Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 301, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 31, 1943 Page: 1 of 6
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3
it's
Prevails
— The
>
M
i harmony tn dealing wnn uie iuu-
; Un situation, it was learned today,
and it can be presumed that any
L 3
. ■ 1
•> j.
civilian*
-
.V
-3
€
that the war ie over for them and that they are headed for iMgrment in some Allied country
Olin Bates of Fort Worth.
V
IN
said
In Munda Attack
flank.
seri-
es
for maintenance and supply of her
MV
naissance and superiority, and that
at least a week er ssera.
"one day
that
4.
•?
a S' ■
■w*1
•tUdiM???
UNITED NATIONS ACTING IN
CLOSE HARMONY ON ITALIAN
SITUATION; DELAY IRKS BRITISH
in the event of an allied landing,
is still in force, he said in a proc-
clamatlon. Two new classes have al-
so been called to the colors by the
(llo government, the dlspatch-
ld. -------
Ponder Mystery
Of Italian Fleet
This was the understanding here
today following an indication
bombed Naples They say the ships
are not coming out, cannot come
By JOHN M HIGHTOWER
WASHINGTON,
rted at
Friday,
Allied Warships Active
American and British wa^hips
discussion,
fed The
govern-
i to be held in the household
buMing Wednesday night,
conference guests >111. be honored
it, visiting horns
*----‘1 Of the
______park, pic-
private ownership has been urg-
ed by the AMolMbton Mtas
Operators' Cwnmtttees.
Two Deaths From ,
Polio in Houston
WASHINGTON, July 31—(Afi
—Immediate return ef the gev-
' '
Miiiisiry cuuimiuHQUc uiM-iuuru. m __
| Fifteen bcmbers and two figMMV ’Wlerr's not an unhappy face among these Italian prisoners in Sicily, for they evidently enjoy the fact
'-7*3
i
HOUSTON,
deaths from r
Jefferson Davis
bringing the total
powerful force of fighters, attacked
Ballale Airdrome In the Northern
Solomons, causing huge fires. Twen-
*“ — *----Mb Zeros ware in the
enemy stronghold but
gownment-ta-ez-
London that Gen.
■ Sth and sth MU
partisan fighters
tjhitidtaelin-
Udine region of
craft drove
Strait off
island main-
enemy
By JAMES F. KING
LONDON. July 31
Believed Making
Ready for Hard
Drive on Japan
flurry at La Spezia, I
nt Naval hosnu hovo ’ -
Ing program. J. W Edgar. super-
intendent of the Orange schools,
and members of the home econom-
ics staffs of both host colleges
Housing in Dormitory
Austin hall on the T. S. C. W
st
chief ■
soon ,
. with whom I have ever had busi-
ness and personal relations"
a series ot great offensive thrusts
against Japan as soon as the pres-
ALLIED HEADQUARTER*
IN NORTH AFRICA. July gl
—(AX-The AINsd High O*ta-
mand radlssd a stem warning
to the Italian people today that
the terrible aerial stfeosive
agahsst Italy weald bo rseesn-
ed immediately.
T- Jp-
' 'r"
LONDON, July ll-b»>-The Bsr-
Uh radio aaid today that Amedeo
Tbsti, foreign office attache daring
the regime of Benito MusjoUni. has
xanS'sSisS
- - i troops to
Larissa to
New Air
of^Tension
and personal relations"
The weatherman, especially at
nights, has been kind during the
week, but lie was Just as kind a |
year ago. offering 4 degrees lower .
temperature The readings Friday I
were 78 and 94 as compared with
74 and 97 a year ago
ll
onstrating for peace Earlier. DNB. I
German news agency, had report-
ed Milan rioters firing on uniformed
troops, Italian and Germans alike.
Nasis Take Charge
What effect reported German
troop movements in north Italy
would have on allied strategy was
not disclosed The Nazis already
have taken over*the Istrlan Penin-
sula. parte of Flume, Trieste and
Pola, further complicating Italy's
internal crisis, advices from the
continent said.
