Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 300, Ed. 1 Friday, July 30, 1943 Page: 4 of 8
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It was the worst storm for the city since 1915. (NEA Telephoto.
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cal
hurricane
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Tile missing
Quintin B
were:
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Ex]
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K.
3.
4.
—JBT
1
Mrs Lofland was the wifo of
Technical
Traininc
Mrs Ernest Sigler, Miss Muriel
s
Labrador
is
the
most easterl
American Troops
LONDON, July
!
of Burnet.
land
Irresistible!
arate
PERSONALS
‘J
/
TAX
7 •
resting well at noon
SKYWOOD
grF
I *
ADORABLE
$3.oo
1
<Ti
One biff lot of diccontin-
I
I
LI
ill
ored dreseett, with sweat- ,
era and skirts, with ev-
NEW..
■artf Mt Chea
..
■ ■ *
•tl*
I
■■ 9 i ■
I
yO
$
4 001)
end them here, every
lusott
ft;
Hit Jap Targets
In Burma Areas
Red Cross Helps
Relief Work in
Storm Section
Chinese Attack
Jap Garrisons
erythinff! It’s faacinat- .
inff, it’s exciting, it’s the
hat of the year.
F. R. To Push
Postwar Program
For Service Men
Revival Services
At Baptist Church
Rites at Argyle
For Mrs. Lofland
----
On Warnemuende
I.
Five Killed in
Crash of Plane
SAN MARCOS. July 30—(AA-A
Insulate Your
Home Against
Hot Weather
Use Johns-Manville
Rock Wool
ISI1
LC
NAVY MEN HELD
PRISONERS NAMED
i and re-
•deflctt.
L -
| hardware and other bulldl
I tertals to be used tn rehabl
rain which totaled 2.14 inches here
in the past 24 hours, said K. D.
only light anti-aircraft fire. U. 3.
medium bombers hit the airdrome
at Aquino near Naples, and block-
buster raids by RAF crews left huge
fires blazing at airfields at Capod-
ichino and Monte Corvlna Ravella
near Naples
The air war reached new peaks
of fury as the Sicilian campaign
I
Pickett,
U. 8.
Lester
as-
wlll
L'.;'
M. A. GAY
Roofing 4k Sheet Metal
T
BABCOCK’S
223 W. Hickory
Opei
Instr
ECONOMY/
FOOD STORE
RUSSELL’S
Millinery Dept.
coi
N.
y«
R
la
V
br
O
•9
NA
Hooten, III, seaman first class, sons Allied Bombers
V
T i ■
I.
I
Rugtfr Brown
Shoes
Brownl,,i'
Shoe Stoce
Use Our OPA
Official Tire
Inspection Station
and have your tires in-
spected before the biff
rush!
t
L ~
R
Lt 6
in
&
h ’/X*- ’
Ct
&
-.5.-L • V
•••': .... > «. . . .. ....
New Fighting
Between Germans,
i. i:.....x I
»111. H S to
T ;£
U_ 8 Army Air Force; five staters. /Hilt I 11 <411 1 TIHHlb
lice and I
dXX Edge Up on Munda
■R—R—
V Heads Jaycees
If
F **
I •* *.
r
•" *
Street, has graduated from
course in airplane mechanics at
Sheppard Field, near Wtchlta Falla,
Bomber Fleets
at
I ' / L
/ / M
turned from Ennis where
ited her daughter, Mrs. E.
man, who is 111 but improved
Mrs M C barton of Tye is vis-
iting her parents-in-law. Mr and
Mrs. J. A. Barton. 310 Center
Street
NEWVBRIEfS
Eli P. Cox. 1213 Eoiivar Street.
the land bridge atop the
had opened negotiations with Ital-
ian divisions in Northern Dalmatia
to leave their arms with ihern upon
withdrawal.
The guerrillas were identified as
Serb minority groups opposed to the
Croat Ustachi, which Rome—even
in * Mussolini's
feared operated
I German orders.
