Station. Oma Rosencranl* and D
Anderson B Harris of Arkansas City. Kan
returned to their tuxnrs after vU-
‘ Hing Rev and Mrs J 1. Harris
Mr and Mrs Bert Gibbs of Drn-
| ton visited Mr and Mrs J W Col-
i lina
Mr
Walter Koons
visited hb moUier,
Koous
Mr and Mrs Tom Campbell vts- I
lied in Port Wurth and her mother. |
Mrs Nannie Brewer returned with
them for a visit
Res F M I'albot and family
spent mothers' day with his parent*
in McKinney
Mias Callie Miller has been ser-
lously ill
Bud Oentle underwent surgery in
Ata I u6*‘*
i
.
sw jfoltHfftg
-
Final Rites for
J. B, Gadberry
Special to the Record-Chronicle
BANOBl. May 10 —Final rites for
John B Oadberry were held at the
So 11 van Funeral Home Saturday af-
ternoon. conducted by Rev G R
WUkoraon. pastor of the Assembly !
of Qod Church at Gainesville, as-
sisted by » T Barnard of Sanger gpactol to Record-Chronicle
Mrs Roxie Winstead. Mias Thelma JUSTIN. May 10 The Methodist
They sang
of conquering Germany first then
the whole world They whipped up
hate and spite by prostituting a
noble art to the end* of tyranny
The power of music to du good
or evil has been recogmaed since
the dawn of civilisation The fellow
who said, in effect. 'I care nut who
write* a nation* laws if I can but
write her songs’ understood this
power
We took upon music In He true ;
in it* power to aoothe the
Uplift 1
I bop* and
I
aWrr-&r’hhof ' Ward and H Jackson,
lien Lb* wvrld 1 Walter Koon-, of Fort
Mrs
___■*"
nmligiB ir^T SWMtay night
£Xto «JI tateto. Mta ghotrera
taring th* tey god te gf gm inch
and Mr* C Y Ueuty and
Mrs. B L Adams attended the dis-
■neeting of the
Church in Gainesville
i L M Miller returned from Tytor
I where he visited Mr and Mrs Al-
, ton Morris
.Phone 321
Denton Typewriter
Exchange f
W t Cleiarnl. aperial Wry
meatal lie te the Ml TffAL
BENEFIT. HEALTH and AC-
CIDENT .Maa, Kown 113 Ba-
ley BMg . ka> a special FM|CB
on ttoter HOSPITAL POLICY,
and invite* even one Interest-
ed tn phone 2?*. and m*ke *p-
ytealarcnl far him Io rail at
your HOME and explain flu*
WOtarrfal CONTRACT IligT
PATNBNT. COVRMs all ex-
ptetee ta MIX MONTHS
nature. 1
savage breast. Ils power
and Inspire to encourag*
sustain faith
Mam singing of <"
songs, now enjoying
popularity among soldiers tire world
over an lung factory workers and
among civil populations in the de-
mocracies is a hogeful sign Sing-
ing takes a man out of himself and
makes iilm conscious of others
It is a sure antidote for Uiat self-
centered feeling which causes so
much miery in the world
"Maaic. properly utilised is a po-
tent sustainer of morale a mighty
weapon against the forces of dark-
nesa.
"Music to the one emotional out- j Dalias Friday
Miss Beatrice Jones of Dallas I*
It 1* the language by visiting her parents here
Mmes W W Forester and O B l
i Lane and O B Lane Jr., of Dalia*
■ visited Mrs Lillie Nicholson
> IteG dWictao ohnMrs RAemG slin.
uv
iVVR^BALE^pi
hog* Ftobtra
FOR BALE 3C
pig* Joe Hut
18 YOUNG i
10 CALVRB n<
within *o day
l>hone 643
FOR 8AIX- Wr
Holstein cow
farter. Krum.
vived by his parents, Mr and Mrs '
Joiui Gadberry of Gainesville, his '
wife, who was formerly Mias Gladys church TtirMtoy afternoon wllh 10
Hunnicutt The latter accompanied members present. Ttie subject was
"Christian witnessing through
learning ' Prayer was b y Mrs .
John Pennington. Power of Edu- |
cation'' by Mrs Will Stanley. "Wll-
neMing for Baptists" by Mr* W 1
master of Theology degree and Mrs Bishop, prayer by Mrs Bruce Kel-
I ly. Education for Negtocted ’ by
Mrs Noel Haund The clotong
prayers were by Mmes Arthur Fer-
rell and Glenn McClary
Mmes Fannie Looper of Newton.
Kan Helen Harris of Washington,
ter 44 days in the Denton Hospital D C . Nettle Book ter of Winfield
after an operation for ruptured Kan Grace
appendix
Mr and Mri W E
and ton* visited Mr. and Mr* Mar*
Anderson in Gainesville
Mrs W K Miller and Miss Nora
Freeman visited In Denton
Mr and Mrs Buck Jackson and
sons of Dallas visited Mmes J W
A, monVUY.
CANT BE WEANED
The active effort being made by Texas official* U>
preserve states rights and to return to the States
of same of the right* that have been lost to the fed-
eral government in the last two decades isn't get-
ting much support from other southern States A
recent regional conference of goremors of southern
States hel<L in Atlanta brought out some interesting
tact* about lioa the executive* of many southern
States regard the principle of state's rights when it
contorts with their desire to get money from the
federal treasury
The governors requested more aid from the fed-
eral government, and recommended that federal
contribution? be made on the basis of need and
necessity ". rather than on the present basis of Stetm
matching federal fund* dollar for dollar The con-
ference also refused to recommesxd that the Stales
rather than the federal government distribute
administer federal fund*
. tally tows* at 314 wait tatary Wwt, gaata.