Other Italian border dispatches
to Bern. Switzerland, reported that
tension in central Italy was mount-
ing as the result of a warning is-
sued by the commander of the
Italian Fifth Army that there was
a possibility of an allied invasion
I of Latlu, Tuscany and Umbria. The
I alert of July 15. declaring a state
of emergency in these provinces
ty-five Ji
air over ___
they “avoided combat." the commu-
nique said.
Sharp fighting continue to the
ana between Mubo and Salamaua,
New Guinea, but Ita progress was
not detailed.
begun to
the stag!
-
Oklahoma Bank
Robbed of $12000
mom arrow. ot, Mr n „
(to ®Wb RMRteb WMp taM a S®
bank president and his wife prie- m
oners aU night robbed the Arkan- F
sas State Valley Bank of an **ti- R
I
Mussolini Attacks
Direct Italy Press
cased the subject disagrees He says
the Italian fleet is too dispersed,
making bombing not worthwhile
during the other more urgent Med-
iterranean campaigns of recent
months. But several others think ,
the harbors of La Spezia. Bari!
and Taranto are black with ships, I „
with additional concentrations at will be held ’ ,
Genoa, Venice and even at heavily- | tn the college library auditorium,
bombed Naples. They say the ships, and Thursday night. w——-
are not coming out, cannot come | economists will be guests
out in the face of aerial fficon- college at the recreation pi
palMavwtA awd *tina*( rat*I*— rental 4 task* hHta mlraorae
they are not holding any more* al-
lied naval strength to the Med-
iterranean than would be neees
aary anyway. „ . ... , ..
Vatican Activity Grows
BERN, Switzerland, July 31— (to
—German civilians living in Italy
were advised by their consuls to-
day to return home immediately
and diplomatic negotiations at the
Vatican suddenly were intensified,
advices from Italy said today
A dispatch from La Suisse of
Geneva reported that the Italian
police chief, Renzo Chiericic, and
his assistant had been assassinated.
From the border of Chiaaso came
word that the military commander
at Trieste had ordered all Croats
to turn in their guns, ammunition
and explosives within 48 hours. The
Croats have been demonstrating for
separation of the Istrlan Peninsula
from Italy.
There was no immediate ampli-
fication of the frontier reports ot
German civilians being urged to
quit Italy. *
/ May leak Peace
The sudden surge in diplomatic
conversations with the Vatican In-
dicated the government of Marshal I
Pietro Badoglio was trying to bring
Italian foreign relations into order
to pave the way for peace, and the
Home correspondent of the Basler
Nacnncnten aecia red tn at Ltaiy
today la to a transition
This writer,-------
Nd civil or criminal cases are i
for the third week of the three __ _
iriU,M*^iil?yUj2dgf&r >|eSFSmMm
to aid Moekard McNMf. No Jury aheraft deatn
ill panel Rm been summoned f U^nkers-M tnw
I ly would carry the approval of all
j three powers
Russia. Britain and the United
<1 k.States all were reported to have
instructed their representatives in
I neutral countries of Europe and in
I Argentina to notify the govern-
ments they would consider harbor-
ing Mussolini or any other Axis
leaders an infringement ot United
Nations war principles
This manifestation of allied unity
became known as Prime Minister
Winston Churchill ordered all Brit-
ish cabinet members and heads of I
e» of the current island-hopping
miMal tn enmiwVt fwmninv- |
off places from which crippling at- j
tacks can be made
These future assaults undoubted- i
painful and with as little loss as
possible for the Italian people."
1*te British and Americans had !
"indeed the same goal of peace," he > —
Luigi Cardinal Maglioite. papal ,
» -t «r»--| IL1IHH MM m
gue.se diplomatic representatives 1 ?
yesterdiiy They were summoned I
again this morning Most other dip-
lomats gathered in the Cardinal's I
reception hall to awatt an audi-|
ence.
Ati they shall speak and say
11to/thee, art thou also become weak
5 we? are thoii become like unto
if—Isaiah 14-10
All wickednes is weakness, that
lea. there tore, with God or num
>111 gain thee no remission Mil-
in
WOMAN FOUND DEAD IN DENI-
' HON NOMg
DENISON, July 31—Mrs. Otis L.
