Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 244, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 26, 1943 Page: 1 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Al MUN
'll HNB
UGS
f
V
I
H
i1
■H
ill
1 am our
s crisis.
IND
Y
^c.
ne 1!M
CO.
fl
I
omUS
y
1
;>.J
on hole*.
MT. '
ON
i.
•T-. J •■»■' i '•’q'J*:
*’ <
"7
“*■$* ■■ <*p
-.1
1
Si
A- —
Ey
U. S. S, Oklahoma Salvaged
'
and Italian
t'’
in
Areas Hit
■■
4 *
i-
MORE STRIKES
HINDER WORK
rapt tta
by
Ou
Floods Im
•?'
s
H'
«mh
foacata ■
MMl
4B-YRAB
'"■'J-
SMM-
TUBELKAS
Austin
«u
SAS
P.
W,
and
MW
4
3fe=
Peg* Thregft |
up
/
A*
i ■
3
I
L*'
P’
F’’’l
• great
ma V
Romo
AaMdated Pn« Uami Wire
w
who
CM
Ito <3
to<tor
then art a
ting that the
Mass Meeting
To Plan Farm
Labor Assistance
one DOtittm,
t^havejwo SMke
eXTsalr^BotiFare
i.Mfi
♦ M
«Ml !
I
V
I
"Just middling not strict mid-
dling. either.” aaM Charlie Wolfe,
weet of Denton, when
hie (rain crop John 1
Fleet Class Boatewaln Joe W
Jagoe. in. and Mrs Jagoe. who
have been guest* of hto parents.
Mr and Mrs J. W Jagoe. Jr . re-
turned to Aransas Pas*. where be
is stationed
of the hoc
At Wolf
House ■
BtoWBtafi
*d >*3ap—i
Survllle. Ban
Yewell Coleman of Dallas, form-
er Denton cittoen. was bare for a
short visit thia week. Yewell left
Denton tn 1514 and after World War
I. tn which he fought. be became
associated with the Herachey Choc-
olate Company. He baa been with
them since getting out of the army,
and he has risen in the ranks of
that organisation until he occu-
pies a very responsible position
Born To Mr and Mrs George
Preston of Denton last week tn a
Dallas sanitarium, a daughter, who
was named Katherine
er defenses of the Mussolini home-
land—and “
M *M
attack*
&£&
(By Associated Prom)
Two huge industrial plan
of acres of land
after town broke
iWito
sound. HU
C. Greer
normal tin
the north
whteh am___
to the east of the
of the he
b-8t Leto
1 about
of the
Plainview community was in Den-
ton Wednesday morning on the
search for some binder twine. “The
grain out our way is fair, not the
best ever, but a whole lot better
than it has been for the past two
years " J. D Hall. Sr. at the shady-
side club said that be might be-
come a member if they* elect him
president, as he understood that
the head-guy didn't have to attend
nor stay at ail meetings, as he is
allowed to delegate authority
Ixxik to Senate
To Save Poll Tax
WASHINGTON. May 28 '*5
Routed Southern congressmen look-
ed hopefully to the Senate today
to kill legislation outlawing the im-
position of poll taxes In national
elections
Passed late yesterday by the
through which pour
BOMB COMFORTS
KANSAS CITY—Mm Baker,
opening Ms reetanrent, found a
man was sleeping in a booth.
The visitor explained he had
dewed off MOUt closing time
cleared of
day. Altho
of ensswy <
ad here «
Ooaot
w?
•42
L,‘ J
I® i
IM. A • ‘i
E/V'.'
bi
Allied war-
outer tm*
•*U|k
fo,>'
Sifts
hMBMato r
In a similar situation at Utica.!
N. Y, striking bus drivers voted
over western Europe
fi—hteg of Britain.
------‘ J power to betas
toaatoed agalMt HMtor. Wb b
done more - - —J
ohfeettvwa i
Duesseldorf Again
Heavy Bomb Target
In Aerial Marathon.
