Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 232, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 12, 1943 Page: 2 of 8
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Il‘l - w
I’’."1
V
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t
A
• BARBS
1
FOLKS
By L A M
»9
»
IM
MONEY
For Use of Unrationed Foods
Q What
impossible
DENTON. TEJkAS MAY 12 1943
BRING
E
The lai
|n rf. e. fkmmkf «•.. i ft c. h
FIKI
■(
NOW ALL OF US MUST DRESS FOR ACTION!
*
7(
The Italia* Times Herald says
We re strictly alive!"
♦
I
jl.
r7!
M seem* to to lower the met of living to people who
To Amori
»
y.
I or Time <X And p'
TAILORED SLACKS
MEN’S SI MMER SLACKS
■o
• Nineteen years ago
3.98
Carolina rides high with hi* southern colleagues
i
I'railhial Colon Or Hrtght Totfn'
COTTON DRESSES
2.98
niKii r
.MLS H
V Al I »J«
OTHi a Si.41 as TO < H1M1M
I KOM
1 K*
All-Summer ria.tlme'
snmmer fashion lavixltex'
SLACKS FOR (URIS
BOYS’ STURDY SLACKS
BEAD THE GAMIFlUl ADA
1.98
N.nod looting A» l>adS*
INSURANCE
< arefullv Tailored'
FIRE
LIFE
2.98
AUTOMOBILES
ACCIDENT
SURETY BONDS
7
A
b
I
mare apparent every uay
/
>
'I
WANTED
A
A
For Government Use
Phone 321
•laaenllal For Work. Hay. Leioare!
'ASHINGTON
COTTON KNIT HTRIFKB KM I KT
with
r<
!
■■JTk
V3-
3
I
•; 1
I H If I I 1 >
I H I
*M| l|i
'"Ti 1 ■■■' . ’
11
>1
i
i
Rave yawr ctothes eteaaed and
Rwoaed at Camy (tea Mr*. Ph. 1211
a> *
V
Makes Your BIT a Bit BE’lTER
Your Bit Can Be BE I I ER
Your Best You Can’t BEA1
up for discussion at every
•myteuetr /w »vmvar«inr> nr ------ — - ---— — - - - — ---——
end will come. or how or when
UNRATIONED—
Morrisons PEACEMAKER Elour
ki
th
b]
R
JUST
AMONG US
Denton Typewriter
Exchange
.year m
- your fi
went hi
I )ry < ’<
L
ONLY
OLD
.... >eo
Remember the good oM days when girls made
poets out of men instead of rubbernecks'*
With rationing, mother herself Is longing for
pie* like mother used to make.
WRITTEN ONLY IN
STRONG OLD LINK
COMPANIES.
They Dry I ri*p A* Ever
Without Any Ironing'
piece
suits
neat
around
64 Enrolled for
Saltillo School
i
i
Good-looking
Inside pixket
ed In the
Who in
monl
the i
NO H(
livery r
tor stor
Roller skates come with the summer. and the
tall will come with the roller skates.
All Typewriters Made
Since 1935
KA1GN
PANTIES
Women’s Striped SPORT SHIRTS
Wear them all summer' Knit ret-
urn In diagonal blaster stripes Crew
neck, smart eaddle ehouldera
(MM Ot weigh!
aottoa weave In
Short stoeves. <
I
I
L J. Maclachlan
Ms JariUMH RMg
to engineering and their menfolk
Dallas News
WASHINGTON
IN WARTIME
By JACK BTINNKn
A
L
Oldsmobile Service
Genuine Parts
RAY DICKSON MOTOR COMPANY
Phone 157 115 S. Elm
fi
I
I
t
mL'
98<
ear
L,
r/?