Hilliard, 33, former school teacher
at Denlron and other North Texas
points, was founddoad at her herna
Roa Friday, tomtlre of the Preet
R A. Wrigbt returned a verdict M
suicide. Mrs. Hilliard wu the ter-
mer toe MteMte Lee 1 OartMR
J. B» Carlisle of McKinney- "*t « c
WASHINGTON, Jety 31—(to
—American light wnreMya bam-
bardad Japanese dafaMsa Ml
Rieka Island Friday, the Navy
reported today following a
bombtar miorion by a Tfaglo
American plane Thursday.
WASHINGTON. July ll-(to
* raid from war mabUisa-
direotor James F. Byrnes
awaited today for an eatr
----2 22—-J ta Ike gaoeitae
rationing eotato Motoriota,
laimwtah, eaa expoal? W
London wao aMve with eacttomont
—- lauoo by Italy or k pcooM
allied invasion
The tenafan wao pointed
remark dropped by Foreign
later Anthony ten, -e-n tb
Houae of Commons yoctardw
the cabinet had derided age
war debate unlem there Nw
“some marked ehanCO lif the
tian—and week ends do area
grodtme changes ta attnatts
Dtepatchee teem the Italian
tier said Neel irtifih bad a
German civilians Hvtng to
GERMANY TO QUIT MANUFAC-
TURING CLOTHING
♦ LONDON, July >1—♦
♦ The manufacturing of cloth- ♦
♦ Ing in Germany has been or- *
♦ dered stopped effective Sept. ♦
I ♦ 30. the Berlin radio reported ♦
I ♦ today in a broadcast record- ♦
♦ ed by the Associated Press ♦
♦ The broadcast said there ♦
Fighter-bombers rained cannon j * *
July 31
llo were r
ftOSpiUM
aiiVSJBKX" 2S[For Cbunty Court
Jo tea nmlUd In tw otter
deaths ta the county, outside Hous-
ton. v i' *
„ ____ There have been 4P polio cases
.-ria sr&s xr&sr? ■
When the State government de-
ucts part of the salaries of State
mployees for the federal with-
olding tax, it will give the U. 8
Teasury regular warrants from the
eneral fund, which is still more
han |20,000,000 in the red Some
lx or eight months from their is-
ue* date these warranto will be-
ome good
The average citisen knows what
happens if he should give the U 8.
Internal Revenue office a check
pith Insufficient funds in the bank
St will be interesting to note what
,lappens when the State of Texas umted States, Great Britain and
1 « cimllnr frxa- trim vuliru . — . , i
I Soviet Russia arc acting in close
I harmony in dealing with the Ital- ' added.
l ends a similar check for the salary
(withheld from State employees
I Landlords, if some one telephones
you and asks how much rental
you re getting for a piece of prop-
erly and what you were getting in
J1942 for Ute same, it will, no doubt,
Le a representative of th< -
bailment of Labor, which is having
a clteck made of rentals in Den-
ton
It is possible that some landlords
have hiked the monthly rental a lit-
tle bit high, but. aS a general rule,
it seems that most rental property
owners have kept their rents pretty
well in line However, it seems that
some little advance might have
been in line, as rents in Denton in
1942 were I
might have been
R B Shannon has returned from
> trip to Detroit, where he bought I
in automobile, in which toe re- i
turned 'Crop conditions in the |
north are mighty good." he said
■"They’ve had rain when needed and
the corn to mighty pretty and
green.”
Mrs B E Jackson of the east-
ern part of the county is in Den-
ton to visit with her son, J. C
Jackson, and to help in the nurs-
ing of her grandchildren. Bobbie !
and Bright, who have whooping
' cough "Sometimes I get the feel-
__V*..- trwi ’
she "said". “but~ I'm still ’helping
take care of the children."
<In the tern|X>rary absence of
DeWitt Mackenzie, this column
Is written today by J M Rob-
erts Jr i
By J. M. ROBERTS Jr.