Bv c. yates McDaniel
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN
THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC. Ju-
ly 30——American troops h a v e I
moved 200 yards nearer the Munda
Ct
'W.—
£
__
El
fe
DALLAS, July 30—(AT- The Navy
today aiuiounced the names of 21
Texans in the U. 8. Navy and Mar-
ine Corps held prisoners by the
Japanese in the Philippine Islands
and Manchukuo
James Herron Hooten, seaman
second class, and William Thomas
day—apparently" J*1-! <* American continent
too much under ~ ---— ---------
Is
Pi-'
■ /
-; -.1
c
ft.
200 fl
Four Missing
HOUSTON, July 30 -(AT- The
1 Intracoastal Towing and Trans-
i'. • —. u..—'c;-..
HMTOX, TKXA8 RECORDCHBONICL^, FHDAY, JIXT HMM < / , _____________________________
Galveston Streets Looked Like This After Hurricahe
, *1
' "5-3#
'■^sfcsSS
■ ■■’38^8
The P
Lions 2(1
ball gam
Park, an
Harte It
hoppers
In the
seven ru
was mat
ond inn
three wl
ing non
frames ■
nftii tin
runs an
got two
seventh
five runi
with ttu
Penry
In th*
ond gan
one run
one. Th«
less. In
IV'~W
s
■ w
5**
SO
■agHL*
J A. Davis, son of Mrs. J W
Davte, 1120 Oongress Avenue, an
Mtas Vera Davenport, daughter c
Mrs. M. J Davenport of Sangei
.r *
-r. -., ._7 — _,4
•- ■■ ■ .
ARRaK. »>■ - - • \-T ...
bert Rosson. Papers were ead b
Mines L. M Mann and E E Lovt
A business session was held wit
Mrs Rosson presiding and the dta
missal prayer was said by Mr:
Love Eight Eight members v^er i
present.
I Couple United In
Marriage Monday
MMMMMNNBNN1
■ t5l tx?
B > ...
It*'' ' ■
Send A
Bouquet of Flowers j
I FLOWERS
ExprMa Mar/ than Words
★ birthday* Wcut plant*
★weddings ★corsage*
★shut-in* ★pot plant*
WHAYNE FLORISTS
»*• m ' ggl N. Locmt
AUSTIN. July 30—(AT—Range* in
A/rifl-" .r.ij.- i.4, ** i-a' ut"fcA‘
■wp JJiHJJEsSi -
aaMM^a.
©ter il.JWi
• j.
JM
■hop at Style and Personality”
fcZL......_______________________________________
I A street scene In downtown Galveston after a hurricane and rain had flooded the city
I lars worth of property damage was caused to business establishments and people Just had to wad* if they |
I wanted to cross streets.
LwM
factories engaged in the manu-
facture of oonaumer*' good* have
been converted into war plant*
— it when the pinch
• • • •
Men who come to Perrin Field
seeking aviation cadet training are
going to have to talk to somebody
beside* Warrant Qfflcer W H. Cres-
well. Criswell, pest secretary, ha*
4 Air Force*
X Command.
ter M Itewtevilte visited Woodrow j "
... . Sigler at Camp Wolters, near Min-
Z enfl Wen*.
' '« . k * * *. ‘
Lieut. Mak L- Shipley, former di-
rector of the T. 8. C. W history
depastmaok ta now an instructor
with the V. 8. Army Air Forces at
Dodge City, Kan. In a recent letter
to friends here, he write* that he
ha* been busy teaching, learning to
teach and doing odd jobs of al)
kinds.
"This ta a comparatively new post,
and consequently the "odd-job" part
ha* been quite heavy," he write*.
“We are training student officers
who have already received their
commissions and wings and are
sent here to fly the B-36. We who
have had close contact for several
yean with the generation which ta
really flghtiftg this war knew that
they could do it when the pinch
came."
r »»M»ITIV* 1
'•MMNMMR-
i **
• *w«
I * ’
i
E
•"• j • \ £
9
ued brassieres on di»-
play. Come in and find
.Ji___r-wt—---:---------
the brassiere you have
____
been weannff.