Further Headache Due for Those Who
Try to Figure Out Income Taxes Due
Under Pay-as-you-go Compromise Plan
RKPKAT PKBFOBMANCB
BPRINGFIKLD. HL—Charles
Eldridge baa run into the same
kind of tnhoapttable treatment
every time he comes to the
state capital for a visit from
nearby Jacksonville. ▼'
He came here three years,
ago and waa robbed. The same
tttng happened when he re-
turned for a visit last year And
c his third visit in three years
he waa held up and robbed of
U6 and in addition, he was
bet ten by the two bandits
r3BWto:»abel
toWEM WKI
and had BtotoTliriHNrBr WMF ■
ing in the night, be waa hungry.
He found some roast beef,
warmed It, made gravy and fix-
ed up the aooeeeoriee and had
a lunch, then decided he might
aa well finish his nap since he
couldn't get out
Baker's considering Offering
him a j(i> as cook.
Altman, route
out at my place
prettiest ttttto I
calvee that you l.„
registered animato."
IWOWHl
.. ■
1
■ * . 1 ’WT -yaS-V?..
*4 ^Jts M
* 't?V- • ” ■ Jf? j
Ideal weather since the last rain,
and the farmers are hoping for at
least two weeks urare of the aame
plenty work in front of them. Har-
vesting and general farm wort are
going to come at the ataee tiaaa.
Borne will start cutting grain next
week and some may even jlan the
last of the present Week, 'rtie min-
imum temperature Tueeday was 57
and the high was K. as compared
with readings of M and M a year
ago
ChiotM«5f M
than 51 a day. prompted the United »o previous bills approved by the
Mine Workers and operators to ar- ’ — -* — *- ■-
range for reopening of bargaining
sessions.
In Mobile. Ala.. 7.000 negro work-
ers were called from their ship-
yard Jobe by union leaders after
disorders followed assignment of
negro welders to work with whiten
■
- a
wtt
tatoTwhh swarma’ot rSSmtoytiw
to eaoapa from tbskhmfatod Ital-
tot^-tod* bad imperiled hiand out-
r^tairwan ftwa
Mrlbroeand
iitodtaMt
* k ’
NNBSDAY AFTBBNOON, MAY M, 1H1
■MllHjMMMENgHiEiBtotaBtaMHMBMBBKBlMHHfliMMH
■k
*33
It may be a little previous to an-
nounce bank holidays for the com-
ing week, but aa one of them is
next Monday. It might be well to
bear In mind that banking matters
for that day should be attended to
next Saturday. Monday. May >1.
will be observed as a holiday—
Memorial Day—and Thursday. Juno
3rd. is to be obeerved as a bank-
ing holiday, since that to Jefferson
Ds vis birthday anniversary.
Water. She was sunk in Jap raid on
HIKE IN RAIL
MDRKERS’ PAT
RECOMMENDED
L ----
f WASHINGTON. May 3d—Uf>-An
emergency board of the national
railway labor panel recommended
today a general increase of B cento
an hour for more than a million
of the nation's railroad employee.
The 15 so-called non-operating
unions involved bad asked an in-
< rsas of 30 cenu an
■ ■ M
ROUND 8
ABOUT
TOWN
■mamamtogissiama^r.
Ito wicked stall be turned into
hen. and all the nUnm that for-
get God. For the needy shall not al-
waye bo forgotten t the expectation
tardMhat
Ivwto
a.
Flashes of Life
(By Aseoclated Prom)
TOURING DK LUXE
COLUMBUS. Ga.—The sight
of two 35-paosenger buses tear-
ing along a Columbus street at
50 miles an hour aroused tta
suspicions of poitceenen. Giving
chase they nabbed two nagTO
beys, who explained that ttaF
mw the eoapty vehicles parked
in front of a garage. decMed to
use them Both started out in
one bus. they added, then re-
turned to the garage and got
one apiece.