Allied planes are over the Ital-
ian fleet almost every day This is
no revelation of a military secret,
It’s Just something that Is bound j
to be true But no bombs are
dropped. Why?
Outside of a 1 . .
Italy’s Important Naval bases have
gone remarkably scot free recently.
Crotone was bombarded and bomb-
ed. but not nearby Taranto, Bomb-
ers from the middle east went to '
Bari uly 17, but concentrated on '
the air field On the whole the Al-
probably lower than they yle flghung services to stand by !
| over week-end for any posible I
! developments In connection
the Italian crisis.
All Allies informed
» , Other allied governments
he* said ' *^so b«lng kept Informed of devel- I
-j-j —i 1 opmento. Foreign Minister Anthony ! -w------------------
; Eden summoned their represents- j ent preparatory strategy has set the ;
- t . . ■ . L ..................—
NAZI CIVILIANS TO QUIT ITAL
GERMAN STEELi i;'"" ”""'"'""'"--'''
CENTER IN RUHR1
BOMB BLASTED II
I — • JI
7 i'E
LONDON, July 31—<to-The Al- i fl
lies rtoiing air offensive shifted to I’]
2 2 J nigh*, whan HAF I I
bombers blasted at Remsheld, GeF- I
man steel center on the edge at i 1
the Ruhr.
It was the first raid ot the war >1
on Remscheil, which was singled I
out last for last night’s heavy aa« I
sault after Hamburg had teen sulF, I
Jected to ita seventh attack in a I
week on Thursday night.
The massive offensive rolled on . 1
thioughout daylight today wtihy I
tight-flying formaticQa of Allied I
bombers being shepherded out over I
the channel by droves of tighten.
An almost unbroken tumble <4 - I
explosions and heavy gunfire reteg- >j 1
berated throughout the mom- ;
Ing in the Fc lkstone area. The ’ 1
r—: -.! 1
peered to be in a state of eruption 1 I
and at one time the Bouloqime area < I
was particularly noisy.
At the same time Mosquitos and t
; Beaufighterr attacked enemy ote- i
fields and railway targets tn sweeps I
over France and Holland me rur
Ministry communique dlscloeed.
British light area sea forces ran
------mjna an<j north of Catania,
manual | bombardment started fires
meeting vlalble for 15 milee and caused ex-
tensive damage
The same night a detachment of
British light coastal
right into Messina
Reggio Calabria on th
land, defying numerous
MferchUstVs and undergoing fire of
shore batteries without sustaining
- ■—"—•
Fires were seen rising high fol-
lowing an American Mitchel ajaault
on Pradtica Di Mare outride Rothe
and the IJOO-mile round-trip Fort-
reta attack co Grottaglie Hits
were made on dispersal areas and ad-
ministration buildings. Axis lanes
made no attempt to turn aside the
blows.
Bleat Supply Line
Serious damage was done to Axis
efforts to got more men end sup-
eet piles tnto RMy as American AgM-
er-bombere tank a SOO-ton mer-
“ chantman ta Milaaao barter on the
Cieai ea«wl
1 vohhi Hiia cofuw>Mi
- OVBd * number ot
**-«—*^
queetian Of the Badoglio
„ ment la only how to i
Jr (pareej to a manner
No cases of infantile paralysis in
i Denton or Denton County have
I been reported to Dr. M L. Hutche-
son. city and county health officer,
j he stated Saturday.
! Although new cases have been re-
' ported in parts of North Texas, a
state-wide report from the state
The | health officer received here Friday
indlca es that the epidemic, which
has swept many portions of the
state, including the North Texas
area, is now subsiding, with fewer
new cases reported this week than
in the past three weeks. Dr. Hut-
cheson added.
WIRE BRIEFS
ture show.
Friday morntag representatives
to the conference will meat in the
T. 6. O. W« science auditorium to
plan their work for the coming
year, and Friday afternoon, the fi-
nal meMlng Ot UM conference wilt
be held ta the TMchera Collage
library auditorium, with Miss Huey
presenting the oonftrance summary.