\y
k'
Today
aA it
dark*
Bizee
< (Mil It right* In Rich Ttour<l Kmiimi
If you buy a house, you’ll have a
home now as well as after the war 1
its I
1A tO
with
13 U» 30
M’K >■■■* known, moat aecre-
■MK MtaOBttal inner rownrili
■I Ke iMKMbr and 1m4w Um
m a HMtan enlWted as a prt-
The UtUe
8H0RTIK
ar
ni«M Tub
MMe. I W Ik
Pat OK
lea*
Tbit dlHerence will come from the public treaaury i
*o U» tune of an eaumated 0400 000000 but if other
food product* are adder, the total coat Io the trrwe-
WY can roach an astounding iKure The ceneral utea.
th*’ _w P**nU are aakl to take readily
■g " «rr not *urpn*ecl
A crocodile can go three months without eat-
ing. but when you look at one you always wonder
will he?
To be certain, there is no Indica-
tion at the present time that the
war with Hitler is anything
over
may
Q— What is the "Palmetto’ state?
A- South Carolina
k'
I
t 1
T 3
K1'- '
IL *
t i
"The suddenness with which
Blzerte and Tunis fell to the
arms of the United Nation*
will cause this country to be
Now It’s Wake-up i
Week Before Exams '
| “Dead Week,” long famous in the
irrwh (oflton
PLAY
SUITS
..........................IN
Denton Record^Chromcle
WtCORD-CHRONlCLK COMPANT. DIO.
B. f. CDWARD8 Miter aad General Manager
L A MCDONALD A-ocl.U Mltor
--a. McDonald .............. Kiwtn— Managur
FOWLER Advertning Manager
mall matter at Denton.
Q Are there any
hands In cribbage?
A—Yes There are no hands to-
taling 19. 25. 2t> or 27
u important to drew efficiently
i work efflcl*ntly'
i trim line*' one
For Aummer
- ANKLETS
I 25<
■ Colom
with
thing
xis. in-
'ake-up
be en- '
‘■F: i
1
■■■
■
IKI;' . .
D0|tM. Mk-MM MM aM
■SofJhoiMao MIUont of
N ttaHL * • IMF Aa*t
Invest your erar Income in a
home Plenty of money to help you '
buy. or repair or refinance your
home It will pay you to figure with '
us
BUY
CmM^jMAlMenoM
-
Her flrat requirement ft»r aumnwr rough-
and-ready alack* for wiwk and play’ Tough
fabric* smartly styled Sixes 7 U> 14
fa**
It’* Amari Ta Be Comfortable!
MEN’S SPdRT SHIRTS
RELAX—In unbelievably cool ray- flLAB
one with ehorl eloevm and open I M||
coilara. perfectly tailored I ■ VV
MEN* KNITTED AHf<T aHIRTa Nr
I I
i
'll
TAX GRABS TO GET THE AXE
Taxpayers generally should be happy that Oov
Stevenson is going to veto all tax remission bills that
come to his desk Senator Ramsev who ha* been
pushing one of the several lax remission bill* through
the Legislature was ttie bearer of the report to that
effect from the governor, which should settle at
tenet for this session of the legislature the con-
stant effort to get taxes remitted for various rea-
sons
Sixty Texas counties now enjoy tax remission and
the attitude in Austin has been “you vote for my
tax remission bill and Ill vote for yours’ The in-
tent of the framers of the State ConatltuUou was to
provide a means whereby a county struck by acme
catactrophe could get temporary relief from State tax-
es. but on the same present basis of remittting taxes,
just the expectation of a flood is enough Justifica-
tion
Oov Stevenson deserves the support of all think-
ing citiaen in his stand on lax remisakxi bills The
pity Is that some of his predecessors could not have
seen the danger of tax remission to the financial
structure of the State
■I
1
W mn* «oeoR
■'■■■■ 11
' runnei Ui final examinations has
been abolished on the campus of
North Texas State Teachers Col- >
4 f
* For tsaO-lMst. MeiuNti. beam!
, BOYS* SPORT SHIRTS
OHML eMy-kUiog shirM-wHh owe* o«M
--- —-jit okooiMOMKl forau*
•li ® .MS■
+1... . ...
BtattoUc. gbow that g .oldier eaU Um pound,
more food tn a you* than he does a* a civilian
T***1 ** *• • he ha* to worry about payir<
for it —Oracnoboro. Oa Herald--Journal
I
I
Sbm. imb ib a
•* kMMBK That Wffl
4aar im tf yon don't
Q—What is an amalgam?