Daby'pres* Leagwa
• v ■ rtfliSl
tatata Sfld Bdi»e*toi oatee --------
taeutata Department-----------------
. . BCBBCRJFTION RATRg
0t» rear (to advaBsej
aaartHriff <t» advaMi
tErtotaWCbe *y mad (tn advance)
tab flSafo taiverea ___
— flb* teesrltee* Free* to axciustvta
UW ter re-publicauon at all new* «s*--T
lb it or BM otherwise credited la tbto papee and
th* toaal Bev* puWMbed hereto.
NOTUB to the rt'RJC
ART erraneoito Yefiectton upon th* character, r
of any firm, individual or oori
corrected upon being called to
linking it hard to grow
fcRd this mr. Over
In tetrope there waa a aayiag for *
time that the weather uaually favor-
ed Hitta. because of condition
which frequently made it possible
for hto armies to gain and some-
Uam cawed hto enemies to lose. It
took* a little like the weather over
here tai favoring Hiller, tfle.
The Abilene Reported pays trib-
ute to mdslc. In an ediloriaj on
"national music week".which has
Just come to a close Music Is gen-
erally recognised as a universal
language, something which every-
body can understand and appreci-
ate regardless of nationality or
language More music in the lives
of more people might do much to
bring about understanding among
people of a nation and among those
of nation* The Reported looks
at it this way
Mrs. Mary (’rout
Dies Here Sunday
Mrs Mary Jane Crout. 76. widow
of W W Crout. died at her home
on the Da I hrs Highway Bunday at '
3 30 p m She was a native Texan
and almost lifelong resident of
Denton County. Uaiugti born July
18. IBM. in Pine Mills. Wood Oounty ,
Funeral service* were to be held
Monday at 4 p m in Goen Chapel
conducted by Dr Frank Werdofi
pastor of the First Baptist Church
of which she was a member
■ Burial was to be In Swtoher ceme-
tery
Mrs Crout was married to Crout
Sept 24. 1885 at Garta. now Lake
Dallas He died Aug 3. 1908 Sur
vivtng are eight children Mmes
John Henry and Dona William*. A
A and M E Crout. all of Denton.
MONEY
Invest your war tnccxne in a
' home Plenty of money to iielp you
buy. or repair or refinance .your
home It wiU pay fou to figure with
us
V
five
fifteenth time in the last 20 years, the Unkai Pacific
railroad has had the lowest employe accident fre-
gusney rate of any class 1 railroad William M Jeff
ers. U 8 rubber administrator, is president of this
railroad and is described as the most ardent safety
enthusiast <m the railroad* payroll
Earning a safety record year after year is no ac-
cident. whether the record 1* made by an individual
or a great corporation with Uiousands of employe*
Thinking safety and acting safely are necessary U>
save the live* of woriOer* in industry and the con-
stant preaching to individual* to be careful is fully
justified by the live* saved and injuries prevented
Despite the goud safety records of some concern*
■hlifi really work at preventing accident* many
millions of man-days are lost to the nation each year
because of kst-ume accident* to workers The Na-
tlonal Safety Council puts the figure for 1942 at '
more than 500.000000 man-daya lost to American ,
industry It takes no mathematician* to figure out }
how many battleships how many bombers or ocher !
pteor* of fighting equipment eouM have been turned
out by that much work U accidents had been pre-
vented
Naturally all accidenu eant be avoided, but
ashtrvowwxiu surti as that at the Uummi Pacific and
other concern* which ■are safety-minded provide a
fair yardstick If all railroad* had been as surcoss-
ful in cutting accident* live number of men killed
ar injwed would haw been reduced 43 per cent
---- <h------
'I
. ’ ’ ■'> '■ 'J 7 * ' i. , , f-', ,"lAi ’ ' ■ - • X ■
sang "How Beautiful Heaven Must 1 wltli eight prtwenL Mrs. C Y
Be." Farther Along' and Nearer lx.uty was lf<del of the mimlonary
My God to Thee" Pall bearers femon Mme* J 1. Hann. D B
were Bert Lewtar. George Crawford. , McFartentl and J K Lea tiad parts
Otis Jones. E B Jacks. L R . on Uie program Ttv< meeting wm
Baker and Tom Austin He is sur- ; G,rr*l with sentence prayer* by
... gruup
The BaiXb.t W M U met at the
"With good rexson music is called
the most democratic of all the art*
No other art has more participants,
no other even apprfiaciies It in uni-
versality of appreciation Ttie IMS
music week' proclaims the slogan,
"Foatei American and World Unity
Htrough Mtt*lc Ijocally Blki nat
tonally Musk Week is being observ-
ed this year from May 2 to 8, for the
30th time
"The Next* understood the unify- |
ing power power of music, only
their object wa* utterly foreign to j
detnooraUc ideal* Storth truoprs ,
beHowed out their Horst Wessel
song, commemorative of the life and
• 1°* °f grumbling In to*** of his ( m [he Nazi pantheon
Mr* Roxie Winstead. Mias Thelma ~ z----- " “ 12 - - -
Myers and Mrs O R. Wilkerson w" & c. S tnkt'al the’church Tuea-
----"How BeauUIul Heaven Must 1 da> wlOl eight percent. * ---
My God to Thee " Pall bearer*
L Hann. D B
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 230, Ed. 1 Monday, May 10, 1943, newspaper, May 10, 1943; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315714/m1/4/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.