No Caeee Set~
of the Wk
_____ had MM a warntag
at a poeaMe allied invasion of Tus-
cany, Umbria and Latta fltovtoaM
ta north-central Itekf.
3. DNB. the German new aren- .
cy, geld rioters ta Milan, btrthpkes
of Mussolini's outlawed PeeeW rer-
ty, were firing on German and Ital-
ian troops.* Osman travel bur-
eau in MUan wae rioted.
4 A Cairo broadcast reported that
Axta troops tn Greece fired on Greek
patriots protoeting against a Ger-
man order aaigning Bulgarian
troops to Greek garrinm potato,
T Tfle BertBrnndta MtofawMiii
occupation troopa had been to-
moved from many Greek etaae te-
cauae they won needed elaowhere
due to "mONny necessity" snfl- >
mounting outbreaks by Greek guer-
rillas
«. In Italy, Premier Marshal Me-
tro Bsdoglio urged the peeoe-clam-
ortag Italian people to bo patient,
declaring in a broadcast:
"Italy cannot now got out of the
war honestly and safely without tho :.
exerciM of groat wisdom and ora-
tion, Ttan jo^Nree tfcra." ? -
T» Dispatches from Bwltaerland
reported that Naxl-owuptod France,
caught up in the spreading fever
of revolt, was rumbling with seri-
ous di.eenginh. The Zurich news-
paper Weltwoche said FranceY sot-
ret underground army numbered at
least 250.000 men “oMoeeod with a
burning hatred'ot ths occupying
forces."
a. From BerMn. a Spanish cone*
spondent said German authortttai
were well awofo that “the proctM
begun by tohfR^Mtok to not fir total"
Experi Mg Newe
said ttare was a
% news was about
By C. YATES McDANIEL
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN
THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC. July
31—-ito—Tanks and flamethrowers
were hurled into the battle for
Munda yesterday to burn the Japa-
nese out of their rock cavea and
foxholes and batter down their piil-
.tosME____~~~ rd
Behind these dread . ' weapons,
American troopa crushed forward a
few yards mere. The extent of
their gains was not announced
It was the first reported use of
flamethrowers in the month old
fight for the enemy'* important
Central Sqiotnaas Airbase. Um of
tanks had been attempted before
but the rugged terrain deeper in the
Jungle had stopped them
While the armored unite were
blazing ahead southeast of Munda,
American forces north .rf the air-
drome battered back a Japanese
counterattack U 8. Navy torpedo
and divebombers, covered by Wild-
cat fighters, struck heavily at
coastal positions west of the air-
drome where the Japanese Mill
cling to beachheads.
Strong formations of the Navy'S
Dauntless and Avenger bombers
pounded enemy gun positions
around Bairoko harbor 10 miles
north of Munda. Americans bold
the coast north of Bairoko and
the road leading south to Munda.
Mere Air Attacks
New evidence of the growing Al-
lied Aerial might was contained in
today’s communique from General
Douglas MacArthur's * ------
t ' Island-to-base”
»* de- probably will be scrapped in
raised not-too-distant tuture
— -t> step * In response to questions i
. I down in favor of someone willing press conterence the Navy
— . . - . . „ i to sue for oeace on thei basis of agreed that Allied strategy o^...
stm hriolnz ‘'nns outlined by Gen. Dwight D might call for major stabs at vital
By ROGER GRRBNB
Aaaeeialed Frees War Bditae
- All G
in Italyl .
to leave the strife-torn ldi_
dotn today, and eleetric ten-
sion prevailed in Londan aa
Prime Minister Churchill 0F«
dered British member* and
head* of the fighting service*
to “stand by” for a poaisble
week-end emergency.
Some quarters believed • now al-
ilea invasion mow wu unmuwu*.
morrow." said the London Daily
Mirror —--—-—~r—;---—
^Jneerlllao in ^lalmn*
Meanwhile, patriot guerrilla aF
mtoe ware on the smith in M*
Balkans. '
The Yugoslav govanunent-ta-401-
Ue annotswed in London that Gen.