A—A combtnaUon of mercury
with some other metal Mercury
forms the amalgam by mere con-
tact, such a* applying a drop to a
gokt ring
It certainly won’t do to come to
the conclusion that the war is about ,
over and let up on preparations ;
for a long, hard conflict Let it
be repeated that every Indication I
points to much hard fighting ahead ‘
with no end of the conflict yet in
sight. But whether it will be
months or vears before Hitler is
brought to his feet ixvbodl knows
Cog a«-a breear rayon*
ably mid ainartly!
( plain lotMw
The sudden collapse of BUerto
and Tunis and the rapid deterior-
ation of Axis forces who had foi<ht
of! certain defeat tor months show
very plainly that "expert” oboerv-
ers and commentators do not know
what they are talking about. In
the midst of continued warning
ol these commentators and the
’experts ’ that a long fight was tn
prospect, the Axis suddenly crum-
pled and went under
to go
every-
Sturdy
| •narcarlaed cot-
ton with snug
ribbed knit
cuff
Rrinwnber when you used to go to (to grocer for
rock candy atirka of hard transparent crystal*
a Mrtng through the rmHor» Bitffaln Mm.
.....*
stake «ssb last • mm
*y ctaat. atfvtoto a bohtm
o x at rw Hmm wort
•* LauBBM
' - •*
.
lege as a melancholy misnomer
The pre-exam week beginning
May 17 on the Denton cam.
Mead has been christened “> _r
Week ’’ and collegians will be en- ■
joined to "look alive" throughout
the Mudy week hitherto given the
gloomier appellation
Said De an B B Harris staunch 1
advocate of the new jJan. "I’ll use
my influence to bury 'dead week.’
for there Is nothing dead about the
week the students, or the college
• From Record-Chronicle May 9 1924'
W C. Collier returned this week from a trip to Ok-
lahoma and reports that crop planting there u
JuM being completed
The low tempera:urr of today was 52 and the high
Of yarterday was 71
The Teacher* College Eagle* trimmed the Ban Mar
co. Bobcats 2 to 0 and Won second place In the T 1
A A. conference
W T. Medford, near Roanoke 73 year* 5 month*
and 13 days old * died April 17
Joe Sparger at Pliot Point E J Watson of Lewts-
ville and J O Bell ot Denton registered new auto-
atobUM
1ft* Berta I Stout entertained with » tea at her
fWRM. 1K07 West Hickory Street Th unday afternoon
MBs Beulah! Chrtrtal. 002 West Oak Street, enter
talned the WedneMiay Bndge Club at Iver home
Wednesday afternoon with five table, of bridge
Lawton L Gambill aon of J 8 Gambill of Den-
ton. is included in the list of six men who were elect-
ed from the Senior Law Clau of the Univerdty of
Tbaas to membership in the honorary society of
Chancellors an honorary legal order of the Law
School
Mtmei Lois Carlisle and Mary Loving Wlbon of
tile OoUege of Industrial ArU faculty have filed ap-
pbcaUoti for passports and are planning to sail from
IWw York June 14 on the Olympic for a trip to Itog-
land. France Italy Belgium Holland and Switaer-
land
R P Loma* u taking 8cout Troop No 2 boy* to
Denton Creek for an all-night fishing trip
R G Hammond sustained a painful cut over the
KR eye Thunday afternoon wlven be accidentally
ABM* hi* head against a piece of lumber extend-
ing from a truck
Ctty Secretary George Rucker sustained a painful
MMry to u»e little finger of hi* right hand when It
Baa Caught between the printing plate, at an ad-
'ttoeetRieph which be era* operating
U JMa J T BaytaM and Lee R McDonald spent
VMMday tn Dallas
KMce Theater today often The Mask of
K Mg—" *“ w*>toh Fred Tbompeon is featured
“’’• ’feMkR M. A. Oeaeling. «2. a reeldent of Texas for 04
BBt modem of Denton County for 10 yeara.