*• ■- - -♦
\ / ' 1
V7 i
. I
«• .....
’jk’ ""ii'i'.j
ww—M
Dan Cupid Say«:
FLOWERS
Do The Trick!
• ’ , V ■'
What gift *aya Um sweet-
est things and warms her
heart Um meat? FLOW-
| ers—and we have the bete.
11 SKLBX A SONS
.......■'..........11 ■"
of william T. Hooten Jr., of Prince-
ton. are held by the enemy as war
prisoners, the Navy said.
’Die list was the sixth c< Its type
since the cutbreak of war It con-
tained the names of 51 officers and
328 enlisted personnel of the U 8
Navy from 45 states and 14 enlisted
personnel of the U. 8. Marine
Corps. Total war prisoners In the
Naval services ta now 4.235
Texans and their next of kin in-
cluded:
Chipman. Marvin Lee, fireman,
first class U S Navy, Galveston;
Slmmcns, Dorris Pickett, Chief
Pharmacist's Mate, U. 8. Navy,
Sherman, Wing, Lester Hubert,
shipfitter, second class, U S Navy.
Beaumont
Speculate on
Developments as
British Cabinet
Meets Twice
U. 8. PREPARING FOR BIG JAP
ATTACK
WASHINGTON, July 30- (AU
Secretary Knox indicated today
that the present American strategy
of limited island advances in the
Pacific ta but preparation for pow-
erful and decisive thrusts against
the strategic strongpoints of the
Jkpanete empire
r .
KJ!
IflMlctfaoMieai
W 1M »« *•«
■lk«» MIS
•spHtajljfw
TRI
-MM
2 ■
NW UMS*
3 , \
aHBi
W K Baldridge, above,
sistant county attorney,
head the Junior Chamber of
Commerce as president for Ute
ensuing year.
CHUNGKING, July 30—(AT— A
series of sustained Chinese attacks
on Japanese garrisons in the vicin-
ity of Hangchow, 100 mile* south-
west of Shanghai, were disclosed
by an army spokesman at a pres*
conference today
He said the Japanese had sus-
pended passenger traffic on the
Shanghai-Hankchow railway to fa-
cilitate the movement of troop*
needed to reinforce different garri-
sons.
Chinese troops at one point along
the railway have cut traffic from
Hangchow north, the spokesman
■aid. They also were reported to
have driven back a JaJpanese
thrust from Wukang, northwest of
Hangchow.
The spokesman said the Japanese
had legalised enlistment in the
Japanese army of subjugated peo-
ple* and that they hoped to enltat
large number* of Koreans and for-
moaan* by the end of the year.
He also declared that all Japanese.
Brassieres For Sale
/
Funeral services for Mrs Sarah
Ellen Lofland. 34, formerly of Ar-
gyle. who died in a Wichita Falta
hospital Wednesday, were held
day at 10 a m. in the Argyle
Baptist Church, conducted by Rev
Robert Hughes. Baptist minister of
Argyle, and Rev Boyd Jones, As-
sembly of God minister of Dentaon.
Burial was In Prairie Mound remt-
■
- ’ xm
taa» Onm* JfcB Jb Arm* JWwi
WITH THE KHAKI AND BLUE
OF LAND, SEA AND AIR
F , W EMMY MMJ MIUJB
IT-
A methodical Nazi military occu-
pation of the Istrian Peninsula and
the whole Udine region from the '
I Gulf c-f Trieste to the Austrian
border was outlined in advices di-
| red from Rome
The luck of reaction by Ute Rome
radio to the Nazi movement into
Flume. Trieste und other Italian I were married in New Orleans Mon
AMONG SICK
' David Wayne Yeck, five-year-old
son of Mr. and Mrs. E W Yeck.
Argyle, ta ill in the Denton hos-
pital.
C. E. Gordon, 914 Welch Street,
underwent minor surgery in l‘
Denton Hospital Friday and was er and a transport which prevlous-
r /
Big Airplane
Factory Badly
Damaged by Raid
iltciliuiis Reported
MADRID. July 30—(Ap New fight- 1
raid yesterday ' i«8 between German und Italian I
I day.