Draja Mihailovich Ith and----
■adea of Slovene 1 —
had broken throui
and reached the L,_ .
northern Italy.
were previously reported
ten strong poeiUons a* v«iuw. ■
Developments to the Italian cite-
li over peace or war broke with
Ughtata* rapidity
It may be only that our bombers ' capacity, and ^residence had. dfrec-
i pus would not be able to house the swee'plng“"t"he"'italian^ coasted waU
I visitors this year. ‘ ers in defiance of enemy shore guns
----- I Conference activities on the op- ' one merchantmen and prob-
There has been the suggestion j ening day Will center on the T. 8. abiy an enemy motor torpedo boat
I that the pendulum In Italy might C. W. campus, with a general meet- I ancj three heavily armed fighters, it
I even swing so far as to bring her ing to be held Wednesday morning waa officially announced
i* | into the war on our side. IXn’t i in the science auditorium and af- , Allied cruisers and destroyers on
laugh Stranger things have hap- i ternoon sectional meetings on prob- | Wednesday nlghF bombarded 1m-
pened to people on the back-swing, tans of child care and the school poytant railway bridges near Locri.
i. If Italy is occupied, her shipyards I lunch to be held in the household j() lnllp(i from Cape gpartivento on I
and factories would be available; arte T"
for maintenance and supply of her «... ^ ..—
her fleet and. with raw materials with a picnic in Lowry Woods,
from the United States, she might Canning Center geeeien
do a much better Job of it than
she did for herself.
are missing from the night's at-
tacks.
Remscheid is the center for the '
clsion tools vital to German anal- {Allied Annies Making Progress
SSiln Sicily; Bombers Return to Route
Suburbs. Blast Other Italian Points
try and the manufacture of motor It '
parts and small arms.
There are also 25 smalled fac- Y ' wwanatTAn'nrM
tories in the city, mostly engaged L ALLIED HEADQUARrERS
in tool making and extensive ■
way repair shops
Homemaker Meet
ToBettfetdat
Denton Colleges
! Final plan, have b«n complat- ----- — ... ------------ .
. ed for the annual area homemak- I than 500 Germans among nearly | lies were using fresh force* and
ing conference to be held at North | 1.000 new prisoners taken in the j mass air support" and were de-
I Texas State and T. 8. C W Aug. Northern sector. j veloplng their attacks, with Ital-
i 4-6. { The unconditional surrender of I lan and German troops fighting off
Expected to draw approximately i the islands of Favignana, Levanzo ' the attacks in a ’bitter struggle."
— " * ---- ‘ 1 «Twenty-two Allied planes were
shot down, the omxnunique declar-
of led.)
a - | ______ ...
City and County
Free Of Paralysis
tional this summer in Ohio. Olin
is known as one of the best shots |
over the trap in the United States .
and has won many tournaments
■Denton was fortunate in getting
a men Uke George Harte td con-
duct the flying school here,” said a
Denton business man who ha* had
considerable dealings with the Harte
Flying School. “He has invested a
lot of money here and is taking a
citizen's part in the affairs of the
- town and county, and I consider
, ' him one of the squarest shooters’
Blow at Italy or
Peace Move Seen
Ab Possibilities
I ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN ( Fighter-bombers rained cannon ; * •r>Uots’ uniforms and mourn- ♦
i NORTH AFRICA. July 31—UPh- , shells on enemy positions ta the * clothes " ,♦
B<<h the British Eighth Army and narrow area of Easem Sicily and *n*a*atta*ataaa**a**aa|
I the American Seventh Army have {riddled his pillboxes IQ the. vicipity I
I made good progtess o>n the North . <4 Mt. Etna. r/...