At Bearitakoom (W the XHtaato
River continued to rtoe. towoNag
».« earty today and tatotataB
wan that it wouM roach tta
foot encl ‘
metals b
Uneasy Calm
Still Prevails On
Russian Front
"It would be a mistake, how- city or half a damn couldn't dto-
ever, to think that the military
might of the Germans already has
been smashed and that they wfll
make no attempt to resume active
operations on a broad scale,** he
added.
“On the cont
number of signs
Germans are preparing intensively
for the tunsMT CBnipMlgll Of 1M3
on the Soviet-German front.”
MtaM Of
atota TtoaM
L Y&SnSS
d Me Rnal ptaee tta baitacta
__ mo dSbte tadoee ted been
At tato tteoe gn—■
Them grotto ooeuptad CKtatot
"a^teiw T
cltornd to recommend these pro-(
pOMklft.
The recommendations are not
•baaed on the Little steel formula
of the war labor board, but th*,,
emergency board said “we certify**] Southern Tlllnota. aa
that the Increases are within the 1
national stabilization program.
The increases, said the report, are
RLaBiB
MUMdUOK MM Mr-4»
toto OMrt My today
Bhktog MMMK Si-yoar-o
of the poor chad Mt perish
er. Put ttata In fear. O tart
the nattons may know thotaoi
be but men.-Faalms 5-17, Ito.
Oto and strafed Japanom inMito
tions at Ringl Oove^weet of Via to
KQn1>May*r>5th.l*'Daunttom Dive
17 More f exa ns
Are Prisoners
■ " > Jfta
T A
Big Pay Cori
The reort estimated the Increases
would add about 5304.000.000 to
the comers annual payrolls and
added:
“It to the considered judgment
of the board that the recommended
wage increases do not. under pre-
Vhnmr _______ —- —— — --r—
basis for increases in railroad rates Illinois Central PuUfc Bervice
or for rosistance to justifiable re-
toRtona in such rates.”
'The increases would be retro-
active to February 1. All retroac-
tive payments would be 'made in
(8enHIKK IN Page3)
Many of Germany* essential in-
dustries, however. an mntaaltoBd
because of dreumstanem «mr
which Htttor bee bad no MBfttol.
Hto greatest anamneut worts an
conaantoMtod in tta Ruhr, boomne
both iron and coal an those. Clos-
ing down of tta Ruhr aeanufeo-
turtng aone would bo a major
catastrophe wbtah the el btotaot
could othRBly survive.
lS<’jna. tta fwtaer tad tta
idea that if to ootoM top tantoto
in ftoftbir MM
MM MQ
This bow-on shot shows main deck of battleship Callfarnta taoekinr “*
Pearl Harbor. Dec. 7. 1541 (Official Navy Photo fromNEA TWiopiMtO).
temorTW. Army
tenttodb oortiM."Aboat SjMg'of
the river town* KMb neMsuta
have been evootoktaK
Allies Not Due to
Depend Alone on
Bombing Germany
BY DeWITT MaeKKNZIX.
M Hitler couldn't knock England
out by bombing, what chanoo have
the antes of blasting Germany into
submission nowr ■ •
Actually, of course, nobody in au-
thority has claimed that Htttor
could be beaten by air alone, al-
though British Premier Churchill
says it* an “experiment well worth
trying, so long as other measures
aren't excluded”—with accent on
that last clause. There baa been
no indication that the allies intend
to watt for airpower to turn the
trick.
It* reoeonahls to expect them to
start invasions of the continent as
soon m tta raids have reduced axto
strength so that armies can be
landed without being mowed down.
Hitler* bosnbtag of Wvwtewl and
the allied banMiw of Oesmany to-
voftve different ctreumstanooa. Take,
for example, tta dtotrttattton of
war Industries.
Britain* plants won largely de-
uenfialtoed Bettered ato over the
country. Tta nasi bombers dtd ter-
rific damage ben and there, bet
KnocKing on* one manuiBCVuniis
As a man grows older he reads
more of the Book of Experience
and less of the Pages of Prophecy.
He thinks more about the worth
tf folks and torn about collateral.