Bombers of the
States air force wrecked the Im- ,
portant bridge over the Mv River, I
25 miles west of Mandalay Destruc- |
tion of tills bridge will delay rail
traffic between Monywa and towns
to the north between the Chind-
win and Irrawaddy Rivers
An enemy-operated factory and
railroad installations at Tangon
were blasted out of existence and
violent bomb explosions left fires, I
smoke from which rose 3.000 feet
Mills at Myingyan. southeast of
Mandalay, were also damaged by
direct hits
P-48 fighters and bombers at-
tacked Dawaw in northern Bur-
ma, but clouds prevented accurate
observation of the resulting dam-
age
On Wednesday near hits were
scored on a 300-foot ship near Port
Blair in the Andaman Islands by
American heavy bombers
British bombers roamed over the
Mayu Peninsula In western Bur-
ma. blasting Jaitanese Monscon
quarters, while their fighter pa-
trols were active over the middle
Irrawaddy and Kalemyo areas.
I ;
RT J
r a /i
I tral and western Burma yesterday. , veaton, Roy F Brucks. Merchant-
‘ ' ville, N J
Tlie four were on the tug
The tug, towing the barge, lett
’ . for Port
j Neches, Tex., and ran Into the cen-
Clark Is stationed at Cainj Camp-
j bell. Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Buck have,
received word of the birth of a !
LONDON, July 30—(AT- Photo- [
graphs taken at Warnemuende in i
the Flying Fortress
showed that bomq I
ered" almost evety unit of the
Ernst Heinkel FlMgzeugwerke. im-
portant producers 1 of Focke Wulf
190 fighters, the U 8. Eighth Bom-
ber Command reported today . ....^ „„
Thete wete diiect lilts or severe 1 |OUte to take over Ute submarines I
biast damage on nearly every unit, i for use against Allied landings on I
--a ... ....ih,,,,., „i.„ | the Dalmatian coast- I
I ‘ J
slbility of Italy’s
terms.
Prime Minister Church‘ll called
the first session at 1:30 a. m. and a
second meeting was held later hi
the day :
There was no official indication !
of what wax discussed, but the min-
isters presumably were concerned
with some major turn in the I tai- 1
lan situation
Speculation arose immediately
over the possibility that Premier
Pietro Badoglio of Italy had ask-
ed for peace terms, but despite the
unusual hour it was stated relia-
bly that it is ‘nc-t unusual for such
meetings to take plaoe at any time.”
A spokesman added that "It
would not necessarily be correct to
attribute any special significance to
this early morning meeting in con-
nection with the immediate war sit-
uation."
L'-. ■ .■
said D C.
Instead of wrapping up the en-
tire program In a single bill exclus-
i ively for servicemen, Speaker said,
tt a ......wi j 1 ,hp administration will back sep-
Lnd_. ,*ar?Mp8 .hft,Ve.,1K,ured arate propoxate covering one £
more o' the points and applying
them to the rest of the population
along with veterans.
One bill likely to get administra-
tion impetus is the proposal by
Senator Wagner (D-NY’ which
would enlarge current social secur-
: ity system benefits and extend the
j system to servicemen and various
farmers.
talked scores of men into becom-
ing aviation cadets, so convincingly
that—he took hte examinations this | M
week, and it won't be long before W
he’ll -enter training himself . M
• • • •
Herbert Decker has completed
"boot training" in the U. B Navy ’
and now to stationed at the U 8. I
Naval Air Center, Corpus Chrtati, !
as a third class petty officer He ta I ‘
a yeoman, in the personnel office |
ot the administration building at I
the station. Hta wife remains here. I
where she is secretary to Dean E V
White of T. 8 C. W
REFER SETTING STATE
RATE TO MONDAY
AUSTIN. July 3O (Ah- The Au-
tomatic Tax Board today deferred
until Monday setting tile 1043 state
property tax rate In order to con-
fer with the State Board »f Educa-
tion on Governor Steventon's plan
for altering state finale*
duclng tbe general fund >d
pilot, a navigation instructor and
three navigation cadets from tie
Ban Marco* army air school were :
killed last night in the crash of a 1
Surviving beside* her husband
are an eight-month-old son, Joe
Spencer Lofland; her parents, Mr.
and Mr*. H. G. Littrell of Argyle;
five brother*. Sidney Littrell in the
U. 8. Navy. Woodrow, H. O Jr.. W
J and Wallace Littrell, all in the
U 8. Army Air Force; five staters.