'C^ l ^ront, Allied headquarters announc- tacular result of their i r to Burn |
Twriutalten coastal raters And Al- ‘ Junkera-52 Uansp®rWk JlUt '
I lied Aircraft laid down a heavy I ing off when the bombs fell. The |cll)S vJlll 01 I rflVCS
offensive against Italy’s mainland ' big plane was blown to dita Four • L
■ airdrome*. other big German trpop carrier* ~
* Very heavy casualties were in- I caught fire ,
fileted by the Americans and Brit- (The Italian communique, broad-
ish, the communique said. I cast from Rome and recorded by (
. .p—,—.r The Americans captured more {the Associated Press, said the AL
' ed for the annual area homemak- i than 500 Germans
• a. vw'f'At.'y•
•r..
Rationing makes a difference!
J Dick Wood said, "When I sat down
at breakfast for the first cup of
non-raHoned coffee. I noticed that
it didn’t taste near as good as when
it was scarce and rationed and
bought only with coupons. Made us
appreciate our ceffee a lot more ’
Some of the visitor* around
I ’ Sheriff Roy Moore’s office were say-
ing, " You can’t buy this and you
cant buy that" Luther Allen. Dep-
uty Sheriff. Mid. "Well, there’s one
thing you can buy and it's not ra-
tioned and there are plenty of^em
and you ought to buy ’em—thats
War Bonds and Stamps"
If you haven't bought those July
War Bonds, there’s Mill time to get
’em. The Poet Office has a rather
goal supply of them and the Den-
ton Federal Home Loan Associa-
tion. too, can fill your War Bond
needs.
' "Some of the boys are haying
pretty good luck on the trot lines
these day*." Mid A. 8. Sargeant of
Lake Dellas here Saturday "But
♦ the boys with pole* are not getting
many perch right how.”
Love ye therefore the rtranger;
for ye were stranger* in the land of
Egypt Detrtqronomy io-i»
• m the City of Oairo ... an out-
standing feature ha* been the be-
havior of the American troops
which ha* been of an. exerwplary
character.—Sir Thoma* Wentworth
nr—n police commandant of Oai-
ro, ^ypt.
. He: "Women can never keep a
Mcret ’• ,r
Sta- “Tee. they can. I have kept
/ my mo * ooovt ever since I wo*
HT Ttat OM 4*r you wW tot
M»?: "No. If I can keep a am-
fiX J?* x c“ «° 0,1
S'
IV w »
by .
the I
strategy i
the j
manufacture of machine and *re-
. - J eixinn tnnlx vltul tn rt»rmMn numl-
Allied strategy s^n >lo^_Pro_d«51‘?n;...... ...
isiiliid bombers' heavy attack was
* lava nrtorwiarir A Z>
Such points could
e an out lor , naval base of Truk In
Badoglio has {the 8r*uth Pacific, enemy air and
These three little islands form a
JI the West coast ('
Sicily, the most westerly being Ma-
rettlnrt*. which Is 25 miles from Al-
lled-oocupied Trapani.
American bombers returned to
j the suburbs of Rome to pulverize
I the Practice Di Mare Airport 11
tend a series of general and sec- ■ miles south of the capita), and Fly-
ing Portrerses, returning to the
speaaers as n»i» nuui nuey. nu>ve mainland for another of their
j director of homemaking education. | sledgehammer blows, attacked I
----------- -------1 Grottaglie Alrpcrt near Taianto |
on the Italian Heel. Allied head-
quarters announced
Warhawks in a savage fight over
Sardinia shot to pieces a formation
Of German and Italian fighters, de-
stroying 21 out ot about 35
Axis Air Force reeled under the lop-
me air neiu. tni uir wiivne me fu- r»uovm —■ —• ■ __
lies appear to have been almost as 1 campus will house the visiting home > sided score <■! 26 AxU planes lost
solicitous for the safetv of the Ital- I economists. Dormitory facilities at to one Allied plane missing for the
lan Navy as was Mussolini. the Teachers College are filled to . d*Y*
J* S-_ «an«AUu a rtX V>ta ■ 1 rf MYt/M* httll rtirtof'-
have had more urgent work to do tors announced that the T C. ex-
cise where I
But there may be another an- I
swer.