He boasts lees, and boota aeon.
He observes that snobbery to a con-
fession of Inferiority and kindly po-
liteness the trademark at the only
aristocracy worth mehttonlng He
relishes an argument toss, and
notes that streaks of rrittotom can
be washed away with tta ends of
tolerance. He hurriBB toBBk. CM
usually accomplishoe mon. And he
comes to know that tta boot tro-
phy any man can win to tta love
and understanding of thorn
need him —Whitefield. W. H.
Bulletin.
Cancel a whole year* taoemo tax
natality for persons owing tta gfl*«
onmenk BM tax er too*. . .
OMMBl W per cent of a year* Bn*
ban* tor all totem with the ro-
matodor to be paM MM tol 1M4 and
hatt in iMfi.
Watt*
M» —
Sn; %
An auction salR thto will offer
Denton County pM*to and others
Mbo: -Wont ym help a poor
lg«^Ss=-
Wblli
man sunenog powwM^/
WASHINGTON.. May-. 33—(P>-
Houae and Senate oonferom who
finally straggled to a compromise
on pay-as-you-go income tax col-
lection raced against the legislative
clock today to put it into effect by.
July 1. only five week* away.
Proapeete took good for moody
Senate and House approval, toadsrs
^*2* **** conference group m-
Detigned to put the Nakicn*
MjOBBAbb taxpayers on a current
basts without tta romputoton at pay-
ing two year* taxm in one, taro, «
strtppel of detail. Hotel tta bin
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Reynolds have
a letter from their eon. Truman,
who is with the United States
Army 'somewhere.' and Judging
from some money which he sent one
would guess that Truman is some-
where in the South Pacific. The
three Mito sent were of different
kinds and denomination. He took
the money ott a dead soldier. One
of the bilk was for five francs. In-
do China, the other two were Jap
and Dutch money, one for five
gulden and the other for sump'n.
unknown, aa it was printed In Jap-
anese. He writes that be Is well 'and
not to worry about him. but to take
care of themselves' Truman has
been in the armed forces for the
past 15 months, and his brother.
Eugene, has been in the service for
the past three year*.
U. S. TROOPS WIPE OUT JA
IN ONE OF THREE AREAS HE
ON ATTU; AIR WACKS HEA
vSTSSWA-ft
^Jof^Smw toMUmta*mrM
areas held by tta emmy Ml Atta
Island, the Navy unniMild Ma*>
and were reported foltowtaff up
wiui a curve against a moqm bmid
position around CMcepf BtabM.
u 1 . _______ , v,
continuing aanA a Mavy ragaMk
nioue — M The bMtbadF^rt
eti afed gnoaiy poattSaBB in ttn
cagof area anf<^:l_r
The ctamgof Wto* tatoot wm
TSn WBMNMrt
^telM^ta Aft wmto
____cn the Mask iflL
Pacific tote had agata Into taagfty
and that ttaoe whteh survtood Ito
attack fan ba* upon OMaapef
Harter fcr a flnal stand with MMr
uie narBw^r r "**■
Myn^STjSi oStodaJB
A maas meeting of Denton peo-
ple will be held tn the municipal
auditorium Thursday night. May
tn. at t:30 o*to* sponsored by the
agricultural bureau of the Cham-
ber of Commerce, to dtoeum means
of helptag fanners in Denton
County secure tabor for tta har-
vest season.
The publto was invited to eftend
the meeting. With large crops
planted and much of the normal
labor supply in defense wort W
tta annsdsorvtoeex. a serious short-
age of help oxtote, it wm stated.
War at Glance
(By AMctaild procs)
By EDDY GILMORE
MOSCOW. May 3B. (AV-Land ac-
tion moved today from the south
to the north central sector of the
Soviet front, where the Rustens
reported (MX ted captured tour
settlements, but on the whole an
uneasy calm continued to prevail
over the long battle lines.