Mmes. D. R Knox of Alice "
Marie Cooper of Dallas;
Elizabeth, Esther Jo and 1
Ann Littrell, at home
Canned Fruits And
Juices to Cost More
WASHINGTON, July 30— (AT-
The 1943 pack of many canned
fruits, berries and juices will sell
at Increased prices, the Office of
Price Administration said today in
announcing new price formulas for
canners.
Added costs of raw ingredients
and, in certain states, increased
labor costs, were taken into con- ; . — - r-— ---- —'--------
sideration in establishing canners’ > reported in a satisfactory condi-
prices for fruit cocktails, canned | at a Dallas hospital where he
apricots, cherries, figs, peaches,1 underwent major surgery.
‘ pears, plums, fresh prunes, biueber-1 Born Pvt- an<l Mra- Ja<* Clark
ries, blackberries, raspberries, boys- ot P)10t Point, in the Denton Hos-
enberrles, gooseberries, loganberries. Thursday evening, a boy Pvt
and youngberries i —
At the same time a table of .
maximum prices for the 1943 pack !
of canned red sour cherries was an-
nounced, on a regional baste.
Since canned fruits and berries
are sold under fixed mark-ups at
both wholesale and retail, OPA said
Increased costs to the housewife
were certain
I--
Training Plane
Crash Kills Two
| CORPUS CHRISTI. July 30—(A^
' —Two persons were killed yesterday
in the crash of a training plane
23 miles northeast of the Corpus
Chrtati Naval Air Training Center,
the center's public relations office
said today.
The dead: Second Lieut. Thomas
J. O'Brien Jr., 22. Detroit; Avia-
tion Cadet Thomas L. Yarbrough,
Santa Paula, Calif.
WASHINGTON, July 30— (A>
The American Red Cross today
1 filed u request with the War Pro-
i duction Board (WPB for lumber,
Ung ma-
bliltation
of the hurricane-hit Gulf Coast
I area, where storms centering
around Galveston and Port Arthur
left major damage earlier this I
week.
Norman H. Davis, Red Cross
chairman, announced a request had I
been made for top priority on one j
| million feet of lumber as Well as I
: shingles, electrical fixtures and I
plumbing and heating supplies for I
immediate use
Additional materials may be |
needed, Davis said, when the storm I
damage has been completely sur-
veyed
| Meanwhile, emergency relief has |
j been organized, Davis said, with
I Red Cross field workers from mid-
western area headquarters In St
| Louis on the scene to assist local
I Get*
if Cluster
lumiiM’s desk has come
lire made at a‘liberator
4 „ Jie VIII Bomber Com-
ESX mand, “somewhere in England." It
SET showa Cd- DMQ W. Johnson c< Mo-
Um. Kaq., congratulating Capt.
*■. Walter T. Holme* Jr„ son of Mr.
ES and Mn. W. T Holmes, Wl West
EX’ Hickory Street* Ito he presents him
” ' ft with an Oak Leal Cluster to his
DtoUngulahed Flying Cross
Capt Holme*, now flying In the
Middle East, also held* the British
Distinguished Flying Cross as well
as the U. 8. Air Medal The cita-
tion lor his cluster reads. "For ex-
ceptionally meritorious achievement
while participating In five separate
bomber oombat mission* over enemy
occupied Europe. The courage and
coc-lnees and skill displayed by Capt.