2.98
styled to nt nomfort-
Smsrt .tripes and rich
All favorites'
“Wake-up"
ithly between biennial issues of
main volume
< eel aaynn. For Mummer Wear!
WOMEN’S SPORT BLOUSES
TkdoNd took the W*y you i*o anta to tom
to team wMh slack, or skirt*' mm
LurtrouB RMrt. fbbrwe la while * | W
fHM Mtof jnoteto M to to. COttON «mt
"~ *** •»»»*> ^s~»-as I*.
It ha* been our contention all
along that these commentators
who conunent for pay and for no-
tor I ty as well as a lot of the "ex-
perts" who predict and who lecture
for money do not know much more
about the situation and how long
the war will last than the rest of
us As a matter of fact, It is impos-
sible fur anybody to know when the
from all the people At the
VU1 oncourage production without
of living to the — rt-rr of people
While the intent of the plan is fine and follows a
otosil.r plan tn use by thr Bnush to bold down the
Bike of Maple foods, in effect it u like the food
stamp plan of the late depression days when sur-
pius supplies were bought by the i
Elven away to person* tn relief rolls.
Ing to person* on relief rolls the new sutwidy goer
to all citlxens Fooa cxwu paid partially through tax-
•O. will be more in proportion to ability to pay rather
than food requirements
L_’ £_*•
Entered m wcood-clM.
Item
Dally tesued al >14 Wmt Hickory Street Denton.
TWxm. avary afternoon except Sunday by the itecord-
CkronM. Company, Inc
Is the longest barge
canal tn the world?
A—The Marlnsky Canal, tn So-
viet Russia running from the Bal-
tic Sea and the Volga river
seldom more than a dogen present and for the most
part they were men whose name, do not figure large
in the news from Washington Thev were bright
young men like Nathan, who himself is only 35.
the men behind the big name men who sit In the
front office* The Goons were all civilians, brain
boys from the civilian agencies of the government
No bright young men from Army or Navy depart-
ments were included
One subject was taken v * --------- ------
meeting Maybe tt wsl contract* or conversion or
manpower or the siie of the Army or what should
be done about civilian economy After dinner the
boys talked it out decided what ought to be done
and how their program* could be put over
The fact is that on a lot of issues the Goons were
dead right They were 'all-outers long before the
rest of the country woke up They were for full con- | p7edict“7thror vears
•I
e*
route?
A- From Albany to Schmcctady.
N Y
DENTON FEDERAL SAVINGS
A LOAN ASSN.
Jto JackSMi Bldg Phene 54
dKF MiimoHiu has bought a home in Bwttaer-
l^XJTorX to
ed, plan, for an enlarged summer
school of Bpantoh at Saltillo, where
Mexico is studied first-hand, have
been announced by Dr Rebecca
Bwitaer. director of the school and
of the T. 8 C W foreign lan-
guages department. Twenty-five
five had signed for the session at I
thia time last year
Thirty-three of those who will!
attend the Jifly 23-Aug 27 session ’
now are students of the college. '
Fourteen will come from out of
state. I
*rrvhv«hlr M.lert.l*'
It might
be just a* well to stop such guess- „„
ing a* it only upsets the people annals of' college 'iTfe Ts the "fore- i
particularly those with relatives in;------- ---•
the armed services, and nothing !
constructive can be accomplished |
59c
Htnootb rayon
Wear w e I I—
launder with
MM.
WILL BYRNF8 8O1JDTFY STH'ni IN 41 I
WASHINGTON—Suppose I ju*t give it to you for
what it’s worth, without emphasizing too much that
I think it may be worth something. It came from
a political obeervrg ix>w retired but formerly high
enough on the Democratic roll* to speculate with
Mime authority
SuppoM be said President Flooseveu should run
( again with James F Byrnes, now the little presl-
< dent " as bls vice presidential candidate and with
, ..... w>r werf oyer before
Roosevelt l
ex-congressman ri-
ot the Supreme
Mwnber AMoclated Preo
Member Texa. Dally Prate Lmgu.