The great air batttes of the cur-
rent softening-up campaign were
unabated however, with Red air-
men fiammertng again and again
at GenMpi BOEnianterttogp anp
supplies—particularly railway ste-
tiooa. supply uumps and truck col-
umns.
As on numerous previous occas-
ions, WH—ien bombers struck be-
hind the German lines. RosvavL M-
nya and
front Jur
supplies to the vital salient net far
from Moscow — suffered (iemage
from heavy-weight bomba.
Sporadic eannonading and scout-
ing to* ptaee west of Rostov and
at Utetan* on the Donate river.
Tta midday communique also re-
ported a flare-up on the approaches
to Leningrad, where, it said, eight
enemy planes were shot down by
Red Baltic Bea pilots.
Col. Nikolai Akimov, reviewtag
the military situation, said: “The
Germane evidently have been ata
able fully to recover from the blows
inflicted on thsm at Stalingrad, the
middle Don and th* northern Cau-
casus.”
I
^Ctty*
A mass meettag tea bo* Bailed
Ruhr City
purpose of the nweitag to to dta ---------- - /
cuss ways and moans of helping tta ■ ■ .
farmers of the county secure labor _1 I 1 . I
to harvest their oropc. The meet-
ing is to be in charge of the Ag-
ricultural Committee of the Cham-
ber of Commerce, and the ammbere
of that committee hope that you
will be present with some good ideas
for solving this very important
problem. Remember tt* tomorrow
night at 8:30 o'clock at the City
Hall.
in
a sow-
oral smaU ccmrmmtttaB to that re-
gion and in Baatem Missouri, re-
mained imperilled today as the
rampaging M3tetMto*t River, stak-
ed with flood waters from scores
of tributarisa. stewed no material
drop in the tower reaches
Although conditions upstream on
the IfiMtaippi and the Illinois
Rivers were reported improved with
drops recorded, the ttto ewoDan
streams continued leiMittoertj along
their path of destruction over a
wide section tn the danger bbmb
) flooded area.
13B mites south of
St Louie, six taetae of water «w*
ered the town and fear wm en-
preeeed by offtetato that the Altai
Powder Plant, covering 3Mb acres
in the tow land, wm endangered
by the spreading Mtostasippl wa-
ters The plant, whteh manufac-
tures industttal <
three mite west
which sire*
over thouM
tn the vict
a* Preston
...___ _______ About 35 g*M~Perth of WbM
circumstances provide a take, at Grand Tenor (HL) the
.J i wots— .1- — a--, i a as ma-.—a-
erattag ptant. a gfijBMiMb project
we* men* ord by the ever-rietag
Mteetesippi waters and tta situation
was firmed "crttioal** by -----
Guardsmen at the scene,
plant, which ogMtae power
Unoto south of Tuscola, in r
many coal mta* atoo ocwem MM
acres and it wm ringed with aanta
bage. The plant* intake tor tta
generator eoottnm.ayatem to toeatad
on the nonnalbank of tta Mto-
By CABL CRANMM
WitlTblJkbuBterg’imd or-
dinary bombs, with cannon
and machineguns, Allied air
armadas numbering 900 or
more planes, stormed at an-
other of Adolf Hitler’s broken
arsenal cities and the fire-
grimed ramparts of Italy in a
two-front assault, war an-
nouncements from London
and Africa said today.
Duesseldorf. Rhine tend city of
438.000 of which 380 acres already
had been laid waste by previous
assaults, was the target last night |
of approximately 500 of the RAF*
giant bombers in the RAF's fourth :
super-raid of the month. The at- ,
tack approached or equated the re- J
cord 3A00-Um bomb assault on
Dortmund of two nights ago
Prom northwst Africa yesterday
nearly 400 planes again swarmed I
over the battered islands of Sicily.