Holme* upon these occasions re-
flect great credit upon himself and
the Armed Forces of the United
. Stater" ‘
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS
NORTH AFRICA, July 30 (4T-
Allied air fleets in shattering new
blows by day an£ night pounded
, the Axis reinforcement ports of
I Messina and Milazzo in Sicily, rout-
ed a convoy, and blasted airfields
near Naples and Rome, It was an-
nounced today.
Fighter-bombers ranged ahead of
advancing allied troops to wreck
Axis road communications, and
fighters swept over Sardinia to har-
ry other enemy objectives.
I RAF Beaufighters attacking a
convoy off the Italian coast left a
I merchant shin sinking, and a de-
stroyer and motor torpedo boat on
i lire
Flying Fortresses smashed alr-
; drome Installations at Viterbo. 50
j miles northeast of Rome, meeting
daughter to Capt anti Mrs Don-
ald A Buck at Stackton, Calif j
Capt Buck is somewhere In Eng-
I« .•* *4
portation Company announced that I
ten survivors of the seagoing tug !
Titan and five crewmen of a large |
oil barge were landed today
Beaumont.
Four men still were missing af-
ter the $100,000 tug sank In the
Gulf of Mexico during the tropl-1
The barge
Balkan reports received at this , sAk** °I gardenias
neutral capital said Dalmatian j Dawis recently
• Navigation Cadet Robert F. Jones,
I 36. Toledo. O.
The bright little beret
everyone will want t<X
wear with auita and tail-
nemuede, said "it seemed to
Brit? I"-'''
I
I
Mrs. Snoda Foster has returned j
to her home in Dallas after vis-
iting her sister. Mrs Joe 8. Gambill
Sr <
Mrs J. Frank Solomon has re- i
$he vis-
it New-
Note* of Service
Here and There
Lieut. Lindon H. Wilson of Camp
Pickett. Va.. ta on a 15-day leave,
Visiting his stator. Mrs W C.
Crombie. 2607 North Lccust Street,
and parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. M
Wilson of the Cross Roads commu-
nity. He expects to return to camp
Pickett Monday
9 • • •
Pvt Thomas Jefferson Blackwell,
son of Mr. and Mrs J. B. Blackwell,
923 West Sycamore Street, is now
in the finance training center at
Fort Benjamin Harrison, Ind, near
Indianapolis. Before going into
service, he was credit manager and
auditor for the Dallas bronch of a
publishing compan .
• • • •
Aviation Cadet Paul Simpson has
L feMr completed basic flight training at
k • • ths Newport Air Base, Newport,
Ark, and has been transferred to
Lawrenceville, Ill. for advanced
training. With an average c< above
95, Simpson made the highest rat-
ing in the class of cadets. His
mother and stater. Mrs Paul Simp-
son and Mias Nan Simpson, visited
him in Newport, just prior to hta
transfer.
and an adjoining railway also was
wrecked -t—
At Kiel, bombs blanketed Import-
ant installations of the Kriegsmar-
Inewerft U-boat building
Wreckage included two
shops hit directly, the roof of
third damaged, two bays of
engine shop demolished,
ous hits in the Naval arsenal, and
on shipping in the harbor
First Lieut. Ttm R Hines Jr., of
Charlotte. N C.. group bombardier
of the first formation over Wer- '
nemuede. said "it seemed to me (
that the whole target area o' the
Focke Wulf plant was smothered
with bombs." He was flying in ‘J.e
Fortress "Dottie June IV."
“The target was hit nicely." ad-
ded Staff Sgt Alfred A. Oldfather,
former welder frem Mercedes, Tex.,
tail gunner on "Raunchy Wolf."
Special to Record-Chronicle
AUBREY. July 30—A two week
revival ta in progress al the Anti
ock Baptist Church at Spring HU
Rev Hobart Sampson, pastor qj th
Justin Baptist Church is conduct
ing the meeting Services are beln
held at 10 a. rn and 8 30 p is Th
public is invited to attend
Personals
Messrs and Mmes. Woodrow Wil
son and Denver Amos of Deeati
visited Mr and Mrs C C Thoms
al Spring Hill
Mr. and Mrs E. E Love wer
guests of Mrs J. O. Dawson a
Rockwall.