j 200 homemaking teachers from all . and Mareltlmo was reported,
parts of Texas, the conference will j These thiee little udaniR t
emphasize family and community ' triangle off
problems in wartime, taking up
such phases as food preservation,
the high school victory corps, con- [
servation of materials, adult edu- I
cation and child care
Visiting home economists will at-
West
I secretary of state, received Portu-
armistloe terms laid down for Ita- I guese diplomatic
_ ..IJ <> 11 1 ^»-U.J. > 'VYvuv
three powers
Russia. Britain and tile United
tional meetings featuring such
speakers as Mis* Ruth Huey, state
M F Thurmond, state supervisor:
of the rural war production train-
The official announcements dis-
closed greet activity by Allied light
~ - ■— if w * coastal forces off the North coast of
North Texas State will be head- gicny „ tne Allied blockade closed
------------- quarters for activities on_ the sec- jn the Germans and Italians still
One expert with whom I dto- ond day of the meeting- Food pres- fighting at the Eastern Sicilian tip.
•oeltn ’ dL. • a.____w. ___
train* and
meeting* to bo held in the com- 1 the railway
T. c. and in the home economic*
dining room of the
art* building A g------
..22 be taid Thursday afternoon I
WUb WASHINGTON. July 31-^Pr^J^l^ajpv
■ The glowing might oi Allied arms
were i in the Pacific is being readied for [
• 1 U Ctarizsc rtf ar*»Qf fifVteHRivp thrilAtM 1
opments. Foreign Minister Anthony !
PHen ciimmnnad rpnrAKAntfl- '
tives into conference shortly after stage,
the two early morning sessions yes- )
terday of the British war cabinet ,----- -----
As British public anger mounted | Navy Secretary Knox tnBt
over Premier Badoglio's delay in { present Lsland-to-base" Ct
replying to the allied peace
mands, the possibility was i
that he mjght be induced to step
to sue for peace on thei basis of agreed that
. Eisenhower in his message to the strong points in Japan's
I Italian people Wednesday This, it i empire system F‘—-
zvh D , . wort wnrth for- I wali •®ld* woultl prove an out for Include 4.he Naval base of Truk In
“x e—:
~ ■-* «s;
Mid. that he would entej th* Na- DiUy-I>^li«i emy would be exposed to assault
(In Italy, Badoglio, urging his and destruction.
1 peace-hungry people to be patient. . Knox made it clear, even though ;
I said last night: I h* apeclficaliy declined to go »to I
I “Italy cannot now get out of the details strategy, that the purpos-
tlon This requires time."
(The Premier's broadcast was
quoted by BBC, whose broadcast ,1,™ lu,u.c
was recorded in New York by the t ly will be correlated with "operations
National Broadcasting Company ) ! in China against Japan’s western
From neutral listening posts and |
Axis radios came news and prop- j
agenda describing grave develop- 1
ments in Italy
A dispatch from Madrid reported :
clashes between Italian troops and
reinforced German divisions in
northern Italy
The Swiss frontier town of Chi-
asso heard reports that Italian
troops in Milan had been placed
under a new commander. Gen. Vit-
| torio Ruggere, after they had re-
' fused to fire on compatriots dem- [
The first of Denton County's cot-1
ton was brought to Denton Satur- j
day morning, when George Mead-
ows brought two bolls that had op-
ened In his garden spot, where he
left 22 stalks of volunteer cotton.
The bolls have only four locks of
cotton
"No, I’m not going to do any iron-
. ing," said M L Portwood, who was
found carrying two electric irons.
4"These belong to the Missus and
she does all the ironing that’s done
J around our house. I don’t have time
I —I have to keep the family sup-
plied with fish "
TOWN
DENTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 31, 1»43
Araociated Pre** Leaaad Win
VOL. XLII
NO. 301
SIX PAGIS
ROUND
ABOUT
Ata'* • ■ - —-ijy I||| . -
Record-chronicle
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DENTON
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kith Pro-
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are proud
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iNTOlJ
■X
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 301, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 31, 1943, newspaper, July 31, 1943; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1317694/m1/1/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.