FHONKS
Buslaew and Bdltorial Office . . ...
CircutaUon Department
OlBMCRirriON KATE0
One y».r (In advance)
Mix month, by mail tin ad'.nee)
Three month* by mat! (tn advance)
One monlb delivered ----------
The Aaaoxtated Pre*, te exclualvely entiKed to toe
Me for re-publlcauon of all new. dtopatebea cmdlted
to 11 or not other* lie cred ted In thia pap* and Mte)
the local new. publixhed herein
NOTHB TO THB Fl'KUC
Any erroneoua re Beet ion upon the eixarwetea, reQ.*-
tatlon or atandtng of any arm. Individual * cospoto-
■iou will be gladly correctKl upon being caUed to t*.
'burners' attention
MhnrON^KXASjJlBCJg^CJg^ICLBjJLlDNBBDAY. IQiY U« IMS
-------~N '
afford to pay high pners by taking t*x“monev
same tunc, the subsidies
raising the cost
Free- Action—and Kmart—Model*'
Q T7ie first steam locomotive
•Vi run marie in the Uniter! 8tal-
i Occurred in 1831 What was the
Men who strike during wartime have three
strikes on them a* far as Unde Sam 1* concerned
Black* for lolling dancing or holding down
your desk’ Cool weave amazingly tight pop-
lin* and colorful summer Uiade*
SUBSIDIZED PRICES
The decision of the government to Mitwldlae meat,
coffee and butter marks the first drastic change tn
the program to maintain price levels within reason-
able bounds Heretofore, ceiling prices have been
utilized to hold down the co«t of living, but the cell-
ing* were placed on the wholesaler* and retailers. I
While the producer* have been allowed to raise i
price*
Uixier the new plan the pnee of meat butter and
coffee to consumer* will be cut by the simple ex-
pedient of paying subsidies to meat packer* butter
manufacttrrr* and coffee importer* Hie c*tUe
raiser and the dairy farmer will get as muerf a*
ever for their product*, but the consumer will pav
C o m f o r talilb
one -
ahortle
with
wrap -
buttoned
akirte Exciting
atrlpea design*
tn xun-tan col-
or. tiigea 12-20
like
It may run for years and It
be only for months Those
ii-» •»”— •—- or four |
were j years or five year* of war are guess- j
! ing Just like other people
Tunis
United
country
swept by another wave of belief
that the end o! the war is here
Expert observers of the Tunis-
ian campaign 'orecast almost
unanimously that the Hitler-
ites would take refuge behind
the bulwarks of th* Blzerte
naval base and hold out as our
men and the Filipinos did in
Corregidor If they were op-
timistic. thev were e* rem*ly
cautious The warnin' of the
commutators made the fall of
the two African strongholds a
surprise to the public and
because of this, an expectation
will rw that the invasion of
Europe will come earlier than
the cautious forecast* indicate
But after all Hitler's contin-
ued resistance Ui Africa was a
delaving action to give him
time to complete his fortifica-
tion* along the coast of Europe
In spite of the fighting In Rus-
sia. the Axis has gained valua-
ble tune and we may depend
upon it that the Nazi war lord*
liave not wasted a day The in-
vasion of Europe is coming we
may be certain ot that And
meanwhile the airmen ot the
United Nations will continue to
pound Hitler's factories and
transportation equipment The
Naxi* on their part, will re-
double their submarine activity
to check the flow of supplies
to our invasion forces Our
victory in Africa i* of tremend-
ous import, but we must beware
of wistful thinking It is vitally
important for every American
to realize that our enemies are
not yet defeated and that many
of our fighting men must die
before the day of final triumph
comes ’’
Worthy Tog* lor Work Inti Fla> '
Tailored To III'
ington with all their might pipelining through Wayne
Coy. aseutant director of the Budget, to the White
Houm through Edward F Pricha'-u U> the Office
of EcoxManu Stabilization Director Bvmes and so
on
Th? net effect of all this wirepulling certainly
dldn t help the tnaodly relations that should have
existed between the armed services and the civilian
agencies And so when C E Wilson moved in as
executive director of WPB one of his acts was to
demote Bob Nathan and the entire planning com- '
mittee as a disturbing factor that might interfere
with the production jot> Wilson obviously intended
to du
Nathan couldn t take a pushing around like that
He resigned, but to show his guts he enlisted as a
buck private In the Army whose brass hat* he had
battled He'll make 'em a soldier too Quite a boxer
he wa* at University of Pcnnsylvanin and his Sun-
day afternoon pa-stune used to be jovnding to scare
truck drivers who hogged the road That s where he
got the name of the go<xi
Pittsburgh
Sun-proof Paints
1 /
Jack Hodges
Back of PosUCfioc
FlwasIM
—.......