Mrs. T C. Hampton of Dallas w«
a guest of Mrs J W Rpmack an
Miss Llnnle Lybass
Mrs. Fred Coffey and son c
Denton were guests cf Mrs 1*011
Tidmore.
Mr and Mrs W C SimpHun wer
In lyallas
Roy Blanks and son and MU
Viola Blanks of Dallas visited M
and Mr s W A Blanks
Mr and Mrs. Ira Looper and dau
ghters of Houston are vLsltln
Messrs and Mmes D H. 1 uster an
Holly Looper
Nancy Jolly of Laredo is visitin
her grandparents. Mr and Mrs /
8. James.
Rev and Mrs. L B Tooley an
Mr and Mrs. L. B Tooley Jr., an
son of Lexington. Ky„ were guest
of Mr and Mrs Earl Love •
Mrs Bruce Wilson and daugh
ter and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Stew
art Jr of Fort Worth visited Mi
and Mrs. J C. Haynie
W. 8. C. 8. Meeting
Mrs L. E Madden was In charg
of the program fee the MethodU
W S. C. 8. meeting Monday in th
church. The topic was "Social Re
; lations." Scripture was read by Mn
. I G. A Davis from Matthew 5 1-
bursts “smotth- i troops in Northern Italy and es-I fo,lowed wlth prayer by Mrs Gl)
' unit of the tabllshment by the Germans of a !
guard over five Kalian submarines;
j they fc-und at Flume were reported I
in messages to Madrid today.
Nazi crews were said to be en- !
Jack A. Matone, son of Mr and
Mn. D. R. Matone, 1123 West Oak
’ the | _ .. .
Wav. was uie w oa
i Claude Lofland, to whom *he was
on*'of many iichcote of the Army 1 rtedln Denton In December of
Air Force. Technical Training ^1 She was living in Dentaon.
. where her husband ta employed. She
was bom in Denton March 27. 1909.
I and was graduated from the Den-
24. Honey Grove, pitot; Second ! whlfh f°r three weeks has been
y * - - a a aa ~ , 4*^laa4aa^ 9 aaBaa*« aaaaa, 4 a*a wA m S -- — *
Pa , navigation Instructor; Navlga- I forcement by land
tion cadet Lester Kessler. 24.1 """"— -----
I Brooklyn. N Y.; Nsvigatlon Cadet
Steven Kias, 27. of Lo* Angeles; . --------- —
' “—“—' — . . _ . . _ | Wh0 now are wtthin 1800 yards of
the airdrome. t
Japanese forces at Balroko, 10 *3 Including
miles north ot Munda. have been j llow excluded
hemmed in by Americans who .
landed a few miles away at Rice HEAVY RAINS
A communique from allied head- IN AUSTIN AREA
quarters today also told of the sink- j
Ing of a Japanese destroyer and i . . .
the | the destruction qf another destroy- I this area were greatly benefited by
Broa **r And n transYMYrt whirh nmvinn*, FAln Which tr»tnL‘d 2.14 Inctl^S tlSF?
| ly had been re|>orted set on fire in the past 24 hours, said K D
—— I Liberators, Flying Fortresses and I Willingham, Travis County farm
— I Mitchells made a concentrated at- ; agent
tack on Salamaua, dropping 94 tons ; Grass is greatly needed to fill in
of bombs in 17 minutes on that al- for a shortage in protein feeds The
I ready badly battered Jajjanese | heavy precipitation was also ex-
l I strongpoint on the southeast coast Dected.to help replenish dimintah-
of New Guinea. | ing water tank stocks.
The
British war cabinet met twice to-
day amid speculation over the pox-
asking peace
would hammer the subject home
while it was “hot," and would un-
veil further details without waiting
'or cengress to reconvene Sept 14
from Its summer recess.
Virtually the entire "minimum
program," the president revealed in
outline In a broadcast to the nation
Wednesday night already is covered,
though perhaps In lesser degree, in
bdls pending or already passed in
congress.