Sardinia and PanteUeria—the out- |
U* M1V Ml—■■■■!■
— in WAR effort
Yrt another large force of U 8 Hl Hnll LI I Ull I
Liberators from the African desert. I »
dropping 175 tons of bombs on Mes- -----
sente, teamed up with waves of (By Associated Press)
flying fortrasses to knock at the a walkout of 50*0 Akron. O.
shaky reststanee of Italy, invited rubber workers and a strike vote
by Prime Minister Churchill yes- | of transportation workers in war-
terday to get out of the war white booming Baltimore complicated the
there to yet lime Already, it was nation's production picture today
reported. Italy was confronted with , but prospects of peace tn the coal
a refugee probta* rtnllar to that - - -
of fatten Prance ta ISM. ae Italians
sought safety from the beeshed
Other Desetopsaento
Other war headlines today:
ITALY—Washington diplomatic i
sources predict quick col tepee of
resistance of Italy if alites invade
and Germane desert her
GERMANY—Purge of Nazi party
hinted >
FINLAND—Ftanteh radio says
allied invasion of continent certain,
and Russian front will become sec-
rwwtary
FAR PACIFIC-Adverse weather
limits operations tn Southwest Pac-
ific. no change in situation report- ;
e<1 in North Pactflc with Rleet,
snow hampering U 8. attack on
Attu Japanese admit damage to 10 «P*eamen estimated service was
al thtirtiilpa since AprtL claim on»v *bout 15 per cent below nor-
-• -i mal
Ttie strike vote, protesting exist-
prevailed ence of an independent union and
a work Interruption yesterday
| which union spokesmen ascribed to
, workers attending a union meeting
The union said today * strike
| would lie up four-fifths of the city's
BMjCANB-The *e*est Ger- , transportation system, but this
man pressure was reported being i morning the company said "the
exerted on Rumania, dispatches situation is Just about the same
from Turkey said to send another as yesterday "
large army for a summer campaign
in Russia.
Twenty-seven planes of the RAF* ■ to return to wort pending media-
raiding force were lost In the Dues- , tton of a dispute about discharge
seidorf attack, which the British of workers. v
air ministry said was in “very great
strength”—the same language It us-
ed to describe the record 3.000-ton
bomb toad that was dumped on the
flood-ravaged Ruhr and Dortmund
Bunday night
Al least three-fourths of the 500
bombers worn the four-engined
bio*-buster oarrtara. obeerverx said.
An Informed source added that
“It would not be surprising to hear
that the weight of bombs” dropped
on Dueaeeldorf approached or equal-
ed the tonnage left at Dortmund
Dueemldorf" V Mty\rfMBJ)00. to
50 mites southwest of Dortmund
and the third largest inland port
in Germany. It to a tank, gun and
armament center on the Rhine
where 180.000 persons were reported
hemetem last December aa a result
of tta RAP* offensive.
Tta raid—meriting tta second ex-
tension of tta bomber offeMftb
“It* suite unueukL” said B. W. ftaoo Prime Minister GkttNMB de-
imni gimpd t>w oMaMMMoR gt (Mamay
from the war by air assault might
be worth ttytafi tf other methods
were not exclttdefl WM Ike fourth
“saturation” attack of May. Tteo
were against Dortmund, om against
Dutoburg.
The mounting assault on Italy,
already reported “ “
-"Xy wo
nil
justmenta necessary to correct gram
InequaMUrs and to aid in ttee ef-
fective prosecution of the war.”
The WLB. In addition to its Lit-
tle Steel formula, may justify fur-
ther increases under the same lan-
guage
The emergency board's report to
not subject to action by the war
labor board Only Stabtiteation
Director James F Byrnes, acting
for the President, may modify it.