'J ..<7
l»eer*teker» Are Kervlreable
WAY I
verskai of industry while the reactionaries
still pleading for business as usual
But early in the game, the Goon* started to make
war on the Army and Navy procurement services
and that in (he end was their undoing All those
stones you used to read six months or so ago aboul
how the Army wanted to take over the govern-
ment may not have been Goon Inspired, but they
expressed the Goon idea
Just how much influence the Gocns actually had
is a question Probably not much They played back- ■
stairs palace politics and fought the battle of Wash- .
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH FOB
'WHO’8 WHO"
A biographical sketch of Dr. Floyd
Stovall, head of the Teachers Col-
lege English department and author
of the recently published book,
With M students already enroll- ( "American Idealism,” wiU be tnclud-
the White House is not
term issue discussed Ottnlv A won) frow) ih- Pruii-
dent to some of thosewwho hav- b—1> shout ink i.
from the mtke. and house-top* would nave put a
Mop to it week* ago
PYFMh nir»l mt Um nr«»rRurkMrR
in Rummer utrlpre or nrgt
check* ClMMk styles' 34-3H
A ottalo is b croBE between ft
Iw tried tixwe queslion* on wveral bigwig* m
bOth hereabouts and all I ve gotten aside I
from a wearied look or a staring eve. ha* been the
counterqumtion why dldn 7 Rorawvelt pg k Bvrncs
in 1M2? The answers to that are probably three '
il> Byiitea was too valuable as floor manager and
smoother-outer of Democratic convention ailment* !
to be used for anything else, <2> Wr were nt in the i
war then and Byrnes had rrosul the "New Deal" I
on home frtxu issues often enough to raise the
probabllUy that he wouldn't always string along .
on everything that the Administration proposed, and ;
<J> Byrnes probably wouldn t have had the y>b un-
der any circumstances (It s pretty well estobhahed !
”*5 he had his heart set on the 8upretn< Court
post >
government and the understanding that if the
Instead of go- the fourth term expired he (President
would resign tn favor of the
senator and ex-associate justice
Court
There is an idea to toy with By picking Byrnes
I •* hl* running mate the President probablv could'
bring all the recalcitrant southern states back Into
the fold because the little gentleman from South!
Carolina rides high with hi* southern colleagues I
Why did Byrnes step down out of that >20.000-a- 1
year-for-life Job on the Supreme Court, if there i
were no greater future promised than being trou-
ble-shooter for the Administration'* ft the President j
does run for a fourth term tn the midst of global
war whom else could he select for a running mate
and why’ • |
There» also the fourth point made by sonir ob !
xerver* that President Roosevelt felt that Henry !
Wallace would itelp with midwes- »nd fain vote*
which were more important then than the still-
solid South
It is. of course too early to make any prediction* '
about 1044. but the powers that be in both parties 1
already are drawing the line* The fart that Byrnes
who didn't earn his political spur* oy being * yes I
man. could probably win enough ron'ide.x- in the
south to stem any threate.ied rebellion there a not '
to be ignored
*• becoming more apparerr. every uay I
avere to having the fourth I
fr tv R te-evtewi • L. W—- ’
y V*'
I
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 232, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 12, 1943, newspaper, May 12, 1943; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315716/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.