One ace up the presidential sleeve
was a report on demobilization of
manpower by a conference of fed-
eral agency representatives se; up
I under the Natimal Resources
: Planning Board iNRPBi a year ago
on the "post-war adjustment of
j civilian and military personnel ”
"Inclusion of the word 'civilian'
[ in the planning assignment may
mean that war workers and civil-
ians generally will not be overlooked
in the conferring of benefits? al-
thcugh principal emphasis is to be
I placed on the case of servicemen,"
Bn id 4 V
. . . very bone |
Investigate the crashT^the field*'* Bombers have dropped at least 700
public relation* office' announced *'— ’
The plane was on a routine train-
ing flight.
The dead:
WASHINGTON July 30—(4’>
President Roosevelt was reported
determined today to bear down im-
mediately on his program for re-
storing servicemen to civilian life
»fter the war. He was said by Con-
fidants to feel that public senti-
ment aroused now would sweep it
through congress with maximum
speed
D C. Speaker said the president I
entered its final stages.
Four allied plane* were lost In
the far-ranging attacks, and one
enemy plane was destroyed, head- 1
quarters said.
'J
WW <■ Jis bar wtam )*■ isnater JW gmteas KmI Prints?
So many poands and sae*** ri ate*? ..Of Mara, bat when yo«
*pend them here, every^rint boys a fall S*niar^*f^ai*slttm*
“ U tote* every Mia. We baaw baeaaa* year
tbaa* and yaar Unrie Saa* pate his “grade-
more than 400 tons of shells upon
Second Lieut. George H. Gordon, i lhat central Solomons stronghold,
Zt, ZZ^.^, C.vtc, Second 1 whlch for three weeks has been
Lieut. Frank L. Ktate, 32, Verona, i 1!'ola,<‘d from any Important rein-
n— a__a___a___ *.«___a_ . fnrrarrtont hv latxH
Fourteen Japanese Pillboxes were
destroyed yesterday by the advanc-
ing American soldiers and Marines.
tion
Thousands of dol-
Blast Italian*
ran Sicilian Points
nuers uiiu ; jne missing were; Quintin B !
successful Payba, Houston, John E. Paschall.
Houston. Charles P McCaleb, Gal- j
, v<gt
( Villi
yards
engine
’ a
one
numer- 1
I poin yesterday was reported due
It with Rev R. H. Whittington of
‘ ~ The bride wore a soldle
‘ blue dressmaker suit with a cor
sage of gardenias
I Davs* recently returned inor
guerrillas in Italy's service, adverse- j the Paqama Canal Zone, where h
ly regarding the Nazi occupation of | was employed in the enginee/in
the land bridge atop the Adriatic, I department c4 the U . 8 Govern
’ -- ’ - ■ .... ment. Mrs. Davis ta a graduate o
Teachers College afld is a teache
In the Denison public schools Th
couple is here visiting hta mothe
and other relatives.
airbase and General Douglas Mac- I
Arthur todav described their prog-
ress as satisfactory
_w_.w „ The ceaseless sea and air nound- 1
training plane ”12 miles south west ln* of lhe Munda area. General
i MacArthur said, has cut the ene-
A board has been appointed to I my’K supplies to the
tons of explosives on the Munda
defenses in the past four weeks
_____4 I day when the service took place i:
I to the German argument that so : Lolloseum Place Baptist Churcl
I If; as Italy remains in the war it | •*-
I was merely peaceful cooperation | delating.
1 'between allies " ]
I
NEW DELHI. July 30 — dP>- ground
American und Britisli bombers and j
fighter planes staged i
j attacks on Japanese targets in cen-
blastlng bridges, railways, lactory j
Installations and shipping without |
the loss of a single plane US;
and Britisli communiques said to- Corpus Christi Monday
I t.„ . ....------
10th U n it e d i ter of the hurricane, H Richard-
son. dispatcher for the company
said.
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 300, Ed. 1 Friday, July 30, 1943, newspaper, July 30, 1943; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1317693/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.