An executive order provides that
unless the stabilisation director
otherwise directs, the recommenda-
tions shall become effective 30 days
after they are tiled with the Tree ,
idem
MBM. tataH to. ■ tESM .MBM. K m HMM.' “
DENTON R"
VOL.XUI Naw DKNTON, TBXA% Wil
MORE BOMBS BLA
____ . i ....... W-P-4 i.................. .
in upper salary bracket*
Chairman Doughton (D-NC) of
ftataMewai a and means cenunto
tee, wto headed the House confer-
ence delegation, said he hoped tta
bill toould be accepted by both
Mourn* this we* and approved by
IHNiSlviMNRNBfek* ■ 1 ’ ■»t’~
RMtator Vandenberg <R-MtehK
ranking Republican member of the
finance committee, told a reporter
MdM Mt think there would be any
cootrovergy about tta mean*
mw that tta conferem havo
4 a five day deadlock
hether Um lewUlwUon
etomtnate any nocoaslty for
MMMmm tu Hkfeos chit jwwe r
to be detonnined. •
Rep. Knuteon Gb*Mta). Mb
toBlpod work out tta cxxnprotok said
tta o*Mm ^tato7wo3G*bo"Stosm.
"Si
peroMtWM betaff
4ted tatotun*
1 and
lartiiM m tbecta-
forces on Men-
) eystemaltoatfy Mi tta
BNMted ar* vital parte
of hto war ma*lM. Tta Obhmm
loosed some terribly destructive
bombs over Britain but tta tateet
anted bombs ere both MMteMHM
and tanrt-taoten. It to. aa Mt.
Churehttl suugmtod. an tateneltat
esportosent.
Some Hope for
N^Tax Bill
WAHHIHTOW. May
bitt" east seme tatak ram W - - .
In wM* Houee and Senate BMUe*
ben mu atetelbB to eoeepeoe their
dtflerenoea on pay M M» — Mt
togtotattan.
Admittedly still dsndtoetad within
theta- own rank* sou* at Ito Demo-
crats called tar suppertiwman effcrta
, to evolve a program acceptable to
KKdh houses and to the ngeMfitu^k
Om of these. Senator Byrd <D-
va) aetd he taught to would bo
-a tad thtar Mr tta country *
tta conferees gave up trytag m
so*m were reported to have aug-
OMtod doftito wt s ctoMs MMton
..u. —. —■,>. *'. •, -zm... .... I
WeQlutro
WAHHDBGTOM. Mfe
Tta Wbta House dto]
i*lntoar'rthnrrhni>*are1
couMUa^Prartte^So
ctam Barty ejd hsjta tof taM ’
~ to would not batata*.
-w“»°,OT^y.-M .-*t-
Lt* ***? ...
Sby JtaM^t *Uj.u-iriR ofs2*tarttoto iw^wm
Tta* taStofisd: Wtosrpon* Muto to finenoe epeen-
isre, Rto taan- MaM of Itatoral auoMtoo denM
ftetoa provktod an optimistic tone
to tta ovsratf labor situation
The stoppage of wort tn the
giant Akron nghksr factories, turn-
ita out vtoai w ogulpwi int Was
a maas protest against refusal of
the War Labor Board to grant a
demanded eight - cento - an - hour
wage boost The WLB allowed three
cents The board bluntly tdd the
workers yesterday it would not re-
| open the case unless they went
1 back to their jobs The CIO United
, I Rubber Workers called an extraor-
.' i dtnary meeting of Ike executive
board to consider the situation
Rm Ntrfkea f
Baltimore transit worker* affili-
ated with an American Federation
ed in North Pactflc with sleet. I Labor Union voted to strike at
-- - ------- —, ' 4 a. m.. but at 8 a. m company
IK -">7
■< nnlv about 1& n*r rant below
without confirmation sinking of 13
allied ships. 17 submarines
RUSSIA—Tense calm I—---- -- -
on the long front as a whole, but discharge of an employe followed
the Russians shifted the center of “ . •-
their “feeler*' attacks irom the i
south of the sector northwest of
Moscow where they announced the |
capture of four settlements.
The soft coal wage dispute seem-
ed headed for settlement The,
WLB* decision, granting ronces- i H°«* • roll-call vote of 385 to
sions to the miners that would I 110 over almost solid Southern op-
amount to pajr increases of more position, the legislation to similar
House and talked to death in the
Senate
7*
kt (os
> MANY
I
i
■SHto
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. 244, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 26, 1943, newspaper, May 26, 1943; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315728/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.